Chapter 838: The Wonders
Chapter 838: The Wonders
They walked to the opposite side of the mansion.
Where the front faced the cliff and the endless cliff, the back opened onto something else entirely. Something that made Peter stop dead at the threshold and simply stare.
The grounds stretched before them like a painting come to life.
Manicured lawns rolled outward in impossible waves of emerald green—acres upon acres of perfect grass, vast as any championship golf course but dedicated to a single, ancient purpose.
Dark wooden fences bordered the land, curving with the gentle hills, disappearing into distant groves of ancient trees that looked like they’d been standing since before Columbus had sea legs.
A driveway wound through the center—tree-lined, elegant, serpentine—flanked on both sides by perfectly spaced evergreens standing like soldiers at eternal attention. The corridor they formed drew the eye inexorably toward what waited at the far end.
The stable.
No—not a stable.
A palace.
The building rose from the landscape like it had been transplanted straight from the height of European aristocracy and then upgraded by someone who hated half-measures. Warm honey-colored stone walls.
Arched windows that caught the golden light of late afternoon like stained glass. A slate roof with dormers, cupolas, and weather vanes shaped like running horses spinning lazily in the breeze.
It was easily the size of a small mansion—larger than most homes Peter had ever stepped foot in—built with the kind of architectural grandeur that belonged to kings, emperors, and men who planned to outlive empires.
"Holy shit," Madison whispered.
The approach took several minutes even at a brisk walk.
The grounds were that vast. Paddocks stretched on either side—multiple training arenas, riding rings with perfect footing, open fields where horses could gallop flat-out without hitting a fence for half a mile.
A lake glittered in the distance, ringed by willows, placed with deliberate perfection so the animals could drink and cool themselves under dappled shade.
As they drew closer, the details sharpened.
The main entrance was flanked by actual stone columns—like something pilfered from a Greek temple and then polished to modern insanity.
Above the massive double doors, carved deep into the lintel, was a symbol Peter didn’t recognize—ancient, angular, radiating quiet significance in ways that made the hair on his neck stand up.
The doors themselves were dark, heavy wood reinforced with iron bands, standing open to reveal the interior.
Inside was even more impressive.
Vaulted ceilings soared overhead.
They soared twenty feet overhead, supported by exposed wooden beams that had been carved with intricate patterns. Chandeliers—actual crystal chandeliers—hung at intervals, casting warm light across the space.
The floor was stone, worn smooth by centuries of use that hadn’t actually happened yet, covered in places by thick rugs that muffled footsteps; interlocking rubberized brick for traction and comfort. Automatic waterers.
Hay racks that seemed to have refilled themselves.
Each stall door was wrought iron with gold accents, nameplates blank and waiting.
At the far end, a central atrium opened to the sky—glass roof retractable, sunlight pouring in on a circular exercise area ringed by viewing balconies.
Tack rooms flanked the space—rows of saddles, bridles, blankets, all gleaming, all perfectly maintained, like they’d been polished yesterday even though no one had set foot here in decades.
Twelve stalls lined the walls—six on each side—but these weren’t ordinary stalls. Each one was the size of a small studio apartment, polished wooden doors gleaming under soft overhead lights, brass nameplates currently blank and waiting for names to be etched.
Automatic watering systems hummed quietly, climate control kept the air perfect—cool but never cold—and the bedding looked softer than the average five-star hotel mattress.
Peter half-expected the straw to smell like vanilla and money.
The tack room opened off to one side like a luxury boutique someone had forgotten to lock.
Custom racks held saddles of every style—English, Western, dressage, jumping—all hand-stitched, leather still supple and oiled. Bridles hung from brass hooks in perfect rows, bits polished to mirror shine.
Riding crops, whips, helmets, gloves, blankets—everything organized with museum-level precision, like the previous owner had been waiting for an inspection that never came.
But it was the horses that commanded attention.
Four of them.
They occupied the stalls at the far end of the stable, and each one was magnificent in its own right.
A black Arabian mare watched them approach with eyes like polished onyx—intelligent, assessing, ancient wisdom trapped in equine form.
