THE THORNWICK BLOODLINE
In 1987, deep in the remote hills of Milfield Hollow, West Virginia, there existed a place most people avoided — Cedar Ridge.
At the very top of that ridge stood a decaying wooden house, hidden behind thick forest and silence.
That was where the Thornwick family lived.
They were known, but never understood.
People whispered about them in low voices at the general store. Children were warned not to wander near the ridge. And no one — absolutely no one — was ever invited inside their home.
Because the Thornwicks believed in something… ancient.
Something dangerous.
“The blood must remain pure.”
🌑 The Arrangement
Evangeline Thornwick was only fourteen when her life was decided for her.
She had pale skin, long dark hair, and eyes that always seemed distant — as though she already knew she did not belong to the world beyond Cedar Ridge.
Her brother, Marcus, was sixteen.
Quiet. Obedient. Hardened by the will of their father.
Cornelius Thornwick.
A man whose presence alone could silence a room. His belief in preserving the family bloodline had long crossed the boundaries of morality, reason… and humanity.
So in August 1987, in secret, under candlelight and without witnesses beyond family…
Evangeline was married to her own brother.
No celebration.
No joy.
Only silence… and obedience.
🕯️ The Warning
Rumors, no matter how deeply buried, have a way of surfacing.
When word finally reached Dr. Webb, the town’s only physician, he forced his way up Cedar Ridge, ignoring the unspoken rule to stay away.
When he saw Evangeline, his concern turned to alarm.
And when he understood what had been done to her—
“This must stop,” he said firmly.
Cornelius did not even flinch.
Dr. Webb’s voice lowered.
“If this continues… the consequences will be irreversible. Genetic collapse. Severe deformities. Psychological damage. This isn’t just wrong — it’s dangerous.”
Cornelius stepped closer.
And with a calmness that felt colder than anger, he replied:
“Outsiders do not understand what must be preserved.”
Dr. Webb left that day with a feeling he could not shake—
That something terrible had already begun.