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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 girl leaves her friends behind. Bad move! Everyone knows you don't go alone!\n\nStory:\nChapter 1: https://inkbunny.net/s/3731905\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 girl leaves her friends behind. Bad move! Everyone knows you don&#039;t go alone!<br /><br />Story:<br />Chapter 1: <a href=\"https://inkbunny.net/s/3731905\" rel=\"nofollow\">https://inkbunny.net/s/3731905</a><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 2\nBy: Mikolai\n\nKael pushed open the heavy library doors, the beam of Zara’s flashlight cutting through swirling dust motes. Fern huddled close behind him, her breathing shallow, while Zara scanned the towering shelves, her expression tight with tension. The air hung thick with the smell of decayed paper and damp wood. Moonlight filtered weakly through grime-caked windows, casting long, distorted shadows that seemed to shift as they moved. \"Okay,\" Kael whispered, his voice unnaturally loud in the silence. \"Maps. Ground floor layout. Look for anything labeled 'Architectural Plans' or 'Estate Survey'.\" Fern immediately began scanning the nearest shelves, her fingers trembling as she traced faded gold lettering on crumbling spines.\n\nThe library was vast, swallowing their lights. It spanned two stories, its upper level ringed by a wrought-iron balcony accessible via a spiral staircase choked with cobwebs. Rows of towering mahogany bookcases, like skeletal sentinels, marched into the gloom, their shelves bowed under the weight of forgotten knowledge. High above, the coffered ceiling was lost in shadow, the plasterwork obscured by decades of dust and the intricate webs of unseen inhabitants. Below their feet, the parquet floor was thick with grime and dirt. Zara’s light swept upwards, catching the gleam of the balcony railing. \"It’s like a tomb,\" she murmured, her voice barely audible.\n\nFern moved towards the nearest bookshelf, her flashlight beam trembling over leather-bound spines. \"Architecture... History... Ledgers...\" she read aloud, the words brittle in the silence. Her light flickered across the wall beside the shelf. Unnoticed by any of them, a large, ornate frame hung there, tilted slightly. Inside was a faded sepia photograph: Holloway Town Council, 1867. Stern-faced men and women stared out, their expressions severe. But one face, near the center, was violently defaced. Thick, dried strokes of dark crimson – unmistakably blood – had been slashed across the man’s image, obliterating his features. The nameplate beneath it was scratched but legible: William Becker. A cold draft seemed to coil around their ankles.\n\nZara paused, her light catching the edge of the defaced portrait. She shivered, turning away. \"Leo,\" she whispered, her voice tight. \"He was wrong. What he said to Rex... it was vile.\" She traced a finger along a dusty shelf edge, avoiding Fern's gaze. \"Just... cruel.\"\n\nKael, scanning a shelf labeled *Local Histories*, nodded without looking up. His jaw was set. \"Yeah. Way over the line. Silas shouldn't have hit him, but... Leo asked for it.\" He pulled a heavy ledger free, sending a plume of dust into the air. \"Nobody deserves that crap.\"\n\nFern snorted, her flashlight beam jerking across a shelf of moldering poetry volumes. \"Why not?\" Her voice was sharp, brittle. \"My parents say it's true. That being gay is unnatural. A sickness.\" She shot a venomous glance at the library doors, as if Rex might appear. \"And Rex? He's pathetic. Always clinging to Silas like some lost puppy. Silas only keeps him around out of pity. It's embarrassing.\"\n\nZara turned, her face pale in the flashlight glow. \"Fern, that's—\"\n\n\"What?\" Fern snapped, whirling on her. Dust motes danced violently in the beam of her light. \"True? It is true. Rex is a loser. A scaredy-cat crybaby who trips over his own feet. He only hangs out with other losers like Benny.\" Her voice dripped with contempt. \"Silas could have anyone. He's strong, he's smart, he's... perfect.\" Her tone shifted, becoming almost plaintive. \"He should be hanging out with me. I'm not afraid of everything. I'm not weird like Rex.” She kicked at a pile of loose papers on the floor, sending them fluttering. \"But Silas never even looks at me. Just wastes his time with that... that useless boy.\"\n\nZara stared at Fern, her expression shifting from disbelief to dawning horror. \"Fern... you don't mean that. Rex is—\"\n\n\"What?\" Fern cut her off, voice sharp as broken glass. \"Kind? Funny? Interesting?\" A brittle laugh escaped her. \"He's nothing. A scared little shadow trailing after Silas. And Benny? Benny's a joke. A clumsy, babbling joke.\" She crossed her arms, chin jutting defiantly. \"Name one thing. What is one real thing about Rex or Benny that makes them worth being friends with? Without Silas. Go on. I dare you.\"\n\nZara opened her mouth, then closed it. Her flashlight beam wavered on the dusty floor. Kael lowered the ledger he was holding, his brow furrowed. \"They're... they're part of the group,\" he said lamely.\n\n\"Exactly!\" Fern spat, her voice echoing slightly in the cavernous space. \"They're dead weight. Especially Rex. Always needing Silas to hold his hand, always slowing us down. It's pathetic. And Silas just... indulges him.\" She hugged herself, her eyes bright with a fervent, almost desperate conviction. \"I'm just saying what everyone thinks. Everyone knows Rex is a liability. Benny's just... annoying. Silas would be better off without them hanging around all the time, dragging him down. He deserves better friends. Real friends. Like us.\" Her gaze flickered between Kael and Zara, seeking agreement. \"Wouldn't it be easier if Silas just... stopped? Then we wouldn't have to pretend to like them anymore. We could just hang out, properly.\"\n\nZara recoiled as if struck, her flashlight beam jerking upwards to illuminate Fern's defiant face. \"Fern, that's... that's monstrous. Rex is our friend.\" Her voice trembled, thick with disbelief. \"He's kind, he's funny when he's not scared witless, and he cares about Silas more than anyone. Benny's loyal and tries harder than anyone I know. Just because they're different—\"\n\nA deafening *BANG* exploded from the upper balcony, cutting Zara off mid-sentence. It wasn't a book falling. It sounded like a heavy piece of furniture had been violently overturned. Dust cascaded like grey snow from the ceiling high above, swirling in their flashlight beams. The sound echoed, rolling through the cavernous space, followed by an unnatural, resonating silence that pressed against their eardrums.\n\nKael instinctively shoved Zara and Fern backwards, deeper into the alcove formed by the towering shelves. Zara’s flashlight beam snapped upwards, stabbing into the gloom of the upper level. They froze, hearts pounding. For a moment, there was nothing. Then, faintly, a rhythmic scrape-scrape drifted down. Metal on stone? It was slow, deliberate, coming from somewhere above and to their left, near the spiral staircase. It sounded like something heavy being dragged.\n\nFern’s defiant sneer vanished, replaced by wide-eyed terror. She pressed herself against the dusty books, her earlier venom forgotten. Zara gripped Kael’s arm, her knuckles white. \"Is it... Benny?\" she breathed, barely audible. The scraping stopped abruptly. Silence, thick and suffocating, descended again. Then, a low, guttural moan echoed from the balcony. It wasn't human. It was a sound of profound, ancient sorrow mixed with chilling fury, vibrating through the floorboards beneath their feet. It seemed to come from everywhere at once.\n\nA shadow detached itself from the deeper gloom near the spiral staircase. It wasn't Benny. It plummeted from the upper balcony, landing with a heavy, resonant thud that shook dust from the shelves. Moonlight and flashlight beams converged on the figure. It stood tall, easily seven feet, its form shimmering with spectral translucence. It wore the tattered, formal attire of a bygone era – a high-collared butler's coat, frayed at the cuffs and elbows, over trousers that ended above strangely jointed ankles. But the creature beneath the uniform was monstrous. Its skin was scaled, a deep, iridescent obsidian that drank the light. A pair of large, curved horns swept back from its elongated skull, framing eyes that burned with cold, blue-white fire. A long, powerful tail, tipped with a wicked barb, lashed slowly behind it like a serpent. Clutched in one massive, clawed hand was a weapon – a long, ornate halberd with a wickedly curved blade that gleamed like polished bone. The ghostly butler-dragon tilted its horned head, its burning gaze sweeping over the three teens cowering in the alcove. A low, rumbling growl emanated from its chest, vibrating the air.\n\nThe creature took a step forward, its clawed feet making no sound on the dusty floor. Its tail whipped, cracking like a bullwhip and shattering a porcelain vase on a nearby pedestal. The blue fire in its eyes intensified, fixing on Fern, who stood frozen, her earlier defiance replaced by sheer terror. It raised the halberd, the blade catching the light. Kael reacted first. He grabbed Fern’s arm, yanking her backwards just as the creature lunged. The halberd sliced through the air where she’d stood, embedding itself deep into the mahogany bookshelf with a splintering crunch. Ancient volumes cascaded to the floor in a cloud of dust. \"RUN!