Text Practice Mode
Story of nether-land
created Oct 28th, 03:33 by BishalSapkota
0
521 words
7 completed
0
Rating visible after 3 or more votes
00:00
For decades, people whispered about the place, warning each other never to go near it after dark. They said that anyone who entered Blackwood Manor at night would vanish without a trace, taken by the spirit of the lady who once lived there, Lady Eleanor Blackwood. She had mysteriously died one stormy night over fifty years ago, and her murder remained unsolved.
One cold October evening, a young detective named Thomas Gray arrived in Willowbrook. Driven by his curiosity and a desire to solve the unsolved, he decided to uncover the truth about Lady Blackwood’s death. Villagers warned him, but Thomas dismissed their superstitions, confident in his own abilities.
With nothing but his lantern and his notebook, he entered Blackwood Manor just as the sun began to set. Dust and shadows filled the air as he stepped inside, the grand halls eerily silent, filled with forgotten furniture and cobweb-covered portraits of the Blackwood family. The deeper Thomas ventured into the mansion, the stronger the feeling of being watched grew.
As he reached the top floor, he noticed a door ajar, leading into what appeared to be Lady Eleanor’s old bedroom. He entered and found the room frozen in time — the bed neatly made, a vanity with a cracked mirror, and a faded portrait of Lady Eleanor herself staring back at him.
Suddenly, a chilling draft swept through the room, and the door slammed shut behind him. Thomas spun around, and his lantern flickered out, plunging the room into darkness. He fumbled for his matches, but before he could light one, he heard a whisper in the darkness: “Why have you come here?”
He steadied his nerves and replied, “To solve the mystery of your death, Lady Eleanor. I mean you no harm.”
A pause, and then — "If you dare seek the truth, follow me."
A ghostly light appeared at the far end of the hallway, illuminating a hidden staircase that spiraled down into the bowels of the manor. Thomas followed, descending deeper and deeper into the cold, stone-walled cellar.
At the bottom, he found himself in an old wine cellar, and in its center lay a crumbling diary and an ornate, bloodstained dagger. The diary belonged to Lady Eleanor herself, filled with pages of heartbreak and betrayal. Her husband, Lord Edgar Blackwood, had discovered that she planned to leave him and, in a jealous rage, ended her life with the very dagger that lay before him.
As Thomas reached to pick up the dagger, he heard footsteps behind him. Turning, he found himself face-to-face with the apparition of Lady Eleanor, her eyes sorrowful yet thankful. "Thank you," she whispered, as her form slowly faded into the mist.
When the sun rose the next morning, the villagers found Thomas lying in the grass outside Blackwood Manor, clutching the dagger and diary. He awoke, dazed but victorious, knowing he had freed Lady Eleanor’s spirit by uncovering the truth.
From that day forward, Blackwood Manor was no longer haunted, and the story of Lady Eleanor’s tragic fate became a cautionary tale in Willowbrook — a reminder that no secret stays buried forever.
One cold October evening, a young detective named Thomas Gray arrived in Willowbrook. Driven by his curiosity and a desire to solve the unsolved, he decided to uncover the truth about Lady Blackwood’s death. Villagers warned him, but Thomas dismissed their superstitions, confident in his own abilities.
With nothing but his lantern and his notebook, he entered Blackwood Manor just as the sun began to set. Dust and shadows filled the air as he stepped inside, the grand halls eerily silent, filled with forgotten furniture and cobweb-covered portraits of the Blackwood family. The deeper Thomas ventured into the mansion, the stronger the feeling of being watched grew.
As he reached the top floor, he noticed a door ajar, leading into what appeared to be Lady Eleanor’s old bedroom. He entered and found the room frozen in time — the bed neatly made, a vanity with a cracked mirror, and a faded portrait of Lady Eleanor herself staring back at him.
Suddenly, a chilling draft swept through the room, and the door slammed shut behind him. Thomas spun around, and his lantern flickered out, plunging the room into darkness. He fumbled for his matches, but before he could light one, he heard a whisper in the darkness: “Why have you come here?”
He steadied his nerves and replied, “To solve the mystery of your death, Lady Eleanor. I mean you no harm.”
A pause, and then — "If you dare seek the truth, follow me."
A ghostly light appeared at the far end of the hallway, illuminating a hidden staircase that spiraled down into the bowels of the manor. Thomas followed, descending deeper and deeper into the cold, stone-walled cellar.
At the bottom, he found himself in an old wine cellar, and in its center lay a crumbling diary and an ornate, bloodstained dagger. The diary belonged to Lady Eleanor herself, filled with pages of heartbreak and betrayal. Her husband, Lord Edgar Blackwood, had discovered that she planned to leave him and, in a jealous rage, ended her life with the very dagger that lay before him.
As Thomas reached to pick up the dagger, he heard footsteps behind him. Turning, he found himself face-to-face with the apparition of Lady Eleanor, her eyes sorrowful yet thankful. "Thank you," she whispered, as her form slowly faded into the mist.
When the sun rose the next morning, the villagers found Thomas lying in the grass outside Blackwood Manor, clutching the dagger and diary. He awoke, dazed but victorious, knowing he had freed Lady Eleanor’s spirit by uncovering the truth.
From that day forward, Blackwood Manor was no longer haunted, and the story of Lady Eleanor’s tragic fate became a cautionary tale in Willowbrook — a reminder that no secret stays buried forever.
saving score / loading statistics ...