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Abigail's Curse

Follow Abigail as she is drawn into a world of ghostly hauntings and hidden darkness., As friendships form and romance blooms in "Abigail's Curse", It all culminates in a spine-chilling twist, leaving readers questioning the boundaries between life and the afterlife.

June_Calva81 · Thanh xuân
Không đủ số lượng người đọc
25 Chs
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Chapter 13: Unearthed Secrets

In the yawning silence that followed the séance, the pallid moonlight seemed to wash away the warmth from the world, leaving everything bathed in a spectral gloom. The walls of Lament whispered of the past, their voices low and insistent, like the rustling of dead leaves in a forgotten crypt. After the night's harrowing events, the very air seemed to hum with the resonance of unearthed secrets.

I lay in my bed, the afterimage of darkness seared behind my eyes—a darkness that had been stirred by our reckless incantations. The room felt smaller, the shadows longer, and in the corners of my vision, I fancied I saw the flutter of movement, a hint of something watching, waiting.

The next morning, the school was abuzz with an electric current of unease. The students who had participated in the séance moved amongst the others like ghosts themselves, haunted by the knowledge that we had disturbed something ancient, something that had been content to lie dormant until our voices had called it forth.

Ethan found me by the old oak tree, its gnarled limbs a testament to the countless seasons it had witnessed. His face was drawn, the usual spark in his eyes replaced by a smoldering concern.

"Abby," he said, his voice a low rumble that seemed to match the tree's whispering leaves. "Last night... it wasn't just a trick of the mind, was it? We really did something."

"No," I replied, my gaze fixed on the scarred bark, as if it could offer up some wisdom to guide us. "It was real, Ethan. We opened a door, and I'm not sure we can close it again."

He took a step closer, his hand reaching out to gently grasp mine. "Then we deal with it, together. We unsealed these secrets; now we have to face them."

The murmurs in the corridors grew louder as the day wore on, tales of cold spots in classrooms, of whispers echoing from empty halls, of fleeting shadows seen out of the corner of one's eye. Lament had always been a place of mystery, but now those mysteries were awake, and they were hungry.

In the days that followed, we discovered that the séance had indeed been a key, unlocking doors long closed and spilling forth the secrets that had been hidden behind them. It began with the finding of old letters tucked away in a forgotten drawer in the library—letters that spoke of love and betrayal, of a student and a teacher whose forbidden affair had ended in tragedy.

As we pieced together the story from the fragile pages, it became clear that their tale was intertwined with the curse that had been woven into the fabric of Lament's history—a curse born of a heartbroken rage that had never been appeased.

And then came the discovery of the hidden room, a chamber concealed behind a false wall in the basement, its existence wiped from the school's records. Inside, we found the remnants of old rituals, the symbols etched into the stone floor a ghastly mirror of the ones we had used in our séance.

The darkness of Lament's past was a living thing, and we had given it breath. The secrets we unearthed painted a picture of a school steeped in more than just academic tradition—a place where the line between the arcane and the known was blurred, where the whispers of ghosts were as real as the turn of a page.

Ethan and I, along with the others, found ourselves caught in the web of Lament's dark history, our lives entangled with those who had walked these halls before us. With each secret revealed, the school seemed to grow darker, the shadows deeper, as if the building itself was reacting to the exposure of its hidden wounds.

The ghost of the murdered student, the blood-stained corridor, the whispers—they were all connected, threads in a tapestry of sorrow that we had unwittingly begun to unravel. And as the pieces fell into place, as the picture of Lament's cursed past became clearer, we understood that we were not just observers of this history; we were part of it, actors in a play that had been written long before we took the stage.

The séance had been the catalyst, the spark that had ignited the flame, and now we were surrounded by the fire of revelation. The secrets of Lament were secrets no longer, and we were left to face the consequences of our actions, to stand together against the darkness we had called forth from the depths of Phantom Hall.

The air was still and stifling, as if Lament itself was holding its breath. It was the kind of stillness that prefaces storms, and within it, the absence of Sammie, one of our own, screamed louder than the gales that had battered the ancient windows of Phantom Hall the night before.

The morning had come too soon, and with it, the realization that Sammie had not returned to her room. Her bed lay untouched, a silent testament to the panic that was starting to seep through the cracks of our composure. In the aftermath of the séance, it seemed we had awakened more than just the lingering spirits of the school.

"We have to find her," Clara said, her voice a mixture of fear and determination as we gathered in the common room, the scene of our misguided ritual. "She could be hurt... or worse."

Ethan's face was set in a grim line, his eyes scanning the room as if he could will Sammie to reappear through sheer force of will. "We've searched everywhere," he said, his voice low. "Everywhere, but..."

His words trailed off, but we all knew what he meant. There was one place we hadn't looked—the hidden room that had been revealed in the diary, its location a secret kept by the school for reasons we were beginning to understand.

The decision was made without a word. We moved as one, our collective fear a beacon that drew us to the basement, to the false wall that concealed the truth. The air grew colder as we descended, each step taking us deeper into the heart of darkness that beat beneath Lament's veneer of academia.

The hidden room was a tomb, the air thick with a dread that clung to the skin and filled the lungs like a miasma. The walls were lined with shelves holding relics of a time best forgotten—candles burnt to stubs, tomes with spines cracked from use, and symbols that seemed to writhe under our gazes.

"Sammie?" Clara called out, her voice faltering as it was swallowed by the shadows.

There was no answer, only the echo of our own breaths and the distant drip of water that seemed to keep time with our racing hearts. We searched through the detritus of the room, uncovering more questions than answers, the absence of Sammie a hole that threatened to consume us.

It was then, amidst the searching and the silence, that we heard it—a whisper, so faint it was almost lost in the stillness. "Help me."

The voice was Sammie's, but it was not within the room. It was coming from the walls themselves, seeping through the stone like the remnants of a scream.

I pressed my ear against the cold, damp wall, my heart pounding in my ears. "Sammie, where are you?"

The whisper came again, a desperate plea that sent shivers down my spine. "Below... trapped..."

Below. The word was a weight that settled in the pit of my stomach. Below the hidden room, below the school, in places that our maps did not show and our fears dared not contemplate.

We left the room in a rush, the feeling of Sammie's voice lingering like a chill that would not abate. Our search became frantic, the corridors of Lament a labyrinth that hid its minotaur well. The school seemed to watch us, its walls whispering secrets that only the missing could hear.

As the day bled into night and our search yielded nothing but more dread, the realization set in like a frost. Sammie was gone, swallowed by the school that we had thought was our sanctuary. And in our hearts, a seed of terror took root—the fear that we might never find her, and that we, too, might become part of Lament's whispered history.

The séance had been a folly, a child's game that had called forth the shadows that now danced at the edges of our vision. And in those shadows, a truth darker than any ghostly apparition waited for us, its hunger insatiable and its depths unfathomable.

Sammie's disappearance was no mere vanishing; it was a sign, a harbinger of the secrets that Lament was not yet ready to surrender. And as we called her name into the darkness, our voices growing hoarse with despair, we knew that we were not just searching for our friend—we were searching for the key to our own survival within the cursed halls of Phantom Hall.