\" Kael bellowed, shoving Zara towards the library's main doors. \"Don't look back!\"\n\nThey scrambled, feet slipping on loose papers. The creature wrenched its weapon free with a grating screech, sending wood fragments flying. Its guttural moan deepened into a roar that shook the chandelier above. Fern stumbled, crying out as she almost fell. Zara hesitated, turning back, but Kael was already there, hauling Fern upright. \"Keep moving!\" he gasped. Behind them, the scaled horror glided forward, unnervingly fast, its halberd held low and ready. The cold fire in its eyes seemed to pulse with each stride, casting flickering, monstrous shadows that danced across the walls like demons.\n\nKael spotted the archway he had previously seen, half-hidden behind a collapsed bookcase near the fireplace. \"There!\" He shoved Zara and Fern towards it. They ducked through the jagged opening just as the halberd whistled past, shattering stone where the archway met the wall. They burst into a narrow, pitch-black corridor smelling of mildew and rot. Kael slammed the heavy oak door shut behind them, fumbling for a bolt. There was none. \"Barricade it!\" Zara yelled, spotting a chair nearby. They dragged it, wedging it under the handle as the door shuddered under a heavy impact. THUD. The wood groaned. THUD. Splinters flew.\n\nFern whimpered, backing away down the corridor. \"It's coming through! We have to go!\" Her flashlight beam danced wildly on the damp stone walls. \"This way!\" She turned and bolted into the darkness, her footsteps echoing rapidly away. Zara made a move to follow, but Kael grabbed her arm. His face was pale, sweat beading on his forehead. \"Wait,\" he breathed, his voice tight. \"We can't just run blind. That thing... It's fast. We need a second to think about our next move.\" He pressed his ear against the shuddering door. The impacts had stopped. An eerie silence seeped through the wood, colder than the damp air. Zara hesitated, torn. Fern's light was already vanishing around a distant bend. \"Kael...\" she whispered, fear warring with loyalty.\n\nKael held up a hand, listening intently. \"Shh. Nothing. Maybe it gave up?\" He leaned closer, his cheek almost touching the splintered wood, straining to hear any sound from the library. His breath fogged the cold surface. The silence stretched, thick and suffocating. For a long, agonizing minute, the only sounds were their own ragged breathing and the frantic drumming of their hearts. Kael dared to hope. Maybe Fern was right. Maybe they should just run. He started to pull back, turning to Zara. \"Okay, maybe—\"\n\nTHWUNK!\n\nThe sound was wet, brutal, final. Kael jerked back instinctively, stumbling into Zara as a foot-long section of the bone halberd blade punched clean through the heavy oak door. It missed his temple by less than an inch, spraying splinters and dust across his face. The wickedly curved tip hovered in the air, glistening faintly, mere inches from his eye. Cold, blue-white light seeped through the ragged hole it had torn, illuminating the terror on Zara’s face.\n\n\"Run!\" Kael choked out, grabbing her hand. They spun and fled down the pitch-black corridor, their flashlight beams bouncing wildly off damp stone walls slick with slime. Fern was already long gone, swallowed by the darkness ahead. Behind them, the door groaned under another massive blow, wood splintering with a sound like snapping bones. They didn't look back. They ran, lungs burning, feet slipping on uneven flagstones, driven by the primal terror of the unnatural silence that followed the halberd’s strike.\n\nFern ran blindly, her breath coming in ragged sobs. She’d bolted without thinking, driven by pure panic. Her flashlight beam, a frantic yellow circle, revealed only endless stone corridors branching off into deeper blackness. She skidded around a corner, stumbled down a short flight of crumbling steps, and slammed into a heavy wooden door. Escape! She fumbled for the latch, yanking desperately. It didn’t budge. She threw her shoulder against it. Solid. Unyielding. She pounded on it, screaming, \"Let me out!\" Her voice echoed hollowly back at her. She tried the next door she found, then the next – a pantry, a scullery, a linen closet – all locked or barred from the outside. The mansion had become a prison. Whimpering, she pressed her back against cold stone, the beam of her light trembling across the empty passage. She was utterly, terrifyingly lost. The silence pressed in, heavier than before, broken only by the frantic drumming of her own heart and the distant, chilling scrape of something moving far above.\n\nThen, a sound. Faint. Click. Ahead, a heavy oak door stood slightly ajar. Fern didn’t hesitate. She lunged forward, shoved it open, and threw herself inside, slamming it shut behind her. She leaned against it, gasping, pressing her ear to the wood, listening for pursuit. Silence. Only then did she raise her flashlight and sweep the beam around the room. Her breath caught in her throat.\n\nIt was a child's room. Or it had been. Dust lay thick as snow over everything. A small, ornate rocking horse sat frozen mid-rock near the cold hearth of a large fireplace, its paint peeling. But it wasn’t the horse that held her. It was the dolls. Dozens of them. Maybe hundreds. They filled every available surface – shelves lining the walls, small chairs arranged in a silent circle, even piled haphazardly in the corners. Porcelain faces, cracked and stained, stared blankly into the gloom. Glass eyes reflected her flashlight beam like malevolent stars. Some wore faded lace dresses, others were naked, limbs missing or twisted at unnatural angles. Their expressions ranged from vacant smiles to grotesque grimaces, frozen in eternal, silent watchfulness. The air reeked of decayed fabric, old dust, and a faint, sweet, yet cloying scent, like forgotten perfume turned sour.\n\nAnd in the center of the room, dominating the space, stood the dollhouse. It wasn’t a child’s toy. It was a masterpiece of miniature craftsmanship, easily five feet tall and eight feet wide, a perfect, terrifyingly detailed replica of Holloway Mansion. Fern’s beam traced its intricate rooflines, the tiny turrets, the miniature arched windows, even the crumbling stonework near the foundation. Every brick, every shingle, every windowpane seemed meticulously rendered. The front facade was complete, but the entire back was open, revealing the interior rooms in perfect, eerie scale. She could see the grand entrance hall, the sweeping staircase, the library with its towering shelves – even the spiral staircase leading to the Widow’s Watch. It was unnervingly accurate.\n\nHer light trembled as it moved through the tiny rooms. Dust coated everything inside the dollhouse, too, but it couldn’t hide the unsettling details. In the miniature library, tiny books lay scattered on the floor near a fallen shelf. Near the fireplace, a minuscule chair was wedged under a tiny door. And in the grand entrance hall… Fern’s breath hitched. A small, dark stain marred the tiny parquet floor. Crimson paint? It looked too real. Too wet. Her beam jerked upwards, catching movement in one of the upper bedrooms. A tiny leopard figure, no bigger than her thumb, hanging from a wall near a window. It wore dark clothes. Its tiny face turned away, but one arm was outstretched, fingers curled as if reaching for something. A chill colder than the stone floor seeped into Fern’s bones. Leo?\n\nPanic flared. She swept the light wildly across the dollhouse interior. There. In the replica of the Widow’s Watch tower, barely visible through a tiny arched window, was a figure. Small, clumsy, wearing a familiar serial killer costume. Benny. He seemed to be crouching, peering at something on the floor. Her light darted down. In the second-floor hallway, near a miniature bedroom, another figure. Chloe. Her tiny form was pressed against a wall, frozen mid-step, looking over her shoulder with an expression of terror etched onto her porcelain face. Fern’s beam skittered lower, searching the ground floor. Near the library archway, two more figures huddled together. Kael and Zara. Kael’s arm was outstretched, shielding Zara. They looked trapped, facing the archway they’d just fled through. Fern’s own breath sounded deafening in the silence. Where was she? Her light jerked back to the child’s room replica. There. Huddled against the miniature door, a tiny figure in a nurse costume, flashlight beam rendered as a speck of glittering dust. Watching. Just like she was now.\n\nYet, her figure wasn't alone. A small fox girl in a dress was also there. Fern’s light highlighted the tiny vulpine features and the delicate dress, standing beside her doll with one paw gently resting on its shoulder. The fox girl’s glass eyes seemed to stare directly up at Fern. Then, Fern heard it — a little girl’s laugh. High-pitched, pure, and utterly chilling. It echoed softly through the dust-filled air, as if coming from everywhere and nowhere at once. From the dollhouse itself. Fern froze, her blood turning to ice. The laugh tinkled again, now closer, playful yet cold. It wasn't in her ears; it was inside her head.