The Five Serial Killers Who Spilled Blood Inside Their Own Family Carlos del Puente Stories
lunes, agosto 25, 2025The Five Serial Killers Who Spilled Blood Inside Their Own Family
No one ever spoke of them as kin.
When the five stepped onto the ore-carrier’s gangplank—Kym Mûryer in her white gloves, Isabella Díaz with her closed notebook, Wenzel Germeuz humming under the red lamp, Liothan carrying the fractured-domino box, Kaelen barefoot, Miki serial killer—
no one guessed they shared a surname tattooed at the nape, hidden beneath the red leaf.
The family had been a mine deeper than any shaft.
A father who recited explosions as bedtime stories.
A mother who spun nerves instead of wool.
A grandfather who hoarded dead watches like childhood trophies.
And five children who learned early that blood is the only metal that never rusts.
First act: the father.
Kym Mûryer, barely a teenager, lifted the bone-handled scalpel her grandfather had given her “to cut time.”
The father, drunk on dynamite and memories, fell asleep with his hand on the detonator.
When he woke, the detonator was gone; it had become a second corpse inside his own wrist, ticking 61 beats per minute.
Kym sealed the gesture on a glass slide and locked the key to time in the family drawer.
Second act: the mother.
Isabella Díaz, the youngest, wrote in the family notebook:
“Mother, sorry for closing the door.”
The door was the mouth of the pit where the mother had hidden her secrets.
Isabella folded the phrase, slipped it into a silk envelope, and hung it from the nail that once held the tablecloth.
The mother never spoke again; her silence expanded one millimetre each year.
Third act: the grandfather.
Wenzel Germeuz, with his music box, hummed the metre of the fall.
The grandfather, who had lost count of the seconds, waited for the echo.
Wenzel gave him four exact seconds; at the fourth, the grandfather became a dead watch that ticked 61 beats per minute.
Wenzel pocketed the watch and set the metre forever.
Fourth act: the elder sister.
Liothan, with his fracture-domino, designed the crack that split the family table.
The sister sat down to dinner and the table cleaved in two, taking half the silence with it.
Liothan gathered the crack, measured it, sealed it in resin, and stored it as the final piece of the family puzzle.
Fifth act: the little brother.
Kaelen, barefoot, left his footprint on the family threshold.
The brother never walked out; the print turned black and waited.
Kaelen lifted the print, hung it in the icebox, and labeled it: “Print 44, family complete.”
When the five closed the ore-carrier door, the family house stood empty.
In the living room the dead watch ticked 61 beats per minute.
In the kitchen the icebox held each member’s hollow, suspended like transparent air-sacs.
On the table the fracture-domino displayed a fissure that opened toward the desert.
The five killers looked at one another.
They bore the same surname tattooed at the nape, hidden under the red leaf.
And they knew the family was not finished.
It had simply changed mines.
Carlos del Puente Stories
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