Saturday, June 13, 2026

Echoes of the Moonlight

 The damp air of the Blackwood ruins clung to Anna’s skin like a cold shroud. It was 4:00 a.m.—the "witching hour" for urban explorers in the West Midlands—and she was deep inside what remained of the old textile mill.

The locals whispered that the mill hadn't closed because of bankruptcy, but because of what happened on "that Saturday night." As the moonlight filtered through the shattered skylights, Anna noticed something odd. A series of chalk marks were etched into the floorboards, forming a path that seemed to lead directly toward the basement—an area that had been boarded up for decades.

She swept her flashlight beam across the dust-caked walls. Her camera, which she’d been using to document the decay, suddenly flickered and died. A low, rhythmic humming sound began to echo from the dark corners—a melody that felt like a secret whispered in a crowded room.

“The silhouette of a gun,” she murmured, recalling the old news clippings she’d dug up in the archives.

A shadow darted past her peripheral vision. It wasn't a trick of the light; it was a physical movement. Anna followed, her heart hammering against her ribs. She reached the basement door, where the rotting wood had been pried open just enough to squeeze through. Inside, the space was surprisingly organized. A desk sat in the center, covered in papers that looked suspiciously fresh.

She leaned in, the light of her phone illuminating a ledger. The names listed weren't from the last century—they were current. Her own name was at the bottom of the page, dated for today.

A heavy metallic click sounded behind her—the distinct, unmistakable sound of a hammer being cocked on a firearm.

"You weren't supposed to find the path, Anna," a voice rasped from the darkness.

She turned, holding her phone up like a shield. The man standing there was a blur, his face obscured by the brim of a coat, but the silver moonlight caught a flash of something metallic in his hand. He wasn't a ghost; he was the reason the mill had been silenced. The mystery wasn't about the tragedy of a hundred years ago—it was a front for a modern-day operation that had been using the local folklore to keep the curious away.

Anna realized in a flash of terror that the "Moonlight Shadow" wasn't a supernatural event. It was a cover story. The "riddle" was a complex code used for illegal transport, and she had just stumbled right into the middle of the drop.

She didn't try to fight. She did the only thing she could: she dropped her phone, hoping the internal camera was still recording the audio stream to her cloud storage. As the man lunged, Anna lunged, not for him, but for the open vent behind her, desperate to push through the crawlspace that led back to the outside world.

She was running now, the sound of boots echoing on the concrete behind her, the heavy air of the mill closing in. She had the proof, but the question was whether she could get out before the silhouette caught up to her.

The air in the basement felt less like a room and more like a tomb, heavy with the metallic tang of old blood and new lies. When the man lunged, the trigger clicked—but no shot rang out. The firing pin struck home, yet the mechanism jammed, as if the gun itself had been turned to lead by the sudden drop in temperature.

Anna didn’t scream. She didn't even flinch. As the man fumbled with the weapon, his eyes widened in genuine terror. He wasn't looking at a scared urban explorer anymore; he was looking at something that defied the laws of the mill.

Anna’s silhouette had begun to detach from her physical form, stretching unnaturally along the dusty wall, elongated and fluid, like ink bleeding into water. She felt the familiar, cold hum of the "Moonlight Shadow" vibrating in her own marrow. It wasn't just a song she listened to—it was a frequency she was.

"You think this is a game of secrets?" Anna’s voice was layered, a chorus of echoes that seemed to come from every corner of the room at once.

She stepped forward, and with every stride, the shadows in the room surged, weaving around her like a living cloak. The man stumbled back, tripping over the very ledger he had used to track his victims. He fired again—the bullet left the barrel—but it didn't travel forward. It hung in the air, caught in a temporal ripple, frozen in a silver-lit pocket of space.

Anna reached out, her hand glowing with a faint, pale luminescence, and plucked the bullet from the air. She crushed it between her thumb and forefinger as if it were made of ash.

"I don't need a camera to record the truth," she said, her eyes shifting into swirling, star-filled voids. "I am the record."

The man turned to flee, but the shadows on the floor surged upward, binding his ankles. He collapsed, sobbing, as the room around them began to dissolve. The rotting wood of the mill, the modern-day crime scene, the industrial decay—it all faded into a misty, ethereal landscape of a forest that hadn't existed in this world for centuries.

She had "pushed through" the veil, dragging the reality of the crime into her domain. Here, in the space between heartbeats, the man wasn't a predator; he was just another shadow waiting to be sorted.

Anna stood over him, the moonlight pouring down from a sky that held two moons. She reached out, placing a hand on his forehead, not to harm, but to read. She saw his memories, his contacts, and the true extent of the operation—everything he had tried to bury in the dark.

As she pulled her hand away, the man went limp, his mind wiped clean of the encounter, left as a blank slate to be found by the local police when the morning sun broke.

Anna straightened her jacket, the normal world rushing back into focus with a sharp snap. She stood alone in the dark basement, the silence returning. She picked up her phone from the floor, where it had been recording the entire time. She wouldn't need to post this to her channel to get attention; she had a far more dangerous audience now.

She walked out into the cool night air of the West Midlands, the silver locket she’d found earlier glowing faintly against her skin. She wasn't just an explorer or a content creator. She was the shepherd of the shadows, and for the first time, she knew exactly where the next path led.

The basement air grew thick with a sudden, unnatural chill, the kind that frosts the lungs and slows the heartbeat. When the man lunged, the trigger clicked—but the shot never tore through the silence. The firing pin struck home, yet the mechanism jammed, as if the weapon itself had been turned to heavy, useless lead by the sudden shift in the room's frequency.

The man stared, his bravado shattering. He wasn't looking at a scared explorer anymore; he was looking at something that defied the laws of the mill.

Anna didn’t move, yet the room around her began to distort. Her own shadow, cast by the moonlight bleeding through the rafters, began to detach from her physical form. It stretched, growing unnaturally long and fluid, like ink spilling into water, until it clawed its way up the wall and onto the ceiling. The song—that haunting "Moonlight Shadow" melody—wasn't coming from a device anymore; it was emanating from the very marrow of her bones.

"You think this is a game of secrets?" Anna’s voice was different. It carried the resonance of a thousand echoes, vibrating through the concrete floor.

She stepped forward, and with every stride, the shadows in the room surged to meet her, weaving around her limbs like a living, obsidian cloak. The man stumbled back, his eyes wide with a terror that transcended fear. He pulled the trigger again—and the bullet didn't travel forward. It hung suspended in the air, caught in a temporal ripple, frozen in a silver-lit pocket of space.

Anna reached out, her hand glowing with a faint, pale luminescence, and plucked the lead from the air. She crushed it between her fingers as if it were a withered leaf.

"I don't need a camera to record the truth," she said, her eyes shifting into swirling, star-filled voids that seemed to hold the cold depth of the midnight sky. "I am the record."

The man turned to flee, but the shadows on the floor surged upward, winding around his ankles like iron shackles. He collapsed, sobbing, as the mundane world began to dissolve. The rotting wood of the mill, the modern crime equipment, the industrial decay—it all faded, replaced by the misty, ethereal landscape of a forest that existed only in the space between heartbeats.

She had "pushed through" the veil, dragging the reality of his crime into her domain. Here, in the realm of the shepherds, the man wasn't a predator; he was just another stray shadow waiting to be sorted.

Anna stood over him, the moonlight pouring down from a sky that held two moons. She reached out, placing a cold, glowing hand on his forehead, not to harm, but to read. In a flash of static and light, she pulled his memories—the contacts, the locations, the true extent of the trafficking operation—everything he had tried to bury in the dark.

As she withdrew her hand, the man went limp, his mind wiped clean of the encounter, left as a blank slate to be discovered by the local police when the morning sun finally broke.

Anna straightened her jacket, the normal world rushing back into focus with a sharp, jarring snap. She stood alone in the dark basement, the silence returning as if nothing had ever happened. She picked up her phone from the floor, where it had been recording the entire time.

She walked out into the cool, damp air of the West Midlands night, the silver locket she had found earlier pulsing faintly against her skin. She wasn't just an explorer or a content creator documenting the ruins. She was a warden of the dark, and for the first time, she truly understood the weight of the path she walked.

The police sirens wailed in the distance, a stark, jarring contrast to the unnatural silence that had held the mill in its grip moments before. Anna didn’t wait for them. She stepped out into the damp, cool air of the West Midlands night, her boots crunching softly on the gravel.