\n\nThe door behind her creaked. Slowly. Deliberately. Fern spun, flashlight beam slicing through the gloom. The heavy oak door she’d slammed shut was now wide open. The corridor beyond was impenetrably dark. Silence pressed down, heavier than before. The dust motes in her beam danced frantically. She backed away, her shoulders bumping against the cold stone wall beside the monstrous dollhouse. Her breath came in short, sharp gasps. The laugh echoed again, a ghostly whisper skittering across her mind. “Come play with us, Fernie.” The voice was sweet, innocent, and laced with malice. Her light jerked back to the dollhouse. The tiny nurse figure was gone. Vanished. Only the fox girl remained, her painted smile seeming wider, sharper. Her paw now pointed towards the open doorway.\n\nA soft *scritch-scritch* sounded from the shadows near the rocking horse. Fern flinched, swinging her light. Dust motes swirled. Nothing moved. Then, a faint *tap-tap-tap*, like tiny fingernails on porcelain, came from the shelf above her head. She jerked the beam upwards. A row of cracked dolls stared down, their glass eyes blank. One wore a tiny, tattered soldier’s uniform. Its miniature bayonet gleamed dully. Fern froze. Had its arm been raised like that before? She couldn’t remember. Another sound – a dry rustle – from the pile in the corner. Her light snapped towards it. A porcelain head rolled slowly, stopping face-up. Its painted eyes seemed to track her movement. A doll missing both legs lay beside it, clutching a jagged shard of broken mirror like a knife.\n\nThe laugh echoed again inside her skull, sweet and venomous. “Stay and play, Fernie. FOREVER!!!” Fern screamed, a raw sound tearing from her throat. She lunged for the door she had entered, but it closed on her before she could get to it. Fern grabbed the iron ring handle as she pulled with all her weight. It didn’t budge. She slammed her shoulder against the solid wood. It felt like stone. \"LET ME OUT!\" she shrieked, pounding her fists against the unyielding oak. Behind her, a chorus of tiny *clicks* erupted – dozens of tiny porcelain heads turning in unison. The sound was like pebbles rattling in a jar. Fern spun, pressing her back against the door. Her flashlight beam trembled wildly across the room. Dolls were shifting. Slowly. Deliberately. The soldier doll lowered its bayonet, pointing it directly at her. The legless doll dragged itself forward an inch, the jagged mirror shard scraping across the floorboards. From the silent circle of dolls on miniature chairs, one stood up. Its painted smile stretched impossibly wide.\n\nPanic seized Fern. She couldn't go back. She couldn't stay. Her eyes darted towards the fireplace – a dark maw promising possible escape. She bolted, scrambling over piles of discarded toys, kicking aside a stuffed bear leaking sawdust. She reached the hearth, plunging her hand into the soot-blackened recess. Cold ash billowed up. Nothing. No hidden passage, just damp brick. A sharp *ping* sounded near her ear. A tiny porcelain hand, detached from its body, skittered across the mantelpiece like a spider. Fern recoiled, stumbling backwards. Her foot caught on the frozen rocking horse. She crashed to the floor, her flashlight clattering away, its beam spinning wildly, illuminating the advancing dolls in stuttering flashes.\n\nThey moved with jerky, unnatural grace. The soldier doll marched stiffly, bayonet lowered. The legless doll dragged itself forward, mirror shard raised. The standing doll lurched towards her, arms outstretched, fingers curled into claws. Others stirred – heads swiveling, limbs twitching, glass eyes catching the spinning light. A low, collective hum filled the air, like the vibration of countless tiny gears grinding. Fern scrambled backwards on her elbows, kicking frantically at the closest doll. Her boot connected with the soldier, sending it skittering across the floorboards. Its bayonet snapped off. But more were coming. From the shelves, from the chairs, from the dark corners. A doll with cracked cheeks and matted hair crawled down a bookcase like a lizard. Fern screamed again, raw and desperate.\n\nPain lanced through her ankle. She looked down. The legless doll had reached her. Its jagged mirror shard was buried deep in her flesh, just above her shoes. Blood welled, dark and slick. Fern kicked violently, dislodging the doll. It flew backwards, shattering against the stone hearth. Shards of porcelain sprayed. But the wound burned. She clutched her ankle, hot blood seeping between her fingers. Above her, the rocking horse creaked. Fern looked up. Dolls were perched on their saddle, their manes, their frozen runners. One dropped, landing heavily on her chest. Cold porcelain pressed against her throat. Tiny hands, impossibly strong, scrabbled at her skin. Fern gasped, choking, batting at it. More tiny impacts landed on her legs, her arms – pinpricks of pain as sharp porcelain fingers dug in, tearing fabric and skin. The humming grew louder, drowning her ragged breaths. “Stay and play, Fernie.”\n\nFern rolled violently, crushing dolls beneath her weight. Tiny cracks echoed. She scrambled towards the spinning flashlight, kicking dolls away. Her fingers closed around the cold metal cylinder. She swung it like a club. Crack. A doll’s head exploded. Thump! Another shattered against a shelf leg. Porcelain shards flew. But for everyone she destroyed, three more advanced. They ripped her costume, biting through. Needle-sharp teeth pierced her calf. Fern screamed, ripping the doll free and hurling it against the wall. She staggered upright, limping heavily on her bleeding ankle. The soldier doll lunged, its broken bayonet aimed at her knee. She stomped down hard. It crunched beneath her shoe. The legless doll dragged itself closer, clutching another jagged shard. Fern kicked it away. Her beam swept the room. They were everywhere. Blocking the door. Surrounding the fireplace. Climbing the shelves to drop onto her. Only one path remained open: the dollhouse itself. Its open back yawned like a dark cave. Escape? Or trap?\n\nBut before Fern could do anything, a thick, rusted chain whipped out from the deep shadows beside the dollhouse. It moved with unnatural speed, wrapping tightly around her right wrist with a heavy, metallic *clank*. The cold iron bit into her skin. Fern gasped, yanking instinctively. The chain held fast, anchored somewhere in the darkness. Before she could react, a second chain snaked out, coiling around her left wrist with the same brutal efficiency. She was jerked forward, off-balance. Fern cried out, pulling back with all her strength. The chains didn't budge. They were impossibly strong, pinning her arms outstretched towards the shadows. Her flashlight beam, still clutched in her chained right hand, trembled wildly across the floorboards near her feet.\n\nThe dolls swarmed. They surged forward in a wave of cold porcelain and snapping jaws. Tiny hands clawed at her legs, her costume tearing. Needle-sharp teeth sank into her ankles, her calves, drawing beads of blood that stained her white nurse's stockings crimson. Fern screamed, kicking frantically. Her feet crushed a doll wearing a tiny bonnet, scattering fragments. Another crawled up her thigh, its painted face inches from hers, mouth open in a silent shriek. She shook it off violently. But more came. Always more. They climbed her pinned arms, biting and scratching. Pain flared everywhere – sharp pinpricks on her skin, deeper stabs where teeth found purchase. The legless doll dragged itself closer, raising its jagged mirror shard towards her exposed belly. Fern thrashed, desperate, the chains biting deeper into her wrists. The little girl's laugh echoed louder inside her skull, sweet and mocking. “Hold still, Fernie. It's time to play properly.”\n\nNew figures emerged from the deeper gloom near the dark. Not dolls Fern had seen before. These were larger, cruder, cobbled together from broken things. One was a stuffed bear, leaking sawdust, its button eyes replaced with shards of dark glass. It clutched a long, rusted nail like a spear. Another was a porcelain harlequin, its face cracked diagonally, wielding a jagged piece of broken bottle glass. A third, made from twisted wire and scraps of faded velvet, held a small, sharpened bone. They moved with jerky purpose, joining the porcelain horde. The bear lunged first, driving its nail-spear deep into Fern's thigh. She shrieked, the pain blinding. The harlequin slashed her forearm with the glass, leaving a deep, stinging gash. The wire doll jabbed the sharpened bone into her side, drawing a gasp. Blood flowed freely now, soaking her costume, pooling on the dusty floorboards beneath her straining feet. The chains held her fast, an offering to their malice. The tiny porcelain dolls continued their relentless assault, climbing higher, biting her shoulders, her neck, pulling her hair. Fern's screams became ragged sobs. The fox girl doll watched from the miniature room, her painted smile serene.\n\nFern threw her head back, sucking in a desperate breath. \"HELP! SOMEBODY! PLEASE!\" Her voice tore from her raw throat, echoing shrilly within the suffocating confines of the doll room. She screamed Kael's name. Silas's. Chloe's. Leo’s. Even Benny's. \"ANYONE! HELP ME!\" The sound bounced off the stone walls, loud and frantic in her own ears, a desperate plea flung against the oppressive silence. Outside the heavy oak door, the corridor remained utterly dark, utterly silent. No answering no shouting. No pounding footsteps. Nothing. The mansion swallowed her cries whole. The only response was the intensified *scritch-scritch* of porcelain limbs scuttling closer, the low hum vibrating louder, and the cold, mocking echo of the little girl's laughter inside her skull. “Shhhh, Fernie. No one hears you here. Only us.” The fox girl's paw gestured towards the advancing horrors.