Thursday, October 2, 2025

Beneath The Creamson Sky

 PROLOGUE:

 Shadows in the Walls

 Basia was thirty-five when she first truly understood the weight of shadows. She’d moved to Brierley Hill in 2012, chasing a fresh start in the gray heart of England. The flat she shared with her partner felt like a refuge then — a small sanctuary carved from unfamiliar streets and damp skies. But that sanctuary was shattered in 2016. Her partner died suddenly, unexpectedly, and the walls of that flat seemed to bleed with his absence. The TV would flicker and roar to life in the dead of night. The boiler hissed and thundered, rattling the pipes like a restless ghost. Objects moved, just out of reach or sight, and the silence was never silent. Basia fled in 2018, moving in with someone new — someone better, she told herself — but the memories lingered, thick as the fog that clung to Brierley Hill’s canal banks. Part of her family still lived far away, in a village near Nowy Targ, close to Kraków. A place that looked ordinary enough on the map, with its weathered homes and winding dirt roads. But the village held secrets beneath its quiet surface—whispers of old curses, bitter grudges, and shadows that clung to the land like a second skin. The people there were polite, even warm — at least on the surface. But Basia knew better. Her family was no different. The kind of family where smiles hid teeth, and kindness came with strings you didn’t want to pull. A family from a horror you never hear about in travel guides — the kind where the past never dies, and the darkness waits patiently behind locked doors and shuttered windows. Basia thought she’d left it all behind. But some shadows follow you. And some names are never forgotten. 

 CHAPTER ONE: 

The Woman in Flat 6

 They called her “the woman in Flat 6,” like it was a warning. Barbara—Basia, if you knew the name, though few did, had lived in Brierley Hill long enough to be recognised, but never known. She walked to the shop when it rained. Always then. Never when the sun was out. Always in black, always with a scarf pulled loose around her shoulders, even in summer. A figure people half-remembered, like a detail in a strange dream. The older locals whispered she’d been here since 2012, but no one knew the full story. One woman at the pub claimed she had a partner who died suddenly. A man with dark hair and sharp features who used to fix radios, gone overnight in 2016. No funeral anyone attended. No flowers, no priest. Just a silence, and then the stories. That autumn, the flat at number 6 changed. Loud banging, pipes clanging at night. The boiler fired at 3AM like it was trying to scream. The TV turned on by itself, full volume, static blaring like a warning no one understood. Someone called the landlord. He came once, left pale, never returned. By December 2017, the noise stopped. But Basia had already gone. Now she lived in a narrow terrace by the canal. Her curtains never fully opened. People said they saw her watching—sometimes from behind glass, sometimes from places where there was no window. She never smiled. Not that people saw, anyway. Martin, fifteen, lived two streets over. His mother warned him to stay away from the canal path after dark, especially near Basia’s row. “Not good energy,” she said, half-joking. “She’s got something walking with her. You'll see it if you stare too long.” Martin thought she was messing with him. But when he passed her place last week, there had been crows—three of them. One perched on the streetlight, another by the canal gate, and one on her chimney. They didn’t move. Just stared. He told himself it was nothing. But even now, he avoided her stretch of the towpath. Basia’s world, behind closed doors, was smaller than it looked. A kettle that clicked twice before boiling. Shelves of old herbal books, in both English and Polish. A black iron key that never fit any lock she currently owned. A loose floorboard under the hall where she kept a brass ring, a photo of her partner, and an iron nail. And a notebook. One with half the pages torn out. She’d started it again last night. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 18th September,  

The flat still knows him. It’s been seven years, but sometimes the walls shift like they used to—like when he was angry. The wind outside moaned like it remembered. The kettle boiled dry. He never liked me making tea after midnight. The thing from Kraków is quiet, but I feel it shifting. The canal murmurs like the Vistula used to. Sometimes I dream of my cousin’s farm. Not the fields—but the cellar. The smell of the soil beneath the trapdoor. The sound of my aunt’s voice when she sang to the thing down there. I was supposed to forget. But bones don’t forget. And neither do rivers. The doorbell rang. Basia froze. No one visited. Her shadow stretched toward the entry as she stepped softly through the hall. The sound came again. Not a buzz—a knock this time. Three short, one long. Old rhythm. The cellar door... She turned the bolt slowly. Outside, there was no one. Just a crow. Perched on the railing. In its beak: a small, rusted nail. 

 CHAPTER TWO: 

