In the fog-choked arteries of a steampunk London, where gas lamps flicker like dying hopes and airships hum through skies heavy with coal dust, Hyde Unbound reimagines the classic tale of duality as a descent into visceral horror. This is no gentleman's struggle between good and evil, but a grotesque unraveling of flesh, bone, and soul. Dr. Henry Jekyll's serum doesn't merely transform; it tears him apart, birthing Edward Hyde in a symphony of ripping skin and grinding bone, each change a perverse ecstasy that binds him to the monster within. The city itself becomes a crucible, infected by a plague that twists its denizens into reflections of Hyde's fractured essence, their bodies contorting in alleys and sewers as London drowns in blood and decay. This novel is a plunge into Gothic terror, where the cobblestones steam with arterial spray and mirrors reflect horrors too raw to name. It weaves body horror with psychological dread, painting a world where the line between man and monster blurs until it vanishes. From Jekyll's secret laboratory aboard a shadowed airship to the detectives chasing a killer they cannot comprehend, every chapter pulses with the serum's dark promise: to unleash what lurks beneath. Hyde Unbound is a tale of hunger, corruption, and a city consumed by its own hidden sins, crafted for those who dare to gaze into the abyss of human nature and find it staring back, grinning with jagged teeth.