\n\nFern gasped, choking on dust and despair. Then, she felt it. A small, impossibly cold hand pressed flat against her lower back, right above the waistband of her nurse's skirt. The touch was like ice radiating through her costume. Another small hand, equally frigid, gripped her hip. Then, tiny fingers dug into the fabric of her skirt, finding purchase. Something small and impossibly light began climbing her pinned body. Fern froze, terror locking her muscles tighter than the rusted chains. She couldn't twist to see, couldn't dislodge the climber. The tiny porcelain dolls paused their biting assault, glass eyes gleaming with unnatural anticipation as they watched the ascent. The cold climbed higher. Small feet pressed against Fern's spine, tiny hands grasping her shoulders, pulling upwards. A delicate chin, sharp and vulpine, brushed against Fern's neck. Soft fur tickled her skin. Fern squeezed her eyes shut, trembling violently, tears carving paths through the dust and blood on her cheeks. The scent of decayed roses washed over her.\n\nA soft, childish whisper breathed directly into Fern's ear, chilling the damp skin. \"Shhh, Fernie. Fighting is messy.\" The voice was sweet, melodic, utterly devoid of warmth. \"You wanted Silas so badly? To be perfect for him?\" A cold, wet nose nuzzled Fern's earlobe. \"We can make you perfect. Forever.\" Fern whimpered, a pathetic, broken sound. The fox girl shifted her weight, settling lightly on Fern's shoulders like a grotesque parody of a child riding piggyback. One small, furred arm snaked around Fern's throat in a mockery of an embrace. The other hand rose slowly into Fern's peripheral vision. Clutched in delicate fingers was a shard of glass, long and lethally sharp, its edges catching the trembling beam of Fern's flashlight. It gleamed like frozen midnight. The fox girl brought the point to rest against the soft skin beneath Fern's jaw, just above her frantic pulse. The pressure was terrifyingly precise. Fern held her breath, every muscle screaming, tears blurring her vision. The dolls watched, utterly silent now. The chains held firm.\n\n\"Perfect,\" the fox girl whispered again, her tone almost dreamy. Then, with a sudden, vicious jerk, she dragged the glass shard sideways across Fern's throat. The sound was wet, obscene – a tearing rasp that echoed louder than Fern's choked gasp. Warmth bloomed instantly, shocking in its intensity, flooding down her neck, soaking the collar of her nurse costume. Fern’s eyes flew wide, shock overriding pain for a single, suspended moment. Her flashlight beam jerked wildly upwards, illuminating dust motes dancing like frantic snowflakes. Blood pulsed out in thick, rhythmic spurts, splattering onto the dusty floorboards near her feet, onto the frozen rocking horse, onto the impassive porcelain faces of the watching dolls. A terrible gurgling sound bubbled from the ruin of her throat as she tried, impossibly, to scream. Her body jerked against the chains, a frantic, dying reflex.\n\nThe flashlight slipped from her fingers. It hit the floor with a sharp crack. The plastic casing shattered. The beam died instantly, plunging the room into near-total darkness, broken only by the faint, pulsing glow emanating from the dollhouse windows. In sudden gloom, the dolls began to move. Not to attack, but to dance. A jerky, macabre victory dance. They twirled on broken limbs, tapped cracked heads together, scraped jagged edges across the floorboards in a dissonant rhythm. The soldier doll saluted with its broken arm. The harlequin pirouetted, its glass shard catching the dim light. The sawdust bear lumbered in a clumsy circle. The rustle and scrape and click of their movements filled the silence where Fern’s breathing should have been. Warm blood pooled around her shoes, sticky and dark.\n\nFern’s sight dimmed. The cold chains bit deeper, but she barely felt them now. A deeper cold was spreading from within. Her thoughts fragmented, swirling like dust motes in the vanished light. “Silas.” His name echoed in the hollow chamber of her dying mind. Not Kael, not Zara. Silas. She saw his sharp jawline, his eyes that always seemed to look through her. If he were here… if he had come… he would smash the dolls. He’d break the chains. He’d be strong enough. He would have saved her. The desperate fantasy flickered, an absurd and agonizingly sweet whisper cut through the darkness, inches from her ruined ear. \"Shh, Fernie,\" the fox girl murmured, her vulpine face pressing against Fern's cooling cheek. \"Don't fret. The bleeding stops soon. Then the fun begins.\" Her small hand patted Fern's shoulder, a grotesque parody of comfort. \"You'll be perfect. My new doll. Just like them.\" She gestured vaguely at the dancing horrors. \"Forever quiet. Forever pretty. Forever mine.\" Fern tried to shake her head, a feeble twitch. Darkness swallowed the edges of her vision. The frantic dance of the dolls blurred into shifting shadows. The chains felt distant, unimportant. Only the icy weight on her shoulders and the fading pulse in her neck remained real. ‘Silas...’ The thought was a final, silent plea lost in the void.\n\nThe fox girl sighed, a sound like dry leaves skittering across stone. \"Sleep now.\" Fern’s last breath escaped in a wet, bubbling sigh. Her body slumped heavily against the chains, held upright only by their cruel grip and the small rider on her shoulders. The fox girl tilted her head, observing the slack face, the vacant, staring eyes. She traced a claw-tipped finger along Fern’s jawline, smearing blood. \"Much better,\" she whispered. Then, with unsettling abruptness, she vanished. One moment, the cold weight pressed against Fern’s neck; the next, only the chill remained. The dancing dolls froze mid-twirl, mid-tap, mid-scrape. Their glass eyes dulled. The humming ceased. Silence crashed down, thicker and heavier than before. As if controlled by unseen strings, the dolls turned stiffly. They shuffled, crawled, and rolled back to their original positions. The soldier doll slumped against the baseboard, its broken arm dangling. The legless doll settled back into its corner, the mirror shard clattering beside it. The harlequin leaned drunkenly against the rocking horse. The sawdust bear slumped near the fireplace, its nail-spear dropping from its limp paw. Within seconds, the room looked exactly as Fern had first found it – a tableau of dusty neglect, filled with broken toys frozen in time. Only the thick pool of blood spreading beneath Fern’s dangling feet and the chains holding her corpse upright betrayed the horror.\n\nFern’s flashlight beam, extinguished when it shattered, left the room bathed in the faint, sickly greenish glow emanating from the dollhouse windows. In that eerie luminescence, Fern’s own figure was starkly visible. Her nurse's costume was torn and stained crimson, her blonde hair matted with dust and blood. Her head lolled forward, chin resting on her chest, hiding the ruin of her throat. Her arms remained outstretched, crucified by the rusted chains anchored deep in the shadows beside the dollhouse. Her legs hung limp, one ankle still weeping blood onto the darkening pool below. She was utterly, terrifyingly still. A perfect, grotesque addition to the macabre collection. The stillness was absolute. Not a creak of wood, not a skitter of dust. Even the dust motes seemed suspended in the stale air. The silence pressed in, a physical weight. It was the silence of a tomb sealed shut. The silence of a predator satisfied, its prey secured. The silence of something ancient and cruel settling back to watch, unseen, from the miniature windows of the dollhouse.\n\nThen, movement. Not from Fern, not from the scattered dolls frozen once more. From the dollhouse itself. The fox girl doll reappeared within the tiny replica of the room Fern stood in. She moved with unnerving grace, stepping delicately past miniature furniture coated in dust. She stopped directly before the tiny figure representing Fern – a nurse doll slumped in chains, mirroring the real horror in chilling detail. The fox girl tilted her head, examining the tiny effigy. With a flick of her paw, she nudged the nurse doll’s head upright. Its painted face stared blankly forward. Satisfied, the fox girl turned her vulpine gaze upwards, out of the dollhouse window. Her glass eyes seemed to fix directly on Fern’s lifeless face hanging in the gloom. A tiny, painted smile curved her lips. It was a smile of possession. Of completion.\n",
