The Last Letter

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The humidity of the Mississippi Delta had a way of preserving decay. At the Blackwood Estate, the paint was peeling from the columns like dead skin, and the air tasted of river silt and old secrets. I was seventeen when I became the messenger for the house, a boy with a fast horse and a desperate need to leave.

Colonel Blackwood was a man of iron and obsession. He had spent the last year of the war turning his estate into a fortress, convinced that the Union army was coming to erase him from the map. He had a network of spies and a single, tenuous link to the outside world: me.

"Ride to the coast, Samuel," he would command, his eyes wild with a mixture of fear and pride. "Find the relief column. Tell them the Blackwood line holds. Tell them we are the last bastion of the Old South. Tell them to hurry."

I rode until my horse's lungs burned and my own skin was scorched by the sun. I reached the coast, only to find a wasteland of burnt piers and retreating ships. The relief column was a myth, a ghost story the Colonel told himself to keep the darkness at bay.

I returned to the estate each time with the same news: *Nothing. No one is coming.*

But the Colonel didn't want the truth; he wanted the hope. He would look at me with a terrifying intensity and say, "You simply didn't look hard enough, boy. Ride again. The cavalry is just over the next ridge."

I became the curator of his delusion. I watched as the estate's servants fled one by one, leaving the Colonel alone in a house that was too big for one man's madness. I watched him stop eating, stop sleeping, spending his hours staring at the road, waiting for the dust cloud of a thousand horses.

The end came on a Tuesday. The Union army didn't arrive with a grand charge; they simply walked into the garden. They had been there for three days, watching the same road the Colonel had been watching.

I was in the stables, preparing my horse for another futile journey, when I heard the Colonel scream. It wasn't a scream of fear, but of betrayal. He had seen the blue uniforms in his driveway and realized that the "relief" he had spent his life waiting for was actually the executioner.

I didn't try to save him. I didn't try to help. I simply mounted my horse and rode away, leaving the same way I had always ridden—into the empty, humid silence of the Delta.

As I looked back, I saw the Blackwood house burning. It was a beautiful, terrible sight. I realized then that the Colonel hadn't been waiting for an army; he had been waiting for the end of his own story. And I had been the only one who knew exactly how long the wait had been.

*** **Objective Tensor Code (OTMES_v2):** - **T-ID**: 106-V06 - **T-Vector**: [M1:8.0, M4:6.0, N2:0.8, K1:0.7, I:0.8, R:0.2] - **Theta**: 135.0° - **Energy**: 13.4 - **Coord**: (M1, N2, K1)


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

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

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