Wasn’t expecting that fs but a good read c:
Paul loved escape rooms.
He just loved them. The lovingly-crafted set designs and props, the electric buzz that came from finding hidden items and putting together puzzle pieces, the euphoria of cracking a code, the adrenaline of the ticking clock, and most importantly, the thrill of the escape.
His friends had long ago stopped accompanying him every week, sometimes more than once a week, to escape rooms in his area. Especially once he started driving hours out of town just to try new escape game centers for a fresh hit of that delicious escape puzzle challenge.
Paul now preferred to go alone anyway. People just bogged him down. He didn’t come to make friends, he came to win.
Months of hot anticipation finally bore fruit when the “Great American Escape” opened its doors to him, at long last. Great American, according to the billboards and posters strewn around town, was the primary attraction of an entertainment mega-complex which took the place of a long-disused waterpark hotel. It would be huge, he knew. Not just physically. His great fear was that it would blow up on social media– maybe even on his feed– and then the solutions would be spoiled for him. So he had to be first.
Great American Escape was so new the day he strode in there that there were still “CONDEMNED” notices stuffed into the recycling bins and old lists of health & safety violations stuck in the vents.
“One ticket for Mystery Escape,” Paul, slapped his money on the counter and smiled at the teen boy working behind it. He was a short, lithe, wide-eyed man in his thirties with dark greasy hair and one navy blue university sweater he’d kept in moderate repair for a decade and a half.
“No group?” The boy asked. When Paul confirmed this, the boy said, “You’ll have to wait until a group comes in. You need three people at least.”
“When is the next group coming?” Paul asked.
“We don’t have any groups booked today,” the boy replied.
“... So, you’re not gonna let me in?”
“... Um… yeah. I can’t. Sorry.”
Paul put down another handful of bills. This wasn’t his first rodeo.
“I’ll buy three tickets,” he said. He made sure to draw the boy’s attention to the extra $20, a little tip for a helpful front deskman.
The boy, who was thin and bored-looking with a patchy teen mustache and his elbow resting on top of a stack of I Escaped stickers, glanced at the security camera which flickered in the corner, its blinking red eye frosted over with a decade of dust. The boy took the $20 and shrugged.
“You won’t be able to escape,” the boy said. “It’s impossible by yourself. But if you want to try… I guess you can try.”
The boy led Paul towards a set of slightly rusty elevator doors, past posters and cardboard cut-outs of characters from “Rattlesnake Gulch Treasure Hunt,” “Escape From Venus,” and “King’s Dungeon Jailbreak.” Paul planned to return to these, but he’d start by going straight for the crown jewel– Mystery Escape, which had been advertised exclusively with nothing but an open doorframe leading to darkness.
The boy went over basic safety guidelines. The door wouldn’t really be locked, red things were real alarms, things that said “staff only” were really for staff only, etc., blah blah blah, boring stuff. Paul listened impatiently, but carefully, only because knowing what was “real” (and therefore inconsequential) would give him a leg up in the game.
“The game starts when the elevator door opens,” the boy finally said. “Floor 3. Good luck.”
The elevator bell dinged, and the doors slid open. The light flickered. Paul stepped inside.
He waved to the boy as the doors shut. He pressed 3.
The light above flickered. Paul could almost see his reflection in the red-rusted metal doors.
The elevator began its ascent, and right away, Paul could tell something was strange. There was a creaking noise, like a train braking. The light flickered. The light sputtered out.
The elevator stopped.
Paul was trapped. It was pitch black inside the tiny car, which made no sound or movement.
The first thing Paul did in any escape room was to check around for hidden props. Keys, ciphers, and puzzle pieces were often hidden around a room for players to find, which would then give them a clue as to what to do next. Paul checked around the elevator car for hidden tools. He pulled up the mildewy carpet by its frayed edge– nothing under there but more mildew. But wait! On the bottom of the carpet there were numbers and letters: EL1. What could that possibly mean?
The next thing Paul did in an escape room was to interact with anything interactable he could see. In front of him was a series of numbers, 1-5, a “door open” and “door close” button, and “emergency.” But “emergency” was red, and red things were inconsequential.
Paul pushed all the buttons but the last. To his surprise, the door began to open slightly– then jammed.
Paul mused about the possible meanings of “EL1.” E was the fifth letter, and there were five numbers… But L?
Maybe it was a cipher. Paul thought on this.
He started trying combinations of buttons. The cipher thing was the key somehow, he knew it. A cipher worked with a code. Where was the code? Maybe it had to do with the symbols, not the numbers…
Suddenly, it all made sense to him. He pressed a set of numbers and then hit the door open button.
To his delight and satisfaction, the elevator doors creaked open. And with them came light.
Paul could see well enough now to see that he faced a concrete wall, which took up the whole lower half of the exit. But above that half, Paul could see a hallway of a hotel, so tantalizingly close.
Paul had beaten escape rooms that had physical components to them before, so this was cake. He gripped the edge of the concrete ledge in front of him and pulled himself up. He let out a grunt as his head and arms made it over the threshold. He just had to find something to grip so he could drag the rest of himself through the gap, and then it was on to the next puzzle.
The elevator lurched.
There was a sound. A scrape, a crash, a wet squelch, a snap. It all happened at once, and it was the loudest sound he ever heard.
