On the wind-scoured cliffs of coastal Brittany, a forgotten crime lies buried beneath gravel, sea mist, and superstition. When ancient bones are disturbed, an old curse stirs—and something returns to watch, to warn, and to wait.
The Messenger is a chilling gothic tale by Robert W. Chambers, where reason and folklore collide in the shadow of history. As a rational American observer investigates a mysterious burial site, he uncovers the story of a long-executed traitor known as the Black Priest—a man branded in death, cursed in blood, and sworn to return if his remains are ever disturbed.
What follows is a slow descent into unease: a skull that will not stay buried, a death’s-head moth appearing at windows and hearths, masked figures glimpsed in stormlight, and blood trails that defy explanation. Set against moonlit seas, ruined forts, and candlelit rooms, the story builds its terror through implication rather than spectacle, leaving the listener to question whether the horror is supernatural—or the product of guilt, history, and fear.
Narrated by Michael Lyons, The Messenger is a masterwork of fin-de-siècle weird fiction: elegant, ominous, and quietly devastating. It is a tale of omens and inheritance, of old sins reaching forward in time, and of the moment when disbelief can no longer protect the living from the dead.











