The keyword structure suggests a serialized fantasy story: "Part 1" implies a narrative. "Rain," "de Grey" (could be a character name or a place like a castle or a dynasty), "Curse," "Dullknight" (maybe a dull or cursed knight). I should treat this as a creative writing task.
The people of Dullkight, too, began to change. They grew listless and apathetic, their eyes losing their luster as the curse took hold. The king, realizing too late the horror that had been unleashed upon his kingdom, was powerless to stop the darkness that had been set in motion. As the days passed, the land continued to wither and decay, and the people of Dullkight became trapped in a living nightmare from which they could not awaken. rain+degrey+curse+of+dullkight+part+1
That is where our protagonist, , enters the story—not as a hero, but as a reluctant witness. Rain is a "puddle-treader," a low-tier aquamancer licensed only to clear clogged drains and redirect minor flooding. She is twenty-three, cynical, and wears a waxed coat that smells like regrets and river moss. She never asked for a curse. She never believed in Dullkight’s old legends. But legends, like damp, have a way of seeping in when you least expect them. The keyword structure suggests a serialized fantasy story: