Thursday, 27 February 2025

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The Curse of Blackwater Isle

 












Chapter 1: The Forbidden Island

For centuries, sailors spoke in hushed tones about Blackwater Isle. Hidden in the North Atlantic, it was marked on few maps, its shores shrouded in eternal mist. The few who ventured there either never returned or came back changed—silent, hollow-eyed, as if a piece of them had been left behind.
Ethan Cole, a journalist known for his investigations into the paranormal, dismissed the tales as superstition. When he received an anonymous tip about strange disappearances linked to the island, he saw it as the perfect opportunity to uncover the truth.
Along with his cameraman, Mark, and historian Dr. Evelyn Hart, Ethan chartered a boat. The locals refused to take them all the way, dropping them miles from the island’s shore with a final warning: "The island doesn’t want you there."
The waves grew violent as they neared Blackwater. The sky darkened unnaturally fast. When they finally set foot on the shore, an eerie silence greeted them—no birds, no rustling leaves, only the sound of their own breathing.
The island was waiting.

Chapter 2: The Vanishing Village

They found the remains of a settlement deep within the island—weathered wooden houses, doors hanging open as if the inhabitants had fled mid-step. Rotten food sat on tables, untouched for decades.
"They left in a hurry," Evelyn murmured, brushing dust off an old book. The pages were filled with frantic scribbles—warnings of shadowy figures, whispers in the wind, and something called "The Watcher."
Then, the whispers began.
Mark turned sharply. "Did you hear that?"
Ethan nodded. The sound came from everywhere and nowhere, voices overlapping, too distorted to understand. The air felt heavy, charged with an unnatural energy.
Then Mark screamed.
They turned to see him staring at his reflection in a broken window—except it wasn’t his reflection.
The figure mimicked his movements but had hollow, black eyes. Then, it smiled.
The real Mark did not.

Chapter 3: The Watcher in the Mist

Night fell too quickly. The mist thickened, pressing in on them. Their flashlights barely penetrated the darkness.
"We need to leave," Evelyn said, voice shaking.
Their boat was gone.
Panic set in. They retraced their steps to the beach, but where the boat had been tethered, only empty water remained. No footprints. No sign it had ever been there.
A low, guttural sound echoed through the trees. Something was watching them.
A shadow moved within the mist—tall, elongated, barely human. It stood at the edge of their vision, always just out of focus.
Ethan raised his camera. The lens cracked.
Then, the whispers returned.
"Run."

Chapter 4: The Island Takes Its Own

They ran blindly, deeper into the island. The shadows multiplied, closing in. The whispers turned to screams.
Mark stumbled, falling onto the damp earth. Ethan turned to help him, but Mark’s eyes were wide with terror. "It’s inside my head," he gasped.
Then, before Ethan could react, Mark was pulled backward—his body vanishing into the mist as if swallowed whole.
Evelyn screamed. Ethan dragged her forward, their only goal now: survival.
Ahead, an ancient stone altar stood beneath a twisted tree. Symbols carved deep into the rock pulsed with an eerie glow.
"A ritual site," Evelyn breathed. "The island... it’s feeding."

Chapter 5: The Final Sacrifice

The Watcher stepped forward at last.
Its form flickered, shifting—sometimes human, sometimes monstrous, its hollow eyes locking onto Ethan. It raised one long-fingered hand, pointing at him.
"A trade," Evelyn whispered. "It wants one of us."
Ethan’s mind raced. He had come seeking the truth, but the truth had found him first.
A decision had to be made.
With a sudden shove, Evelyn pushed him backward. "Run!" she screamed before stepping onto the altar.
The shadows engulfed her instantly.
The mist cleared. The whispers stopped.
Ethan was alone.

Chapter 6: Escape... or Not?

By morning, Ethan found a wrecked fishing boat on the shore. He didn’t question it. He rowed until his arms burned, until Blackwater Isle was a smudge in the distance.
He was found days later, drifting near the mainland. Weak, dehydrated, but alive.
His footage was corrupted. His recordings—only static.
No one believed his story. No one but him.
Yet, every night, he hears the whispers.
Calling him back.
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The Curse of Black Hollow Cemetery


 











Chapter 1: The Forgotten Graveyard


Daniel Hayes was not a believer in curses. As a journalist, he relied on facts, evidence, and logic. So when he was assigned to write about the infamous Black Hollow Cemetery—a place whispered to be cursed—he saw it as nothing more than another ghost story to debunk.

The cemetery had been abandoned for decades. Hidden deep in the woods, it was known for strange disappearances, unmarked graves, and eerie, inexplicable occurrences. Locals avoided it, refusing to even speak its name after dark.