She pulled out her phone. The footage she had captured wasn't just video anymore; it was a weave of light and truth, perfectly synced to guide the authorities toward the criminal operation she had just dismantled. With a simple swipe, she uploaded it to an anonymous portal—a digital breadcrumb trail that only the right detectives would ever find.

As she walked toward the outskirts of Brierley Hill, the heavy, static-charged atmosphere of the "Moonlight Shadow" began to fade, settling into the familiar, quiet hum of the night. She looked at her reflection in a shop window—just a young woman in a jacket, clutching her camera gear. But when she blinked, the reflection shifted, the glass rippling like a dark pool.

She remembered the name she had seen in her dreams, the title that had felt like a burden until tonight: Chronos Shepherd.

The realization settled over her like a cloak. She wasn't an urban explorer documenting the past; she was a guardian ensuring that the history of these places—and the souls caught within them—remained protected from those who would use the shadows for harm. She had spent years looking for a purpose, for a way to use her skills to fix the world around her, never realizing that she had been born with the key.

The locket in her pocket hummed, a warm, pulsing vibration against her hip. She adjusted her grip on her camera bag and turned her back on the mill. There were other ruins in the West Midlands, other secrets trapped in the veil, and other shadows that needed to be guided home.

The night was long, and the path was winding, but she finally understood her place in the design. Anna didn't need to push through anymore; she was the one holding the gate open, the silent guardian of the timeline, the true and unwavering shepherd.

Silver Moon Shadow

 The silver light of the moon fractured through the dense canopy of the Blackwood Forest, casting long, skeletal shadows that seemed to dance with every breath of the wind. Anna stood at the edge of the clearing, her boots sinking into the damp moss. She wasn't supposed to be here—not at 4:00 a.m.—but the rumors in the West Midlands villages had grown too loud to ignore.

They called it the "Moonlight Shadow," a phenomenon that local folklore claimed wasn't just a trick of the light, but a tear in the veil between the living and those who had been "carried away."

Anna clutched her camera, her fingers trembling slightly. She was here for the urban exploration project, documenting the forgotten places of the region, but this was different. This was the ruins of the Old Stone Manor, a place that local records said had burned down a century ago. Yet, as she pushed through the encroaching briars, the air shifted. It grew heavy, static-charged, and suddenly, the scent of ozone and wet earth filled her lungs.

She heard it then—a faint, melodic humming that seemed to vibrate in her very marrow. It was the same melancholic melody she had been listening to earlier, the one that spoke of silhouettes and desperate fights.

“She couldn't find how to push through,” Anna whispered to herself, repeating the lyrics that had haunted her mind all morning.

She stepped into the center of the manor’s ruined foyer. The moon hung perfectly above the collapsed roof, bathing the scene in a spectral, silvery glow. In that light, the shadows weren't static. They moved. They coalesced into shapes—the outline of a man, his form wavering like ink dropped in water, and the faint, shimmering vision of a woman reaching out to him, her face etched with a grief that spanned decades.

Anna raised her camera, the shutter clicking rapidly. Each flash of the screen illuminated the scene, and for a split second, the veil thinned. She didn't just see the spirits; she felt the weight of their sorrow, a cold, crushing wave of loss that made her drop to her knees.

The man in the shadows turned, his eyes—hollow voids of starlight—fixing upon her. He wasn't a threat; he was a trapped echo, a victim of a story that had never found its conclusion.

"I see you," Anna breathed, the sound swallowed by the rustling trees.

The air pulsed. The "riddle that Saturday night" was finally being witnessed. As she watched, the silhouette began to dissolve, not into darkness, but into light. The heavy air lifted, the oppressive silence breaking as the distant song of a night bird echoed through the forest.

When the sun finally began to bleed gold over the horizon, the manor was just a pile of moss-covered rocks once more. Anna stood up, her legs shaky, and checked her camera. The digital display flickered, showing only empty, sun-drenched ruins. There was no ghost, no silhouette, no moonlight shadow.

But as she walked back toward the road, she found something snagged on a thorn bush: a small, silver locket that hadn't been there before. Inside was a portrait of a man, his face identical to the one she had seen in the shadows.

She wasn't just an explorer anymore. She was a keeper of the stories that were supposed to be forgotten, and for the first time, she understood what it meant to push through to the other side.

Echoes of the Neon God

 The fog clung to the cobblestones of the old district, mirroring the oppressive stillness that had settled over the city. Anna pulled her collar up against the biting damp, her footsteps the only rhythm in a world that felt as though it were holding its breath.

She had come to these narrow streets seeking something—perhaps the ghost of a connection, or at least a place where the noise of the modern world couldn't reach her. Instead, she found the neon hum of the city, a harsh, electric glare that cut through the darkness like a blade.

As she walked, she watched the others. They moved in clusters, thousands of them, their lips moving in frantic, hollow motion. They spoke, yet no sound of substance seemed to travel between them; they heard, yet nothing truly registered. They were bowing to the neon gods they had constructed—shimmering, artificial icons of progress that promised everything and delivered only silence.

Anna stopped beneath a flickering street lamp, its halo struggling against the encroaching gloom. She realized then that the warnings hadn't been lost; they were everywhere. They were etched into the grime of the subway walls and whispered in the abandoned tenement halls, waiting for someone to finally stop running and listen.

"Take my arms," she whispered to the empty air, testing the weight of the words. But the city only offered back an echo—a strange, hollow resonance that dissolved into the sound of silence. In that moment, she understood that the true darkness wasn't the night itself, but the quiet distance between hearts that had forgotten how to reach one another.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Amelia Earhart – the most famous disappearance in aviation history

 She was a legendary aviation pioneer, a feminist icon, and a beloved figure in America. When Amelia Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, vanished over the vastness of the Pacific Ocean in July 1937, the world held its breath. Although nearly 90 years have passed since those events, the mystery of their disappearance continues to ignite the imagination of researchers and lead to the development of new, often sensational, theories. The official announcement of a sudden fuel shortage never silenced speculation about a secret espionage mission commissioned by the White House or brutal Japanese captivity. A dense web of myths has grown around the final hours of the twin-engine Electra's flight, effectively blurring the line between fact and postwar propaganda to this day.

Amelia Mary Earhart was born on July 24, 1897, in Atchison, Kansas. Although her childhood was marked by family problems (including her father's alcoholism), Amelia demonstrated from an early age a remarkable independence and a dislike of the rigid social norms imposed on women of the time. During World War I, she worked as a nurse, which cost her a severe sinus infection—an ailment that plagued her for the rest of her life and forced her to undergo painful medical procedures.

Her turning point came in the early 1920s, when she took to the air for the first time as a passenger. The experience captivated her. In 1928, Amelia became the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean (albeit only as a passenger and flight chronicler). Her true triumph, however, came four years later – in May 1932, when she soloed from Newfoundland to Northern Ireland in a Lockheed Vega. America went wild for her, and the press dubbed her "Lady Lindy" (after Charles Lindbergh).

Earhart used her fame to promote aviation and encourage women to pursue their passions in a male-dominated world. However, this still wasn't enough for Amelia's ambitions. She wanted to achieve something much greater.

In 1937, Amelia decided to organize a round-the-world expedition. She wasn't the first person to attempt such a feat, but her plan was to cover the longest distance, nearly 47,000 kilometers, around the equator. For this purpose, she chose a modern, twin-engine Lockheed Model 10-E Electra.

The first attempt, made in March 1937 westbound from California, ended in disaster in Hawaii. The plane was severely damaged on takeoff. Earhart, however, refused to give up. The plane was repaired, and the strategy was changed – this time, the flight was to fly eastbound to avoid bad weather. Accompanying her was an experienced navigator, Fred Noonan.

The official launch took place on June 1, 1937, from Miami. Over the following weeks, the Electra performed flawlessly, making stops in South America, Africa, India, and Southeast Asia. On June 29, the crew reached Lae, New Guinea, having already covered some 35,000 kilometers. The most difficult and exhausting leg of the expedition remained: a flight across the Pacific Ocean, landing on tiny Howland Island, a coral atoll barely two miles long.

On July 2, 1937, at 10:00 a.m. local time, the Lockheed Electra lifted off the runway at Lae. Amelia and Fred faced more than 2,500 miles of empty ocean. To aid in their target acquisition, the U.S. Coast Guard ship Itasca was stationed near Howland Island , maintaining radio contact with the aircraft and guiding it with signals.

