Elias Crowe had always been a man shaped by absence. At thirty-eight, he lived alone in the sagging Victorian on Briar Hollow Lane, the last house before the woods swallowed the town. His inheritance had come with cobwebs and silence, and he had accepted both as old friends. Once a promising illustrator of children’s books, he now painted only decay: rotting petals, split-open fruit crawling with unseen life, faces half-erased by mold. Critics had called his early work “hauntingly tender.” No one called it anything anymore. He sold nothing. He spoke to no one. Each evening he sat on the warped veranda with a glass of cheap wine and watched the garden die in slow, exquisite increments.
The garden had once been his grandmother’s pride. Now it was a tangle of brown stalks and blackening roses that refused to die completely. Their scent lingered like a wound that would not close—sweet, cloying, faintly metallic. Elias found comfort in its stubborn refusal to vanish. Like him, the flowers persisted in their ruin.
On the first night of October, when the air tasted of iron and coming frost, she appeared.
He noticed her first as a pale shape between the skeletal hydrangeas. She wore a faded lavender dress, the hem frayed as if it had been dragged through centuries of dust. Her hair was the color of wet ash, falling past her shoulders in uneven waves. When she turned, her eyes met his—large, dark, impossibly gentle—and something inside Elias’s chest cracked open like an old bone.
“I’m sorry,” she said softly. “I didn’t mean to trespass. The gate was open.”
Her voice was low, musical, with the faintest rustle at the edges, like pages turning in an abandoned book. Elias, who had not spoken aloud in three days, found his throat closing.
“It’s… not locked,” he managed. “Never has been.”
She smiled, small and sad, and the smile made the dying roses tremble though there was no wind. “My name is Lila.”
“Elias.”
They stood ten feet apart, separated by frost-killed grass, and something passed between them that felt ancient and inevitable. She did not offer a last name. He did not ask for one.
She returned the next evening, and the next. Each time she brought something small: a smooth gray stone, a dried sprig of lavender that still carried scent, a yellowed photograph of a couple dancing beneath gas lamps. Elias showed her his studio—canvases stacked like tombstones, the smell of turpentine and despair. She touched the paintings with reverent fingers, tracing the places where color had bled into rot.
“You paint what I feel,” she whispered once, her breath cool against his ear though she stood behind him. “The moment before everything falls apart. It’s beautiful, Elias. You’re beautiful in your breaking.”
No one had ever called him beautiful. The word lodged in his chest like a thorn wrapped in silk.
Their romance was not the stuff of novels. There were no grand gestures, no passionate kisses beneath moonlight. Instead there were quiet hours on the veranda where she rested her head on his shoulder and he felt the strange lightness of her—almost weightless, as if her bones were hollow. She would read to him from a small leather-bound book she carried, poems about lost sailors and women who waited on cliffs until the sea took them. Her voice would catch on certain lines, and Elias would pretend not to notice the way her fingers sometimes passed through the pages rather than turning them.
He was pathetic in his devotion. He began cooking again, simple meals he hoped might tempt her. She rarely ate more than a few bites, but she praised every dish with such aching sincerity that he felt, for the first time in years, worthy. He bought her a new dress—soft gray wool, modest and warm—because the lavender one seemed too thin for the coming winter. When she wore it, she cried soundless tears that left no trace on her cheeks.
“I don’t deserve kindness,” she told him one night as they lay clothed on his narrow bed, staring at the water-stained ceiling. “Not anymore.”
“You do,” he answered, voice rough. “You deserve everything I have. Which isn’t much.”
She turned to him then, eyes luminous in the dark. “It’s more than I’ve had in a very long time.”
Their first kiss tasted of dust and rainwater. Her lips were cool, yielding, and when he pulled back he saw a single black rose petal caught in her hair. He brushed it away, but more appeared—tiny, velvety, falling from nowhere onto the sheets between them.
The horror began gently, the way true horror always does.
It was the garden first. Where Lila walked, the dead plants stirred. Brown stems greened for a moment, only to blacken again more violently, as if the brief life hurt them. Thorns lengthened overnight, curving like claws. One morning Elias found a perfect circle of withered grass where she had stood the night before, shaped exactly like a grave.
