sábado, marzo 28, 2026

NEITHER DUST, NOR SHADOW: ALWAYS

 

 


NEITHER DUST, NOR SHADOW: ALWAYS

 

By GAVARRE BENJAMIN


 © INDAUTOR

Cd. De México

©  BENJAMÍN GAVARRE SILVA

Contact: bengavarre@gmail.com

gavarreunam@gmail.com


         

 

GENRE: Gothic Horror / Historical Drama

SETTING: Late 18th Century (New Spain)

LOCATION: A Baroque palace in the heart of Mexico City.

 

DRAMATIS PERSONAE

 

DOÑA LEONOR DE NAVARRA (50s): The widowed Marchioness. A woman of marble and shadow. Her religious fervor is a fortress built to contain a sin from her youth.

LUCRECIA (19): Her daughter. Initially a creature of silk and light, she becomes an "empty vessel" for the Knight's dark influence.

CÉSAR (21): Her son. Arrogant, volatile, and desperate for an authority he cannot truly claim. A bastard prince unaware of his own hollow bloodline.

THE DUKE OF CÓRDOBA (30s): A pragmatist and skeptic. He represents the Enlightenment arriving too late to a house ruled by ancient ghosts.

PETRA (40s): A servant of mixed heritage. Her prayers in Nahuatl and Spanish are the house’s only—and failing—defense.

THE KNIGHT OF ALARCÓN (The Portrait): An entity of oil and malice. He is not just a painting; he is a predator waiting for the blood to come home.


 

ACT I: THE ARRIVAL

 

SCENE 1

 

INT. THE PALACE - MAIN HALL - DAY

 

A monumental but somber hall. Heavy tapestries shroud the stone windows, allowing only golden, dust-laden threads of light to seep in. The smell of incense and dampness is almost palpable. A patch of shadow above the fireplace marks where the painting will hang. Several servants, beaded with sweat and an instinctive dread, finish hoisting a colossal canvas covered in a red, dusty velvet that looks like dried blood. CÉSAR watches, glass in hand. His elegance is rigid, nervous.

 

CÉSAR

Another anonymous gift? This house is becoming a warehouse for charities, Mother. If the sender seeks LUCRECIA’s favor, he should have sent flowers, not this bundle that reeks of a crypt. I formally object to it hanging here.

DOÑA LEONOR does not look at him. Her fingers, entwined in a silver rosary, are white from the pressure.

LEONOR

(A voice like ash) Call your sister, CÉSAR.

PETRA peeks from the shadows of a corridor. She does not enter the room, but lingers at the threshold, making a sign of protection with her fingers.

PETRA

Señora... the men say the painting weighs more than it should. They say the air turns cold at its touch. It is no good omen to hang the unknown in the heart of the home.

CÉSAR

(Irritated, masking a shiver) Kitchen gossip! The weight is in the frame, and the cold is but the stone of this hall. Elena, stop sowing weeds and find my sister.

LUCRECIA enters. Her light silk dress is the only bright thing in the room. She approaches the painting with a curiosity bordering on hypnosis.

LUCRECIA

It seems to... pulse. Is it for me, Mother?

CÉSAR, in a fit of arrogance, yanks the velvet. The cloth hits the floor with a heavy whisper.

 

SCENE 2

 

THE PAINTING.

 

The Knight of Alarcón. A man of frigid beauty. His dark eyes have an impossible depth, as if the oil were stagnant water. His smile is a mere fold of contempt.

 

LUCRECIA

(In a whisper) He was waiting for me.

CÉSAR

(Trying to laugh) It is... a magnificent piece. Look at that composure. Some Spanish noble wished to remind us of our lineage. Elena, why that face of horror? It is but paint and oil.

PETRA

(Terrified) His eyes... My lady, the knight blinked. I swear it by the Virgin.

CÉSAR

A trick of the light, woman. It is called chiaroscuro. Designed to deceive simple eyes. But...

 

He stops. LEONOR is a statue of salt. Her rosary snaps, and the wooden beads clatter to the floor like hail.

 

LEONOR

(Voiceless) Take it down. To the cellar. Cover it with ash.

CÉSAR

Absolutely not! It is the finest ornament this hall has seen. LUCRECIA, tell us: does this hidalgo from Alarcón frighten you?

LUCRECIA

(Eyes fixed on the canvas) No. He does not frighten me. He recognizes me.


 

ACT II: THE INFECTION

 

SCENE 3

 

INT. MAIN HALL - NIGHT

 

Moonlight pours through the skylight. The Knight looks younger, more alive under the silver glow. PETRA enters to extinguish the candles. She walks pressed against the opposite wall. Upon reaching the painting, she is stopped by an invisible force. From her perspective, the Knight seems to have slightly tilted his head toward her.

 

PETRA

(Whispering in Nahuatl and Spanish) In tloque in nahuaque... Blood of Christ... begone, shadow. Return to your land of oil.

Suddenly, a crack: the sound of a wooden frame groaning under enormous pressure. PETRA flees, dropping the candle snuffer.

