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Chapter 12 - CHAPTER 11: THE KEEPER

The Feast's words still

echoed—'Jesus is love.'

The compass led them

north, across state lines where the cornfields gave way to dense, brooding pine

forests. The destination was a library, but not one meant for the public. It

was a rotting Victorian structure sinking into the marshland of Minnesota, the

wood blackened by ash, the windows sealed with boards.

Marietta pulled Maryanne's

diary from her pack, reading the entry aloud in the dim light: "In Minnesota,

where The Covenant of the Drowned kept records, lived a town librarian. The

Keeper."

"This is it," Anne Faith

whispered.

They slid past the "NO

TRESPASSING" sign, the heavy doors groaning as they pushed inside. The air

didn't smell like books. It smelled of holy oil, rotting death, and wet ash.

Pinned to a corkboard near

the entrance, a single note fluttered in a draft that shouldn't exist. It

radiated a cold, desperate sorrow.

To Dad from Marjorie:

Hello Lawrence. Mom's been keeping us in the basement for weeks now. She says

she'll take the pain away soon. The Seven Sites follow them. Immortality

awaits.

"He kept it," Marietta

murmured. "All this time."

As they moved deeper into

the labyrinth of shelves, the shadows began to bleed ink. From the darkness, a

creature manifested. He was a walking archive—a man whose skin had been flayed

and replaced with shifting parchment. Arcane symbols, ritual instructions, and

the names of the drowned crawled across his flesh like ants.

His eyes were ledgers,

irises scrolling infinitely with data.

"The Keeper," Anne Faith

breathed.

The creature didn't speak;

he opened his chest. The mist of the Covenant's records spilled out, coalescing

into a book floating before them. It promised everything: Maryanne's final

thought, the Deep's true name, the memory of her face that had been stolen from

them.

The Keeper's voice rasped

like turning pages. "The Memory you long for. Every answer you've sought. But

to read it, you must let me write on you. You will know everything… but you

will be trapped in the knowing forever."

Will you write, or be

written on?

The Keeper twisted

reality, stitching knowledge into the very fabric of the air. Anne Faith's

spiritual sense jolted violently. As she reached for the book, entranced by the

promise of her mother's name, Marietta leaped forward, grabbing her sister's

shoulder.

"Don't!"

Contact triggered the

vision. The library dissolved into smoke.

THE VISION: THE FIRE AND

THE ACID

Suddenly, they were

standing in a house fire, thirty years ago. Alarms screamed.

Lawrence, human and

frantic, sprinted down a collapsing hallway. He smashed the glass of an

emergency box, grabbing an axe. He reached the basement door, hearing the

agonizing screams of his daughter, Marjorie.

"I'll save you! Don't

worry, Marjorie!"

Thud. The axe splintered

the wood. The door gave way.

Inside, the heat was

unbearable. His wife, Laura, stood by the furnace, a gun in her hand and

madness in her eyes.

"Get back!" she shouted.

"You won't take her! I'm doing this to save her from you… from the suffering of

it all!"

"Don't do this!" Lawrence

begged, dropping the axe. "Living in a broken household is all we have! Think

of Marjorie!"

"I'll burn here with her

to save our family from your lies," Laura wept. The Crowned-Deep's voice

slithered through her mind, promising mercy through erasure.

Lawrence rushed her. Laura

fired. Pop.

The bullet shattered

Lawrence's leg. He fell, watching helplessly as the char fell from the ceiling.

The scene shifted

violently. Lawrence, dragged from the wreckage by the Covenant, woke up

strapped to an inverted cross.

"Will you die proudly for

us?" the Covenant leader asked. "Or does the Crowned-Deep's lair await?"

"No," Lawrence spat, blood

in his teeth. "But… I will mark every soul. I will judge every outcome until

the end of time. I will become Deeper than knowledge itself to free my

daughter's soul."

The Covenant lowered him

into a vat of acid.

Lawrence didn't scream. He

smiled. He believed his vow would save her. As his body hit the liquid and his

skin boiled away to be replaced by ink, he died smiling.

THE CHOICE

Marietta gasped, snapping

back to the present. Her fingers hovered over the book. The temptation was

agonizing—to know her mother's name, just once. To see her face.

It's a trick, she thought.

Knowledge isn't control.

"Is it a lie or a choice?"

Marietta asked, her voice cutting through the library's hum.

The Keeper's skin stilled

for the first time. A single line surfaced on his chest, written in Maryanne's

handwriting: "Do I need to understand it all to love them through it?"

The Keeper's answer was

spoken aloud, a sound like tearing paper. "No. You only needed to choose

right."

Marietta shook Anne Faith.

"Anne! Wake up! We have to choose Truth."

Anne Faith fell to her

knees, trembling. She looked up at the monster of parchment and ink. She said,

"You're what happens when love is forced into a decision without understanding

consequences. Poor soul… Anne Tears up. You overthought how to save your daughter…

So in this fucked up world…You chose assimilation, thinking it would save your

daughter."

Marietta stepped forward.

"We've seen your story. Oh, God… I know you lied to yourself about sacrificing

for love. But Love saves even those meant to be damned. I've seen it! We choose

to still love you!"

The Keeper froze. He

looked at Marietta's defiant eyes, at Anne Faith's compassion. For the first

time in thirty years, he didn't see variables. He saw Marjorie.

"Marjorie…" he whispered.

"I chose… I loved her enough to let it in."

The realization broke the

Covenant's hold. The Crowned-Deep roared from the shadows, furious at the

redemption. Pressurized air and sawdust erupted from the floor, dragging The

Keeper backward into the fabric between realities.

"Marjorie!" The Keeper

shouted, reaching out one last time. "Not again!"

He vanished into the void.

As the library crumbled

around them, the daughters saw one final message burn itself onto the wall

where The Keeper had stood: FOUR SITES REMAIN.

ASSIMILATE OR BECOME A WORTHLESS LIMB.

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