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  "description": "[color=#ef2929]Disclaimer:[/color]\nThis is a work of fiction. Names, characters, business, events, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental. The acts depicted by the characters are purely fictional. If you have any problems with the keywords or do not like the topic of said work then please feel free to not read the story. Have a nice day.\n\nSummary: A group of teenagers decided to explore an abandoned mansion. What will they find? Nothing but trouble!\n\nCharacters belong to me. :)\n\nThank you to anyone who takes the time to read the story and all of it. If you like it, please leave a comment and make sure to favorite the story. :)",
  "description_bbcode_parsed": "<span style='word-wrap: break-word;'><span style=\"color: #ef2929;\">Disclaimer:</span><br />This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, business, events, and incidents are the products of the author&rsquo;s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental. The acts depicted by the characters are purely fictional. If you have any problems with the keywords or do not like the topic of said work then please feel free to not read the story. Have a nice day.<br /><br />Summary: A group of teenagers decided to explore an abandoned mansion. What will they find? Nothing but trouble!<br /><br />Characters belong to me. :)<br /><br />Thank you to anyone who takes the time to read the story and all of it. If you like it, please leave a comment and make sure to favorite the story. :)</span>",
  "writing": "Crimson Reckoning: Chapter 1\nBy: Mikolai\n\nThe town square shimmered like a neon heartbeat. Orange string lights intertwined among lampposts, casting long, lively shadows over sidewalks covered with fallen leaves. Fake cobwebs decorated storefronts, sparkling under the flickering glow of jack-o'-lanterns placed on each porch step. A tinny version of Monster Mash played from speakers outside the hardware store, competing with the screams of children running between groups of parents holding thermoses. The air was filled with the scent of damp earth, the burnt sugar of roasted pumpkin seeds, and the sharp smell of cheap face paint.\n\nBeyond the square, neighborhoods dissolved into quieter streets. Porch lights glowed amber behind fogged windows, illuminating silhouettes of skeletons swaying in the breeze. Occasionally, a gust of wind sent paper bats taped to windows fluttering wildly. Down Elm Street, Mrs. Henderson’s prize-winning scarecrow slumped sideways in her rocking chair, its burlap grin eerily intact. The distant thump of bass from a house party drifted on the chilly air, punctuated by bursts of laughter that faded as quickly as they rose. It was the kind of night where the ordinary felt thin, stretched tight over something older and sharper.\n\nThey called the town Hollow’s End. A name whispered with a shrug and a half-smile by locals. Founded centuries ago where dense forest met stony riverbanks, its history was a patchwork of logging booms, mill closures, and stubborn resilience. Now, it clung to the edge of the modern world, its charm tinged with the melancholy of forgotten things. The river, the Blackwater, coiled dark and sluggish around the town’s eastern flank, its surface reflecting the Halloween lights like scattered, broken glass. Folks said the water ran deep there, deeper than seemed possible, hiding secrets under its murky skin.\n\nHalloween wasn't just a night in Hollow’s End; it was a reckoning. A collective exhale before winter’s iron grip. Every porch became a stage, every stoop a shrine. Generations poured their superstitions and hopes into the decorations. Hand-carved pumpkins, their guttering candles casting wavering light, lined driveways like sentinels. Yards transformed into graveyards with leaning, weathered tombstones bearing names like \"R.I.P. Dewey Cheatem\" or \"Here Lies Maude Lynn – Took a Wrong Turn.\" Fog machines hissed in hidden corners, weaving tendrils of mist around animatronic witches stirring cauldrons that bubbled with dry ice vapor. The air itself tasted of woodsmoke, caramel apples, and the faint, metallic tang of impending frost. It was a night when the veil felt thin, and Hollow’s End leaned into the chill, celebrating the darkness it knew so well.\n\nBeyond the manicured lawns and glowing windows, where Elm Street dissolved into a rutted dirt track called Old Mill Road, the town ended abruptly. There, swallowed by ancient oaks whose gnarled branches clawed at the sky, stood the Holloway Mansion. Three stories of decaying grandeur, it loomed against the bruised twilight like a broken tooth. Locals called it the Widow’s Watch. Built by Elias Holloway, a timber baron obsessed with isolation, its ornate Victorian trim was now peeling paint, revealing grey, water-rotted wood beneath. Most windows were boarded shut, eyes blinded. One upper window, however, gaped open like a dark, screaming mouth. Stories clung to it thicker than the ivy strangling its columns. Elias vanished mysteriously with most of the family and servants. Only his wife, Agatha, lingered alone for decades, seen only at that top window, staring endlessly towards the Blackwater until she simply… wasn’t. Whispers spoke of unnatural cold spots near its sagging porch, of faint, discordant piano notes drifting on windless nights, and of shadows seen moving behind that lone, unboarded window long after Rumor has it the place is haunted and that the family was cursed, which is why they suddenly disappeared. Agatha was buried in the overgrown family plot out back. Kids dared each other to touch its rusted gate; few ever did.\n\nTonight, fueled by cheap cider and the reckless bravado Halloween brewed, six figures slipped away from the town square’s neon pulse. They huddled near the skeletal remains of the old mill, the Blackwater gurgling sluggishly beside them. The air here smelled damp, thick with decaying leaves and river mud. Soon, outside of town, they reached Holloway mansion.\n\nAt the front of the pack stood Silas. Fourteen years old, lean muscle coiled beneath a layer of dense, russet-brown fur that shimmered faint copper under the weak moonlight filtering through the oaks. His amber eyes, slit-pupiled and unnervingly sharp, scanned the looming silhouette of the Widow’s Watch ahead. A faded, oversized tricorn hat sat slightly askew on his head, partially covering his short, bristly fur that ran close to his skull. A ragged faux-leather vest hung open over his bare chest, revealing more of that tawny fur, while loose canvas trousers tucked into scuffed boots completed his \"pirate\" ensemble. He looked less like a swashbuckler and more like a wild creature playing dress-up. A low rumble vibrated in his chest, part anticipation, part instinctive wariness. The mansion’s oppressive silence felt heavier than the cider buzz.\n\nBeside him, shifting nervously on clawed feet wrapped clumsily in stained gauze, was Rex. Thirteen years old, Rex embodied the lean, athletic build of his Doberman heritage. His fur was a deep, rich mahogany, almost black in the shadows, save for sharply defined rust-colored markings above his intelligent, dark brown eyes. Short, sleek fur hugged his frame, accentuating the sharp angles of his muzzle and the alert pricking of his ears. Tonight, he was a mummy – or attempting to be. Yards of cheap, off-white gauze were haphazardly wound around his torso and limbs, already snagging on twigs and unraveling near his ankles. A few loose strips fluttered around his neck like a tattered scarf. The costume seemed absurdly flimsy against the mansion’s brooding presence. He kept smoothing down the gauze over his chest, his movements quick, birdlike. \"You sure about this, Silas?\" Rex’s voice was a husky whisper, barely audible over the rustle of dead leaves skittering across the dirt track. His gaze flickered towards the mansion’s lone open window, a void in the decaying facade. \"Old Man Brown said his dog wouldn’t go near this place, not even for steak.\"\n\nA low growl escaped Silas, sharp and dismissive. \"Hell no, I ain't sure,\" he hissed, his amber eyes narrowed, pupils thin slits in the gloom. He jabbed a clawed thumb towards the distant town lights. \"That cider buzz wore off halfway down Elm Street. This place feels… wrong.\" He shifted his weight, the worn leather of his vest creaking. \"Like the air’s too thick. Like something’s watching.\" He scanned the group, frustration warring with protective instinct. \"But you jackasses dragged me out here.\" As he looks to the others behind him. \n\nBeside Rex, Chloe flicked her long, spotted tail impatiently. Fifteen years old, she possessed the lean, whipcord grace of her cheetah heritage. Her fur was a breathtaking tapestry of golden-yellow covered in solid black spots, sleek and close against her slender frame. Large, intelligent blue eyes, ringed with dark tear-lines, scanned the mansion with wary curiosity. A cascade of thick, dark-blonde dreadlocks, woven with tiny fake spiders and glittering purple beads, tumbled past her shoulders. She’d gone all out as a witch: a pointy black hat perched jauntily atop her head, a flowing black robe cinched at her slim waist with a silver belt shaped like a serpent, and tall, buckled boots peeking out beneath the hem. She clutched a plastic cauldron bucket half-full of candy. \"Oh, relax, Silas,\" she murmured, her voice a soft purr laced with forced bravado. \"It's just a creepy old house. Besides,\" she added, a mischievous glint in her eyes, \"Rex needs someone to hold his hands when he gets scared.\" She nudged the Doberman teen, making him jump.\n\nRex bristled, smoothing his gauze again. \"I do not need—\" he started, his voice tight.\n\nChloe cut him off with a sharp flick of her tail against his leg. \"Please,\" she scoffed, rolling her large eyes. \"You jumped higher than a startled hare when that paper bat blew off Mrs. Smith's porch.\" She gestured dismissively towards the mansion's gaping upper window. \"It's just wood and rot. Probably smells worse inside than Rex after gym class.\"\n\nSilas whirled on her, a low growl rumbling deep in his chest, vibrating the air between them. His fur bristled visibly along his spine. \"Knock it off, Chloe,\" he snapped, his voice tight and sharp. His clawed hands clenched at his sides. \"You're being a real bitch tonight. We're all jumpy, okay? This ain't the place for your crap.\" The words hung heavy in the damp air, sharper than the chill. Chloe blinked, her confident smirk faltering for a fraction of a second before she lifted her chin defiantly.\n\nBefore Rex could stammer out a defense or an apology, a soft, hesitant voice piped up from the back of the group. \"Guys? Maybe we should shut up and go in.\" All eyes turned to Fern. At fourteen, she was slender and delicate, embodying the fragile grace of her deer lineage. Her fur was a soft, dappled grey-brown, like sunlight filtering through autumn leaves, blending seamlessly into the shadows. Large, liquid brown eyes, wide with apprehension, dominated her gentle face. Long, silky strands of pale blonde hair, almost silver in the moonlight, cascaded down her back, partially obscuring the plunging neckline of her hastily assembled costume. She was dressed as a \"sexy nurse,\" but the effect was more awkward than alluring: a cheap, too-short white polyester dress strained across her chest, paired with bulky white sneakers and a crooked red cross drawn clumsily on her armband. A stethoscope hung limply around her neck. She shifted nervously, her feet scraping softly on the dirt track. \"It's just an old house. Nothing is going to happen to us.\"\n\nSilas’s growl softened slightly as he glanced at Fern, his protective instincts flaring. But before he could respond, another voice cut through the tense silence, bright and reassuring. \"Aw, c'mon guys! It'll be fine!\" The speaker pushed forward, stepping into a sliver of moonlight. This was Benny. Fourteen years old, Benny possessed the lean, wiry frame typical of a rabbit, all coiled energy beneath a coat of plush, snowy-white fur that seemed to glow faintly in the gloom. He stood a head shorter than Silas, with a slim and agile build. Large, expressive eyes, a startling shade of vibrant ruby-red, shone with unwavering optimism beneath floppy, velvety ears that twitched constantly, catching every rustle in the undergrowth. His head fur was short and neatly trimmed, a stark white cap atop his skull. Tonight, Benny embraced the Halloween spirit with gusto, transforming into a truly unsettling figure. He wore a ragged, stained butcher's apron splattered with disturbingly realistic fake blood over faded jeans. Clutched in one paw was a large, wicked-looking plastic cleaver, also dripping crimson. The pièce de résistance, however, was the mask: a grotesque, grinning rabbit face, disturbingly cheerful despite the peeling paint and cracked plastic, secured tightly over his own features. Only his bright red eyes peered out from the eyeholes, gleaming with infectious enthusiasm. \"Seriously,\" Benny chirped, his voice muffled slightly by the mask but brimming with cheerful certainty. He gestured grandly with his cleaver towards the imposing mansion. \"What's the worst that could happen? Ghosts? Pfft! We got Chloe's witchy vibes! Creaky floorboards? We got Rex's ears! And Silas? He'd bite a ghost's face off!\" He bounced lightly on the balls of his feet, radiating an energy that felt jarringly out of place against the Widow’s Watch’s oppressive gloom. His unwavering confidence was a stark counterpoint to the group's mounting dread.\n\nBeside Benny, partially obscured by the shifting shadows cast by the skeletal oaks, stood the sixth member of their ill-advised expedition. Her name was Zara. At fifteen, Zara possessed the distinctive silhouette of her hyena heritage – a slender, almost lanky build beneath a coat of short, coarse fur patterned in striking patches of rich chocolate brown and creamy tan. The fur hugged her lean frame closely, emphasizing sharp shoulders and prominent collarbones. Her face was narrow, dominated by large, intelligent eyes, the color of dark green, currently narrowed with wary skepticism as she surveyed the decaying mansion. Unlike Benny's flamboyant costume or Chloe's witchy elegance, Zara had opted for stark simplicity, channeling Morticia Addams with eerie precision. She wore a long, flowing gown cut from heavy black satin that whispered against the dry leaves underfoot. The dress clung to her slender form, plunging dramatically in a sharp V-neckline that revealed the smooth transition of fur to cloth on her chest. Her dark brown fur, visible at her neckline and wrists, contrasted sharply with the fabric. Her short, spiky mane of fur atop her head was slicked back neatly, accentuating her sharp jawline and high cheekbones. Her only adornment was a single, blood-red artificial rose pinned precisely at her shoulder. She stood utterly still, radiating a quiet intensity that felt far more ancient than her years. Her gaze lingered longest on the mansion’s gaping upper window, her expression unreadable but deeply focused. She hadn't spoken since they left the mill ruins.\n\nBenny’s infectious bravado seemed to thaw some of the tension. Rex managed a shaky grin beneath his unraveling gauze. Chloe snorted, though her earlier defiance seemed slightly muted after Silas’s sharp rebuke. Fern offered Benny a tremulous smile. Benny bounced again, cleaver gleaming. \"Exactly! Adventure time!\" He dug into his own candy-filled plastic pumpkin bucket, pulling out a cheap flashlight shaped like a ghost. Its weak beam sliced through the gloom, illuminating swirling motes of dust and dead leaves. \"Light 'em up, troops!\"\n\nRex fumbled with his gauze-wrapped paws, extracting a sturdy metal flashlight from his own bucket. Its bright, white beam cut a confident path towards the mansion’s sagging porch. Chloe produced a sleek purple flashlight from her witch’s cauldron, its beam casting long, dancing shadows on the peeling paint. Fern retrieved a small, pink flashlight, its beam trembling slightly as she clutched it. Even Zara moved silently, pulling a slim, black flashlight from some hidden pocket within her satin gown. Its beam was narrow, intense, and unwavering, aimed directly at the mansion’s dark, open upper window. Only Silas hesitated, his clawed hand hovering near his pirate-themed bucket.\n\nBefore Silas could grab his light, a sudden crunch of dry leaves and snapping twigs echoed from the dense thicket behind them. Six heads whipped around, flashlights stabbing erratically into the shifting darkness. Rex yelped, stumbling back. Fern gasped, pressing closer to Chloe. Silas instantly dropped into a low crouch, a deep, warning growl rumbling from his chest, his fur bristling along his spine. His amber eyes, narrowed to slits, scanned the source of the noise.