Daniel, however, was eager to uncover the truth.

One cold October evening, armed with a flashlight and his camera, he stepped beyond the rusted iron gates.

The air was unnaturally still.

Chapter 2: The First Omen



The deeper Daniel ventured, the heavier the atmosphere became. The gravestones were crumbling, their inscriptions barely legible. Overgrown vines wrapped around tombs like skeletal fingers. The silence was deafening.

Then, he heard it.

A whisper.

At first, it was soft, like the wind rustling leaves. But as he moved forward, it grew louder. Distinct. Murmuring voices, overlapping, desperate.

His flashlight flickered.

Something moved behind a nearby mausoleum. He turned sharply, camera ready—but saw nothing.

The air turned icy. His breath came out in visible puffs.

And then, he saw the grave.

A fresh mound of dirt, despite no burials taking place here for decades. The headstone was blank.

His name wasn’t engraved on it yet.

But it would be.

Chapter 3: The Unearthed Secret





Determined to uncover the mystery, Daniel began researching the cemetery’s history. What he found was disturbing. Black Hollow had been a burial ground for the outcasts—the executed, the exiled, those who had been denied a peaceful rest.

In the 1800s, a vengeful priest, Father Elias Mercer, had conducted forbidden rituals here. Legends claimed he had bound the souls of the condemned, trapping them between life and death. His last act was a curse—to ensure no one who entered the cemetery left whole.

Daniel scoffed at the superstition.

But that night, his dreams told a different story.

He saw the cemetery, shrouded in fog. The ground beneath him trembled, and skeletal hands clawed their way from the soil. A figure in tattered robes stood among the graves, hollow eyes staring directly at him.

"You disturbed the dead," the figure whispered. "Now, they will claim you."



Chapter 4: The Haunting





Daniel woke up gasping. His room was freezing. The whispering hadn’t stopped—it had followed him home.

His reflection in the window wasn’t his own.

It grinned.

Objects moved on their own. Shadows stretched unnaturally. The scent of damp earth filled his apartment. And then, the nightmares worsened—visions of being dragged into an open grave, suffocating under layers of soil while unseen hands pulled him deeper.

Desperate, he sought out the only person who might have answers—an old historian named Margaret Sinclair.

Her face went pale when he mentioned Black Hollow.

"You walked among the cursed," she said. "And now, they walk with you."




Chapter 5: Breaking the Curse



There was only one way to sever the connection—return to the cemetery and perform a reversal ritual at Father Mercer’s tomb. But there was a catch.

"You must not speak," Margaret warned. "No matter what you hear. No matter what you see. If you acknowledge them, they will know you are afraid. And fear is their doorway."

Daniel returned to Black Hollow at midnight. The graveyard was alive with whispers, shadows shifting between tombstones. As he reached Mercer’s grave, the wind howled.

Then, the ground split open.

Hands erupted from the soil, clawing at his legs. Faceless figures emerged, their hollow eyes pleading, accusing. The air was thick with the stench of decay.

"Daniel... help us..."

A voice like his mother’s.

"Daniel... don’t leave us..."

His hands trembled as he poured the sacred salt over the grave and lit the candle. The figures screamed, their forms contorting, dissolving into the mist.

The last thing he saw was Mercer himself, standing over the grave, his eyes burning with rage.

Then, silence.


Chapter 6: The Aftermath



Daniel never returned to Black Hollow. The whispers faded. The shadows disappeared.

But he knew the dead never truly rested.

And sometimes, when he passed by an old graveyard, he could swear he still heard them calling his name.

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The Haunting of St. Augustine Morgue



















Chapter 1: The New Night Shift



James Carter never believed in ghosts. As a medical examiner, he had spent years working with the dead, and to him, a body was just an empty vessel—nothing more. So when he was offered the night shift at St. Augustine Morgue, he took it without hesitation.




The morgue was old, its walls yellowed with time, the scent of antiseptic barely masking something more decayed. It had been abandoned for a few years before being reopened, and rumors swirled about what had happened to the last night shift worker. James ignored the whispers, believing them to be exaggerated ghost stories.




His first night was uneventful. A few autopsies, some paperwork, and the occasional hum of the refrigeration units. But as the clock neared 3 AM, the temperature in the room dropped suddenly. The fluorescent lights flickered, and for the first time, James felt uneasy.




Then came the knocking.



Chapter 2: The Unseen Guests



At first, it was soft, barely noticeable—a slow tap-tap-tap coming from one of the metal drawers that housed the corpses. James turned sharply, scanning the room. All the drawers were sealed shut. He dismissed it as an old ventilation system creaking.



