The Eternal Estate

0
5

The swamp had been swallowing secrets since long before the LeBlanc family arrived in Louisiana, and it would continue swallowing them long after the last LeBlanc was gone. Thomas stood at the edge of the bayou, his boots sinking into mud that was the colour of old blood, and looked at the ruin half-submerged in the cypress knees and Spanish moss.

It was not Native American. He knew that much. The stonework was too precise, the angles too sharp, the lines too straight for any indigenous architecture he had studied in twenty years of archaeological fieldwork. It was also not Spanish, not French, not anything European. It was something else entirely, and it had been sitting in this swamp for longer than anyone in his family could remember.

His grandfather had first spoken of it, thirty years ago, when Thomas was a boy of ten. Old Jean-Baptiste LeBlanc had taken him out on a skiff, through channels so narrow the cypress branches brushed the top of his hat, to a place where the water was still and black and the air was so thick with mosquito sound you could taste it.

'There is something down there, Tom-Thomas,' his grandfather had said, pointing at a cluster of stones barely visible beneath the surface. 'Old man Dupre, he saw it in eighteen-fifty. Then his father saw it in eighteen-twenty. And his father before that, in seventeen-ninety. We have been watching this thing for four hundred years, and none of us have ever gone down to look inside.'

Thomas had forgotten about the ruin until last month, when the water level dropped unusually low after a drought, and the stones became visible for the first time in decades. He returned with equipment: a diving bell, rope, a camera. What he found inside changed everything he thought he understood about archaeology.

The ruin was a doorway, leading downward into a chamber that extended beneath the swamp floor. Inside, the walls were covered with symbols—geometric, mathematical, unmistakably not of this Earth. They were arranged in patterns that suggested language, perhaps, or mathematics, or both. And in the center of the chamber, on a pedestal of some black stone that absorbed light rather than reflecting it, was an object that Thomas could not identify.

It was roughly spherical, about the size of a human head, and it hummed with a frequency just below the threshold of hearing. When he touched it, the hum intensified, and for a moment, he saw—no, not saw, understood—a image of a vast, dark space, and in that space, a light so bright it was almost a presence, and a feeling so vast it was almost love.

Then the moment passed, and the hum faded, and Thomas was left standing in a swamp chamber with a sphere that was not of this Earth, wondering what his family had known for four hundred years, and why they had never told anyone.

--- OTMES-v2-7B6E3D-108-M6-180-8R5960-908D E_total: 10.8 | Dominant: M6 | Angle: 180-deg | Rank: 8 M_vector: [6, 2, 4, 5, 5, 8, 5, 1, 4, 6] | N: [0.6, 0.4] | K: [0.4, 0.6]


Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

Search
Categories
Read More
Literature
The Longest Winter
(Act I: The Setup) Berlin in 1962 was a city of concrete and whispers. Klaus sat in a dim café,...
By Brandon Cox 2026-05-23 13:03:08 0 4
Games
The Seed of Harlem
The piano in the basement sounded like someone had taken a sunrise and smashed it into keys....
By Samantha Olson 2026-05-20 20:14:04 0 1
Games
The House of Falling Ashes
The house had been dying for a hundred and eighteen years, and Cassius Beauregard was the only...
By Diane Davis 2026-05-22 02:33:48 0 1
Literature
The Iron Carriage of Whitechapel
The fog rolled through Whitechapel like a living thing, thick and yellow as old bile. It...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-08 11:05:25 0 6
Games
The Ashes of December
I. The water came at half past eight in the evening, though I could not know this at first. There...
By Nicholas Torres 2026-05-20 19:37:13 0 15