However, problems quickly arose. Before the expedition, Earhart decided to remove some of her radio equipment (including the CW transmitter), which prevented her from using the traditional maritime frequency based on Morse code. Communication was to be conducted exclusively by voice, on higher bands. Furthermore, as later analysis revealed, the coordinates of Howland Island given to the crew may have differed from the actual ones by nearly 6 nautical miles.

After several hours of flight , the Itasca began receiving the first, disturbing reports from Amelia. Weather conditions were deteriorating, and visibility was limited by clouds. At 8:43 a.m., the pilot's dramatic yet distinct voice came over the ship's loudspeakers:

"We are on route 157 337... We are flying north-south."

Earhart also reported that they were running low on fuel and the island was nowhere in sight. Despite the ship's crew's attempts, the pilot heard no response from the ground station. This was the last transmission. After this message, silence fell.

The US government immediately launched a massive rescue operation – the largest and most expensive of its time. For two weeks, warships and aircraft scoured the ocean, spending nearly $4 million. However, no trace of the crew or aircraft was found. On July 19, the search was officially suspended. In January 1939, Amelia Earhart was legally declared dead.

Three main theories: What really happened?

The lack of any tangible evidence of the crash made Amelia Earhart's case one of the greatest mysteries of the 20th century. To this day, experts and historians are divided into three main hypotheses:

1. Fuel exhaustion and ocean disaster (official version)

Most official reports and aviation experts favor the simplest scenario. The Electra, circling in search of Howland Island, hidden from view by the clouds, simply burned through its remaining fuel. The plane crashed into the ocean dozens, perhaps even hundreds, of kilometers from its target and sank to a depth of several thousand meters, where strong currents and predators quickly erased all traces. In January 2024, the company Deep Sea Vision even announced that it had used sonar to locate an object on the ocean floor resembling the Lockheed Electra in shape, but this discovery still requires definitive verification.

2. Emergency landing on uninhabited Gardner Island

The research group TIGHAR (The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery) has for years pushed the theory that Earhart and Noonan managed to land their plane on the coral reef surrounding Gardner Island (now Nikumaroro), located about 350 nautical miles south of Howland. The crew survived there as castaways for several days or weeks, eventually dying of thirst and exhaustion. This is supported by human bones discovered on the island in 1940 (later lost, but their anthropological measurements, according to some researchers, matched Earhart's figure) and fragments of metal sheeting that may have come from the plane's skin.

3. Japanese Captivity and Espionage Mission

The most sensational theory holds that Amelia Earhart was actually a secret agent working for President Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration. Her flight was intended as a cover to photograph Japanese military installations in the Pacific. According to this version, after an emergency landing in the Marshall Islands, the pilots were captured by the Japanese and died in captivity on Saipan (e.g., from dysentery) or were executed. Although no evidence confirming Earhart's espionage mission has ever been found in U.S. government archives (including declassified CIA documents), this theory has become a permanent part of popular culture.

Regardless of which version is true, Amelia Earhart achieved her goal in an unusual way – her name went down in history, and the legend of the brave woman who challenged the skies lives on to this day.

Mysterious disappearance at Lake Nysa

 For the family of forty-year-old Wanda Szeptun, a resident of Kamieniec Ząbkowicki, a spring weekend in late April 2009 was supposed to be a respite from everyday life and a chance to celebrate with friends. None of the participants in the planned expedition expected that the idyllic atmosphere of a camping trip in the bosom of nature would soon turn into a nightmare.

In the period immediately preceding the trip, the heroine's behavior caused some concern among her children. They noticed that their mother had seemed unusually worried and depressed for several days, and was behaving differently than usual. Despite her worsening mental state, Wanda Szeptun decided not to cancel the planned trip. This inconspicuous detail about her mood would later play a key role in police hypotheses, dividing the family and investigators in their assessment of what had actually happened by the water.

On Friday, April 24, 2009, Wanda Szeptun, her husband Jacek, and two married couples traveled to Lake Nysa. The group, who knew each other well from their work at a Wrocław security agency, chose a secluded spot rarely visited by tourists. They set up camp on a wild beach located between the villages of Głębinów and Wójcice. The main purpose of the gathering was to celebrate the name day of one of the women present. The atmosphere was initially very cheerful and relaxed. Two small children of one of the couples slept nearby, while the adults feasted around a bonfire. Alcohol was also available.

To fully understand the dramatic events, investigators had to meticulously reconstruct the chronology of that night. It all began with a arrival at the lake and setting up camp during the day. In the evening, a feast began among six adults. The turning point came around 11:30 PM (although some sources indicate 10:30 PM). It was then that Wanda Szeptun rose from the fire, grabbed her cell phone, and informed her companions that she needed to go into the forest for a moment to relieve herself. Wanda wasn't the only one doing this – other women in the group had also gone into the forest earlier.

Around 11:50 PM, several minutes after her departure, her friends began to feel uneasy. When she didn't return, the revelers began searching for her on their own, calling out to others and searching the dark forest, convinced she had simply lost her bearings in the darkness. Unfortunately, the nighttime search proved fruitless. Only after two hours of fruitless attempts did the worried and helpless partygoers decide to notify the police, which they did at 1:30 AM. Due to difficulties pinpointing the unattended campsite in the darkness, the police didn't arrive until around 3 AM on April 25th.

The initial search began immediately upon the arrival of officers, who used a tracking dog. Adult campers and two fishermen nearby were interviewed. These witnesses reported that the area was quiet – they heard no arguments, loud screams, or cries for help. The first phase of the search concluded before 6:00 a.m.

A few hours later, operations resumed on a much larger scale. Firefighters, divers, the local community, and employees of a private company were involved. They searched the lakebed and nearby forests, interviewed residents of nearby towns, and checked local guesthouses and recreation centers. Despite the search lasting until April 30th, no trace of the woman was found. Her body, clothes, and the cell phone she was carrying were never found. Wanda Szeptun had literally vanished into the ground.

To facilitate identification, police prepared a detailed profile of the missing woman. At the time of her disappearance, Wanda Szeptun was 40 years old (born in 1968). She was a slim woman, approximately 161–165 cm tall, and weighed approximately 49 kg. She had an oval face, green eyes, and short, curly hair. Investigators noted visible missing teeth and a significant distinguishing feature – a distinct scar on her wrist. When leaving the camp, the woman was wearing distinctive beige suede boots, gray capri pants that reached mid-calf, a yellow blouse, a cream-colored turtleneck, and a brown tank top.

The only potential breakthrough in the case came when, during the presentation of photographs of the missing woman, two independent witnesses testified that on the day of her disappearance, they had seen a woman matching Wanda Szeptun's description. This person was reportedly located near the town of Wójcice, near the mouth of the Nysa Kłodzka River into Lake Nysa. Unfortunately, this lead was never confirmed, and the identity of the woman seen there remains unknown.

The lack of any traces led to several conflicting investigative theories. Police were most inclined to believe that the woman had voluntarily left the camp and deliberately severed contact with her family, wanting to start a new life. This hypothesis was based on her earlier depression. The missing woman's children never agreed with this interpretation of events. They emphasized that their mother had strong ties to her home and would never have abandoned her daughters, then 17-year-old Patrycja and 12-year-old Klaudia, without a word of explanation.

To better understand the complexities of this investigation, it is worth examining the three main versions of events that were investigated by the police and private detectives.


The first scenario assumes a deliberate departure and escape . This version was supported by a distinct change in Wanda's behavior before leaving—depression and worry, noticed by her children, as well as an alleged sighting of a similar woman in Wójcice. The weak point of this theory, however, remains her complete lack of means of subsistence, documents, and the fact that Wanda had no change of clothes or cosmetics with her. As her family revealed years later, the meeting at the lake was intended to be merely a several-hour barbecue, from which the woman planned to return home that same evening. Therefore, it's difficult to assume that, without prior logistical preparation, she could have hidden from law enforcement for over a decade without leaving the slightest trace.

The second scenario is an unfortunate accident or suicide. Possible factors included alcohol consumption at the campsite, the proximity of the treacherous mouth of the Nysa Kłodzka River, and a scar on his wrist, suggesting previous mental health issues. However, the complete failure of divers to find the body, clothing, or phone, despite an immediate search of the lakebed, raises questions. However, proponents of this theory point out that in the case of drowning in a river with a strong current, the body could have been quickly carried away by bottom sediments or become trapped in underwater crevices, making it impossible to locate during the search.