He told himself it was coincidence. He was lonely; loneliness bred imagination. But then the house began to change.
At first it was small things. The floorboards in the hallway creaked her name when he walked alone. The mirror in the bathroom showed her reflection standing behind him even when she was not there—smiling that same gentle, sorrowful smile. His paintings began to move when he wasn’t looking. The half-erased faces gained her features: her eyes, her mouth, her quiet suffering.
One night he woke to find her standing at the foot of his bed, naked. Her skin was luminous, almost translucent. Beneath it, dark veins pulsed slowly, like roots seeking soil. When she climbed into bed with him, her body left faint imprints of frost on the sheets.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered against his throat. “I’m trying to hold on. For you.”
He held her tighter, pathetic and desperate, as if his thin arms could anchor her to the world. “Stay. Whatever you are, stay with me.”
She wept then—real tears this time, warm at first, then cold as sleet. They burned where they touched his skin.
The truth came in fragments, delivered in her soft, rustling voice during the long hours before dawn.
She had lived in this house in 1897. A gentlewoman of modest means, engaged to a cruel man who collected rare orchids and rarer women. On the night before their wedding, she had discovered his secret: the orchids were fed with blood—his previous fiancées’, drained slowly so their beauty might last. In terror she had fled into the garden, only to be dragged back by roots that should not have moved. The house itself—built on unconsecrated ground over an older burial mound—had claimed her. It drank her life slowly, turning her love and fear into nourishment for its endless hunger. She had died screaming among the roses, and the house had kept her ever since, a ghost tethered to its rotting timbers.
“Until you,” she said. “You see me, Elias. Really see me. And seeing… it feeds me too. But the house is jealous.”
As November bled into December, Lila began to fade at the edges.
Literally.
When she reached for a teacup, her fingers sometimes passed through it. Her reflection in mirrors grew translucent, showing the pattern of wallpaper behind her. Worst of all, parts of her body were changing. Delicate black roots, thin as thread, had begun to emerge from the skin of her ankles and wrists, questing blindly toward the floorboards. When Elias touched them, they curled lovingly around his fingers before retreating with what felt like reluctance.
The horror was not monstrous. It was intimate. It was watching the woman he loved dissolve into the very walls that sheltered them. It was realizing his love was killing her faster.
He became frantic in his pathetic devotion. He researched old grimoires and local legends, driving to dusty archives in neighboring towns. He burned sage and salt and muttered prayers he did not believe. Nothing worked. The house only grew stronger. Doors that had never locked before now sealed themselves when Lila tried to leave the property. Windows showed not the woods outside but endless corridors of wilting flowers stretching into infinity.
One bitter evening, as snow fell like ash outside, Lila stood in the center of the parlor and began to unravel.
It started with her hair. Strands lifted as if underwater, then disintegrated into fine black dust that settled on the furniture. Her eyes—those beautiful, sorrowful eyes—filled with tiny blooming roses that pushed through the whites, petals unfolding with wet, tearing sounds. She screamed, a sound like wind through a graveyard, and reached for him.
Elias caught her as she collapsed. Her body was lighter than ever, almost hollow. Where her bare feet touched the floor, the wood split open and small white roots shot upward, wrapping around her calves in a lover’s embrace.
“I can’t stop it,” she gasped. “It wants all of me now. Because I gave part of myself to you.”
He held her, rocking her like a child, tears cutting tracks through days of unshaven stubble. “Then take me instead. Let it have me. Just don’t leave.”
She looked up at him, roses blooming and dying in her eyes in rapid succession. “You don’t understand. It doesn’t want to kill us. It wants us together. Inside it. Forever. A perfect, rotting romance.”
That night they made love for the first and only time.
It was not lust but desperation—a clumsy, tender joining of two broken people trying to become one before the dark took them. Her skin was cold, then fever-hot, then cold again. Roots brushed against his thighs, gentle as fingertips. When he kissed her, petals fell from her mouth into his. He swallowed them. They tasted of grief and honey.
