Rain hammered Cargrave’s London window when Maude’s letter arrived, ink blurred with fear and pleading for help at a remote baronial castle. By midnight he was on the road toward stone halls, a silent servant, and a patient whose face was trapped in a grotesque grin—an affliction tied to cruelty, obsession, and dread.
In the gloomy depths of 19th-century Europe, beyond the comfortable reach of certainty and ordinary remedies, the tale of Sardonicus takes shape. It is woven from madness, cruelty, and the grotesque—where human shadow-works hide unspeakable secrets and grim consequences await those who pry too far into the dark.
Our story begins when a celebrated London physician, Dr. Robert Cargrave, receives a summons that will stretch his knowledge of mind and body to its limits.
The Summons
Dr. Robert Cargrave was a man of deliberate habits, a physician whose calm mind and steady hand had earned him a reputation for unraveling perplexing maladies. One rain-slicked evening while he sat bent over case notes, a letter arrived stamped with a seal that made his pulse quicken: Maude Randall, a name from a past life. She wrote in urgent, clipped phrases, begging him to travel to a remote estate where she now lived as the wife of Baron Sardonicus.
Her handwriting trembled with fear; the letter hinted only at a "terrible affliction" and an appeal Cargrave could not ignore. He packed quietly and set off, driven by both professional duty and an old, complicated tenderness.
The Arrival
The road north shed civilization as mile after mile of sodden fields and skeletal trees fell behind him. The manor that crowned the hill ahead appeared suddenly through rain and dusk: a black silhouette, battlements like teeth. The castle loomed as if it had grown from the rock itself. There was a chill to the air that had nothing to do with temperature—a sense of expectancy that tightened Cargrave’s throat.
At the gate, Krull, a hunchbacked servant with a slate-gray face, received him. Krull's movements were precise and oddly animal; his silence filled the corridors more oppressively than the draft. He led Cargrave through cavernous halls where torchlight threw the plaster into grotesque relief, until a pale figure emerged from a shadowed doorway: Maude. Time had not been kind; her cheeks were thin, and her eyes carried the hollow look of someone who has learned to live with persistent fear. Their reunion was brief, urgent—Maude’s embrace trembled, and in a voice that broke she begged Cargrave to save her or help her flee.
Then Cargrave saw him: Baron Sardonicus. The sight struck like a blow. The Baron's face was locked in a hideous, eternal smile, the skin drawn taut as if fixed over an invisible rictus. His lips were pulled back into a grin that revealed too much of his teeth; his eyes remained unnaturally wide and glassy, giving the impression that the smile had colonized all expression.
The sound of his voice was low and bitter, laced with resignation. He told Cargrave that the affliction had clung to him for years and that every remedy had failed.
He had placed his last hope in the London physician.
The Curse Revealed
Cargrave set himself to a methodical inquiry, probing both flesh and psyche. He questioned the Baron, inspected the muscles and nerves that controlled the face, and watched for any involuntary motion. He found a man tormented not only by physical distortion but by guilt and a gnawing fear that something in his past had turned upon him.
One evening, while the once-grand dining hall sagged with dust and memory, Sardonicus told the tale in a voice soaked with shame and rancor. He had been born poor—once Marek, a desperate commoner whose hunger for escape led him to a ruinous choice. When his miserly father died, word spread that money had been buried with the corpse. Marek, fevered with the hope of sudden fortune, had exhumed the grave by lantern light and rifled the dead man's hand to seize the gold. In that moment of desecration, something answered: his face contorted, the mouth twisted into the grin that would not release him, and his life tilted into monstrous extremes.
The act itself seemed to have forced a new identity upon him; greed braided with guilt, and Marek became the cruel, paranoid Baron Sardonicus. Maude, who had once loved him differently, had been ensnared and broken by the man he turned into. Cargrave, though repelled, felt the physician's compulsion to act—both to heal the visible deformity and to set right any moral wound that might yet be remediable.


















