Note: This story contains elements of non-con/dub-con, some mind control, and sex with a non-human (tentacles). Extraordinary thanks to kenjisato for his excellent editing—any remaining errors are my own.
Enjoy!
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The Margot Estate stood like the oppressive maw of a monster which, each night, descended from its perch in the black sky to devour the city of Richmond. Even on starless nights, the hunkered house hung blacker than black between the paper-lantern-blue moon above and the crackling, candescent city below. Somehow, the mansion had long ago shouldered its ogreish bulk onto the city's limits and no one had ever been brave enough to slay it. Each night, its windows winked and fluttered as they caught streetlight and moonlight, and the whole of it lingered there like a hulking spider with a thousand black and glittering eyes.
And always, the house was waiting. Always, it was watching.
And Abbie had always hated it. It assaulted a sensibility of taste and style that, even as a little girl, she couldn't ignore. It was opulent and gaudy and so rich with its pomposity that it made her ill. At a party in her final year of high school, her friend, Desmond, had told her that he had planned to burn it down, and all summer she had looked up to it in the long evening hours, expecting to see it alight.
When it still was standing in August, she assumed it had all just been bravado, something spoken to impress a girl at a party. She was disappointed, but she couldn't help but wonder what such arson would have meant to the community. It was assured by the Richmond Historical Society that the estate's history made it, indeed, a very important place and one worth protecting. What that history actually was, though, was always dismissed and talked around by everyone in Richmond, and if questioned, no one in the city seemed to actually know what that history was, but always, people were steadfast in insisting that it was significant and necessary.
There had been no shortage of outsiders, though—people who, like her, had looked at the imperious manor and thought it a monstrosity. Architects and building moguls had come to the city, each offering plans and projects and estimates to renovate its sprawling acreage into something useful—apartments or houses or parks or shopping centres—but they had all been flatly refused. In fact, there had been a scandal not long after she had graduated from high school about a real estate tycoon who had tried to pay an immense bribe to push his proposal through the city council, and, in a rare act of unity, the tycoon had ended up as the target of a sting that would imprison him for twenty years.
Her father—a beat reporter for one of the local newspapers—had talked her whole life about how the minuscule scale of municipal politics made it impossible to ever experience genuine, grassroots change. No one cared as ardently about
not
changing their city as an ombudsman or a ward representative who was most invested in maintaining their own fractional power. It had always struck her as funny, then, that a group of such self-interested locals had come together in such an act of moral pettiness—and all to punish a man who had, no doubt, offered successful bribes to people at much higher levels of government.
That was something she never could understand. What was it about that house that made people defend it so? There must have been
something
special about it to draw such a strong reaction from the community. Everything she knew about it, though, told her that it existed only as a bulwark to progress.
Late that same summer, Desmond called and told her that he was finally ready. He was going to burn it down. She was compelled by the idea, and asked all manner of penetrating questions, which revealed to both of them that he didn't have any idea how to get away with his crime.
So she did what any normal friend would do—she promised to go onto the grounds with him and find the best way in and out. Part of it was a genuine attempt to help, but mostly she just wanted to see the place up close, to understand what made it so special.
She spent the week beforehand at the library, researching the house's history through local papers and books. Everything she found, though, remained as vague about the Margot family as anyone she'd ever spoken to. People were glad the house existed. It was good for the town, they said. It shouldn't be destroyed. On and on the articles went, praising it, but no one ever explained why.
All she learned was that the place hadn't been lived in for years. After the last of the Margot family had died without an heir, the place had been shuttered, and there was now only one groundskeeper who cared for it.
And it was well cared for. Its major reclamations, renovations and repairs were funded by the city, and they kept it in excellent shape. Features were repaired if they broke, or were replaced if they were worn, and every year some maintenance was done to rebuild outbuildings or renovate parts of the house. One year, its entire driveway was redone in fresh black asphalt; another year, its old gazebo on the grounds had its rotting wood torn down and the whole thing rebuilt. In the summer, the expansive lawn was voraciously watered and cut; in the autumn, the vast sweeping waves of leaves were raked; and in the winter, the long road that wound up like an eyelash off the side of a giant's face was always plowed and salted. It was, in many ways, the best looking part of the city, even though people were hardly ever permitted there.
At a dead end in her research, she decided to go ahead with her plan to survey the place with Desmond.
