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The hallowed halls of Lament Boarding School were a stage, and we, its unwilling actors, were set to perform the tragedies that had seeped into the wood and stone. The play was a tradition, a reenactment of the sorrow that was as much a part of the school as the ivy that clung to its walls. I should have felt a sense of camaraderie with my fellow performers, but instead, there was only a hollow dread, an anticipation of something sinister waiting in the wings.
I stood backstage, the heavy velvet of the curtain brushing against my arm like the caress of a specter. The air was thick with the scent of dust and a faint, underlying tang of mildew. My costume, a period dress that belonged to a bygone era, felt like a shroud, a garment meant to prepare me for a descent into the underworld.
"You look perfect, Abby," Clara whispered to me, her own costume a mirror of my sepulchral attire. Her attempt at reassurance did little to ease the tightness in my chest.
I forced a smile, the gesture feeling as foreign as the clothes I wore. "Thanks, Clara. Break a leg, right?"
Her nod was solemn, her eyes betraying the unease we all felt. We were about to summon the ghosts of Lament's past, and the air was electric with the tension of those who knew they danced on the edge of a knife.
The play began, the audience a sea of shadows that watched with bated breath as we unraveled the tapestry of Lament's cursed history. My lines were a recitation of sorrow, each word a note in a requiem for the lost and the damned. The performance was a thing of grotesque beauty, a choreography that wove through the most harrowing moments of the school's legacy.
It was then, in the midst of our grim portrayal, that the play took a terrifying turn. The lights flickered, a stutter in the otherwise steady glow that bathed the stage. A sense of unease rippled through the cast, a collective shiver that preluded the chaos to come.
From the back of the auditorium, a figure emerged, a new student whose arrival had been a whisper on the lips of rumor. He was a specter of the familiar, his features a reflection of someone we all knew—Ethan.
The figure walked with purpose, his gait an echo of Ethan's own, and as he approached the stage, I felt the ground beneath me shift, reality warping at the edges of my vision. Ethan's past identities, those I had stumbled upon in the library's ledger, seemed to coalesce within this uninvited guest, a parade of faces and lifetimes that now wore the guise of someone new.
The play ground to a halt, the audience and performers alike fixed upon the interloper with a mix of fear and fascination. He climbed onto the stage with an air of belonging that sent a chill through me. He was not merely playing a part; he was the embodiment of the very tragedies we sought to enact.
"Who are you?" I managed to ask, my voice a tremulous note that barely carried over the sudden, oppressive silence.
The newcomer turned to me, his eyes holding the weight of centuries. "I am a reminder," he said, his voice a chilling mimicry of Ethan's timbre, "of the past that never truly dies."
The auditorium was a tomb, the audience statues in the darkness, as the uninvited guest moved among us, a wraith that bore the secrets of Lament in his very bones. Ethan, standing offstage, watched the scene unfold with an inscrutable expression, a mask that offered no clues to the thoughts that churned behind it.
Stolen content warning: this tale belongs on Royal Road. Report any occurrences elsewhere.
As the lights returned to normal and the play resumed with a sense of urgency born from fear, I could not shake the feeling that we had all become part of something far beyond a mere performance. The phantom's play was a window into the abyss, and the arrival of the new student—a harbinger of the dark revelations yet to come—had only served to deepen the shadows that stretched across the stage of Lament Boarding School.
In the weeks following the phantom's play, an unsettling aggression had taken hold of the apparitions that roamed the school's corridors and courtyards. The once benign specters, content to linger in the periphery of our perception, were now emboldened, their ethereal forms manifesting with a palpable fury.
I could feel them, the angry dead, their icy fingers grazing the nape of my neck as I walked, their hollow voices echoing in the hollows of my ears. It was during one such encounter, as I traversed the dimly lit passageway that connected the dormitories to the main hall, that I first heard my name whispered among the disembodied voices.
"Abby," they hissed, the sound a malignant sibilance that caused me to stop dead in my tracks. The word was repeated, passed along by unseen lips, a spectral game of telephone that bore a message of foreboding.
I spun around, searching for the source of the whispers, but found only the oppressive darkness and the flickering light of the overhead lamps that seemed to struggle against the encroaching gloom. "What do you want?" I demanded of the shadows, my voice a mix of defiance and trepidation.
The response was a gale of phantom laughter, a sound that chilled my blood and stoked the fires of my growing panic. It was clear that I had been marked, but for what purpose, I could not fathom.
The revelation of Ethan's involvement in the ghostly upheaval was as unexpected as it was alarming. I learned of it from Clara, who had overheard a conversation not meant for her ears—whispers that spoke of Ethan and the restless dead in the same breath.
"Abby," Clara said, her eyes wide and brimming with urgency as she pulled me aside one morning. "I heard the groundskeepers talking. They mentioned Ethan... and they're scared, Abby. They think he's part of the reason the ghosts are so angry."
I felt a knot form in my stomach, a tangle of fear and betrayal that tightened with each word she spoke. "Are you sure?" I asked, though a part of me already believed it to be true.
She nodded, her expression grave. "I overheard them say that your name keeps coming up. That you're a target now because of him."
The implication hung between us, a dark cloud that threatened to burst and drench us in its ominous truth. Ethan, the enigma, the constant presence in Lament's long and troubled history, was now a harbinger of my potential doom.
I found myself adrift in a sea of suspicion and unanswered questions. The need to confront Ethan was a fire within me, but when I sought him out, he was as elusive as the answers I so desperately sought.
"Ethan!" I called out when I finally caught sight of him standing alone in the courtyard, his figure a dark silhouette against the fading light of dusk. "We need to talk."
He turned to face me, his expression unreadable, a mask that revealed nothing of the thoughts behind his stormy eyes. "Abby, what's wrong?" he asked, his voice a measured calm that belied the intensity of the situation.
I took a deep breath, steeling myself for the confrontation. "The ghosts... they're angry, and they're saying my name. And now I hear that you're involved, that somehow you're the reason I'm being targeted. Is it true, Ethan? Are you behind this?"
His gaze never wavered, his eyes locking onto mine with an intensity that bordered on ferocity. "Abby, you have to understand, things at Lament are complicated. There's so much you don't know."
Frustration welled up within me, a tide of emotion that threatened to overflow. "Then tell me," I pleaded. "Make me understand, because right now, I don't know what to believe."
Ethan stepped closer, the distance between us shrinking until I could feel the coolness of his presence. "It's not safe to talk here," he said, his voice a low whisper that sent shivers down my spine. "Meet me in the library tonight, after curfew. I'll explain everything then."
As he walked away, leaving me alone in the gathering darkness, I couldn't shake the feeling that I was walking deeper into the web of Lament's secrets—a web that Ethan had spun, with threads as strong and as invisible as the ghostly whispers that now seemed to follow my every step.