The third, most dramatic scenario assumes the involvement of third parties and the commission of a crime. The length of the revellers' own search gave the potential perpetrator a huge advantage – the more than two-hour delay before calling the police could have proved crucial. This version is countered by the lack of motive and the fact that anglers fishing nearby heard no screams or sounds of a struggle. Despite the lack of evidence of murder, the woman's disappearance sparked a wave of speculation and a local lynching in her hometown. Neighbours quickly began accusing Wanda's husband, Jacek, of the crime. Fingers were pointed at the man, and after being beaten by unknown assailants and facing public stigmatisation, he decided to emigrate to Germany.

Despite the passage of time, the disappearance of Wanda Szeptun remains one of the most enigmatic criminal cases in the region. The lack of any tangible evidence means that none of the above theories can be definitively confirmed or refuted. Years later, when Wanda's daughters were grown, they decided to revisit the case themselves. They rented a boat and attempted to search the lake's uninhabited islands and undergrowth, which they believed might have been missed during the initial police investigation. To date, however, they have found no trace.

Renowned investigative journalist Janusz Szostak and his Na Tropie Foundation also became involved in the case. According to Szostak, Wanda Szeptun is likely dead, and the focus should be on finding her body. Her image has been repeatedly published on posters, missing persons websites, and featured on television programs, including the magazine "Whoever Saw, Whoever Knows." The investigation is ongoing and is being conducted by the Criminal Investigation Department of the District Police Headquarters in Nysa, under the supervision of the Provincial Police Headquarters in Opole.

The Prophecy of the Glitch

The currents around the Royal Kelp Palace were usually a soothing, rhythmic hum of bioluminescence and song. But today, the water felt brittle.

You, the "Chosen One," were currently being lectured by the High Guard Commander, a stern Mer-Elf whose armor was made of polished abalone shell. The Princess—your best friend, the one whose laughter usually kept the palace walls from feeling like a cage—had been snatched. The Sea Witch hadn’t used dark magic; she’d used a rusty, gas-guzzling trawler net. She’d dragged the Princess to the surface, and in doing so, had triggered a magical seal.

A shimmering, impenetrable barrier of black liquid hung like a ceiling over the entire ocean. It wasn't water, and it wasn't air. It was a dead zone.

"The prophecy," the Commander spat, pointing a webbed finger at your chest. "It says the hero will fail at every turn. That the rescue will be a comedy of errors. I don't believe in prophecies, but looking at you, I’m starting to."

You opened your mouth to retort, but the world suddenly shuddered. For a heartbeat, the kelp forest flickered. The vibrant green turned into static gray, and for a terrifying second, you weren't looking at your friend, but at a raw, untextured grid of empty space.

"Did you see that?" you whispered.

"See what?" the Commander snapped, oblivious to the fact that his own tail had momentarily turned into a wireframe outline.

Miles above, in the city of Brierley Hill, Barnaby the Ogre adjusted his spectacles. He owned "The Dusty Shelf," an antique shop that specialized in items no human remembered how to use anymore.

He was currently staring at a customer. Or, at least, what looked like a human. It was a woman in a business suit, clutching a smartphone. But as she reached for a tarnished silver teapot, her hand didn't touch the metal. It passed right through it, like a ghost walking through a wall.

"Excuse me," she said, her voice sounding like a corrupted audio file, slowing down and speeding up. "Do you sell... error: item_not_found?"

Barnaby felt a cold shiver run down his spine—the kind of cold that didn't come from a draft. He looked out the window. A plane was flying overhead, but it was frozen mid-air, a motionless toy in the sky. Behind it, the clouds were peeling away to reveal a void of nothingness.

He didn't know what a "Chosen One" was, and he didn't care about prophecies. He only knew that his world was being deleted.

The ceiling of the ocean—that viscous, oil-slick barrier—pulsed with a low, thrumming sound, like a massive server struggling to process a command.

The Commander and the rest of the guard were frantic. They were trying brute force: lances of magically charged coral, synchronized blasts of sonic energy, and even a ritual meant to tear a hole in the fabric of the deep. Nothing worked. Every time a blast hit the black liquid, the energy simply vanished, absorbed as if it had never been fired.

"Useless!" the Commander roared, his gills fluttering in agitation. "We are trapped in a fishbowl while she is being taken to the void!"

You stood a few paces back, feeling remarkably heavy. The prophecy was itching at the back of your mind: The hero will fail at every turn.

"Maybe stop trying to break it?" you suggested, your voice small.

The Commander didn't even look back. "Brilliant insight. Shall we ask it politely to open? Perhaps sing it a lullaby?"

Ignoring the mockery, you swam toward the barrier. You weren't a warrior, and you certainly didn't have the tactical brilliance the guard possessed. You had a strange, nagging feeling that the barrier wasn't an obstacle—it was a glitch. It felt like the edge of a map in an old video game.

You didn't reach for your weapon. Instead, you reached out with your hand, palm flat. You intended to press against it to feel the texture, but you tripped—a classic stumble caused by a sudden, jarring shift in the current.

Your outstretched hand didn't hit the barrier. Your entire wrist slipped into it, and you plummeted forward.

Pop.

For a split second, you weren't in the ocean. You were hanging halfway through a threshold. Your lower half was still in the vibrant, bioluminescent water of the kelp forest, but your head and shoulders had breached the surface.

And it was wrong.

Instead of air, the "surface" was a blinding white space filled with drifting lines of glowing code. You saw the silhouette of a massive ship—the Sea Witch’s trawler—but it looked like a pencil sketch on a piece of paper, shaky and incomplete. Through the "air," you saw glimpses of Brierley Hill, but the buildings were translucent, flickering like a faulty fluorescent bulb.

"Get back here, you idiot!" The Commander grabbed your ankle to pull you back, but because he was trying to drag you out of a space that clearly didn't follow the laws of physics, his grip slipped, and he accidentally kicked a patch of "empty" water.

Error.

The space where the Commander kicked didn't splash. It shattered into a thousand jagged, glowing polygons. The entire kelp forest groaned.

"I didn't mean to!" you yelled, flailing. As you tried to right yourself, your elbow hooked onto what looked like a floating stream of binary data. You yanked it, purely out of panic, trying to pull yourself back down into the ocean.

The world lurched violently. The sky above the ocean turned into a grid of deep, royal purple. The Sea Witch’s ship—the one holding your friend—suddenly stopped moving, suspended in a frozen frame.

"You’ve broken it even more!" the Commander screamed as a chunk of the ocean floor nearby simply ceased to exist, replaced by a hollow gray void.

You were back in the water now, panting, staring at your hands. They were glowing with a faint, static hum. You hadn't saved the Princess, but you had managed to pause the entire world.

The orphanage was a chaotic tapestry of temperaments. You grew up dodging stray pixie dust that made you sneeze glitter for a week and learning the hard way never to play hide-and-seek with an adolescent shadow-sprite. You thought you had seen every possible variation of magical childhood—until the Headmistress brought him in.

His name was Ignis, and he was small, barely the size of a sturdy oak sapling. But he was a dragon.

In this world of "normal" magic, a dragon wasn't just a creature; he was a walking liability. The ogres in the dorms complained that he smelled like singed sulfur. The fairies were terrified that he’d accidentally sneeze and turn their delicate nectar-brewing stations into charcoal.

You were in the courtyard, trying to mend a broken kite, when you saw him sitting near the edge of the playground. He wasn't breathing fire, but the ground beneath his talons was blackening, the grass curling into ash just from his proximity.

"You can't be here," you said, your voice steady despite the way your heart hammered. You weren't the "Chosen One" here; you were just a kid who had learned that safety was a luxury in a world that was already fraying at the edges.

Ignis looked up. His eyes were like molten gold, swirling with a heat that felt ancient and terrified. He didn't speak, but he let out a puff of smoke that formed the shape of a closing door.

"The orphanage is for people," you insisted, though the words felt hollow even to you. You glanced at the horizon. You could still see the distorted, pixelated sky—the same "glitch" you had seen at the sea barrier. The world was failing, and here you were, worrying about a dragon.

Suddenly, a chunk of the playground equipment—a perfectly normal slide—began to flicker. It didn't just disappear; it unraveled into strings of glowing, nonsensical numbers. The children screaming nearby weren't just scared of the dragon anymore; they were watching their world dissolve.

