The House That Holds Our Hearts

The House That Holds Our Hearts

Nina Brooks

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My podcast, "Crimson Echoes," was flatlining, desperate for a jolt of something real, something raw. Then the email landed: "The Blackwood Experience" – an exclusive, five-person weekend trapped in the notoriously haunted Blackwood Manor. I signed up instantly, picturing viral content, the ultimate professional coup. But the confirmation email already hinted at the unease: "Five participants. No more, no less. The gate will open once, and close once." I arrived at dusk, only to find four others – a Goth, a Tech CEO, a Gamer, and an Influencer – already there. Then, a sixth person, a clueless student named Mark, pedaled up on a beat-up bike, clueless about the exclusive invitation. Just as the chilling realization of an extra person sank in, the massive iron gate groaned shut behind us, locking with a deafening clang. We were trapped, not five, but six, and one of us was definitely not supposed to be here. Panic set in, but then came the voice, childish and clear, echoing throughout the now-lit up manor: "Welcome, playmates... Let's play a game. A game of hide-and-seek." My fellow captives scattered, desperate to hide, but the voice promised "punishment" for those found. The terrifying truth dawned on me as one by one, they were claimed, their deaths horrifying reflections of their deepest flaws, from the Influencer literally dissolving to the paranoid Gamer twisting into an impossible shape. I survived, found but spared, only to realize the ghost, Lillian, wasn' t just in the house; she was the house, hiding in every reflective surface, watching. I found her, I "won," and the spell broke, the house reverting to a ruin as a faint whisper confirmed my chilling victory. But that whisper became a scream in my memory: "You've won before, you know. It's just your first time remembering." My entire reality fractured; I wasn't a survivor, but a ghost myself, trapped in a loop, reliving this nightmare again and again. My memory was wiped clean the moment I stepped outside, the horror dissolving like smoke. A week later, I found myself inexplicably drawn back, my duffel bag with recording equipment forgotten, a friendly smile on my face. "Hi," I said to the five strangers gathered at the gate. "My name is Sarah. I'm a podcaster. I came here for the experience." The cycle, inevitably, began anew.

Introduction

My podcast, "Crimson Echoes," was flatlining, desperate for a jolt of something real, something raw.

Then the email landed: "The Blackwood Experience" – an exclusive, five-person weekend trapped in the notoriously haunted Blackwood Manor.

I signed up instantly, picturing viral content, the ultimate professional coup.

But the confirmation email already hinted at the unease: "Five participants. No more, no less. The gate will open once, and close once."

I arrived at dusk, only to find four others – a Goth, a Tech CEO, a Gamer, and an Influencer – already there.

Then, a sixth person, a clueless student named Mark, pedaled up on a beat-up bike, clueless about the exclusive invitation.

Just as the chilling realization of an extra person sank in, the massive iron gate groaned shut behind us, locking with a deafening clang.

We were trapped, not five, but six, and one of us was definitely not supposed to be here.

Panic set in, but then came the voice, childish and clear, echoing throughout the now-lit up manor: "Welcome, playmates... Let's play a game. A game of hide-and-seek."

My fellow captives scattered, desperate to hide, but the voice promised "punishment" for those found.

The terrifying truth dawned on me as one by one, they were claimed, their deaths horrifying reflections of their deepest flaws, from the Influencer literally dissolving to the paranoid Gamer twisting into an impossible shape.

I survived, found but spared, only to realize the ghost, Lillian, wasn' t just in the house; she was the house, hiding in every reflective surface, watching.

I found her, I "won," and the spell broke, the house reverting to a ruin as a faint whisper confirmed my chilling victory.

But that whisper became a scream in my memory: "You've won before, you know. It's just your first time remembering."

My entire reality fractured; I wasn't a survivor, but a ghost myself, trapped in a loop, reliving this nightmare again and again.

My memory was wiped clean the moment I stepped outside, the horror dissolving like smoke.

A week later, I found myself inexplicably drawn back, my duffel bag with recording equipment forgotten, a friendly smile on my face.

"Hi," I said to the five strangers gathered at the gate. "My name is Sarah. I'm a podcaster. I came here for the experience."

The cycle, inevitably, began anew.

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