Chapter 1121: Story 1121: Black Hymns at Dawn
The bells of Dunswich rang at dawn—though they hadn't rung in decades.
No one lived in Dunswich anymore. Not truly.
The town had rotted from the inside, hollowed by something older than stone and hungrier than time. The windows of the chapel, once vibrant with saints and salvation, now bore only soot-stained panes. And beneath the chapel's floorboards, the cult gathered—those who sang the black hymns.
They didn't need instruments. They didn't need light.
Only breath, and blood.
Only dawn.
Madame Grin arrived before sunrise. She wore black, but not for mourning. She came for answers—and a reckoning.
The tavern keeper had always known things she shouldn't. She remembered faces from lifetimes past, heard whispers through her walls, and poured drinks for ghosts. But Dunswich? Dunswich had taken her sister.
At the chapel steps, she paused. The stone wept dew that tasted like iron.
She descended.
The pews were overturned, moss growing through the floor. Candles burned with blue flames. In the altar's place, a pit yawned wide—carved into a spiral, descending endlessly into the earth.
They stood around it, hooded and still.
The Ash Prophet stood at the center. His robes were dust and ember. His eyes? Hollow sockets, scorched from ritual fire, yet he saw more clearly than any man alive.
"You have come," he said.
His voice sounded like flint against bone.
"I've come for my sister," Madame Grin replied, "and to burn this place behind me."
A soft chuckle rippled through the congregation.
The Prophet raised a hand.
"The hymn has already begun."
At once, they sang.
No melody. No harmony. Just notes that crawled under the skin—dissonant, writhing, old. Each voice layered into the next like rotting pages pressed together.
The pit responded.
It breathed.
And from the spiral void, a shape began to rise.
Not her sister. Not anymore.
The thing wore her face like a cracked porcelain mask, but its limbs were stretched, fingers too long, mouth sewn closed with strands of hair.
Madame Grin did not flinch.
She uncorked the flask at her belt.
From it rose a scream—one she'd bottled years ago from a dying banshee. A single, perfect scream.
She released it.
The sound split the hymn in half.
The cult recoiled. The Prophet fell to one knee, hands to his ears.
The creature in the pit convulsed—then shrieked, mouth tearing open as hair-stitches snapped. Its voice joined the banshee's, a chorus of pure agony that shattered the candle flames and collapsed the pit inward.
Stone caved. Screams faded. The dawn broke.
When the dust cleared, only Madame Grin remained—alone in the ruin, surrounded by ash and silence.
But as she turned to leave, she felt a hand slip into hers.
Small. Familiar.
She didn't look back. She didn't need to.
Her sister walked beside her, barefoot and quiet, as the sun rose behind them, burning away the last of the black hymn.
But deep beneath the chapel, something still listened.
And it was still humming.