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tragedy

Nothing Happened Twice

On the morning of his eighteenth birthday a young man receives a letter from someone whose voice once formed the centre of his life. The letter describes an event that appears both precise and impossible. It speaks of a death, of a punishment carried out with deliberate patience, and of a past that refuses to remain where it belongs. Yet what unsettles him most is not the violence described within it, but the strange composure of the voice that addresses him. It writes as though the matter were already concluded, as though something long unfolding had finally reached its quiet end. Certain details resist explanation. Dates seem displaced. Memories shift in tone. The figure who writes to him feels at once intimately familiar and strangely distant, like a presence remembered from a dream whose meaning changes each time it is recalled. What begins as a letter gradually becomes something else: a point of disturbance in memory. Returning to the places and histories that shaped their childhood, he finds that recollection does not move in a straight line. Episodes once believed to be settled begin to reopen. Affections and injuries long buried reveal themselves as part of a pattern that may have been forming without his knowledge. The deeper he follows the thread left behind by the letter, the more uncertain the boundaries of the story become. Was the person who wrote it a witness, an executioner, or merely one of several selves produced by a life that could not be endured in a single voice. Nothing Happened Twice moves through the fragile territory between memory and invention, where the past is less a sequence of events than a structure slowly assembled in retrospect. At its centre lies the suspicion that what appears to be a beginning may already belong to a different moment entirely. Some stories open with a revelation. Others begin with the quiet sense that something has already been finished.
LucienVale · 171 Views

The Guarantee Card: Extra Joker

Guys just to let you guys know This is not Lord of the Mysteries, nor is it a rip-off of it. In a sprawling Victorian metropolis where steam-engine airships dominate the skies and clockwork lawmen enforce order, survival is dictated by the Warp Deck—a mysterious system of power-granting cards that define a citizen's worth, utility, and social standing. To hold a card is to have a future; to be without one is to be non-existent. Marzell Côme is a man living on the jagged edge of that existence. For nineteen years, the Deck has spat out nothing but Blanks—the ultimate death sentence of "zero value." While the elite bask in the resources granted by high-tier cards, Marzell has spent two decades honing the only thing the system can’t touch: his own physical grit. He has pushed his body to the breaking point, hoping that discipline might finally force the hand of fate. Now, as he stands before the Deck for his twentieth and final attempt, Marzell isn't looking for godhood or glory. He just wants a "normal" life and a way to pull his family out of the suffocating soot of the slums. But in a world where the machinery of luck is rigged by those at the top, Marzell is about to find out if twenty years of defiance can finally break the cycle—or if the Deck has something far more volatile in store for him than a simple job. This story will be dark, tragic, and heartbreaking—and by the end, it will leave you in quiet awe of its sadness. And once again it is not Lord of the Mysteries, or a rip-off. https://discord.gg/YBpxfK8yE
Pyannn · 5.6k Views