But then, the knocking grew louder. Insistent.


He hesitated before stepping toward the source of the sound. It was drawer #12. His hands were cold as he gripped the handle. With a deep breath, he yanked it open.


Empty.

A chill ran down his spine. He slammed the drawer shut, shaking his head. "Fatigue," he muttered. "That’s all."


But as he turned back to his desk, he saw something that made his heart stop.


The footprints. Wet, bare footprints, leading from the drawer to where he stood.


Chapter 3: The Forgotten Dead


James spent the next day researching St. Augustine Morgue. The history was darker than he had expected. In the 1960s, the morgue had been a hospital wing during a severe flu outbreak. Overwhelmed, doctors had left bodies in the basement, forgotten for weeks. Some patients had been declared dead prematurely, their desperate scratches found on the inside of their drawers.


That night, the whispers began.


As he performed an autopsy, he heard them—low voices murmuring just beneath the hum of the refrigeration units. He turned quickly, but the room was empty.

Then, one of the body bags moved.

James froze as the zipper slid down on its own. The cadaver inside—a middle-aged man—had its eyes open. Wide. Watching.

The morgue door slammed shut.



Chapter 4: The Possession


James tried to leave, but his body wouldn’t move. The air turned thick, suffocating, as if invisible hands pressed against his chest. The whispers grew louder, overlapping, desperate and accusing.


"You left us... You let us die..."


The room blurred. The cold metal of the examination table burned against his skin. In the reflection of the glass cabinets, he saw them—dozens of shadowy figures standing behind him. Their hollow eyes stared, mouths moving in silent screams.


He squeezed his eyes shut. "This isn’t real," he chanted. "This isn’t real."


But then, something grabbed his wrist.




Chapter 5: The Escape



James woke up in the hospital. They told him he had been found unconscious in the morgue, his body ice-cold, his heartbeat dangerously slow. When they asked what happened, he said nothing. Who would believe him?


He quit his job the next day.

St. Augustine Morgue remains operational, but no one stays past midnight. The new night shift workers report strange occurrences—knocking drawers, phantom whispers, and the occasional wet footprints leading nowhere.



Some say the ghosts are searching for justice.


Others say they just want out.
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The Haunting of Dr. Elias Grayson



























Chapter 1: The Skeptic





Dr. Elias Grayson had spent years debunking the supernatural. As a renowned psychiatrist specializing in delusions and psychosis, he had built a career on rationalizing the irrational. His patients spoke of ghosts, demons, and unseen horrors, but he always traced their fears back to trauma, mental illness, or simple paranoia.




That is, until the night the shadows started whispering his name.




Elias had recently moved into an old Victorian home on the outskirts of town. It was meant to be a quiet retreat from the chaos of his practice. The house was spacious, with high ceilings and an eerie charm, but it had been abandoned for years. The locals called it "The Hollow House" and avoided it, whispering about its cursed past. Elias dismissed their fears as folklore.




Then, the disturbances began.










Chapter 2: The Whispering Walls





At first, it was subtle. Books fell from their shelves, doors creaked open on their own, and the temperature in his study would plummet without explanation. Elias rationalized it as drafts, old house quirks—nothing more.




But then came the whispers.




Late at night, as he reviewed his case files, he heard them—faint voices drifting through the halls. They called his name in breathy, broken tones. When he searched the house, he found nothing.




One night, he awoke to the sensation of cold fingers brushing against his forehead. His pulse pounded as he reached for the bedside lamp, but before he could turn it on, a voice rasped in his ear:




"Do you believe now?"








Chapter 3: The Patients Who Never Left





Elias became obsessed. He spent hours researching the history of the house. What he discovered chilled him. Decades ago, the house had been a makeshift asylum, run by a psychiatrist named Dr. Victor Holloway. Holloway had experimented on his patients, performing cruel lobotomies and electroshock treatments until many died in agony. Their restless spirits were said to still roam the halls, seeking justice—or revenge.




The more Elias uncovered, the worse the hauntings became. Shadows stretched unnaturally along the walls. Murmurs turned into agonized wails. His reflection in the mirror began moving on its own, grinning when he wasn’t.




One night, as he sat in his study, his case files flew from his desk, scattering across the floor. The papers rearranged themselves, forming words:




**"YOU ARE HIM."**










Chapter 4: The Possession





Elias refused to believe it. He was nothing like Holloway. He was a healer, not a butcher. But the house had other ideas.




