Deepanalabyss -

Then the floor tilted.

The darkness began to take shape. Not a monster. Not a god. Something worse: a mirror. A vast, curved surface of black glass that showed Kaelen his own reflection—except the reflection was smiling, and Kaelen was not.

He managed to choke out: “What are you?”

At the exact moment the moon’s edge darkened, a staircase unfolded from the far wall of the chasm. Not stone. Not wood. It looked like fossilized cartilage, each step fused to the next by what might have been dried sinew. It descended at a steep angle, spiraling into the throat of the world. Deepanalabyss

Kaelen arrived at the Rift’s edge on the eve of the second moon’s bleeding—a rare astral event when the smaller of the two moons passed through the larger’s shadow, turning the color of rust. The air smelled of ozone and ancient rot. He lit his lantern. The flame burned green.

By the fifth hour, the air had grown thick and warm, like breath. The staircase narrowed until his shoulders scraped the walls on either side. The green flame of his lantern cast shadows that moved independently of the light source—they scurried ahead of him, as if eager to reach the bottom first.

Kaelen felt something brush his ankle. Not a hand. A thought that had grown fingers. Then the floor tilted

He was twenty-seven when the letter arrived. No postmark, no return address. Just a single sheet of heavy, fibrous paper, and on it, one word written in a hand so old the ink had turned to rust: Deepanalabyss The word pulsed when he touched it. Literally—a slow, subsonic thrum that he felt in his molars. He turned the paper over. On the back, in smaller script: “You have been expected since before your first breath. Come to the Sulfer Rift before the second moon bleeds. Or do not. The abyss does not care. But it does remember.”

If you want me to write the next part—what Kaelen sees in the mirror, the “use” the abyss has for him, or a completely different version of the story (horror, epic fantasy, psychological thriller, cosmic weird fiction)—just let me know. I can also adjust the tone, length, or level of detail.

“You left the stove on.” “Your mother’s last word was your name, but you weren’t listening.” “The mule you rode here—you forgot to tie it. It’s already fallen in.” Not a god

Kaelen should have burned it. Instead, he packed a single bag: rope, rations, a knife, a lantern that burned oil rendered from the fat of deep-sea fish. He left his apartment in the coastal city of Vellenthrone at midnight, and by dawn he was riding a mule along the Serpent’s Spine, a trail that hugged cliffs so sheer that the ocean below looked like a sheet of beaten lead.

Kaelen stepped onto the first stair. It creaked but held.

Falling in the Deepanalabyss was not like falling in the world above. There was no ground to meet, no sudden stop. Instead, the darkness grew denser , like sinking into honey. His descent slowed until he was drifting, suspended in a warm, thick blackness that pulsed with a slow rhythm— thump-thump, thump-thump —like a heart the size of a city.

Kaelen kept walking. The abyss wanted him to stop, to doubt, to turn back. That was the first rule of the Deepanalabyss: The descent is the defense.

A voice spoke. Not a whisper this time. A voice that had mass, that pressed against his chest and made his ribs ache.