Welcome to Ecky's lair, where the shadows whisper and the unknown beckons. Under this pen name, I delve into the eerie realms of horror, the supernatural, and the paranormal. From cosmic horrors to urban legends, my tales weave the dark and the uncanny with a touch of poetry. Occasionally, a hint of tickling laughter slips through the cracks, adding an unexpected twist. Follow me into the abyss if you dare, and let the stories take hold.
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I actually quite like this track and poem.
Stardragon Love
A cosmic ballard
When comets fall and stars grow old,
Still he waits in skies of gold.
From flame he came, not forged but born,
A lonely oath through worlds war-torn.
No name could bind, no chain could hold,
His heart a forge, his gaze ice-cold.
Then darkness split the sky anew—
Three heads roared with wrath they drew.
Ghidorah came with storm and fang,
The cosmos cracked with thunder’s clang.
But Stardragon, soul of fire and flight,
Rose fierce against the endless night.
Their clash lit stars that never fade,
A battle sung where myths are made.
And though no mortal sees them fight,
Their shadows blaze in endless night.
Disclaimer:
King Ghidorah is a fictional character owned by Toho Co., Ltd. This video is a fan-made tribute and is not affiliated with or endorsed by Toho. All rights to the character belong to their respective owners. This project is non-commercial and created for artistic and entertainment purposes only.
#cosmic ballard#dark poetry#poetry#cinematic storytelling#synthwave song#ghidorah the three headed monster
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The Atlantis Deep
A Backroom terror story by Lady Eckland
Starring @solesofwonder returning as Tara Newman
The first-class cabin of the Emirates flight felt like a gilded cage, insulating Tara Newman from the thirty-thousand-foot drop but not from the plummeting sensation within her own chest. Dubai. City of superlatives, gleaming ambition thrusting skyward from the desert sands. It was Mark’s idea, booked months ago during a fleeting period of optimism before the final, ugly implosion of their relationship. “A new start, T! Sun, sea, ridiculous luxury… just what we need!” He wasn’t wrong about the luxury part, she thought bitterly, accepting a glass of champagne she didn’t want. But the new start was hers alone now, tainted by the acrid tang of betrayal and the hollow echo of slammed doors.
She needed this escape, not for relaxation, but for oblivion. A place so overwhelming, so demanding of the senses, that it might momentarily drown out the internal replays of arguments, the phantom feel of his hand accidentally brushing hers, the sheer, unexpected void he’d left. And the Atlantis Deep hotel, a subaquatic fantasy burrowed beneath the Persian Gulf, promised overwhelm in spades. More importantly, it promised water. Endless, blue, chlorinated water. The one place she usually felt truly herself, truly in control. Usually.
Before the Labyrinth.
That name, unspoken, unbidden, sent a familiar chill down her spine, tightening its grip around her ribs. The memory was a shadow clinging to the edges of her vision, a persistent tinnitus of clicking sounds and guttural hisses just beneath the threshold of hearing. Even now, surrounded by polished service and hushed cabin air, she could almost feel the cold, fungal touch against her skin, the oppressive weight of water in impossibly dark tunnels. Dr. Allen called it PTSD. Tara called it being haunted.
Dubai International Airport was a blur of polished marble, rushing escalators, and disorienting multilingual announcements. The chauffeured transfer to the hotel complex – a sprawling artificial island crowned by a structure resembling Neptune’s fever dream – felt equally unreal. Everything was too bright, too clean, too designed. It lacked the messy authenticity of places that grew organically; instead, it felt like a meticulously rendered simulation.
The hotel lobby was an exercise in aquatic maximalism. Towering columns resembling coral formations reached towards a ceiling inset with shimmering fibre optics mimicking constellations. Waterfalls cascaded down glass walls into turquoise pools where exotic fish darted. The air hummed, not just with the murmur of wealthy guests and the ubiquitous climate control, but with the low, subliminal thrum of massive pumps, the lifeblood of this underwater kingdom. It was breathtaking. And deeply unsettling. The constant, subtle pressure of the water surrounding them, unseen but implied, felt less like luxury and more like a slow, crushing embrace.
"Welcome to Atlantis Deep, Ms. Newman," the receptionist, a vision in crisp white, recited with practiced warmth. Her smile was geometrically perfect. "Your Ocean Serenity suite is prepared. We trust the subaquatic environment will meet your desires for unparalleled tranquility." Behind her, a floor-to-ceiling acrylic panel revealed the hypnotic ballet of sharks and rays gliding through artificially blue water.