 

SCENE 4

 

INT. MAIN HALL - ANOTHER NIGHT

 

LUCRECIA stands before the painting. She wears her nightgown, her hair undone like a dark cataract. Her face is a mask of absolute devotion. She does not speak. She tilts her head, listening to a whisper the audience cannot hear. Slowly, she leans in and rests her cheek against the cold, painted face of the Knight. She reaches out and touches the Knight’s painted lips. As she withdraws her fingers, they are stained with a shimmering black oil. LUCRECIA brings her fingers to her mouth, tasting the oil as if it were a sacrament.

 

LUCRECIA

(A whisper that curdles the blood) — Always.

 

 

SCENE 5

INT. LIBRARY - DAY

CÉSAR and the DUKE OF CÓRDOBA. CÉSAR drinks with anxiety.

 

DUKE OF CÓRDOBA

It is strange, CÉSAR. Your sister has declined every invitation. They say she spends her hours conversing with a wall in the hall.

CÉSAR

(Aggressive) Women’s fancies. She is fascinated by that painting. She claims the Knight tells her stories of the court... details she couldn't possibly know. Things about... secret executions and stained beds.

 

LUCRECIA appears in the doorway. Her paleness is cadaverous.

 

LUCRECIA

Fire does not burn the truth, Duke. It only purifies it.

CÉSAR

LUCRECIA, return to your chambers.

LUCRECIA

(Walking toward him with an unnatural slowness) He has told me about you, "brother." He says the name Navarra is too large for you. He says the roots of this house are not of nobility, but of betrayal... and that the blood in your veins is not the same as the man who died in that bed.

CÉSAR

(Pale with rage) Silence, you madwoman!

LUCRECIA

(Close to his ear, cold) You tremble, CÉSAR. Is it fear... or does the bastard’s instinct recognize the voice of its true master?


 

ACT III: THE SACRIFICE

 

SCENE 6

 

INT. THE PORTRAIT HALL - NIGHT

 

CÉSAR enters with a torch and a dagger.

 

CÉSAR

(Screaming at the painting) Out! Stop poisoning the air! If you are a man, fight; if you are a demon, burn!

 

He lunges. As the steel is about to rip the canvas, the torch flame turns blue and dies. Only moonlight remains. CÉSAR’s shadow on the wall begins to move on its own. The shadow of the Knight’s hand emerges from the frame and encircles the neck of CÉSAR’s shadow. In the real world, CÉSAR clutches his throat. His feet rise off the ground. No screams, only the sound of bones snapping under invisible weight. LUCRECIA appears, watching with terrifying peace.

 

LUCRECIA

He says that steel cannot wound one who is already eternal, CÉSAR. Only blood can seal the pact.

 

CÉSAR falls dead.

 

SCENE 7

 

INT. HALL - DAWN

 

CÉSAR’s corpse is at the table. LEONOR sobs in terror.

 

LEONOR

It is the payment. He has come for what is his. CÉSAR was his reflection... the fruit of a sin I committed in Alarcón.

 

Enter LUCRECIA. She wears a dark, masculine suit of an old cut. Her posture is martial; her voice is now a dry, hollow echo.

 

LUCRECIA

(With the cadence of 17th-century nobility) Do you weep for the straw the wind carries away, Leonor?

 

LEONOR

(Terrified) You are not my daughter!

 

LUCRECIA

Your daughter was an empty vessel. I have merely filled it.

 

SCENE 8

 

THE CLIMAX.

 

LUCRECIA lunges at the Duke with unnatural speed. She emits a cold hiss. The servants flee. LEONOR stands and draws a dagger. She walks toward the painting.

 

LEONOR

To me! Look at me, shadow of my disgrace! I was the one who broke the vow. Take the root, and leave the fruit!

Leonor drives the dagger into her chest. Her blood splashes onto the Knight’s face. LUCRECIA collapses like a marionette. The painting begins to drink the blood; the red turns black, and the Knight’s face sinks back into the darkness of the oil.

 

LEONOR

(Dying, reciting the exorcism) It is corpse... it is shadow... it is dust... it is nothing!

 

LUCRECIA / KNIGHT

(A dual, overlapping whisper) No, Leonor. It is oil... it is flesh... it is shadow... it is always.


 

EPILOGUE

 

INT. THE PORTRAIT HALL - SIX MONTHS LATER

 

A gold-framed mirror occupies the place of the painting. LUCRECIA and the DUKE stand before it.

 

DUKE OF CÓRDOBA

The nightmare has passed, LUCRECIA. Fire consumed that tainted canvas. At last, we can live.

 

LUCRECIA

(With a perfect, frigid smile) You are right, Duke. Fire burns the canvas... but blood... blood always finds its way home.

 

LUCRECIA leaves. The Duke remains, adjusting his collar. In the mirror, his reflection begins to pale. Behind him, in the reflection of the empty wall, the Knight’s eyes open within a black stain.

 

VOICE OVER

(A double whisper) — Welcome to the family.

 

SLOW CURTAIN.


 

 

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