When Paul finally sat up, he was somewhere completely different. It was dark here. Darker than the elevator car. The darkness of this place was crushing, like the depths of the deep ocean. There was a smell of meat all around. Paul quickly dismissed the idea of trying to adjust his eyes– he’d navigate by feel.
Paul reached out into the darkness and felt nothing. He stood. His hands pushed him up from a strangely soft, lumpy floor. He noticed something strange about the sound of his movements, and let out an inquisitive “Hey!” to check the echo. It did not bounce. He was… outside?
No– he must be in the disused waterpark proper. The building was huge. Paul was delighted by this thought. He’d chosen the right room.
Paul felt around for a wall, a light switch, a puzzle. Anything.
“Abandon all hope, ye who enter here,” said a deep voice.
“Hello?” Paul said after a moment.
“You lived a selfish life, Paul. You cared for nothing and no one but yourself and your own pleasure. You were an idolater, a heretic. You raised the Escape Game to the heights of a god. Pity that from this place, there is no escape.”
Paul listened carefully to the monologue. Selfish. Idolater. Raised. Heights. These things might be clues.
“Paul,” said the deep voice, which seemed to come from above, below, and all around him, “You died a foolish death. Pity that you did not suffer. But now, you will suffer for eternity.”
Paul was already climbing up a staircase he’d found. It was the disused waterpark. Raise, he thought. Heights. The key was to go up.
He found a craggy, warm wall. There was something under his hand– a button? He pushed it in, hard.
Under his hand, a huge glowing red eye flew open.
“OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOHHHH!”
The eye blinked in pain and fury, welling up with tears. A thousand more eyes flew open along the wall before him, and Paul saw that it was not a wall at all, but some kind of enormous creature. It stirred, its red gaze illuminating the space around them.
“Stupid man. You woke something up.”
But now Paul could see the entire room– or space, or whatever it was. What he’d taken to be the “floor” was a mass of flesh– human hands, it looked like, reaching up stiffly. The hands started to stir as the creature woke from its slumber. What Paul had taken for a staircase was not that.
Paul was making some real progress. As the hands clamored over each other, rising like tentacles from around the immense eyes, Paul hopped onto the face of the thing and started using the eyes as hand-and-footholds, which was their obvious use. Paul could spare no time on figuring out little things like that the honest way, he was on a clock. As he stepped on the creature’s eyes, it let out another unearthly roar and started to rise.
There was a hole in the ceiling. Yes– this was meant to be a cave of some sort, and it had an exit.
“You idiot,” the voice boomed. “You–”
Paul kicked the creature in the eye a few more times to make it rise faster. A tsunami of pale, writhing hands on wiggling stems shot up towards him to slap him away, but by the time they reached him, he was already through the hole.
Paul scurried through the tunnel as fast as he could. If it was a three-person puzzle, you couldn’t waste any time.
He came to the next room, which was well-lit– a nice reprieve. In this room, a sweltering cave, some props department had gone all-out carving little demon faces that stuck out from the sides. These gargoyle-like stone structures leered at him and grinned in anticipation.
“The flametongue is coming, kindling,” the demon voices hissed. “Ready or not!” Paul heard a splashing, gurgling sound up ahead. He took quick note of some of the quirks of the gargoyle faces– most of them had black scorch marks on them, but some didn’t. That was a clue. The light from the other end of the tunnel grew brighter, as did the gurgling. Paul realized what he was meant to do, climbed up the protesting gargoyles, and found a set on the ceiling which had no scorching on them. Below, a wave of red-hot boiling sulferous-smelling magma flowed down, passing over the other gargoyles, who screeched and sputtered in it. Another puzzle solved. Paul dropped down once the stones cooled, and hurried up the tunnel– no time to spare. Only one more wave of “fire” passed before he solved the gargoyle pattern and pulled the right ones out of the wall in sequence to reveal a hidden exit.
This escape room was huge. He made his way through a room which featured a river of moving knives, which he was able to avoid by memorizing the timing and patterns, and climbed up into a room full of blistering ice and animatronic zombies which lurched toward him, their bodies crackling as they froze just as soon as they’d moved, their lips split by the cold. This puzzle was a simple matter of lining up the giant shards of ice in the room so that the light concentrated and blasted a hole through the glacial wall.
Paul’s own body was profoundly frostbitten by this point, but he didn’t notice. He was on a timer.
By the time Paul finally made it past the “three-headed-dog on a chain” puzzle, that subterranean voice from the first room had caught up with him.
“Paul,” the voice said. “There is no hope. There is no escape. Do you understand? You are dead, Paul–”
“Ssh,” Paul said, gazing at the puzzle before him.
The door was immense. It seemed to stretch above him and beyond for miles. It was carved from stone older than the bedrock of earth, and above it, in an arch as large as the firmament, there was carved a phrase:
Abandon all hope, ye who enter here.
This was clearly important, because the deep voice had already voiced it earlier in the game. After checking the area for tools, Paul ran through anagrams. There were a lot of little props around the big door– lots of discarded holy texts, some bones, some strange bits of giant insectoid carapaces which Paul could not immediately identify. The bibles and such had bits burned and torn off of them in places. Abandon all hope, ye who enter here. That was a ciper, maybe. He was sweating. He had to be at nearly an hour already. He started arranging the bones.
“What you are doing is futile nonsense,” the deep voice said.