  "writing_bbcode_parsed": "<span style='word-wrap: break-word;'>Crimson Reckoning Chapter 2<br />By: Mikolai<br /><br />Kael pushed open the heavy library doors, the beam of Zara&rsquo;s flashlight cutting through swirling dust motes. Fern huddled close behind him, her breathing shallow, while Zara scanned the towering shelves, her expression tight with tension. The air hung thick with the smell of decayed paper and damp wood. Moonlight filtered weakly through grime-caked windows, casting long, distorted shadows that seemed to shift as they moved. &quot;Okay,&quot; Kael whispered, his voice unnaturally loud in the silence. &quot;Maps. Ground floor layout. Look for anything labeled &#039;Architectural Plans&#039; or &#039;Estate Survey&#039;.&quot; Fern immediately began scanning the nearest shelves, her fingers trembling as she traced faded gold lettering on crumbling spines.<br /><br />The library was vast, swallowing their lights. It spanned two stories, its upper level ringed by a wrought-iron balcony accessible via a spiral staircase choked with cobwebs. Rows of towering mahogany bookcases, like skeletal sentinels, marched into the gloom, their shelves bowed under the weight of forgotten knowledge. High above, the coffered ceiling was lost in shadow, the plasterwork obscured by decades of dust and the intricate webs of unseen inhabitants. Below their feet, the parquet floor was thick with grime and dirt. Zara&rsquo;s light swept upwards, catching the gleam of the balcony railing. &quot;It&rsquo;s like a tomb,&quot; she murmured, her voice barely audible.<br /><br />Fern moved towards the nearest bookshelf, her flashlight beam trembling over leather-bound spines. &quot;Architecture... History... Ledgers...&quot; she read aloud, the words brittle in the silence. Her light flickered across the wall beside the shelf. Unnoticed by any of them, a large, ornate frame hung there, tilted slightly. Inside was a faded sepia photograph: Holloway Town Council, 1867. Stern-faced men and women stared out, their expressions severe. But one face, near the center, was violently defaced. Thick, dried strokes of dark crimson &ndash; unmistakably blood &ndash; had been slashed across the man&rsquo;s image, obliterating his features. The nameplate beneath it was scratched but legible: William Becker. A cold draft seemed to coil around their ankles.<br /><br />Zara paused, her light catching the edge of the defaced portrait. She shivered, turning away. &quot;Leo,&quot; she whispered, her voice tight. &quot;He was wrong. What he said to Rex... it was vile.&quot; She traced a finger along a dusty shelf edge, avoiding Fern&#039;s gaze. &quot;Just... cruel.&quot;<br /><br />Kael, scanning a shelf labeled *Local Histories*, nodded without looking up. His jaw was set. &quot;Yeah. Way over the line. Silas shouldn&#039;t have hit him, but... Leo asked for it.&quot; He pulled a heavy ledger free, sending a plume of dust into the air. &quot;Nobody deserves that crap.&quot;<br /><br />Fern snorted, her flashlight beam jerking across a shelf of moldering poetry volumes. &quot;Why not?&quot; Her voice was sharp, brittle. &quot;My parents say it&#039;s true. That being gay is unnatural. A sickness.&quot; She shot a venomous glance at the library doors, as if Rex might appear. &quot;And Rex? He&#039;s pathetic. Always clinging to Silas like some lost puppy. Silas only keeps him around out of pity. It&#039;s embarrassing.&quot;<br /><br />Zara turned, her face pale in the flashlight glow. &quot;Fern, that&#039;s&mdash;&quot;<br /><br />&quot;What?&quot; Fern snapped, whirling on her. Dust motes danced violently in the beam of her light. &quot;True? It is true. Rex is a loser. A scaredy-cat crybaby who trips over his own feet. He only hangs out with other losers like Benny.&quot; Her voice dripped with contempt. &quot;Silas could have anyone. He&#039;s strong, he&#039;s smart, he&#039;s... perfect.&quot; Her tone shifted, becoming almost plaintive. &quot;He should be hanging out with me. I&#039;m not afraid of everything. I&#039;m not weird like Rex.&rdquo; She kicked at a pile of loose papers on the floor, sending them fluttering. &quot;But Silas never even looks at me. Just wastes his time with that... that useless boy.&quot;<br /><br />Zara stared at Fern, her expression shifting from disbelief to dawning horror. &quot;Fern... you don&#039;t mean that. Rex is&mdash;&quot;<br /><br />&quot;What?&quot; Fern cut her off, voice sharp as broken glass. &quot;Kind? Funny? Interesting?&quot; A brittle laugh escaped her. &quot;He&#039;s nothing. A scared little shadow trailing after Silas. And Benny? Benny&#039;s a joke. A clumsy, babbling joke.&quot; She crossed her arms, chin jutting defiantly. &quot;Name one thing. What is one real thing about Rex or Benny that makes them worth being friends with? Without Silas. Go on. I dare you.&quot;<br /><br />Zara opened her mouth, then closed it. Her flashlight beam wavered on the dusty floor. Kael lowered the ledger he was holding, his brow furrowed. &quot;They&#039;re... they&#039;re part of the group,&quot; he said lamely.<br /><br />&quot;Exactly!&quot; Fern spat, her voice echoing slightly in the cavernous space. &quot;They&#039;re dead weight. Especially Rex. Always needing Silas to hold his hand, always slowing us down. It&#039;s pathetic. And Silas just... indulges him.&quot; She hugged herself, her eyes bright with a fervent, almost desperate conviction. &quot;I&#039;m just saying what everyone thinks. Everyone knows Rex is a liability. Benny&#039;s just... annoying. Silas would be better off without them hanging around all the time, dragging him down. He deserves better friends. Real friends. Like us.&quot; Her gaze flickered between Kael and Zara, seeking agreement. &quot;Wouldn&#039;t it be easier if Silas just... stopped? Then we wouldn&#039;t have to pretend to like them anymore. We could just hang out, properly.&quot;<br /><br />Zara recoiled as if struck, her flashlight beam jerking upwards to illuminate Fern&#039;s defiant face. &quot;Fern, that&#039;s... that&#039;s monstrous. Rex is our friend.&quot; Her voice trembled, thick with disbelief. &quot;He&#039;s kind, he&#039;s funny when he&#039;s not scared witless, and he cares about Silas more than anyone. Benny&#039;s loyal and tries harder than anyone I know. Just because they&#039;re different&mdash;&quot;<br /><br />A deafening *BANG* exploded from the upper balcony, cutting Zara off mid-sentence. It wasn&#039;t a book falling. It sounded like a heavy piece of furniture had been violently overturned. Dust cascaded like grey snow from the ceiling high above, swirling in their flashlight beams. The sound echoed, rolling through the cavernous space, followed by an unnatural, resonating silence that pressed against their eardrums.<br /><br />Kael instinctively shoved Zara and Fern backwards, deeper into the alcove formed by the towering shelves. Zara&rsquo;s flashlight beam snapped upwards, stabbing into the gloom of the upper level. They froze, hearts pounding. For a moment, there was nothing. Then, faintly, a rhythmic scrape-scrape drifted down. Metal on stone? It was slow, deliberate, coming from somewhere above and to their left, near the spiral staircase. It sounded like something heavy being dragged.<br /><br />Fern&rsquo;s defiant sneer vanished, replaced by wide-eyed terror. She pressed herself against the dusty books, her earlier venom forgotten. Zara gripped Kael&rsquo;s arm, her knuckles white. &quot;Is it... Benny?&quot; she breathed, barely audible. The scraping stopped abruptly. Silence, thick and suffocating, descended again. Then, a low, guttural moan echoed from the balcony. It wasn&#039;t human. It was a sound of profound, ancient sorrow mixed with chilling fury, vibrating through the floorboards beneath their feet. It seemed to come from everywhere at once.<br /><br />A shadow detached itself from the deeper gloom near the spiral staircase. It wasn&#039;t Benny. It plummeted from the upper balcony, landing with a heavy, resonant thud that shook dust from the shelves. Moonlight and flashlight beams converged on the figure. It stood tall, easily seven feet, its form shimmering with spectral translucence. It wore the tattered, formal attire of a bygone era &ndash; a high-collared butler&#039;s coat, frayed at the cuffs and elbows, over trousers that ended above strangely jointed ankles. But the creature beneath the uniform was monstrous. Its skin was scaled, a deep, iridescent obsidian that drank the light. A pair of large, curved horns swept back from its elongated skull, framing eyes that burned with cold, blue-white fire. A long, powerful tail, tipped with a wicked barb, lashed slowly behind it like a serpent. Clutched in one massive, clawed hand was a weapon &ndash; a long, ornate halberd with a wickedly curved blade that gleamed like polished bone. The ghostly butler-dragon tilted its horned head, its burning gaze sweeping over the three teens cowering in the alcove. A low, rumbling growl emanated from its chest, vibrating the air.<br /><br />The creature took a step forward, its clawed feet making no sound on the dusty floor. Its tail whipped, cracking like a bullwhip and shattering a porcelain vase on a nearby pedestal. The blue fire in its eyes intensified, fixing on Fern, who stood frozen, her earlier defiance replaced by sheer terror. It raised the halberd, the blade catching the light. Kael reacted first. He grabbed Fern&rsquo;s arm, yanking her backwards just as the creature lunged. The halberd sliced through the air where she&rsquo;d stood, embedding itself deep into the mahogany bookshelf with a splintering crunch. Ancient volumes cascaded to the floor in a cloud of dust. &quot;RUN!&quot; Kael bellowed, shoving Zara towards the library&#039;s main doors. &quot;Don&#039;t look back!&quot;<br /><br />They scrambled, feet slipping on loose papers. The creature wrenched its weapon free with a grating screech, sending wood fragments flying. Its guttural moan deepened into a roar that shook the chandelier above. Fern stumbled, crying out as she almost fell. Zara hesitated, turning back, but Kael was already there, hauling Fern upright. &quot;Keep moving!