\n\nTwo figures emerged from the gloom, silhouetted against the faint glow of distant town lights filtering through the trees. The taller one stepped confidently into the overlapping beams of their flashlights. It was Leo, Chloe's boyfriend. At sixteen, Leo possessed the powerful, compact build of his leopard heritage. His fur was a dense, luxurious tapestry of deep gold, patterned with striking rosettes – dark, irregular circles outlined in a slightly darker shade – that flowed seamlessly over defined muscle beneath his sleek coat. Short, velvety fur hugged his frame, emphasizing broad shoulders and a thick neck. His head fur was equally short and neat, framing a strong jawline. Large, intelligent eyes, a startling shade of pale, glacial green, scanned the group with cool appraisal beneath thick, dark lashes. He wore a costume that screamed effortless cool: a battered, dark leather jacket over a plain black t-shirt, faded jeans, and sturdy boots. A silver chain glinted faintly at his neck. He carried no flashlight, his eyes seeming to gleam faintly in the low light.\n\nBeside Leo, stepping forward with a quiet presence that felt more solid than the shifting shadows, stood the other boy. His name was Kael. At sixteen, Kael embodied the formidable stature of his brown bear lineage. He stood easily a head taller than Leo, his frame a mountain of dense muscle beneath a thick pelt of fur, the rich, deep brown of wet earth, shot through with subtle reddish-gold highlights where the flashlight beams caught it. His fur was short, coarse, and incredibly thick, lying flat against powerful shoulders, a broad chest, and thickly corded arms. It gave him a rugged, primal solidity. His head fur was equally short and dense, cropped close against his skull, accentuating the strong lines of his jaw and the heavy brow ridge above his eyes. Those eyes were a deep, warm amber, watchful and calm, holding an unnerving stillness. He wore no elaborate costume, just practical, dark cargo pants and a heavy, olive-green canvas jacket left open, revealing a simple grey t-shirt stretched tight over his immense chest. A worn leather satchel hung diagonally across his broad torso. He carried no flashlight either, his large hands hanging loosely at his sides. He simply observed, his amber gaze lingering thoughtfully on the trembling Fern and the bristling Silas before drifting towards the looming Widow’s Watch.\n\nSilas exploded. He surged upright, knocking his pirate bucket aside on the ground. Candy scattered across the dirt like fallen teeth. His fur stood completely on end, making him seem larger, wilder. Amber eyes, blazing with fury, locked onto Chloe. He jabbed a clawed finger towards Leo, then Kael, his voice a low, dangerous snarl that vibrated in the suddenly frigid air. \"Chloe. What the fuck are they doing here?\" The accusation hung sharp as broken glass. Every head snapped towards Chloe. Rex flinched violently, his gauze-wrapped paws instinctively curling into fists, his dark eyes darting nervously between Leo and Silas. Fern smiled at the chaos, while Benny was shocked to see the other two.\n\nChloe froze. Her spotted tail lashed once, violently, then went still. Her blue eyes widened slightly, then narrowed into defiant slits beneath her crooked witch hat. She lifted her chin, meeting Silas's glare. \"Leo heard us talking,\" she stated, her voice tight, defensive. \"He wanted to see the place.\" She gestured vaguely towards Leo, who smirked, a thin justification. \"Kael's with him. So what?\"\n\nLeo chuckled, a low, rumbling sound that lacked any real warmth. He shifted his weight. His green eyes slid past Silas, landing squarely on Rex. \"Heard you were heading out here, Rex,\" Leo purred, his voice smooth as oiled leather. He took a deliberate step forward. Rex flinched back, a full-body jerk that sent another strip of gauze unraveling from his ankle. His dark brown eyes darted away, fixing on a patch of damp leaves near his foot. His shoulders hunched inward, making his lean frame seem smaller. \"Thought you'd be too scared,\" Leo added, his tone dripping with mock concern. \"Guess you needed Silas to hold your hand tonight, huh?\"\n\nThe silence that followed was thick and suffocating. Rex froze, his breath catching audibly. His gaze snapped back to Leo, wide with shock and humiliation. Chloe stiffened, her knuckles white around her purple flashlight. \"Leo—\" she started, her voice tight.\n\nLeo cut her off, his smirk widening into a cruel grin. He took another step closer to Rex, invading his space. \"What?\" Leo drawled, his green eyes gleaming with malice. \"It's true, isn't it? Everyone knows. Little Rex, always trailing after Silas like a lost puppy.\" He leaned in, his voice dropping to a venomous whisper that carried clearly in the dead air. \"Pathetic. A fucking fag who can’t do anything by himself.\"\n\nThe word hung, sharp and ugly, freezing the damp night air. Rex recoiled as if physically struck, a choked gasp escaping him. His eyes flooded with hurt and shame. Chloe’s jaw dropped, her witch hat tilting sideways. Benny’s plastic cleaver clattered to the dirt. Even Zara’s intense stillness fractured; her eyes widened in disbelief. All while Fern is silently laughing. \n\nSilas didn't think. Didn't growl. Didn't hesitate.\n\nHe moved like coiled lightning released. One moment, he stood bristling; the next, his fist cracked against Leo's jaw with a sickening thud. Leo's head snapped sideways, a spray of saliva and blood catching the weak flashlight beams. He stumbled back, eyes wide with shock, a low groan escaping him as he clutched his face. Silas's candy bucket fell to the ground, scattering candy and knocking over a cellphone out of the bucket, too. \n\nBefore Silas could surge forward again, Kael moved. Not with aggression, but with startling speed and solidity. He stepped smoothly between Silas and the staggering Leo, one massive hand clamping firmly onto Silas's shoulder. The grip was like iron, anchoring the furious feline hybrid in place. \"Enough,\" Kael rumbled, his deep voice cutting through the chaos. His eyes held Silas's blazing gaze, calm but implacable. \"It's done.\"\n\nLeo spat blood onto the damp leaves, wiping his muzzle with the back of his hand. His eyes burned with pure hatred as he glared at Silas. \"You're dead,\" he snarled, voice thick with pain and rage. He started forward, but Kael shifted his bulk slightly, blocking Leo's path without a word. Leo stopped, trembling with fury.\n\nFern's voice cut through the tension yet remained clear. \"Stop fighting. We came to explore the house, remember?\" Her eyes darted between Silas and Leo, with mischief in them. Benny scrambled to retrieve his cleaver, his ruby eyes wide behind the grotesque mask. \"Yeah! Ghosts! Adventure! Less punching!\" His forced cheer sounded brittle.\n\nSilas still vibrated with fury under Kael's restraining grip. He wrenched his gaze from Leo’s murderous glare to Chloe. His voice was low, gravelly, and deadly serious. \"Your boyfriend.\" He jerked his chin towards Leo. \"He stays the hell away from me. And Rex.\" His amber eyes, narrowed to furious slits, locked onto Chloe’s defiant stare. \"Or I swear, Chlo', I'll rip his throat out.\" The promise hung heavy, devoid of bluster. Chloe flinched, her witch hat slipping further. Leo hissed something venomous, but Kael’s low rumble silenced him.\n\nChloe swallowed hard. Her spotted tail twitched nervously. \"Fine,\" she snapped, her voice tight. She spun towards Leo, grabbing his leather-clad arm. \"Leo, come on. We'll go explore the other side.\" Leo resisted, glaring daggers at Silas, but Chloe dug her claws in, her voice rising. \"Now, Leo!\" She shot Silas a final, complicated look–defiance warring with something else–before forcefully dragging a muttering Leo towards the mansion. Kael watched them go for a moment, his heavy gaze thoughtful, then silently followed, his immense frame disappearing into the deeper shadows.\n\nBenny bounced anxiously, his plastic cleaver waving. \"Ghosts! Let's go find ghosts!\" He grabbed Fern’s hand. \"C'mon, Fernie! Adventure awaits!\" Fern cast one last glance back at Silas and Rex before allowing Benny to pull her gently towards the main entrance. Zara lingered for a heartbeat longer, her eyes flicking between Rex’s hunched form and Silas’s bristling fury. Without a word, she turned, her black satin gown whispering against the dead leaves, and followed Benny and Fern towards the sagging front door.\n\nThe oppressive silence rushed back in as Chloe, Leo, Kael, Benny, Fern, and Zara disappeared through the mansion’s gaping maw. Only Silas and Rex remained near the skeletal oak trees, the distant town lights a mocking reminder of normalcy. The air felt colder, thicker, pressing in. Rex hadn’t moved. He stood frozen, staring at the spot where Leo had spat blood onto the damp earth. The unraveling gauze around his paws hung loose and dirty. His sleek mahogany fur seemed dull in the weak moonlight filtering through the skeletal branches.\n\nSilas’s own fury still thrummed beneath his skin, a low, dangerous vibration. He took a deep, shuddering breath, forcing his bristling fur to lie flat along his spine. The sharp scent of damp earth, decaying leaves, and Rex’s distress filled his nostrils. He turned slowly, his amber eyes finding Rex’s hunched form. The Doberman looked impossibly small, fragile. Silas’s protective instincts roared back, sharper than the anger. He took a hesitant step closer, the crunch of leaves under his boot unnaturally loud.\n\n\"Rex?\" Silas’s voice was rough, scraped raw from the snarls, but deliberately softer now. He kept his claws retracted, hands loose at his sides. \"Hey. Look at me.\" Rex flinched at the sound but didn’t lift his head. Silas moved closer still, until he stood directly in front of him, blocking the view of the blood-stained leaves. He reached out slowly, not touching, just letting his presence be a shield. \"That bastard,\" Silas growled, low and fierce. \"He’s nothing. Filth. You hear me? Nothing.\" He paused, searching Rex’s downcast face. The silence stretched, thick with unspoken hurt. Silas swallowed, the next question feeling heavier than the mansion’s shadow. \"Are you okay?\" he asked, his voice dropping almost to a whisper. \"Getting close... to him?\" He couldn’t bring himself to say Leo’s name. The implication hung in the air: proximity, the humiliation, the violation of Rex’s space.\n\nRex finally stirred. His shoulders trembled once, violently. He lifted his head slowly. His eyes, usually sharp and alert, were wide, wet, and utterly shattered. A strip of gauze had unraveled completely, dangling uselessly from his wrist like a dead vine. He stared past Silas, towards the dark porch where the others had vanished. \"I...\" His voice cracked, a broken rasp. He swallowed hard, his Adam's apple bobbing. \"I just... wanted tonight to be fun.\" The words were small, lost. \"Not... not this.\" He gestured vaguely, helplessly, at the ground, at the air thick with tension and the lingering scent of Leo’s aggression. His gaze flickered back to Silas, raw and vulnerable. \"Why does he...?\"\n\nSilas couldn't stand it. The broken look, the tremor in Rex's voice – it sliced through the remnants of his fury, leaving only a fierce, protective ache. Before Rex could finish the agonizing question, Silas closed the distance. He didn't hesitate. His arms wrapped around Rex, pulling him close and tight, shielding him. Rex stiffened momentarily, a gasp catching in his throat, then melted against Silas with a shuddering sigh, burying his face against the russet fur of Silas’s neck. Silas held him fiercely, his own breath ragged against Rex’s ear. \"Shhh,\" Silas murmured, his voice rough but gentle. \"He's nothing, Rex. Less than nothing. Just a homophobic piece of shit spewing garbage.\" He pulled back just enough to cup Rex’s jaw, forcing the boy to meet his blazing amber gaze. \"You hear me? *Garbage*. Worthless.\"\n\nThe moonlight caught the wet tracks on Rex’s mahogany fur beneath the dangling gauze. Silas leaned in, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird. He pressed his lips to Rex’s – not tentative, but firm, desperate, a silent promise against the cold night. It was brief, charged with all the fear and fury and fierce affection he’d bottled up. Rex’s eyes widened, shocked, then fluttered closed as he leaned into the kiss, clutching Silas’s pirate shirt. When Silas pulled back, his own breath was shaky. \"I love you,\" he breathed, the words raw and true, hanging in the frigid air. \"I’ve loved you forever. And I’m so damn tired of hiding it.\" He traced Rex’s cheekbone with a claw-tipped thumb, his voice dropping to a fierce whisper. \"Let me tell them. Tonight. Let me tell everyone we’re together. Screw Leo. Screw anyone who doesn’t like it.\"\n\nRex’s breath hitched. His dark eyes searched Silas’s face, wide with a mixture of awe and terror. \"Silas…\" he whispered, his voice trembling. \"Your father…\" The name hung heavy, unspoken horrors lurking behind it. Rex knew the man’s cold fury, the way his words could cut deeper than claws. \"He’d… he’d lose it.\"\n\nSilas scoffed, a sharp, bitter sound. His amber eyes hardened, the protective warmth around Rex tightening into something fierce and defiant. \"My father?\" His voice was low, gravelly with contempt. \"That bastard spent last year for one week straight, facedown in cheap whiskey while I was burning up with fever. Remember?\" The memory was sharp, jagged – the empty house echoing, the chills wracking his body, the terrifying silence broken only by his own ragged coughs. \"He didn’t give a damn if I lived or died.\"\n\nRex’s gaze softened, filled with remembered worry. \"I know,\" he whispered, his clawed hand tightening on Silas’s arm. \"My mom... she didn’t want me staying over. Said it wasn't safe.\" He looked away, shame flickering across his face. \"But... I snuck out. Every night.\" His voice was barely audible. \"Brought soup. Medicine. Sat with you.\"\n\nSilas remembered. The haze of fever, the crushing loneliness, then Rex’s quiet presence in the dark, spooning lukewarm broth into his mouth, pressing cool cloths to his forehead. His father’s absence hadn’t just been physical; it was a void Rex had filled. Silas pulled Rex closer, burying his nose in the familiar scent of Rex’s fur beneath the gauze – earth and pine needles. \"Exactly,\" Silas murmured, his voice thick. \"You were there. You! Not him. Not anyone else.\" He pressed his forehead against Rex’s. \"So why should his hate, or anyone else's, matter more than this?\" He gestured between them, encompassing the closeness, the shared breath, the fierce protectiveness thrumming in his own chest.\n\nRex leaned into him, a fragile hope replacing some of the shattered look in his dark eyes. He lifted his head, searching Silas’s face. Then, with a sudden, decisive movement, Rex closed the distance. His kiss wasn’t desperate like Silas’s had been; it was softer, deeper, a deliberate claiming. His clawed hands cupped Silas’s jaw, pulling him in. It spoke of trust, of reciprocation, silencing the lingering echoes of Leo’s venom. When they finally broke apart, breath mingling in the cold air, Rex managed a shaky smile. \"Okay,\" he whispered, his voice steadier. \"Okay. Tell them.\"\n\nSilas grinned, sharp and bright. He scanned the oppressive silhouette of Holloway Mansion, where distant flashlight beams flickered erratically behind grime-crusted windows. \"They’re already lost in there,\" he said, jerking his chin towards the decaying structure. \"Probably screaming at dust motes.\" He turned, his amber eyes catching the faint, warm glow filtering through the trees further down the old mill path. \"Screw this haunted hellhole. Let’s bail.\"\n\nRex tilted his head, his dark eyes still shadowed but clearing. \"Bail? To where?\"\n\nSilas jerked his thumb towards the dense woods bordering the mansion grounds. A faint, warm glow flickered through the skeletal trees, barely visible beyond the mill's decaying silhouette. \"A cabin,\" he said, a slow, knowing grin spreading across his face. \"My uncle uses it for trapping season and other stuff. Empty now. Keys are...\" He patted the worn leather pouch hanging from his belt, hidden beneath his pirate shirt. \"Right here.\" The implication hung thick in the cold air – shelter, privacy, escape. \"Way better than chasing ghosts or... other assholes.\"\n\nRex’s shoulders relaxed visibly. A flicker of relief, then a spark of something warmer, replaced the lingering dread in his dark eyes. \"My parents,\" he murmured, leaning into Silas’s side, his voice regaining its usual low timbre. \"I told them I was probably crashing at your place tonight anyway. Since your dad wasn’t going to be there.