Victoria’s POV
Dr. Whitmore arrived that afternoon. I watched from the upstairs window as his car pulled up the long driveway. He was old now, his back bent with age and maybe guilt. He'd been our family physician for forty years. He'd signed Elias's death certificate without an autopsy. He'd helped bury our secret. Now he was here to face it. Mother had called him in a panic after breakfast. She needed someone who knew. Someone who understood what we'd done. I wondered if she realized she was just making everything worse. I found them in Father's study. Whitmore sat in a chair by the fire, his hands gripping a glass of whiskey. He drained it in one swallow. "Where is he?" Whitmore asked. "Walking the grounds," Thomas said. He stood by the window, watching the gardens. "He does that. Just walks around like he owns the place." "Because he does," I said from the doorway. Everyone turned to look at me. "This was his home. Before we took it from him." Father's face darkened. "Victoria, not now." "When, then? When should we talk about the fact that we murdered Elias? Next week? Next year? Maybe at your seventieth birthday party?" "Enough!" Father slammed his hand on the desk. "We did what we had to do. I won't apologize for saving this family." "You saved your bank account," I shot back. "Not the family. We died that night too. We just kept walking around pretending we were alive." Whitmore cleared his throat. "The question is what do we do now? If this truly is something supernatural, something connected to the ritual, then traditional methods won't work." "Can you reverse it?" Mother asked. Her face was desperate. "Can you send it back?" "I'm a doctor, Margaret, not a priest. You're the one who read those damned books." Mother twisted her hands. "I burned them. After. I couldn't stand having them in the house." "Then we're blind," Whitmore said. "We don't know what we're dealing with or how to stop it." The door opened. The stranger walked in, still wearing his coat. Snow dusted his shoulders. "Don't stop talking on my account," he said. "I'm enjoying learning about my death. It's not every day you get to hear how your family murdered you." Whitmore stood up so fast his chair fell over. His face went white as paper. "Dear God." "Not quite." The stranger moved closer. "Do you recognize me, Doctor? You signed my death certificate. You told the police the fire destroyed most of my body. You helped them cover it up." "I had no choice," Whitmore stammered. "Your father, he threatened my career, my family. I did what I had to survive." "Everyone did what they had to do." The stranger's voice was hard. "Except me. I didn't get a choice. I just burned." He turned to Mother. "Tell me about the ritual. What exactly did you summon?" Mother shook her head. "I don't remember. The words were in Latin, or something older. The book said it would grant prosperity in exchange for an innocent soul." "A demon, then. Or something close enough." The stranger walked to the fireplace. He held his hand over the flames. They bent away from his skin like they were afraid. "And when you killed me, I became the payment. My soul bound to whatever entity you called." "But you're here," I said. "How did you get free?" He pulled his hand back. "I don't know. I remember darkness. Centuries of darkness, even though only twenty years passed out here. I remember hunger and cold and endless screaming. Then something changed. A crack appeared. A way back. And here I am." Father stood up. "What do you want from us?" "Justice." "We'll pay you anything. Name your price." The stranger laughed. It was a terrible sound, empty and cold. "You already paid your price, Father. Twenty years of wealth and success. The entity kept its end of the bargain. But now the balance has shifted." "What does that mean?" Thomas asked. "It means the debt is coming due." The stranger looked at each of us. "The ritual required an innocent sacrifice. But my death was wrong. Unjust. That injustice created a crack in the contract. Every year you prospered, the crack grew wider. Your guilt fed it. Your secrets strengthened it. Until finally, it was big enough for something to slip through." Whitmore sank back into his chair. "You're not Elias at all." "I have his memories. His face. His voice. His love for his sister and his hate for his killers. Am I not Elias? Or am I something that ate Elias and wears him like a suit?" No one answered. He smiled. "The truth is, I don't know either. But I know what I want. I want to feel them suffer the way Elias suffered. I want them to burn the way he burned. I want payment for the twenty years he lost." "You want revenge," I said quietly. He looked at me. For just a moment, something human flickered in his eyes. "Wouldn't you?" Before I could answer, Whitmore made a gurgling sound. He clutched his chest, his face turning purple. He fell forward onto the carpet, convulsing. Mother screamed. Thomas ran to him, loosening his collar. But I saw the frost spreading from where the stranger stood. Saw the darkness gathering in the corners of the room. Whitmore's eyes rolled back. His last breath rattled out of him like chains dragging across stone. Then he was gone. The stranger looked down at the body without emotion. "One down. The entity is pleased. It got its appetizer." Father stepped back, his hand reaching for the letter opener on his desk. A useless weapon against whatever this thing was. "Don't worry," the stranger said. "You three are the main course. But first, we're going to play a game. We're going to uncover every secret. Every lie. Every sin. And when I'm done, when the truth is laid bare, then you'll pay. Then you'll understand what it feels like to be betrayed by the people who were supposed to love you." He walked to the door. "Oh, and Father? Happy birthday. I got you exactly what you deserve." He left us there with Whitmore's corpse and the cold certainty that this was only the beginning.Latest Chapter
The International Incident