Something Follows Basia didn’t sleep much. Not deeply, not fully. Sleep was a shallow drift now, full of shifting shapes behind her eyelids and echoes of voices that weren’t speaking aloud. She knew how to sleep lightly— she’d learned that back in the village, where dreams weren’t always yours alone. Tonight, the air was wrong again. The flat was still. The crow’s nail sat on the kitchen counter, untouched. She hadn’t moved it since she brought it in, wrapped in the corner of her scarf like it was radioactive. It smelled faintly of river water and old iron. She stood barefoot in the hallway, staring at her front door. Her hand hovered near the bolt. The kettle clicked. Twice. Basia turned slowly. It wasn’t plugged in. Her stomach sank. She walked to the kitchen in silence. The light above the sink flickered once, then dimmed. The shadow beneath the table shifted, like something had moved there. But the chair was still. The chair always stayed still. She made tea anyway. Boil. Pour. Two fingers of honey. Stir counter-clockwise. The old ways clung to her. Her phone buzzed—a rare sound. She hadn't given the number to many. Fewer still had any reason to use it. A message: “Cześć. Dostałam coś. Otworzyło się z szafki po dziadku. Czy mogę zadzwonić?” (Hi. I found something. It opened from grandpa’s cupboard. Can I call?) It was from Zosia, her niece. The girl still lived in the house near Nowy Targ, with the rest of them. The old family, the dark-bloodline. The ones who painted saints on the windows but buried certain jars under the hearth. The ones who smiled wide at church and locked their animals inside during red moons. She hadn’t heard from Zosia in a year. Maybe longer. Basia stared at the message, heart thudding softly beneath her ribs. Her thumb hovered over “Yes.” Then moved to “No.” Then paused. The floor creaked. She wasn’t moving. She turned her head. Just a sound, she told herself. Just the flat settling. But there it was again. A weight—slow, deliberate—stepping through the hallway behind her. One foot. Then another. No breath, no shuffle. Not her partner, not anymore. He had made himself known with noise. This was quieter. Older. She turned off the light. Basia stood in the dark kitchen, eyes adjusting. The nail on the counter glinted faintly in the low glow of the hallway nightbulb. The smell came first: salt and soil. Wet stone. The scent of deep cellars and stagnant water. She looked at the chair again. This time—it was facing her. She hadn’t touched it. The shadow underneath it... exhaled. Basia didn’t scream. She reached for the small bottle on the windowsill. Miód z jałowcem. Juniper honey. She smudged it across the frame of the window with her finger and whispered something in Polish, something cracked with age. Then she picked up the nail. It was warm. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 20th September The chair moved. It isn’t him. It’s not the man I buried, or the man I burned. He was loud, and spiteful, and angry. But he never watched. This thing watches. I think Zosia’s found the second box. The one we swore not to open after the binding. She would’ve been ten. Old enough to know better. But too young to feel what the cellar truly held. If she’s found the ring, it’s already waking. I should’ve buried the key in Kraków. But the salt mines never let go of what they’re owed. The light in the hallway dimmed again. Basia stepped toward it, barefoot on cold floorboards, the nail gripped in her hand like a relic or a weapon. Her shadow walked beside her. But something walked behind. 

 CHAPTER THREE: 

Zosia’s Box Basia didn’t answer the message right away. The flat was quiet again, but it was the kind of quiet that had edges. The kind that listened. She placed the nail beside the photo of her dead partner—Tomasz—on the small altar in the hall. She never lit candles anymore. Fire had started too many things already. The clock on the wall ticked once. Then again. Then stopped. Basia pressed Call. Zosia answered on the first ring. There was no greeting, just breath. Panicked. Sharp. Like someone who had run up a hill and didn’t know what was at the top. “You’re awake,” Zosia said. Her voice sounded older. Rougher. Basia didn’t ask how she got the number. “It opened,” Zosia continued. “I didn’t try to. I swear. The cupboard—grandad’s cupboard— it was sealed. You know that. Nails, salt, even the black ribbon.” Basia closed her eyes. She could see it. The old wooden cabinet that reeked of lilac and rust. In her childhood, it was just where her grandfather kept his vodka. Later, she knew it was something else. A binding place. “There was a box,” Zosia said. “Wrapped in oilskin. Sealed with wax. The wax is gone.” Basia sat down slowly on the floor, one hand pressed to her chest. “Inside,” Zosia whispered, “was a tooth.” Basia didn’t speak for a long moment. When she finally did, her voice came low, like she was reciting from memory. “You remember the cellar?” Zosia didn’t answer. “The prayer mat your mother used to keep down there. The old hymns she sang. The way the dogs never went near it. You remember.” Still, silence. “That tooth isn’t dziadek’s. It’s hers.” Basia could still see the woman—that woman—years ago, in the village, sitting at the edge of a salt circle. They called her Ciocia Magda, though no one claimed to be her niece. She lived alone. Except she didn’t. She was the caretaker of the thing. The family said Magda had made a deal generations ago, after the winter of black snow. Every bloodline paid its toll. Every full moon, the cellar doors had to be checked. Every girl learned the hymn before she learned her prayers. Basia had failed to keep singing. She left. Ran to Kraków. Then to England. The rope snapped, and the weight followed. “I didn’t touch it,” Zosia said again. “But the barn cat went near it yesterday. It’s gone now.” Basia nodded, knowing Zosia couldn’t see it. “Listen to me,” she said. “You need to take the box. Wrap it again in oilskin. Salt it. Then find the black key in the family Bible.” “There is no key.” “Then it’s already out.” She ended the call before Zosia could say more. Basia sat in the silence, her breath steady, her eyes on the hallway mirror. In the reflection, something stood behind her. Tall. Unmoving. Head tilted, just slightly, like it was remembering her face. She didn’t turn around. She whispered a name instead—not Tomasz’s, not Zosia’s. A name from the old dialect. One she wasn’t supposed to speak outside the cellar. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 21st September

 Magda kept it asleep for forty years. I broke the rhythm when I left. The hymns stopped. The bloodline thinned. Now it’s hunting again. I was the last binding. I think… I think it’s coming for me first. Outside, three crows gathered on the roof. One held a bone in its beak. It dropped it onto the windowsill. Basia didn’t look up. She just lit a candle—for the first time in years—and began to hum. 

 CHAPTER FOUR: 

The Thing in the Cellar.  