&quot; he gasped. Behind them, the scaled horror glided forward, unnervingly fast, its halberd held low and ready. The cold fire in its eyes seemed to pulse with each stride, casting flickering, monstrous shadows that danced across the walls like demons.<br /><br />Kael spotted the archway he had previously seen, half-hidden behind a collapsed bookcase near the fireplace. &quot;There!&quot; He shoved Zara and Fern towards it. They ducked through the jagged opening just as the halberd whistled past, shattering stone where the archway met the wall. They burst into a narrow, pitch-black corridor smelling of mildew and rot. Kael slammed the heavy oak door shut behind them, fumbling for a bolt. There was none. &quot;Barricade it!&quot; Zara yelled, spotting a chair nearby. They dragged it, wedging it under the handle as the door shuddered under a heavy impact. THUD. The wood groaned. THUD. Splinters flew.<br /><br />Fern whimpered, backing away down the corridor. &quot;It&#039;s coming through! We have to go!&quot; Her flashlight beam danced wildly on the damp stone walls. &quot;This way!&quot; She turned and bolted into the darkness, her footsteps echoing rapidly away. Zara made a move to follow, but Kael grabbed her arm. His face was pale, sweat beading on his forehead. &quot;Wait,&quot; he breathed, his voice tight. &quot;We can&#039;t just run blind. That thing... It&#039;s fast. We need a second to think about our next move.&quot; He pressed his ear against the shuddering door. The impacts had stopped. An eerie silence seeped through the wood, colder than the damp air. Zara hesitated, torn. Fern&#039;s light was already vanishing around a distant bend. &quot;Kael...&quot; she whispered, fear warring with loyalty.<br /><br />Kael held up a hand, listening intently. &quot;Shh. Nothing. Maybe it gave up?&quot; He leaned closer, his cheek almost touching the splintered wood, straining to hear any sound from the library. His breath fogged the cold surface. The silence stretched, thick and suffocating. For a long, agonizing minute, the only sounds were their own ragged breathing and the frantic drumming of their hearts. Kael dared to hope. Maybe Fern was right. Maybe they should just run. He started to pull back, turning to Zara. &quot;Okay, maybe&mdash;&quot;<br /><br />THWUNK!<br /><br />The sound was wet, brutal, final. Kael jerked back instinctively, stumbling into Zara as a foot-long section of the bone halberd blade punched clean through the heavy oak door. It missed his temple by less than an inch, spraying splinters and dust across his face. The wickedly curved tip hovered in the air, glistening faintly, mere inches from his eye. Cold, blue-white light seeped through the ragged hole it had torn, illuminating the terror on Zara&rsquo;s face.<br /><br />&quot;Run!&quot; Kael choked out, grabbing her hand. They spun and fled down the pitch-black corridor, their flashlight beams bouncing wildly off damp stone walls slick with slime. Fern was already long gone, swallowed by the darkness ahead. Behind them, the door groaned under another massive blow, wood splintering with a sound like snapping bones. They didn&#039;t look back. They ran, lungs burning, feet slipping on uneven flagstones, driven by the primal terror of the unnatural silence that followed the halberd&rsquo;s strike.<br /><br />Fern ran blindly, her breath coming in ragged sobs. She&rsquo;d bolted without thinking, driven by pure panic. Her flashlight beam, a frantic yellow circle, revealed only endless stone corridors branching off into deeper blackness. She skidded around a corner, stumbled down a short flight of crumbling steps, and slammed into a heavy wooden door. Escape! She fumbled for the latch, yanking desperately. It didn&rsquo;t budge. She threw her shoulder against it. Solid. Unyielding. She pounded on it, screaming, &quot;Let me out!&quot; Her voice echoed hollowly back at her. She tried the next door she found, then the next &ndash; a pantry, a scullery, a linen closet &ndash; all locked or barred from the outside. The mansion had become a prison. Whimpering, she pressed her back against cold stone, the beam of her light trembling across the empty passage. She was utterly, terrifyingly lost. The silence pressed in, heavier than before, broken only by the frantic drumming of her own heart and the distant, chilling scrape of something moving far above.<br /><br />Then, a sound. Faint. Click. Ahead, a heavy oak door stood slightly ajar. Fern didn&rsquo;t hesitate. She lunged forward, shoved it open, and threw herself inside, slamming it shut behind her. She leaned against it, gasping, pressing her ear to the wood, listening for pursuit. Silence. Only then did she raise her flashlight and sweep the beam around the room. Her breath caught in her throat.<br /><br />It was a child&#039;s room. Or it had been. Dust lay thick as snow over everything. A small, ornate rocking horse sat frozen mid-rock near the cold hearth of a large fireplace, its paint peeling. But it wasn&rsquo;t the horse that held her. It was the dolls. Dozens of them. Maybe hundreds. They filled every available surface &ndash; shelves lining the walls, small chairs arranged in a silent circle, even piled haphazardly in the corners. Porcelain faces, cracked and stained, stared blankly into the gloom. Glass eyes reflected her flashlight beam like malevolent stars. Some wore faded lace dresses, others were naked, limbs missing or twisted at unnatural angles. Their expressions ranged from vacant smiles to grotesque grimaces, frozen in eternal, silent watchfulness. The air reeked of decayed fabric, old dust, and a faint, sweet, yet cloying scent, like forgotten perfume turned sour.<br /><br />And in the center of the room, dominating the space, stood the dollhouse. It wasn&rsquo;t a child&rsquo;s toy. It was a masterpiece of miniature craftsmanship, easily five feet tall and eight feet wide, a perfect, terrifyingly detailed replica of Holloway Mansion. Fern&rsquo;s beam traced its intricate rooflines, the tiny turrets, the miniature arched windows, even the crumbling stonework near the foundation. Every brick, every shingle, every windowpane seemed meticulously rendered. The front facade was complete, but the entire back was open, revealing the interior rooms in perfect, eerie scale. She could see the grand entrance hall, the sweeping staircase, the library with its towering shelves &ndash; even the spiral staircase leading to the Widow&rsquo;s Watch. It was unnervingly accurate.<br /><br />Her light trembled as it moved through the tiny rooms. Dust coated everything inside the dollhouse, too, but it couldn&rsquo;t hide the unsettling details. In the miniature library, tiny books lay scattered on the floor near a fallen shelf. Near the fireplace, a minuscule chair was wedged under a tiny door. And in the grand entrance hall&hellip; Fern&rsquo;s breath hitched. A small, dark stain marred the tiny parquet floor. Crimson paint? It looked too real. Too wet. Her beam jerked upwards, catching movement in one of the upper bedrooms. A tiny leopard figure, no bigger than her thumb, hanging from a wall near a window. It wore dark clothes. Its tiny face turned away, but one arm was outstretched, fingers curled as if reaching for something. A chill colder than the stone floor seeped into Fern&rsquo;s bones. Leo?<br /><br />Panic flared. She swept the light wildly across the dollhouse interior. There. In the replica of the Widow&rsquo;s Watch tower, barely visible through a tiny arched window, was a figure. Small, clumsy, wearing a familiar serial killer costume. Benny. He seemed to be crouching, peering at something on the floor. Her light darted down. In the second-floor hallway, near a miniature bedroom, another figure. Chloe. Her tiny form was pressed against a wall, frozen mid-step, looking over her shoulder with an expression of terror etched onto her porcelain face. Fern&rsquo;s beam skittered lower, searching the ground floor. Near the library archway, two more figures huddled together. Kael and Zara. Kael&rsquo;s arm was outstretched, shielding Zara. They looked trapped, facing the archway they&rsquo;d just fled through. Fern&rsquo;s own breath sounded deafening in the silence. Where was she? Her light jerked back to the child&rsquo;s room replica. There. Huddled against the miniature door, a tiny figure in a nurse costume, flashlight beam rendered as a speck of glittering dust. Watching. Just like she was now.<br /><br />Yet, her figure wasn&#039;t alone. A small fox girl in a dress was also there. Fern&rsquo;s light highlighted the tiny vulpine features and the delicate dress, standing beside her doll with one paw gently resting on its shoulder. The fox girl&rsquo;s glass eyes seemed to stare directly up at Fern. Then, Fern heard it &mdash; a little girl&rsquo;s laugh. High-pitched, pure, and utterly chilling. It echoed softly through the dust-filled air, as if coming from everywhere and nowhere at once. From the dollhouse itself. Fern froze, her blood turning to ice. The laugh tinkled again, now closer, playful yet cold. It wasn&#039;t in her ears; it was inside her head.<br /><br />The door behind her creaked. Slowly. Deliberately. Fern spun, flashlight beam slicing through the gloom. The heavy oak door she&rsquo;d slammed shut was now wide open. The corridor beyond was impenetrably dark. Silence pressed down, heavier than before. The dust motes in her beam danced frantically. She backed away, her shoulders bumping against the cold stone wall beside the monstrous dollhouse. Her breath came in short, sharp gasps. The laugh echoed again, a ghostly whisper skittering across her mind. &ldquo;Come play with us, Fernie.