Baron De Melk 〈UPDATED × 2024〉

It began, as most obsessions do, with a loss. His young wife, Klara, had vanished from their summer garden one twilight. No struggle, no note—only the lingering scent of rain on dry stone and the faintest echo of her final word, “ Melk ,” bouncing off the courtyard walls long after she had spoken it. The servants heard it for hours. The Baron slept with it in his ears.

“Speak her name,” the Baron whispered. baron de melk

That night, the Baron de Melk ordered every obsidian panel smashed. He burned his wax cylinders in the courtyard furnace, the smoke curling into shapes that looked briefly like a woman running. Then he walked to the edge of the cliff and shouted into the gorge below—not a name, but a question: “What followed her back?” It began, as most obsessions do, with a loss

He lifted his bow. The first note he played was Klara’s voice—soft, questioning, as if she were calling from a distant room. Then the note split. Another voice emerged beneath it, low and ancient, speaking a language of stone and water. The Baron recognized it as the sound of the Danube eroding a cliff, or perhaps the abbey’s own foundations groaning under centuries of prayer. The servants heard it for hours

“The echo that learned to listen.”

One night, a blind violinist named Serefin arrived at the castle gates during a thunderstorm. He claimed he could play any note that had ever been sung, if only he could hear its ghost. The Baron, intrigued, led him to the Rotunda.