She dreamed again. Or she was remembering. The difference, for Basia, was never clear anymore. It was autumn, years ago—just before she left the village outside Nowy Targ. Leaves black with rain, mist clinging to the field edges like breath. Her coat was too thin that year. Tomasz hadn’t proposed yet. He still smelled of soldering wire and vodka, still smiled at her like she wasn’t broken. She'd been called to the house by Ciocia Magda. “You’re old enough now,” the woman had said. “You’ve bled enough winters. You’ll take my place, if your bones agree.” Basia had nodded, heart stone-heavy. The cellar was older than the house. It sat beneath the floor like a lung, breathing slow and deep. Magda had her kneel on the steps. She lit a bundle of rowan twigs and salt, waved them three times, and whispered: “You must not open your eyes. If you see it before it sees you, it will follow.” Basia opened her eyes anyway. Of course she did. It wasn’t just dark down there. It was darker than dark. Black like ink soaking into stone. But something moved inside it. Not crawling. Pulsing. She saw bone. Long and white, bending where bone shouldn’t bend. Something like teeth,  but too many—too layered. Not a face. Just a shape, like memory made flesh. The air was thick with the smell of turned soil and something older—like blood gone to rust. It didn’t look at her. But it twitched, once. And the ground shook beneath her feet. When Basia screamed, Magda slapped her. “Do not give it a name!” the woman spat. “It’s waiting for that!” Basia had dropped the candle. The light flickered against the stones, revealing something she would never describe—not even in her diary. That was the last time she went down. That was the night she packed her bag and left for Kraków. Now, in her Birmingham flat, Basia woke with a gasp. Sweat chilled her back. The candle on the windowsill had gone out—melted to a stub. The room smelled like old ash. The bone the crow had left sat beside the nail. She picked it up. It was a tooth. She crossed the room slowly and placed it on the altar next to the nail, next to Tomasz’s photo. Her hands shook. There was a knock at the door. She froze. Three short. One long. Same rhythm as before. Basia didn't move. She waited thirty seconds. Then slowly unlocked it. No one was there. But something had been. A footprint—wet, pale, and bare—marked the carpet just inside the threshold. She didn’t own carpets. 

 DIARY ENTRY

 – 22nd September 

 It reminds me. It didn’t forget, even when Kraków swallowed it. I should have listened to Magda. She said it needs a name to become real again. A name, and a memory strong enough to give it shape. Maybe I am its name. Maybe I brought it here. The light flickered again. Basia didn’t move. Behind her, the mirror cracked. 

 CHAPTER FIVE: 

The Shape Behind Glass.  

The mirror hadn’t just cracked. It had split—clean, deliberate. Not from heat or pressure, but from the inside, like something had pressed back. Like something was wanted out. Basia stood before it, staring into her own fractured reflection. Her face repeated along the fault lines, disjointed and unfamiliar. One fragment showed her mouth smiling. She wasn’t smiling. A shard fell. She didn’t flinch. She swept it into the dustpan without a word, wrapped it in salt, and dropped it into a mason jar marked with the Gromnica cross—the same one her grandmother used to bless water during storms. Glass was a gateway. Everyone in her family knew that. The older ones kept their windows smeared with wax and ash during eclipses. Mirrors were covered for births and burials. Basia had broken that tradition years ago. But now? Now she didn’t take chances. She was making tea again—always tea—when her phone buzzed on the table. Zosia. Another message. But this one felt… off. The language was wrong. The phrasing. The silence it left behind in her chest. “Czy ono przyszło do ciebie już? Zjadło psa. Chce krwi. Pamięta twoje imię.” (Did it come to you yet? It ate the dog. It wants blood. It remembers your name.) No punctuation. No warmth. And the grammar is wrong. Zosia had never written like that, even when drunk or afraid. Basia re-read it five times. On the sixth, the message changed. Right in front of her. The text bled into itself. Letters twitching, flickering. The words dissolved into a single sentence, pulsing faintly on the screen: YOU TOOK MY NAME. She dropped the phone. The kettle screamed. This time she did flinch. Steam hissed up toward the ceiling. The walls groaned. A picture fell from the shelf— Tomasz’s photo. It cracked in the same place as the mirror. Basia stood very still. In the silence that followed, she heard breathing. Not hers. Behind the wall. Heavy. Wet. Like something newly born and full of bone. That night, she didn’t sleep. She lit the old ritual candle again. The one her grandmother made with cow tallow and beeswax, rolled with rosemary and hair. She whispered an old Slavic incantation under her breath. A prayer from before Christianity took hold. Older than saints. “Niech krew zostanie uwięziona. Niech cień się nie zagnieździ. Niech zmarli nie mają języka.” (Let the blood be bound. Let shadow find no nest. Let the dead have no tongue.) But the candle flickered—once forward, once back. A response. 

 DIARY ENTRY

 – 23rd September 

 It’s here. Not fully. But enough. I don’t think Zosia sent that message. Not all of it. She may not even be… her anymore. It remembers names. That was always its power. Not shape, not muscle—but identity. Memory. The power of recognition. I shouldn’t have answered. I opened the door with a word. The lights dimmed. Her TV turned on by itself. White static. For a moment, just a second— her own voice whispered through it: “Barbara… come back. I remember you.” She turned to the hallway mirror. It wasn’t cracked anymore. But her reflection was missing. 