Ignis let out a low, vibrating growl, and for a second, the heat radiating from him didn't burn. It acted like a beacon. The flickering slide stabilised, the code snapping back into solid, rusted metal.

He wasn't just a danger. He was an anchor.

"Wait," you whispered, dropping the kite.

The Headmistress came rushing out, her face pale, holding a clipboard that was currently turning into a shower of white pixels. She saw the dragon, then she saw the stabilised slide, and her expression shifted from fear to a cold, hard calculation.

"He’s not safe," she insisted, clutching the air where her clipboard used to be. "Get him away from the children!"

"Get him away from the children!" the Headmistress shrieked, her voice cracking as a section of the oak tree behind her began to dissolve into a swarm of translucent, geometric shapes. "He’s a walking furnace in a wooden building! He's attracting this… this rot!"

You looked at Ignis. He was curled into himself, his scales shimmering with an unstable heat that seemed to ripple through the air. You saw the logic in the Headmistress's eyes. In a world of fairies and merfolk, a dragon was an apex disaster waiting to happen. If his internal fire was what was drawing the "glitch" to the orphanage, then removing him was the only way to save the other kids.

"You're right," you said, your voice tight. "He’s too dangerous to be near the wards."

You turned to the other children—the pixies, the young mer-kids, the ogre toddlers—who were huddling behind the crumbling stone walls. You didn't tell them the truth, that the world was literally deleting itself. You just pointed toward the high-security storage shed at the far edge of the grounds, a place reinforced with anti-magic iron.

"Everyone, get inside the main building! Now!" you commanded, pushing the younger ones toward the shelter.

Then, you grabbed the heavy iron gate key from the Headmistress’s belt. You approached Ignis. He didn't growl; he looked at you with a mournful, golden intelligence, as if he knew exactly what you were doing. He shifted his weight, his talons scoring the earth, and you felt a wave of intense, dry heat roll off him. For a split second, you felt a surge of stability—the ground beneath your feet felt real again, solid and firm—but you shook it off. It was just the dragon’s aura, a dangerous side effect of his nature.

You lured him toward the iron shed. Every step he took left a charred footprint, and every time his tail brushed a blade of grass, it turned to ash. See? you told yourself. He’s destroying the place.

You slammed the iron door shut and locked it, the heavy bolt sliding home with a final, echoing thud.

For a moment, the world went deathly silent.

Then, the sky didn't just flicker—it screamed. A massive, jagged tear appeared directly above the playground. It wasn't just a glitch anymore; it was a total system collapse. The orphanage walls, stripped of whatever stabilizing influence the dragon had provided, began to de-render. The bricks turned into raw, gray cubes that tumbled into a void that shouldn't have been there.

The Headmistress gasped, looking at her own hands as they began to fade into static. "What... what did we do?"

From inside the locked shed, a mournful, deep vibration hummed through the ground. It wasn't a roar; it was the sound of a structural support being ripped away. The orphanage was falling apart, and you had just locked the only thing holding it together in a box.

Panic clawed at your throat, sharper than any dragon’s talon. You couldn't let him out—not with the kids still huddled in the main building. If he really was the source of the rot, releasing him would be signing their death warrants. But if you didn't do something, the ground was going to turn to nothingness, and the shed would slip into the void, taking Ignis—and your only lead—with it.

You scrambled toward the shed, your boots skidding on a patch of grass that was flickering between "lush green" and "empty gray." You didn't reach for the lock. Instead, you dropped to your knees and pressed your palms against the cooling iron of the shed's door.

"If you're the anchor," you shouted through the metal, "then anchor something!"

You remembered the feeling from the ocean. That static hum in your hands. You realized that you weren't just a bystander; you were a conduit. The prophecy had called you a "failure," but maybe that was because you were trying to force reality to behave, rather than letting it be what it was: a broken, beautiful mess.

You closed your eyes and shoved your internal energy out. You didn't try to stop the rot; you tried to patch it.

You visualized the orphanage as a document—a massive, sprawling file—and you were the patch-kit. You felt the ground vibrating, the "void" pulling at your heels like a hungry tide. You weren't a dragon, you weren't a mermaid, and you didn't have magic tea. You were just a kid who grew up in the cracks of this world, and you knew exactly how to bridge them.

Snap.

The ground beneath the shed stopped dissolving. It didn't solidify, but the texture stabilized. A bridge of shimmering, golden light—the same color as Ignis's eyes—began to weave itself across the growing abyss. It looked like a stitch in a giant, fraying quilt.

"It’s working," you gasped.

But you weren't holding the stitch alone. Through the metal door, you felt a rhythmic, pulsing heat. Ignis was pushing back against the void, his own energy feeding the bridge you were creating.

However, the strain was too much. The sky above you was peeling away in long, vertical strips like falling wallpaper, revealing the terrifying, sterile white of the source code behind the world. You could see the "Sea Witch’s" trawler now, hovering in the distance, casting a digital shadow over everything.

The Headmistress crawled toward you, her legs already partially pixelated. "You have to choose," she whispered, her voice fading in and out. "The bridge is pulling energy from the main building. You’re saving the shed, but you’re draining the foundation of the nursery."

"We can’t lose him!" you screamed, your voice tearing at your throat. "He’s the only thing keeping the logic of this world together!"

You didn't wait for the Headmistress to argue. You lunged toward the golden stitch you had woven, your hands glowing with a raw, unstable light that felt less like magic and more like a system overload. You weren't just patching the world anymore; you were forcing a rewrite.

You slammed both palms into the ground. A shockwave of pure, blinding code erupted from you, a surge of energy so intense it scorched the grass around you, turning the landscape into a shimmering mirror.

System Override Initiated.

The bridge didn't just stabilize; it roared. It grew, thick cables of golden light lashing out like iron chains, wrapping around the base of the iron shed. You groaned as the sheer weight of reality pulled against you. The orphanage nursery, the building where you had spent your childhood, gave a sickening, metallic screech. The foundations weren't just breaking; they were dissolving into white light.

You watched, heart shattering, as the nursery roof buckled and then vanished, replaced by the endless, silent void. The kids inside had already fled toward the treeline—thankfully, they were safe—but the building, your history, the only home you’d ever known, was gone.

With a final, desperate heave, you yanked your arms back, dragging the golden bridge inward.

CRASH.

The iron shed slammed into the bedrock right in front of you, kicking up a cloud of debris that looked disturbingly like scattered paper. The bridge shattered into a million fireflies of light that flickered and faded.

The silence that followed was absolute. The void had stopped encroaching for now, but the orphanage was a ruin, a skeleton of stone and splintered wood sitting on a floating island of earth, surrounded by nothing but that sterile, white horizon.

The heavy iron door of the shed groaned. It was scorched, the metal glowing dull red from the heat inside. Slowly, it creaked open.

Ignis stepped out. He was no longer the size of a sapling. The exertion of the bridge, the surge of energy you had fed him, had triggered something. He was massive, his scales an obsidian black that seemed to absorb the light around him, his wings folded tight like heavy curtains. He stepped over the debris, his golden eyes locking onto yours.

He didn't bow. He didn't thank you. He exhaled, and a plume of smoke curled into the shape of an arrow, pointing directly toward the distant, frozen silhouette of the Sea Witch’s trawler.

"You did it," a voice whispered behind you. The Headmistress was standing there, though her arm was still flickering—an unfinished asset in a broken game. "You saved the anchor. But look at what it cost."

She gestured to the surrounding nothingness. There was no going back to the way things were. The world was failing, and you had just traded your home to keep the only creature that could fix it.

Ignis nudged your shoulder with his snout. He was hot, a burning, reassuring weight against you. He wanted you to climb on.

The silence of the void was heavier than the ocean. Beyond the edge of your floating island, reality had been replaced by a flat, white emptiness that hummed with a low-frequency static.

"Go!" the Headmistress urged, though her feet were starting to drift apart, dissolving into geometric patterns. "If you stay, you’ll be deleted with the foundation!"

You ignored her, turning your back on the beckoning dragon. You scrambled through the debris of the nursery. It felt surreal—the wood was light as balsa, and the books were just static-filled rectangles. You weren't looking for jewels or gold; you were looking for the one thing that proved this place had been real before the world started "de-rendering."

Your hands brushed against a pile of rubble. There, beneath a fallen support beam, sat a wooden box—the "memory chest" where you’d stored the few things you had from before you were placed in the orphanage.

You pried the lid open. Inside were a few childhood trinkets: a smooth, river-polished stone, a rusted keychain, and a photograph.

