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Prologue

Beneath the oppressive weight of a sky cloaked in perpetual twilight, the town of Willow's End had long surrendered to an unspoken dread. It was here, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and two, that the tragedy of Morgana LeFay, once the most revered and feared witch of our age, unfolded—a tale of a love so pure it transcended the bounds of the mortal coil, only to be sundered by the unforgiving blade of betrayal.

Morgana, with her raven hair and eyes like the stormy sea, was not always the harbinger of curses and collector of souls. No, she was once a maiden fair and full of life, her laughter like the sweet chime of church bells on a clear Sunday morn. Her heart, however, belonged to one man—Jonathan Hawthorne, heir to the Hawthorne Estate and its vast, uncharted lands. Their love was the kind spoken of in hushed tones by firesides when the night grew cold and the stars peered down like curious onlookers.

It was in the blooming heart of summer when Jonathan, with fervor in his eyes, presented Morgana with a locket—a delicate trinket of silver, housing within it a portrait of their entwined hands and a lock of his golden hair. "My love," he had whispered, "let this be the symbol of our undying affection, a promise that not even the cruel march of time can sever."

Yet, as the seasons turned and the leaves adopted their autumnal hues, a shadow fell upon their love. For Jonathan, burdened by the expectations of his lineage and the whispers of the townsfolk, who viewed Morgana's affinity for the old ways with a mix of reverence and fear, began to drift away. His visits grew infrequent, his touch hesitant, his gaze no longer alight with the fire of passion but dimmed by the specter of doubt.

On a night when the moon hid behind despairing clouds, Jonathan came to Morgana, his countenance etched with sorrow. "Morgana, my dearest," he began, the words stumbling from his lips like traitors, "our union cannot be. My family... the town... they will never accept you, and I am bound by duty to preserve our name."

Morgana's heart, once a vessel of warmth and joy, fractured like fine porcelain dashed upon the unforgiving stone floor of the Hawthorne Estate's grand foyer. "Your duty," she echoed, her voice a ghostly calm that belied the tempest brewing within her soul. "And what of love, Jonathan? Does it weigh so lightly upon the scales of your conscience?"

The locket, once a beacon of their love, grew heavy around her neck, a yoke of forsaken promises. In the days following Jonathan's departure, the townsfolk spoke of a change come over Morgana. The gardens of her solitary abode, once vibrant with flora, withered and recoiled as if in mourning. The laughter of children ceased in the streets, and an unseasonable chill enveloped Willow's End.

Driven by heartache and the sting of abandonment, Morgana turned to the ancient tomes of her forebears, seeking solace in the eldritch words that danced like shadows across the pages. The incantations she spoke, the rituals she conducted, were not of healing or hope, but of vengeance and binding. She summoned the spirits of the earth and the air, of fire and water, and to them, she offered her pain, her rage, her undying grief.

It was then that the disappearances began. One by one, the souls of Willow's End were plucked from their earthly bodies, drawn to Morgana’s abode by the haunting melody of her lullaby—a song of sorrow and loss that resonated through the walls of the town and into the hearts of its people. Each soul she captured, she imprisoned within a doll, an effigy of their mortal visage, and sealed them away in her attic, her collection ever-growing.

Decades passed, and the legend of Morgana LeFay grew ever darker, her name synonymous with the fear that settled like a shroud over Willow's End. Yet, in her heart, the witch longed not for the souls she had taken but for the love she had lost—a love she could neither reclaim nor relinquish.

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In her final act, with hands that trembled with age and eyes clouded by the passage of time, Morgana penned a letter. It was not a missive of malice or spite, but one of confession, of revelation, of a plea for forgiveness that she knew would never come. She addressed it to the inheritors of the Hawthorne Estate, to those whose bloodline bore the weight of Jonathan's choice, and she left it unsealed, an invitation for eyes yet unborn to witness the truth of her tale.

As the ink dried on the parchment of Morgana's final testament, the echoes of her lament were etched into the fabric of the manor, a residence she had never intended to claim as her own, yet fate, with its capricious hand, had woven her story into the very stones of the Hawthorne Estate.

Morgana, with no lineage or title to her name, came into the possession of the estate through a confluence of tragedy and dark providence. In the wake of her forsaken love, the townsfolk of Willow's End had become wary of her presence, her isolation within the town serving as a wellspring for whispered rumors and frightened glances.

Jonathan Hawthorne, her once betrothed, found himself shackled by the weight of his decision. His days were spent wandering the vast corridors of his ancestral home, each ornate tapestry and gilded frame a reminder of the life he could have chosen. His nights were tormented by dreams of Morgana's despairing eyes, which no amount of drink could blur from his vision.

It was not long after their parting that Jonathan fell ill, a malady of the heart that no physician could diagnose, and no tonic could cure. Some speculated it was a hex, a curse wrought by a spurned lover; others whispered that it was the manifestation of his own remorse gnawing away at him from the inside.

As Jonathan's strength waned, he became consumed by an obsession to make amends, to right the wrongs he had wrought upon Morgana. In a final act, blurred by fever and the encroaching shadows of death, he bequeathed the Hawthorne Estate to her. With a shaking hand, he signed away his birthright, believing that in doing so, he might offer her the sanctuary she had lost when he turned her away.

Upon receiving word of this unexpected inheritance, Morgana was struck by a bitter irony. The home that could have been theirs in a life unmarred by societal shackles was now hers alone, a hollow victory that filled her with neither joy nor satisfaction. The townspeople, fearing the wrath of a witch scorned, dared not contest the will of the last Hawthorne scion, and so the manor passed to Morgana without dispute.

The house, once lively with the laughter of guests and the bustle of servants, grew silent and somber as Morgana took residence within its walls. The gardens where she had once walked hand in hand with Jonathan became wild and untamed, as if reflecting the tumult of her own heart. The halls, which had echoed with the promises of a future together, now whispered with the sighs of the lost and the damned.

Morgana transformed the manor into a reflection of her inner world, a place where the veil between the living and the dead was drawn thin. Each room became a sanctuary for the arcane arts she delved into with fervor, seeking to fill the void left by her shattered love. The attic, once a place of forgotten trinkets and memories, became the macabre gallery for her collection of cursed souls—her silent companions in the dance of eternity.

As the years passed into decades, and the visage of the once-vibrant Morgana grew lined with the passage of time, the house seemed to age with her. Its once-pristine facade became marred by creeping ivy and the relentless passage of time, a testament to the town's dark heart and Morgana's undying grief.

Yet, within the walls of the manor, the letter lay in wait, a final echo of Morgana's existence, a bridge between the past and the future. For the Hawthorne Estate was more than just a home; it was the keeper of secrets, the silent witness to a love that had burned too bright, and the vessel for a curse that would span generations.

The letter, marked by the year of its creation, lay in wait, hidden within the depths of the manor, as Morgana surrendered herself to the embrace of death. Her spirit, however, would find no rest, for her curse was her own to bear—an eternal vigil over the souls she had bound to her sorrowful collection.

And so, dear reader, as you stand upon the threshold of this tale woven from the dark threads of history, remember that within the walls of the Hawthorne Estate, mysteries old as time itself await. The letter, a relic of a bygone era, now calls to the future, to Aria and Ariel, whose fates are irrevocably entwined with the witch's legacy—a legacy of love, betrayal, and the unyielding grip of the supernatural.

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