&rdquo; The voice was sweet, innocent, and laced with malice. Her light jerked back to the dollhouse. The tiny nurse figure was gone. Vanished. Only the fox girl remained, her painted smile seeming wider, sharper. Her paw now pointed towards the open doorway.<br /><br />A soft *scritch-scritch* sounded from the shadows near the rocking horse. Fern flinched, swinging her light. Dust motes swirled. Nothing moved. Then, a faint *tap-tap-tap*, like tiny fingernails on porcelain, came from the shelf above her head. She jerked the beam upwards. A row of cracked dolls stared down, their glass eyes blank. One wore a tiny, tattered soldier&rsquo;s uniform. Its miniature bayonet gleamed dully. Fern froze. Had its arm been raised like that before? She couldn&rsquo;t remember. Another sound &ndash; a dry rustle &ndash; from the pile in the corner. Her light snapped towards it. A porcelain head rolled slowly, stopping face-up. Its painted eyes seemed to track her movement. A doll missing both legs lay beside it, clutching a jagged shard of broken mirror like a knife.<br /><br />The laugh echoed again inside her skull, sweet and venomous. &ldquo;Stay and play, Fernie. FOREVER!!!&rdquo; Fern screamed, a raw sound tearing from her throat. She lunged for the door she had entered, but it closed on her before she could get to it. Fern grabbed the iron ring handle as she pulled with all her weight. It didn&rsquo;t budge. She slammed her shoulder against the solid wood. It felt like stone. &quot;LET ME OUT!&quot; she shrieked, pounding her fists against the unyielding oak. Behind her, a chorus of tiny *clicks* erupted &ndash; dozens of tiny porcelain heads turning in unison. The sound was like pebbles rattling in a jar. Fern spun, pressing her back against the door. Her flashlight beam trembled wildly across the room. Dolls were shifting. Slowly. Deliberately. The soldier doll lowered its bayonet, pointing it directly at her. The legless doll dragged itself forward an inch, the jagged mirror shard scraping across the floorboards. From the silent circle of dolls on miniature chairs, one stood up. Its painted smile stretched impossibly wide.<br /><br />Panic seized Fern. She couldn&#039;t go back. She couldn&#039;t stay. Her eyes darted towards the fireplace &ndash; a dark maw promising possible escape. She bolted, scrambling over piles of discarded toys, kicking aside a stuffed bear leaking sawdust. She reached the hearth, plunging her hand into the soot-blackened recess. Cold ash billowed up. Nothing. No hidden passage, just damp brick. A sharp *ping* sounded near her ear. A tiny porcelain hand, detached from its body, skittered across the mantelpiece like a spider. Fern recoiled, stumbling backwards. Her foot caught on the frozen rocking horse. She crashed to the floor, her flashlight clattering away, its beam spinning wildly, illuminating the advancing dolls in stuttering flashes.<br /><br />They moved with jerky, unnatural grace. The soldier doll marched stiffly, bayonet lowered. The legless doll dragged itself forward, mirror shard raised. The standing doll lurched towards her, arms outstretched, fingers curled into claws. Others stirred &ndash; heads swiveling, limbs twitching, glass eyes catching the spinning light. A low, collective hum filled the air, like the vibration of countless tiny gears grinding. Fern scrambled backwards on her elbows, kicking frantically at the closest doll. Her boot connected with the soldier, sending it skittering across the floorboards. Its bayonet snapped off. But more were coming. From the shelves, from the chairs, from the dark corners. A doll with cracked cheeks and matted hair crawled down a bookcase like a lizard. Fern screamed again, raw and desperate.<br /><br />Pain lanced through her ankle. She looked down. The legless doll had reached her. Its jagged mirror shard was buried deep in her flesh, just above her shoes. Blood welled, dark and slick. Fern kicked violently, dislodging the doll. It flew backwards, shattering against the stone hearth. Shards of porcelain sprayed. But the wound burned. She clutched her ankle, hot blood seeping between her fingers. Above her, the rocking horse creaked. Fern looked up. Dolls were perched on their saddle, their manes, their frozen runners. One dropped, landing heavily on her chest. Cold porcelain pressed against her throat. Tiny hands, impossibly strong, scrabbled at her skin. Fern gasped, choking, batting at it. More tiny impacts landed on her legs, her arms &ndash; pinpricks of pain as sharp porcelain fingers dug in, tearing fabric and skin. The humming grew louder, drowning her ragged breaths. &ldquo;Stay and play, Fernie.&rdquo;<br /><br />Fern rolled violently, crushing dolls beneath her weight. Tiny cracks echoed. She scrambled towards the spinning flashlight, kicking dolls away. Her fingers closed around the cold metal cylinder. She swung it like a club. Crack. A doll&rsquo;s head exploded. Thump! Another shattered against a shelf leg. Porcelain shards flew. But for everyone she destroyed, three more advanced. They ripped her costume, biting through. Needle-sharp teeth pierced her calf. Fern screamed, ripping the doll free and hurling it against the wall. She staggered upright, limping heavily on her bleeding ankle. The soldier doll lunged, its broken bayonet aimed at her knee. She stomped down hard. It crunched beneath her shoe. The legless doll dragged itself closer, clutching another jagged shard. Fern kicked it away. Her beam swept the room. They were everywhere. Blocking the door. Surrounding the fireplace. Climbing the shelves to drop onto her. Only one path remained open: the dollhouse itself. Its open back yawned like a dark cave. Escape? Or trap?<br /><br />But before Fern could do anything, a thick, rusted chain whipped out from the deep shadows beside the dollhouse. It moved with unnatural speed, wrapping tightly around her right wrist with a heavy, metallic *clank*. The cold iron bit into her skin. Fern gasped, yanking instinctively. The chain held fast, anchored somewhere in the darkness. Before she could react, a second chain snaked out, coiling around her left wrist with the same brutal efficiency. She was jerked forward, off-balance. Fern cried out, pulling back with all her strength. The chains didn&#039;t budge. They were impossibly strong, pinning her arms outstretched towards the shadows. Her flashlight beam, still clutched in her chained right hand, trembled wildly across the floorboards near her feet.<br /><br />The dolls swarmed. They surged forward in a wave of cold porcelain and snapping jaws. Tiny hands clawed at her legs, her costume tearing. Needle-sharp teeth sank into her ankles, her calves, drawing beads of blood that stained her white nurse&#039;s stockings crimson. Fern screamed, kicking frantically. Her feet crushed a doll wearing a tiny bonnet, scattering fragments. Another crawled up her thigh, its painted face inches from hers, mouth open in a silent shriek. She shook it off violently. But more came. Always more. They climbed her pinned arms, biting and scratching. Pain flared everywhere &ndash; sharp pinpricks on her skin, deeper stabs where teeth found purchase. The legless doll dragged itself closer, raising its jagged mirror shard towards her exposed belly. Fern thrashed, desperate, the chains biting deeper into her wrists. The little girl&#039;s laugh echoed louder inside her skull, sweet and mocking. &ldquo;Hold still, Fernie. It&#039;s time to play properly.&rdquo;<br /><br />New figures emerged from the deeper gloom near the dark. Not dolls Fern had seen before. These were larger, cruder, cobbled together from broken things. One was a stuffed bear, leaking sawdust, its button eyes replaced with shards of dark glass. It clutched a long, rusted nail like a spear. Another was a porcelain harlequin, its face cracked diagonally, wielding a jagged piece of broken bottle glass. A third, made from twisted wire and scraps of faded velvet, held a small, sharpened bone. They moved with jerky purpose, joining the porcelain horde. The bear lunged first, driving its nail-spear deep into Fern&#039;s thigh. She shrieked, the pain blinding. The harlequin slashed her forearm with the glass, leaving a deep, stinging gash. The wire doll jabbed the sharpened bone into her side, drawing a gasp. Blood flowed freely now, soaking her costume, pooling on the dusty floorboards beneath her straining feet. The chains held her fast, an offering to their malice. The tiny porcelain dolls continued their relentless assault, climbing higher, biting her shoulders, her neck, pulling her hair. Fern&#039;s screams became ragged sobs. The fox girl doll watched from the miniature room, her painted smile serene.<br /><br />Fern threw her head back, sucking in a desperate breath. &quot;HELP! SOMEBODY! PLEASE!&quot; Her voice tore from her raw throat, echoing shrilly within the suffocating confines of the doll room. She screamed Kael&#039;s name. Silas&#039;s. Chloe&#039;s. Leo&rsquo;s. Even Benny&#039;s. &quot;ANYONE! HELP ME!&quot; The sound bounced off the stone walls, loud and frantic in her own ears, a desperate plea flung against the oppressive silence. Outside the heavy oak door, the corridor remained utterly dark, utterly silent. No answering no shouting. No pounding footsteps. Nothing. The mansion swallowed her cries whole. The only response was the intensified *scritch-scritch* of porcelain limbs scuttling closer, the low hum vibrating louder, and the cold, mocking echo of the little girl&#039;s laughter inside her skull. &ldquo;Shhhh, Fernie. No one hears you here. Only us.