\" He shrugged, a small, defiant gesture. \"They... worry. But they like you. They trust you. Especially after I told them you and I are dating and you started coming to eat dinner with us regularly.\" It was a fragile shield against the world’s judgment, but it was theirs.\n\nSilas snorted softly, a sound devoid of bitterness this time. He bent down, scooping up his overturned pirate bucket. The cheap plastic felt absurdly light after the night’s tension. He shook it gently, the remaining candy rattling like tiny bones. \"More for us,\" he muttered, a ghost of his usual smirk returning. He fished inside, past the scattered sweets, and pulled out his heavy-duty flashlight – a sturdy metal tube, reassuringly solid in his grip. He thumbed the switch, and a powerful beam sliced through the gloom, illuminating the path towards the woods, away from the mansion’s oppressive silhouette.\n\nRex watched him, a tentative smile touching his own lips. He carefully rewound the loose gauze around his wrist, tucking the end securely. The lingering tremor in his hands was fading. He retrieved his own flashlight – a sleek, black cylinder – clicking it on. Its beam joined Silas’s, carving twin paths of light through the skeletal trees towards the distant, warm glow. \"Lead the way, Captain,\" Rex murmured, his voice steadier now, laced with a quiet anticipation that had nothing to do with ghosts.\n\nSilas didn't hesitate. He reached out, his clawed fingers finding Rex’s, lacing them together. The contact was electric, grounding. Not hidden, not furtive. Deliberate. Rex squeezed back, his grip firm. Together, they turned their backs on Holloway Mansion and its fractured group. Silas kicked aside a stray piece of candy near his boot. The crunch echoed in the stillness as they stepped off the leaf-strewn path bordering the mansion grounds and plunged into the denser woods towards the cabin. The cold air felt cleaner here, smelling of damp earth and pine resin instead of decay and spilled blood. The distant sounds of the town’s Halloween revelry were swallowed by the rustling canopy overhead. Only the crunch of their footsteps and the twin beams of light piercing the gloom accompanied them. Silas glanced sideways, catching Rex’s profile illuminated in the flashlight’s spill. The shattered look was gone, replaced by a quiet determination that mirrored his own. They walked faster, drawn by the promise of warmth and solitude.\n\nInside Holloway Mansion, the air hung thick and stale, tasting of dust, mildew, and something metallic beneath it all. Benny’s ghost-shaped flashlight beam danced erratically across peeling floral wallpaper as he bounced ahead. \"Ghosties! Where are youuu?\" His cheerful whisper echoed strangely down the narrow hallway they’d entered through a broken side window. Fern clung to Chloe’s arm, her feet scraping on warped floorboards. \"Benny, slow down!\" Fern pleaded, her voice trembling. \"It’s so dark...\" Chloe didn’t answer, her own flashlight beam fixed straight ahead, her jaw set. Leo stalked beside her, radiating simmering fury, one hand pressed gingerly to his bruised jaw. He spat again, the sound loud in the oppressive silence. Kael brought up the rear, his immense frame filling the passageway, his calm amber eyes constantly scanning the shifting shadows beyond their lights. Zara drifted silently beside him, her black gown whispering against the walls, her intense gaze fixed on the darkness ahead.\n\nThey emerged into a cavernous foyer. Moonlight, weak and distorted, filtered through grime-caked stained glass windows high above, casting fractured colors onto a grand staircase choked with cobwebs. The air felt heavier here, colder. Dust motes danced in their flashlight beams like agitated spirits. Something skittered deep within the walls – claws on wood. Fern gasped, pressing closer to Chloe. \"Just rats,\" Chloe muttered, though her voice lacked its usual confidence. She shone her light up the decaying staircase. \"This way. The Widow’s Watch tower is supposed to be at the top.\" Benny cheered, already scrambling onto the first step, which groaned ominously under his weight. \"Race you!\" he called, darting upward before anyone could stop him.\n\nLeo glared after Benny, then spat onto the filthy marble floor. \"This place is a dump,\" he snarled, his voice thick with pain and resentment. He shot a venomous look back towards the broken front door they’d entered through. \"Should’ve finished that runt.\" Chloe flinched but kept her gaze fixed upward. \"Forget Silas,\" she snapped, pulling her arm free from Fern’s grasp. \"Benny! Slow down!\" She started after him, her flashlight beam bobbing erratically on the sagging steps. Leo hesitated for only a second, then followed Chloe, his own light sweeping aggressively across the peeling walls.\n\nFern whimpered, frozen at the staircase's base. \"I don’t want to go up there,\" she whispered, her large eyes wide with terror. Kael’s heavy paw settled gently on her shoulder. \"Stay with me,\" he rumbled, his deep voice cutting through the oppressive silence. \"We’ll find something else.\" He nodded towards a shadowed archway leading deeper into the mansion’s ground floor. Zara drifted closer, her eyes thoughtful. \"The library,\" she murmured, her voice barely audible. \"Maybe have old maps. Safer than rotten stairs.\" Without waiting, she glided towards the archway, her satin gown whispering like secrets on the dusty air. Fern glanced nervously at the staircase where Chloe and Leo were disappearing after Benny, then clutched Kael’s arm tighter. \"Okay,\" she breathed, following Zara into the gloom.\n\nSadly, Benny was already up to the third floor, far from the group. He was a fast bunny after all. His ghost-shaped flashlight beam bounced wildly as he hopped up the final steps, giggling. \"Ghosties! Benny’s coming!\" The third-floor hallway stretched before him, narrower and darker than below. Thick cobwebs draped like ragged curtains, brushing against his floppy ears. Dust coated the floorboards, muffling his steps. He paused, tilting his head. A faint, rhythmic *scritch-scratch* echoed from behind a warped oak door down the hall. Benny’s ruby eyes widened behind his mask. \"Kitty?\" he whispered hopefully, padding towards the sound. The door hung slightly ajar. He pushed it open slowly. Inside, moonlight streamed through a grimy window, illuminating an empty nursery. A rusted crib sat crookedly in the corner. The scratching stopped. Silence pressed in, thick and heavy. Benny frowned. \"Hello?\"\n\nDownstairs, Chloe and Leo reached the second-floor landing. Leo leaned against the peeling wallpaper, gingerly touching his swollen jaw. \"That psycho bastard,\" he hissed. Chloe shone her light upwards. \"Benny!\" she yelled, her voice echoing hollowly. Only silence answered. Leo grabbed her arm. \"Forget the rabbit. Let’s find something fun to do in this dump.\" His flashlight beam swept across a portrait hanging crookedly on the wall – a severe-faced woman in Victorian dress, her painted eyes seeming to follow them. Chloe shivered. \"Fine. But we stick together.\" They moved deeper into the gloom, Leo’s light catching the glint of something metallic discarded near a collapsed wardrobe.\n\nUpstairs, Benny stood frozen in the nursery doorway. His ghost-shaped flashlight trembled slightly, casting long, dancing shadows. The room smelled overwhelmingly of dust, decay, and something faintly sweet beneath it all – like old, dried flowers. Moonlight filtered weakly through a grime-caked window, illuminating motes dancing in the stale air. A rusted iron crib, its paint flaking like diseased skin, stood crookedly against the far wall. Beside it lay a decaying wooden rocking horse, one broken leg dangling uselessly. Its painted eyes were scratched out. Scattered across the warped floorboards were faded cloth dolls, their button eyes missing, limbs twisted at unnatural angles. One doll, its porcelain head cracked, lay face-down near Benny’s foot. Thick cobwebs draped from the cracked ceiling plaster like tattered shrouds, brushing against his floppy ears. The silence was absolute, pressing in like a physical weight after the scratching stopped.\n\nBenny tilted his head, his eyes scanning the gloom. From deep within the mansion’s belly, muffled by layers of wood and plaster, came faint, indistinct sounds: a distant thump that could be Fern stumbling, the muffled echo of Chloe’s sharp voice calling his name again, a low rumble that might be Kael. He relaxed slightly, a small smile returning beneath his mask. \"Just the others,\" he whispered to the empty room, his voice swallowed by the thick air. \"Playing hide-and-seek!\" He giggled softly, the sound unnervingly bright in the oppressive silence. He took a step further into the nursery, his flashlight beam catching the cracked porcelain face of the fallen doll. Its remaining eye seemed to glint in the light.\n\nHis beam swept upwards, tracing the intricate patterns of decay on the ceiling plaster – cracks spreading like dark veins, patches of damp blooming like rotten flowers. Then it caught something else: a large, dark rectangle high on the wall opposite the window. It wasn't a painting or a mirror. It looked like... a door. A small door, set high up near the ceiling, is barely visible beneath layers of grime and cobwebs. It had no handle, Benny could see, just a simple latch near the top, almost out of reach. Benny hopped closer, craning his neck. \"Secret door?\" he breathed, excitement bubbling anew. \"For tiny ghosties?\" He glanced around, spotting a small, overturned stool near the crib, half-buried under dust and shredded cloth. He scrambled over, dragging it beneath the high door. It wobbled precariously as he climbed onto it, stretching upwards on tiptoe, his ghost-shaped flashlight clenched in his teeth. His clawed fingers brushed the cold metal latch. *Click*. It slid open easily.\n\nDownstairs, Chloe and Leo moved cautiously through a room choked with overturned furniture and shrouded shapes. Leo kicked aside a moth-eaten velvet drape, revealing a tarnished silver candelabra and shining light from a flashlight he got from Chloe on it. He grunted, pocketing it. \"Worth something, maybe.\" Chloe shone her light towards a far archway leading deeper into the mansion's west wing. \"This place feels... wrong,\" she murmured, her voice tight. \"Like we're being watched.\" Leo scoffed, shining his beam aggressively into the dark archway. \"Just dust and rats.\" But his beam caught something unexpected: a faint, flickering light deep within the passageway. Not the cold blue of moonlight or their flashlights. A warm, orange flicker. Like candlelight. Leo froze. \"What the hell?\"\n\nChloe followed his gaze. \"Benny?\" she hissed, hope flaring. But the light wasn't bouncing. It was steady, moving slowly away from them, deeper into the gloom. A silhouette briefly eclipsed the glow – tall, impossibly thin, draped in something dark that flowed like smoke. Then it vanished around a sharp corner, the candlelight disappearing with it. Chloe gasped, grabbing Leo's arm. \"Did you see that?\" Leo jerked his arm free, his flashlight beam darting wildly across the empty passage where the figure had been. \"Just... dust,\" he insisted, but his voice lacked conviction. It sounded strained. \"Reflection. Or Benny playing tricks.\" He took a step forward, then hesitated, his knuckles white on his flashlight. The oppressive silence pressed in, heavier than before. The air tasted suddenly colder, metallic.\n\nLeo swallowed hard, the sound loud in the stillness. \"It'll be fine,\" he muttered, more to himself than Chloe. He forced another step forward, his boots crunching on unseen debris. \"Probably just one of the others messing around. Zara with a candle or something.\" He didn't sound convinced. Chloe stayed rooted, her flashlight beam trembling slightly. \"Zara wouldn't wander off alone,\" she whispered. \"And that... that didn't look like her.\" The memory of the silhouette – its unnatural height, the way it seemed to absorb the light – sent a fresh chill down her spine. Leo glanced back at her, his bruised jaw tightening. \"So what? We just stand here?\" Contempt with a flicker of unease in his eyes. \"Come on.\" He strode forward, his light cutting a defiant path towards the corner where the figure vanished. Chloe hesitated only a heartbeat longer, the dread coiling in her stomach, before she hurried after him, her own beam joining his in the suffocating darkness.\n\nThey rounded the corner into a narrower hallway. The air felt thicker here, colder, clinging to their skin like damp gauze. The faint scent of mildew was overpowered by something else: a dry, ancient smell, like old parchment and forgotten graves. The flickering orange light was gone. Only oppressive blackness stretched ahead, their flashlights revealing peeling wallpaper stained with ominous dark blooms that might have been water damage... or something else. Leo swept his beam aggressively across the walls, the floor, the ceiling. \"See?\" he rasped, his voice tight. \"Nothing. Trick of the light.\" His beam caught a doorway halfway down the hall, hanging open on rusted hinges. Inside, shadows pooled thickly. \"Probably ducked in there.\" He moved towards it, faster now, as if speed could outrun the crawling dread. Chloe followed, her breath shallow. The silence was absolute, broken only by the frantic pounding of her own heart. No rats, no distant voices from the others. Just the crushing weight of the mansion pressing in.\n\nThen it came. A soft, rhythmic sound drifted from the dark room ahead. *Tap... tap... tap...* Like a fingernail lightly rapping on wood. Slow. Deliberate. Chloe froze, grabbing Leo's arm. \"Benny?\" she whispered, her voice trembling. The tapping paused. Leo swallowed, his bruised jaw clenching. \"Has to be,\" he muttered, pulling his arm free but not moving forward. \"Playing another stupid game.\" He shone his light into the room. It was a small study, choked with dust. An overturned desk, a chair lying splintered on its side, bookshelves sagging under moldering volumes. The beam found nothing moving. The tapping resumed, louder now, sharper. *Tap-tap-tap.* It seemed to come from the far corner, behind the fallen desk. \"Benny!\" Leo barked, stepping fully into the doorway, his light fixed on the corner. \"Cut it out! This isn't funny!\" Chloe hovered behind him, peering over his shoulder. The tapping stopped abruptly. A heavy silence fell, thicker than before. Dust motes danced in the flashlight beams.\n\nLeo took a step into the room, kicking aside a pile of loose papers. \"Alright, rabbit,\" he growled, advancing towards the desk. \"You asked for it.\" Chloe followed reluctantly, her own beam scanning the shadows near the ceiling. Something felt deeply wrong. The air tasted stale, metallic. The tapping hadn't sounded like Benny's playful thumps. It was colder. More... patient. Leo reached the overturned desk, shining his light behind it. Empty. Just crumbling plaster and exposed lath. \"Where the hell...\" he started, turning back towards Chloe.\n\nTap-tap-tap.\n\nThe sound came again, sharp and deliberate, from directly above them. Chloe’s flashlight beam jerked upwards, illuminating the cracked plaster ceiling. Dust sifted down like fine snow. Leo froze mid-step, his own light trembling slightly as he scanned the empty corner behind the desk. The metallic taste in the air thickened, coating the tongue.\n\nBehind them, just outside the doorway, the shadows deepened unnaturally. A figure stood silhouetted against the dim hallway gloom—tall and impossibly slender, draped in flowing black fabric that seemed to absorb the weak light. It held an old-fashioned oil lamp low at its side, the warm, flickering flame casting long, dancing shadows that writhed up the peeling wallpaper. The light caught the curve of a long, slender knife gripped loosely in its other hand, the blade gleaming dully. The figure didn’t move. Didn’t breathe. Its vulpine features, partially obscured by a hooded shawl, remained utterly still, eyes like polished gems fixed on Leo’s back.\n\nLeo spun, flashlight beam slicing through the gloom. He froze, his breath catching in his throat. \"Benny?\" he choked out, a desperate hope warring with primal terror. \"Cut the crap, rabbit!\" His voice cracked. The figure didn’t react. It simply glided forward, silent as smoke, the lamp swinging gently. Leo stumbled back a step, bumping into Chloe, who whimpered, frozen. \"It’s just Benny!\" Leo yelled, the words a shield against the impossible. \"Playing dress-up!\"\n\nThe figure moved. Faster than thought. A blur of black cloth and cold flame. It surged into the room, the oil lamp flaring wildly, casting grotesque, leaping shadows. Leo instinctively raised his flashlight, a clumsy shield. The blade flashed downward, not towards his head or chest, but towards his outstretched hand clutching the metal tube. It was a precise, horrifying arc.