Aha! By turning the phrase above the gate into numbers and then matching those numbers to the non-burned sections of each holy text, organized by the printing date, Paul had discovered an anagram which, when re-ordered, spelled out skeleton key prop, ds flo knemb yyuq. Paul had only bothered to spell out the first three words, however, due to the time crunch. That was all he needed to understand what to do, and he had done it: he had connected all the bones into one big key.
“I don’t think you understand, Paul. This is not a game. You cannot escape your fate. You cannot escape your death. You cannot escape damnation. You cannot escape from Hell.”
Paul slid the giant skeleton key into the lock. It took all of his strength to shove it to the back. Behind him, the host of hell scrambled over each other up the lip of the abyss– the thousand hands and eyes, the fire-spitting gargoyles, the lurching ice zombies, the great black dog, and many others, come to claim him for their own special torment.
Paul turned the key. There was a click.
Well– more of a thunderous clunk.
The deep, gravelly noise of the stone door opening reverberated all throughout Hell.
“What the–”
“Hell yeah!” Paul shouted. He ducked through the door.
The red eye of the security camera caught it all. The man, crawling through the gap in the elevator. The lurch. The fall. The split.
The hopeless paramedics, the traumatized front desk boy, the shaking venue manager, the anxious lawyers, the dozens of police putting up brand-new yellow “do not cross” signage around the old hotel.
The red eye of the security camera watched on as people in grim uniforms put the larger piece of what had been paul into a black bodybag and fetched the rest from the third story floor.
“Used to love this waterpark when I was a little kid,” said one of the paramedics to another. “Now I hope they tear it down.”
“Wasn’t this place a lawsuit magnet back in the day?” said the other. “I remember a kid–”
The paramedics both noticed at the same moment that the body bag was moving. A lot.
“Is he alive in there?” The first paramedic choked out, even though he understood that the answer had to be no. But then the zipper started sliding down. The bag was opening from the inside.
The headless body of Paul Gibson sat up. It reached out with its stumps of fingers, covered in cool dark blood, and rolled out onto the hotel lobby floor. Both paramedics screamed and leapt away as the decapitated Paul stumbled to its feet and lurched forward. It felt around without its fingers, leaving smears of blood on the front desk, the wall, the table, the “do not cross” tape, until it found the small white cooler on the floor. He pried it open with his mangled hands and lifted his own iced head out.
Paul put his head on top of the gristle that was his neck. He had it the wrong way around, but his eyes opened and he smiled through bloody teeth.
“I ss-ss-olved the b-a-ag puzzle,” the formerly dead man sputtered. “Did it a-all mys-self.”
He turned around to face both paramedics, so that his front side faced away.
“Uh… congratulations,” the second paramedic said.
Paul choked up more blood and grinned wider. He stumbled toward the front desk, toward the paramedics. They backed away from him in horror as he reached out the wrong way and grabbed a commemorative I Escaped! sticker from the top of the pile.
“Th-a-ank you,” Paul said. “I’ll be su-ure to come back soon!”
You're going for a stroll in the woods one day when you see a person approaching you on the same path you're walking on. From afar it looks like they don't have a face. That's a funny illusion, you think to yourself, but as you pass them you realize they actually don't have a face. Less than a minute later you see the same person approach again, exactly as they had a few seconds ago, and this happens another time, and then again and again, and you realize it's not just the faceless person that is the same. You hear the same exact bird chirps in the same exact order with regular intervals, go past the same trees including a tree stump with a cluster of mushrooms on it and a small ant hill. You want to stop and get your bearings but you can't stop, you just keep walking, passing by the same things and the same person over and over. You're starting to realize something about this person, too, that you hadn't realized before for some reason. They're wearing the exact same clothes you're wearing, they have the same hair, they're basically you. Somehow you know your face is beginning to disappear too, little by little, but you can't check because you can't stop walking and your arms won't stop moving in step with your feet. Soon your face is entirely gone just like the other person's face but you keep walking. You don't remember a time when you weren't strolling through these woods, seeing these same things over and over. You don't remember a time when you had a face.
If you’re into the silly yet eerie strange rule trend on r/nosleep one of my favorites is this story about a cinema usher named Shaun who’s theater has some strange rules he needs to follow. I get why some people would find this repeated trope super annoying but I find some of these stories strangely riveting.
If you’re itching for strange macabre and gorey short horror stories may I recommend this anthology by Adam Cesare, author of my favorite book series ever. Some of these stories definitely made me feel a little queasy
“Ow!”
Ken yanked his hand away from the sink as the water gushing out became scolding hot.
He dunked the burned hand into the Sani sink, which was kept mildly cold.
Ken typically used his bare hands to do the dishes. One of the dish gloves he’d brought in for all the preps and dishwashers to use had a tear in the pointer finger, and the other one just filled with water, even after duct-taping both tightly around his arm. He never figured out where the hole was.
Inspecting his hands, Ken noted the pink splashed all over the back of them, accompanied by a slight burning, almost-itching sensation. He stepped away from the sink, his worn, black sneakers dipping into little puddles on the floor.
His hand throbbed to the sound of his heartbeat. Why do they constantly shove me onto Dish? He thought, exhausted. It seemed like only people with sensitive skin were ever thrown on there.
The other usual dish, Alex, had eczema and kept this giant white bottle of special lotion in her locker.