Tranquility wasn't high on Tara’s list, but immersion was. "Thank you. Could you direct me to the AquaSanctum pool complex?"
"Certainly, madam. Level Sub-Zero Three. Accessible via the Pearl Elevators. It is… extensive. We recommend consulting the orientation map available on your suite’s interactive console." The receptionist’s smile tightened almost imperceptibly. "Enjoy the depths."
Her suite was an opulent bubble resisting the crushing pressure of the Gulf. One entire wall was the promised window onto the deep, a mesmerizing panorama of carefully arranged coral, anemones swaying in engineered currents, and schools of fish performing for unseen guests. It was beautiful, undeniably. But Tara felt a prickle of claustrophobia. The thick acrylic, the reinforced seals around the edges, the faint vibration from the water pressure – it wasn’t a window, it was the wall of an aquarium, and she was inside.
That night, sleep was fragmented, punctuated by dreams that started in the luxurious suite but inevitably bled into slime-coated tunnels and echoing clicks. She’d wake with a gasp, heart pounding, the serene blue glow from the ocean window feeling menacing, the shadows in the corners of the room seeming too deep, too still. The gentle filtration noises morphed into the sound of something heavy dragging itself just out of sight. Was this healing? Or was she just swapping one set of haunted corridors for another, far more expensive one?
The next morning, driven by a need to reclaim her element, she descended to Sub-Zero Three. The Pearl Elevators whispered downwards, pressure changes popping in her ears. The doors opened onto the AquaSanctum.
It wasn't just a pool complex; it was a subterranean water world. Vast, echoing caverns tiled in shimmering mosaics stretched in every direction, connected by arched tunnels and bridges over canals of gently flowing water. Steam rose from thermal pools nestled in artificial grottos lit by flickering faux-torchlight. A massive lap pool, easily Olympic size, dominated the central cavern, its surface impossibly clear and blue under banks of simulated daylight. Waterfalls fed smaller lagoons, hydro-therapy jets pulsed in hidden alcoves, and glowing signs pointed towards specialized zones: 'Cryo-Plunge Pools', 'Sonar Sound Bath', 'Mineral Maze'.
It was the Mineral Maze tunnels that immediately set her teeth on edge. Branching pathways, dimly lit by coloured spotlights embedded in the rockwork, water infused with different salts and minerals in each section. They twisted away into the complex, promising relaxation, but all Tara saw were the inescapable, branching choices of the Labyrinth. She could almost smell the decay beneath the expensive mineral additives.
She forced herself towards the main lap pool, needing the familiar burn in her muscles, the rhythm of strokes, the straight black line on the pool floor to focus on. She slipped into the cool water, the shock momentarily silencing the internal noise. She swam, pushing herself hard, finding a temporary solace in the physical exertion. Other guests were scattered around – a couple doing slow backstroke, a man meditating on a submerged bench, children splashing cautiously in a shallower lagoon under the watchful eye of a parent. Lifeguards in crisp white uniforms stood at intervals, their postures relaxed, sunglasses hiding their eyes even in the simulated daylight. It felt… normal. Almost.
She spent hours there, swimming, resting, observing. Trying to dissect the unease. Was it just her trauma painting familiar fears onto a new canvas? Or was there something genuinely off about this place? The perfection felt brittle. The staff seemed almost too serene, their smiles uniform, their movements economical. The ambient soundscape – gentle waves, ethereal music – occasionally seemed to glitch, replaced by a split-second of grating static or a low hum that felt deeper, more industrial, than the advertised tranquility.
Later, needing to prove to herself she wasn’t completely ruled by fear, she ventured into one of the Mineral Maze tunnels, choosing one labelled 'Magnesium Meander'. The water was warmer here, silky against her skin. The tunnel was perhaps eight feet wide, the ceiling arched overhead, the lighting a dim purple. It curved gently, the entrance quickly disappearing behind her. The promised ambient music was a low, pulsing drone that vibrated in her bones. It was meant to soothe, but it felt invasive. She swam slowly, nerves stretched taut. Every gurgle of water, every ripple reflecting the purple light, seemed like a prelude to something emerging from the depths. She lasted less than five minutes before the claustrophobia became unbearable, the similarity to the Labyrinth tunnels too acute. She turned and swam rapidly back towards the main cavern, emerging into the bright light with a gasp, feeling foolish but undeniably relieved.
Over the next two days, the feeling of wrongness intensified, coalescing from vague unease into specific, worrying observations. The AquaSanctum seemed less populated each time she visited. Guests she’d seen previously were absent. Conversations overheard in the locker rooms or near the juice bar were hushed, laced with anxiety.
