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Start writing free →The Letter
The letter arrived on a Tuesday, which Elsa Vogt would later consider significant — Tuesdays had always been the day her husband had died, the day the telegram came, the day the world cracked at its seams and let in the cold. This letter bore no official seal, no army insignia, only a wax blot the color of dried blood pressed with a device she did not recognize: a compass rose with one arm broken. She stood in the doorway of her cramped Leopoldstadt apartment for a full minute before she stepped inside.
Inside, she set the letter on the table beside a cold cup of coffee and a draft transcript of the Schenker Archive's inventory — work she had taken home against regulations, because there was never enough daylight and the gas lamps at the archive left her eyes burning. She had been a senior archivist at the Imperial and Royal Archive before the war. Now she was a junior cataloguer on a conditional appointment, allowed in the building on the sufferance of Dr. Brenner, who had made clear that her reinstatement was provisional and contingent on her continued discretion. She sat. She opened the letter.
The handwriting was educated — broad, confident strokes, the German of someone schooled before the war, before the empire fell and the new governments began rewriting even the alphabet. There were only three lines: You catalogued the Hartmann collection in the spring of 1913. One item is missing. Come to the Café Central at six o'clock on Thursday if you wish to understand what that means for your continued employment. It was unsigned.
Elsa read it twice, then a third time. She folded it carefully along its original creases and tucked it beneath the false bottom of the writing box her mother had left her — the one place in the apartment she was certain had never been searched. Her coffee had gone cold an hour ago. She drank it anyway, standing at the window, watching a man in a grey overcoat pause at the corner below and then, after a moment too long, walk on.
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Explore the Story Bible →Story Bible — Characters
3 charactersElsa Vogt
ProtagonistDisgraced Viennese archivist, late 30s, sharp mind, haunted by her husband's death in the war. She lost her senior position through a disputed cataloguing decision and now works on provisional reinstatement.
Count Albrecht Reinhardt
AntagonistCharming, dangerous, last scion of a fallen noble house. The Reinhardts lost their estates in 1919 but Albrecht retained influence through a network of pre-war connections.
Inspector Kovar
SupportingWorld-weary detective who owes Elsa a debt from before the war. Works in the Political Section of the Vienna police, which means he knows where the bodies are buried.
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47,832
Total Words
7 days
Current Streak
6,830
This Week
Daily Words — Last 7 Days
Novel Goal Progress
60%Plan your launch before you need it.
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Plan your launch →Launch Center
T-Minus
90
days to launch
August 30, 2026
Logline
“When an archivist uncovers a Habsburg conspiracy, she must choose between justice and survival.”
Target Audience
Historical fiction readers, fans of Umberto Eco and Donna Tartt
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Design your cover →Genre Presets
The
Crimson
Path
Sophia Bennett
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Brainstorm character backstories, break through plot holes, get feedback on your opening chapter — the AI assistant understands your manuscript context and gives you answers that actually help.
Meet your AI assistant →AI Writing Assistant
PublisherMate™ Intelligence
Help me develop my antagonist's backstory. His name is Count Albrecht Reinhardt — fallen noble, charming, dangerous.
Count Albrecht Reinhardt works beautifully as an antagonist because his danger stems from loss, not cruelty.
Consider: the Reinhardts were once patrons of the very archive Elsa works in. Albrecht grew up watching his father trade rare manuscripts for political favors. He learned early that knowledge is currency — and that the people who control archives control history.
After 1919, when the estate was seized, Albrecht didn't rage. He adapted. He cultivated the same charm his father used at court, but now applied it to a new Vienna — bureaucrats, journalists, men who owed favors. The missing Hartmann item isn't greed. It's erasure. There's something in that collection that rewrites the Reinhardt family's role in the war.
His tell: he's unfailingly polite to people he intends to destroy.
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