Twenty years after Victoria's death, the network faced its first major diplomatic crisis.It started in Kazakhstan. A practitioner named Elena Volkov had intervened in a case involving the family of a high-ranking government official. The official's wife had been planning to sacrifice their daughter. Elena stopped the ritual, saved the girl, reported the incident through proper channels.But the government official was powerful. Connected to Kazakhstan's security apparatus. He claimed Elena had kidnapped his daughter, violated their family's religious freedom, interfered with sovereign domestic matters. He demanded Elena's arrest and extradition to face criminal charges."This is political retaliation," Elena insisted during emergency video call with network leadership. "I followed all protocols. Saved a child's life. Now they're criminalizing crisis intervention to protect corrupt official."The Kazakhstan government issued international warrant for Elena's arrest. Threatened to expe
The Next Frontier
Fifteen years after Victoria's death, the field faced a new question: what came after crisis intervention?The discussion started at an academic conference. A graduate student presenting research on long-term outcomes for ritual attempt survivors asked an uncomfortable question: "We've gotten very good at preventing immediate death. But what happens to these people afterward? Are we just saving them from supernatural harm only to abandon them to ordinary suffering?"The question hit Lily hard. The network had always focused on acute crises, stopping ritual attempts, banishing entities, resolving immediate supernatural emergencies. But follow-up care was minimal. Once immediate danger passed, clients were referred to conventional mental health services. The network moved on to the next crisis."We're emergency medicine, not primary care," Marcus had always argued when this came up. "We stop the bleeding. Other professionals handle rehabilitation."But the graduate student's research su
The Crisis Point
Ten years after Victoria's death, the network faced its greatest challenge.It started with scattered reports. Practitioners in different regions are noticing unusual patterns. Increased ritual attempts. More desperate people researching dangerous practices. Numbers that had been declining steadily for years suddenly spiking upward."This isn't random fluctuation," Daniel said during an emergency leadership meeting. "My precognitive sense has been screaming for weeks. Something systematic is happening. Someone is deliberately creating conditions that drive people toward supernatural solutions."Lily reviewed the data. Forty-seven percent increase in identified ritual attempts over six months. Concentrated in specific regions, Eastern Europe, Southeast Asia, parts of South America. Areas where the economic crisis had created widespread desperation."Economic factors explain some of this," Marcus noted. "Global recession creates desperation. Desperate people seek extreme solutions. But
The Documentary Revisited
Three years after Victoria's death, the documentary makers returned.Rebecca Chen contacted Lily with a proposal. "The original documentary captured the network's founding and early growth. I want to make a sequel. Show what happened after Victoria died. How the organization evolved beyond its founder."Lily was hesitant. "Victoria hated being the center of attention. A sequel focusing on her death feels exploitative.""I'm not proposing hagiography," Rebecca clarified. "I want to examine organizational succession. How movements survive founder death. What happens when charismatic leader is replaced by institutional leadership. Your network is rare success story. Most organizations don't survive founder transitions this well."The pitch intrigued Lily. Not as memorial to Victoria, but as case study in organizational sustainability. That felt worthwhile."What kind of access would you need?""Same as before. Embedded observation. Interviews. Documentation of actual work. But focusing o
The First Year After
The network's annual report, one year after Victoria's death, showed remarkable continuity.Lily sat in what had been Victoria's office, now hers and Daniel's shared space, reviewing the statistics. Two thousand three hundred practitioners worldwide. Sixty-seven thousand active volunteers. An estimated four hundred and twenty thousand people helped directly in the past year. Ninety-three percent success rate on crisis interventions.The numbers were better than when Victoria was alive. Not because she'd been holding the network back, but because the systems she'd built had matured. The infrastructure she'd established operated efficiently. The culture she'd instilled sustained itself."We're growing," Daniel observed, looking over Lily's shoulder. "Fifteen percent increase in practitioners. Twenty percent increase in volunteers. The field is expanding faster than before.""Victoria's death created what Dr. Santos calls 'martyrdom effect,'" Lily said. "People inspired by her story. Wan
The Aftermath
The funeral was held on a grey October morning at Cambridge.Lily and Daniel had organized everything according to my written instructions. No religious service, my relationship with religion had been complicated at best. Instead, a celebration of life focusing on the work rather than mourning.Over two thousand people attended. The chapel was packed. Overflow crowds filled adjacent halls watching via video feed. Practitioners from forty countries. Volunteers who'd never met me but felt connected through the mission. Clients whose lives had been saved. Academics who studied the field. Government officials. Media.The diversity was staggering. Young and old. Every ethnicity. Multiple languages. Rich and poor. All united by connection to the work I'd started fifteen years ago.Sarah gave the first eulogy. Her voice was steady despite tears streaming down her face."Victoria Ashbourne was my friend for fifteen years. We met when she was a desperate woman trying to stop one copycat ritual