Her coat gleamed like wet silk under the lights, muscles shifting beneath skin that seemed almost too perfect, too sculpted. She held her head high, ears pricked forward, radiating the kind of quiet arrogance that said she’d seen empires rise and fall and still looked fabulous doing it.
A grey Andalusian stallion stamped one massive hoof and tossed his head, mane flowing like molten silver water. He was power incarnate—barely contained, muscles coiled like springs under dappled hide.
The kind of horse that had carried armored knights into battle and probably won most of those battles by sheer intimidation. His nostrils flared once, scenting the newcomers, then he went still—watching, judging, ready to explode into motion the second someone gave him an excuse.
A chestnut Thoroughbred stood calm and patient, built for speed, every line of her body engineered for velocity. Long legs, deep chest, elegant neck—she had the quiet confidence of a champion who knew exactly how fast she could run and didn’t feel the need to prove it every five minutes.
Her eyes were soft but sharp, the look of someone who’d crossed finish lines first and never looked back.
And then there was the white one.
Peter’s breath caught in his throat.
It looked Friesian, but wasn’t. It was a unique breed, standing apart—not just in a larger stall, but in a different category of existence. She was massive—built like a legendary war-mare, powerfully muscled yet unmistakably feminine, with feathered legs that looked carved from moonlight.
Her coat wasn’t just white; it was luminous, catching every stray beam of light and reflecting it back with an almost supernatural glow. Her mane and tail flowed like liquid starlight, moving in gentle currents that had nothing to do with air movement or drafts.
Her eyes were the color of winter storms—grey, deep, knowing. Ancient.
This wasn’t just a horse.
This was something else.
Something that belonged in myths. In stories where gods rode across storm clouds. In legends where horses carried heroes to impossible victories against impossible odds and then quietly demanded tribute afterward.
Peter walked toward the stall without consciously deciding to move.
The other horses watched. The Arabian’s ears flicked forward. The Andalusian went statue-still. The Thoroughbred’s nostrils flared once, scenting the air.
But the white...
The white Friesian had been looking at him since the moment Peter crossed the threshold.
Waiting.
Peter reached the stall door. The horse stood close enough to touch, radiating warmth, presence, and something deeper—something that made the fine hairs on Peter’s arms stand straight up.
Recognition.
Not the casual curiosity of a horse meeting a new human. Something older. Something that remembered. Like the Friesian had known him before this moment. Before this life. Before whatever thin veil separated then from now.
"Hey," Peter said softly.
The Friesian lowered her head.
Pressed her velvet nose against Peter’s palm.
And something passed between them.
Not words. Not thoughts. Just... understanding. A connection forged in spaces that didn’t follow normal rules. The same way the mansion had recognized him. The same way the car had recognized him. The same way everything in this impossible place seemed to know exactly who he was—and exactly what he was becoming.
"Yeah," Peter whispered, stroking the velvet nose with slow, reverent fingers. "I’m here."
ARIA stood behind him, wings half-unfurled, mismatched eyes seeing layers no human could. "Master... that horse. It’s not entirely normal."
"I know."
"Do you?"
"I know enough." He didn’t take his eyes off the Friesian. "I know she’s mine. I know she’s been waiting. And I know that when I ride her, it’s going to feel like something I’ve done before. Something I’ve always done."
The horse exhaled—warm breath washing over Peter’s hand like a benediction.
Agreement.
Madison came up beside him, wonder softening her features into something almost vulnerable. "What is this place, Peter? Really? The mansion, the car, the server, and now... horses that look at you like you’re their long-lost king?"
He looked at her. At Soo-Jin standing guard by the stable entrance, eyes scanning shadows like she expected assassins to drop from the rafters. At ARIA glowing faintly in the warm chandelier light, wings rustling with quiet amusement. At the white Friesian who had been waiting—waiting—for a master who finally arrived.
"Home," he said simply. "This is home."
The Friesian nickered softly—low, contented, almost amused.
The stable hummed with something that felt like approval.
Outside, the sun began its slow descent toward the cliff, painting the impossible grounds in shades of gold and amber, as if the universe itself was rolling out the red carpet.
NOVGO.NET