Outside, a powerful, blistering wind shook up trees and whistled against the building. It was getting late, 10 pm, only an hour before closing.
BAM! BAM! BAM! The powerful knocks on one of the two back doors made Ken jump.
Heart still pounding, It made Ken feel silly when he remembered that Alex and another coworker had slipped outside to smoke on their vapes for a bit.
Trying not to slip on the wet ground, he pushed open the heavy door, which was completely locked from the outside.
Alex and Leyla slipped in, stripping off their heavy coats.
“You don’t have to knock so loudly, you know,” Ken told them as he returned to his spot in front of the sinks. “I’m right next to the door.”
“Leyla just has a lot of pent-up rage,” Alex explained, before hitting the vape and blowing the sweet fragrant smoke into the air. Both girls had to re-tie their hair back into ponytails and tuck them into their work caps.
“Someday, Richie’s gonna write you guys up for this,” Ken smirked. He didn’t get why so many of his coworkers just had to bring their vapes with them to a part-time job. They couldn’t last six hours without it? Why not have the decency to do it in the comfort of your home?
Leyla shrugged. “Richie doesn’t care as long as we do our jobs.”
“And have you been doing that?” Ken raised an eyebrow.
“Do your dishes,” Alex grinned.
“Um,” Ken stopped them from heading back out into the front. “Shouldn’t someone get to cleaning the walk-in?” The three of them turned to the giant, metal door, where the fridge sat.
It was at the very opposite end of the sink, sitting next to the second door leading directly outside. When the restaurant was extra quiet, usually late at night, you could hear the soft buzzing.
Leyla sighed. “Why can’t you do it?”
“It’s not my job,” Ken frowned.
“It’s not ours either,” Alex readjusted her cap, as she did often.
“The prep’s supposed to do it,” Leyla said. “But Dominique left early. So now you should be the one to do it.”
“He’s so messy,” Ken frowned. “He didn’t do a very good job cleaning his station.”
“But he gets his work done the fastest,” Leyla defended.
“Not super effectively,” Ken complained.
“Whatever,” Alex rolled her eyes. “His station looks fine.” Dominique was Alex and Leyla’s friend, as were a lot of people in this place. Friends who had convinced each other to work with them.
Richie’s voice cut into their conversation. The three of them could hear Richie from the front: “Alex! Leyla! Where are you?!”
The girls sighed, and Ken shook his head as he watched them exit out to the front.
He turned to the sinks and got back to work.
Richie was tonight’s shift lead. They were closer to Ken’s age than the high schoolers who snuck out to vape.
As Ken got through the last dirty plate, he froze to an unnerving sound: movement, inside the fridge.
His eyes shot in its direction. No more sound.
The sound had been faint, as if someone, or something, had bumped into something.
Waiting silently for anymore noise, Ken’s heart thrummed in his chest anxiously.
He considered checking inside, just to see, but he told himself to just focus on what he was being paid to do: clean.
Now all he could hear was the rhythm of running water. Outside, he heard the voices of his coworkers welcoming guests. They didn’t get very many customers at this time. He never understood how they could afford to stay open so late.
Once the commotion out front died down, Richie strolled in through the swinging doors. They scooped a foam cup from the racks of ingredients and brushed by Ken, situating themself into the manager's chair, a little black one right in front of the desk, complete with a computer, screens displaying the camera videos, and mini drawers stuffed with so much shit Ken doubted the scribbled-on labels were accurate anymore.
“Richie?” Ken asked.
Richie raised their eyes to Ken. “Mm?”
“Who's gonna clean the walk-in?”
Richie stretched an arm above their head. “Don’t worry about it, Ken. I’ll force one of the girls to do it before they leave.”
Ken nodded. He hated things being left unclean for too long. It was why he was one of the best dishes: he got through them fast just so he didn’t have to watch them sit around in their filth.
“I know. You mostly work with Omar, right? Everything done early and quickly, right? But on my shifts, we like to wait ‘till the end of the shifts. You get a bit dirty after doing it, huh?” Richie smiled. Ken was used to Omar’s shifts; tonight was his first time working with Richie since they became a shift lead.
“It’s an easy clean-up, especially with the aprons,” Ken protested.
Richie nodded. “You know this shift is mostly newbies. Dominique is fast but he’s still a tad careless.”
Ken nodded in agreement.
After a bit, Richie returned to the front. Ken was left with nothing to do. All the dishes were done. All the trash was taken out.
He swept the floor, though it had already been pretty neat from the previous few times he’d swept. Usually, those on dish waited until closing to finally sweep, and there'd always be a fun assortment of trash and fallen food bits scattered about the floor, along with puddles of water and some mysterious sludges.
Ken had to squeegee some of the water on his side of the room into the big drain underneath his station. If the building had been designed right, the drain would be slightly lower in elevation compared to the rest of the floor, but unfortunately, some doofus made it the same height, and a bunch of water collected behind it, cloudy and gray from whatever elements accumulated underneath the sink.
Then he heard it again. A bumping sound. This time louder than before. Were Ken’s ears playing tricks on him?
His heart thumping, he ignored it. After finishing the floor he decided to reorganize the condiments on the rack behind the prep station. Unfortunately much closer to the walk-in, but he preferred it over going out front to help clean and serve whatever random customer decided to grab a burger at 10:30 at night.
