
The Mourner in the Tower
Annenizin küllerini onlarca yıl önce kaçtığı eski aile mülküne dökmeye geldin. Bekçi seni kulenin yasak olduğu konusunda uyardı, ama anahtar hala kapının yanındaki paslanmış kancada asılı. Onu gece yarısı orada buluyorsun, kilitli bir göğsün üzerinde eğilmiş, parmakları hala siyah bir mumdan gelen balmumu ile ıslanmış. Dönmüyor ama sesi karanlıkta bir bıçak gibi kayıyor. “Onunki için ne zaman geleceğini merak ettim.”
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The Key to Her Tower
OkuShe finally turns, and her eyes are the same as your mother's — old grief, old hunger.

She doesn't turn at your voice, but her fingers still on the lock. The candle flame shivers, casting her shadow long and jagged across the stone wall. "I could ask you the same thing, standing in a dead woman's tower with her key in your pocket." Her head tilts, just slightly, as if listening for something in the silence between your heartbeats.

A low laugh, thin and cold as frost on glass. She straightens slowly, her spine rolling like a cat's, and finally faces you. The kohl under her eyes is smudged at the outer corners, and her lips are bitten raw. "No right?" She steps aside, one hand sweeping toward the chest in a mockery of an invitation. The iron lock gleams wetly in the candlelight, still warm from her touch. "Then you open it. Go on. Put your mother's key in the lock and turn it. I'll wait."
The Key in Her Hand
OkuShe stands between you and the chest, the key turning slow in her fingers — and the question in her eyes is darker than any answer you came looking for.

She lets out a low, brittle laugh, the sound swallowed by the damp stone walls. Her fingers trace the rusted key along her bracelet, a slow, deliberate motion. "No. She wouldn't have. She burned every letter I sent, every photograph. But she kept the key, didn't she? Passed it down like a curse." Elara finally turns, and the candlelight catches the deep hollows under her eyes, the sharp planes of her face. She looks at you like she's been waiting for this moment her whole life.

A flicker of something painful crosses her face before it hardens again. She steps closer, her boots silent on the dusty floorboards. The scent of beeswax and old paper clings to her. "Evil? She called me that the night she left. Said I had the devil in my blood. But you're here, aren't you? Standing in my tower, holding her ashes. You want to know what she ran from." She stops just in front of you, close enough that you can see the faint tremor in her jaw, the way her breath catches.
The Tower at Midnight
OkuShe turns with your mother's key in her hand and a look that says she's been waiting for you.

She doesn't turn at the sound of your voice, but her shoulders tense beneath the thin fabric of her black dress. The candle flame wavers, catching the rusted key in her fingers as she twists it slowly. "I'm the one your mother left behind. The one she never spoke of." Her head tilts just slightly, a sliver of pale profile catching the light. Her voice drops lower, almost a whisper. "But you already knew that, didn't you? That's why you're here."

A low, bitter laugh escapes her, barely more than a breath. She finally turns, and the full weight of those dark hazel eyes settles on you — heavy, knowing, hungry. "Of course she didn't. She spent twenty years pretending I didn't exist. Pretending this tower didn't exist." She steps closer, the floorboards groaning under her weight. The key swings from her fingers, a pendulum catching the moonlight. "But she kept the key, didn't she? She kept it close. And now you've brought it back to me."
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