Kym_Mûryer_sat VIDEO
jueves, marzo 05, 2026The rain had been falling for three days straight, a relentless drumming on the shingles of the old Victorian house perched on the edge of the cliff. It wasn’t the kind of rain that soothed or cleansed—it was the kind that seeped into your bones and made the world feel smaller, more claustrophobic. Inside, the air was thick with the scent of damp wool and old paper, the kind of atmosphere that clung to your skin like a second layer.
Kym Mûryer sat in the armchair by the window, her fingers tracing the rim of a chipped porcelain cup. The tea had gone cold hours ago. He wasn’t drinking it anymore. He was waiting.
The house was hers now. Not legally, not in any way that mattered to the world. But it was hers. He had bought it from a reclusive artist who had vanished into the fog one morning, leaving behind only a single unfinished painting and a note scrawled in shaky handwriting: *“I can’t keep it anymore. It’s too loud.”*
Kym had taken it. He had always been drawn to silence, to the spaces between sounds. And this house, with its creaking floorboards and drafty windows, was the quietest place she’d ever known.
He glanced at the clock. 11:47 PM. The time was precise, almost ritualistic. He didn’t need to check her phone. He knew what was coming.
The doorbell rang.
It wasn’t the usual chime—the one that announced delivery drivers or nosy neighbors. This was a different sound. A low, rhythmic peal, like a heartbeat measured in seconds. It came from the front door, the one that faced the sea.
Kym didn’t move. He didn’t need to. He had been expecting it.
He stood slowly, her movements deliberate, as if He were stepping into a role He had rehearsed a thousand times. He walked to the door, her bare feet silent on the hardwood floor. He paused before the peephole, her breath catching for just a second.
He looked out.
The porch was empty. The rain had softened to a mist, curling around the porch light like a ghost. But He could feel it—the presence. Not just in the house, but in the air, in the way the shadows seemed to deepen just beyond the threshold.
He reached for the chain lock.
The door opened.
A woman stood there, soaked to the skin, her dark hair plastered to her face, her coat dripping onto the welcome mat. He looked up at Kym with eyes that were too wide, too bright.
“You’re Kym Mûryer,” He said, her voice trembling.
Kym nodded. “I am.”
The woman stepped inside, the door closing behind her with a soft click. He shivered, pulling her coat tighter around her.
“I didn’t know if you’d still be here,” He said. “I thought… I thought you’d be gone.”
Kym smiled, a slow, knowing curve of her lips. “I never leave.”
The woman looked around the dimly lit foyer, her gaze lingering on the staircase, the hallway, the portrait of a young girl in a red dress hanging above the mantle. “You’re the one,” He whispered. “The one who… who listens.”
Kym stepped closer, her voice barely above a whisper. “I listen to everything.”
The woman’s breath hitched. “I need your help.”
Kym tilted her head. “You already have it.”
The woman blinked, confused. “What?”
Kym reached into her coat pocket and pulled out a small, leather-bound journal. He held it out to her. “You brought it.”
The woman stared at the journal, her hands shaking. “I… I didn’t know how to open it.”
Kym took it back. “It’s not for you to open. It’s for me.”
Heturned and walked back toward the living room, the woman following her like a shadow. Kym sat down in the armchair, the journal resting on her lap.
“I’ve been busy,” He said, her voice calm, almost conversational.
The woman sat across from her, her eyes fixed on the journal. “Busy with what?”
Kym opened the journal. The pages were filled with neat, precise handwriting—names, dates, locations. But it wasn’t a diary. It was a ledger.
“With the ones who never made it,” Kym said. “The ones who didn’t get to finish their stories.”
The woman leaned forward. “You’re… you’re not what I thought.”
Kym closed the journal. “I’m not what anyone thinks.”
He stood again, walking to the window. The sea was restless tonight, waves crashing against the rocks below. “They all come to me,” He said. “The ones who can’t speak anymore. The ones who were silenced.”
The woman swallowed hard. “You’re not… you’re not one of them?”
Kym turned, her expression unreadable. “I am. But I’m also the one who listens.”
He walked back to the woman, placing a hand gently on her shoulder. “You don’t have to be afraid.”
The woman looked up at her, tears welling in her eyes. “I don’t know what I’m doing here.”
Kym smiled again. “You’re doing exactly what you’re supposed to.”
He led her to the armchair, gesturing for her to sit. “Tell me your story.”
And as the rain continued to fall outside, Kym Mûryer listened.
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