Blackgarden is a dark gothic fantasy thriller set inside the hidden machinery of crown, state, memory and murder.
Beneath the visible world of governments, records and royal continuity lies Blackgarden: a secret archive where names are erased, truths are buried, and the dead are filed away as if history itself could be managed. It is not merely a place. It is a system built on silence, power and fear - a place where the past is not preserved, but controlled.
Most people will never know it exists.
Those who do rarely leave unchanged.
For generations, Blackgarden has catalogued the impossible, contained the inconvenient, and hidden the truths that would break nations if they ever reached daylight. Its handlers believe procedure can tame horror. Its archivists believe records can master monsters. Its masters believe every weapon can be stored, named and used.
Then long-buried secrets begin to surface, and Blackgarden opens itself to the one force it was never designed to withstand.
Caine is not a hero. He is not a saviour. He is the man history calls when clean hands are no longer enough. Across centuries, courts, ministries and hidden offices have used him, feared him, denied him and written him out of the official record.
But some records do not stay buried.
As the archive begins to reveal what it has kept, the line between preservation and control collapses. Old crimes return. Forgotten names demand witness. And the institution built to survive every scandal, every succession, every war and every corpse in its care discovers that some things cannot be locked away forever.
Because some places do not keep the past.
They weaponise it.