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Chapter 250 - Chapter Two Hundred Forty-Nine: The Farmer's Peace

WHAT LIVES BENEATH THE VEIL

Book Eight: The Eternal Night

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CONTENT WARNING: This series contains explicit sexual violence, human sacrifice, psychological torture, murder of innocent characters (including children and family members), ritualistic killing, and extreme horror. No character is safe. Read at your own risk.

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Chapter Two Hundred Forty-Nine: The Farmer's Peace

Year 258 – Two Hundred Forty-Seven Years After the Curse

The farmer in the north had farmed for two hundred forty-seven years.

Not literally—he was only thirty-six. But he had farmed as if he had been tending the soil for centuries. Every day. Every night. Every season of every year.

He believed the queen would leave him alone.

He believed she didn't care about him.

He believed he was safe.

His name was Bren—another echo, another coincidence. He was young, hardworking, and hopeful. He had a wife. Two children. A small farm on the edge of the kingdom.

He had heard the stories.

The legends.

The fear.

He did not believe them.

He could not believe them.

No one was that powerful.

No one was that evil.

No one was that alone.

He was wrong.

But he had found something.

A blessing.

An ancient blessing, bestowed upon his family by a wandering druid, a promise that his land would always be fertile, his crops would always grow, his family would always be safe.

He had believed it.

He had trusted it.

He had relied on it.

This is it, he thought.

This is the answer.

This is how I protect my family.

He did not see the shadows gathering.

He did not hear the whispers growing louder.

He did not feel the darkness closing in.

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The Northern Farm – Morning

Bren woke at dawn, as he always did.

He kissed his wife. He hugged his children. He went out to the fields.

The sun was warm. The soil was rich. The crops were growing.

Life is good, he thought.

Life is peaceful.

Life is safe.

He did not see the shadows.

He did not hear the whispers.

He did not feel the darkness watching.

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The Ruins – Morning

Liora sat on the throne, listening to the whispers.

Three million and eleven souls now served her. They flitted through the shadows, invisible to all but her, reporting on everything they saw and heard.

They told her about the farmer.

He is happy, they said. He is peaceful. He is safe.

He has a blessing. An ancient blessing. Bestowed upon his family by a wandering druid.

He believes it will protect his family.

He believes it will keep them safe.

Liora's smile widened.

A blessing, she thought.

Bestowed upon his family by a wandering druid.

He believes it will protect them.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

But blessings can be broken.

Promises can be shattered.

She stood up.

She walked down the steps.

The shadows followed.

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The Northern Farm – Night

Liora traveled north, invisible as always.

The whispers guided her. Three million and eleven souls, bound to her, serving her, hungry for more.

He is close, they said. His farm is ahead. He is inside. He is sleeping.

He is perfect.

She found the farm.

It was small, made of wood and stone, surrounded by fields of wheat and corn.

She walked through the fields.

The crops swayed in the breeze.

The shadows followed.

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The Farmhouse

She entered the farmhouse.

The family was sleeping. The farmer. His wife. His two children.

They looked peaceful.

They looked happy.

They looked safe.

Liora stood over them, watching.

He does not believe in me, she thought.

He does not fear me.

He does not respect me.

I will teach him.

She reached out.

She touched the farmer's face.

"Wake up," she whispered.

His eyes opened.

"Who—"

"Shh."

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The Feeding – The Farmer

Liora reached into the farmer's mind.

He tried to resist.

He was strong. Hardworking. Determined.

But she was stronger.

She pushed past his defenses.

She found his memories.

...the farm...

...the family...

...the peace ...

...that he could live forever...

...that he could be happy...

...that he could be safe ...

She pulled.

The memories flowed into her.

The peace.

The joy.

The soul.

Delicious, she thought.

More.

She pulled again.

He gasped.

His body convulsed.

His eyes rolled back.

She pulled again.

He went limp.

She withdrew from his mind.

She looked down at him.

Still breathing. Still alive. But empty.

The farmer was no more.

Just a shell.

Another victim.

Another name for the list.

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The Family

The wife woke up.

"Bren?"

No answer.

"Bren!"

She saw Liora.

"Who are you?"

"I am the queen."

"The queen?"

"Yes."