&rdquo; The fox girl&#039;s paw gestured towards the advancing horrors.<br /><br />Fern gasped, choking on dust and despair. Then, she felt it. A small, impossibly cold hand pressed flat against her lower back, right above the waistband of her nurse&#039;s skirt. The touch was like ice radiating through her costume. Another small hand, equally frigid, gripped her hip. Then, tiny fingers dug into the fabric of her skirt, finding purchase. Something small and impossibly light began climbing her pinned body. Fern froze, terror locking her muscles tighter than the rusted chains. She couldn&#039;t twist to see, couldn&#039;t dislodge the climber. The tiny porcelain dolls paused their biting assault, glass eyes gleaming with unnatural anticipation as they watched the ascent. The cold climbed higher. Small feet pressed against Fern&#039;s spine, tiny hands grasping her shoulders, pulling upwards. A delicate chin, sharp and vulpine, brushed against Fern&#039;s neck. Soft fur tickled her skin. Fern squeezed her eyes shut, trembling violently, tears carving paths through the dust and blood on her cheeks. The scent of decayed roses washed over her.<br /><br />A soft, childish whisper breathed directly into Fern&#039;s ear, chilling the damp skin. &quot;Shhh, Fernie. Fighting is messy.&quot; The voice was sweet, melodic, utterly devoid of warmth. &quot;You wanted Silas so badly? To be perfect for him?&quot; A cold, wet nose nuzzled Fern&#039;s earlobe. &quot;We can make you perfect. Forever.&quot; Fern whimpered, a pathetic, broken sound. The fox girl shifted her weight, settling lightly on Fern&#039;s shoulders like a grotesque parody of a child riding piggyback. One small, furred arm snaked around Fern&#039;s throat in a mockery of an embrace. The other hand rose slowly into Fern&#039;s peripheral vision. Clutched in delicate fingers was a shard of glass, long and lethally sharp, its edges catching the trembling beam of Fern&#039;s flashlight. It gleamed like frozen midnight. The fox girl brought the point to rest against the soft skin beneath Fern&#039;s jaw, just above her frantic pulse. The pressure was terrifyingly precise. Fern held her breath, every muscle screaming, tears blurring her vision. The dolls watched, utterly silent now. The chains held firm.<br /><br />&quot;Perfect,&quot; the fox girl whispered again, her tone almost dreamy. Then, with a sudden, vicious jerk, she dragged the glass shard sideways across Fern&#039;s throat. The sound was wet, obscene &ndash; a tearing rasp that echoed louder than Fern&#039;s choked gasp. Warmth bloomed instantly, shocking in its intensity, flooding down her neck, soaking the collar of her nurse costume. Fern&rsquo;s eyes flew wide, shock overriding pain for a single, suspended moment. Her flashlight beam jerked wildly upwards, illuminating dust motes dancing like frantic snowflakes. Blood pulsed out in thick, rhythmic spurts, splattering onto the dusty floorboards near her feet, onto the frozen rocking horse, onto the impassive porcelain faces of the watching dolls. A terrible gurgling sound bubbled from the ruin of her throat as she tried, impossibly, to scream. Her body jerked against the chains, a frantic, dying reflex.<br /><br />The flashlight slipped from her fingers. It hit the floor with a sharp crack. The plastic casing shattered. The beam died instantly, plunging the room into near-total darkness, broken only by the faint, pulsing glow emanating from the dollhouse windows. In sudden gloom, the dolls began to move. Not to attack, but to dance. A jerky, macabre victory dance. They twirled on broken limbs, tapped cracked heads together, scraped jagged edges across the floorboards in a dissonant rhythm. The soldier doll saluted with its broken arm. The harlequin pirouetted, its glass shard catching the dim light. The sawdust bear lumbered in a clumsy circle. The rustle and scrape and click of their movements filled the silence where Fern&rsquo;s breathing should have been. Warm blood pooled around her shoes, sticky and dark.<br /><br />Fern&rsquo;s sight dimmed. The cold chains bit deeper, but she barely felt them now. A deeper cold was spreading from within. Her thoughts fragmented, swirling like dust motes in the vanished light. &ldquo;Silas.&rdquo; His name echoed in the hollow chamber of her dying mind. Not Kael, not Zara. Silas. She saw his sharp jawline, his eyes that always seemed to look through her. If he were here&hellip; if he had come&hellip; he would smash the dolls. He&rsquo;d break the chains. He&rsquo;d be strong enough. He would have saved her. The desperate fantasy flickered, an absurd and agonizingly sweet whisper cut through the darkness, inches from her ruined ear. &quot;Shh, Fernie,&quot; the fox girl murmured, her vulpine face pressing against Fern&#039;s cooling cheek. &quot;Don&#039;t fret. The bleeding stops soon. Then the fun begins.&quot; Her small hand patted Fern&#039;s shoulder, a grotesque parody of comfort. &quot;You&#039;ll be perfect. My new doll. Just like them.&quot; She gestured vaguely at the dancing horrors. &quot;Forever quiet. Forever pretty. Forever mine.&quot; Fern tried to shake her head, a feeble twitch. Darkness swallowed the edges of her vision. The frantic dance of the dolls blurred into shifting shadows. The chains felt distant, unimportant. Only the icy weight on her shoulders and the fading pulse in her neck remained real. &lsquo;Silas...&rsquo; The thought was a final, silent plea lost in the void.<br /><br />The fox girl sighed, a sound like dry leaves skittering across stone. &quot;Sleep now.&quot; Fern&rsquo;s last breath escaped in a wet, bubbling sigh. Her body slumped heavily against the chains, held upright only by their cruel grip and the small rider on her shoulders. The fox girl tilted her head, observing the slack face, the vacant, staring eyes. She traced a claw-tipped finger along Fern&rsquo;s jawline, smearing blood. &quot;Much better,&quot; she whispered. Then, with unsettling abruptness, she vanished. One moment, the cold weight pressed against Fern&rsquo;s neck; the next, only the chill remained. The dancing dolls froze mid-twirl, mid-tap, mid-scrape. Their glass eyes dulled. The humming ceased. Silence crashed down, thicker and heavier than before. As if controlled by unseen strings, the dolls turned stiffly. They shuffled, crawled, and rolled back to their original positions. The soldier doll slumped against the baseboard, its broken arm dangling. The legless doll settled back into its corner, the mirror shard clattering beside it. The harlequin leaned drunkenly against the rocking horse. The sawdust bear slumped near the fireplace, its nail-spear dropping from its limp paw. Within seconds, the room looked exactly as Fern had first found it &ndash; a tableau of dusty neglect, filled with broken toys frozen in time. Only the thick pool of blood spreading beneath Fern&rsquo;s dangling feet and the chains holding her corpse upright betrayed the horror.<br /><br />Fern&rsquo;s flashlight beam, extinguished when it shattered, left the room bathed in the faint, sickly greenish glow emanating from the dollhouse windows. In that eerie luminescence, Fern&rsquo;s own figure was starkly visible. Her nurse&#039;s costume was torn and stained crimson, her blonde hair matted with dust and blood. Her head lolled forward, chin resting on her chest, hiding the ruin of her throat. Her arms remained outstretched, crucified by the rusted chains anchored deep in the shadows beside the dollhouse. Her legs hung limp, one ankle still weeping blood onto the darkening pool below. She was utterly, terrifyingly still. A perfect, grotesque addition to the macabre collection. The stillness was absolute. Not a creak of wood, not a skitter of dust. Even the dust motes seemed suspended in the stale air. The silence pressed in, a physical weight. It was the silence of a tomb sealed shut. The silence of a predator satisfied, its prey secured. The silence of something ancient and cruel settling back to watch, unseen, from the miniature windows of the dollhouse.<br /><br />Then, movement. Not from Fern, not from the scattered dolls frozen once more. From the dollhouse itself. The fox girl doll reappeared within the tiny replica of the room Fern stood in. She moved with unnerving grace, stepping delicately past miniature furniture coated in dust. She stopped directly before the tiny figure representing Fern &ndash; a nurse doll slumped in chains, mirroring the real horror in chilling detail. The fox girl tilted her head, examining the tiny effigy. With a flick of her paw, she nudged the nurse doll&rsquo;s head upright. Its painted face stared blankly forward. Satisfied, the fox girl turned her vulpine gaze upwards, out of the dollhouse window. Her glass eyes seemed to fix directly on Fern&rsquo;s lifeless face hanging in the gloom. A tiny, painted smile curved her lips. It was a smile of possession. Of completion.<br /></span>",
  "pools_count": 2,
  "title": "Crimson Reckoning Chapter 2",
  "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"
    },
    {
      "content_tag_id": "3",
      "name": "Violence",
      "description": "Mild violence",
      "rating_id": "1"
    },
    {
      "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": "74"
}