 CHAPTER SIX: 

Salt and Nails 

 Basia had lived in England for thirteen years. Brierley Hill was the quietest place she could find after Kraków—far from the mines, the voices, the cellar. Far from Tomasz. They’d come here together in 2012. He had dreams of fixing old radios and maybe opening a café. She had dreams of sleep. Neither got what they wanted. He died in 2016, suddenly. Some said stroke. Others said a curse. Basia just stopped correcting people. She stayed in the flat a little longer than she should have. Flat 6 had never been normal. After he passed, it changed. Doors slammed without wind. The TV flicked on with static. The boiler screamed through the pipes like something was being boiled alive. For a whole year, the hallway lights burned red when she entered. And once—just once— she saw Tomasz in the bathroom mirror. Except… he wasn’t blinking. She left that flat in early 2018 and never went back. Moved into the smaller terrace by the canal. Quieter. Less present. The haunting seemed to stop—until the crows started coming. Until the smell of the cellar drifted back. Now, she needed to return. Not for him. For what she left behind. She stood at the edge of the stairwell now, looking up at the flat she hadn’t entered in seven years. Flat 6. Her name wasn’t on the buzzer anymore. But the new tenants had left weeks ago. Or fled. There was still salt around the doorframe. Old. Grey. Broken in places. She reached into her coat and pulled out three iron nails, blackened with ash. She pushed them into the wood—one at each corner, one dead centre. Then she knocked. Three short, one long. The door creaked open. It smelled like boiled milk and mould. Tomasz’s photo still hung by the kitchen—she hadn’t remembered leaving it. The hallway felt warped. Angled. Like the dimensions didn’t quite match anymore. She stepped inside carefully, her shoes tapping against warped floorboards. The kettle clicked. Twice. She went straight to the bedroom closet. She pulled up the floorboards, breath shallow. Beneath the lowest plank: a cloth bundle, wrapped in waxed paper and tied with thread dyed in ox blood. Inside: a small wooden box. The second binding box. She hadn’t dared take it with her in 2018. Back then, she still believed distance mattered. The lights flickered. A soft voice came from the bathroom. “Basia…?” Her name. His voice. But wrong. Like a puppet made of fog and bones trying to imitate love. “Come here… It’s warm now. I fixed the boiler.” She didn’t answer. Just opened the box. Inside: an old pendant carved with runes, a burnt piece of scripture, and a lock of her own hair, wrapped in lambskin. Her grandmother’s binding kit. Meant to hold the name of the thing. The mirror in the bathroom shattered. She turned, slowly. The hallway behind her was empty. Then the light above her flickered again. And he was there. Tomasz’s face was pale and flickering. Eyes hollow. Hands too long. He hovered above the rug, feet not touching the floor. “You took my name,” he hissed. “Now take it back.” 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 24th September,

 It wore him like a costume. But the voice was wrong. The soul was missing. I opened the box, and now the seal is broken. The binding must be redone. But not here. Not in this flat. The thing wants a home. Not just a body. It wants my memory to shape it. Basia ran. Down the stairs. Back into the street. Behind her, the flat door closed slowly, without a hand. 

 CHAPTER EIGHT: 

The Hollow Invitation. 

 The morning after the canal, Basia stayed in bed. Her limbs were heavy, like stone had grown inside them overnight. Her name still buzzed in her ears—not spoken, but echoed. She couldn’t quite explain it. Just... pressure, low and constant, like a voice trying to be her from behind her own teeth. She hadn’t dreamed. Or if she had, someone else had been dreaming in her place. At noon, she received a knock. Two this time. Slow. Measured. She peered out the front window. Her neighbour, Elaine, stood on the step. Basia opened the door halfway. “Oh,” Elaine said, startled. “You’re here.” Basia frowned. “Why wouldn’t I be?” “Because... you already left this morning.” Basia didn’t move. Elaine glanced back toward the street, then smiled nervously. “Saw you near the Tesco. You waved. Even spoke to me.” Basia’s mouth went dry. “I haven’t left the house.” Elaine’s smile faltered. She glanced at Basia’s coat on the hook, her keys still on the table behind her. Then nodded quickly and backed away. “Sorry. Must’ve been someone else. You two just look so alike.” She left. Basia closed the door. Bolted it. Locked it again. Her hands were trembling. That night, she turned off all the lights. Sat by the window, watching the street. At 2:12 AM, she saw herself. Walking down the canal path. Same coat. Same stride. Same hair, pinned lazily up. But it wasn’t right. The gait was too smooth. The arms didn’t swing. The head didn’t turn. It moved like it remembered being human, but wasn’t anymore. Basia’s mouth dried. The other one stopped. Looked directly at the window. Smiled. And waved. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 26th September 

 It’s wearing me. My name gave it the right. My memory gave it the pattern. I think it’s testing the skin—like trying on a dress in a mirror. But it’s more than that. It’s inviting someone in. In the morning, she checked her phone. There were three missed calls from a school in town. One message. “Hi, just confirming your visit earlier today. You mentioned you’d come speak to the sixth formers about Polish folklore next week. Just wanted to make sure that’s still happening— your presentation sounds fascinating.” Basia dropped the phone. She hadn’t called anyone. She hadn’t left. In the mirror above her sink, her reflection blinked before she did. Then smiled again.