\n\nA wet thwack echoed in the small room, sickeningly loud. Followed instantly by Leo’s choked scream – a raw, animal sound ripped from his throat. His flashlight clattered to the dusty floorboards, its beam spinning crazily, illuminating swirling dust motes and Chloe’s frozen face, contorted in absolute terror. Three slender things bounced once, twice, then lay still amidst the debris: the tips of Leo’s middle, ring, and little fingers, severed cleanly just above the knuckle. Blood pulsed dark and thick onto the grimy wood.\n\nLeo staggered back, clutching his ruined hand against his chest, his screams dissolving into ragged, high-pitched gasps. Blood streamed down his forearm, soaking his sleeve. The figure stood utterly still for a heartbeat; its eyes fixed on the crimson pool spreading near Leo’s boots. The oil lamp’s flame danced, reflecting coldly in those depthless pits.\n\nThen Chloe heard it. Cutting through Leo’s agonized whimpers and the frantic hammering of her own heart – a sound that froze her blood. A soft, mournful weeping drifted from the hooded figure. It wasn't mortal. It was high-pitched, keening, like wind whistling through cracked bone. And woven within the sobs were words, faint as cobwebs brushing skin, chillingly clear: \"My children... my vengeance...\" The voice was ancient, filled with a bottomless, icy grief that clawed at Chloe’s sanity.\n\nThe figure lunged again, impossibly fast. The knife flashed towards Leo’s throat – a silvery streak in the lamplight. Leo stumbled sideways, driven by blind terror, crashing into the splintered chair. The blade hissed past his ear, slicing a lock of hair before embedding itself deep into the crumbling plaster wall with a sickening *thunk*. Dust rained down. Chloe reacted on pure instinct. She snatched Leo’s fallen flashlight, its beam still spinning wildly, and hurled it like a club at the figure’s hooded head. It passed through the shadowy fabric with a faint *whoosh*, clattering uselessly against the far wall. The figure didn’t flinch. Its obsidian eyes snapped towards Chloe, the weeping intensifying into a shriek that vibrated the very air. \"Give them back!\"\n\nLeo scrambled backwards on his elbows and heels, kicking frantically, his mangled hand clutched tight against his chest, blood soaking his jacket. His face was a mask of agony and primal fear. \"Go!\" he choked out, spraying blood. Chloe didn’t hesitate. She grabbed the collar of Leo’s jacket with her free hand, hauling him backwards towards the doorway. He scrambled to his feet, swaying violently, his eyes wide and unfocused. They stumbled out into the hallway, leaving smears of crimson on the filthy floorboards. Behind them, the figure remained frozen for a heartbeat, its attention fixed on the knife buried deep in the wall. It reached a long, impossibly thin hand towards the hilt, fingers like bleached bone curling around it. It pulled. The knife didn’t budge. It pulled harder, a low, frustrated groan joining the spectral weeping. The plaster cracked further around the blade, but the steel remained stubbornly wedged. The figure’s hood tilted, its obsidian eyes narrowing in palpable frustration. It braced one foot against the wall, yanking with unnatural strength. The blade scraped against brick beneath the plaster, emitting a high-pitched screech that echoed down the hall, but it stayed lodged.\n\nChloe led Leo past the crooked portrait, the painted woman’s eyes seeming to track their panicked flight. \"Stairs!\" Leo gasped, his voice thick with pain and terror. \"Where… stairs?\" They skidded to a halt at the landing where they’d ascended. Where the grand staircase should have plunged downwards into the relative safety of the foyer, there was only a solid wall. Ancient, faded wallpaper stretched unbroken where the banister and steps had been moments before. Chloe shone her flashlight frantically up and down the corridor. \"No!\" she breathed. \"It was here! Right here!\" Panic clawed at her throat. They were trapped on the second floor. The hallway stretched in both directions, with identical doors lining the walls and vanishing into oppressive darkness. The only sound was Leo’s ragged breathing and the distant, chilling scrape-scrape-scrape of the figure trying to free its knife.\n\nLeo slumped against the impossible wall, sliding down to sit heavily. His face was ghostly pale beneath the sheen of sweat, his lips tinged blue. Blood pulsed steadily from the ruin of his hand, pooling darkly on the dusty floorboards beside him. His jacket sleeve was soaked crimson almost to the elbow. \"Chloe…\" he whispered, his voice fading. \"Can’t… run anymore.\" He tried to lift his uninjured hand weakly towards the hallway. \"Go… find… others…\"\n\nChloe knelt beside him, ripping a strip from her flannel shirt with frantic fingers. \"Shut up!\" she hissed, pressing the makeshift bandage hard against the mangled stumps. \"We’re getting out!\" But her eyes darted wildly down the corridor. The scraping sound had stopped. Silence pressed in, thick and suffocating. Only Leo’s shallow, rattling breaths broke it. The air tasted like cold iron and old dust. Chloe’s flashlight beam trembled across the peeling wallpaper opposite them. \"We need…\" she started, her voice cracking.\n\nBefore she could finish, the wallpaper bulged. Not a ripple, but a sharp, sudden protrusion, like a fist pushing from behind thick, rotten canvas. Plaster dust cascaded down. A hand, impossibly long-fingered and bone-white, shot out with terrifying speed. Its fingers, cold as grave dirt, clamped over Leo’s throat like iron bands. Leo’s eyes flew wide, a choked gasp escaping his bloodied lips. His uninjured hand flew up instinctively, clawing uselessly at the skeletal wrist emerging from the wall.\n\n\"RUN!\" Leo rasped, the word barely audible past the crushing pressure. His eyes, wide with terror and fading consciousness, locked onto Chloe’s. \"GO!\"\n\nThe skeletal hand flexed. With horrifying, effortless strength, it yanked. Leo’s body crumpled like paper, pulled violently into the bulging wallpaper. Plaster exploded outward in a cloud of choking dust and jagged fragments. There was no doorway, no passage – just the wall swallowing him whole. Chloe screamed, scrambling backwards on hands and knees as Leo vanished, leaving only a jagged hole and swirling debris.\n\nShe caught a fleeting glimpse through the dust: Leo sprawled on a rotting wooden floor in a dimly lit room beyond. Towering over him stood the figure from the study. Its vulpine features were fully visible now – sharp, aristocratic, etched with lines of ancient sorrow and chilling fury. It wore elegant, old-fashioned black attire – a frock coat, waistcoat, cravat – all pristine yet shimmering with an unnatural translucence. Its form flickered slightly at the edges, confirming the impossible truth: a ghost. Its obsidian eyes, devoid of pupils, burned with cold fire. The phantom raised its long, knife-less hand, fingers curling like claws. Leo groaned weakly, trying to push himself up. The ghost’s lips peeled back in a silent snarl.\n\nChloe’s scream ripped through the hallway, raw and desperate. \"HELP! SOMEBODY! KAEL! FERN! BENNY!\" Her voice echoed uselessly down the identical, suffocating corridors, swallowed whole by the mansion’s oppressive silence. No answering call came. Only the faint, frantic scratching sound resumed from the study – the trapped ghost still struggling to free its blade. Panic seized her. She scrambled backwards, away from the jagged hole, her feet slipping on plaster dust and Leo’s blood. Her flashlight beam danced erratically across the peeling walls, finding only more doors leading to unknown horrors. Where were the others? Where was the way out? The grand staircase was gone. \n\nThe mansion had shifted, trapping them. Tears blurred her vision as she stumbled down the hallway, choosing a direction at random, driven by pure, animal terror. The ghost hadn't followed, but its presence lingered, a cold draft chasing her heels. She had to get downstairs and continue running to find a way.\n\nInside the hidden room, Leo groaned, consciousness flickering. Pain radiated from his mangled hand, a dull, insistent throb beneath the sharper agony of his bruised throat. He tried to push himself up, his uninjured hand sinking into damp, rotten floorboards. Before he could rise, an unseen force seized him – impossibly strong, impossibly cold. It lifted him bodily off the floor as if he weighed nothing. He cried out, a hoarse gasp, as he was flung violently across the cramped space. His body slammed into a heavy, ornate wardrobe with a sickening *crunch*. Wood splintered, dust exploded into the air, and Leo crumpled to the floor, gasping, ribs screaming. Before he could draw breath, the force seized him again. This time, he was hurled sideways, crashing into a small table. It shattered beneath him, sending shards of porcelain skittering across the floor. He landed hard, tasting blood in his mouth, his vision swimming. The ghostly figure stood silhouetted against the faint light filtering through the hole in the wall, its form shimmering with cold fury. It advanced slowly, deliberately.\n\nLeo scrambled backwards on his elbows, kicking weakly, his back hitting the cold, damp wall. \"Stop!\" he choked, blood bubbling on his lips. \"Please!\" The ghost halted, its head tilting slowly, the rippling surface, its vulpine features sharpening. Its lips didn't move, but the voice slithered into Leo's mind, ancient, brittle, and filled with glacial rage: \"William Becker.\" The name echoed like a tomb slamming shut. \"Thief. Desecrator. MURDERER!!!!! Your bloodline stole what was mine. Stole my solace. My children.\" The ghost drifted closer, its form seeming to solidify momentarily. Leo saw the intricate embroidery on its frock coat, the pallor of its skin stretched taut over sharp cheekbones. \"You bear his face. His greed. His sin.\"\n\nRecognition flared through Leo’s pain-fogged mind. William Becker. His grandfather. The old man who had vanished decades ago whispered about in hushed tones. The one who’d supposedly found \"treasure\" out west. Before Leo could gasp the connection aloud, the ghost surged forward. Its hand, impossibly cold and hard as marble, clamped around Leo’s left ankle. Leo screamed, a raw, animal sound, as the ghost twisted with unnatural, savage force. A sickening *CRACK* echoed off the rotting walls, louder than Leo’s scream. White-hot agony exploded through Leo’s leg, radiating up his spine. His kneecap shattered, fragments grinding against bone and tendon. He convulsed, vomiting bile onto the filthy floorboards, his vision swimming with black spots. The ghost released his ankle, letting the ruined leg flop uselessly. \"Pain,\" the voice hissed directly into his skull, \"is merely the beginning.\"\n\nLeo scrambled backwards with his good hand, dragging his shattered leg, leaving a trail of blood smeared. He grabbed a splintered table leg, swinging it wildly. \"Get away!\" he choked, spitting blood. The ghost didn’t flinch. The crude weapon passed harmlessly through its shimmering chest. It drifted closer, its eyes fixed on Leo’s face. Then, with blinding speed, its hand lashed out. Not a punch, but an open-palmed swipe. Long, spectral fingers, sharp as obsidian shards, raked across Leo’s right cheek and temple. Blood sprayed in a crimson arc, splattering the ghost’s immaculate frock coat and the peeling wallpaper. Leo reeled, a deep, burning gash opening from his hairline to his jawbone. Warm blood poured down his neck, soaking his collar. He dropped the table leg, clutching his ruined face, his screams dissolving into wet, gurgling sobs.\n\nThe ghost’s head tilted, its gaze shifting past Leo’s crumpled form. Its eyes, pools of ancient malice, fixed on a specific point on the damp, moldering wall behind him. A cruel, predatory stillness settled over its translucent features. Without a word, the phantom lunged. It’s cold, incorporeal hands seized Leo’s shoulders with impossible strength, hauling him upright like a ragdoll. Leo screamed again, the sound raw and ragged, as agony exploded from his shattered knee and mangled hand. He kicked feebly with his good leg, but it was useless. The ghost propelled him backwards, driving him towards the wall. Leo’s head snapped back, his eyes wide with dawning horror as he saw his target: a heavy, rusted iron sconce, shaped like a twisted, leering gargoyle, protruding several inches from the wall. Its single, broken horn ended in a jagged, rusted point.\n\n\"No! PLEASE!\" Leo shrieked, thrashing wildly, his fingers scrabbling against the ghost’s insubstantial arms. The ghost ignored him; its expression was detached, glacial fury. It adjusted its grip, hoisting Leo higher. For a fraction of a second, Leo hung suspended, staring into the gargoyle’s empty stone eyes. Then, with a final, brutal shove, the ghost slammed him downwards.\n\nThe rusted iron horn punched through Leo’s lower back with a wet, crunching tear, just below his ribs. It exited messily through his abdomen in a spray of crimson and darker fluids. Leo’s body arched violently backwards, every muscle locked in a horrific spasm. A choked, guttural gasp escaped his lips, thick with blood. His eyes flew impossibly wide, pupils dilating in pure, uncomprehending agony. His limbs flailed wildly, kicking at the air, fingers clawing uselessly at the phantom still holding him aloft. Blood pulsed from the horrific wounds front and back, cascading down the rusted metal and splattering onto the rotten floorboards below in thick, rhythmic gouts. It pooled rapidly, steaming faintly in the cold air, mingling with the dust.\n\nThe spasms intensified, a grotesque, jerking dance, each convulsion driving the jagged point deeper. Then, as suddenly as it began, the violent thrashing ceased. Leo’s body went utterly limp. His head lolled forward, chin resting on his blood-soaked chest. His wide, sightless eyes stared blankly at the spreading crimson pool beneath him. The only movement was the slow, steady drip-drip of his lifeblood falling from the horn's tip onto the floor. The ghost released its grip. Leo’s body sagged, held grotesquely upright only by the impaling spike. A final sigh, more a rattle than a breath, escaped his slack lips. Silence descended, thick and absolute, broken only by the relentless dripping.\n\nThe ghost drifted back a pace. Its vulpine features, etched with ancient sorrow and fury, seemed to soften for a fleeting moment. The cold fire in its eyes dimmed. It raised one translucent, long-fingered hand, gazing at it as if seeing it for the first time. Then, like smoke dispersed by a sudden draft, the figure began to dissolve. The elegant frock coat, the pallid skin, the burning eyes – all shimmered, losing cohesion. The spectral form thinned, becoming insubstantial mist, then faded entirely, vanishing into the cold, damp air of the hidden room. Only the impaled corpse remained, a grisly monument in the sudden stillness, the rusted gargoyle seeming to leer in triumph.\n",