You snatched the photograph. It was a picture of the kelp forest, taken from a view just below the surface, showing the tops of the palace spires. It was the only tangible link you had to your friend—the Princess. It wasn't just a piece of paper anymore; it was an anchor. You felt the familiar hum of stability flow from the photo into your fingers.

"Got you," you whispered, shoving it into your pocket.

As you turned back, the ground beneath the Headmistress gave way. She didn't scream; she just vanished into a shower of white pixels, like a corrupted file being wiped clean. The orphanage floor beneath you groaned, tilting at a sharp angle. The void was rising, swallowing the structure inch by inch.

Ignis let out a roar—a sound that shook the very air, vibrating through your bones. He was impatient, his tail whipping back and forth, shattering a nearby wall into dust. He knew better than you did that time wasn't just running out; it was being erased.

You sprinted across the tilting floorboards, your heart hammering against your ribs. You didn't look back at the ruins of your home. You leapt, your fingers catching the rough, warm ridges of Ignis’s scales.

He caught you effortlessly, his powerful wings snapping open with a sound like a sail catching a gale. The force of his takeoff shattered the last of the orphanage floor, sending the remnants of the nursery spiraling into the abyss.

You were airborne, rising into the terrifying, glitchy sky. From this height, you could see the truth of the world. It was a massive, broken grid. Entire cities were missing chunks of their geography, and the ocean—where the barrier still hung like a shroud—looked like a dark, bruised circle in the center of a fraying tapestry.

The Sea Witch’s trawler was dead ahead, suspended in the air by nothing but the sheer weight of the narrative she was forcing upon the world.

Ignis banked sharply, diving toward the ship. You clutched the photograph in your pocket, the heat from the dragon’s back seeping into your clothes, keeping you centered as the world around you flickered between existence and nothingness.

Ignis plummeted toward the trawler like a meteor of obsidian and fire. The ship’s defensive shield—a shimmering, translucent dome of jagged geometric code—pulsed as you neared. You didn't try to fly through it. Instead, you reached into your pocket, gripping the photograph of the kelp palace so hard the edges bit into your palm.

It’s an anchor, you realized. It’s not just a memory. It’s a definition.

As you slammed into the shield, you didn't fight the code. You injected your own reality into it. You projected the memory of the kelp forest—the vibrant, pulsing life of your home—directly into the barrier. The shield shrieked, a high-pitched digital whine, and shattered like glass.

You landed on the deck with a bone-jarring thud. Ignis roared, his flames singeing the ship’s rigging, but the Sea Witch didn't flinch. She stood by the helm, her hands still dancing across that impossible, glowing interface.

"You're late," she said, her voice sounding like a thousand overlapping recordings. "The de-rendering is at eighty-percent completion."

"Release her!" you shouted, pointing at the center of the deck, where your friend, the Princess, was trapped inside a crystalline cage. "I have the object! The prophecy said the hero would bring the end to the cycle!"

You pulled the photograph from your pocket, holding it up like a holy relic. You expected it to glow, to act as a key, or to purge the darkness from the deck.

The Sea Witch stopped typing. She turned, looking at the photograph, then at you. And then, she began to laugh. It wasn't a cruel laugh—it was hollow, tired, and deeply sad.

"The prophecy?" She gestured to the ship, the sky, and the void beyond. "That little story was written by the same people who designed this prison. They needed a 'hero' to keep the system running. They needed a motivation to keep the 'Chosen One' moving, so they wouldn't stop to look at the cracks in the walls."

She walked to the cage, tapped a single key, and the crystalline structure dissolved into light. Your friend stumbled out, gasping for air, but the Sea Witch didn't stop her. She didn't even look at her.

"There is no 'save the world' object," the witch said, pointing to the console. "There is only this. This ship isn't a vessel; it's a delete-button. The 'fairytale' world is an outdated simulation. It’s buggy, it’s failing, and they are trying to wipe the server to make room for something... newer."

You stared at the photograph in your hand. The edges were curling, the image of the palace beginning to fade as if someone were erasing it with a physical eraser.

"If the prophecy is a lie," you whispered, the realization hitting you harder than the fall from the orphanage, "then there’s no way to win."

"There is no win condition," the witch agreed, her eyes hollow. "Only the exit."

The ceiling of the ocean—that viscous, oil-slick barrier—pulsed with a low, thrumming sound, like a massive server struggling to process a command.

The Commander and the rest of the guard were frantic. They were trying brute force: lances of magically charged coral, synchronized blasts of sonic energy, and even a ritual meant to tear a hole in the fabric of the deep. Nothing worked. Every time a blast hit the black liquid, the energy simply vanished, absorbed as if it had never been fired.

"Useless!" the Commander roared, his gills fluttering in agitation. "We are trapped in a fishbowl while she is being taken to the void!"

You stood a few paces back, feeling remarkably heavy. The prophecy was itching at the back of your mind: The hero will fail at every turn.

"Maybe stop trying to break it?" you suggested, your voice small.

The Commander didn't even look back. "Brilliant insight. Shall we ask it politely to open? Perhaps sing it a lullaby?"

Ignoring the mockery, you swam toward the barrier. You weren't a warrior, and you certainly didn't have the tactical brilliance the guard possessed. You had a strange, nagging feeling that the barrier wasn't an obstacle—it was a glitch. It felt like the edge of a map in an old video game.

You didn't reach for your weapon. Instead, you reached out with your hand, palm flat. You intended to press against it to feel the texture, but you tripped—a classic stumble caused by a sudden, jarring shift in the current.

Your outstretched hand didn't hit the barrier. Your entire wrist slipped into it, and you plummeted forward.

Pop.

For a split second, you weren't in the ocean. You were hanging halfway through a threshold. Your lower half was still in the vibrant, bioluminescent water of the kelp forest, but your head and shoulders had breached the surface.

And it was wrong.

Instead of air, the "surface" was a blinding white space filled with drifting lines of glowing code. You saw the silhouette of a massive ship—the Sea Witch’s trawler—but it looked like a pencil sketch on a piece of paper, shaky and incomplete. Through the "air," you saw glimpses of Brierley Hill, but the buildings were translucent, flickering like a faulty fluorescent bulb.

"Get back here, you idiot!" The Commander grabbed your ankle to pull you back, but because he was trying to drag you out of a space that clearly didn't follow the laws of physics, his grip slipped, and he accidentally kicked a patch of "empty" water.

Error.

The space where the Commander kicked didn't splash. It shattered into a thousand jagged, glowing polygons. The entire kelp forest groaned.

"I didn't mean to!" you yelled, flailing. As you tried to right yourself, your elbow hooked onto what looked like a floating stream of binary data. You yanked it, purely out of panic, trying to pull yourself back down into the ocean.

The world lurched violently. The sky above the ocean turned into a grid of deep, royal purple. The Sea Witch’s ship—the one holding your friend—suddenly stopped moving, suspended in a frozen frame.

"You’ve broken it even more!" the Commander screamed as a chunk of the ocean floor nearby simply ceased to exist, replaced by a hollow gray void.

You were back in the water now, panting, staring at your hands. They were glowing with a faint, static hum. You hadn't saved the Princess, but you had managed to pause the entire world.

The environment around you is starting to de-rez, and the Commander is looking at you with a mix of terror and begrudging realization that your clumsiness is the only thing affecting the barrier. 

The orphanage was a chaotic tapestry of temperaments. You grew up dodging stray pixie dust that made you sneeze glitter for a week and learning the hard way never to play hide-and-seek with an adolescent shadow-sprite. You thought you had seen every possible variation of magical childhood—until the Headmistress brought him in.

His name was Ignis, and he was small, barely the size of a sturdy oak sapling. But he was a dragon.

In this world of "normal" magic, a dragon wasn't just a creature; he was a walking liability. The ogres in the dorms complained that he smelled like singed sulfur. The fairies were terrified that he’d accidentally sneeze and turn their delicate nectar-brewing stations into charcoal.

You were in the courtyard, trying to mend a broken kite, when you saw him sitting near the edge of the playground. He wasn't breathing fire, but the ground beneath his talons was blackening, the grass curling into ash just from his proximity.

"You can't be here," you said, your voice steady despite the way your heart hammered. You weren't the "Chosen One" here; you were just a kid who had learned that safety was a luxury in a world that was already fraying at the edges.