Ken tried not to think about the walk-in. He hadn’t felt so nervous about it since his first few days working here. He’d calmed down since, but working with a new crew under new conditions was spiking his anxieties again.
Finally, he pressed an ear against the metal door and listened hard. No sounds.
10:50 approached, and the crew up front was bringing back the last of the dishes, including items they were technically not supposed to be taking back until exactly 11. But most of the leads preferred to close as early as possible. No one wanted to go home thirty minutes before midnight. Even during the summer, when the high schoolers weren’t concerned about school.
Finally, Ken watched Richie tell Alex to clean up the walk-in, and for Leyla to clock out. Leyla ignored them and instead stayed to help Alex clean.
They were in there for maybe ten minutes or so. Ken thought he should help, but decided it wasn’t worth it and continued scrubbing his station. He always closed it well.
Finally, Ken watched Alex and Leyla lug out a ginormous black trash bag from the fridge.
“Fuck, this is heavy,” Leyla murmured.
Ken cringed when they nearly dropped it. Ken hated it when the bag hit the floor.
The girls disappeared out into the dark, windy night. The door shut behind them. They’d forgotten to jam a hat or trashcan onto it to keep it open.
Ken went up to the fridge and slipped inside.
He was impressed. The walk-in was spotless.
Nearly. He spotted a small, red smear on the floor just beside his feet.
Ken shook his head. How could they miss such an obvious spot?
As he crouched down to his knees to wipe it away, his eye caught something underneath the racks.
Bending low, he pulled it out and inspected it. And then yelled.
A human finger. Bits of red gore hung from the middle joint where it had been severed.
Heart beating faster, Ken couldn’t believe it.
He barged out of the fridge just as Alex and Leyla returned. Their clothes were splotched and stained from the cleaning job.
“Alex! Leyla!” Ken snapped. “Look at this!”
He held up the finger to them, letting them both take in the sight.
Ken huffed, “It’s paramount that you make sure to take out all of the trash!”
~~~
Other short stories by me:
Those Green Eyes
One of the first stories I posted on wattpad.
On there I'm at 71 short horror stories right now, I'm not sure if I will ever post all of the stories I wrote before on tumblr, but here is one.
Word count: 1105
TW: Psychological horror
I look up at the old school building, just for a second I see the cracks. The surrounding plants around it have started growing inside. Some of the windows are broken.
The broken bell goes off and it almost sounds like a muffled scream.
I quickly go inside.
Inside the right classroom I take a seat at my table, it is a scratched old table with graffiti, not done by me.
Slowly the classroom fills with my 'classmates', these dolls with keys in their backs. They enter with their rattling keys and stiff movements. Opening and closing their wooden mouths, like they are talking to one another. I can't hear them, but I'm not interested anyway.
Lastly, the 'teacher' enters leaving its books on the desk and 'starting the lesson'.
I don't care to listen to the clacking of its mouth. It doesn't matter anyway, ignoring is for the best and pretending.
At some point the 'teacher' points at me and stops.
Carefully I stand and walk towards it, followed by the empty stares of the other painted wooden faces.
It is quiet.
It has always been quiet.
My 'teacher' seems to have stopped working, so I stand behind it and gently turn it's key until it starts working again.
Then just as quietly as before, I return to my seat.
I stare out of the window, without actually observing what is happening. Well nothing is happening really. Nothing ever is.
Just nature taking over this school, this empty building.
Even during break I just stare outside, while those dolls are clacking to each other.
If I go anywhere the dolls will be mean to me, they will sometimes throw things at me or clack mean things about me. So it is better just to remain in one place. They are defective.
I return home without looking back.
I live in an old dollhouse, it's almost completely empty and always silent.
I love the silence.
I enjoy the emptiness.
The rest of the house is just like the city with plants growing everywhere, inside and outside the buildings.
All buildings are slowly breaking apart and I just ignore it.
It's all fake anyway.
It's all useless anyway.
Nothing matters here, just that I do what I have to do and return 'home'.
The next day when I go to 'school', something strange happens.
The 'teacher' introduces a new 'classmate', another doll.
With a key and a painted face, just like any other.
It takes the empty seat next to me.
The new student seems to try to get my attention, but I just start doodling in my workbooks. Pretending I don't see or hear her.
The day passes by quite quickly, and I return to my old dollhouse.
I walk up the creaking stairs and past the rotting woodwork.
In my room I stare out of the hole in the roof, at the dark, starless abyss, most people call the sky.
And just like always, another day has passed.
The next day I do the same as all the previous days.
Stare out of the window, turn a key and return to my seat.
Then lunch comes around.
The new student is getting more annoying.
It has even started jumping in front of me to get my attention, which made the other dolls clack their mouths like they were laughing.
It's becoming more and more difficult.
Then suddenly it locks it's wooden hands around my wrist.
No matter how hard I struggle, It won't let me go.
Then it started walking and I am forced to follow.
We go up to the rooftop.
"I need you to listen." The voice coming out of the doll sounds vaguely human.
While blocking the only exit, it let's go of my wrist.
What does this thing want from me? None of them ever try to contact me as long as I ignore them, why does this one do?
The new student puts a hand under its chin, then a short click could be heard.
She removes her face, I guess she was wearing a mask.