  "writing_bbcode_parsed": "<span style='word-wrap: break-word;'>Crimson Reckoning: Chapter 1<br />By: Mikolai<br /><br />The town square shimmered like a neon heartbeat. Orange string lights intertwined among lampposts, casting long, lively shadows over sidewalks covered with fallen leaves. Fake cobwebs decorated storefronts, sparkling under the flickering glow of jack-o&#039;-lanterns placed on each porch step. A tinny version of Monster Mash played from speakers outside the hardware store, competing with the screams of children running between groups of parents holding thermoses. The air was filled with the scent of damp earth, the burnt sugar of roasted pumpkin seeds, and the sharp smell of cheap face paint.<br /><br />Beyond the square, neighborhoods dissolved into quieter streets. Porch lights glowed amber behind fogged windows, illuminating silhouettes of skeletons swaying in the breeze. Occasionally, a gust of wind sent paper bats taped to windows fluttering wildly. Down Elm Street, Mrs. Henderson&rsquo;s prize-winning scarecrow slumped sideways in her rocking chair, its burlap grin eerily intact. The distant thump of bass from a house party drifted on the chilly air, punctuated by bursts of laughter that faded as quickly as they rose. It was the kind of night where the ordinary felt thin, stretched tight over something older and sharper.<br /><br />They called the town Hollow&rsquo;s End. A name whispered with a shrug and a half-smile by locals. Founded centuries ago where dense forest met stony riverbanks, its history was a patchwork of logging booms, mill closures, and stubborn resilience. Now, it clung to the edge of the modern world, its charm tinged with the melancholy of forgotten things. The river, the Blackwater, coiled dark and sluggish around the town&rsquo;s eastern flank, its surface reflecting the Halloween lights like scattered, broken glass. Folks said the water ran deep there, deeper than seemed possible, hiding secrets under its murky skin.<br /><br />Halloween wasn&#039;t just a night in Hollow&rsquo;s End; it was a reckoning. A collective exhale before winter&rsquo;s iron grip. Every porch became a stage, every stoop a shrine. Generations poured their superstitions and hopes into the decorations. Hand-carved pumpkins, their guttering candles casting wavering light, lined driveways like sentinels. Yards transformed into graveyards with leaning, weathered tombstones bearing names like &quot;R.I.P. Dewey Cheatem&quot; or &quot;Here Lies Maude Lynn &ndash; Took a Wrong Turn.&quot; Fog machines hissed in hidden corners, weaving tendrils of mist around animatronic witches stirring cauldrons that bubbled with dry ice vapor. The air itself tasted of woodsmoke, caramel apples, and the faint, metallic tang of impending frost. It was a night when the veil felt thin, and Hollow&rsquo;s End leaned into the chill, celebrating the darkness it knew so well.<br /><br />Beyond the manicured lawns and glowing windows, where Elm Street dissolved into a rutted dirt track called Old Mill Road, the town ended abruptly. There, swallowed by ancient oaks whose gnarled branches clawed at the sky, stood the Holloway Mansion. Three stories of decaying grandeur, it loomed against the bruised twilight like a broken tooth. Locals called it the Widow&rsquo;s Watch. Built by Elias Holloway, a timber baron obsessed with isolation, its ornate Victorian trim was now peeling paint, revealing grey, water-rotted wood beneath. Most windows were boarded shut, eyes blinded. One upper window, however, gaped open like a dark, screaming mouth. Stories clung to it thicker than the ivy strangling its columns. Elias vanished mysteriously with most of the family and servants. Only his wife, Agatha, lingered alone for decades, seen only at that top window, staring endlessly towards the Blackwater until she simply&hellip; wasn&rsquo;t. Whispers spoke of unnatural cold spots near its sagging porch, of faint, discordant piano notes drifting on windless nights, and of shadows seen moving behind that lone, unboarded window long after Rumor has it the place is haunted and that the family was cursed, which is why they suddenly disappeared. Agatha was buried in the overgrown family plot out back. Kids dared each other to touch its rusted gate; few ever did.<br /><br />Tonight, fueled by cheap cider and the reckless bravado Halloween brewed, six figures slipped away from the town square&rsquo;s neon pulse. They huddled near the skeletal remains of the old mill, the Blackwater gurgling sluggishly beside them. The air here smelled damp, thick with decaying leaves and river mud. Soon, outside of town, they reached Holloway mansion.<br /><br />At the front of the pack stood Silas. Fourteen years old, lean muscle coiled beneath a layer of dense, russet-brown fur that shimmered faint copper under the weak moonlight filtering through the oaks. His amber eyes, slit-pupiled and unnervingly sharp, scanned the looming silhouette of the Widow&rsquo;s Watch ahead. A faded, oversized tricorn hat sat slightly askew on his head, partially covering his short, bristly fur that ran close to his skull. A ragged faux-leather vest hung open over his bare chest, revealing more of that tawny fur, while loose canvas trousers tucked into scuffed boots completed his &quot;pirate&quot; ensemble. He looked less like a swashbuckler and more like a wild creature playing dress-up. A low rumble vibrated in his chest, part anticipation, part instinctive wariness. The mansion&rsquo;s oppressive silence felt heavier than the cider buzz.<br /><br />Beside him, shifting nervously on clawed feet wrapped clumsily in stained gauze, was Rex. Thirteen years old, Rex embodied the lean, athletic build of his Doberman heritage. His fur was a deep, rich mahogany, almost black in the shadows, save for sharply defined rust-colored markings above his intelligent, dark brown eyes. Short, sleek fur hugged his frame, accentuating the sharp angles of his muzzle and the alert pricking of his ears. Tonight, he was a mummy &ndash; or attempting to be. Yards of cheap, off-white gauze were haphazardly wound around his torso and limbs, already snagging on twigs and unraveling near his ankles. A few loose strips fluttered around his neck like a tattered scarf. The costume seemed absurdly flimsy against the mansion&rsquo;s brooding presence. He kept smoothing down the gauze over his chest, his movements quick, birdlike. &quot;You sure about this, Silas?&quot; Rex&rsquo;s voice was a husky whisper, barely audible over the rustle of dead leaves skittering across the dirt track. His gaze flickered towards the mansion&rsquo;s lone open window, a void in the decaying facade. &quot;Old Man Brown said his dog wouldn&rsquo;t go near this place, not even for steak.&quot;<br /><br />A low growl escaped Silas, sharp and dismissive. &quot;Hell no, I ain&#039;t sure,&quot; he hissed, his amber eyes narrowed, pupils thin slits in the gloom. He jabbed a clawed thumb towards the distant town lights. &quot;That cider buzz wore off halfway down Elm Street. This place feels&hellip; wrong.&quot; He shifted his weight, the worn leather of his vest creaking. &quot;Like the air&rsquo;s too thick. Like something&rsquo;s watching.&quot; He scanned the group, frustration warring with protective instinct. &quot;But you jackasses dragged me out here.&quot; As he looks to the others behind him. <br /><br />Beside Rex, Chloe flicked her long, spotted tail impatiently. Fifteen years old, she possessed the lean, whipcord grace of her cheetah heritage. Her fur was a breathtaking tapestry of golden-yellow covered in solid black spots, sleek and close against her slender frame. Large, intelligent blue eyes, ringed with dark tear-lines, scanned the mansion with wary curiosity. A cascade of thick, dark-blonde dreadlocks, woven with tiny fake spiders and glittering purple beads, tumbled past her shoulders. She&rsquo;d gone all out as a witch: a pointy black hat perched jauntily atop her head, a flowing black robe cinched at her slim waist with a silver belt shaped like a serpent, and tall, buckled boots peeking out beneath the hem. She clutched a plastic cauldron bucket half-full of candy. &quot;Oh, relax, Silas,&quot; she murmured, her voice a soft purr laced with forced bravado. &quot;It&#039;s just a creepy old house. Besides,&quot; she added, a mischievous glint in her eyes, &quot;Rex needs someone to hold his hands when he gets scared.&quot; She nudged the Doberman teen, making him jump.<br /><br />Rex bristled, smoothing his gauze again. &quot;I do not need&mdash;&quot; he started, his voice tight.<br /><br />Chloe cut him off with a sharp flick of her tail against his leg. &quot;Please,&quot; she scoffed, rolling her large eyes. &quot;You jumped higher than a startled hare when that paper bat blew off Mrs. Smith&#039;s porch.&quot; She gestured dismissively towards the mansion&#039;s gaping upper window. &quot;It&#039;s just wood and rot. Probably smells worse inside than Rex after gym class.&quot;<br /><br />Silas whirled on her, a low growl rumbling deep in his chest, vibrating the air between them. His fur bristled visibly along his spine. &quot;Knock it off, Chloe,&quot; he snapped, his voice tight and sharp. His clawed hands clenched at his sides. &quot;You&#039;re being a real bitch tonight. We&#039;re all jumpy, okay? This ain&#039;t the place for your crap.&quot; The words hung heavy in the damp air, sharper than the chill. Chloe blinked, her confident smirk faltering for a fraction of a second before she lifted her chin defiantly.<br /><br />Before Rex could stammer out a defense or an apology, a soft, hesitant voice piped up from the back of the group. &quot;Guys? Maybe we should shut up and go in.&quot; All eyes turned to Fern. At fourteen, she was slender and delicate, embodying the fragile grace of her deer lineage. Her fur was a soft, dappled grey-brown, like sunlight filtering through autumn leaves, blending seamlessly into the shadows. Large, liquid brown eyes, wide with apprehension, dominated her gentle face. Long, silky strands of pale blonde hair, almost silver in the moonlight, cascaded down her back, partially obscuring the plunging neckline of her hastily assembled costume. She was dressed as a &quot;sexy nurse,&quot; but the effect was more awkward than alluring: a cheap, too-short white polyester dress strained across her chest, paired with bulky white sneakers and a crooked red cross drawn clumsily on her armband. A stethoscope hung limply around her neck. She shifted nervously, her feet scraping softly on the dirt track. &quot;It&#039;s just an old house. Nothing is going to happen to us.&quot;<br /><br />Silas&rsquo;s growl softened slightly as he glanced at Fern, his protective instincts flaring. But before he could respond, another voice cut through the tense silence, bright and reassuring. &quot;Aw, c&#039;mon guys! It&#039;ll be fine!&quot; The speaker pushed forward, stepping into a sliver of moonlight. This was Benny. Fourteen years old, Benny possessed the lean, wiry frame typical of a rabbit, all coiled energy beneath a coat of plush, snowy-white fur that seemed to glow faintly in the gloom. He stood a head shorter than Silas, with a slim and agile build. Large, expressive eyes, a startling shade of vibrant ruby-red, shone with unwavering optimism beneath floppy, velvety ears that twitched constantly, catching every rustle in the undergrowth. His head fur was short and neatly trimmed, a stark white cap atop his skull. Tonight, Benny embraced the Halloween spirit with gusto, transforming into a truly unsettling figure. He wore a ragged, stained butcher&#039;s apron splattered with disturbingly realistic fake blood over faded jeans. Clutched in one paw was a large, wicked-looking plastic cleaver, also dripping crimson. The pi&egrave;ce de r&eacute;sistance, however, was the mask: a grotesque, grinning rabbit face, disturbingly cheerful despite the peeling paint and cracked plastic, secured tightly over his own features. Only his bright red eyes peered out from the eyeholes, gleaming with infectious enthusiasm. &quot;Seriously,&quot; Benny chirped, his voice muffled slightly by the mask but brimming with cheerful certainty. He gestured grandly with his cleaver towards the imposing mansion. &quot;What&#039;s the worst that could happen? Ghosts? Pfft! We got Chloe&#039;s witchy vibes! Creaky floorboards? We got Rex&#039;s ears! And Silas? He&#039;d bite a ghost&#039;s face off!&quot; He bounced lightly on the balls of his feet, radiating an energy that felt jarringly out of place against the Widow&rsquo;s Watch&rsquo;s oppressive gloom. His unwavering confidence was a stark counterpoint to the group&#039;s mounting dread.<br /><br />Beside Benny, partially obscured by the shifting shadows cast by the skeletal oaks, stood the sixth member of their ill-advised expedition. Her name was Zara. At fifteen, Zara possessed the distinctive silhouette of her hyena heritage &ndash; a slender, almost lanky build beneath a coat of short, coarse fur patterned in striking patches of rich chocolate brown and creamy tan. The fur hugged her lean frame closely, emphasizing sharp shoulders and prominent collarbones. Her face was narrow, dominated by large, intelligent eyes, the color of dark green, currently narrowed with wary skepticism as she surveyed the decaying mansion. Unlike Benny&#039;s flamboyant costume or Chloe&#039;s witchy elegance, Zara had opted for stark simplicity, channeling Morticia Addams with eerie precision. She wore a long, flowing gown cut from heavy black satin that whispered against the dry leaves underfoot. The dress clung to her slender form, plunging dramatically in a sharp V-neckline that revealed the smooth transition of fur to cloth on her chest. Her dark brown fur, visible at her neckline and wrists, contrasted sharply with the fabric. Her short, spiky mane of fur atop her head was slicked back neatly, accentuating her sharp jawline and high cheekbones. Her only adornment was a single, blood-red artificial rose pinned precisely at her shoulder. She stood utterly still, radiating a quiet intensity that felt far more ancient than her years. Her gaze lingered longest on the mansion&rsquo;s gaping upper window, her expression unreadable but deeply focused. She hadn&#039;t spoken since they left the mill ruins.<br /><br />Benny&rsquo;s infectious bravado seemed to thaw some of the tension. Rex managed a shaky grin beneath his unraveling gauze. Chloe snorted, though her earlier defiance seemed slightly muted after Silas&rsquo;s sharp rebuke. Fern offered Benny a tremulous smile. Benny bounced again, cleaver gleaming. &quot;Exactly! Adventure time!&quot; He dug into his own candy-filled plastic pumpkin bucket, pulling out a cheap flashlight shaped like a ghost. Its weak beam sliced through the gloom, illuminating swirling motes of dust and dead leaves. &quot;Light &#039;em up, troops!&quot;<br /><br />Rex fumbled with his gauze-wrapped paws, extracting a sturdy metal flashlight from his own bucket. Its bright, white beam cut a confident path towards the mansion&rsquo;s sagging porch. Chloe produced a sleek purple flashlight from her witch&rsquo;s cauldron, its beam casting long, dancing shadows on the peeling paint. Fern retrieved a small, pink flashlight, its beam trembling slightly as she clutched it. Even Zara moved silently, pulling a slim, black flashlight from some hidden pocket within her satin gown. Its beam was narrow, intense, and unwavering, aimed directly at the mansion&rsquo;s dark, open upper window. Only Silas hesitated, his clawed hand hovering near his pirate-themed bucket.<br /><br />Before Silas could grab his light, a sudden crunch of dry leaves and snapping twigs echoed from the dense thicket behind them. Six heads whipped around, flashlights stabbing erratically into the shifting darkness. Rex yelped, stumbling back. Fern gasped, pressing closer to Chloe. Silas instantly dropped into a low crouch, a deep, warning growl rumbling from his chest, his fur bristling along his spine. His amber eyes, narrowed to slits, scanned the source of the noise.<br /><br />Two figures emerged from the gloom, silhouetted against the faint glow of distant town lights filtering through the trees. The taller one stepped confidently into the overlapping beams of their flashlights. It was Leo, Chloe&#039;s boyfriend. At sixteen, Leo possessed the powerful, compact build of his leopard heritage. His fur was a dense, luxurious tapestry of deep gold, patterned with striking rosettes &ndash; dark, irregular circles outlined in a slightly darker shade &ndash; that flowed seamlessly over defined muscle beneath his sleek coat. Short, velvety fur hugged his frame, emphasizing broad shoulders and a thick neck. His head fur was equally short and neat, framing a strong jawline. Large, intelligent eyes, a startling shade of pale, glacial green, scanned the group with cool appraisal beneath thick, dark lashes. He wore a costume that screamed effortless cool: a battered, dark leather jacket over a plain black t-shirt, faded jeans, and sturdy boots. A silver chain glinted faintly at his neck. He carried no flashlight, his eyes seeming to gleam faintly in the low light.<br /><br />Beside Leo, stepping forward with a quiet presence that felt more solid than the shifting shadows, stood the other boy. His name was Kael. At sixteen, Kael embodied the formidable stature of his brown bear lineage. He stood easily a head taller than Leo, his frame a mountain of dense muscle beneath a thick pelt of fur, the rich, deep brown of wet earth, shot through with subtle reddish-gold highlights where the flashlight beams caught it. His fur was short, coarse, and incredibly thick, lying flat against powerful shoulders, a broad chest, and thickly corded arms. It gave him a rugged, primal solidity. His head fur was equally short and dense, cropped close against his skull, accentuating the strong lines of his jaw and the heavy brow ridge above his eyes. Those eyes were a deep, warm amber, watchful and calm, holding an unnerving stillness. He wore no elaborate costume, just practical, dark cargo pants and a heavy, olive-green canvas jacket left open, revealing a simple grey t-shirt stretched tight over his immense chest. A worn leather satchel hung diagonally across his broad torso. He carried no flashlight either, his large hands hanging loosely at his sides. He simply observed, his amber gaze lingering thoughtfully on the trembling Fern and the bristling Silas before drifting towards the looming Widow&rsquo;s Watch.