Ignis looked up. His eyes were like molten gold, swirling with a heat that felt ancient and terrified. He didn't speak, but he let out a puff of smoke that formed the shape of a closing door.

"The orphanage is for people," you insisted, though the words felt hollow even to you. You glanced at the horizon. You could still see the distorted, pixelated sky—the same "glitch" you had seen at the sea barrier. The world was failing, and here you were, worrying about a dragon.

Suddenly, a chunk of the playground equipment—a perfectly normal slide—began to flicker. It didn't just disappear; it unraveled into strings of glowing, nonsensical numbers. The children screaming nearby weren't just scared of the dragon anymore; they were watching their world dissolve.

Ignis let out a low, vibrating growl, and for a second, the heat radiating from him didn't burn. It acted like a beacon. The flickering slide stabilized, the code snapping back into solid, rusted metal.

He wasn't just a danger. He was an anchor.

"Wait," you whispered, dropping the kite.

The Headmistress came rushing out, her face pale, holding a clipboard that was currently turning into a shower of white pixels. She saw the dragon, then she saw the stabilized slide, and her expression shifted from fear to a cold, hard calculation.

"He’s not safe," she insisted, clutching the air where her clipboard used to be. "Get him away from the children!"

"Get him away from the children!" the Headmistress shrieked, her voice cracking as a section of the oak tree behind her began to dissolve into a swarm of translucent, geometric shapes. "He’s a walking furnace in a wooden building! He's attracting this… this rot!"

You looked at Ignis. He was curled into himself, his scales shimmering with an unstable heat that seemed to ripple through the air. You saw the logic in the Headmistress's eyes. In a world of fairies and merfolk, a dragon was an apex disaster waiting to happen. If his internal fire was what was drawing the "glitch" to the orphanage, then removing him was the only way to save the other kids.

"You're right," you said, your voice tight. "He’s too dangerous to be near the wards."

You turned to the other children—the pixies, the young mer-kids, the ogre toddlers—who were huddling behind the crumbling stone walls. You didn't tell them the truth, that the world was literally deleting itself. You just pointed toward the high-security storage shed at the far edge of the grounds, a place reinforced with anti-magic iron.

"Everyone, get inside the main building! Now!" you commanded, pushing the younger ones toward the shelter.

Then, you grabbed the heavy iron gate key from the Headmistress’s belt. You approached Ignis. He didn't growl; he looked at you with a mournful, golden intelligence, as if he knew exactly what you were doing. He shifted his weight, his talons scoring the earth, and you felt a wave of intense, dry heat roll off him. For a split second, you felt a surge of stability—the ground beneath your feet felt real again, solid and firm—but you shook it off. It was just the dragon’s aura, a dangerous side effect of his nature.

You lured him toward the iron shed. Every step he took left a charred footprint, and every time his tail brushed a blade of grass, it turned to ash. See? you told yourself. He’s destroying the place.

You slammed the iron door shut and locked it, the heavy bolt sliding home with a final, echoing thud.

For a moment, the world went deathly silent.

Then, the sky didn't just flicker—it screamed. A massive, jagged tear appeared directly above the playground. It wasn't just a glitch anymore; it was a total system collapse. The orphanage walls, stripped of whatever stabilizing influence the dragon had provided, began to de-render. The bricks turned into raw, gray cubes that tumbled into a void that shouldn't have been there.

The Headmistress gasped, looking at her own hands as they began to fade into static. "What... what did we do?"

From inside the locked shed, a mournful, deep vibration hummed through the ground. It wasn't a roar; it was the sound of a structural support being ripped away. The orphanage was falling apart, and you had just locked the only thing holding it together in a box.

Panic clawed at your throat, sharper than any dragon’s talon. You couldn't let him out—not with the kids still huddled in the main building. If he really was the source of the rot, releasing him would be signing their death warrants. But if you didn't do something, the ground was going to turn to nothingness, and the shed would slip into the void, taking Ignis—and your only lead—with it.

You scrambled toward the shed, your boots skidding on a patch of grass that was flickering between "lush green" and "empty gray." You didn't reach for the lock. Instead, you dropped to your knees and pressed your palms against the cooling iron of the shed's door.

"If you're the anchor," you shouted through the metal, "then anchor something!"

You remembered the feeling from the ocean. That static hum in your hands. You realized that you weren't just a bystander; you were a conduit. The prophecy had called you a "failure," but maybe that was because you were trying to force reality to behave, rather than letting it be what it was: a broken, beautiful mess.

You closed your eyes and shoved your internal energy out. You didn't try to stop the rot; you tried to patch it.

You visualized the orphanage as a document—a massive, sprawling file—and you were the patch-kit. You felt the ground vibrating, the "void" pulling at your heels like a hungry tide. You weren't a dragon, you weren't a mermaid, and you didn't have magic tea. You were just a kid who grew up in the cracks of this world, and you knew exactly how to bridge them.

Snap.

The ground beneath the shed stopped dissolving. It didn't solidify, but the texture stabilized. A bridge of shimmering, golden light—the same color as Ignis's eyes—began to weave itself across the growing abyss. It looked like a stitch in a giant, fraying quilt.

"It’s working," you gasped.

But you weren't holding the stitch alone. Through the metal door, you felt a rhythmic, pulsing heat. Ignis was pushing back against the void, his own energy feeding the bridge you were creating.

However, the strain was too much. The sky above you was peeling away in long, vertical strips like falling wallpaper, revealing the terrifying, sterile white of the source code behind the world. You could see the "Sea Witch’s" trawler now, hovering in the distance, casting a digital shadow over everything.

The Headmistress crawled toward you, her legs already partially pixelated. "You have to choose," she whispered, her voice fading in and out. "The bridge is pulling energy from the main building. You’re saving the shed, but you’re draining the foundation of the nursery."

"We can’t lose him!" you screamed, your voice tearing at your throat. "He’s the only thing keeping the logic of this world together!"

You didn't wait for the Headmistress to argue. You lunged toward the golden stitch you had woven, your hands glowing with a raw, unstable light that felt less like magic and more like a system overload. You weren't just patching the world anymore; you were forcing a rewrite.

You slammed both palms into the ground. A shockwave of pure, blinding code erupted from you, a surge of energy so intense it scorched the grass around you, turning the landscape into a shimmering mirror.

System Override Initiated.

The bridge didn't just stabilize; it roared. It grew, thick cables of golden light lashing out like iron chains, wrapping around the base of the iron shed. You groaned as the sheer weight of reality pulled against you. The orphanage nursery, the building where you had spent your childhood, gave a sickening, metallic screech. The foundations weren't just breaking; they were dissolving into white light.

You watched, heart shattering, as the nursery roof buckled and then vanished, replaced by the endless, silent void. The kids inside had already fled toward the treeline—thankfully, they were safe—but the building, your history, the only home you’d ever known, was gone.

With a final, desperate heave, you yanked your arms back, dragging the golden bridge inward.

CRASH.

The iron shed slammed into the bedrock right in front of you, kicking up a cloud of debris that looked disturbingly like scattered paper. The bridge shattered into a million fireflies of light that flickered and faded.

The silence that followed was absolute. The void had stopped encroaching for now, but the orphanage was a ruin, a skeleton of stone and splintered wood sitting on a floating island of earth, surrounded by nothing but that sterile, white horizon.

The heavy iron door of the shed groaned. It was scorched, the metal glowing dull red from the heat inside. Slowly, it creaked open.

Ignis stepped out. He was no longer the size of a sapling. The exertion of the bridge, the surge of energy you had fed him, had triggered something. He was massive, his scales an obsidian black that seemed to absorb the light around him, his wings folded tight like heavy curtains. He stepped over the debris, his golden eyes locking onto yours.

He didn't bow. He didn't thank you. He exhaled, and a plume of smoke curled into the shape of an arrow, pointing directly toward the distant, frozen silhouette of the Sea Witch’s trawler.

"You did it," a voice whispered behind you. The Headmistress was standing there, though her arm was still flickering—an unfinished asset in a broken game. "You saved the anchor. But look at what it cost."

She gestured to the surrounding nothingness. There was no going back to the way things were. The world was failing, and you had just traded your home to keep the only creature that could fix it.

Ignis nudged your shoulder with his snout. He was hot, a burning, reassuring weight against you. He wanted you to climb on.

The silence of the void was heavier than the ocean. Beyond the edge of your floating island, reality had been replaced by a flat, white emptiness that hummed with a low-frequency static.

