Cherreads

The Black Chapel

Jaden_Cortezano
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
418
Views
Synopsis
The Black Chapel – Series Synopsis “Some confessions were never meant to be heard.” When a young church archivist, Maria Vescari, uncovers a decades-old pattern of suspicious priest deaths tied to an unregistered rural chapel, she stumbles into a hidden system of power, silence, and murder operating within the Catholic Church. This chapel — known unofficially as The Black Chapel — has no parishioners, no paper trail, and no official clergy. Yet for over fifty years, priests have been assigned to it. Most are dead within months — all listed as natural causes, their bodies cremated swiftly, their files sealed. As Maria investigates further, she discovers the existence of a secret faction within the Vatican known as “The Thirteenth Sacrament” — an internal tribunal operating above the law of Church and state, tasked with punishing clergy guilty of crimes too dangerous or politically costly to prosecute publicly. But the punishment isn't exile or defrocking. It's execution, masked as divine fate. Working alongside a disgraced ex-priest turned detective, Liam Renner, Maria uncovers a sprawling conspiracy that stretches back to post-World War II Europe, where the Church quietly absorbed fugitive war criminals into its own ranks. The chapel was built atop these sins — a place of hidden justice… and now, of endless cover-up. Across twenty seasons, the investigation spans generations, involving whistleblowers, Vatican insiders, forensic experts, rogue priests, innocent victims, and political powerbrokers. As more bodies are unearthed, the mystery expands to include: Illegal sanctuaries for war criminals Secret rituals used to determine clergy fate A coded system for selecting execution targets A Vatican ledger that names every sanctioned death And a final prophecy written in the chapel itself By the final seasons, the Black Chapel is no longer just a location — it’s revealed to be part of a long-standing doctrine buried deep within forbidden Church texts: a ritual sacrament meant to “burn sin into silence.” The series culminates in Maria confronting the current Pope himself, only to learn the final, shattering truth: the last name in the execution ledger… is hers.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - The Black Chapel

The Black ChapelChapter 1: The Archivist

Albany, New York – Diocese Records AnnexOctober 3rd, 2021 – 6:17 PM

The air inside the records room was dry, yellowed by age and silence. It always smelled faintly of mildew, ink, and something bitter — like old paper that had forgotten how to breathe.

Maria Vescari stood in front of a file cabinet that hadn't been opened in years. She wasn't supposed to be here. Not this late. Not alone.

Her keycard shouldn't have worked, either — but it had.

The drawer scraped open with a metallic sigh, revealing a stack of old clergy death reports filed under Clerical D. She scanned the faded tabs: DeLong, Delaney, Desanti, D. Lussaro. That name.

She recognized it.

Father Anthony Lussaro, who'd died earlier that year at St. Irenaeus Chapel — a small, half-forgotten structure tucked in the woods north of town. Heart failure, they said. Peaceful, quiet. The kind of death expected of an aging priest.

But this report…

It didn't match the one she'd catalogued three months ago.

Maria slid the manila folder onto the nearby table. Two documents were missing — the autopsy summary and the funeral clearance slip. In their place, a post-it note:

"Filed under sealed directive — per Archbishop F."

No signature. No seal. Just that cryptic "F."

Maria frowned. This wasn't standard. It wasn't even legal.

She turned to cross-reference the funeral log. But before she could, her phone vibrated. One new voicemail.

Unknown number.

She hesitated — then played it.

"You're not ready for what's buried there, Ms. Vescari. Stay out of it. Confession is one thing… exposure is another."

The message ended with a low static hum that didn't stop. She pulled the phone from her ear — it was still vibrating, even though the call had ended.

She stared at it.

And then, slowly, she turned back to the file.

Taped to the back of Father Lussaro's death certificate was an old, brittle photograph. Black-and-white. Slightly curled. Four men in cassocks standing in front of a chapel with no windows. No name. The wood behind them was black as coal, warped by age or fire.

Maria flipped it over.

Scrawled in faint, shaking pencil:

"The last gate. Silence kept. Blood paid."St. Irenaeus, 1996

She stared at the year.

That wasn't when Lussaro died.

That was twenty-five years earlier.