Afterward, she lay curled against him, half her face already merging with the pillow—fabric and skin blurring at the edges.
“I was happy,” she whispered. “For the first time since 1897. Thank you, Elias.”
He cried then, ugly, wracking sobs that shook his thin frame. He, who had painted decay for years, now understood its true face: not dramatic ruin, but the slow, loving erosion of everything precious.
The final days were a fever dream of horror and devotion.
Lila no longer left the house. She was the house in growing measure. When Elias walked the halls, he heard her heartbeat in the walls—slow, patient, enormous. Her voice drifted from air vents and chimneys, singing the old poems they had shared. In the garden, the roses bloomed overnight into impossible, fleshy things the color of bruised hearts. They opened to reveal tiny, perfect replicas of her face at their centers, eyes following him with love and pity.
He stopped eating. Stopped painting. He simply sat with her—wherever she was. Sometimes she manifested fully, roots trailing behind her like a wedding train. Sometimes she was only a presence, a cool hand on his cheek, a whisper in his ear: I’m still here. I still love you.
On the longest night of the year, the house made its final offer.
Elias woke to find every surface covered in blooming roses. The air was thick with their perfume, almost sickening. Lila stood before him—whole again, radiant in her lavender dress, no roots, no fading. She looked exactly as she must have in 1897: young, hopeful, terrified.
“Come with me,” she said, extending her hand. “We can be together inside it. No more loneliness. No more decay. Just us, entwined forever. The house will keep us beautiful in our own way.”
Behind her, the walls had opened like flesh, revealing glistening corridors lined with pulsing veins and flowering growths. In the distance he saw two shapes—vaguely human—entwined in an eternal embrace, slowly becoming part of the architecture.
Elias stood on trembling legs. He was unshaven, unwashed, eyes sunken with exhaustion and love. A pathetic creature by any measure. Yet in that moment he felt strangely clear.
He took her hand. It was warm.
For one perfect second, he let himself imagine it: endless nights of her voice, her touch, never alone again. The horror of it was seductive—two souls preserved in amber of rot, a romantic tragedy perfected.
Then he pulled her close and kissed her forehead.
“I love you, Lila,” he said. “But I won’t let it have you. Not like this.”
With strength he did not know he possessed, he dragged her toward the front door. The house fought back. Floorboards buckled. Roots shot from the walls, wrapping around his ankles, his waist. Lila screamed—a sound of love and betrayal—as her form began dissolving again, pulled in two directions.
Elias reached the door, bloodied and weeping. With his last ounce of will he kicked it open. Snow and freezing wind rushed in like judgment.
The house howled.
He pushed her across the threshold. For a moment she stood on the veranda—solid, real, alive in the way only the dying can be. Snow settled on her hair like blossoms. She looked at him with such terrible love that his heart shattered completely.
Then she began to crumble.
Not into dust, but into petals—thousands of black and lavender roses that swirled upward in the wind, dancing around him in a final, tender embrace. They brushed his cheeks, his lips, his closed eyes. He breathed them in, choking on their sweetness.
The house shuddered violently. Plaster cracked. Windows exploded outward in showers of glass. Then it fell silent, empty once more.
Elias sank to his knees in the snow among the scattered petals. He gathered them in his arms, pressing them to his chest until they stained his shirt. He stayed there until dawn, a broken man holding the remains of his only love.
They found him three days later, half-frozen on the veranda. The house was just a house again—dilapidated, ordinary, sad. The garden had finally died completely, nothing but bare earth and a few stubborn thorns.
The authorities called it exposure. Delusion. The ravings of a lonely eccentric.
But Elias kept one perfect bloom in a small glass jar by his hospital bed. It never wilted. Sometimes, late at night, it whispered his name in a voice like turning pages.
He smiled at it with cracked lips, eyes shining with pathetic, undying love.
“I’m still here,” he would answer softly. “I still love you too.”
And in the quiet hours, the walls of his new room—sterile and white—would sometimes creak with the faintest, most tender reply.


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