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02/17/2026 

The Twice-Turned Hourglass
Category: Adventure



The grandfather clock in the foyer of the manor didn’t tick; it thrummed, a heartbeat made of brass and ancient wood, counting down the seconds until the curse demanded its due.

Jeremy Crane stood before the mirror in the grand library, adjusting the collar of his silk shirt. The face staring back was sharp, handsome, and dangerous—the face of a man in his prime. He possessed the chaotic charisma of a predator, the  charm that masked a soul rotting with ambition. But behind him, lounging on the velvet chaise with a glass of wine that looked suspiciously like blood, was Wanda.

Not Petra. Not yet.

Right now, she was Wanda Maximoff. Her hair was a tumble of auburn, her eyes wide and glowing with that familiar, catastrophic scarlet. She looked at him, and for a fleeting second, Jeremy felt that twisted ache in his chest—the one that confused her power with the memory of his mother, Katrina. It was the nurturing warmth of magic, the promise of protection, even if it was wrapped in madness.

​"You're staring, Jeremy," Wanda murmured, her voice a low hum that vibrated against his ribcage. "Five minutes."

​"Five minutes until I lose my youth," he corrected, turning to face her. "Until we lose it."

​"It’s a fair trade," she countered, swirling the wine. "You dragged me out of the void to turn me into a battery. You wanted to siphon the Darkhold’s stain from my soul to fuel your own immortality. I simply... adjusted the terms."

​She stood up, the movement fluid and predatory. When she closed the distance between them, the air tasted like ozone and burnt sage. She reached up, cupping his jaw. When she looked at him, she didn't just see a warlock; she saw the hard, metallic resolve of a man who believed the ends justified the means. She saw the helmet of Magneto in the shadow of Henry’s brow—the father who would burn the world to save his own kind.

​"You tried to eat me, Henry," she whispered, using his true name. "So I made sure we’d starve together."

​"I adore you," he replied, and he meant it. It was a love born of mutual corruption, a romance forged in the fires of the dark arts.

​Then, the clock struck six.

​It didn't hurt anymore. That was the tragedy of it. The pain had been replaced by a sickening sensation of stretching and withering.

​Jeremy gasped as his spine stiffened, the fluid grace of youth evaporating into the brittle authority of age. His jawline softened, his hair bleaching into a distinguished white. The chaotic hunger in his eyes dimmed, replaced by a terrifying, calculating intelligence. He was no longer Jeremy Crane, the dashing rogue. He was Henry Parrish, the Sin Eater, old and burdened by too many sins.

In his arms, Wanda dissolved. The auburn darkened, the skin losing its flushed elasticity, gaining the porcelain, statuesque elegance of a queen. She grew taller, colder. The wild witch was gone, replaced by the regal, imperious presence of a woman—beautiful, but in a way that commanded fear rather than lust.

She stepped back, her movements now measured and precise. She was Petra now. The name she wore like a widow’s veil, a tribute to the brother she had lost a lifetime ago.

​Henry coughed, his voice dropping an octave, becoming gravelly and rich. "Twelve hours of winter, my dear."

Petra smoothed the skirt of her dress, her fingers long and elegant. She looked at Henry—at the wrinkles etched by dark magic and time—and smiled. It was a cold smile, but possessive.

​"The sun has set, Henry," Petra said, her voice crisp and icy. "The children have had their fun. It is time for the adults to work."

​She walked to the massive grimoire open on the desk. The Darkhold energy crackled between them, a tether that neither could break, binding the motherless son and the fatherless daughter in a cycle of eternal twilight.

​"Shall we begin?" Henry asked, joining her at the book, his old hand covering hers.

​"We shall," Petra replied. "There is a world to break, after all."

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𝕱𝖎𝖗𝖘𝖙 𝖂𝖎𝖙𝖓𝖊𝖘𝖘🎃

 

Abbie Mills pushed through the precinct doors like she was finally stepping out of a pressure chamber. Her shoulders dropped first, then her breath, then the tight line of her mouth. A whole shift without the new Sheriff Michaela “Mickey” Fox materializing behind her with that terse, razor‑clean stare. That alone felt like a small miracle. Fox was the kind of woman who believed in paperwork, order, chain of command, and absolutely nothing with hooves, claws, or a Revolutionary War grudge. Mention a headless Hessian and Abbie would be escorted to a psych eval before she could blink.

