Chapter 120: The Woman Beneath the House
At the sa ti, sowhere in the West...
The night was heavy, like the breath of the earth itself held still. The air carried a thickness that clung to the skin...warm, perfud faintly with smoke and myrrh. Crickets humd lazily outside the walls of the manor, their rhythm a soft tremor beneath the veil of darkness.
The house stood upon a hill of ochre stone, its walls lacquered black beneath the moonlight, its windows shuttered tightly as though guarding secrets ant to stay buried. From afar, it looked abandoned, but a faint ember burned within...a single light glowing low through the cracks of the stone foundation. It pulsed, like a slow heartbeat.
Inside, footsteps echoed against marble floors.
A woman walked alone through the long corridor, her gait unhurried, the faint whisper of her gown trailing behind her like a shadow that dared to worship. The torches lining the walls flickered as she passed, as though the very fire bent toward her presence. Her hair...long, dark as pitch and fluid as a night tide...flowed over her back, the movent deliberate, almost sentient in its grace.
Her gown was a masterpiece. It was black silk woven with veins of gold thread that caught the dim light and shimred like molten sunlight caged in darkness. It clung to her figure, accentuating the soft curve of her waist and the proud swell of her chest. Gold embroidery snaked across the bodice, curling like vines over her hips, drawing the eye without sha.
Her skin was the color of honey kissed by dusk...smooth, unblemished, ageless. Her face held symtry so cruel it was almost divine. The high cut of her cheekbones, the full lips painted the deep red of blood after wine, the eyes...pale, glacial blue...that carried no warmth, only reflection. The sort of beauty that was sculpted, not born.
The gold bangles at her wrists chid softly as she walked. There were more around her ankles...delicate, thin, whispering their music against her skin. Her feet were bare, the sound of them soft against the cold stone as she reached the end of the hall.
There, beneath an arched fra, a stairway descended, a narrow passage spiraling down into the dark. Without pause, she began her descent. The hem of her gown swept over the steps, trailing behind her like spilled ink.
As she descended, the air changed. The warmth of the upper floor gave way to a chill rising from the depths below. It was the kind of cold that clung to the lungs, tasting faintly of salt and iron. Each step she took was asured, deliberate.
When she reached the bottom, the passage opened into a cavernous hall carved directly from the earth. A massive stone door stood before her, carved with symbols long forgotten..serpents, suns, and eyes that seed to blink when the torchlight hit them just right.
She raised her hand.
The air trembled.
One by one, torches lining the walls flared to life, their flas bursting forth in synchronized reverence, revealing the true expanse of the underground chamber. One would think it was magic but there were people hidden that paid attention to her movents and understood what she demamnded. The stone glowed a deep amber under the firelight, slick with condensation.
The woman stood still for a mont, her shadow stretching across the floor. The scent of old earth mingled with sothing sharper, tallic, faintly sweet, the unmistakable sll of blood long dried.
She moved forward. Her gown whispered against the ground, the sound too soft for the vastness of the space. The door before her groaned as it opened, the stone moving of its own accord. The mont she crossed its threshold, the light seed to bend around her.
Inside, another woman waited.
This one was nothing like the first.
Bent over a wooden table scarred by centuries of use, the second woman worked in near silence. Her back was hunched, her hair wild and streaked with gray, the thin strands tied back with what looked like a strip of old leather. Her skin was dull and waxen, stretched thin over bones that jutted like ridges beneath the skin.
Her ears were pierced dozens of tis, each hole threaded with odd bits of tal...nails, small bones, a few rings that could have once been gold before tarnish claid them. When she turned, her lips were blackened with dye, her two front teeth gone, revealing a thin, hungry grin. Her fingers were long and crooked, the nails yellowed and caked with earth.
Before her lay a table covered with tools, blades of varying sizes, so sharp, others dull and stained. Mortars filled with crushed herbs. A jar filled with sothing dark and viscous that reflected the firelight like the surface of oil. Bundles of dried leaves hung from the ceiling, their scent mixing with incense that burned low in a clay bowl.
There was a rhythm to her movents. Each was asured, ticulous and ritualistic. She ground sothing into a paste, muttering under her breath, words that didn’t belong to any known tongue.
Behind her, carved into the stone wall, a chamber of glass and gold stood half-buried in shadow. Inside it sloshed a liquid the color of garnet, thick, glistening, alive. It pulsed faintly, as if it had a heartbeat of its own. The sound of it filled the silence: drip... drip... drip. Each drop echoed through the hollow chamber like a clock asuring sothing other than ti.
The beautiful woman walked past, unbothered by the sll or the cold. She moved with the slow confidence of soone who owned everything her eyes fell upon. When she reached the center of the chamber, her hand brushed the air lightly, and the air seed to respond, humming faintly.
The haggard woman stopped working imdiately and turned, bowing low, so low her forehead nearly brushed the stone floor.
The other woman crossed the room and lowered herself onto the lone piece of furniture that didn’t belong , a couch of black velvet and gold trim, its cushions too fine for a place that reeked of dust and bone.
She reclined upon it like a queen in her throne room, one arm bent under her head, her pale eyes fixed on the bowed woman. The flicker of firelight danced across her features, turning beauty into sothing sharp, dangerous.
The gold bangles around her wrists glead in the dim light, and the faintest curl touched her lips, a smile that didn’t reach her eyes. The kind of smile that carried no warmth, only promise.
The hunchbacked woman remained in position bowing reverently at the woman...
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