Chapter 1

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The eviction notice looked like a death sentence, wedged in the crack of my apartment door. The bright red "FINAL WARNING" text carried a cheap yet crushing sense of doom. I held it in my hand, the flimsy paper somehow weighing a thousand pounds. My living room was a disaster zone—takeout containers piled in the corner, failed drafts and abandoned story ideas scattered across the floor like debris from a creative hurricane that had produced nothing but exhaustion.

I collapsed into my creaking chair and opened my laptop. The glaring red negative number in my bank account burned worse than the eviction notice. The publisher's advance had dried up three months ago, while my novel "The Ghost Typewriter" remained stuck at chapter three—my protagonist's motivation as empty as my damn wallet. I was the real ghost here, trapped in my own half-written story, unable to type a single word worth money.


Just as I was seriously considering applying for the night shift at the convenience store downstairs, my laptop chimed with an email. I nearly ignored it—probably just another spam article on "10 Secrets to Becoming a Bestselling Author." But the sender's name stopped me cold: "Blackwood Law Firm."

I opened the email with a knot in my stomach. The letter was formatted with old-school precision, the language straight out of the last century. The message was simple: a great-uncle I'd never met, Mr. Auston Vince, had died last month. According to his will, I, Eleanor Vince, was now the sole heir to all his property. And at the top of that property list sat something called "Thornhill Manor."

Thornhill Manor.


The name hit like a stone thrown into still water, sending ripples through my mind. I didn't need to Google it—the place was already etched into my professional DNA. In paranormal circles, it was practically sacred—the "ultimate haunted house" that dominated every ghost story forum online. Legend had it that an ancient family had once lived there before mysteriously vanishing overnight. Since then, anyone attempting to stay had either gone mad or been driven out by unseen forces. Its notorious reputation was exactly the kind of gold mine writers like me dream about.

I read the email three times, my heart racing. I glanced from the eviction notice to my bank statement, then back to those four words: "Thornhill Manor." Desperation and ecstasy collided inside me, creating a wild chemical reaction that crystallized into pure determination. To hell with my landlord! To hell with my publisher! To hell with writer's block! Fate had thrown me a lifeline—a path paved with thorns and legends.


I grabbed my phone and called my best friend, one of the few people I hadn't alienated yet—Lily.

"Nora? Holy shit, you're still alive? I thought you'd fossilized next to your manuscript by now." Lily's voice buzzed with its usual energy.

"Not only am I alive, I'm planning to move." I tried to sound casual, but couldn't keep the excitement from my voice.

"Moving? Where'd you get the money? What, did you sell a kidney to finance your dark medical thriller?" she asked with theatrical suspicion.

"Even better," I took a deep breath and announced in my best lottery-winner voice, "I inherited an estate."

Five full seconds of silence followed, then an incredulous shriek: "What? An estate? Which long-lost oil baron relative suddenly remembered their broke-ass niece?"

"Something like that," I leaned back in my chair, savoring her shock. "It's called Thornhill Manor."

Lily's voice cut off abruptly. "Wait... are you talking about THAT Thornhill Manor? The one with like a dozen different ghost stories all over Reddit? That one?"

"That's the one." I could picture her face—that worried frown mixed with her classic "of course you'd do something this stupid" expression.

"Nora, are you insane? That's a haunted house! It's an urban legend! You're not actually planning to live there, right? They say even desperate squatters won't go near that place!"

"Haunted house?" I laughed—my first genuine laugh in months. "Lily, it's not a haunted house. It's a temple of inspiration! A treasure trove of material! The promised land delivered to this nearly bankrupt writer! Don't you get it? I'm about to move into a real-life story!"

"All I understand is you're about to be evicted, so you're desperate enough to take anything," Lily said bluntly, though her voice softened. "Seriously, Nora, is it safe? You all alone out there..."

"What's more dangerous—not paying rent and dodging calls from my publisher, or a few bumps in the night?" I cut her off. "Relax. I've researched so many paranormal events I could handle a furniture-tossing poltergeist in my sleep. Hell, maybe I'll hire it as my writing assistant."

My joke didn't ease Lily's concern, but we both knew she couldn't stop me. This wasn't a choice—it was destiny. Thornhill Manor was my only escape route, and deep down, it called to the part of me that craved something real.

After hanging up, I stood and surveyed the tiny apartment that had imprisoned me for two years, witnessing all my struggles and failures. Everything looked so gray and lifeless. I walked to the window and watched the bustling street below—all those blank-faced people rushing through their daily grind. I used to be one of them. Not anymore.

It took just one afternoon to pack. Besides some books and my laptop, I had almost nothing worth keeping. I tossed the rent notices and bank letters into the trash together, then drove away in my ancient Ford—affectionately named "Betsy"—leaving behind a city I never wanted to see again.

Betsy rumbled down the highway as the city shrank in my rearview mirror. With each mile, my spirits lifted. I rolled down the window, letting the wind whip through my hair. The sensation of freedom—one I hadn't felt in years—washed over me like I'd broken invisible chains.

Following the lawyer's directions, I exited the highway onto a country road that grew increasingly isolated. The trees on either side grew taller and thicker until they formed a green tunnel overhead, sunlight breaking through only in scattered patches. The air filled with the scent of damp earth and wild vegetation, cleansing my lungs of the city's exhaust.

When the estate finally appeared at the end of the road, my breath caught. I pulled over, killed the engine, and just stared.

It was more magnificent than any photo or legend could capture, and somehow more... alive. Not a lifeless structure, but a sleeping beast. Gothic spires stabbed the brooding sky, dark stone walls draped with ivy, stained-glass windows glinting with mysterious light. A massive iron fence encircled the property, its railings—like every corner of the building itself—adorned with intricate carvings of thorny vines, both beautiful and grotesque. They seemed to both guard the estate and imprison it.

I felt no fear—only the wild exhilaration of an artist discovering her perfect subject. Every cell in my body hummed with recognition. This is it. This is where I belong.

I stepped out of the car and approached the massive wrought-iron gate. The key felt cold and heavy in my hand. When I slid it into the lock, the metal-on-metal scrape sounded like an ancient contract being renewed. I pushed with all my strength against the towering oak door, easily twice my height.

*Creeeaak—*

The hinges released a long, pained groan, like someone whose centuries-old sleep had been disturbed. A shaft of light cut diagonally through the opening, illuminating golden dust motes that swirled like startled fairies dancing in the beam.

That legendary smell—a blend of dust, dried roses, and ancient paper—enveloped me. Not musty as I'd expected, but strangely comforting.

I stood frozen in the doorway, taking in the grand hall that time had forgotten—its soaring dome, sheet-covered furniture, and sweeping staircase that curved upward into shadow. Everything here whispered stories.

I drew a deep breath, a genuine smile spreading across my face, and whispered to the silence:

"Hello, new home. I hope you have many stories to tell."
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