He began losing time. Waking in different rooms with no memory of how he got there. He found scribbled notes in his handwriting—detailed descriptions of cruel experiments he had never performed. And yet, they felt… familiar.




One night, he awoke strapped to his own office chair. His body wouldn’t move, paralyzed by an unseen force. Across the room, the air shimmered, and a figure emerged—tall, gaunt, wearing a bloodstained doctor’s coat.




Dr. Holloway.




The phantom stepped forward, his hollow eyes burning with recognition. "Finally," he whispered. "You remember."




Elias screamed.







Chapter 5: The Escape





Elias fled the next morning. He left the house, his belongings, and his entire career behind. But as he checked into a cheap motel on the outskirts of town, he caught his reflection in the bathroom mirror.




It grinned at him.




And whispered in Holloway’s voice:




"You can’t run from yourself."










**Some patients never leave. Some doctors never die.**

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The Curse of the Mirror Djinn



Chapter 1: The Forgotten Relic

Hannah had always been fascinated by antiques. As a historian, she loved uncovering the stories behind forgotten relics. So when she stumbled upon a Victorian-era mirror at an old estate sale, she felt drawn to it. The glass was cloudy, the silver frame tarnished with intricate carvings of symbols she didn't recognize. The vendor, an elderly woman, hesitated before selling it to her.
"That mirror has a past," the woman warned. "It's seen things."
Hannah dismissed the comment as superstition and took it home, placing it in her study. The first few nights were uneventful. But soon, she began to notice… oddities. The reflection in the mirror seemed slower than her own movements, a fraction of a second behind. At first, she thought it was her imagination.
Then, one night, she saw something impossible.
As she brushed her hair in front of the mirror, her reflection smiled. But she hadn't.
---

Chapter 2: The Whispering Glass

Hannah stared, frozen in terror. The reflection held its eerie grin for a moment before snapping back to mimic her movements. She swallowed hard, trying to shake off the chill creeping down her spine. Perhaps she was overtired.
The following night, she dreamt of the mirror. In her dream, it was no longer a simple object but a doorway, a window into a dark void. A figure stood beyond the glass, shadowed and shifting, whispering her name. The voice was like silk and sand, soft yet grating.
When she awoke, the whispering didn’t stop.
She turned toward the mirror. The glass rippled, like water disturbed by an unseen force. She bolted upright, her heart pounding. The room was silent again, but the feeling of being watched never left.
---

Chapter 3: The Entity

Determined to find answers, Hannah researched the carvings on the mirror’s frame. She discovered they were ancient Arabic sigils used to trap malevolent spirits. The mirror wasn’t just a relic—it was a prison.
That night, she made a terrible mistake.
Armed with her newfound knowledge, she attempted a purification ritual, chanting words she barely understood. As she traced her fingers over the mirror’s surface, the air turned ice cold. The lights flickered. The sigils on the frame began to glow faintly.
Then, the glass shattered.
But instead of falling to the floor, the shards hovered in the air, forming a swirling vortex of darkness. From within, a figure emerged—tall and gaunt, its limbs elongated and twisted. Its face was featureless, except for hollow black pits where eyes should have been.
"You… released me," it whispered, its voice echoing through her mind.
---

Chapter 4: The Haunting

Hannah ran, but no matter where she turned, reflections showed glimpses of the entity. In the bathroom mirror, it stood behind her. In the windowpane, its hollow eyes watched. Even the reflection in a puddle on the street bore its image.
She smashed every mirror in her house, but it was useless. The Djinn was no longer bound to the glass. It was part of her now, lurking in every reflective surface, whispering dark promises.
Sleep became impossible. Every time she closed her eyes, she felt its presence drawing closer. It didn’t need a mirror anymore. It could reach her anywhere.
---

Chapter 5: The Escape

Desperate, Hannah sought the help of an occult scholar, Dr. Farid Malik. He listened to her story, his expression grim.
"Mirror Djinn are powerful. They don’t just haunt—they consume. The more you fear it, the stronger it gets. There’s only one way to banish it."
He handed her a vial of black sand. "This must be scattered over the broken shards while reciting the binding spell. But beware—if you fail, it will claim you entirely."
Returning home, Hannah gathered the mirror’s shards, heart hammering. As she began the ritual, the shadows in the room deepened. The Djinn emerged, its twisted form writhing in the darkness.
"You cannot bind me again," it hissed.
Hannah ignored it, her voice steady as she completed the incantation. The black sand glowed, absorbing the entity’s form. It shrieked, its body distorting, until with a final, deafening howl—it was gone.
The room fell silent. The air felt lighter. The reflections showed nothing but her own exhausted face.
Hannah collapsed to the floor, tears of relief streaming down her cheeks.
But as she stood up, something caught her eye. A single, unbroken shard of the mirror lay in the corner. And in it, just for a moment—
She saw it smile.
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The Shadows Beneath Blackwood Manor

