The Last Broadcast
The rain hammered the slate roofs of Ravenscroft Hall like a thousand fingernails scratching at the bones of the ancient building. Fog curled around the iron gates, swallowing the ironwork in a cold, damp embrace. Inside, the great foyer was lit only by the dying embers of a cracked fireplace; the amber glow trembled across warped tapestries depicting long‑forgotten saints and grotesque beasts. For three generations the Hall had been the domain of the Whitmore family, a lineage that had once commanded the nation’s airwaves. Edward Whitmore, the last surviving heir, was the voice that had cradled the nation’s souls through war and peace. His baritone sang through the crystal‑clear tubes of the British Broadcasting Company, turning the humble radio into a shrine, and his listeners swore that even the night itself would hush when he spoke. But the world had turned. The new century’s neon flicker had invaded the soot‑stained windows of Ravenscroft, and a new horror seeped through the...