"...fiancé went for a 'Deep Tissue Hydro-Massage' yesterday afternoon. Hasn't seen him since," a woman confided tearfully into her phone near the towel station. "Hotel says he checked out, paid cash. Ridiculous! He wouldn't leave without a word!"
"...swore I saw something in the filtration intake grate near the Cryo-Plunge," a man muttered to his friend, nervously scanning the water. "Long… pale… like a snake, but massive. Pulled back when I looked closer. Lifeguard just laughed it off."
"...third person this week," another voice whispered. "They're hushing it up. Rich folks don't like bad press."
Disappearances. Hushed up by staff. Sightings of something large and pale in the water. It was the Labyrinth all over again, repackaged with five-star amenities and a higher body count. Nausea roiled in Tara’s stomach. Part of her, the sensible part, screamed to get out, to take the first flight back to London, trauma be damned. But another part, the part forged in the terror of the maze, felt a grim, magnetic pull. She couldn't run again. Running hadn't helped before; the nightmares had followed her across continents. Maybe facing it, even vicariously, was the only way through.
That evening, armed with morbid curiosity and a rising sense of dread, she returned to the AquaSanctum. The place was almost deserted. The simulated daylight had dimmed to a dusky twilight setting. The ambient music played, but it sounded distorted, punctuated by faint static hisses. Only one other guest remained – a man treading water nervously in the centre of the vast lap pool, his eyes darting towards the shadowed tunnel entrances.
Several lifeguards were still present, but they stood like statues, eerily still, their faces blank, staring vacantly at the water. Tara approached the one nearest the main entrance, a young woman whose name badge read 'Anja'.
"Excuse me, Anja?" Tara kept her voice low, calm. "Is everything alright? The place feels… empty tonight. And I’ve heard some unsettling rumours."
Anja turned her head slowly, her movements stiff, unnatural. Her eyes were dilated, unfocused. "The AquaSanctum operates at optimal serenity parameters, madam," she recited, her voice monotone, devoid of inflection. "Guest flow fluctuates naturally. All systems are nominal."
"Nominal?" Tara pressed, glancing at the nervous man in the pool. "People are saying guests have gone missing. Vanished."
Anja’s lips stretched into a horrific approximation of a reassuring smile. "Guest privacy is paramount. Unscheduled departures are processed efficiently. We invite you to embrace the tranquility." She turned rigidly back to her vacant contemplation of the pool.
A cold dread washed over Tara. They weren't just hushing it up; they were compromised. Drugged? Hypnotized? Something worse?
The man in the pool caught her eye again, his face pale with terror. He paddled closer to the edge, keeping his voice low. "Get out of here," he hissed urgently. "I saw it properly this time. In the 'Sedative Soak Zone'. Came right out of a drainage duct. Huge. White." He gestured frantically towards a dimly lit tunnel entrance across the cavern. "It took someone. Just… pulled them under. No sound."
Before Tara could process his warning, a low-frequency tremor vibrated through the water, through the very tiles beneath her feet. It wasn't seismic; it felt localized, powerful, like something immense shifting its weight deep within the complex's plumbing. The twilight simulation lights flickered violently, plunging the cavern into momentary darkness before sputtering back to their dim level. The distorted music cut out abruptly, replaced by a piercing electronic shriek that quickly faded into an echoing, profound silence.
From the shadowed mouth of the Sedative Soak Zone tunnel, a sound emerged – a soft, rhythmic, undulating hiss, like escaping steam mixed with the dry rasp of scales over concrete. It slithered through the silence, growing steadily louder.
The nervous man cried out, a thin shriek of terror, scrambling clumsily out of the pool on the opposite side, slipping on the wet tiles as he bolted towards the elevators.
Anja, the lifeguard beside Tara, remained utterly still, facing the pool, seemingly oblivious.
But Tara saw it. Emerging from the designated tunnel, moving with impossible speed and silence, was a coil. Thick as a tree trunk, pale and glistening like dead flesh, scales catching the dim light with a sickening, greasy sheen. It slid across the wet tiles and wrapped itself around Anja's ankles with terrifying gentleness. Anja didn't flinch. Another coil looped around her waist, then her chest, pinning her arms. Still, she stared blankly ahead, a statue being embraced by a nightmare.