Which meant Crane was on a silent, ironclad ban from the building. Archives? No. Bullpen? No. The entire precinct? A trap waiting to spring. Crane wouldn’t last ten minutes under Fox’s stare, and Abbie wasn’t cleaning up that mess today. She wasn’t about to explain why a man dressed like a colonial reenactor kept wandering around like he still paid taxes to King George.

The late afternoon air hit her as she crossed the parking lot — warm, heavy, carrying that faint metallic smell that always came before a storm. She slowed. The sky had shifted while she was inside: clouds rolling in low and dark, the kind that made the world feel smaller, tighter. Her Witness instincts stirred — a small, involuntary tightening low in her stomach, the kind she never ignored anymore. “Great,” she muttered under her breath. “Storm sky. Perfect.”

Moloch was gone, but Henry Parrish wasn’t. Back from the dead. Back in Sleepy Hollow. And Abbie had no interest in another apocalypse‑level showdown. Not when she’d barely slept this week. Not when her nerves were already stretched thin. She pulled out her phone, thumbs moving with controlled, deliberate precision. Crane. Katrina. Elisa Cameron — their newest addition, a ghost who died in 1993 and came back with impeccable manners and a habit of pretending to be “normal” around normal people. Which somehow made her more unsettling. Charlotte had dubbed them “the Resurrection Four.” Abbie told her to stick to antiques and stop trying to brand the end times.

Alice Cullen crossed her mind, but Alice was knee‑deep in her own supernatural mess. Abbie would loop her in later. She reached her SUV and slid inside, the seat still warm from the sun. The 24‑hour coffeehouse on Seventh was neutral ground — bright lights, steady noise, no Charlotte, no rabbits, no antique shop theatrics. Crane could inhale his donut holes like they were oxygen. Katrina could sip her coffee with that tight‑voiced, elegant restraint she used when she was pretending not to judge the décor. And Abbie could sit in the corner booth with her back to the wall, eyes on the door, pretending for five minutes that she wasn’t waiting for the next disaster.

Her reflection in the rearview caught her — tired eyes, humidity‑frizzed curls, that familiar Witness tension sitting just under her skin like a second pulse. She rubbed a hand over her face, slow and grounding. Somewhere in the back of her mind, she could feel Elisa’s presence — a faint shift in the air, like someone holding their breath too close. Polite. Still. Too still. Even after everything — death, resurrection, Crane’s wardrobe — a ghost trying to act normal still put her on edge.

Thunder rolled across the sky, low and warning. Abbie started the engine. Whatever was coming… it was already moving toward them. And she could feel it watching.

Posted by 𝕱𝖎𝖗𝖘𝖙 𝖂𝖎𝖙𝖓𝖊𝖘𝖘🎃 on Fri Feb 27, 2026, 00:02

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S꜀ₐᵣₗₑₜ Hₑₓ

 

The chaos of the girl quieted, replaced by the exquisite, marble-cold clarity of the woman.

​Petra let out a long, steady breath, the air whistling slightly through nostrils that felt sharper, more refined. The heat of the day—the impulsive, weeping, burning energy of Wanda—receded into the back of her mind, locked away behind a wall of ice. In its place came the structure. Her spine lengthened, the slouch of youth snapping into the rigid, aristocratic posture of a queen who had survived her own execution.

​She walked to the mirror, her movements fluid but heavy, lacking the frantic bounce of her younger self. The reflection showed porcelain skin, the eyes that were no longer a wide, naive red, but a piercing, intelligent blue that had seen too much and forgiven nothing. She reached up, tucking a strand of pale, strawberry-blonde hair behind her ear.

​"Better," she murmured, her voice dropping that childish octave into a rich, velvety contralto.

​She turned to the room, smoothing the front of her gown. It felt tighter now, restricting in a way that grounded her. She looked at the man across from her—no longer the boy who looked at her with desperate hunger, but the man who looked at her with shared ambition.

​"The girl leaves such a mess in her wake," Petra said, her tone clipped and dry as she gestured to the scattered books on the floor—remnants of the afternoon's manic spellcasting. She met Henry's gaze, coolly assessing the deep lines of his face. "I trust you have the itinerary for the evening, Henry? I have no patience for improvisation tonight."

Posted by S꜀ₐᵣₗₑₜ Hₑₓ on Thu Feb 19, 2026, 01:02

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