Nathaniel stared at the flickering candlelight casting warped shadows across the walls, each curve and jagged line feeling like another taunt from the house itself. The weight of the curse seemed to press on him with an intensity he hadn't felt before. Every creak of the old floorboards, every whisper of wind against the windows, felt like a voice from the past, telling him he would fail, just like the rest.
Helena was by his side, but he sensed she was becoming as uneasy as he was. They had spent the day combing through yet another dusty corner of the manor, poring over old books and cryptic letters, yet nothing they found brought them any closer to the truth. Instead, each passage felt like another layer of obfuscation, another carefully planted trap meant to confuse and deter. He'd never felt so helpless, so unable to grasp even a thread of meaning from the intricate web his ancestors had left behind.
Helena sighed, finally closing the heavy, leather-bound journal she'd been studying. "This… it's like they were purposely leaving pieces out, like they didn't want anyone to understand."
Nathaniel nodded grimly. "Or maybe they were so tangled in the curse's darkness that they couldn't see clearly themselves. I keep wondering—if they were consumed by this, maybe it's because there's no real answer to find. Maybe this curse isn't meant to be broken."
The words tasted bitter as they left his mouth, but he could no longer deny the growing feeling gnawing at him: that he was walking in circles, chasing a phantom solution. The manor, with its decaying walls and cryptic symbols, seemed to close in tighter each day, a relentless reminder of his ancestors' failures.
Elias, who had joined them shortly after dinner, set down an old map he'd been studying. "Nathaniel, these symbols—they're more convoluted than anything I've seen. It's as if each ancestor left behind a puzzle to protect rather than reveal the truth. But why?" He rubbed his temples, his frustration mirroring Nathaniel's. "Perhaps there's a reason none of them could break free."
Nathaniel let out a long breath, his gaze fixed on a painting above the fireplace, a portrait of one of his ancestors who had also attempted to lift the curse. The figure's face was obscured by shadows, but the expression was unmistakably one of anguish, a look that seemed to mirror Nathaniel's own. He felt his resolve falter as he imagined himself just another portrait in the house, yet another Ashford lost to the curse.
"Maybe the curse is meant to ensure that each generation falls deeper," he muttered, almost to himself. "That we're all just pieces in some grand design that can never be undone."
Helena shot him a worried look. "Nathaniel, don't talk like that. You're different—you've made it further than anyone else."
"But at what cost?" he replied bitterly. "All I've done is unearth more suffering, more questions. The closer I get, the more impossible it feels."
Suddenly, a noise echoed down the hallway—a soft, rhythmic tapping, like footsteps approaching slowly but with purpose. The sound sent a chill down his spine, and they all turned toward the door. Mathias stepped into the room, his face drawn and serious, his eyes like hollowed-out pits that seemed to see through the walls of the manor itself.
"Mathias," Nathaniel said cautiously, rising to his feet. "What are you doing here at this hour?"
Mathias's presence was unnerving, as always. The older man had an air about him that seemed tied to the very foundations of the manor, as though he was more a part of it than any living soul should be. His voice was low, deliberate. "I felt it. The stirring in the Atrium. You went there, didn't you?"
Nathaniel exchanged a glance with Helena and Elias before nodding. "I did. I thought it might give me answers, but… it's only made things more confusing."
Mathias stepped closer, his shadow stretching unnaturally long across the floor. His gaze bore into Nathaniel, unreadable but intense. "You've awakened something, Nathaniel. The Atrium isn't just a reflection—it's a tether. A doorway. And now, it's watching you."
Nathaniel frowned, his unease growing. "What's watching me?"
Mathias's lips pressed into a thin line. "The other side. The realm of shadows. It sees you now, and it knows what you're trying to do. That's why the manor feels different—why the whispers have grown louder."
Helena stiffened. "You mean the curse itself? It's… aware?"
Mathias nodded slowly. "It always has been. But now, it's no longer content to remain hidden. The deeper you dig, the closer you come to undoing the pact, the more desperate it will become. And desperation makes it dangerous."
Nathaniel clenched his fists, his frustration boiling over. "Then tell me how to stop it! Every clue I've found has been a dead end, every answer leads to more questions. If you know something, Mathias, for God's sake, just tell me!"