I look at her face, her nose, her eyes, her eyebrows... Everything about her looks too familiar.
She looks like...
me...
Why does she look like me?
"I need to speak with you, please listen." She pleads with my voice.
I don't like where this is going and I take a step back. She doesn't seem to mind though.
"I need you to start looking around you and not ignore everything."
I remain silent.
"Remember what the doctor told us, about the ignoring of bullies and unfortunate situations? Well he was wrong."
I stay quiet and stare past her at the door, so close yet so far away. I just want to ignore her and continue my day.
"You can't ignore everything, you've already done that too much. You need help. You need to tell others about what's going on and learn not to just take everything."
So annoying.
"I don't care... I can just ignore it." I mumble to myself.
"Please don't." the other me pleads, her eyes starting to look red and watery.
I don't answer and take a few steps closer to the door.
"No you can't leave!" She yells.
I glare at her: "You're not supposed to exist. The doctor wasn't the only one who told me to just ignore it. Everything is better this way."
Defeated, she moves aside, her head hanging down: "S-so it has already gone this far... I see, it really is too late."
In silence I continue towards the door.
As my hand brushes the door handle she suddenly seems to want to give it one more try: "This whole city will collapse on top of us! It will kill us!"
"Then let it collapse. I can't go back to the time, when I still observed, when I still listened and I still felt everything. That time was hell. It was worse than death."
"But it is not too late. You can still get the help you need, before your world will collapse!"
"I don't want it."
I shove her aside and return to class.
The classroom looks more in disrepair than before we left, but I ignore it.
As school continues on, more cracks start appearing and I haven't seen the other me since I left her.
She probably won't return.
She must have left.
Given up entirely.
Well it's not like she could change my mind or anything.
She has no power over this place, unlike me.
I don't want to leave this place.
Yes, it's empty and it's lonely.
It might all be breaking apart, but this is my only safe haven. My own place of peace and quiet.
My own safe little world.
When the teacher stops working while pointing it's finger at me again, I turn the key on his back and return to my seat.
See, it all works perfectly fine.
I'm perfectly fine.
Nothing is wrong.
As long as I just ignore it all
And then at last the cracked walls can't hold the ceiling anymore.
I can hear its creaking.
But like always... I just ignore it.
The Whistle
It was 11:30 in the morning, and the school grounds were quieter than usual. Most students had already shuffled inside for class, but Sky and Talia lingered outside, taking their time with lazy footsteps and casual conversation.
“So that’s what happened yesterday,” Sky said, finishing her story with a sigh.
Talia snorted. “Sounds stupid.”
“That’s because it was stupid.”
A small hum escaped Talia’s throat in agreement. She let her arms swing at her sides, eyes drifting across the empty school yard. Then her expression shifted—just slightly—as something else came to mind.
“Oh, have you heard about that new creepypasta character?”
Sky raised an eyebrow. “Creepypasta? No. What character?”
“They call him The Mimic,” Talia said, eyes bright with the kind of curiosity that always danced around horror stories. “Apparently he can shape-shift. Like, into anything. People, objects, whatever.”
Sky tilted her head. “Okay, that’s actually kinda cool. How do people even know he exists?”
Talia looked around for a moment before answering, her voice dropping just a bit. “Some people said they saw him changing shape before they were attacked. But there’s something else—right before he strikes, they say you hear this weird, creepy whistling.”
They both stopped walking, instinctively scanning the area. The breeze blew gently across the field, ruffling leaves and whispering through the trees, but other than that, there was nothing unusual.
“Well,” Sky said, trying to shake off the chill that had snuck up her spine, “that’s cool, I guess.”
“Yeah,” Talia murmured, already turning toward the school. “We should head inside.”
Sky nodded and followed for a few steps—then cursed under her breath when she felt something loose. Her shoe was untied.
She crouched down to fix it, fingers fumbling with the laces. Just as she tightened the last knot, a soft, eerie whistling drifted through the air behind her.
Faint. Slow. Almost playful.
Sky froze.
She stood up slowly, heart thudding in her chest. “Talia?” she called, trying to laugh it off, her voice cracking just a little. “If that’s you messing with me, you’re not funny.”
She rounded the corner toward the front entrance of the school—then stopped dead in her tracks.
Talia was lying on the pavement. Her limbs were limp, her eyes open but unblinking. She didn’t move.
Sky staggered back a step, panic bubbling up in her throat. “Talia?”
Behind her, something creaked.
The bench she had passed moments ago began to shift, its shape warping in unnatural, sickening ways. Metal bent like clay. The wooden slats stretched and split, folding in on themselves.
And then the thing stood up.
No longer a bench. No longer anything human.
It grinned at her with too many teeth. And began to whistle.
Sky didn’t scream. She couldn’t. The sound stole the breath right from her lungs.
All she could do was run.
Sort of reminds me a bit of We Came to Welcome You by Vincent Tirado and The September House by Carissa Orlando.
My most recent short horror story.
Word count: 724
Trigger warning: Blood (who would have guessed)
It was just half an hour when it happened.
I had come to the decision that my house was in need of a rather intense cleanup.
Starting with the living room, I took out all the junk and other stuff and then started cleaning.
I glanced at the wallpaper, pained by how ugly it truly is without any of my stuff cluttering around it. This wallpaper had belonged to the previous owners, it hasn't been too long ago since I had moved in and I hadn't really taken the time to change it.
