Cherreads

Curator of Cursed Objects

Mystery4OL
49
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 49 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Elias Thorne is a Curator, one of the hidden guardians who keep a modern city safe from the magic bubbling beneath its surface. His quiet life of containing cursed objects is shattered when the mysterious Anya unleashes a city-wide magical plague of apathy, the Oblivion Crisis. Elias fights alone, restoring the city's soul, but in the climactic confrontation, Anya vanishes into a tear in reality—The Void—taking with her a piece of Elias's own essence. Now, subtle anomalies linked to the Void are appearing, hinting at deeper magical principles and the presence of an enigmatic entity, the Inversionist. Driven by the unresolved mystery of Anya's fate and his lost artifact, Elias must use his unique blend of magical science and investigation to decipher the secrets of inversion, convergence, and displacement, delving into the very fabric of reality to understand the true nature of the Void, the Inversionist's purpose, and the truth behind Anya's disappearance along a path that lies beyond the known.
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Chapter 1 - The Brass Music Box

The scent of aged paper and lemon polish was a familiar comfort to Elias Thorne. Sunlight, thick with dust motes, streamed through the tall front window of "Ages & Oddities," illuminating rows of forgotten trinkets and furniture that had seen better centuries. Elias, outwardly, was just another browser, hands tucked behind his back, moving with a quiet reverence past chipped porcelain and dark, heavy wood.

Inwardly, however, Elias was a sentry. His gaze didn't just see price tags and potential refinishing projects; it scanned for resonance. For the prickle under his skin, the subtle hum in the air that marked an object apart. Most days, the shop was blessingly silent to his unique senses, filled only with the mundane echoes of countless past owners. Today was not one of those days.

It started as a faint, melancholic thrumming near the back, by the display cases holding small, portable items – jewelry, old watches, decorative boxes. Elias drifted closer, affecting an interest in a collection of tarnished silver spoons. The feeling intensified, a low ache in his chest, a sudden, overwhelming urge to remember things he couldn't quite grasp – a forgotten lullaby, the scent of rain on hot pavement from a childhood summer, the specific shade of blue in a long-lost friend's eyes.

Around him, other patrons exhibited subtler symptoms. A woman Browse ceramics sighed, a wistful, faraway look on her face. An older gentleman near the bookshelf wiped a sudden tear from his eye. The feeling wasn't aggressive, not yet, but it was undeniably there. A cursed object. And one that preyed on memory and emotion. Nasty.

Elias finally located the source: a small brass music box, nestled between a ceramic cat and a stack of antique postcards. It wasn't playing, its lid firmly shut, yet the strange resonance pulsed from it like a silent heartbeat. Its surface was intricately engraved with swirling patterns that seemed to subtly shift if he looked at them too long.

Manifesting passively, Elias assessed, his mind compartmentalizing the sensory input. Emotional distortion, low-level psychic residue. Not immediately life-threatening, but widespread effect. Needs containment.

He glanced around. The shop owner was haggling with a customer near the door. The other browsers were lost in their induced reverie. Now was the time.

He casually reached out, his fingers hovering over the cool brass. Even through his thin gloves, the energy felt heavy, saturated with a sorrow and longing that wasn't his own. He needed to get it into a shielded container, fast. He carried a small, lead-lined box disguised as a camera bag specifically for this purpose.

"Excuse me," he said, his voice low and polite, addressing the air near the display case. He caught the eye of the wistful woman. "Could you perhaps tell me the time?"

She blinked, momentarily pulled from the music box's influence. "Oh. Uh, yes, just a moment." As she fumbled for her phone, Elias smoothly picked up the music box. It was heavier than it looked. He palmed it, his thumb tracing a particularly unsettling swirl on its lid, and quickly tucked it into his camera bag, zipping it shut.

The instant the music box was inside the lead-lined box, the oppressive, melancholic feeling in the air dissipated. The woman checked her phone. "Half past three," she said, her expression clearing. "Odd, I felt a bit lightheaded there for a second."

"Must be the afternoon slump," Elias offered with a small, reassuring smile. "Thank you."

He nodded and turned away, the weight in his bag a familiar burden. Another object secured. He just needed to pay for something innocuous to avoid suspicion and then transport the music box back to his shielded workshop.

He picked up the ceramic cat the music box had sat next to – ugly, with one ear chipped, but blissfully inert. As he reached for his wallet, his fingers brushed against the shelf where the music box had rested. Something felt different. Not the cursed energy, which was gone, but something else.

He looked closer. Tucked just behind where the music box had been, almost hidden in the dust and the faint ring left by the box's base, was a small, almost invisible etching on the wood of the shelf. It was a symbol – two intertwined crescents, one upright, one inverted, with a single dot between their points.

Elias felt a different kind of prickle now. Not of cursed energy, but of alarm. This wasn't part of the shop's markings. It was deliberate. A signature? Someone else had been here. Someone else knew about the music box. Someone else was marking places he visited.

His heart hammered against his ribs, a stark contrast to the melancholic thrumming of moments before. The world outside the shop window suddenly seemed less like a familiar city and more like a hunting ground.

He paid for the ceramic cat, his mind racing. Who left the symbol? What did they want? Were they following him, or just after the same objects?

Clutching the bag containing the neutralized music box and the unsettling knowledge of the symbol, Elias Thorne stepped out of the quiet antique shop and back onto the bustling, unsuspecting city street. His secret life, already a delicate balance, had just become significantly more complicated. The game, it seemed, had new players.