<br /><br />Silas exploded. He surged upright, knocking his pirate bucket aside on the ground. Candy scattered across the dirt like fallen teeth. His fur stood completely on end, making him seem larger, wilder. Amber eyes, blazing with fury, locked onto Chloe. He jabbed a clawed finger towards Leo, then Kael, his voice a low, dangerous snarl that vibrated in the suddenly frigid air. &quot;Chloe. What the fuck are they doing here?&quot; The accusation hung sharp as broken glass. Every head snapped towards Chloe. Rex flinched violently, his gauze-wrapped paws instinctively curling into fists, his dark eyes darting nervously between Leo and Silas. Fern smiled at the chaos, while Benny was shocked to see the other two.<br /><br />Chloe froze. Her spotted tail lashed once, violently, then went still. Her blue eyes widened slightly, then narrowed into defiant slits beneath her crooked witch hat. She lifted her chin, meeting Silas&#039;s glare. &quot;Leo heard us talking,&quot; she stated, her voice tight, defensive. &quot;He wanted to see the place.&quot; She gestured vaguely towards Leo, who smirked, a thin justification. &quot;Kael&#039;s with him. So what?&quot;<br /><br />Leo chuckled, a low, rumbling sound that lacked any real warmth. He shifted his weight. His green eyes slid past Silas, landing squarely on Rex. &quot;Heard you were heading out here, Rex,&quot; Leo purred, his voice smooth as oiled leather. He took a deliberate step forward. Rex flinched back, a full-body jerk that sent another strip of gauze unraveling from his ankle. His dark brown eyes darted away, fixing on a patch of damp leaves near his foot. His shoulders hunched inward, making his lean frame seem smaller. &quot;Thought you&#039;d be too scared,&quot; Leo added, his tone dripping with mock concern. &quot;Guess you needed Silas to hold your hand tonight, huh?&quot;<br /><br />The silence that followed was thick and suffocating. Rex froze, his breath catching audibly. His gaze snapped back to Leo, wide with shock and humiliation. Chloe stiffened, her knuckles white around her purple flashlight. &quot;Leo&mdash;&quot; she started, her voice tight.<br /><br />Leo cut her off, his smirk widening into a cruel grin. He took another step closer to Rex, invading his space. &quot;What?&quot; Leo drawled, his green eyes gleaming with malice. &quot;It&#039;s true, isn&#039;t it? Everyone knows. Little Rex, always trailing after Silas like a lost puppy.&quot; He leaned in, his voice dropping to a venomous whisper that carried clearly in the dead air. &quot;Pathetic. A fucking fag who can&rsquo;t do anything by himself.&quot;<br /><br />The word hung, sharp and ugly, freezing the damp night air. Rex recoiled as if physically struck, a choked gasp escaping him. His eyes flooded with hurt and shame. Chloe&rsquo;s jaw dropped, her witch hat tilting sideways. Benny&rsquo;s plastic cleaver clattered to the dirt. Even Zara&rsquo;s intense stillness fractured; her eyes widened in disbelief. All while Fern is silently laughing. <br /><br />Silas didn&#039;t think. Didn&#039;t growl. Didn&#039;t hesitate.<br /><br />He moved like coiled lightning released. One moment, he stood bristling; the next, his fist cracked against Leo&#039;s jaw with a sickening thud. Leo&#039;s head snapped sideways, a spray of saliva and blood catching the weak flashlight beams. He stumbled back, eyes wide with shock, a low groan escaping him as he clutched his face. Silas&#039;s candy bucket fell to the ground, scattering candy and knocking over a cellphone out of the bucket, too. <br /><br />Before Silas could surge forward again, Kael moved. Not with aggression, but with startling speed and solidity. He stepped smoothly between Silas and the staggering Leo, one massive hand clamping firmly onto Silas&#039;s shoulder. The grip was like iron, anchoring the furious feline hybrid in place. &quot;Enough,&quot; Kael rumbled, his deep voice cutting through the chaos. His eyes held Silas&#039;s blazing gaze, calm but implacable. &quot;It&#039;s done.&quot;<br /><br />Leo spat blood onto the damp leaves, wiping his muzzle with the back of his hand. His eyes burned with pure hatred as he glared at Silas. &quot;You&#039;re dead,&quot; he snarled, voice thick with pain and rage. He started forward, but Kael shifted his bulk slightly, blocking Leo&#039;s path without a word. Leo stopped, trembling with fury.<br /><br />Fern&#039;s voice cut through the tension yet remained clear. &quot;Stop fighting. We came to explore the house, remember?&quot; Her eyes darted between Silas and Leo, with mischief in them. Benny scrambled to retrieve his cleaver, his ruby eyes wide behind the grotesque mask. &quot;Yeah! Ghosts! Adventure! Less punching!&quot; His forced cheer sounded brittle.<br /><br />Silas still vibrated with fury under Kael&#039;s restraining grip. He wrenched his gaze from Leo&rsquo;s murderous glare to Chloe. His voice was low, gravelly, and deadly serious. &quot;Your boyfriend.&quot; He jerked his chin towards Leo. &quot;He stays the hell away from me. And Rex.&quot; His amber eyes, narrowed to furious slits, locked onto Chloe&rsquo;s defiant stare. &quot;Or I swear, Chlo&#039;, I&#039;ll rip his throat out.&quot; The promise hung heavy, devoid of bluster. Chloe flinched, her witch hat slipping further. Leo hissed something venomous, but Kael&rsquo;s low rumble silenced him.<br /><br />Chloe swallowed hard. Her spotted tail twitched nervously. &quot;Fine,&quot; she snapped, her voice tight. She spun towards Leo, grabbing his leather-clad arm. &quot;Leo, come on. We&#039;ll go explore the other side.&quot; Leo resisted, glaring daggers at Silas, but Chloe dug her claws in, her voice rising. &quot;Now, Leo!&quot; She shot Silas a final, complicated look&ndash;defiance warring with something else&ndash;before forcefully dragging a muttering Leo towards the mansion. Kael watched them go for a moment, his heavy gaze thoughtful, then silently followed, his immense frame disappearing into the deeper shadows.<br /><br />Benny bounced anxiously, his plastic cleaver waving. &quot;Ghosts! Let&#039;s go find ghosts!&quot; He grabbed Fern&rsquo;s hand. &quot;C&#039;mon, Fernie! Adventure awaits!&quot; Fern cast one last glance back at Silas and Rex before allowing Benny to pull her gently towards the main entrance. Zara lingered for a heartbeat longer, her eyes flicking between Rex&rsquo;s hunched form and Silas&rsquo;s bristling fury. Without a word, she turned, her black satin gown whispering against the dead leaves, and followed Benny and Fern towards the sagging front door.<br /><br />The oppressive silence rushed back in as Chloe, Leo, Kael, Benny, Fern, and Zara disappeared through the mansion&rsquo;s gaping maw. Only Silas and Rex remained near the skeletal oak trees, the distant town lights a mocking reminder of normalcy. The air felt colder, thicker, pressing in. Rex hadn&rsquo;t moved. He stood frozen, staring at the spot where Leo had spat blood onto the damp earth. The unraveling gauze around his paws hung loose and dirty. His sleek mahogany fur seemed dull in the weak moonlight filtering through the skeletal branches.<br /><br />Silas&rsquo;s own fury still thrummed beneath his skin, a low, dangerous vibration. He took a deep, shuddering breath, forcing his bristling fur to lie flat along his spine. The sharp scent of damp earth, decaying leaves, and Rex&rsquo;s distress filled his nostrils. He turned slowly, his amber eyes finding Rex&rsquo;s hunched form. The Doberman looked impossibly small, fragile. Silas&rsquo;s protective instincts roared back, sharper than the anger. He took a hesitant step closer, the crunch of leaves under his boot unnaturally loud.<br /><br />&quot;Rex?&quot; Silas&rsquo;s voice was rough, scraped raw from the snarls, but deliberately softer now. He kept his claws retracted, hands loose at his sides. &quot;Hey. Look at me.&quot; Rex flinched at the sound but didn&rsquo;t lift his head. Silas moved closer still, until he stood directly in front of him, blocking the view of the blood-stained leaves. He reached out slowly, not touching, just letting his presence be a shield. &quot;That bastard,&quot; Silas growled, low and fierce. &quot;He&rsquo;s nothing. Filth. You hear me? Nothing.&quot; He paused, searching Rex&rsquo;s downcast face. The silence stretched, thick with unspoken hurt. Silas swallowed, the next question feeling heavier than the mansion&rsquo;s shadow. &quot;Are you okay?&quot; he asked, his voice dropping almost to a whisper. &quot;Getting close... to him?&quot; He couldn&rsquo;t bring himself to say Leo&rsquo;s name. The implication hung in the air: proximity, the humiliation, the violation of Rex&rsquo;s space.<br /><br />Rex finally stirred. His shoulders trembled once, violently. He lifted his head slowly. His eyes, usually sharp and alert, were wide, wet, and utterly shattered. A strip of gauze had unraveled completely, dangling uselessly from his wrist like a dead vine. He stared past Silas, towards the dark porch where the others had vanished. &quot;I...&quot; His voice cracked, a broken rasp. He swallowed hard, his Adam&#039;s apple bobbing. &quot;I just... wanted tonight to be fun.&quot; The words were small, lost. &quot;Not... not this.&quot; He gestured vaguely, helplessly, at the ground, at the air thick with tension and the lingering scent of Leo&rsquo;s aggression. His gaze flickered back to Silas, raw and vulnerable. &quot;Why does he...?&quot;<br /><br />Silas couldn&#039;t stand it. The broken look, the tremor in Rex&#039;s voice &ndash; it sliced through the remnants of his fury, leaving only a fierce, protective ache. Before Rex could finish the agonizing question, Silas closed the distance. He didn&#039;t hesitate. His arms wrapped around Rex, pulling him close and tight, shielding him. Rex stiffened momentarily, a gasp catching in his throat, then melted against Silas with a shuddering sigh, burying his face against the russet fur of Silas&rsquo;s neck. Silas held him fiercely, his own breath ragged against Rex&rsquo;s ear. &quot;Shhh,&quot; Silas murmured, his voice rough but gentle. &quot;He&#039;s nothing, Rex. Less than nothing. Just a homophobic piece of shit spewing garbage.&quot; He pulled back just enough to cup Rex&rsquo;s jaw, forcing the boy to meet his blazing amber gaze. &quot;You hear me? *Garbage*. Worthless.&quot;<br /><br />The moonlight caught the wet tracks on Rex&rsquo;s mahogany fur beneath the dangling gauze. Silas leaned in, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird. He pressed his lips to Rex&rsquo;s &ndash; not tentative, but firm, desperate, a silent promise against the cold night. It was brief, charged with all the fear and fury and fierce affection he&rsquo;d bottled up. Rex&rsquo;s eyes widened, shocked, then fluttered closed as he leaned into the kiss, clutching Silas&rsquo;s pirate shirt. When Silas pulled back, his own breath was shaky. &quot;I love you,&quot; he breathed, the words raw and true, hanging in the frigid air. &quot;I&rsquo;ve loved you forever. And I&rsquo;m so damn tired of hiding it.&quot; He traced Rex&rsquo;s cheekbone with a claw-tipped thumb, his voice dropping to a fierce whisper. &quot;Let me tell them. Tonight. Let me tell everyone we&rsquo;re together. Screw Leo. Screw anyone who doesn&rsquo;t like it.&quot;<br /><br />Rex&rsquo;s breath hitched. His dark eyes searched Silas&rsquo;s face, wide with a mixture of awe and terror. &quot;Silas&hellip;&quot; he whispered, his voice trembling. &quot;Your father&hellip;&quot; The name hung heavy, unspoken horrors lurking behind it. Rex knew the man&rsquo;s cold fury, the way his words could cut deeper than claws. &quot;He&rsquo;d&hellip; he&rsquo;d lose it.&quot;<br /><br />Silas scoffed, a sharp, bitter sound. His amber eyes hardened, the protective warmth around Rex tightening into something fierce and defiant. &quot;My father?&quot; His voice was low, gravelly with contempt. &quot;That bastard spent last year for one week straight, facedown in cheap whiskey while I was burning up with fever. Remember?&quot; The memory was sharp, jagged &ndash; the empty house echoing, the chills wracking his body, the terrifying silence broken only by his own ragged coughs. &quot;He didn&rsquo;t give a damn if I lived or died.&quot;<br /><br />Rex&rsquo;s gaze softened, filled with remembered worry. &quot;I know,&quot; he whispered, his clawed hand tightening on Silas&rsquo;s arm. &quot;My mom... she didn&rsquo;t want me staying over. Said it wasn&#039;t safe.&quot; He looked away, shame flickering across his face. &quot;But... I snuck out. Every night.&quot; His voice was barely audible. &quot;Brought soup. Medicine. Sat with you.&quot;<br /><br />Silas remembered. The haze of fever, the crushing loneliness, then Rex&rsquo;s quiet presence in the dark, spooning lukewarm broth into his mouth, pressing cool cloths to his forehead. His father&rsquo;s absence hadn&rsquo;t just been physical; it was a void Rex had filled. Silas pulled Rex closer, burying his nose in the familiar scent of Rex&rsquo;s fur beneath the gauze &ndash; earth and pine needles. &quot;Exactly,&quot; Silas murmured, his voice thick. &quot;You were there. You! Not him. Not anyone else.&quot; He pressed his forehead against Rex&rsquo;s. &quot;So why should his hate, or anyone else&#039;s, matter more than this?&quot; He gestured between them, encompassing the closeness, the shared breath, the fierce protectiveness thrumming in his own chest.<br /><br />Rex leaned into him, a fragile hope replacing some of the shattered look in his dark eyes. He lifted his head, searching Silas&rsquo;s face. Then, with a sudden, decisive movement, Rex closed the distance. His kiss wasn&rsquo;t desperate like Silas&rsquo;s had been; it was softer, deeper, a deliberate claiming. His clawed hands cupped Silas&rsquo;s jaw, pulling him in. It spoke of trust, of reciprocation, silencing the lingering echoes of Leo&rsquo;s venom. When they finally broke apart, breath mingling in the cold air, Rex managed a shaky smile. &quot;Okay,&quot; he whispered, his voice steadier. &quot;Okay. Tell them.&quot;<br /><br />Silas grinned, sharp and bright. He scanned the oppressive silhouette of Holloway Mansion, where distant flashlight beams flickered erratically behind grime-crusted windows. &quot;They&rsquo;re already lost in there,&quot; he said, jerking his chin towards the decaying structure. &quot;Probably screaming at dust motes.&quot; He turned, his amber eyes catching the faint, warm glow filtering through the trees further down the old mill path. &quot;Screw this haunted hellhole. Let&rsquo;s bail.&quot;<br /><br />Rex tilted his head, his dark eyes still shadowed but clearing. &quot;Bail? To where?&quot;<br /><br />Silas jerked his thumb towards the dense woods bordering the mansion grounds. A faint, warm glow flickered through the skeletal trees, barely visible beyond the mill&#039;s decaying silhouette. &quot;A cabin,&quot; he said, a slow, knowing grin spreading across his face. &quot;My uncle uses it for trapping season and other stuff. Empty now. Keys are...&quot; He patted the worn leather pouch hanging from his belt, hidden beneath his pirate shirt. &quot;Right here.&quot; The implication hung thick in the cold air &ndash; shelter, privacy, escape. &quot;Way better than chasing ghosts or... other assholes.&quot;<br /><br />Rex&rsquo;s shoulders relaxed visibly. A flicker of relief, then a spark of something warmer, replaced the lingering dread in his dark eyes. &quot;My parents,&quot; he murmured, leaning into Silas&rsquo;s side, his voice regaining its usual low timbre. &quot;I told them I was probably crashing at your place tonight anyway. Since your dad wasn&rsquo;t going to be there.&quot; He shrugged, a small, defiant gesture. &quot;They... worry. But they like you. They trust you. Especially after I told them you and I are dating and you started coming to eat dinner with us regularly.&quot; It was a fragile shield against the world&rsquo;s judgment, but it was theirs.<br /><br />Silas snorted softly, a sound devoid of bitterness this time. He bent down, scooping up his overturned pirate bucket. The cheap plastic felt absurdly light after the night&rsquo;s tension. He shook it gently, the remaining candy rattling like tiny bones. &quot;More for us,&quot; he muttered, a ghost of his usual smirk returning. He fished inside, past the scattered sweets, and pulled out his heavy-duty flashlight &ndash; a sturdy metal tube, reassuringly solid in his grip. He thumbed the switch, and a powerful beam sliced through the gloom, illuminating the path towards the woods, away from the mansion&rsquo;s oppressive silhouette.<br /><br />Rex watched him, a tentative smile touching his own lips. He carefully rewound the loose gauze around his wrist, tucking the end securely. The lingering tremor in his hands was fading. He retrieved his own flashlight &ndash; a sleek, black cylinder &ndash; clicking it on. Its beam joined Silas&rsquo;s, carving twin paths of light through the skeletal trees towards the distant, warm glow. &quot;Lead the way, Captain,&quot; Rex murmured, his voice steadier now, laced with a quiet anticipation that had nothing to do with ghosts.