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Flesh and thread

Sorean
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
When Elira returns to her fog-drowned childhood village, she expects quiet roads, familiar faces, and the home she left behind. Instead, she finds silence—heavy, watching, wrong. People avoid her eyes. Doors close too quickly. And something moves beneath the fog at night, brushing against windows, whispering her name. They call him the Skin Collector. A polite man with an ordinary smile—too ordinary. He takes pieces of skin from the living, leaving no screams, no blood… only a faint burning mark and memories twisted into nightmares. As Elira digs deeper into the village’s past, she uncovers secrets her mother died to keep, a church that refused to speak, and a truth that binds her to the Collector more tightly than she ever realized. Each step reveals another thread in a design that has already wrapped itself around her life. And the fog is closing in. To save the village—and herself—Elira must confront the thing wearing the face of a man. But the closer she gets, the more she realizes: Some monsters aren’t born. They’re stitched.
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Chapter 1 - The Return

The fog was heavier than I remembered. It clung to the cart wheels, to my cloak, to my throat. I pulled the fabric tighter around me, though it did little against the damp.

The first rooflines of the village broke through the gray like bones jutting from the earth. Smaller than I remembered. Crooked. Tired. Even the chapel tower, once so tall in my mind, leaned as if the years had worn it down too.

No one waited for me. The cart stopped in the square and the driver muttered something about the road, but I didn't listen. A few villagers passed by, carrying baskets, eyes fixed anywhere but me. They didn't stop, didn't greet me. Their glances slid away like water.

My boots hit the stones with a sound that echoed louder than it should have. I could still picture the child I had been, chasing friends across this same square. Now the air smelled of smoke and damp soil, with something faint underneath---sharp, metallic, almost like blood.

My mother's house hadn't changed. The faded blue shutters, the swollen frame of the door where spring rains always warped the wood. I rested my hand against it, the grain familiar under my palm, then pushed it open.

Inside smelled of flour and dust. The floorboards creaked, each one betraying my steps. My mother's arms wrapped around me briefly---strong, wordless, as if silence could fold the years between us flat.

That night, I lay awake in my childhood bed, staring at the ceiling beams I used to count when sleep wouldn't come. The fog pressed thick against the window, and every groan of the house felt heavier than it should.

Coming home should have brought comfort. Instead, I felt something else settling under my skin---not homesickness, not fear, but a weight that told me I hadn't come back to the same place I'd left.