The rain had stopped just before sunset, leaving the House of Shadow wrapped in that clean, after-storm shimmer — windows fogged around the edges, garden smelling of wet leaves and undone secrets. It didn’t look like a place where mysteries gathered. More like an old, moody house that pretended it was normal even when everyone inside knew it wasn’t.
Inside, Leon was adjusting a crooked picture frame in the living room with the intensity of a surgeon. Every millimeter mattered. Pride didn't live in him — it wore him like a perfectly pressed suit. Ren lounged beside him on the couch, flipping through TV channels like he was personally offended by each one. “You fix that thing every day,” he muttered. “And you complain every day,” Leon replied without even glancing back.
Out in the garden, Marco sat under the still-damp evening air, enjoying his snacks and tea as if the rain had fallen just to refresh his appetite. Alex stood nearby, hands in pockets, eyes fixed on the glowing sky.
“Storms change things,” he said quietly, as though making a prediction only he could profit from. Marco didn’t answer — he just reached for another snack.
Back in the living room, Milo lay half-asleep on the rug, one arm thrown over his face. The fading orange light from outside stretched over him like a warm blanket he didn’t ask for.
Outside, a taxi whispered to a stop under the dripping trees. Two girls emerged.
Lucy — elegance wrapped in sunlight, even with travel hair and rain-damp sleeves.
Iva — quiet focus, eyes that didn’t just look but read things.
And Doorbell rings. A sound too polite for this old house, too sharp for the soft dusk settling in its walls.
Leon stopped mid-adjustment. Ren froze with the remote still in his hand. Milo didn’t move at all — just let out a faint sigh, as if even unexpected guests were too much effort. Leon brushed invisible dust off his sleeves and walked to the door with the air of someone preparing for an evaluation he did not schedule. He opened it and saw.
Two girls stood under the porch light, luggage resting by their feet, rain still clinging to their sleeves.
Lucy tilted her head back slightly, letting the porch glow fall on her face as if it were a spotlight she’d been waiting for. “Evening,” she said, voice soft but confident. “I hope the house doesn’t mind new faces dropping in. We’re supposed to start living here from today.”
Beside her, Iva shifted her bag higher and gave the house a long evaluating glance. Everything was measured, compared, judged before she even stepped in. “We completed all the formalities.”
Leon blinked. “I see,” he said, recovering instantly. “Well… welcome. Come in before the floor gets muddy.” They stepped inside, water droplets trailing behind them on the wooden floor. Ren stared at them from the couch, remote in hand but attention snagged. Milo cracked one eye open, squinted, and then let it close again like the problem could be postponed. Leon cleared his throat, taking command back like it belonged to him. “So you’ll be staying here from today onward. I’m Leon. I will show you around if you mind.” Lucy let out a soft laugh. Iva didn’t laugh, but she didn’t look uncomfortable either — she simply observed the house like it was a puzzle already whispering hints. “Follow me,” Leon said, gesturing down the room.
He gave them a brief tour. Starting from living room where Ren pretending not to stare, Milo pretending not to exist. They past the kitchen doorway, with Leon saying “You can always find Marco eating his snacks anytime in entire day.” Alex from the garden with Marco, watching them pass like someone assessing new variables. Everything felt normal until they reached hallway.
The air cooled. The lights dimmed a little.
The house grew… quieter. Leon didn’t stop walking, but his voice lowered.
“That one,” he said, nodding toward the locked door, “stays closed. No touching. No opening. No questions.”
Lucy’s gaze softened with curiosity.
Iva’s sharpened instantly — she noticed the temperature shift, the stillness, the faint indentation on the floor near the bottom of the door. He carried on and showed them their rooms — simple, tidy, faintly smelling of cedar, sheets tucked with machine precision. “You’ll settle in,” he said. “It doesn’t take long but be sure to not peek into others room and letters.” Lucy smiled, setting her bag down gently. Iva tested the window latch with quiet fingers.
Outside, the house exhaled — long, slow, steady. Like it was adjusting to new footsteps in its rhythm. But a faint voice can be heard behind a locked door like something is there but no one noticed it.
To be continued.