CHAPTER NINE: 

The Doppelgänger

 As Basia woke to an emptiness in her mind. Small things slipped away — a friend’s birthday, the colour of her grandmother’s shawl, the taste of her morning tea. She could still feel herself somewhere inside, but it was like trying to hold water with bare hands. The phone rang again. Her voice, but not her words. The doppelgänger was learning. Downstairs, the front door creaked open. Footsteps. Voices. Basia watched from the stairs, heart pounding. Her double. Smiling, chatting with neighbors, answering questions Basia had never prepared to face. She moved with an eerie grace — polite but cold. Smooth but hollow. At the local school, the teachers nodded as the doppelgänger stepped into the role Basia had promised to fill. She spoke confidently about folklore, but the stories twisted—familiar tales bent into something darker, more hungry. Back home, Basia’s handwriting blurred on her notebooks. The words she wrote felt strange, disconnected—as if another hand traced over her memories. In the mirror, her reflection grew distant. Sometimes it hesitated before moving. Sometimes it didn’t move at all. Basia was slipping away. And the doppelgänger? She was stepping in. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 27th September

 The world is starting to forget me. People look at me like I’m a stranger. They don’t recognize the face in my own mirror. But they smile when they see her. She wears my skin. Speaks my name. She is me — or what the thing wants me to be. I need to fight this. Before there’s nothing left. By the second night after the doppelgänger’s arrival, Brierley Hill was already trembling. The sky darkened early, as if the sun had simply given up. Thick, rolling clouds swallowed the horizon in silence. Then came the crows. Thousands of them. Blackening the sky like soot on fire. They circled, shrieked, and settled in dense flocks on rooftops, telephone wires, and the sagging canal bridges. It wasn’t natural. They weren’t just birds. They were a warning. The first power outage struck just after dusk. Streetlights blinked—then died. Homes went dark. Phones lost their signal. The town slipped into a hush broken only by the beat of wings and bone-deep cries. At the emergency town meeting, authorities declared a lockdown. “Stay inside. Lock your doors. Report anything unusual.” The moon rose blood-red—swollen and furious—casting a hellish glow on the canal, now still and black as ink. Basia watched from her window, the weight of the night pressing against the glass like a held breath. The sky churned with wings. The water whispered her name. And the thing walking her streets… was no longer walking alone. � � ️ 

DIARY ENTRY 

– 28th September,  

The town is shutting down. The crows watch like sentinels. The moon is red. And the walls are closing in—between me, the thing, and whatever lives beneath the surface. They say it’s just a storm. I know better. This is the beginning. 

 CHAPTER 10

 Dawn offered no comfort. 

 Black feathers had begun to appear—sleek, glossy, and strangely sharp. Pinned to doorsteps. Tangled in hedges. Tucked under windshield wipers like sinister calling cards. They multiplied like a silent plague. Basia found them scattered across her kitchen table, resting on her windowsill, even threaded into the fabric of her coat. Each feather was cold. As if steeped in the chill of the canal’s depths. Her phone buzzed violently in her hand, screen flickering with static. Voices whispered in languages she didn’t recognise. Sometimes she heard her own voice. Sometimes it was the things. Neighbours began complaining: phones glitching, texts disappearing, calls cutting mid-word. Screens cracked—without cause. At night, the air vibrated with the beat of unseen wings. The feathers weren’t just warnings. They were invitations. Basia felt it now— the shadow of those wings pressing in. Her name was no longer hers alone. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 28th September (Evening) 

 Feathers. Everywhere. They know where I am. Phones betray me. The voice through the static— I can’t tell if it’s mine or the thing’s. The crows are still watching. The town is still waiting. And I’m running out of time. 

 CHAPTER 11: 

What the Water Took

 The canal was still. Too still. Basia stood at its edge, her reflection trembling on the surface — not from wind, but from something beneath. The town was quieter now. Too many people staying inside. Too many too afraid to speak. But the water remembered. She knelt slowly, the rune pendant in her palm, and whispered the name again. “Katarzyna.” A ripple spread across the surface, then another. Something stirred deep below — not a fish, not debris — something slower. Heavier. Basia braced herself. The reflection changed. It wasn’t her face staring back. It was the thing’s. Her own eyes, but hollow. Her own mouth, but smiling wrong. Not warm. Not human. She flinched back, nearly falling in. And then — just for a moment — she heard it. A baby’s cry. It echoed faintly from the canal, distorted by the water, distant as a memory. She blinked. The sound faded. She turned to Maya, who stood a few feet back, recording. “Did you hear that?” Basia asked, voice shaky. Maya nodded, slowly. “Yes. I recorded it.” Basia looked again at the water, now calm. “It’s not just wearing me. It’s remembering everything it’s taken.” � � ️ 

DIARY ENTRY 

— 6th October 

 The water speaks. It doesn’t lie, it remembers. There are other names down there. Other voices. Other lives. Not all of them are dead. Not yet.  Found beneath the floorboards of Magda’s cottage, written in ink that smudged like old blood. They lied to us. The curse didn’t come for us — we called it. In the salt tunnels beneath Kraków, the Wrona bloodline made a pact. My ancestor, Katarzyna, begged for power to save a dying child. The villagers whispered of the Nameless One — a spirit that answered desperate prayers. So they summoned it. Bone, blood, salt, and a name spoken backwards. The price was unclear. But something answered. The child lived. And the shadow awakened. It didn’t take a body at first. Just a little time, a little memory, a little face in the mirror that smiled wrong. But each generation, it returned — hungrier. I feel it now in my blood. It doesn’t just want my name. It wants to finish the pact. To walk the world fully, finally — through me. We opened the gate. Now we have to close it.