Tara’s breath hitched. Fight or flight. This time, flight wasn't an option. Not really. Running meant leaving this horror to fester, meant letting the trauma win. She scanned the area, her swimmer’s spatial awareness kicking in. Main exit blocked by the emerging creature. Elevators too far, and likely compromised. Service access? She remembered seeing maintenance panels near the large filtration units tucked into an alcove behind a decorative cascade – Lap Pool Beta.
She didn’t hesitate. She ran, not away, but parallel to the pool edge, towards the alcove. Behind her, she heard a soft, wet crunch, followed by the heavy splash of something being dragged into the water. She didn't look back.
She reached the alcove, ducking behind the curtain of falling water. Yes – a heavy steel panel, marked with hazard symbols. She wrenched it open – stiff, but not locked. Beyond lay darkness and the roar of machinery. She scrambled inside, pulling the panel almost shut behind her, peering through the crack.
The creature was fully emerged now, its horrifying scale revealed. It was impossibly long, easily sixty, maybe seventy feet, its serpentine body filling a significant portion of the main cavern as it slid into the central pool with barely a ripple. Its skin was a ghastly, translucent white, revealing darker organs pulsing beneath. Down its spine ran a series of undulating, fleshy membranes, like grotesque fins, that glowed with shifting patterns of soft, bioluminescent light – blues, greens, violets – hypnotic and deeply wrong. Its head was disproportionately small, almost vestigial, eyeless, with a distended jaw that unhinged to reveal concentric rings of needle-sharp teeth. It ignored the floating remnants of Anja and submerged, its light patterns fading into the blue depths, heading towards another part of the complex.
Tara leaned back against the cold metal wall of the maintenance tunnel, heart hammering. This wasn't just a monster; it was an apex predator perfectly adapted to this artificial environment, using the tunnels, the pools, the plumbing itself as its hunting ground. And the staff… were they collaborators, victims, or puppets?
The air in the tunnel was thick with the smell of ozone, chemicals, and damp. The roar of the nearby filtration pumps was deafening. Catwalks led off into the darkness over churning tanks and beside massive pipes. This was the hotel's mechanical underbelly, another kind of labyrinth, but potentially, a way out. Or a place to make a stand.
She couldn’t just hide. The creature knew the complex. It would find other guests. It would likely find her eventually. The memory of her helplessness in the original Labyrinth surged, but this time, it mingled with cold fury. She wasn’t unarmed. She had her wits, her strength, her knowledge of water dynamics. And this place… this place had potential weapons.
She moved cautiously along the catwalk, her eyes adjusting to the dim emergency lighting. She passed huge sand filters, UV sterilization units, chemical dosing pumps feeding chlorine and pH regulators into the system. An idea sparked, cold and dangerous. Chlorine. Highly toxic in concentrated form. Could she weaponize the hotel's own systems?
She followed a series of pipes labelled 'Sodium Hypochlorite - DANGER'. They led to a large holding tank and a complex valve system in a secondary pump room. The area hummed with power. Control panels lined one wall. It was risky. Tampering with the system could flood the area with gas, could trigger alarms – if any security systems were still functional and not compromised like the staff. But what choice did she have?
A low hiss echoed from the main filtration tank access tunnel nearby. It was close. Hunting. The bioluminescent glow pulsed faintly, reflecting off the wet walls.
Tara worked quickly, adrenaline lending unnatural clarity. She found the main valve controlling the chlorine feed to the AquaSanctum pools. And beside it, a manual override pump system, likely for emergencies or shock treatments. If she could isolate one of the smaller pools or tunnels near here, and flood it with concentrated chlorine…
She located a schematic diagram on the control panel, dimly lit. Yes – a parallel hydro-jet circuit tunnel looped close to this pump room, with isolation valves accessible from here. If she could lure the creature into that section…
The hissing was louder now, closer. The pale, hypnotic light spilled into the pump room from the access tunnel. Tara scrambled behind a large pump housing, heart pounding. The creature’s small head emerged first, swaying slightly, sensing the air, tasting the chemical tang. Its massive body began to flow into the room, coils filling the space, the pulsing lights casting eerie shadows.
Tara held her breath. She needed to draw it towards the hydro-jet tunnel entrance, further down the catwalk. She dislodged a loose wrench from the top of the pump housing, sending it clattering across the metal grating in that direction.
The creature’s head snapped towards the sound, its eyeless face conveying a chilling predatory focus. It changed direction, flowing silently, scales rasping faintly on the grating, towards the noise, towards the isolated tunnel entrance.
Now.
