A Doll’s House
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A creeping dread settles within the shadowed parlor, thick as dust motes dancing in the weak winter light. The air tastes of brittle smiles and unspoken debts, clinging to the velvet upholstery and the polished wood like a suffocating perfume. This is a house built on brittle foundations—a gilded cage where appearances bleed into deception. Every whispered conversation feels laced with a desperate, fragile hope, mirroring the desperate, fragile hope of its mistress. A slow rot permeates the carefully arranged domesticity, a blossoming poison concealed beneath layers of lace and polite society. The weight of expectation presses down, not as a grand tragedy, but as a quiet fracturing of the soul, a meticulous unraveling born of silence and the stifling weight of a life lived for others. It’s a darkness that doesn’t roar, but sighs—a chilling stillness before the glass shatters, and the meticulously constructed world collapses inwards, leaving only the hollow echo of what was pretended to be. The scent of pine and winter lingers long after the final act, a ghostly chill clinging to the empty rooms and the lingering questions of a life reclaimed, or perhaps, lost entirely.
Copyright: Public Domain
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70 Part
A creeping dread settles over the marshlands of Anglia, mirroring the slow rot within the bones of its last kings. Morris weaves a tale not of glorious battle, but of a world drowning—not in water alone, but in the melancholic decay of forgotten gods and the venomous whispers of those who would usurp them. The narrative clings to the peat bogs like a clinging mist, smelling of salt and brine, of drowned things and the iron tang of blood. Villages vanish beneath encroaching tides, their stone foundations swallowed by the relentless grey, while within crumbling halls, the remnants of a fractured kingdom barter with shadow-things for survival. Each chapter feels like a descent into a waterlogged grave, the prose thick with the weight of loss and the insidious bloom of fungal blooms on rotting timbers. The sun, when it dares to appear, casts no warmth, only long, skeletal shadows stretching across the drowned fields. A sense of inevitable collapse permeates every line; not a heroic struggle against fate, but a mournful acceptance of its glacial, crushing embrace. The flood isn’t merely a rising water level, but a fracturing of the world itself, revealing the skeletal truths of a land consumed by its own melancholic past. The voices that linger are not those of the living, but the drowned echoes of kings, lovers, and children, murmuring from beneath the surface, beckoning the reader to join them in the cold, suffocating embrace of the sundering flood.