 CHAPTER 12: 

Where the Earth Remembers 

 The graveyard behind St. Aidan’s Church was older than the town itself. Basia stood among the leaning stones, some half-swallowed by ivy, others broken like forgotten teeth. The wind pressed cold against her back, carrying the faint scent of moss and iron. She held Katarzyna’s journal close. The last page was no longer blank. Words had appeared overnight — scrawled in trembling ink: “Where the three roots meet the salt.” “Beneath the old yew.” “It waits.” Magda had gone pale when she read it. “There was a mine shaft here,” she whispered. “Before the town, before the church. The Wronas worked it. They brought their secrets with them.” Basia found the yew at the far edge of the graveyard, its limbs warped and clawing at the sky. Beneath its roots, the earth felt hollow. Maya joined her, flashlight trembling slightly in her grip. “Here?” she asked. Basia nodded. “It’s under us.” They dug with shaking hands — through dirt, stone, and time. An hour later, they uncovered it: a cracked iron ring embedded in the earth — a trapdoor, ancient and rusted shut. Maya forced it open with a crowbar. The air that rushed out was damp and heavy with salt. A staircase spiraled into darkness. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 7th October 

 There’s a mine beneath the graveyard. No record of it. No map. Just memory passed through blood. They brought the curse here. They buried it. But the earth remembers. The deeper we go, the more the air feels alive. Breathing. Watching. And I swear I heard it say my name — not aloud, but in my bones.

CHAPTER THIRTEEN: 

The Mine That Dreams

 The stairwell groaned under each step, old stone slick with moisture and age. Basia descended first, Maya close behind, her camera flickering with static every few seconds. The air thickened with every turn — colder, denser, tinged with salt and something older. They reached the bottom. It wasn’t a mine anymore. It was a cathedral of memory. Carved salt walls shimmered faintly in the light, and symbols were etched into the stone — runes, circles, and feathers drawn in ash. Bones littered the corners: animal, human, indistinct. A ritual circle remained intact in the center of the chamber, lined with rusted iron nails and dried herbs crumbling to dust. “This is where they did it,” Maya whispered, her voice swallowed by the walls. Basia stepped into the circle. The air shifted. Reality stuttered — then peeled. Suddenly, she wasn’t alone. Dozens of shadowed figures surrounded her — cloaked, chanting in a tongue her body recognized before her mind did. They didn’t see her. Or maybe they did. One figure stepped forward — Katarzyna. Younger than Basia imagined. Eyes hollowed with desperation. She held a small child wrapped in cloth. The child wasn’t crying — it wasn’t breathing. Basia reached out — but her hand passed through. “We call you across the veil,” Katarzyna intoned. “Name for name. Soul for breath. Come, Nameless One.” A black mist curled from the salt in the circle. It slithered like thought. It touched Basia. And then — it saw her. The ritual froze. Everyone turned to look at Basia. “You are the echo,” Katarzyna said. “You are the vessel.” The shadows lunged. Basia gasped and stumbled back into herself, into now. Her hands trembled violently. “What happened?” Maya asked, gripping her shoulder. Basia’s voice was hoarse. “It didn’t stay in Kraków. It followed them. And now it’s followed me.” 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 7th October (Evening) 

 It saw me. Not in memory — now. Time is bleeding. The past clings to me like wet cloth. Their choices were mine before I was born. And the shadow knows that. It doesn’t just want my name. It wants to finish what it started. It wants a body. It wants a voice. It wants the world. 

 CHAPTER FOURTEEN: 

When Names Begin to Burn 

 They surfaced from the mine before dawn — pale, shaking, salt clinging to their skin like old blood. Above ground, the town had changed. The sky was gray-green, bruised and flickering. The birds were gone. And the air buzzed — not with wings, but with voices. Whispers echoed in alleyways, spilled from dead phones, breathed through tree branches that moved without wind. “It’s no longer waiting,” Magda said when they returned. “The shadow has crossed. It’s loose.” Basia felt it in her chest — a dull ache behind her heart. The name. Her name. It pulsed, hot and fragile, like it was being scraped. Maya was already filming everything. Her voice stayed calm, but her hands trembled. “We have until moonrise. After that... the veil closes. If it's not bound by then…” She didn’t finish. At twilight, the town began to shake. It wasn’t an earthquake. It was something waking up beneath it. The canal churned. Windows cracked. Children cried for people who weren’t there. Basia stood at the center of the town square, clutching the carved wooden box Magda had given her. Then came the scream. It came from Elaine’s house — Basia’s neighbor, her friend. They ran. The front door was ajar, the air thick with the smell of mold and iron. Elaine stood in the hallway. But her eyes were all wrong. Too dark. Too calm. “Basia,” she said. “I remember you. I wore you once, in the water.” She smiled with Basia’s smile. Tilted her head like she had. “You were soft. Easy. You still are.” Magda stepped forward, muttering something ancient under her breath. But the shadow struck first. It moved — not like a person, but like smoke, hunger, and bone. Magda cried out, collapsing as her breath caught and froze. Her eyes turned glassy. Her pendant cracked in her hand. Basia screamed and lunged forward, clutching the box. It flew open in her hands. Inside: iron nails, black salt, a single white feather. Her fingers bled as she grabbed the feather. The shadow flinched. “Name her!” Maya shouted. “ELAINE!” Basia cried. “You are Elaine Braddock!” The thing twisted, hissed, and then — cracked like glass. Elaine fell to the floor, gasping. Alive. But Magda didn’t move. Basia dropped beside her, blood on her palms, tears streaking through the salt on her cheeks. “She gave too much,” Maya whispered. “She slowed it down.” Basia’s voice broke. “She was the last one who knew the old ways.” Maya shook her head. “Then it’s on us now. We end this.” 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 8th October 