Mathias regarded him silently for a long moment before speaking. "You're not wrong, Nathaniel. The curse was designed to be unbreakable, to ensure that the Ashford line would serve as its vessel for eternity. But that doesn't mean it's impossible. It only means the cost will be greater than you can imagine."
Nathaniel's jaw tightened. "I've already lost everything to this. What more could it possibly take?"
Mathias's expression darkened, a shadow passing over his face. "More than your life. It will demand your soul, your memories, and the very essence of who you are. The pact is woven into the fabric of this family, into the blood that runs through your veins. Breaking it would unravel not just the curse, but the Ashford legacy itself."
Elias stepped forward, his voice sharp. "So you're saying that in order to break the curse, Nathaniel has to sacrifice everything that makes him who he is? That's not a solution—it's another trap."
Mathias didn't flinch. "It's the truth. The curse isn't a puzzle to be solved—it's a knot to be cut. And cutting it will sever everything it's tied to, including you, Nathaniel."
Helena's face paled, and she grabbed Nathaniel's arm. "There has to be another way. We can't just… destroy everything."
Nathaniel felt the weight of their words settle over him like a shroud. Was that what this all led to? A choice between continuing the endless cycle of torment or sacrificing himself—and everything his family had built—to end it? The thought was suffocating.
"I need time," he said finally, his voice hollow. "I need to think."
Mathias nodded, stepping back toward the doorway. "Time is not your ally, Nathaniel. The curse knows what you're planning. It will fight you every step of the way. And if you falter, even for a moment, it will consume you."
The hours dragged on as Nathaniel sat alone in the study, staring into the dying embers of the fire. Helena and Elias had retired for the night, though he doubted they would sleep soundly. Mathias's words echoed in his mind, a relentless reminder of the impossible choice before him.
He pulled one of the journals closer, flipping through its brittle pages with a sense of urgency. He needed to find something—anything—that could offer another path. But the words blurred together, their meanings slipping through his grasp like water through his fingers. It felt as though the manor itself was mocking him, its secrets just out of reach.
The candle on the desk sputtered, and the room seemed to grow darker, the shadows stretching unnaturally long. A low whisper filled the air, faint but insistent. Nathaniel froze, his hand hovering over the journal. The whisper grew louder, forming words he couldn't quite make out, until it became a single, haunting phrase:
"You cannot win."
The room grew colder, the air heavy with an oppressive weight. Nathaniel stood abruptly, his chair scraping against the floor. "Show yourself!" he demanded, his voice shaking but defiant.
The shadows seemed to coalesce in the corner of the room, forming a figure that was neither entirely human nor entirely other. Its shape flickered like a flame, its features obscured but its presence undeniable. The voice that spoke was layered, as though it came from a hundred mouths at once.
"You seek to break the chain," it said, its tone almost amused. "But you are bound to it, as were those before you. The pact is not just a curse—it is a bond. It is life and death, creation and destruction. To sever it is to unravel all."
Nathaniel's hands trembled, but he stood his ground. "If it means freeing my family from this torment, then so be it. I'll do whatever it takes."
The figure seemed to laugh, a sound that sent chills down his spine. "Bold words. But you do not yet understand the cost. The pact is not merely tied to your blood—it is tied to the world itself. Breaking it will unmake more than you realize."
Nathaniel stepped closer, his fear giving way to anger. "Then why give me the choice? Why let me get this far if it's all meaningless?"
The figure tilted its head, its shadowy form rippling. "Because even in defiance, you serve the pact. Your suffering feeds it. Your struggle strengthens it. The choice is an illusion, Nathaniel Ashford. There is no victory here—only submission or annihilation."
The words struck him like a physical blow, and he staggered back, his breath coming in ragged gasps. The figure began to dissolve, its voice fading into the darkness.
"Choose wisely, heir of Ashford. The end is nearer than you think."
And then, as suddenly as it had appeared, the shadow was gone. The room was silent once more, but Nathaniel felt its presence lingering, a cold weight pressing down on his chest.
He sank back into his chair, his mind racing. The figure's words had left him more confused than ever, but one thing was clear: the path ahead would demand more from him than he had ever imagined. And if he was to succeed, he would have to face not just the curse, but the very foundations of his own existence.
For the first time, he began to wonder if he was truly ready for what lay ahead.