So what's a better time than now?
I walked towards one of the walls that was facing away from the windows, took a chair to stand on and placed my fingers over the paper's exterior.
It was a strange sensation, is this really paper? I thought to myself.
I hesitated.
Lowering my hands again and just stared for a moment.
Then other thoughts started to convince me to continue: This must be some kind of fancy wallpaper I don't know about. Fancy, but ugly, that explains the texture. I should remove it.
No, it needs to be removed!
Again I raised my hands and started by putting my fingers in between the wall and the wall at a place where it was already slightly loose.
Suddenly I noticed that I was touching something wet and sticky. Something of which I was certain that it couldn't be glue.
I swiftly retrieved my hand only to find the tips of my fingers to be soaked crimson red.
There's no doubt about it...
It's blood.
I immediately got down from the chair and ran towards the phone.
I need to call the police! Was the only thought running through my head.
Dialling the number, it luckily didn't take long for someone to pick up. I told them about the situation and that it was making me fear for my safety. I was told to wait by the door and open it for them.
A little later the doorbell finally rang, I felt a bit underwhelmed when I saw that they had sent just a single officer to check in on me.
Had they thought me mad?
"Good morning sir, Please show me what you found." He greeted me.
I took the man into my living room and showed him the spot.
"Good God..." He murmured.
He reached for his walkie-talkie and pressed a button.
"This is officer Green... Send to the bleeding house alert. I'm in need of backup. Over."
Some white noise left the small object, but nothing audible.
"This is officer Green. Does anyone copy. Over." He seemed to be slightly panicking.
Drip...
Drip...
I heard something coming down from upstairs and it didn't sound very good.
"Sir, I got to check something real quick." I said to the officer, though I don't believe he heard me at all. He seemed to be caught up in the buzzing of his communication device.
I ran up the stairs.
The dripping seemed to come from the bathroom.
Opening the door I found something horrifying.
Instead of water, blood was dripping out of the faucet.
Slowly filling up the tub with the dark coloured liquid.
I tried closing the faucet, but it only got worse.
Blood started pouring out.
I left again quickly, closing the door thoroughly behind me, trying to forget about what I had just seen and proceeded to my bedroom.
This wasn't in any way better.
I felt cold when I stepped into a lukewarm puddle of the sticky substance.
It was coming down from the walls, dripping, colouring and messing with all the furniture in it.
Entering the small hallway again, the walls had taken a colour of dark red as well.
Careful not to slip, I made my way back downstairs again.
"Sir, have you reached your colleagues yet?" I frantically ask the officer standing facing the wall quietly.
Something is wrong though.
Something about him seems so much different than how he was before.
The air around him...
In his hands he's holding a big piece of wallpaper and he's covered in blood.
Without looking my way, he starts talking.
"Perhaps this is its way of cleansing itself."
His voice sounds different too.
"What the hell do you mean?!"
"Usually when a wound is bleeding, it is in a way cleaning itself. The bigger the wound, the less chance of infection. The dirt will be washed away by the blood itself."
I feel anger and panic boiling up in my body: "Are you trying to say that I'm the cause of this?!"
For a moment there's silence, but then he shrugs.
"Nah, I wouldn't know that."
I loved this! Idk why it didn’t get more attention
Saturday Story #2: Down By the Bay
In the several years I've lived in this small town, it never rained. I remember growing up, not knowing what rain was until my parents and I visited extended family in another state. During the week we were there, there was a day where it downpoured. I remember sitting on one of the couches in the living room, curled up out of fear and asking my parents what was going on. They told me that it was raining and explained very broadly how the water cycle works. It was such a brand new and interesting concept to me. The instant returned home, I wanted to tell my friends about rain. My parents told me not to, that we were living in a decade long drought and that bringing up rain would make people sad. I didn't want to make anyone sad with my excitement, so I simply forgot about telling anyone.
Then I remembered.
About a year ago, a new family moved into town. They seemed like a run-of-the-mill, suburban family. Their eldest child, the daughter Korie, was my age (16), and their youngest, the son Thomas, was seven. They moved right into our neighborhood, right down the street. We were on summer break at the time with only two weeks left until school. And when school did inevitably come around, I decided to try and make friends with Korie.
Korie was probably one of the nicest people I've ever met. She was calm and would always strike up a conversation with me before class started. She had this way of talking to people that would instantly put them at ease. Countless times I would make jokes that she had some sort of undiscovered super power, or maybe she was a long lost goddess. She would always smile, giggle and shake her head at me. I'd invite her over after school and sometimes on weekends if her parents didn't have any plans. It was one of these weekends that Korie would inevitably ask the question.
"Isn't it weird that it doesn't rain here?"
"What?" I replied, somewhat caught off guard.
"Yeah, haven't you noticed? Ever since I moved in it hasn't rained once."
I remembered what my parents told me; "It's because we're in a drought. It's lasted for decades at this point."
"A drought ?" Korie looked at me, confused, "Weird. I feel like my parents would've known about one before we moved in."
We were both silent for a moment before Korie's phone buzzed.
"Parents need me to watch my brother, I'll see you later."
Then she left.
I had lived in this town all my life and never thought the drought was weird. No one else did. And maybe her parents just never looked into the town's history far enough to know about it. Maybe all they knew was that the crime rate was low and the houses looked decent.