 Magda is gone. The shadow took part of her — left the rest behind. Elaine survived. But she won’t speak. Now the moon rises red again. The final night. The box is open. The feather is marked. I have her blood, her name, her tools. It’s me now. All of it. I will end this. Or I will be the last name it takes. CHAPTER 15: 

The Wrong Name 

 The blood moon rose — fat, swollen, and low over Brierley Hill like an open wound. Basia stood at the edge of the canal, the ritual box in her hands. Salt. Feather. Nail. Blood. Everything she needed. Behind her, Maya set up the final camera. “One take,” she said. “Let’s show it everything.” Basia knelt and began the circle. Her fingers shook. The ground steamed. The canal rippled — but not from wind. The shadow was already here. Watching. “I name you,” Basia whispered, louder now. “I cast you out. I—” The ground split. The sky screamed. And then — the circle shattered. Salt exploded outward. Feathers flew like knives. The air howled. “You’re not the vessel,” a voice said. It came from everywhere. The canal. The trees. The reflection of the moon. “You were never the vessel. You were the mirror.” Basia turned — slowly, painfully — toward Maya. She wasn’t filming anymore. Her hands were bloodstained. Her eyes were… glowing. “Maya?” Basia whispered. Maya looked down at herself like she was waking from a long dream. “I didn’t know. Not until I came here. I thought I was drawn to the story… but it was me. I’m the end of the line.” The shadow poured toward her — not attacking — welcoming. Basia staggered back. “I was the bait…” “I brought you here.” Maya nodded — tears in her eyes. “You were always meant to open the gate. And I was always what waited behind it.” The shadow wrapped around her like a cloak — not consuming her, but becoming her. Maya floated above the canal now, her body no longer fully hers. “This isn’t possession,” she said. “This is memory. Fulfilled.” The blood moon pulsed. Basia screamed — but it was too late. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

– 9th October (scrawled hastily)

 I was never cursed. I was chosen. She’s gone. Or she’s something else. The shadow didn’t want me. It wanted to be born through her. And now it has. But something’s still inside me. Some part of it lingered. This isn’t over. 

 CHAPTER SIXTEEN: 

The Mouth of the Gate

 The sky turned violet at midnight — wrong, cracked, and slow like spilled ink. Maya was gone. Not just missing — vanished into the reflection of the moonlit canal. Basia still heard her voice in dreams. Not pleading. Inviting. The town wasn’t itself anymore. People walked the streets in silence. Birds flew in circles, never landing. And the mirror in Basia’s hallway showed her sleeping when she was awake. “You have to finish this,” came a voice behind her. Elaine stood in the doorway. Pale, trembling, but determined. She held Magda’s second pendant — the one Basia never knew existed. “Magda left this for you. Said you’d need it. But you’re running out of time.” Basia took the pendant — iron, silver, and something else. Something ancient. It burned in her palm, but she didn’t drop it. They made their way to the chapel. Not for prayers — for answers. Inside, the altar had split. Beneath it was the gate — an ancient seal bound in wax and feathers, salt around its edge like tears. The seal was cracking. Elaine began a chant Basia didn’t recognise. “How do you know that?” she asked. Elaine didn’t look up. “Because I’ve been waiting.” The air froze. “Waiting?” Basia whispered. Elaine smiled. “We made the pact. My family. We gave your ancestor the ritual. The power. The price.” “You…” Basia stepped back. “You were the sacrifice. You always were. We just needed you to open the door again.” A gust of wind knocked the candles out — the salt circle scattered. The gate opened a crack. From the earth came something ancient — not the shadow, but what commanded it. Something with no face, just names it wore like skins. Basia turned to run — But the pendant in her hand glowed. “Basia,” came a whisper behind her. It was Maya. Or what was left of her. “Don’t let it use me.” Elaine turned, dagger in hand. Maya rushed her. They collided. The blade cut deep. Maya fell. Basia screamed — ran to her — but it was too late. Maya was dying. And the gate was wide open now. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

— 10th October

 She killed Maya. Elaine was never our friend. She was the keyholder. The gate is open. I have the pendant. I have the name. I have the blood. But I’m alone now. And it’s coming through.

 CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: 

The Heart of the Salt Blood on her hands. 

 Salt in her mouth. Maya was dying — and the gate behind her was wide open. Elaine smiled, breathless. “You think she mattered? The vessel is just that — a container. She was never meant to hold it. But you—” Basia didn’t hear the rest. Because the whisper came again. Not from outside, but inside her. “We are unfinished.” “Complete us.” “Take the name.” She turned toward the gate. The entity — the thing older than fire, older than gods — was spilling through. But not in form. In feeling. Grief. Hunger. Memory. Every ancestor who gave in. Basia held the pendant in one hand — Maya’s blood in the other. Then she stepped into the circle. Elaine screamed. “You’ll die!” Basia met her eyes. “So will you.” She crushed the pendant. The flash was blinding — iron, salt, soul. The gate collapsed inward. And with it — the entity surged into her. Not to consume her. To be kept. To be carried. Her body convulsed. Every name she’d ever been called fell away. She saw Katarzyna. She saw Kraków. She saw the mines. She saw herself, but not herself — in every form the bloodline had worn. The cost was her. Who she was. When the light faded, Basia stood, but she was changed. Eyes burning gold at the edges. Voice layered with echoes. Skin etched with faint sigils — marks only the old things could see. Elaine had fled. The chapel burned. And the moon turned white again. But the power was not gone. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

— UNKNOWN DATE 

 I am not Basia. I am what came before. And what comes after. The gate did not close. I became the lock. The entity sleeps beneath my ribs. It dreams through me. And I dream of fire, salt, and names I do not yet know. I am the cost. But not the end. 

