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Love That Refused to Die

armojay2025
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Synopsis – Love That Refused to Die Amelia Hartwell lives a life most people dream of. She owns a luxurious bungalow on the edge of the city, drives expensive cars, and moves within elite circles. Her world looks flawless—polished marble floors, glass walls, soft lights, and quiet nights that promise peace. Yet beneath the surface of wealth and elegance, Amelia carries a past she has tried desperately to bury. That past has a name: Sebastian Crowe. Sebastian was not a good man when he was alive. Charismatic, powerful, and dangerously obsessive, he loved Amelia with a passion that slowly turned into control. What began as intense romance became fear—arguments, possessiveness, and a darkness Amelia could no longer ignore. When Sebastian died in a violent incident connected to his own crimes, Amelia believed death had finally freed her. She was wrong. The story begins when Amelia starts experiencing strange disturbances inside her bungalow. Subtle at first—unexplained coldness, shadows that linger too long, whispers she cannot understand. Soon, the terror escalates. Objects move on their own. Mirrors reflect things that should not exist. Messages arrive from unknown numbers containing details only Sebastian once knew. Amelia believes she is losing her mind. Night after night, the bungalow feels less like a home and more like a living entity—watching, breathing, remembering. Fear begins to seep into Amelia’s body, draining her strength and peace. She does not yet know that fear is exactly what the presence feeding on her desires. The truth slowly reveals itself: Sebastian has returned. Not as a man, but as a spirit bound by obsession. Death did not erase his love—it twisted it. In the afterlife, Sebastian’s desire to possess Amelia has grown stronger, darker, and more violent. He cannot accept a world where she lives without him. To Sebastian, love means ownership, and ownership must be eternal. As Sebastian’s spirit grows stronger, Amelia’s life begins to collapse. She loses sleep, her health deteriorates, and the line between reality and nightmare blurs. The bungalow itself becomes his ally, responding to his presence, locking doors, trapping Amelia inside, amplifying her fear. The house remembers Sebastian—and welcomes him back. Into this nightmare steps Oliver Kingsley, a man entirely different from Sebastian. Calm, honest, and genuinely loving, Oliver represents everything Sebastian was not. He cares for Amelia without control, listens without manipulation, and offers protection without demanding ownership. As Amelia grows closer to Oliver, Sebastian’s jealousy turns monstrous. Sebastian begins attacking indirectly—causing accidents, manipulating shadows, whispering lies, and using Amelia’s memories against her. He cannot touch Oliver at first, but he makes it clear that Oliver’s presence is an unforgivable threat. To Sebastian, Oliver is stealing what belongs to him. The story evolves into a terrifying supernatural love triangle. Amelia is torn between the ghost of a love that once felt intoxicating and the living man who offers safety and hope. Sebastian reveals pieces of his past—how he died, how he refused judgment in death, how his soul anchored itself to Amelia through obsession and regret. As the chapters progress, Sebastian becomes more powerful. He can now physically harm, manipulate the environment, and even possess others temporarily. The bungalow becomes a battlefield between the living and the dead. Amelia learns that Sebastian’s ultimate goal is not just to haunt her—but to kill her, so her soul can belong to him forever. Oliver refuses to give up. Despite fear and pain, he searches for ways to fight a force that should not exist. With the help of hidden records, spiritual knowledge, and those who understand the supernatural, Oliver discovers the horrifying
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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER ONE: THE BUNGALOW THAT BREATHED

The Hartwell bungalow never slept.

Even at midnight, it shimmered—marble floors catching moonlight, chandeliers breathing gold into silence, glass walls reflecting the manicured gardens like mirrors polished by money. The driveway curved in a perfect arc, where Amelia Hartwell's black luxury sedan rested beneath a canopy of rain. The car ticked softly as its engine cooled, a gentle sound swallowed by the estate's vastness.

Amelia stepped inside and locked the door.

The lock clicked twice.

She paused.

It always clicked once.

