It couldn’t be that they’d suddenly grown a conscience and apared him, right?
When Laither said, “They had another purpose,” something clicked in my mind a possibility so dark it made my stomach drop.
What it Lather’s ability to grant wishes hadn’t appeared after his death at all?
What if he’d been born with?
A horrifying idea began to take shape.
From birth, Laither possessed a supernatural gift the power to make people’s wishes come true.
But every wish came at a price.
Each one was twisted, corrupted, and fulfilled in the worst possible way.
Fearing this ability would bring disaster to their son, his parents tried to hide it.
But eventually, the household staff–people who saw him every day–found out.
And once they knew, they used him.
They exploited his power to murder his parents and steal everything they owned.
Maybe they tricked him with innocent words, saying things like:
“I wish your parents would come downstairs right now. Can you make that happen, little one?”
He would have nodded, trusting them completely, only to look up and see his mother and father falling from the top floor, their bodies broken on the marble below.
That’s just my theory, of course.
But after killing his parents, those so–called caretakers must have kept him locked up, spoiling him with sweet words and gentle smiles, coaxing him to grant wish after wish.
As Luther grew older, he began to realize that beneath those kind faces were monsters.
And worse, he understood that he’d been the one who had unwittingly killed his own parents.
Crushed by guilt and despair, he slaughtered everyone in the mansion.
And then he killed himself.
But his hatred was too deep to fade.
His soul lingered, twisted into something monstrous.


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