The first thing Kael noticed wasn't the smell of salt or the rot of damp wood. It was the silence. Not the peaceful silence of a sleeping world, but a heavy, suffocating pressure—the kind that exists just before a scream breaks the air
He opened his eyes and stared at a ceiling that shouldn't exist. Gone was the sterile white plaster of his hospital room. In its place were blackened oak beams, weeping a thick, amber-colored resin that looked uncomfortably like congealed blood.
A sharp, electric jolt of memory pierced his brain, cold and jagged.
Kael Von Truman.
The Disgraced Son.
The Heir of Ruin.
"No," he rasped, his voice sounding like dry parchment rubbing together.
He clutched his chest. His heart was thumping a frantic, uneven rhythm. The previous tenant of this body—the original Kael—had died right here on these cold floorboards.
A heart attack brought on by a cocktail of cheap grain alcohol and a terror so profound it had literally stopped his pulse.
Kael pushed himself up, his movements stiff and robotic. In his previous life, he had been a man defined by his walls. He'd hated his family with a quiet, simmering passion, cutting ties and living in a self-imposed exile of cubicles and microwave meals. He was a man who checked his door locks three times before bed.
Now, that paranoia felt like the only thing keeping him tethered to reality.
The memories of the "Truman Dukedom" flickered in his mind like a fever dream:
The High Seat: A fortress of jagged stone where his father, the Duke, sacrificed his own reputation to bury Kael's "sins."
The Incident: Kael had touched something he shouldn't have. A ritual meant to restore the family's fading glory had instead stained his soul and burned his standing to ash.
The Exile: "Go to the coast," his father had hissed, eyes vacant and glassy. "Wait until the tide calls for you."
Kael stumbled toward a cracked vanity mirror. The face looking back was young—perhaps twenty-two—but the eyes were sunken, and the skin had a greyish, translucent quality. He looked like a man who had already started to decay.
He dragged himself to the window, peeling back a heavy, moth-eaten curtain.
Outside, the world was a monochromatic nightmare. This was Blackwater Reach, the edge of the Truman territory. The sky was a bruised purple, and the sea was an oily, churning mass of leaden water. The houses were built at impossible angles, leaning toward each other as if whispering secrets.
There were no birds. Only the sound of the waves hitting the jagged rocks—a sound that, if he listened too closely, started to sound like a rhythmic, wet chanting.
Caution, his mind whispered. Every shadow is a mouth. Every ripple is an eye.Caution, his mind whispered.
Kael turned his attention to the small, circular table in the center of the room. On it lay a single item: a leather-bound journal.
It wasn't just sitting there. It was pulsing.
The leather cover rippled like skin, and a faint, sickly heat emanated from it. Kael didn't reach for it. He backed away, his heart hammering against his ribs. His old-world instincts screamed at him to run, but where? He was an exile in a world that felt like it was made of teeth.
He grabbed a heavy iron poker from the cold fireplace and used the tip to flip the journal open.
The leather cover rippled like skin, and a faint, sickly heat emanated from it. Kael didn't reach for it. He backed away, his heart hammering against his ribs. His old-world instincts screamed at him to run, but where? He was an exile in a world that felt like it was made of teeth.
He grabbed a heavy iron poker from the cold fireplace and used the tip to flip the journal open.
The pages were made of vellum that felt far too much like human skin. The ink wasn't black; it was a deep, bruised crimson. There were no dates, only a single line of text that seemed to etch itself into his retinas:
[ THE FIRST INSTALLMENT IS DUE ]
Below the text, a diagram appeared—a map of his own skeletal structure. The fourth rib on his left side was highlighted in a glowing, ethereal green.
"The Duke asks for his debt to be paid in marrow."
