-
Новости
- ИССЛЕДОВАТЬ
-
Страницы
-
Группы
-
Мероприятия
-
Reels
-
Статьи пользователей
-
Offers
-
Jobs
-
194 Записей
-
0 Фото
-
0 Видео
-
Male
-
17/05/1968
-
Читают 0 человек
Недавние обновления
-
The Archivist Of Dead Stars 202606161605In the year 2847, when death had become a choice and hunger a historical concept, Dr. Seraphina Vale made her living studying people who had suffered. Her title at the Solar Concord was meaningless to anyone outside her department: Senior Archivist, Meaning Acquisition Division. In practice, she was a professional mourner—a woman who spent her days reading the diaries of dead people from the...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 1 Просмотры 0 предпросмотрВойдите, чтобы отмечать, делиться и комментировать!
-
The Hounds of PenanceThe town of Oakhaven was a place where the trees grew crooked and the air always tasted of wet earth and old secrets. It was a town built on a foundation of silence, where the residents spent their lives pretending that the shadows in the woods weren't watching them. Clara, the youngest daughter of the town's most prominent family, had spent her youth trying to scrub the stain of her father's...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 11 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
The Signal That Watched Itself Being HeardAt forty-one degrees below zero, sound behaves strangely. The crunch of snow under insulated boots carries for miles across the frozen tundra, traveling through the crystalline lattice of the air as though the cold itself were amplifying every vibration, turning each footstep into a broadcast. Dr. Lena Okonkwo had been at the Toolik Field Station for eighty-three days, and she had stopped being...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 3 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
THE LAST WALLThe stone was cold beneath Edward's gloved hands. He ran his palm along the face of it, feeling for the cracks his predecessors had spent a thousand years cataloguing. There were none today. The wall held. It always held. Edward Blackthorne, seventieth Lord Keeper of the Morvayne Ramparts, walked the parapet at midnight, as he had every night for twelve years. The moon was a sliver of bone in a...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 9 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
The Saturday FryThe fryer sat on a milk crate in Frank O'Brien's driveway, next to the rusted lawnmower and the stack of empty beer cases he hadn't gotten around to recycling. It was a second-hand commercial model he'd bought from a guy at the hardware store for forty dollars, and it worked most of the time. When it didn't work, Frank didn't have the patience to fix it. He just waited. He set up every Saturday...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 7 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
The UnrememberedThe schoolhouse was a single room, twenty feet by twenty-four, built of log in 1898 and retrofitted with corrugated tin in 1922 to repair leaks that the original construction had failed to address. It stood at the end of a dirt road that became a creek during rain and a cloud of dust during drought. The road connected to Route 11, which connected to Whitesburg, which connected to the world. The...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 7 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
The Cartographer's ShadowThe Cartographer's Shadow I started working for Hudson in June of '52. I was twenty-two, fresh out of Syracuse with a degree in geology and a stack of reams of graph paper that I thought would change the world. Hudson was fifty, maybe fifty-five. Nobody asked. He had a face like a weathered rock — not ugly, just worn down by decades of wind and rain in places where there was no shelter....0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 6 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
Sample V-01: The Fog of Charlton(Victorian Melancholy) The fog of 1890s London did not merely cling to the cobblestones; it seeped into the very marrow of the soul. For Julian Thorne, the fog was a sanctuary, a grey veil that blurred the edges of a world he no longer recognized. He stood in the sterile, cold corridor of Charlton Hospital, the scent of carbolic acid warring with the distant, metallic tang of the Thames. Clara...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 6 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
The Gilded AcademyThe Gilded Academy ACT I The letter from the infirmary arrived on a Tuesday, when the Manchester fog had thickened into something almost solid. Mary Vance was dead. Pneumonia, the matron wrote. Quick, they said. Three days from fever to coffin. Eleanor sat on the edge of her narrow bed and read the letter twice, then a third time, as though the third reading might produce different words. Sixty...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 9 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
The Ledger of TrustShe sat at her kitchen table in the Brooklyn Heights apartment, the one that smelled of boiled cabbage and floor wax, and she read the contract the way she read people—carefully, looking for what they did not say. James Cartwright had sent it via courier at noon. It arrived in a cream-colored envelope, typed on expensive paper, with a legal clause at the bottom that read, in small font, that...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 12 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
The Shadow in the MachineACT I: THE MIRROR The mirror arrived in a crate of optical equipment from London, and Sebastian Moreau unpacked it in his Dublin study on a rain-soaked afternoon in October 1895. It was not a large mirror—perhaps two feet by three feet—but it was constructed with a precision that Sebastian had not expected. The glass was slightly convex, the frame was carved from dark wood that smelled faintly...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 13 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
-
The Last Dance at the HaloI. The champagne was colder than the conversation, which in the circles Rick Halstead moved in was saying something. He stood on the terrace of a Long Island mansion that cost more than most Americans earned in a lifetime, holding a glass he had no intention of drinking and watching the other guests perform their nightly ritual of appearing to enjoy themselves while secretly counting the hours...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 11 Просмотры 0 предпросмотр
Больше