 



Chapter 1: The Arrival

Emma and her husband Daniel had always dreamed of escaping the chaos of the city. When they found Blackwood Manor—a vast but abandoned Victorian estate deep in the countryside—it felt like fate. The price was suspiciously low, but the real estate agent shrugged it off. “It just needs a little love,”

From the moment they arrived, Emma felt uneasy. The house was breathtaking yet carried a strange, oppressive silence. As they walked through the grand hallways, the wooden floors groaned beneath them, as if whispering warnings.

That first night, as they settled into their bedroom, Emma swore she heard shuffling sounds beneath the floorboards. “Just rats,” Daniel reassured her, but

Chapter 2: The Locked Door

Exploring the manor the next day, Emma found a locked door at the end of the east wing. The keyhole was rusted shut, but as she pressed her ear against the wood, she heard faint scr

That night, the scratching turned into knocking. A slow, deliberate rhythm. Knock… knock… knock…

She shook Daniel awake, but by the time he listened, there was only silence.

Chapter 3: The Whispering Portraits

One afternoon, Emma wandered into a hallway lined with old portraits. The eyes of the painted figures seemed to follow her, their expressions shifting subtly when she wasn’t looking directly at them.

As she turned to leave, she heard it.

A whisper. Soft, urgent.

"Leave before it wakes."

Spinning around, she found the portraits unchanged, but the whisper lingered in the air like a breath against her neck.

Chapter 4: Beneath the Floor

That night, the house felt different. The temperature dropped, and the knocking returned—louder this time.

Then, without warning, the locked door creaked open on its own.

Emma grabbed a flashlight and stepped inside. Dust swirled in the beam of light, revealing a narrow staircase leading downward. She hesitated, but something inside her needed to know.

As she descended, the air grew damp and foul. The basement was massive, filled with old furniture, broken crates… and a trapdoor in the center of the floor.

The knocking was coming from beneath it.

Heart pounding, Emma reached for the latch.

Chapter 5: The Awakening

Before she could lift the trapdoor, a deep, rattling breath echoed from below. The wooden floor shuddered as if something massive was shifting underneath.

She stumbled backward as a voice—inhuman and ancient—hissed through the darkness:

"You should not have come."

T

A

Emma scre

She ran, tripping up the stairs as the thing dragged itself from its pris

Daniel met her at the top, his face pale with te

“Run!” she

They sprinted from the house as a deep growl rumbled through its walls. The windows shattered one by one, the door slamming behind them as if the house itself was sealing it

As they re

T

Waiting

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The House That Whispers




Michael had always been a skeptic. Ghosts, spirits, and hauntings were nothing more than myths to him—stories to entertain children or fuel urban legends. But that changed when he inherited an old mansion from his estranged uncle, Arthur Holloway.
The Holloway Mansion stood at the edge of a dense forest, its once-grand structure now decaying under layers of neglect. Ivy curled around its towering pillars, and the windows were like dark, hollow eyes watching all who approached. But Michael, eager to sell the property, saw it only as a potential profit.
From the moment he stepped inside, the air felt thick, like a weight pressing against his chest. The floorboards groaned beneath his steps, and the scent of damp wood and dust filled his nostrils. Yet, the strangest thing was the whispering.
At first, he thought it was the wind slipping through the cracks in the walls. But as the nights stretched on, the whispers grew clearer—distinct voices murmuring just out of reach.
One evening, while exploring the library, he found an old leather-bound journal belonging to his uncle. The entries were erratic, paranoid. Arthur had written about voices in the walls, unseen figures standing at the foot of his bed, and most disturbingly, the presence of “The Watcher in the Attic.”
Michael scoffed, dismissing it as the ramblings of a man who had lived alone for too long. But then, something happened that shattered his skepticism.
At exactly 3:15 AM, he woke to the sound of slow, deliberate footsteps above him. The attic.
Gripping a flashlight, he climbed the creaking stairs, the whispers growing louder. When he reached the attic door, it was ajar. The room beyond was cold—unnaturally so. Dust floated in the beam of his flashlight, and then… he saw it.
A figure stood at the far end of the attic, its shape indistinct, its body wrapped in shifting darkness. The whispers ceased, replaced by a deep, guttural voice that spoke a single word:
“Leave.”
Michael stumbled backward, but before he could move, the figure lunged. The last thing he remembered was a force slamming into him, a searing cold that burned through his veins.
When he awoke, it was morning. He was lying on the attic floor, his body covered in frost, his breath visible in the air. The mansion was silent, but he knew it was only waiting. Watching.
He left that same day, never looking back. The house was sold to another owner, who lasted only a week before vanishing without a trace.
Some houses were never meant to be lived in.
And some whispers… should never be answered.

