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Whispers of the Velvet Night

haoranvelvet
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In a city where the rain never stops, Zeeshaan—a mechanic with a heavy past—and Zhuo—a woman fleeing the dangerous "Wardens"—are thrown together by a mystery three hundred years in the making. At the center of it all is the "Whisper Box," an ancient relic that could rewrite the future of their neon-drenched world. ​Note: This story is a creative collaboration directed by the author, with narrative execution assisted by AI (AIGC).
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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER 1: THE GEOMETRY OF RAIN

The rain in the city didn't fall; it shattered. It hit the jagged skyline and disintegrated into a fine, grey mist that tasted of copper and ozone. Zeeshaan stood in the mouth of his garage, the "Z-Tech" neon sign flickering a tired violet above his head. He was wiped. His hands were stained with a mixture of synthetic oil and old grease that no soap could ever truly touch, but he didn't mind. The grime was honest.

​He pulled a silver lighter from his leather jacket, flicking it open with a practiced snap. The flame danced in the damp draft. He wasn't looking at the fire; he was looking at the street. He liked the city at 2:00 AM. It was when the logic made sense. The traffic lights cycled in their perfect, lonely rhythm—Red. Yellow. Green. No one was there to disobey them.

​Then, the rhythm broke.

​A figure stumbled into the light of the intersection. She looked like a fragment of a dream that had wandered into a nightmare. She was wearing a dress of lavender silk, so fine it looked like it would dissolve in the downpour.

​Zeeshaan's eyes narrowed behind his glasses. He was a man who calculated trajectories and torque, and his mind immediately calculated that she was in trouble. She wasn't running; she was drifting, her hand clutched tightly against her chest, holding something small and rectangular.

​"Hey!" Zeeshaan's voice was a low rasp, cutting through the drumming rain.

​The girl froze. She turned toward the garage, and for a second, the violet neon light caught her face. She was breathtaking. Her eyes were wide, dark pools of terror, and her hair—ink-black and soaked—clung to her pale skin like shadows.

​"You're going to catch a cold," Zeeshaan said, stepping out from the shelter. He stripped off his heavy leather jacket and draped it over her shivering shoulders.

​"I... I cannot go back," she whispered. Her voice was a soft melody.

​"Inside," Zeeshaan commanded. "Whatever you're carrying, it'll be safer behind a steel door."