☠ Prologue ☠
For generations, Westden lay engulfed in the pale monotony of winter. The cold was predatory, seeping through the townsfolk’s winterwear, biting into their skin till its frozen fangs sank through their flesh and found bone. Here, the elements were spiteful. Draped in thick furs and more coats than he could count, Sheriff Dempsey stepped outside of his office, the frost quick to cling to his whiskered face. Under the lame gaze of the morning sun, he sighted a woman who’d visited him every day for the past three; Amanda Baker.
She was one of many mothers whose children had gone missing. Each day she went without answers, the color faded from her eyes, the glint of hope dimming in her soul. Still, she came. Even in the thick of winter, she braved the cold, chattering teeth and all. When he met her gaze, Sheriff Dempsey noted the redness in her eyes. They itched from her tears, yet Amanda wore her bravest face in defiance. Her son was alive. She had to believe so, even if no one else did.
“Morning, Mrs. Baker.”
Dempsey nodded in greeting, his voice pitched by the morning rasp. However, even his stone cold professionalism faltered—if only for a second—before the tortured mother.
“Any news? About who took my James, I mean.” Jaw clenched, she stood hopeful, her heart pounding against her chest like a rioting prisoner.
A sigh escaped Dempsey’s lips, billowing as frozen vapor, a mist that Amanda mistook as the sheriff’s last gust of patience. Yet, it was one of guilt. He welcomed her into his office, as he did with every other parent who came his way that day. Despite his best efforts and the tiresome searches he spearheaded, neither the lost nor the dead were found. Before long, the townsfolk took up arms. Fed up with Dempsey’s failures, they embarked on searches of their own.
In the ensuing days, their searches intensified. And under the leadership of Father John, a Machiavellian soul helming North Saints Church, their searches devolved into witch-hunts. Men and women from walks of life that Father John claimed teemed with sin were dragged to the altar to answer for crimes they never committed. As tensions between the townsfolk and law enforcement peaked, the chaos blanketing all of Westden steered all attention away from the insidious cult lurking under their noses.
☠ Present, Midnight ☠
In the dead of night, the grating roar of the Pale Horse—Blackstone’s motorcycle—clashed with the whistled song of the surrounding wind. The smoldering glow of its burning wheels set the air ablaze, and the thick scent of hot steel and burning rubber trailed the melting snow in the Damned Saint’s wake. Within moments, the wheels of the Pale Horse rolled on asphalt no more. Blackstone, making haste, left the road for the woodlands that flanked it.
The thick trees protested his presence, their wooden skin crackling in embers, their roots recoiling wherever he rode. Here, the Damned Saint sensed an evil that left his soul storming in rage. Yet, no matter where he swept his eyeless gaze, he saw nothing. So thick was the wickedness surrounding him it seemed indistinguishable from air. His skull burned blacker and its flame redder. He ought to scorch the forest to ash and soot.

Yet, a spark of something within kept him from doing so. The naïve would mistake it for his last vestige of human reason. It was anything but. No, it was the dark desire to ensnare the guilty, to hear their helpless pleas as his chain bites into their flesh, its flaming steel drinking their boiling blood. The rage overwhelmed him, for Blackstone needn’t hear a bone cracking underfoot to sense the skeletons buried in the snow and soil.
A roar tore out of his throat. Pitched by his eldritch fury, it was equal parts piercing shrill and bellowing rumble. A hair's breadth later, the forest fell silent, and Blackstone rode onward, abandoning it—a child graveyard—for Westden in search of those who buried them there.
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