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Shattered Dreams, Stolen Lives

Chapter 1 

Word Count: 1005    |    Released on: 04/07/2025

g the world sa

ron gates of the prestigious Blackwood Art Gallery. The screech of tires was a memor

hough no one knew it yet. A faint, serene smile was on her lips, a look of peace that ma

l Sarah's eyelids shut. They wouldn't stay closed. Her wide, vacant eyes stared out at the world, refusing

ol. It was clean, easy, and designed to be forgotten. The gallery's powerful owners, the Blackwood family, issued a brief

s a way of f

w the preliminary autopsy report. He couldn't sleep. The images, the cold, hard facts, burned in hi

as everywhere. It wasn't just

ash Identified as 'Jane Doe.' A

were covered in thick, bruised calluses, the kind formed from years of kneeling on hard surfaces. And her stomach conte

ional nightmare. The story wasn't about an acci

hat mean?" one comment read. "They tried to close her eyes! The gallery is hiding something!" screamed another. The hashtag #JusticeForJaneDoe trended worldwide withi

as, the grim faces of the detectives, the nervous, shifty eyes of the gallery director. I heard the whispers in the crowd, the th

gnored the preliminary report pushed by his superiors and conducted his own examination. He gently touched the calluses on my knees, his brow furrowed. He not

tant. "This was the end of a long, terrible story. And

small point of light in th

city manager's office, on a direct line to Dr. Peterson's desk

e major patrons of this city. Let's wrap this up quickly. Cau

ked, his voice tight. "The mutilation

of death," the voice insisted.

dy on the stainless-steel table. My eyes were still open. An assistant ha

moments before, snapped. The tiny stitches gave way, and my eyelids slid open o

gasped and s

ation: a short video clip from the morgue's security camera. It showed the assis

ent, a sign of a grievance so deep it transcended death itself. "

happened to me. A "muse-slave." An ancient, barbaric practice where humans were treated as living art objects, their bodies and suffering used for th

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Shattered Dreams, Stolen Lives
Shattered Dreams, Stolen Lives
“The world first saw the crash. A cherry-red sports car, crumpled like a can, embedded in the ornate gates of the prestigious Blackwood Art Gallery. Inside, I was slumped over the wheel, a faint, serene smile on my lips that made no sense. Gallery staff rushed out, their faces pale, trying to pull my eyelids shut. They wouldn't stay closed. My wide, vacant eyes stared out, refusing to be silenced. The police called it a tragic accident. The powerful Blackwood family issued a brief statement, an attempt to smother the truth with their influence. But truth has a way of finding cracks. An intern leaked my autopsy report: tongue surgically removed, knees bruised with calluses, stomach filled not with food, but with gnawed animal bones and phlegm. My death became a national nightmare. People raged online, demanding #JusticeForJaneDoe. I watched as a wispy, translucent soul. Dr. Alex Peterson, the medical examiner, refused to be silenced, seeing past the official story. "This wasn't an accident," he said. "She delivered a message." Pressure from city hall mounted, ordering him to close the case. Then, something impossible happened. The stitches meant to keep my eyes closed snapped, and they opened again, a silent act of defiance. The internet erupted. My spirit couldn't rest. People began digging, finding old articles about "muse-slaves," human beings treated as living art objects. It felt terrifyingly real. Dr. Peterson defied his superiors, ruling my death a homicide. With public outcry, a full investigation began. But every lead was a dead end: no wallet, no phone, disabled GPS, conveniently malfunctioning cameras. I longed to scream names, places. The public's patience wore thin, protestors demanding answers. Then, a radical idea emerged: a "Memory-Reader," a device to access the last images in my brain. Against all odds, the authorities agreed. My body, cryogenically preserved, was placed on a stage. The Blackwood family sat in the front row, an obscenity of feigned innocence. Among them, Michael, my brother, with a troubled look in his eyes. Dr. Peterson fitted a chrome helmet to my head. The monitors flickered to life. Static. Chloe Blackwood's dismissive voice echoed, "What a waste of time. This is boring." But then, a jolt. The static cleared. The world was inside my head. A dimly lit room. My parents and a shadowy figure. "She is the price," my mother said, emotionless. "A daughter for a pigment. We can always have another." A collective gasp filled the auditorium. The truth began to unfold.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10