RSS

Tag Archives: fright

The glass didn’t break with a crash; it exhaled.

The glass didn’t break with a crash; it exhaled.
Arthur stood before the bathroom vanity, watching the silver backing of the mirror flake away like dead skin. In the reflection, his face was a map of a country that didn’t exist anymore. The skin was the color of bruised fruit and old parchment, stretched tight over a skull that felt three sizes too small for the thoughts inside it.
He reached up, his fingers trembling as they brushed through his hair. It was a thick, light brown thicket now—feral and charged with a static that made the fine hairs on his arms stand up. It felt less like hair and more like an antenna, catching signals from the floorboards, from the pipes, from the weeping cracks in the ceiling.
“Quiet,” Arthur whispered.
The static only got louder.
The Geography of the Interior
He leaned in until his nose nearly touched the cold surface of the glass. His eyes were the problem. They were two emeralds dropped into a basin of red ink. The capillaries had blossomed into a crimson web, a frantic network of roads leading nowhere. He tracked a single pulse in his temple—a rhythmic thump-thump that sounded like someone hammering a nail into soft wood.
Then he saw it. The mark on his forehead.
It wasn’t a wound, not exactly. It was a leak. A dark, jagged puncture where the “sensible Arthur”—the one who paid his taxes and remembered to buy milk—was slowly draining out. In his place, something vibrant and terrifying was rushing in.
The Melt
The walls of the bathroom began to lose their resolve. The sage-green paint started to swirl, liquefying into a watercolor haze that bled into the air. The world was losing its edges. The hard lines of the towel rack and the door frame softened into smears of teal and ochre.
Arthur opened his mouth to scream, but the sound didn’t come out as a voice. It came out as a color—a bright, jagged yellow that tasted like copper pennies.
He realized then that he wasn’t looking at a reflection at all. He was looking at a window. He was the king of this melting room, crowned in a light brown halo of chaos, presiding over a kingdom of beautiful, absolute nonsense.
“There is so much more to see,” the room whispered, “once you stop trying to make sense of the light.”
Arthur stopped blinking. He didn’t want to miss the moment the last of the logic finished draining onto the floor. He gripped the edge of the sink, his knuckles white, and stared into the emerald heat of his own gaze, waiting for the rest of the world to catch up to his madness.
 
Leave a comment

Posted by on February 5, 2026 in horror story, mad story

 

Tags: , , , , , ,

The Watcher of the Cracks

The Watcher of the Cracks

The air in the Wasteland of the Forgotten didn’t move; it pressed, thick with the dust of ages and the silence of the long-dead. This was the domain of Malak, the Watcher.

Malak was less a creature and more a convergence of dread, draped in rags the color of grave-soil. His face was a hollowed skull, his eyes two pinpricks of yellow hunger. In his skeletal hand, he held a lantern—an antique cage of pitted brass, whose light was an impossible, warm amber. It was the only light in the infinite black, and it was the problem.

His sole, unending task was to patrol the endless, cracked earth. The cracks weren’t from drought; they were fissures in reality. Beneath the crumbling crust lay the Before, and the things that still squirmed there longed for the air, for a taste of the thin, weary world Malak occupied.

The weirdness wasn’t the monster, but the light. Malak wasn’t lighting his own way; he was illuminating the cracks. And every time the warm glow fell upon a particularly deep, vibrating fissure, he had to stop. He’d bring the lantern close, its heat making the dust shimmer, and listen.

Tap. Tap-tap.

The sound was like a tiny, insistent knuckle-rapping on glass. It was the sound of something from the Before—something with too many limbs and no real shape—testing the barrier. Malak’s duty was horrifyingly simple: if the tapping was too quick, too loud, or if the amber light caught a sudden, glistening wetness oozing up, he had to feed the crack.

Slowly, agonizingly, he would lower his lamp, not snuffing it, but placing it gently over the most active fissure. The tap-tapping would cease, replaced by a sucking sound, and the light—the precious, warm, only light—would dim, then flicker, then be gone. The thing below had consumed the illumination, the hope, of the little flame.