Tara darted from her hiding place, sprinting towards the valve controls. She slammed the isolation valves shut, trapping the section of the hydro-jet tunnel. Then, she threw the lever on the manual override pump, diverting the concentrated sodium hypochlorite feed directly, solely into that sealed loop. The pump roared, straining under the pressure. Warning lights flashed amber on the control panel.
The creature, realizing it was being diverted or sensing the change in water chemistry, let out an infuriated, gurgling hiss. It turned, its massive body coiling, striking back towards the control panel, towards Tara.
She scrambled back, dodging the snapping, tooth-filled maw. The small head struck the control panel, showering sparks, cracking the displays. The stench of chlorine gas began to fill the air, burning Tara’s eyes and throat. She needed to get out, needed ventilation.
The creature thrashed, caught between the sealed tunnel entrance and Tara, its body reacting to the caustic flood surging into the isolated loop where its tail end was trapped. Its pale skin began to blister and peel where the concentrated chlorine mix touched it. Its bioluminescent membranes flickered erratically, spasming between colours. It roared, a horrifying, wet, choking sound, agony and fury combined.
It lunged at Tara again, ignoring its own dissolving tail, desperate to eliminate the source of its pain. Tara dodged behind another bank of machinery. She saw a large, red button labelled 'Emergency Ventilation – Purge Cycle'. She slammed her hand onto it.
With a tremendous roar, massive fans kicked in overhead. Hatches opened in the ceiling, drawing the increasingly toxic air upwards. The noise was deafening, but breathable air began to circulate.
The creature was weakening, its movements becoming sluggish, spasming. The beautiful, deadly light patterns on its back faded to a dull, uniform grey. Thick, noxious fumes rose from its blistering skin. It tried one last, desperate lunge, but collapsed halfway, its great body shuddering, coils loosening. A final, gurgling sigh escaped its jaws, and it lay still, pale flesh rapidly degrading in the hyper-chlorinated water flooding from the breached tunnel section.
Tara stared, gasping for breath, eyes streaming, throat raw. The monstrous form dissolving before her. Dead. She had killed it.
Exhaustion hit her like a physical blow. She slumped against the vibrating machinery, shaking uncontrollably. She had faced the monster in the water, the echo of her Labyrinth trauma, and she had won.
It took time, navigating the now-silent, hazardously slick service tunnels, avoiding the areas still thick with chlorine fumes, before she found a ladder leading upwards. It emerged, improbably, behind a linen closet on one of the hotel’s guest floors. The plush carpeting, generic hotel art, and hushed quiet felt utterly alien after the roaring pumps and dying monster below.
She walked numbly towards the elevators, ignoring the startled glance of a room service attendant. She didn't know what she would tell the authorities, what they would believe. Disappearances, compromised staff, a seventy-foot bioluminescent snake monster in the hotel’s plumbing, killed with industrial bleach?
But as the elevator ascended smoothly towards the surface, towards the real world, the desert sun, Tara felt something shift within her. The Labyrinth's shadow hadn't vanished entirely – scars like that didn't just disappear. But it no longer felt like an inescapable prison. She had faced the abyss, stared into the eyeless maw, and fought back. She had survived. And this time, she had left the monster dead in the water behind her. It wasn't serenity, not yet. But it was a start. A real one. Forged in chlorine and terror, claimed by her, alone.
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Empty Spaces
Three psychological tales of terror and isolation inspired by the YouTube series Backrooms
By Lady Eckland, Glenn Riley and Ms Darkwood
Starring @horrorseventhree as Bernard in Midnight At The Meridian and @solesofwonder as Tara in The Labyrinth
Midnight at the Meridian
By Glenn Riley
The clock on the main concourse display flickered, then settled stubbornly on 00:00. Midnight. Bernard sighed, the sound echoing slightly in the cavernous, empty space of the Meridian Mega Mall. Another Tuesday night shift, another eight hours of walking silent corridors, listening to the hum of dormant escalators and the whisper of the air conditioning. He adjusted the ill-fitting security jacket, the fabric stiff and smelling faintly of industrial cleaner and loneliness.
"Zone Bravo clear, heading towards Delta," he muttered into his radio, the words feeling pointless even as he said them. Routine. Everything was routine.
"Copy that, Bernard," Gary’s voice crackled back, laced with the usual weariness. "Dave's sweeping Echo. All quiet on the western front."
