A Tangled Tale
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

Beneath a perpetual twilight, where the cobbled streets of Oxford bleed into the encroaching shadows of dreaming spires, a labyrinth unfolds. Not of logic, nor reason, but of whispers and half-remembered fears. The air hangs thick with the scent of decaying roses and damp earth, clinging to the hems of coats worn thin by regret. A scholar, haunted by a melody only he can hear – a tune woven from moth wings and the rustling of forgotten prayers – finds his investigations twisting into corridors of mirrored reflections, each revealing a sliver of a fractured self. The city itself breathes with a feverish pulse, its inhabitants caught in a slow waltz with madness. Doors open into impossible angles, revealing parlours choked with velvet gloom and populated by figures whose faces shift with every glance. Every clock ticks backwards, unraveling the threads of time. The narrative unravels like a ribbon, tangled with threads of obsession, hinting at a darkness within the heart of academia. A creeping dread descends, born not of malice, but of the unsettling realization that the very foundations of reality are built upon a foundation of delicate, brittle lies. It is a descent into a world where the boundaries between waking and dreaming blur, where the echo of a forgotten smile can drive a man to the brink of despair, and where the most innocent of riddles conceal the key to a suffocating, unspoken terror. The garden is overgrown, the tea party is never ending, and the rabbit hole leads not to Wonderland, but to a suffocating, elegant rot.
Copyright: Public Domain
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Chapter List

38

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28 Part
A creeping dread settles over the manor of Blackwood Grange with each echoing tap. The rhythm isn’t of nails against wood, but something colder, something resonating from *within* the stone itself. Old Man Hemlock, caretaker for generations, claims the taps are the rhythm of the house remembering its dead – the Blackwood line extinguished by scandal and rot. But young Alistair, summoned to settle the estate, finds the taps follow *him*. They begin subtly, a phantom knock on the bedroom door at midnight, then escalate to the insistent pulse against the hearthstone, the icy brush against his collar as he descends the shadowed stairs. The Grange is a labyrinth of dust-choked corridors and portraits with eyes that seem to judge, the scent of decay clinging to velvet hangings and worm-eaten beams. Rain lashes against the leaded windows, mirroring the frantic beat of Alistair’s heart as he uncovers fragments of the Blackwood’s past – whispered accusations of witchcraft, a bride vanishing into the peat bogs, a legacy of madness woven into the very foundation. Each tap feels less like a haunting, and more like a summons—a beckoning from something ancient and hungry, buried beneath the Grange’s suffocating silence. It isn’t a ghost that haunts Blackwood Grange, but the house itself, and Alistair is being drawn into its stone embrace, to become another echo in its dreadful, rhythmic pulse. The three taps are not a warning, but an invitation.
26 Part
Dust motes dance in the perpetual twilight of Blackwood Penitentiary, where Elias Thorne, a cartographer of forgotten grief, meticulously charts the unraveling minds of the condemned. He doesn’t map territories of land, but the labyrinthine landscapes of despair etched onto the letters of the dead – missives intercepted from beyond the veil, penned by those who’ve tasted oblivion. Each spectral script is a fragment of a final reckoning, a whispered confession bleeding through the paper like ichor. The prison itself breathes with a cold, damp sorrow, the stones weeping with the memories of generations swallowed by its maw. Thorne believes the letters aren’t simply *about* death, but *from* it – echoes of fractured souls attempting to rebuild themselves from the wreckage of their final moments. But as he deciphers their chilling prose, a pattern emerges: a recurring symbol, a name whispered in every fractured script, and a creeping realization that Blackwood isn’t merely holding the dead, but *creating* them. The air thickens with the scent of decay and regret. Shadows cling to the corners of Thorne’s workshop, mirroring the shapes of his own unraveling sanity. He’s not just reading the dead’s last words; he’s becoming possessed by their final, suffocating breaths. The prison isn’t just a place of confinement; it's a crucible where the boundaries between the living and the dead dissolve, and the letters become keys to a descent into a darkness that consumes all who dare to decipher its secrets. The silence isn’t empty, but pregnant with the screams of those lost within the stone, waiting to be reborn from the ink of forgotten letters.