The Journals

1005 Words
I stopped leaving the house. It wasn’t a decision so much as a surrender. The thought of driving down the hill, sitting in that cafe, or feeling strangers’ eyes on the cameo at my throat made my stomach knot. Everything I needed was already here. Fresh fruit appeared on the kitchen counter each morning, ripe and perfect, as though the house itself were feeding me. I told myself this was normal. I told myself a lot of things that week. The library had become my entire world. I sat at the oak desk during the day, laptop open, doing the bare minimum of freelance work to keep up the pretense that I was still a person. But my eyes kept drifting to the shelves, to the old volumes no one had touched in decades, to the walls and corners and the deliberate spaces between things. The room felt older than the rest of the house. More intentional. Like it had been built around a secret. I found the panel on a Thursday afternoon. I was pulling a warped shelf away from the wall when I heard the hollow sound. I pressed along the seam until the hidden panel swung inward on silent, ancient hinges. Inside the narrow space lay a stack of leather journals and, beneath them, a small locked tin box. That night I read them all by candlelight. The overhead bulbs had begun flickering badly; the house preferred candles now, and I had stopped questioning it. The first journal belonged to Margaret Harrow, 1897 great-grandniece of the builder. Her early entries were careful and lovely, full of hope about starting over. Then the tone changed. She wrote of a presence that knew her name, dreams that left her aching and wet, a “gentleman in the walls” who came to her at night and made her body sing in ways no living man ever had. She described his c**k in explicit, fevered detail: a burning shadow, endless, splitting her sweetly. She wrote of being f****d for hours, of coming until she wept, of begging him to fill her cunt, her ass, her throat. By the final pages her handwriting had disintegrated into desperate fragments: More. Deeper. Take everything. She died in the master bedroom at twenty-nine. Heart failure, the record said. They found her smiling, bruises around her throat shaped like loving fingers. Clara Whitmore came next, 1923. A war widow seeking something quiet and cheap. Her journal began with practical lists,repairs, garden plans but soon shifted into something darker. Shadows that moved wrong. Exhaustion that felt like ecstasy. Dreams of being bound and used in every hole until she blacked out. The photographs in the tin box showed her on the same four-poster bed I slept in every night: thighs spread wide, eyes glassy with rapture, a dark tendril blurred between her legs as if caught mid-thrust. She lasted eleven months. There were others. Always women. Always alone. Always ending the same way—bodies spent and glistening, faces frozen in blissful agony. The last journal belonged to Elias Harrow himself, 1889. His handwriting was precise, cold, controlled. A scholar of forbidden things, bored with mortal life, he had found a ritual in an ancient text: a way to bind his soul to the house through blood, seed, and willing sacrifice. The house would feed on desire, growing stronger with every woman who surrendered to it. But the ritual needed a final anchor—his own direct descendant, the one whose body could make him fully real again. He had built Harrow Hill for this. Lured Margaret back under the pretense of inheritance. Used her night after night. Fed on her pleasure until her heart gave out. He wrote of it all without guilt or heat, the way a man records a successful investment. The final entry was dated the night before his own ,accident. She will come eventually. The blood calls to itself. When she arrives she will feel the pull, the recognition, the hunger that matches mine. She will think she chose this place. She will not understand until it is too late that the place chose her long before she was born. I closed the journal. My mother’s maiden name had been Harrow. The family tree had always stopped short on that branch, as if someone had taken scissors to it. My hands were steady. The cameo burned hot against my throat, pulsing in time with the slick heat between my legs. I was naked on the library floor clothes had become unbearable legs spread shamelessly because the house liked me open. The voice, no longer a whisper, filled the room like velvet and smoke. “Yes, Evelyn. My blood. My flesh. My perfect, dripping vessel.” Shadows poured from the corners, coalescing into the tall, naked figure I had seen in the mirror. His c**k was thick, heavy, veined with darkness, already leaking at the tip. He knelt between my thighs as shadowy tendrils rose like vines, wrapping my wrists and pulling them above my head, spreading my ankles wide. I was displayed, helpless, aching. He leaned in, cold breath against my soaked folds. “Say it,” he commanded. “You,” I sobbed, hips lifting greedily. “I belong to you.” His long, forked tongue licked a slow, devastating stripe from my entrance to my c**t. I screamed. He devoured me tongue f*****g deep, tendrils tightening around my breasts and pinching my n*****s, another thick tendril pressing into my ass until I was stuffed full in both holes. I came violently, squirting across his shadowed face, and he drank it all with a low growl of approval, forcing orgasm after orgasm until I was a trembling, sobbing mess. Only then did he rise over me, c**k nudging my entrance. “Welcome home, Evelyn Harrow.” He thrust deep in one smooth stroke. The world dissolved into endless, shattering pleasure as my ancestor claimed his bloodline at last. “Now scream for your master.”
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