Then, Malak would remain in the absolute dark, his skull tilted, waiting. After an eternity that might have been a minute, a tiny, fresh flicker would reignite inside the empty brass cage. A new spark, a new life, drawn from the sheer, unending need for a Watcher. And Malak would lift the lamp, its amber glow illuminating the next set of cracks, and continue his patrol, knowing that eventually, he would have to feed the light away again.

He was the guardian of the dark, and the perpetual sacrifice of the light.

The Ledger of Ash and Stone

The figure known only as the Scribe of Silence (the lantern-bearer) had a singular, maddening realization: the cracks in the ground were not new. They were the seams of an ancient wound, and the things that crawled out of them had a disturbing habit.

The ruined tombstones scattered across the cracked plain were the first victims. They weren’t merely weathered by time; they had been scoured. Malak, the Scribe, knew the process well, for it was his fault.

A thousand years ago, this was a proud, vast necropolis, a fortress of memory. When the Great Tear first opened, spewing forth the Grave-Flesh—amorphous, hungry, and impossibly patient—the people fled. The priests tried to seal the Tear with prayer. The warriors tried with steel. Malak, then a common grave-tender, watched them all fail.

The Grave-Flesh did not eat bodies. It ate identity.

When it spilled out, it crept onto the grandest mausoleums, the tallest pillars, and the most lovingly carved headstones. It covered the stone like a damp, black mold. Where it lingered, the names disappeared. The dates vanished. The sentimental epitaphs—Beloved Father, True Friend, Eternal Rest—were polished away until the stone was blank and cold.

The crumbled tombstones in the image are the ones the Grave-Flesh has finished feeding on. They are smooth, faceless wreckage, the stone equivalent of a man’s mind wiped clean.

Malak’s curse is that he was the last one alive, forced to watch the final, agonizing erasure of his own people. His lantern’s light is not a guide, but a warning beacon he must shine only on the new cracks. He is searching for any stone that still carries an inscription, an old mark, or a piece of a forgotten name.

His fear is that one day, he will turn his lantern’s gaze upon the shattered remnants of the necropolis and find that not a single stone bears a mark, leaving the Wasteland perfectly, horribly, clean—the final triumph of the Grave-Flesh. And when the memories are all gone, Malak knows, he will be next.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on October 28, 2025 in Horror, scare, Scary

 

Tags: , , , , ,

Shadow People?

stories for children and adults

I heard a sound by my bedside last night,

I heard a strange sound; I got such a fright.

As something passed by me deep in the night,

I heard a faint sound; did it want my poor life?

**********

I made not a sound; I was still, in such fright,

As I lay in bed in the deep of the night,

I could hear it close by, how I longed for the light.

What was the dark thing probing the night?

**********

An evil black form, a shadowy sight,

Began to rise slowly in front of my eyes.

As I lay in bed on my left-hand side,

The dark, wicked thing rose slowly into sight.

**********

I could move not a muscle; I was frozen in fright,

As the dark frightful vision continued in height,

Till it’s malevolent eyes were almost in sight.

Only then did I close mine, despite the dark night.

**********

I knew it was wicked, evil personified,

That he wanted my sight, the light of my life.

I closed my eyes; shut them tight as the night.

Evading the Grim Reaper’s deathly cold scythe.

**********

Finally, eventually, when I opened my eyes,

I thought it was gone, departed my side,

But it was still there, though lower this time,

Starting beginning to rise over again.

**********

How could I be free from the terrible beast,

That wanted my soul, my heart and my peace?

Perhaps, if I kept my eyes firmly closed,

It might give up and leave me alone.

**********

So I closed my eyes, though still in such fright,

And I prayed that I’d last out the night.

Although its Dark Presence was close to my brow,

I kept my eyes shut so it wouldn’t bother me now.

**********

The Darkness and danger passed from me that night,

It vanished, departed, left my bedside.

I rolled over, so comfy, lulled back into nod,

Till the next time it happened it was just me and my God.

A note: This happened to me on several occasions when I was young.

******************************

sparkClick HERE to visit my online book shop,

where you can purchase my eBooks

**********

 

I DON’T CARE WHAT YOU CALL ME

AS LONG AS YOU ENJOY READING MY STORIES.

 
 

Tags: , , , , ,