Echoes of the End

Chapter 20: The Shard’s Echo



The night blanketed Blackthorn in a suffocating darkness, broken only by the faint glimmer of lanterns swaying in the wind. At the Thorncroft estate, the oppressive quiet was broken by the rustling of papers as Eleanor pored over the Codex Umbra. The book lay open on the grand oak table, its pages yellowed and brittle, each line of cryptic script etched with an ominous permanence.

Her mother's journal sat beside it, its familiar scrawl offering a stark contrast to the alien markings of the Codex. Eleanor traced the edge of a diagram in the journal, her thoughts racing. The markings on the shards matched the patterns in the Codex, but they also resonated with the whispers that now haunted her every waking moment.

The whispers had grown stronger since the shard had appeared in the village. They weren't words, not exactly, but impressions—echoes of something vast and unknowable. She pressed her fingers to her temples, trying to quiet the cacophony.

A knock at the door startled her. Lena stepped in, her face pale and drawn. "Another villager has been marked," she said without preamble. "Edgar brought him to the square. It's Timothy—the boy from the east side."

Eleanor's stomach twisted. "How bad?"

"He's delirious," Lena replied. "He keeps muttering about shadows and lights. And he has the markings."

Eleanor rose, gathering her coat and satchel. The markings were no longer an anomaly; they were a pattern, a thread that tied the shards, the Obelisk, and the villagers together. "Take me to him."

The square was eerily silent when they arrived, save for the low murmurs of the gathered crowd. Timothy lay on a makeshift cot, his small frame shivering despite the heavy blanket draped over him. His mother knelt beside him, clutching his hand and whispering reassurances that did little to quell his trembling.

Eleanor knelt beside the boy, her gaze fixed on the faint, glowing lines etched into his skin. The symbols writhed and shifted as though alive, fading momentarily before reappearing with renewed intensity.

"Timothy," she said gently, "can you hear me?"

The boy's eyes fluttered open. They were bloodshot, the irises clouded with a milky haze. "The shadow," he whispered, his voice barely audible. "It's coming. It said… I was chosen."

Eleanor's breath hitched. "Chosen for what?"

Timothy's lips trembled. "To open the door."

Lena's hand gripped Eleanor's shoulder. "This is getting worse. The markings, the shards… they're spreading."

Eleanor nodded, rising to her feet. "Where did he find the shard?" she asked the crowd.

A villager stepped forward, his face pale. "By the old well. He said it hummed when he touched it. But when he collapsed, it vanished."

Eleanor's jaw tightened. Another shard, another disappearance. The pattern was undeniable, but the purpose remained elusive. "Lena, we're going to the well."

The well stood on the outskirts of Blackthorn, its stones moss-covered and crumbling. The air grew colder as they approached, the oppressive weight of the Obelisk's influence seeping into the surroundings. Eleanor peered over the edge, the darkness below seeming to stretch endlessly.

"Do you hear that?" she asked.

Lena strained her ears. A faint whisper drifted up from the depths, indistinct but persistent. "It's like the whispers near the shards," she murmured.

Eleanor placed her hand on the edge of the well. A jolt of energy surged through her, sharp and biting. She recoiled, clutching her hand. "There's residual power here," she said. "The shard's energy left an imprint."

"What does that mean?" Lena asked.

"It means I need to go down," Eleanor replied firmly. "If the shard's energy lingers, I might be able to trace its source."

Lena's eyes widened. "Are you insane? We don't know what's down there."

"Exactly why I need to go," Eleanor said. "The answers aren't going to come to us, Lena. We have to seek them."

After a brief argument, they fashioned a makeshift harness. Eleanor descended into the well, her lantern casting flickering light on the damp walls. The whispers grew louder, more insistent, as she descended into the darkness.

At the bottom, the lantern's glow revealed a small chamber carved into the earth. Symbols identical to those on the shards covered the walls, glowing faintly. In the center of the chamber lay a shallow basin filled with an inky, swirling liquid.

Eleanor approached cautiously, the whispers now a cacophony in her mind. She peered into the basin, her reflection wavered, replaced by an image of the Obelisk.

"The gate cannot remain closed," a voice echoed in her thoughts. "You hold the key."

The liquid surged upward, coalescing into a humanoid figure. Its form was translucent, its face featureless save for glowing eyes.

"Who are you?" Eleanor demanded.

"I am the Keeper of Threads," it intoned. "The weave binds all, and the mark binds you."

"Why am I marked?" Eleanor asked.

"The gate must open," the Keeper said. "You are the thread that pulls the weave. The shards converge upon you."

The Keeper dissolved into mist, and the basin's liquid stilled. The chamber fell silent, save for Eleanor's ragged breaths.

When Eleanor emerged from the well, Lena's worried expression greeted her. "What did you find?"

Eleanor hesitated. "Answers. And more questions."

Back at the estate, Eleanor's thoughts churned. The Keeper's words haunted her. She couldn't ignore the truth: she was the thread connecting the shards, the Obelisk, and the unfolding horror. But what role would she play when the gate finally opened?

The weight of the mark burned on her skin, a constant reminder of her bond to the unfathomable forces at work. Though she feared the end, she couldn't shake the faint, terrible hope that it might also bring a beginning.


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.