Early one afternoon, they crept onto the property, not with gasoline or matches, but just themselves, eager to get a sense of the place.
They were careful to avoid detection by the ancient groundskeeper, wandering in a lazy arc through the gardens at the back of the house. Quietly, they explored green fields and fertile black plant beds, and they traipsed across the manicured grass and gawked among the shaved topiaries. In all her research, she had learned so little about it that it seemed then like a fairytale castle—as if it were some magical place beyond reach or understanding.
At the back of the house, near the glass sunroom, they found a garden. A long line of strawberries grew there, their fruit so thick and ripe that they made a crunching sound as she bit into one, and the taste and sound made her shoulders shake. When she looked down at the berry, though, she realized that the black seeds were actually pink and blue like a sugary cereal. Desmond took a bite, but spat it out.
She ate one, then another, finding them deliciously rich and creamy.
Then they snuck around the house proper, but there was no obvious way in. They pulled on some doors and wiggled some windows, but each was locked tightly.
Peering into one window, Abbie saw canvas-covered furniture and decadent oil paintings hanging in marvellous golden frames. The carpet was a maroon colour with an indistinct black pattern, the walls and floorboards a dark, rich wood. Despite its luxury, though, the house looked not at all like the enchanted fairytale castle she had built it to be in her mind. Instead, it just looked old and stuffy.
She had sealed her face with her hands to another window, blocking out the sunlight with a grimace, hoping to find something special about this haunted place—and that was when it caught her eye. In a study, beneath tall skylights, there stood an ivory lectern, and on its sloping surface was a perfectly black book—a book so black that it repelled the afternoon light.
She traced her finger along the glass, studying the room with her dawning mouth. There was a chandelier on a long chain hanging from a hook between the skylights, all its lights snuffed out. Beneath that there was a wide round table, but the table was more of a donut than a solid surface. It was a wide ring of wood, like a tight-throated horseshoe, with a space in the middle where several people could easily stand; and on the side of the table facing the lectern, there was a channel that allowed one to walk from outside the table into its inner circle.
Abbie stared at the room, head tilting askew. Unlike the other furniture, the lectern and the table had no canvas covering, and there was no fine layer of dust caked on either. On the floor, she noticed too that, in the space at the middle of the table, there was a hint of glass laid into the floor.
She pressed tighter against the window, examining the book as closely as she could. She had to know more about what it was. Nothing was more important to her then. But the more she stared, hoping to espy some secret, the more a strange feeling settled over her shoulders like a confident hug.
Without warning, Desmond pulled her from the window, urging they had to leave. Even as they walked away, though, she couldn't help but feel as if she were still standing there—as if part of her was before the window, a fine layer of dust on her arms and her mind, as if she was nothing more than another piece of furniture in the house, forgotten and waiting to be uncovered and used.
A ringing began in her ears. Something awakened within her body—within her mind. Something she did not recognize. It was dark and heavy, and she could swear there was the distant groaning of a faraway voice that was as much an intruder in her own mind as she was to the house.
Desmond dragged her by the hand, but the dazed feeling loomed over her, becoming stronger with every step. She was the innocent city beneath this blackhole, its yawning mouth straining to swallow her, and she felt herself opening to it, yielding to it, eager to be swallowed.
Her brain turned fuzzier and fuzzier like a compressed video. She could feel the hold on her own mind slipping away, as if the more she wandered, the more pixelated her brain became. There were flashes of pink and blue in her mind that drowned out all thoughts, and still there was this smiling, bold voice that was speaking just beyond the limit of her understanding. Its words were alien and raw, but no amount of straining made them intelligible.
A voice yelled—a real voice. It was Desmond. Her mind snapped back into focus, and she saw him on his back, the groundskeeper standing over him with a pitchfork at Desmond's throat. The groundskeeper had a rough face with saggy folds of leathery skin, and he growled, thrusting the pitchfork threateningly towards her whimpering friend.
The groundskeeper turned to her then, his mouth opened, but it was not the wide square mouth of an angry man, but like a round sphincter, puckering and sucking as a long, slobbering tongue peeked and whipped from its cavity.
"Don't move. Neither of you," the groundskeeper said. There was a strange pattern to his speech, stilted and inhuman—then his face was normal again. "The police are on their way."
Desmond looked at her with big, fearful eyes, then without warning he kicked out his foot and knocked the groundskeeper off balance. "Run, Abbie. Run!"