 

Monday, 23 December 2024

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The cursed maid


 The cursed maid








There was, in one of the upscale cities.A young merchant named Tawfiq, who was a righteous man.Married to a righteous woman named Thuraya.He has two five-year-old sons.They were living a safe life.His business flourished in a short period, and he became a prominent figure in society; in fact, he was a candidate for an important position in the city.Given these circumstances that would make them interact with the upper classes, Thuraya needed a maid to take care of the household so that she could focus on public and social gatherings and work parties.Mr. Tawfiq refused this and urged his wife to focus on her home and children, and not to meddle in his work affairs except during public and important events.

But she kept insisting until she accused him of neglecting and despising her. Under this insistence, Mr. Tawfiq succumbed to his wife's desire, so he went to one of the maid agencies and chose among the maids one who was clean and diligent in her work, and brought her home. The first few days went well in terms of care, cleanliness, and taking care of the children, but it didn't last long. Mrs. Thuraya felt her health deteriorating gradually and experienced constant lethargy, especially after having breakfast following the children's departure to school. However, she didn't pay much attention to it, and only after a few days did she start to notice some belongings disappearing from her home. However, this time she did not turn a blind eye to the matter; instead, she paid attention to it and wanted to confirm and test her suspicions. So, she placed a camera in the bathroom and deliberately left her ring to see what the maid would do.

Then she went out and asked the maid to clean the bathroom. After a few minutes, Thuraya returned to the bathroom, took out the camera, and watched the footage. To her surprise, the maid was holding the ring and then putting it in her pocket. Thuraya closed her phone and called the maid, who came to her. When Mrs. Thuraya asked her about the ring, the maid denied seeing it and was visibly nervous. At that moment, Mrs. Thuraya showed her the footage of her stealing the ring and putting it in her pocket.Here, the maid stammered. At that moment, Mrs. Thuraya wanted to call the police, but she didn't because the maid, who had transformed from a weak feminine being into a wicked witch with no mercy or compassion in her heart, had caught her.

The cursed maid

And she said to her: "You foolish woman, if you want to report to the police, you will pay the price with your home, your dignity, and your honor. I will tell them that you want to put me in jail because I have exposed your relationship with your lover."

Mrs. Thuraya looked at her in horror and said: "And who will believe you, you fool?"

The maid said: They will believe me when they see those pictures I took for you. 

She took some photos out of her pocket, and to her shock, they were pictures of Mrs. Thuraya in compromising and nearly nude positions with an unknown man. Mrs. Thuraya was stunned by what she saw, became agitated, and said to her: "Where did you get these photos?" And who is this man?

The maid said: "He is my companion in this city. I used to spend some time with him after you had breakfast, which I put a sedative in so that you wouldn't annoy us"  , and I took these pictures of you to use as a weapon in my hands. If you want to call the police now, go ahead.Mrs. Thuraya was shocked by what she heard, her thoughts became confused and disturbed as her life was now at risk of being ruined. She couldn't do anything except remain silent and obey her orders.And from here, the maid became the lady of the house, and Mrs. Thuraya became the one who served and worked in the house.And when her husband sees her exhausted, he asks her: Why are you so tired? 

She says nothing, and after several days while Mrs. Thuraya is shopping outside the house. And Mr. Tawfiq was sleeping at home when the maid and her lover drugged him with a scented handkerchief. They then photographed Mr. Tawfiq and the maid in compromising positions. After a few days, the maid blackmailed Mr. Tawfiq with these photos, threatening that if he didn't marry her or pay her a large sum of money, she would tell his wife about his infidelity and publish these photos everywhere until his reputation was ruined among people. In the end, after the panic, annoyance, and fear he experienced, Mr. Tawfiq had no choice but to comply with her demands. He preferred to pay her the money rather than marry this wicked woman. He couldn't get rid of her or fire her for fear of her betrayal, as it could lead to dire consequences.

Mr. Tawfiq succumbed to keeping her at home. And then the maid became like a queen, not working but being served by Mrs. Thuraya out of fear of being shamed in front of her husband, and Mr. Tawfiq did not scold her out of fear of being shamed in front of people. 