Never did I think that maybe, just maybe, there was a secret being kept, that even I didn't know.
Life continued on as it was. Wake up, eat breakfast, get ready, go to school, get home, do homework, hangout with Korie, go to bed, and repeat. My usual boring routine, interrupted by a knock at my door on one Thursday afternoon when Korie had stayed home.
It was Korie's dad.
"Hey, kiddo. Your parents home?"
"No, my dad's at work and mom's running a bunch of errands before her shift."
"Oh," There was something in his facial expression that I couldn't place. It was like uneasy curiosity. "Would it be alright if I asked you something then?"
"Uh...sure?" I scanned over him, a little freaked out. I didn't know Korie's dad that well, and absolutely wasn't sure of his intentions in that moment.
"So, Korie mentioned to me that this town is in a drought, and that you were the one to tell her. I was just wondering if that's true?"
"I mean, it's never rained once in my life since I can remember, so yeah, I think it's true."
"And everyone in the town knows this?"
"Probably, a lot of them have been here for generations."
Korie's dad just stared at me as he thought. It felt like I could see the gears turning in his head.
"Okay, well, thanks for the talk, pal. I'll uh, I'll see you around then." He gave me an awkward smile before stepping off the front steps and heading down the street. I figured that would be the last time Korie's dad would be interested in the drought. It wasn't. Soon after, he started protesting at Town Hall and trying to publish articles in the local newspaper about how a town was trying to hide a drought from the media. He created conspiracies over it, things like the government was doing some sort of testing, or this was once an uninhabitable site caused by radiation. He went crazy. All over a drought. A lot of the townspeople simply huffed and shook their heads at the whole thing. A few tried to argue with him, and some even tried to silence him. That was the weirdest part. There were a handful of people treating this weird guy's dilemma like it was taboo. Not like he was crazy, but like he shouldn't be talking about it. It confused me, all of this over a drought? Why would people even bother?
My attitude quickly changed as soon as Korie went missing. It happened a week ago. Her dad reported her missing when she didn't come home from school, after he rushed over to our house. He looked so disheveled and frightened. I didn't know where she was either, I thought she had stayed home sick that day because she wasn't at school. The town joined the police's search efforts. We were out looking for hours, some of the adults posted things on social media for their friends in neighboring towns to see. News stations covered it. I was so shocked, scared and confused. I prayed that no one in the town had taken her. I prayed that she wasn't hurt, hoping that her dad's outburst hadn't caused someone to go over the edge.
I've been crying for the past few days. She was my best friend. Everything feels off. And today, when I looked out my bedroom window, I saw it.
The town has been in a drought for decades.
Today..
it finally rained.
THIS ONE IS REALLY GOOD
“Boys, don’t play in the woods! If you get mauled, you could die out there.”
That was the warning parents in our town told kids like me and my friend Beckett.
Technically, we obeyed them.
About a mile into the woods near our street was an abandoned bomb shelter. In the middle of the clearing was a slanted door jutting out of the ground, with two outward swinging metal panels that could be deadlocked from inside.
The furnished bunker had been stocked by some insane doomsday prepper in the 90s before they deserted it. Beckett and I discovered it unattended ages ago, making it the perfect safe, secret weekend hangout for two 10 year olds.
In the fall of my 5th grade school year, my parents announced that we were moving.
For old time’s sake, Beckett and I decided to chill one last time in the bunker. Saddened, I said goodbye to the piles of canned food, bottled water, flush toilet and electric generator.
“Pity you won’t get to try all this stuff” Beckett sighed. “Someone could survive for like 3 months with all the things down here”.
“Maybe” I laughed doubtfully.
Afterwards, I bid goodbye to him, shut the bunker door and went home. My family moved across state the next day.
I didn’t think about Beckett much after then. I’d made new friends and assumed he did too, which I imagined was why he never wrote.
In the winter of my 5th grade school year, that bunker suddenly re-enters my mind.
While opening a stationery cupboard in my classroom, the door jams. I can’t open it until I notice a chair blocking it from the outside. That’s when an insidious thought invades my head.
Could the same thing have happened to Beckett on that night? Could he be missing and alive in the bunker? I remember those words: “Someone could survive for 3 months down here”. Which means…
Immediately, I race from the school in panic, whizzing past confused students and teachers. Paranoid, I board a bus straight back to my hometown.
Reaching that sloped door on the forest floor, my worst fears are confirmed. A heavy boulder is perched on top, obscuring it. It must’ve rolled down the hill and pinned the door shut after I left. Adrenaline screeching, I throw myself at the boulder and heave it off.
Nothing could have prepared me for the unfathomable sight I see when I pry open the bulkheads. The boy I’d said goodbye to in the bunker is no more. In his place is a yellowed, emaciated, incoherent, balding, bearded…man.
While I went to college and became an elementary teacher, Beckett was trapped in that hole, screaming every night, completely alone.
If my mind ever recovers enough for me to teach 5th grade again, I’ll have a lesson for my schoolchildren.
Boys, don’t play in bunkers. If you get trapped, you could survive down there…
…for 20 years.
Here’s another silly strange rule story about a poor guy who starts working at an unusual oil rig.
~Art~ she/they/heShort Scary Stories 👻 @MonsterbloodtransfusionsAi ❌🚫
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