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When Lord Barkwith played the first chord, the gaslights flickered and died. The second chord shattered every wine glass in a three-block radius. The third chord… no one agrees on what the third chord did. Official reports cite a "structural collapse." Unofficial accounts speak of audience members weeping blood, of shadows detaching from their owners, and of a low, rhythmic pulse that emanated from Barkwith’s own ribcage.

But it was music that truly possessed him. Not the polite waltzes of the ballroom, but something deeper—a theory that sound could not only be heard but felt as physical force. His tutors whispered of "infernal frequencies." His mother found him in the crypt, recording the resonance of coffin lids. The event that defined Barkwith’s fall was as quiet as it was catastrophic. During a private recital at the Royal Polytechnic Institution, he unveiled his masterpiece: the Organ of Atrocities . Witnesses described a vast instrument of brass and bone, powered by a steam engine connected to a series of tuned church bells and animal intestines stretched across iron frames. lord barkwith

He resurfaced in 1885 in the court of King Leopold II, offering to design a "sonic plantation" where sound waves would force crops to grow—or slaves to dance until their bones powdered. The deal fell through. Leopold reportedly threw Barkwith out a window. Barkwith landed on his feet, unharmed, and tipped his hat. On December 12, 1887, Lord Barkwith checked into the Grand Hotel in Scarborough. He requested a room facing the sea, a tuning fork of pure silver, and three gallons of whale oil. The next morning, the maid found the door unlocked. Inside: a single sheet of music paper covered in a staff of fifteen lines (instead of the usual five), a faint smell of ozone, and a wet footprint leading into the wall. When Lord Barkwith played the first chord, the