And his wife, and the days pass, and the house has turned into a ticking time bomb that could explode from the smallest spark of anger, destroying everyone.

Mr. Tawfiq and Mrs. Thuraya began to think separately, without the other's knowledge, about how to get rid of the maid who had humiliated them and destroyed their lives. After deep contemplation, the husband decided to track down the maid's lover to find out where he lived. And who are her accomplices?

After numerous investigations, it became clear that he was a single, unemployed young man with no accomplices.Then he was attacked by Mr. Tawfiq and his men. After being bound in chains, Mr. Tawfiq secluded himself with him away from his men and pressured him until he confessed that there were no accomplices, but rather they were relatives who had come from neighboring cities due to extreme poverty. He also revealed that everything had been arranged with the maid, who orchestrated everything to gather as much money as possible so they could marry and live in another city in safety.


The cursed maid

Mr. Tawfiq wanted to forgive them, but he saw pictures of his wife among the photos taken of him with the maid. He became very angry, and when he interrogated the boy, he replied that they did to her what they did to him, and she is innocent. At that moment, Mr. Tawfiq asked him to come the next day at the usual time with the maid to confront him in exchange for his forgiveness and some money. Then he locked him in one of the rooms until morning and placed one of his men in his house to watch him until the next day. Mr. Tawfiq then went and brought cameras without the maid knowing, and he and his men hid in the neighboring apartment. At the usual time, the boy arrived as usual in his elegant clothes, and the maid welcomed him as usual. At that moment, Mr. Tawfiq came out of his hiding place as if he were surprised and overwhelmed them. 

By beating.Meanwhile, Mrs. Thuraya stepped out to defend the maid so that her situation wouldn't be exposed.

Her husband reassured her and said: "Don't worry, my dear, I've learned everything. They blackmailed us together and did to me what they did to you, and now everything is under control.

The maid wanted to expose him.

He said to her: That won't help, as you have taken all the photos and the money you stole from us with the help of your lover.

The lover replied, saying: "This is not what we agreed upon."

Mr. Tawfiq said: "And I did not agree with you to tarnish my wife's reputation?" And now, you have no choice but prison

They were handed over to the police on charges of theft by her lover and using the house for immoral acts.

Mrs. Thuraya apologized to Mr. Tawfiq and regretted her suggestion of having a maid, as they were happy before this devilish woman came into their lives. Mr. Tawfiq accepted her apology and decided not to bring any maid or servant to work in their home from now on. The maid and her lover were imprisoned, and life returned to Mr. Tawfiq's home as it was.

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The Scourge of the Violated Soul

 **The Scourge of the Violated Soul**





It was a chilly pre-winter evening in the little, failed to remember town of Harrowbrook, found somewhere down in the core of Pennsylvania. The roads were calm, as though the very air itself paused its breathing, hanging tight for something evil to unfurl. The residents had long murmured stories of an old, deserted house at the edge of town, a house that was supposed to be reviled — where the wrathful soul of a violated soul hid, prepared to guarantee any who really considered entering.

Nathaniel Blackwood, an effective legal counselor from New York City, had as of late moved to Harrowbrook with his better half, Emily, and their two small kids, Sam and Lily. Nathaniel was looking for harmony and peaceful, far away from the clamoring city, expecting to get away from the tensions of his powerful work. In any case, much to his dismay, his choice would lead his family into the hold of an old revile.

The house they had moved into was beguiling, an old Victorian-style fabricating that had been empty for a really long time. It was a long ways from the cutting edge condo they had abandoned, yet Nathaniel and Emily were attracted to its personality. The past proprietors, a peaceful old couple, had died under secretive conditions, and the house had stayed empty since. The real estate professional guaranteed them it was a protected, quiet spot to begin once more, yet the disrupting feeling Nathaniel had from the second they ventured inside couldn't be disregarded.

One night, as the family got comfortable, Nathaniel wandered into the storage room to investigate the space and maybe discover some old furnishings or collectibles to reestablish. The upper room, dusty and faintly lit, appeared to be immaculate by time. As he moved further in, a little, endured chest grabbed his attention. It was locked, however the key was holding tight a close by snare. Interest got the better of him, and he opened the chest.

Inside, he found a heap of old, yellowed papers, some of them written in a language he was unable to perceive. At the lower part of the chest lay a little, complicatedly cut wooden box. Something about the crate sent a chill down his spine, yet he felt a sense of urgency to take it. As his fingers brushed the surface, a low murmur consumed the space, and briefly, the temperature in the storage room appeared to drop.