She shook the thought away and walked deeper into the bungalow, heels echoing across stone that had been imported from Italy, the kind that promised permanence. Wealth had a smell—clean, floral, expensive. Tonight, something else threaded through it. Something old. Something damp.

She shrugged off her coat and glanced at the wall of framed photographs—gala nights, champagne smiles, a life that looked complete. One frame caught her eye. A reflection, perhaps. A blur where her face should have been.

The lights flickered.

"Power's stable," she muttered, reaching for her phone. No alerts. No storms scheduled. Still, the chandelier above the living room dimmed, brightened, dimmed again—like a slow blink.

The house exhaled.

Amelia felt it then: a pressure against her ears, the sensation of being observed without a direction to point at. She crossed the living room and climbed the staircase, fingers trailing the banister. Halfway up, the pressure sharpened into cold.

A whisper slid along the corridor.

Not words. Breath.

She froze.

The corridor stretched long and polished, doors closed in their perfect symmetry. The guest room. The study. The master suite at the end, its door ajar like a mouth that hadn't finished speaking.

"Hello?" Her voice sounded too loud, too alive.

No answer.

She moved again, faster now, heart tapping against her ribs. The master suite welcomed her with soft lamplight and silk curtains swaying—though the windows were sealed. The air smelled faintly of rain and iron.

Her mirror caught her reflection—Amelia Hartwell, composed, immaculate. Then the reflection lagged. A fraction of a second. Long enough to feel wrong.

She turned.

Nothing.

A thud sounded from the walk-in closet.

Amelia's hand tightened around her phone. "This isn't funny," she said, though there was no one to laugh. She crossed the room and pulled the closet door open.

Her dresses hung in perfect rows.

At the back, a footprint bloomed on the carpet.

Wet.

It faced outward.

Another appeared beside it.

Then another.

Amelia stumbled back, breath tearing free as the closet lights snapped off. Darkness rushed in, thick as velvet. Her phone vibrated in her palm.

Unknown: You still keep the red dress in front.

Her throat closed.

No one knew that. No one had been here since—

She slammed the closet door and backed away, nearly tripping over the bed. The lamp flickered, died. The room dimmed to moonlight and shadows.

A presence gathered behind her.

She felt it without touch: heat at the nape of her neck, a familiarity that scraped against memory. The whisper returned, closer now, shaping itself into a sound she had once loved.

"Amelia."

She turned, scream caught in her chest.

A man stood near the window, half-formed from shadow and silver rainlight. His suit was immaculate, tailored, expensive—wrongly so, like an old habit worn after death. His face refused the light, features shifting, as if the room rejected him.

"Don't," she whispered. "Don't come closer."

He smiled. She couldn't see it, but she felt it—felt the curve of it in her bones.

"I missed this house," the figure said softly. "You made it beautiful."

Her knees weakened. "Who are you?"

A pause. A tenderness that cut.

"Do you really want me to answer that?"

The lights surged, bursting to life. The figure vanished, leaving the room pristine and empty. Amelia collapsed onto the bed, sobbing, fingers digging into silk. She fumbled for a number she trusted.

Oliver Kingsley answered on the second ring. "Amelia?"

"Come over," she said, voice breaking. "Please."

"I'm on my way."

She didn't notice the faint smear on the mirror—like a hand dragged across glass from the inside.

Sebastian Crowe watched from the stairwell.

The bungalow remembered him. It remembered his footsteps, the weight of his anger, the way he had loved too hard, too wrong. He had died for his sins—blood on asphalt, rain washing nothing away. Death had not loosened his grip.

Love had sharpened it.

He drifted through rooms that bowed to him, strength swelling as Amelia's fear soaked into marble and silk. He could feel her heartbeat now. He could time his breaths to it.

"She's mine," he whispered, the house carrying the vow.

Outside, Oliver's car swept into the driveway, headlights slicing the rain. Sebastian's smile widened.

"Let's see how much you're willing to lose," he said to the night.

The chandelier above the foyer flickered—once.

Twice.

And then the bungalow locked itself from the inside.