"Go!" the Headmistress urged, though her feet were starting to drift apart, dissolving into geometric patterns. "If you stay, you’ll be deleted with the foundation!"

You ignored her, turning your back on the beckoning dragon. You scrambled through the debris of the nursery. It felt surreal—the wood was light as balsa, and the books were just static-filled rectangles. You weren't looking for jewels or gold; you were looking for the one thing that proved this place had been real before the world started "de-rendering."

Your hands brushed against a pile of rubble. There, beneath a fallen support beam, sat a wooden box—the "memory chest" where you’d stored the few things you had from before you were placed in the orphanage.

You pried the lid open. Inside were a few childhood trinkets: a smooth, river-polished stone, a rusted keychain, and a photograph.

You snatched the photograph. It was a picture of the kelp forest, taken from a view just below the surface, showing the tops of the palace spires. It was the only tangible link you had to your friend—the Princess. It wasn't just a piece of paper anymore; it was an anchor. You felt the familiar hum of stability flow from the photo into your fingers.

"Got you," you whispered, shoving it into your pocket.

As you turned back, the ground beneath the Headmistress gave way. She didn't scream; she just vanished into a shower of white pixels, like a corrupted file being wiped clean. The orphanage floor beneath you groaned, tilting at a sharp angle. The void was rising, swallowing the structure inch by inch.

Ignis let out a roar—a sound that shook the very air, vibrating through your bones. He was impatient, his tail whipping back and forth, shattering a nearby wall into dust. He knew better than you did that time wasn't just running out; it was being erased.

You sprinted across the tilting floorboards, your heart hammering against your ribs. You didn't look back at the ruins of your home. You leapt, your fingers catching the rough, warm ridges of Ignis’s scales.

He caught you effortlessly, his powerful wings snapping open with a sound like a sail catching a gale. The force of his takeoff shattered the last of the orphanage floor, sending the remnants of the nursery spiralling into the abyss.

You were airborne, rising into the terrifying, glitchy sky. From this height, you could see the truth of the world. It was a massive, broken grid. Entire cities were missing chunks of their geography, and the ocean—where the barrier still hung like a shroud—looked like a dark, bruised circle in the center of a fraying tapestry.

The Sea Witch’s trawler was dead ahead, suspended in the air by nothing but the sheer weight of the narrative she was forcing upon the world.

Ignis banked sharply, diving toward the ship. You clutched the photograph in your pocket, the heat from the dragon’s back seeping into your clothes, keeping you centered as the world around you flickered between existence and nothingness.

As you descend toward the trawler, you see the Sea Witch standing on the deck. She isn't holding a weapon; she's holding a console, her fingers flying across a holographic interface that looks suspiciously like the code you felt earlier. She sees you coming. What is your move as you break through the ship’s defensive shield?

The main character goes on an adventure to find the object to save the world, only to realize the object was a lie all along.

Ignis plummeted toward the trawler like a meteor of obsidian and fire. The ship’s defensive shield—a shimmering, translucent dome of jagged geometric code—pulsed as you neared. You didn't try to fly through it. Instead, you reached into your pocket, gripping the photograph of the kelp palace so hard the edges bit into your palm.

It’s an anchor, you realized. It’s not just a memory. It’s a definition.

As you slammed into the shield, you didn't fight the code. You injected your own reality into it. You projected the memory of the kelp forest—the vibrant, pulsing life of your home—directly into the barrier. The shield shrieked, a high-pitched digital whine, and shattered like glass.

You landed on the deck with a bone-jarring thud. Ignis roared, his flames singeing the ship’s rigging, but the Sea Witch didn't flinch. She stood by the helm, her hands still dancing across that impossible, glowing interface.

"You're late," she said, her voice sounding like a thousand overlapping recordings. "The de-rendering is at eighty-percent completion."

"Release her!" you shouted, pointing at the center of the deck, where your friend, the Princess, was trapped inside a crystalline cage. "I have the object! The prophecy said the hero would bring the end to the cycle!"

You pulled the photograph from your pocket, holding it up like a holy relic. You expected it to glow, to act as a key, or to purge the darkness from the deck.

The Sea Witch stopped typing. She turned, looking at the photograph, then at you. And then, she began to laugh. It wasn't a cruel laugh—it was hollow, tired, and deeply sad.

"The prophecy?" She gestured to the ship, the sky, and the void beyond. "That little story was written by the same people who designed this prison. They needed a 'hero' to keep the system running. They needed a motivation to keep the 'Chosen One' moving, so they wouldn't stop to look at the cracks in the walls."

She walked to the cage, tapped a single key, and the crystalline structure dissolved into light. Your friend stumbled out, gasping for air, but the Sea Witch didn't stop her. She didn't even look at her.

"There is no 'save the world' object," the witch said, pointing to the console. "There is only this. This ship isn't a vessel; it's a delete-button. The 'fairytale' world is an outdated simulation. It’s buggy, it’s failing, and they are trying to wipe the server to make room for something... newer."

You stared at the photograph in your hand. The edges were curling, the image of the palace beginning to fade as if someone were erasing it with a physical eraser.

"If the prophecy is a lie," you whispered, the realisation hitting you harder than the fall from the orphanage, "then there’s no way to win."

"There is no win condition," the witch agreed, her eyes hollow. "Only the exit."

The deck of the ship groaned, the planks beneath your feet turning into transparent geometric wireframes. Your friend, the Princess, reached out and took your hand, her grip trembling—not with fear, but with the sudden, jarring clarity of someone who finally sees the strings attached to her own existence.

The Sea Witch watched you, her fingers hovering inches from a final, pulsing "DELETE" command on the interface. "You are the Chosen One," she said, her voice devoid of malice. "The prophecy claimed you would save everyone by 'complete accident.' You thought that meant a clumsy rescue. It didn't. It meant you were the only one authorised to trigger the kill-switch."

You looked at the photograph in your hand. The palace was gone now, just a blank white square of paper. You looked at Ignis, who was currently flickering, his massive obsidian scales turning into columns of cascading green numbers. He wasn't suffering; he was waiting. He was a creature of this world, and he knew it was time to transition.

"If we reboot," you asked, your voice steadying as you walked toward the console, "what happens to the memory of who we are? Do we just... vanish?"

"We don't vanish," the Witch said, stepping aside to let you take the controls. "We migrate. The data is wiped from this server, but the core essence—the 'story' of who you are—is buffered. We won't be in a kelp forest anymore. We won't be in a city of glitched antique shops. We’ll be... somewhere else. Something new."

You looked at your friend. You didn't need to ask. The look in her eyes—the realization that her entire life was a script designed by a cold, uncaring architect—was enough. You were done being a character in someone else’s broken narrative.

"Complete accident," you whispered.

You didn't reach for the 'Delete' button. Instead, you slammed your fist down onto the entire surface of the interface, overloading the feedback loop. You weren't deleting the world; you were crashing the simulation. You were forcing a hard reset of the entire system.

The ship didn't just break—it dissolved into a roar of white noise. The sky above, the void below, and the trawler itself folded in on themselves, a million gigabytes of reality collapsing into a single, infinitesimal point of light.

For a moment, there was nothing. No sound. No color. No sense of time. You weren't a Chosen One, or an orphan, or a hero. You were just a pulse of energy, drifting in a vast, dark space.

Then, the static began to resolve into sound: the rhythmic, steady beat of a heart. You felt the warmth of sand beneath your fingers and the smell of salt—but real salt, not the smell of a programmed ocean. You heard a familiar laugh nearby.

You opened your eyes.

The sky above was a deep, impossible blue, filled with stars that weren't pixels. You were lying on a beach. Beside you, the Princess was waking up, blinking at the sunrise. And not far off, a large, dark shape was shaking off the sand—a dragon, now just a curious, leather-winged beast that looked as confused and alive as you were.

You sat up, your muscles aching with a very real, human soreness. The prophecy was gone. The glitches were gone.

You looked down at your hand. You weren't holding a photograph anymore, just a handful of warm, real sand. You had saved everyone—by crashing the system and forcing the universe to start again.

You stood up, brushed the sand from your clothes, and looked at your friend. The story of the kelp forest and the glitchy city was over, but for the first time in your life, you didn't know what was going to happen next.

And that, you realized, was the best possible ending.

Echoes of the Moonlight

 The damp air of the Blackwood ruins clung to Anna’s skin like a cold shroud. It was 4:00 a.m.—the "witching hour" for urban explo...