"Please—"

"Shh."

Liora reached out.

She touched the wife's face.

"Close your eyes."

"No—"

"Close your eyes."

The wife closed her eyes.

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The Feeding – The Wife

Liora reached into the wife's mind.

She found her memories.

...the love...

...the children...

...the hope ...

...that they could grow old together...

...that they could be happy...

...that they could be safe ...

She pulled.

The memories flowed into her.

The love.

The hope.

The soul.

Delicious, she thought.

More.

She pulled again.

The wife gasped.

Her body convulsed.

Her eyes rolled back.

She pulled again.

The wife went limp.

Another shell.

Another victim.

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The Children

The children woke up.

"Mommy?"

"Daddy?"

Liora turned to them.

They were young. Innocent. Pure.

Their souls were worth ten.

Ten, she thought.

Each.

Twenty in total.

The hunger will be quiet for a long time.

She reached out.

She touched the first child's face.

"Close your eyes."

"Why?"

"Because I want you to."

The child closed its eyes.

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The Feeding – The Children

Liora reached into the children's minds.

They did not resist.

They did not know how.

They were too young.

Too innocent.

Too pure.

She pulled.

The memories flowed into her.

The laughter.

The joy.

The souls.

Delicious, she thought.

More.

She pulled again.

They gasped.

Their bodies convulsed.

Their eyes rolled back.

She pulled again.

They went limp.

Empty shells.

The final victims.

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The Blessing

Liora found the blessing.

It hung in the air above the farmhouse, a shimmering light that pulsed with protective energy.

Interesting, she thought.

Very interesting.

She reached up.

She touched the blessing.

It burned her fingers.

She smiled.

This blessing could protect them, she thought.

It could keep them safe.

It could shield them.

But I am not a farmer.

I am not a druid.

I am not mortal.

I am the queen.

I am the darkness.

I am the eternity.

She tore the blessing apart.

The light shattered.

The hum stopped.

The warmth died.

The protection ended.

No one will ever use it now, she thought.

No one will ever try again.

I am safe.

I am eternal.

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The Three Million Fifteenth Sacrifice

She performed the rituals in the farmhouse, surrounded by the bodies of the family.

The whispers watched.

She spoke the words.

She made the cuts.

She collected the blood.

And when it was over—

The darkness screamed.

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The Power – Three Million Fifteen

The fire in her veins burned brighter than ever before.

Three million and fifteen sacrifices. Three million and fifteen souls. Three million and fifteen streams of darkness flowing into her, merging with her blood, becoming her.

Three million fifteen, she thought.

The hunger is quieter now.

But it will return.

It always returns.

She released the spell.

The shadows retreated.

She looked at the bodies.

A farmer. A wife. Two children.

Dead.

No one is safe from me, she thought.

No one.

Not even the peaceful.

She smiled in the darkness.

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The Disposal

She burned the bodies in the farmhouse's fireplace.

The fire was hot. The smoke was thick. She worked quickly, efficiently, scattering the ashes before dawn.

No one saw her.

No one ever saw her.

She walked back to the ruins as the sun rose, smelling of smoke and blood and darkness.

She washed her face in a broken fountain.

She braided her hair with her fingers.

She wore a white dress she had found in a forgotten wardrobe.

She practiced her smile.

Eyes wide. Innocence.

Mouth soft. Gentleness.

Head tilted. Curiosity.

Perfect, she thought.

She sat on the throne.

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The Empty Throne

The throne room was open to the sky.

No walls. No roof. No protection.

Just Liora.

And the whispers.

You are alone, they said.

Yes, she thought.

But I am not lonely.

I have you.

I have all of you.

Forever.

She closed her eyes.

She listened to the whispers.

They told her about the world.

The new kings. The new heroes. The new legends.

They told her about a young woman in the east. A hunter. Patient. She had been tracking the queen for years, learning her patterns, her habits, her weaknesses.

She believed she could find the queen's lair.

She believed she could strike when she was vulnerable.

She believed she could kill her.

Liora smiled.

Let her hunt, she thought.

Let her track.

Let her believe.

I have time.

I have forever.

And when she comes—

I will feed.

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End of Chapter Two Hundred Forty-Nine

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