whisper Beneath the silk
img img whisper Beneath the silk img Chapter 1 The Letter
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Chapter 7 The Thread That Remains img
Chapter 8 The Last Binding img
Chapter 9 The Quiet Undoing img
Chapter 10 The Sound of Thread Unraveling img
Chapter 11 The Weight of Ink and Ash img
Chapter 12 The Shape of Shadows img
Chapter 13 Beneath the Boneglass Sky img
Chapter 14 The House That Remembers img
Chapter 15 The House That Remembered img
Chapter 16 The Bride of Mirrors img
Chapter 17 The Hollow Alter img
Chapter 18 What the House Remembers img
Chapter 19 Echoes of the Living img
Chapter 20 The Naming Wind img
Chapter 21 The Door Without a Lock img
Chapter 22 The Garden That Remembers img
Chapter 23 The Voice Among Many img
Chapter 24 The Heart Remembers img
Chapter 25 Whispers img
Chapter 26 The Garden Remembers img
Chapter 27 The Silence Between Petals img
Chapter 28 Where the Thread Leads img
Chapter 29 The Naming of Light img
Chapter 30 The Thread img
Chapter 31 The Last Thread img
Chapter 32 The Echo of Something New img
Chapter 33 Beneath the Silk img
Chapter 34 The Mirror's Daughter img
Chapter 35 Annora img
Chapter 36 The Silent Echo img
Chapter 37 The Name the House Whispers img
Chapter 38 The Child of the House img
Chapter 39 The Unseen Cord img
Chapter 40 Where the Thread leads img
Chapter 41 Where the Thread leads img
Chapter 42 Where the Thread leads img
Chapter 43 The Stitching of Stars img
Chapter 44 The Needle Remembers img
Chapter 45 The Mother-Knot img
Chapter 46 The Pattern That Wasn't img
Chapter 47 The Unwritten Daughters img
Chapter 48 The Cost of Restoration img
Chapter 49 The Pattern That Watches img
Chapter 50 The Unspooling Within img
Chapter 51 The Chamber Below Bone img
Chapter 52 The Book That Wrote itself img
Chapter 53 The Threadwalker img
Chapter 54 The Needle Remembers(continued) img
Chapter 55 The Spindle's Oath img
Chapter 56 The Pattern That Waited img
Chapter 57 The Weavers of Becoming img
Chapter 58 The Thread That Would Not Bind img
Chapter 59 The Unwoven Emerges img
Chapter 60 The Needle Between Worlds img
Chapter 61 The Mirror That Sang Itself Open img
Chapter 62 What the Thread Forgot img
Chapter 63 The Seamwalker img
Chapter 64 The Mirror That Remembers Wrong img
Chapter 65 The Thread Reckoning img
Chapter 66 The land That Spoke Her Name img
Chapter 67 The Memory Lockef the Mountain img
Chapter 68 The Weave That Remembers img
Chapter 69 The Fracture Thread img
Chapter 70 The Shoreline Where Memory awaits img
Chapter 71 The Crown of Cinders img
Chapter 72 The Loom Beneath the Vein img
Chapter 73 The Mirror That Bled Names img
Chapter 74 The Blooded Thread img
Chapter 75 The Name that Named Itself img
Chapter 76 Where the Threads Remember img
Chapter 77 The Archive We Built img
Chapter 78 A New Thread in the Wind img
Chapter 79 The Bone-Loomer img
Chapter 80 A Cradle of Thread and Dust img
Chapter 81 A Cradle of Thread and Dust(2) img
Chapter 82 The First Seam img
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whisper Beneath the silk

Jaja Lolia
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Chapter 1 The Letter

Chapter One: The Letter

The envelope was pressed with a wax seal the color of dried blood.

Evelyn Roth turned it over in her gloved hands, noting the lack of a return address, the unfamiliar script curling like ivy across the thick parchment. Her name-just her name-had been inked in a slanted, almost romantic hand. No title. No location. Not even "Miss" or "Madam." Just:

Evelyn Roth

-as if whoever had written it knew precisely who she was, and knew she would come.

She broke the seal with her letter opener, careful not to tear the paper. A single sheet folded inside, crisp and clean, smelling faintly of sandalwood and age.

> You are formally invited to Silkenmoor Manor to undertake the restoration of a private collection of vintage gowns. All travel arrangements have been made. Compensation will be generous. Discretion is required. You will find a train ticket enclosed.

Silkenmoor waits.

No signature. No date. No details on how she'd been found-or why she'd been chosen. Just that name again: Silkenmoor.

Evelyn sat back in her worn armchair, the letter trembling slightly in her grasp. Outside the rain skittered against her attic window like restless fingers. Her kettle whistled in the kitchen, forgotten. She didn't move.

