1031: Story 1031: The Gentleman Butcher 1031: Story 1031: The Gentleman Butcher The town of Red Veil was quaint once.
Nestled between ashen woods and a river that never ran clean, it was the kind of place where shutters stayed closed after dark, and the fog whispered your name if you lingered too long.
Then came the plague.
And with it, the Butcher.
Not the kind who worked meat and bone behind market stalls.
No, The Gentleman Butcher was something else entirely.
He came in a coach drawn by horses that never breathed, dressed in a suit that never stained, and spoke with a tongue dipped in honey and horror.
He called himself Mr.
Thorne.
Polite.
Impeccable.
And utterly inhuman.
His first act was charitable.
He offered to feed the hungry.
The town, now starved and surrounded by ghouls, had little choice but to accept.
The meals were warm, seasoned, and satisfying.
The wine was sweet.
The bread soft.
But soon, the missing began.
Children first.
Then vagrants.
Then the mayor’s daughter.
And yet the people kept eating.
Because the meat was too good to question.
Mr.
Thorne ran his operation out of the old gristmill, a place once condemned for the wailing sounds within its walls.
Now, it was candlelit, humming with classical music and the rhythmic sound of cleavers dancing like ballerinas.
No one saw the inside.
No one but Tilda Marris, a former healer who’d lost her license for experimenting with blood rituals.
She had a hunch.
And a dagger etched with the names of the dead.
Tilda followed the stench beneath the cellar door, past silk-lined hallways and shelves of cured “delicacies.” She found Thorne not hunched or grotesque, but serenely operating on a still-living corpse, his hands a blur of grace.
“You’re butchering people,” she hissed.
He smiled.
“Correction,” he said, placing a still-beating heart in a glass jar.
“I’m refining them.”
He gestured toward a wall of masks, each one a face peeled and preserved.
“Flesh is just material, my dear.
And I am an artist.”
Tilda tried to strike, but her blade passed through him like air.
Because Thorne wasn’t a man—not anymore.
He was a revenant fueled by guilt, cursed by an eldritch force to feed humanity its own sins until it no longer noticed.
And Red Veil had accepted his banquet willingly.
When the undead swarmed the town that night, Thorne invited them to feast.
Not on the townsfolk.
On him.
He offered himself in slices, singing as they devoured him.
Because his flesh regenerated.
Over and over.
An eternal buffet of agony.
The ghouls never left Red Veil again.
And neither did he.
To this day, travelers claim to hear violin music in the fog.
They say a man in crimson waits by the old mill, offering a meal to the lost.
He bows.
He serves.
And if you ask his name, he’ll smile gently and reply:
“Mr.
Thorne, your humble host.
Care for a bite?”