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Rated: E · Short Story · Fantasy · #2323013
It has been ages since I added work to this account. If I get good responses I'll add more
Mara's boots left muddy imprints on the worn stone steps as she approached the looming structure. The ancient home, a patchwork of weathered wood and lichen-covered stone, seemed to materialize out of the mist like a half-remembered dream. She pulled her coat tighter, the chill seeping into her bones despite the apparent absence of wind.

The realtor's words echoed in her mind: "It's a unique property, Miss Hayes. Been in your family for generations. Quite the... steal, really." His nervous laughter haunted her now as she fumbled with the rusted key.

The massive front doors groaned open, revealing a foyer bathed in an otherworldly half-light. Dust motes danced in pale beams that struggled through clouded windows. Mara squinted, trying to pierce the thick fog beyond the glass. A dark shape slithered past, too quick and too strange to identify. She jerked back, heart pounding.

"Get it together," she muttered, forcing herself to step inside. The doors swung shut behind her with a finality that made her flinch.

Mara wandered the main floor, each room a museum of faded opulence. Elaborate rugs muffled her footsteps, and tarnished mirrors reflected a house that seemed larger on the inside than out. In what must have been a parlor, she found a portrait. The stern face bore an uncanny resemblance to her own, save for the eyes—they held a hunger that made Mara's skin crawl.

A sound from above drew her attention. Floorboards creaked with the weight of unseen feet. "Hello?" Mara called, her voice swallowed by the oppressive silence that followed. The staircase beckoned.

The second floor was a labyrinth of narrow hallways and locked doors. One room, its door slightly ajar, pulled at her like a magnet. Inside, shelves lined the walls, crammed with jars of murky liquids and bundles of dried herbs. A massive tome lay open on a lectern, its pages covered in spidery script and diagrams that hurt her eyes to look at directly.

As Mara approached the book, a gust of wind—impossible, given the sealed windows—ruffled the pages. They settled on an illustration of the house itself, surrounded by twisting shapes that could have been trees or tentacles or something far worse.

The temperature plummeted. Mara spun around, finding herself face-to-face with a window. Beyond the grimy glass, a pair of luminous eyes blinked slowly. She stumbled backward, knocking over a jar. It shattered, but instead of glass and liquid, it released a cloud of chittering shadows that swirled around her ankles before dissipating.

Panic rising, Mara fled the room. She raced down the stairs, making for the front door. The latch refused to budge. Panting, she turned to the back of the house, finding a door so heavily chained it resembled a medieval torture device more than an exit.

A rhythmic thumping drew her to the basement stairs. Each step down felt like a descent into another world. The vast library that greeted her was illuminated by witchfire candles that cast more shadows than light.

In the far corner stood a contraption that defied description—part clockwork, part shimmer, it pulsed with an inner light. Beside it, a crystalline orb cycled through images: a landscape of twisted spires, a cave mouth ringed with teeth, a city whose geometry hurt to comprehend.

"Beautiful, isn't it?" The voice, eerily familiar, came from behind her. Mara whirled to face... herself. Or rather, the woman from the portrait, now terrifyingly alive.

"Who—" Mara began, but the woman cut her off with a wave.

"Margot Hayes, your great-great-grandmother, at your service." She smiled, revealing too many teeth. "I've waited so long for one of the bloodline to return."

Mara's mind reeled. "The house, the mist—what is all this?"

Margot's eyes glittered. "A realm of infinite possibility, my dear. I discovered it, shaped it... but the price was steep. I've been... untethered, you might say. But you—" She reached for Mara with fingers that seemed too long, too sharp. "You can anchor me. Together, we could rule this domain."

The room twisted, reality bending as Margot's form flickered between woman and something else. Mara backed away, her heel hitting the base of the portal.

A choice crystallized: step through into unknown horrors, or remain to face the monster wearing her face. The house creaked around them, as if holding its breath.

Mara closed her eyes, took a deep breath, and made her decision.
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