<br /><br />Silas didn&#039;t hesitate. He reached out, his clawed fingers finding Rex&rsquo;s, lacing them together. The contact was electric, grounding. Not hidden, not furtive. Deliberate. Rex squeezed back, his grip firm. Together, they turned their backs on Holloway Mansion and its fractured group. Silas kicked aside a stray piece of candy near his boot. The crunch echoed in the stillness as they stepped off the leaf-strewn path bordering the mansion grounds and plunged into the denser woods towards the cabin. The cold air felt cleaner here, smelling of damp earth and pine resin instead of decay and spilled blood. The distant sounds of the town&rsquo;s Halloween revelry were swallowed by the rustling canopy overhead. Only the crunch of their footsteps and the twin beams of light piercing the gloom accompanied them. Silas glanced sideways, catching Rex&rsquo;s profile illuminated in the flashlight&rsquo;s spill. The shattered look was gone, replaced by a quiet determination that mirrored his own. They walked faster, drawn by the promise of warmth and solitude.<br /><br />Inside Holloway Mansion, the air hung thick and stale, tasting of dust, mildew, and something metallic beneath it all. Benny&rsquo;s ghost-shaped flashlight beam danced erratically across peeling floral wallpaper as he bounced ahead. &quot;Ghosties! Where are youuu?&quot; His cheerful whisper echoed strangely down the narrow hallway they&rsquo;d entered through a broken side window. Fern clung to Chloe&rsquo;s arm, her feet scraping on warped floorboards. &quot;Benny, slow down!&quot; Fern pleaded, her voice trembling. &quot;It&rsquo;s so dark...&quot; Chloe didn&rsquo;t answer, her own flashlight beam fixed straight ahead, her jaw set. Leo stalked beside her, radiating simmering fury, one hand pressed gingerly to his bruised jaw. He spat again, the sound loud in the oppressive silence. Kael brought up the rear, his immense frame filling the passageway, his calm amber eyes constantly scanning the shifting shadows beyond their lights. Zara drifted silently beside him, her black gown whispering against the walls, her intense gaze fixed on the darkness ahead.<br /><br />They emerged into a cavernous foyer. Moonlight, weak and distorted, filtered through grime-caked stained glass windows high above, casting fractured colors onto a grand staircase choked with cobwebs. The air felt heavier here, colder. Dust motes danced in their flashlight beams like agitated spirits. Something skittered deep within the walls &ndash; claws on wood. Fern gasped, pressing closer to Chloe. &quot;Just rats,&quot; Chloe muttered, though her voice lacked its usual confidence. She shone her light up the decaying staircase. &quot;This way. The Widow&rsquo;s Watch tower is supposed to be at the top.&quot; Benny cheered, already scrambling onto the first step, which groaned ominously under his weight. &quot;Race you!&quot; he called, darting upward before anyone could stop him.<br /><br />Leo glared after Benny, then spat onto the filthy marble floor. &quot;This place is a dump,&quot; he snarled, his voice thick with pain and resentment. He shot a venomous look back towards the broken front door they&rsquo;d entered through. &quot;Should&rsquo;ve finished that runt.&quot; Chloe flinched but kept her gaze fixed upward. &quot;Forget Silas,&quot; she snapped, pulling her arm free from Fern&rsquo;s grasp. &quot;Benny! Slow down!&quot; She started after him, her flashlight beam bobbing erratically on the sagging steps. Leo hesitated for only a second, then followed Chloe, his own light sweeping aggressively across the peeling walls.<br /><br />Fern whimpered, frozen at the staircase&#039;s base. &quot;I don&rsquo;t want to go up there,&quot; she whispered, her large eyes wide with terror. Kael&rsquo;s heavy paw settled gently on her shoulder. &quot;Stay with me,&quot; he rumbled, his deep voice cutting through the oppressive silence. &quot;We&rsquo;ll find something else.&quot; He nodded towards a shadowed archway leading deeper into the mansion&rsquo;s ground floor. Zara drifted closer, her eyes thoughtful. &quot;The library,&quot; she murmured, her voice barely audible. &quot;Maybe have old maps. Safer than rotten stairs.&quot; Without waiting, she glided towards the archway, her satin gown whispering like secrets on the dusty air. Fern glanced nervously at the staircase where Chloe and Leo were disappearing after Benny, then clutched Kael&rsquo;s arm tighter. &quot;Okay,&quot; she breathed, following Zara into the gloom.<br /><br />Sadly, Benny was already up to the third floor, far from the group. He was a fast bunny after all. His ghost-shaped flashlight beam bounced wildly as he hopped up the final steps, giggling. &quot;Ghosties! Benny&rsquo;s coming!&quot; The third-floor hallway stretched before him, narrower and darker than below. Thick cobwebs draped like ragged curtains, brushing against his floppy ears. Dust coated the floorboards, muffling his steps. He paused, tilting his head. A faint, rhythmic *scritch-scratch* echoed from behind a warped oak door down the hall. Benny&rsquo;s ruby eyes widened behind his mask. &quot;Kitty?&quot; he whispered hopefully, padding towards the sound. The door hung slightly ajar. He pushed it open slowly. Inside, moonlight streamed through a grimy window, illuminating an empty nursery. A rusted crib sat crookedly in the corner. The scratching stopped. Silence pressed in, thick and heavy. Benny frowned. &quot;Hello?&quot;<br /><br />Downstairs, Chloe and Leo reached the second-floor landing. Leo leaned against the peeling wallpaper, gingerly touching his swollen jaw. &quot;That psycho bastard,&quot; he hissed. Chloe shone her light upwards. &quot;Benny!&quot; she yelled, her voice echoing hollowly. Only silence answered. Leo grabbed her arm. &quot;Forget the rabbit. Let&rsquo;s find something fun to do in this dump.&quot; His flashlight beam swept across a portrait hanging crookedly on the wall &ndash; a severe-faced woman in Victorian dress, her painted eyes seeming to follow them. Chloe shivered. &quot;Fine. But we stick together.&quot; They moved deeper into the gloom, Leo&rsquo;s light catching the glint of something metallic discarded near a collapsed wardrobe.<br /><br />Upstairs, Benny stood frozen in the nursery doorway. His ghost-shaped flashlight trembled slightly, casting long, dancing shadows. The room smelled overwhelmingly of dust, decay, and something faintly sweet beneath it all &ndash; like old, dried flowers. Moonlight filtered weakly through a grime-caked window, illuminating motes dancing in the stale air. A rusted iron crib, its paint flaking like diseased skin, stood crookedly against the far wall. Beside it lay a decaying wooden rocking horse, one broken leg dangling uselessly. Its painted eyes were scratched out. Scattered across the warped floorboards were faded cloth dolls, their button eyes missing, limbs twisted at unnatural angles. One doll, its porcelain head cracked, lay face-down near Benny&rsquo;s foot. Thick cobwebs draped from the cracked ceiling plaster like tattered shrouds, brushing against his floppy ears. The silence was absolute, pressing in like a physical weight after the scratching stopped.<br /><br />Benny tilted his head, his eyes scanning the gloom. From deep within the mansion&rsquo;s belly, muffled by layers of wood and plaster, came faint, indistinct sounds: a distant thump that could be Fern stumbling, the muffled echo of Chloe&rsquo;s sharp voice calling his name again, a low rumble that might be Kael. He relaxed slightly, a small smile returning beneath his mask. &quot;Just the others,&quot; he whispered to the empty room, his voice swallowed by the thick air. &quot;Playing hide-and-seek!&quot; He giggled softly, the sound unnervingly bright in the oppressive silence. He took a step further into the nursery, his flashlight beam catching the cracked porcelain face of the fallen doll. Its remaining eye seemed to glint in the light.<br /><br />His beam swept upwards, tracing the intricate patterns of decay on the ceiling plaster &ndash; cracks spreading like dark veins, patches of damp blooming like rotten flowers. Then it caught something else: a large, dark rectangle high on the wall opposite the window. It wasn&#039;t a painting or a mirror. It looked like... a door. A small door, set high up near the ceiling, is barely visible beneath layers of grime and cobwebs. It had no handle, Benny could see, just a simple latch near the top, almost out of reach. Benny hopped closer, craning his neck. &quot;Secret door?&quot; he breathed, excitement bubbling anew. &quot;For tiny ghosties?&quot; He glanced around, spotting a small, overturned stool near the crib, half-buried under dust and shredded cloth. He scrambled over, dragging it beneath the high door. It wobbled precariously as he climbed onto it, stretching upwards on tiptoe, his ghost-shaped flashlight clenched in his teeth. His clawed fingers brushed the cold metal latch. *Click*. It slid open easily.<br /><br />Downstairs, Chloe and Leo moved cautiously through a room choked with overturned furniture and shrouded shapes. Leo kicked aside a moth-eaten velvet drape, revealing a tarnished silver candelabra and shining light from a flashlight he got from Chloe on it. He grunted, pocketing it. &quot;Worth something, maybe.&quot; Chloe shone her light towards a far archway leading deeper into the mansion&#039;s west wing. &quot;This place feels... wrong,&quot; she murmured, her voice tight. &quot;Like we&#039;re being watched.&quot; Leo scoffed, shining his beam aggressively into the dark archway. &quot;Just dust and rats.&quot; But his beam caught something unexpected: a faint, flickering light deep within the passageway. Not the cold blue of moonlight or their flashlights. A warm, orange flicker. Like candlelight. Leo froze. &quot;What the hell?&quot;<br /><br />Chloe followed his gaze. &quot;Benny?&quot; she hissed, hope flaring. But the light wasn&#039;t bouncing. It was steady, moving slowly away from them, deeper into the gloom. A silhouette briefly eclipsed the glow &ndash; tall, impossibly thin, draped in something dark that flowed like smoke. Then it vanished around a sharp corner, the candlelight disappearing with it. Chloe gasped, grabbing Leo&#039;s arm. &quot;Did you see that?&quot; Leo jerked his arm free, his flashlight beam darting wildly across the empty passage where the figure had been. &quot;Just... dust,&quot; he insisted, but his voice lacked conviction. It sounded strained. &quot;Reflection. Or Benny playing tricks.&quot; He took a step forward, then hesitated, his knuckles white on his flashlight. The oppressive silence pressed in, heavier than before. The air tasted suddenly colder, metallic.<br /><br />Leo swallowed hard, the sound loud in the stillness. &quot;It&#039;ll be fine,&quot; he muttered, more to himself than Chloe. He forced another step forward, his boots crunching on unseen debris. &quot;Probably just one of the others messing around. Zara with a candle or something.&quot; He didn&#039;t sound convinced. Chloe stayed rooted, her flashlight beam trembling slightly. &quot;Zara wouldn&#039;t wander off alone,&quot; she whispered. &quot;And that... that didn&#039;t look like her.&quot; The memory of the silhouette &ndash; its unnatural height, the way it seemed to absorb the light &ndash; sent a fresh chill down her spine. Leo glanced back at her, his bruised jaw tightening. &quot;So what? We just stand here?&quot; Contempt with a flicker of unease in his eyes. &quot;Come on.&quot; He strode forward, his light cutting a defiant path towards the corner where the figure vanished. Chloe hesitated only a heartbeat longer, the dread coiling in her stomach, before she hurried after him, her own beam joining his in the suffocating darkness.<br /><br />They rounded the corner into a narrower hallway. The air felt thicker here, colder, clinging to their skin like damp gauze. The faint scent of mildew was overpowered by something else: a dry, ancient smell, like old parchment and forgotten graves. The flickering orange light was gone. Only oppressive blackness stretched ahead, their flashlights revealing peeling wallpaper stained with ominous dark blooms that might have been water damage... or something else. Leo swept his beam aggressively across the walls, the floor, the ceiling. &quot;See?&quot; he rasped, his voice tight. &quot;Nothing. Trick of the light.&quot; His beam caught a doorway halfway down the hall, hanging open on rusted hinges. Inside, shadows pooled thickly. &quot;Probably ducked in there.&quot; He moved towards it, faster now, as if speed could outrun the crawling dread. Chloe followed, her breath shallow. The silence was absolute, broken only by the frantic pounding of her own heart. No rats, no distant voices from the others. Just the crushing weight of the mansion pressing in.<br /><br />Then it came. A soft, rhythmic sound drifted from the dark room ahead. *Tap... tap... tap...* Like a fingernail lightly rapping on wood. Slow. Deliberate. Chloe froze, grabbing Leo&#039;s arm. &quot;Benny?&quot; she whispered, her voice trembling. The tapping paused. Leo swallowed, his bruised jaw clenching. &quot;Has to be,&quot; he muttered, pulling his arm free but not moving forward. &quot;Playing another stupid game.&quot; He shone his light into the room. It was a small study, choked with dust. An overturned desk, a chair lying splintered on its side, bookshelves sagging under moldering volumes. The beam found nothing moving. The tapping resumed, louder now, sharper. *Tap-tap-tap.* It seemed to come from the far corner, behind the fallen desk. &quot;Benny!&quot; Leo barked, stepping fully into the doorway, his light fixed on the corner. &quot;Cut it out! This isn&#039;t funny!&quot; Chloe hovered behind him, peering over his shoulder. The tapping stopped abruptly. A heavy silence fell, thicker than before. Dust motes danced in the flashlight beams.<br /><br />Leo took a step into the room, kicking aside a pile of loose papers. &quot;Alright, rabbit,&quot; he growled, advancing towards the desk. &quot;You asked for it.&quot; Chloe followed reluctantly, her own beam scanning the shadows near the ceiling. Something felt deeply wrong. The air tasted stale, metallic. The tapping hadn&#039;t sounded like Benny&#039;s playful thumps. It was colder. More... patient. Leo reached the overturned desk, shining his light behind it. Empty. Just crumbling plaster and exposed lath. &quot;Where the hell...&quot; he started, turning back towards Chloe.<br /><br />Tap-tap-tap.<br /><br />The sound came again, sharp and deliberate, from directly above them. Chloe&rsquo;s flashlight beam jerked upwards, illuminating the cracked plaster ceiling. Dust sifted down like fine snow. Leo froze mid-step, his own light trembling slightly as he scanned the empty corner behind the desk. The metallic taste in the air thickened, coating the tongue.<br /><br />Behind them, just outside the doorway, the shadows deepened unnaturally. A figure stood silhouetted against the dim hallway gloom&mdash;tall and impossibly slender, draped in flowing black fabric that seemed to absorb the weak light. It held an old-fashioned oil lamp low at its side, the warm, flickering flame casting long, dancing shadows that writhed up the peeling wallpaper. The light caught the curve of a long, slender knife gripped loosely in its other hand, the blade gleaming dully. The figure didn&rsquo;t move. Didn&rsquo;t breathe. Its vulpine features, partially obscured by a hooded shawl, remained utterly still, eyes like polished gems fixed on Leo&rsquo;s back.<br /><br />Leo spun, flashlight beam slicing through the gloom. He froze, his breath catching in his throat. &quot;Benny?&quot; he choked out, a desperate hope warring with primal terror. &quot;Cut the crap, rabbit!&quot; His voice cracked. The figure didn&rsquo;t react. It simply glided forward, silent as smoke, the lamp swinging gently. Leo stumbled back a step, bumping into Chloe, who whimpered, frozen. &quot;It&rsquo;s just Benny!&quot; Leo yelled, the words a shield against the impossible. &quot;Playing dress-up!&quot;<br /><br />The figure moved. Faster than thought. A blur of black cloth and cold flame. It surged into the room, the oil lamp flaring wildly, casting grotesque, leaping shadows. Leo instinctively raised his flashlight, a clumsy shield. The blade flashed downward, not towards his head or chest, but towards his outstretched hand clutching the metal tube. It was a precise, horrifying arc.