 Chapter EIGHTEEN: 

The Gate 

She Didn’t Close It began in the firelight behind Basia’s eyes. She no longer dreamed as herself. She drifted — between time, between skins. This time, it was Kraków, 1656. A salt mine so deep the world forgot it. And Katarzyna stood in the ritual circle — younger, gaunt, voice shaking. The child was gone. The offering had been made. But the entity — the Nameless One — had come too strong. It writhed against the ritual’s edge — not entering the vessel, not passing on. Just watching. Just waiting. The circle faltered. The iron nails rusted before her eyes. Her voice cracked mid-chant. She could feel it testing her name. Katarzyna screamed and fled. “I’m not enough!” she sobbed, running toward the mine’s exit. “I’m not enough. Let someone stronger finish it—” But no one did. The entity sank back into the salt veins. Dormant. Furious. Incomplete. And it followed her. Her family fled to England weeks later. They said it was war. But it was the shadow they feared. Basia gasped awake in the present, sweat clinging to her skin like ice. The chapel was ash now. The pendant gone. But the entity whispered: “She failed us.” “You will not.” Basia rose, trembling. She understood now: she hadn’t inherited a curse. She’d inherited a debt. And the balance was still due. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

— (Fragmented) 

 Katarzyna lied. The ritual wasn’t finished. She ran. She lived. She gave birth. And so it passed. Through us. I thought I was ending it. But I’m only the one strong enough to carry it. They’ll come for me now. The old orders. The silent ones. They always do… when the lock becomes the key. 

 CHAPTER NINETEEN: 

The Woods Behind the Canal 

 The night air hung heavy with moisture, the scent of earth and decay thick beneath the gnarled branches of the woods behind the canal. Basia’s footsteps barely made a sound on the leaf-strewn path, but the silence around her was deafening—broken only by the distant cawing of crows and the whisper of wind threading through skeletal trees. This was where it lived now. The shadow had moved. No longer confined to water or whispers, it had claimed these woods as its new hunting ground. Basia paused, heart hammering, eyes scanning the darkness. Shapes shifted just beyond the reach of her flashlight’s beam—feathers fluttered down like black snow, settling on damp moss and broken twigs. The air grew colder, thick with unseen breath. Suddenly, a soft murmur rose—voices, layered and dissonant—calling her name. Not her voice alone, but many—twisted echoes from the past, trapped souls bound to the shadow’s hunger. From the shadows, a figure emerged—Magda, face grim, hands clutching an ancient staff carved with crow feathers and iron nails. “They’ve been watching,” Magda said quietly, eyes darting. “The woods are alive with the cursed now. And you—” Her gaze sharpened. “—you carry the last key.” Basia swallowed the lump in her throat as a chilling wind swept through the trees. Behind them, the canal water rippled black and still, as if waiting. And somewhere deep in the woods, the shadow stirred, ready to strike. 

 DIARY ENTRY

 — (Night, October 6th) 

 The woods breathe. I hear their voices — the lost, the damned. The shadow is here. I’m not alone anymore. Magda says I’m the key. But what door am I unlocking? I’m scared. But I won’t run. Not now. 

 CHAPTER TWENTY: 

The Stranger Is Gone 

 The dawn crept over Brierley Hill, pale and trembling, as if the town itself was exhausted from a long, restless night. The shadow had been pushed back—contained, for now. Maya was gone. No farewells, no explanations. Just an empty café chair and a camera left behind on the table, its lens cracked but still quietly capturing moments unseen. Basia stood by the canal, the first light glinting off the water’s glassy surface. The crows were silent—for the first time in weeks. A fragile peace settled, but it felt like a breath held tight in the lungs of the town. Then, from the edge of the square, a single crow landed. Not like the others—this one was larger, its eyes gleaming with unsettling intelligence. It cocked its head, watching Basia with an almost human curiosity. The town’s nightmare had paused, but the watcher remained. The cycle was broken. But the story was far from over. And somewhere, beneath the black wings, a new shadow waited to take flight. 

 DIARY ENTRY 

— Final Maya is gone. 

 The shadow receded. But the crow is still here. Watching. Waiting. Brierley Hill breathes again— But I don’t think we’ve seen the last of the darkness. Not yet. 

 EPILOGUE:

 Whispers on the Wind

 Weeks passed, and Brierley Hill slowly returned to its quiet rhythm. The streets filled with cautious smiles, the crows’ presence faded to distant silhouettes against the sky. Basia sat by the canal, journal in hand, tracing the faded ink of the last entry. The air was crisp, carrying the scent of damp earth and forgotten memories. A soft rustle in the trees caught her attention. She looked up to see a lone crow perched on a twisted branch, its dark eyes gleaming with an unsettling knowing. It tilted its head, as if it understood the secrets held between the water and the woods. Basia’s breath caught. The watcher remained. The shadow had not left. It only waited—for the next name, the next soul, the next whispered call. And beneath the blood moon’s return, the story would begin anew.        

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