The name stirred something in her. Not a memory, exactly, but a sensation-like the ache of a bruise you don't recall getting. Silkenmoor. She'd heard it spoken once, years ago, in hushed tones at a gallery party in South Kensington, passed between two antique dealers who shared smirks over crystal glasses. The place was mythic among collectors and curators. A manor by the sea. A recluse lord. Gowns so rare and storied, they were said to bleed history when touched.

She stood, then, and crossed to the small box on her worktable where her father's tailor's shears rested beside a faded photograph of her mother, laughing in the summer light. Her life had grown so small in recent years-reduced to fabric, thread, and the silence of old things. She restored for museums, collectors, sometimes even theater companies. But this? This was something else.

A challenge.

A mystery.

A way out.

Evelyn folded the letter and packed a small bag before the tea even cooled.

---

The train wound through countryside lost in fog, the windows frosted and breathless. Evelyn watched as civilization thinned into marshes and thickets, each mile carrying her further from the echoing streets of London. She wore her mother's wool coat and a scarf dyed with cochineal. Her fingers itched with anticipation-or maybe it was dread. She couldn't tell the difference anymore.

The station where she arrived had no nameplate. Just a platform with cracked stone tiles and a single man waiting beneath an iron gas lamp.

"Miss Roth?" he asked, voice sharp with the sea. He wore a driver's cap and a coat too fine for a common servant.

"Yes," she said.

"This way."

The car that awaited was long, dark, and gleaming, like something out of a noir film. Inside, the seats smelled of leather and salt. They drove for nearly an hour, winding up cliffs that rose like jagged teeth along the edge of the sea.

When Silkenmoor finally appeared through the mist, Evelyn gasped.

It was a cathedral disguised as a house. A gothic fever dream, perched at the very edge of the world. Iron turrets pierced the sky. Crimson silk banners-torn by time-fluttered from stone balconies. The windows were tall and narrow, glowing faintly behind velvet drapes. It looked not built, but summoned.

The driver said nothing as he pulled into the arched courtyard and opened her door.

A man stood at the entrance.

Evelyn knew it was Lord Alaric Thorne before he spoke. His presence was unmistakable. Immaculate in black, with silver-threaded cuffs and a face carved from something colder than marble. Handsome didn't begin to describe him-he was haunting.

"Miss Roth," he said, voice low and precise. "You've arrived."

"I wasn't given much of a choice," she said, before she could stop herself.

One of his eyebrows twitched, as if mildly amused. "Choices are overrated."

He turned and entered the manor. Evelyn followed.

Inside, the air was thick with secrets. Every surface gleamed in candlelight. The floors were blackwood, the walls hung with tapestries and portraits so lifelike they seemed to blink when she passed. But what drew her breath away was the staircase-a double helix of iron and carved mahogany, wrapped around a glass chandelier shaped like a blooming rose. It was terrifyingly beautiful.

"You'll find everything you need in the east wing," Alaric said, not looking back. "The dressing room is sealed. Only you will have access."

"And the gowns?" she asked.

"You'll see."

He stopped at the foot of a door carved with ivy and opened it to reveal a room lined with mannequins. Dozens of them. All draped in silence and dust. And in the center-beneath a glass dome-stood a single gown, untouched by time.

Evelyn stepped forward. Her throat went dry.

It was... perfection.

Ivory silk, hand-embroidered with metallic thread that shimmered like moonlight. The waist was narrow, the bodice structured with antique boning, and at the hem, tiny rubies had been stitched like drops of blood. A scent rose from it-jasmine, maybe, or something older. Familiar.

"Lady Isadora's favorite," Alaric said from behind her. "She wore it the night she died."

Evelyn turned. "You're giving me her death gown?"

"I'm giving you the truth," he said, eyes unreadable. "What you do with it is your choice."

He left her there, alone with the silence.

---

Chapter Three: Threads of the Dead

Days passed in a strange rhythm. The manor did not follow time as Evelyn knew it. Meals arrived without being ordered. Candles never seemed to melt. She worked in near silence, pulling dresses from their protective glass, laying them on velvet tables, and coaxing life from the silk.

It was on the third day that she found the first note.

Hidden in the lining of a velvet coat.

A scrap of parchment, folded tightly, stained with something brown and flaked.

> He said if I spoke, he'd bury me in the walls. I think he already has.

Evelyn's blood chilled. She read it again. And again.

Who had written it? Isadora? A maid? A lover? Was it a joke-or a warning?

She checked the rest of the coat. In the sleeve lining: another scrap.

> The gowns remember. They always do.

---

From that point, Evelyn couldn't stop.

She examined every hem, every stitch. In one corset she found a tiny locket, sealed shut with wax. In a capelet, a needle rusted dark with age. The clues were minute, but they built a picture-obsession, secrecy, betrayal. And all of it orbiting Isadora Thorne.

The lady of the house had been more than a socialite. She had been watching. Waiting. Writing her truth into silk and satin, into thread no one else had noticed-until now.

And Evelyn couldn't shake the feeling that the house was beginning to notice her back.

---

            
            

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