<br /><br />A wet thwack echoed in the small room, sickeningly loud. Followed instantly by Leo&rsquo;s choked scream &ndash; a raw, animal sound ripped from his throat. His flashlight clattered to the dusty floorboards, its beam spinning crazily, illuminating swirling dust motes and Chloe&rsquo;s frozen face, contorted in absolute terror. Three slender things bounced once, twice, then lay still amidst the debris: the tips of Leo&rsquo;s middle, ring, and little fingers, severed cleanly just above the knuckle. Blood pulsed dark and thick onto the grimy wood.<br /><br />Leo staggered back, clutching his ruined hand against his chest, his screams dissolving into ragged, high-pitched gasps. Blood streamed down his forearm, soaking his sleeve. The figure stood utterly still for a heartbeat; its eyes fixed on the crimson pool spreading near Leo&rsquo;s boots. The oil lamp&rsquo;s flame danced, reflecting coldly in those depthless pits.<br /><br />Then Chloe heard it. Cutting through Leo&rsquo;s agonized whimpers and the frantic hammering of her own heart &ndash; a sound that froze her blood. A soft, mournful weeping drifted from the hooded figure. It wasn&#039;t mortal. It was high-pitched, keening, like wind whistling through cracked bone. And woven within the sobs were words, faint as cobwebs brushing skin, chillingly clear: &quot;My children... my vengeance...&quot; The voice was ancient, filled with a bottomless, icy grief that clawed at Chloe&rsquo;s sanity.<br /><br />The figure lunged again, impossibly fast. The knife flashed towards Leo&rsquo;s throat &ndash; a silvery streak in the lamplight. Leo stumbled sideways, driven by blind terror, crashing into the splintered chair. The blade hissed past his ear, slicing a lock of hair before embedding itself deep into the crumbling plaster wall with a sickening *thunk*. Dust rained down. Chloe reacted on pure instinct. She snatched Leo&rsquo;s fallen flashlight, its beam still spinning wildly, and hurled it like a club at the figure&rsquo;s hooded head. It passed through the shadowy fabric with a faint *whoosh*, clattering uselessly against the far wall. The figure didn&rsquo;t flinch. Its obsidian eyes snapped towards Chloe, the weeping intensifying into a shriek that vibrated the very air. &quot;Give them back!&quot;<br /><br />Leo scrambled backwards on his elbows and heels, kicking frantically, his mangled hand clutched tight against his chest, blood soaking his jacket. His face was a mask of agony and primal fear. &quot;Go!&quot; he choked out, spraying blood. Chloe didn&rsquo;t hesitate. She grabbed the collar of Leo&rsquo;s jacket with her free hand, hauling him backwards towards the doorway. He scrambled to his feet, swaying violently, his eyes wide and unfocused. They stumbled out into the hallway, leaving smears of crimson on the filthy floorboards. Behind them, the figure remained frozen for a heartbeat, its attention fixed on the knife buried deep in the wall. It reached a long, impossibly thin hand towards the hilt, fingers like bleached bone curling around it. It pulled. The knife didn&rsquo;t budge. It pulled harder, a low, frustrated groan joining the spectral weeping. The plaster cracked further around the blade, but the steel remained stubbornly wedged. The figure&rsquo;s hood tilted, its obsidian eyes narrowing in palpable frustration. It braced one foot against the wall, yanking with unnatural strength. The blade scraped against brick beneath the plaster, emitting a high-pitched screech that echoed down the hall, but it stayed lodged.<br /><br />Chloe led Leo past the crooked portrait, the painted woman&rsquo;s eyes seeming to track their panicked flight. &quot;Stairs!&quot; Leo gasped, his voice thick with pain and terror. &quot;Where&hellip; stairs?&quot; They skidded to a halt at the landing where they&rsquo;d ascended. Where the grand staircase should have plunged downwards into the relative safety of the foyer, there was only a solid wall. Ancient, faded wallpaper stretched unbroken where the banister and steps had been moments before. Chloe shone her flashlight frantically up and down the corridor. &quot;No!&quot; she breathed. &quot;It was here! Right here!&quot; Panic clawed at her throat. They were trapped on the second floor. The hallway stretched in both directions, with identical doors lining the walls and vanishing into oppressive darkness. The only sound was Leo&rsquo;s ragged breathing and the distant, chilling scrape-scrape-scrape of the figure trying to free its knife.<br /><br />Leo slumped against the impossible wall, sliding down to sit heavily. His face was ghostly pale beneath the sheen of sweat, his lips tinged blue. Blood pulsed steadily from the ruin of his hand, pooling darkly on the dusty floorboards beside him. His jacket sleeve was soaked crimson almost to the elbow. &quot;Chloe&hellip;&quot; he whispered, his voice fading. &quot;Can&rsquo;t&hellip; run anymore.&quot; He tried to lift his uninjured hand weakly towards the hallway. &quot;Go&hellip; find&hellip; others&hellip;&quot;<br /><br />Chloe knelt beside him, ripping a strip from her flannel shirt with frantic fingers. &quot;Shut up!&quot; she hissed, pressing the makeshift bandage hard against the mangled stumps. &quot;We&rsquo;re getting out!&quot; But her eyes darted wildly down the corridor. The scraping sound had stopped. Silence pressed in, thick and suffocating. Only Leo&rsquo;s shallow, rattling breaths broke it. The air tasted like cold iron and old dust. Chloe&rsquo;s flashlight beam trembled across the peeling wallpaper opposite them. &quot;We need&hellip;&quot; she started, her voice cracking.<br /><br />Before she could finish, the wallpaper bulged. Not a ripple, but a sharp, sudden protrusion, like a fist pushing from behind thick, rotten canvas. Plaster dust cascaded down. A hand, impossibly long-fingered and bone-white, shot out with terrifying speed. Its fingers, cold as grave dirt, clamped over Leo&rsquo;s throat like iron bands. Leo&rsquo;s eyes flew wide, a choked gasp escaping his bloodied lips. His uninjured hand flew up instinctively, clawing uselessly at the skeletal wrist emerging from the wall.<br /><br />&quot;RUN!&quot; Leo rasped, the word barely audible past the crushing pressure. His eyes, wide with terror and fading consciousness, locked onto Chloe&rsquo;s. &quot;GO!&quot;<br /><br />The skeletal hand flexed. With horrifying, effortless strength, it yanked. Leo&rsquo;s body crumpled like paper, pulled violently into the bulging wallpaper. Plaster exploded outward in a cloud of choking dust and jagged fragments. There was no doorway, no passage &ndash; just the wall swallowing him whole. Chloe screamed, scrambling backwards on hands and knees as Leo vanished, leaving only a jagged hole and swirling debris.<br /><br />She caught a fleeting glimpse through the dust: Leo sprawled on a rotting wooden floor in a dimly lit room beyond. Towering over him stood the figure from the study. Its vulpine features were fully visible now &ndash; sharp, aristocratic, etched with lines of ancient sorrow and chilling fury. It wore elegant, old-fashioned black attire &ndash; a frock coat, waistcoat, cravat &ndash; all pristine yet shimmering with an unnatural translucence. Its form flickered slightly at the edges, confirming the impossible truth: a ghost. Its obsidian eyes, devoid of pupils, burned with cold fire. The phantom raised its long, knife-less hand, fingers curling like claws. Leo groaned weakly, trying to push himself up. The ghost&rsquo;s lips peeled back in a silent snarl.<br /><br />Chloe&rsquo;s scream ripped through the hallway, raw and desperate. &quot;HELP! SOMEBODY! KAEL! FERN! BENNY!&quot; Her voice echoed uselessly down the identical, suffocating corridors, swallowed whole by the mansion&rsquo;s oppressive silence. No answering call came. Only the faint, frantic scratching sound resumed from the study &ndash; the trapped ghost still struggling to free its blade. Panic seized her. She scrambled backwards, away from the jagged hole, her feet slipping on plaster dust and Leo&rsquo;s blood. Her flashlight beam danced erratically across the peeling walls, finding only more doors leading to unknown horrors. Where were the others? Where was the way out? The grand staircase was gone. <br /><br />The mansion had shifted, trapping them. Tears blurred her vision as she stumbled down the hallway, choosing a direction at random, driven by pure, animal terror. The ghost hadn&#039;t followed, but its presence lingered, a cold draft chasing her heels. She had to get downstairs and continue running to find a way.<br /><br />Inside the hidden room, Leo groaned, consciousness flickering. Pain radiated from his mangled hand, a dull, insistent throb beneath the sharper agony of his bruised throat. He tried to push himself up, his uninjured hand sinking into damp, rotten floorboards. Before he could rise, an unseen force seized him &ndash; impossibly strong, impossibly cold. It lifted him bodily off the floor as if he weighed nothing. He cried out, a hoarse gasp, as he was flung violently across the cramped space. His body slammed into a heavy, ornate wardrobe with a sickening *crunch*. Wood splintered, dust exploded into the air, and Leo crumpled to the floor, gasping, ribs screaming. Before he could draw breath, the force seized him again. This time, he was hurled sideways, crashing into a small table. It shattered beneath him, sending shards of porcelain skittering across the floor. He landed hard, tasting blood in his mouth, his vision swimming. The ghostly figure stood silhouetted against the faint light filtering through the hole in the wall, its form shimmering with cold fury. It advanced slowly, deliberately.<br /><br />Leo scrambled backwards on his elbows, kicking weakly, his back hitting the cold, damp wall. &quot;Stop!&quot; he choked, blood bubbling on his lips. &quot;Please!&quot; The ghost halted, its head tilting slowly, the rippling surface, its vulpine features sharpening. Its lips didn&#039;t move, but the voice slithered into Leo&#039;s mind, ancient, brittle, and filled with glacial rage: &quot;William Becker.&quot; The name echoed like a tomb slamming shut. &quot;Thief. Desecrator. MURDERER!!!!! Your bloodline stole what was mine. Stole my solace. My children.&quot; The ghost drifted closer, its form seeming to solidify momentarily. Leo saw the intricate embroidery on its frock coat, the pallor of its skin stretched taut over sharp cheekbones. &quot;You bear his face. His greed. His sin.&quot;<br /><br />Recognition flared through Leo&rsquo;s pain-fogged mind. William Becker. His grandfather. The old man who had vanished decades ago whispered about in hushed tones. The one who&rsquo;d supposedly found &quot;treasure&quot; out west. Before Leo could gasp the connection aloud, the ghost surged forward. Its hand, impossibly cold and hard as marble, clamped around Leo&rsquo;s left ankle. Leo screamed, a raw, animal sound, as the ghost twisted with unnatural, savage force. A sickening *CRACK* echoed off the rotting walls, louder than Leo&rsquo;s scream. White-hot agony exploded through Leo&rsquo;s leg, radiating up his spine. His kneecap shattered, fragments grinding against bone and tendon. He convulsed, vomiting bile onto the filthy floorboards, his vision swimming with black spots. The ghost released his ankle, letting the ruined leg flop uselessly. &quot;Pain,&quot; the voice hissed directly into his skull, &quot;is merely the beginning.&quot;<br /><br />Leo scrambled backwards with his good hand, dragging his shattered leg, leaving a trail of blood smeared. He grabbed a splintered table leg, swinging it wildly. &quot;Get away!&quot; he choked, spitting blood. The ghost didn&rsquo;t flinch. The crude weapon passed harmlessly through its shimmering chest. It drifted closer, its eyes fixed on Leo&rsquo;s face. Then, with blinding speed, its hand lashed out. Not a punch, but an open-palmed swipe. Long, spectral fingers, sharp as obsidian shards, raked across Leo&rsquo;s right cheek and temple. Blood sprayed in a crimson arc, splattering the ghost&rsquo;s immaculate frock coat and the peeling wallpaper. Leo reeled, a deep, burning gash opening from his hairline to his jawbone. Warm blood poured down his neck, soaking his collar. He dropped the table leg, clutching his ruined face, his screams dissolving into wet, gurgling sobs.<br /><br />The ghost&rsquo;s head tilted, its gaze shifting past Leo&rsquo;s crumpled form. Its eyes, pools of ancient malice, fixed on a specific point on the damp, moldering wall behind him. A cruel, predatory stillness settled over its translucent features. Without a word, the phantom lunged. It&rsquo;s cold, incorporeal hands seized Leo&rsquo;s shoulders with impossible strength, hauling him upright like a ragdoll. Leo screamed again, the sound raw and ragged, as agony exploded from his shattered knee and mangled hand. He kicked feebly with his good leg, but it was useless. The ghost propelled him backwards, driving him towards the wall. Leo&rsquo;s head snapped back, his eyes wide with dawning horror as he saw his target: a heavy, rusted iron sconce, shaped like a twisted, leering gargoyle, protruding several inches from the wall. Its single, broken horn ended in a jagged, rusted point.<br /><br />&quot;No! PLEASE!&quot; Leo shrieked, thrashing wildly, his fingers scrabbling against the ghost&rsquo;s insubstantial arms. The ghost ignored him; its expression was detached, glacial fury. It adjusted its grip, hoisting Leo higher. For a fraction of a second, Leo hung suspended, staring into the gargoyle&rsquo;s empty stone eyes. Then, with a final, brutal shove, the ghost slammed him downwards.<br /><br />The rusted iron horn punched through Leo&rsquo;s lower back with a wet, crunching tear, just below his ribs. It exited messily through his abdomen in a spray of crimson and darker fluids. Leo&rsquo;s body arched violently backwards, every muscle locked in a horrific spasm. A choked, guttural gasp escaped his lips, thick with blood. His eyes flew impossibly wide, pupils dilating in pure, uncomprehending agony. His limbs flailed wildly, kicking at the air, fingers clawing uselessly at the phantom still holding him aloft. Blood pulsed from the horrific wounds front and back, cascading down the rusted metal and splattering onto the rotten floorboards below in thick, rhythmic gouts. It pooled rapidly, steaming faintly in the cold air, mingling with the dust.<br /><br />The spasms intensified, a grotesque, jerking dance, each convulsion driving the jagged point deeper. Then, as suddenly as it began, the violent thrashing ceased. Leo&rsquo;s body went utterly limp. His head lolled forward, chin resting on his blood-soaked chest. His wide, sightless eyes stared blankly at the spreading crimson pool beneath him. The only movement was the slow, steady drip-drip of his lifeblood falling from the horn&#039;s tip onto the floor. The ghost released its grip. Leo&rsquo;s body sagged, held grotesquely upright only by the impaling spike. A final sigh, more a rattle than a breath, escaped his slack lips. Silence descended, thick and absolute, broken only by the relentless dripping.<br /><br />The ghost drifted back a pace. Its vulpine features, etched with ancient sorrow and fury, seemed to soften for a fleeting moment. The cold fire in its eyes dimmed. It raised one translucent, long-fingered hand, gazing at it as if seeing it for the first time. Then, like smoke dispersed by a sudden draft, the figure began to dissolve. The elegant frock coat, the pallid skin, the burning eyes &ndash; all shimmered, losing cohesion. The spectral form thinned, becoming insubstantial mist, then faded entirely, vanishing into the cold, damp air of the hidden room. Only the impaled corpse remained, a grisly monument in the sudden stillness, the rusted gargoyle seeming to leer in triumph.<br /></span>",
  "pools_count": 1,
  "title": "Crimson Reckoning: Chapter 1",
  "deleted": "f",
  "public": "t",
  "mimetype": "text/rtf",
  "pagecount": "1",
  "rating_id": "2",
  "rating_name": "Adult",
  "ratings": [
    {
      "content_tag_id": "2",
      "name": "Nudity",
      "description": "Nonsexual nudity exposing breasts or genitals (must not show arousal)",
      "rating_id": "1"
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    {
      "content_tag_id": "3",
      "name": "Violence",
      "description": "Mild violence",
      "rating_id": "1"
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    {
      "content_tag_id": "4",
      "name": "Sexual Themes",
      "description": "Erotic imagery, sexual activity or arousal",
      "rating_id": "2"
    },
    {
      "content_tag_id": "5",
      "name": "Strong Violence",
      "description": "Strong violence, blood, serious injury or death",
      "rating_id": "2"
    }
  ],
  "submission_type_id": "12",
  "type_name": "Writing - Document",
  "guest_block": "t",
  "friends_only": "f",
  "comments_count": "0",
  "views": "2"
}