Nathaniel immediately shut the chest and advanced first floor, attempting to shake off the sensation of disquiet. He was unable to make sense of it, yet something about the case appeared to convey a noxious energy. That evening, as he lay in bed, he could hear faint scratching sounds coming from the loft. Emily excused it as the house settling, yet Nathaniel couldn't shake the inclination that they had accidentally stirred something.

The next days were loaded up with weird events. Sam, the more youthful of the two kids, started to have bad dreams. He would awaken around midnight, shouting, his eyes wide with dread. Lily, typically a brilliant and lively young lady, became removed, gazing vacantly at nothing in particular as though paying attention to something no one but she could hear. The air in the house developed weighty, severe. The once warm and welcoming home currently felt like a jail.

One night, as Nathaniel was distant from everyone else in his review, he chose to investigate the old papers he had tracked down in the chest. As he translated the bizarre language, he started to make out the name "Edgar Thorne" and the expression, "Violated by the hands of the out of line, reviled to look for retaliation forever." His heart hustled as he read more, understanding the papers discussed a man who had resided in the house hundreds of years prior — a man who had been violated and killed by a bad appointed authority and his loved ones. The revile had bound his spirit to the house, and presently, it appeared, the revile had tracked down its next casualties.




That evening, as a tempest seethed outside, the family sat together in the lounge room, attempting to disregard the foreboding inclination that lingered palpably. Unexpectedly, the lights flashed, and the temperature decreased. A shadow got across the room, and afterward a voice, low and rough, murmured through the house.


"Leave... or then again endure."


The family froze, their hearts beating in their chests. Nathaniel stood up, his legs shudder, and went after the telephone to call for help. However, when he got it, there was no dial tone — simply the sound of slow, weighty breathing on the opposite end. Alarm set in. Emily grasped her kids to her, murmuring to them that all eventual great, however where it counts, she realized they were undependable.


In the days that followed, the bizarre events raised. Sam started addressing an undetectable companion, a man named Edgar. He would frequently be tracked down toward the side of the room, conversing with flimsy air, his demeanor empty and far off. Lily began to have angry outbursts, her little body shaking viciously as though something — or somebody — was controlling her. The once untainted family was presently cracked, every part turning out to be increasingly more consumed by the noxious presence that spooky the house.


Nathaniel, frantic for replies, went to the nearby curator, a lady named Margaret, who had lived in Harrowbrook her whole life. She knew all about the accounts of Edgar Thorne and the revile that tormented the house. "You should leave," she encouraged him. "The revile can't be broken without any problem. Just the individuals who have been violated by the uncalled for can free the soul of Edgar Thorne. What's more, when the revile has picked its casualties, there can be no way out."


Not set in stone to save his family, however every endeavor to take off from the house was upset. The streets appeared to extend on unendingly, driving them back to Harrowbrook, regardless of which bearing they took. The revile had bound them to the town, and they were caught.


The last night came like a tempest. The breezes cried outside, shaking the windows and shaking the walls. Inside, the family crouched together, dread grasping their hearts. Sam, presently more far off than any other time, remained in the room, his eyes spacey. His voice, as of now not his own, reverberated in the room.


"I'm Edgar Thorne," the voice grated. "You are the ones who will liberate me."


Nathaniel, understanding the weightiness of their circumstance, made a frantic supplication. "How would we break the revile? How must we respond?"


The air developed cold, and briefly, everything went still. Once more, then, the voice talked, this time with a frightening clearness.


"You should offer the spirit of the crooked," it said. "Really at that time will I be free."


Nathaniel's heart sank. He understood what that implied. The revile had picked them, however it wouldn't be fulfilled until somebody died. As he took a gander at his family, he realized there was just a single method for finishing the bad dream.


With shudder hands, Nathaniel moved in the direction of the old wooden box he had seen as in the loft. He needed to pursue a decision. The crate held the response to their salvation, yet at what cost?


As he lifted the case, a blinding light occupied the room, and the house appeared to moan under the heaviness of its own noxious power. The shadow of Edgar Thorne showed up before them, his face curved in misery. He connected, his skeletal fingers brushing against Nathaniel's cheek.


"You have liberated me," Edgar's voice murmured, "however in doing as such, you have fixed your destiny."


Furthermore, with that, the revile asserted its last casualties.

The following morning, the town of Harrowbrook stirred to find the Blackwood family gone, their home deserted again. The scourge of Edgar Thorne had guaranteed another family, and the house stood quiet, hanging tight for its next prey.


Concerning the crate, it stayed secret in the loft, trusting that the following individual will stir the rage of the violated soul and become a piece of the town's dull history.

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