"Ten-four," Bernard replied, clipping the radio back onto his belt. Gary was in the north wing, Dave down in the service tunnels beneath the food court. Three lonely sentinels guarding a sleeping giant made of retail space and simulated daylight. Bernard was patrolling the central atrium and the adjacent luxury goods section – Zone Delta. Acres of polished marble floor reflected the muted emergency lighting, making the high-end storefronts look like museum exhibits behind their security grilles. Handbags that cost more than his monthly salary gleamed under spotlights, mannequins draped in designer clothes stood frozen mid-pose, their blank faces unnerving in the silence.
He hated this part of the patrol. During the day, this area buzzed with piped-in classical music, the scent of expensive perfume, and the murmur of affluent shoppers. At night, it felt like a tomb. A very shiny, overpriced tomb. He tapped his baton against his thigh, the rhythmic thud a small comfort against the oppressive quiet. Thud-thud-thud. His footsteps echoed, sharp and distinct. Thud-thud-thud.
He passed the gleaming glass elevator shaft, its internal lights off, the cars resting silently at the ground floor. He rounded the corner towards the main fountain, currently drained and dark. Usually, the gentle burble of water filled this space. Now, only the hum of the building’s systems remained.
He paused, listening. Was that...? No, just the air con kicking in again. He continued his patrol, checking the grilles on 'Bijoux Fantastique', 'Senator Watches', 'Le Cuir Chic'. All secure. Boring. Mind-numbingly boring. He sometimes wondered what he’d do if something actually did happen. A break-in, a fire. Would he be a hero? Probably not. He’d probably just call the police and hide behind a large potted plant.
He reached the end of Zone Delta, marked by the transition from marble to the garish carpet of the mid-range fashion wing. Time to check in. He unclipped his radio.
"Bernard to Control. Zone Delta clear. Proceeding to Foxtrot."
Silence. Not static, just... dead air. He frowned, pressing the transmit button again.
"Bernard to Control? Gary? Dave? Anyone copy?"
Nothing. He tapped the radio. Maybe the battery was dead? No, the indicator light was green. He tried switching channels. Still silence. A cold knot began to tighten in his stomach. Equipment failure was common enough – cheap radios, older systems – but losing contact with everyone simultaneously? That felt wrong.
He tried Gary’s direct channel. "Gary, you read me? Bernard here." Silence. "Dave? You there, buddy?" Nothing. The silence was suddenly heavier, pressing in on him. The background hum of the building seemed louder, more insistent.
He decided to head back towards the central security office near the main entrance. Maybe the main console was down. He turned, his footsteps quickening on the marble. The echo seemed to follow him, slightly out of sync. He glanced back, but the corridor was empty, shadows pooling around the bases of pillars and darkened storefronts.
As he reached the central atrium again, something new intruded on the silence. Faintly, distantly, he heard music. He stopped dead, straining his ears. It was the mall’s daytime music. A cheerful, offensively bland pop song from a few years ago, the kind designed to encourage spending, now drifting eerily through the empty space.
"What the hell?" he whispered. The PA system was centrally controlled, timed to shut off automatically at 10:30 PM, half an hour after the last shopper was shooed out. It never played overnight. Never.
He fumbled for his radio again, forgetting it wasn't working. Useless. Okay, stay calm. There had to be a rational explanation. A timer malfunction. A system glitch. Maybe Dave was messing around in the control room? But Dave was supposed to be in the service tunnels. And why wasn't he answering his radio?
The music grew slightly louder as he walked towards the main entrance, the upbeat tempo a grotesque counterpoint to the fear coiling inside him. It felt mocking. He passed the darkened food court on his left, the chairs stacked neatly on tables, silhouettes in the gloom. The music seemed to be coming from the speakers dotted across the high ceiling, tinny and pervasive.
He reached the security office, a small glass-walled room tucked beside the main sliding doors. The lights were off inside. He swiped his keycard. The reader beeped green, and the lock clicked open. Relief washed over him – at least something was working. He pushed the door open.
"Gary? Dave?" he called into the darkness. No answer. He fumbled for the light switch just inside the door and flicked it on.
The office was empty. The main console, usually alive with the glow of monitor screens displaying CCTV feeds, was dark. Completely dead. Not just asleep – powered down. The master PA system controls were on a separate panel, and its indicator lights were also dark. Yet the music played on, seeping into the office from the mall outside.
Panic began to bubble in his throat. This wasn't a glitch. This was impossible. The system was off, dead, but the music was playing. And Gary and Dave were gone. Or at least, not answering.
He backed out of the office, scanning the vast, empty concourse. The music swelled, seeming to fill every corner of the enormous space. Where could they be? Maybe they went to investigate the music? He tried shouting their names, his voice cracking.
"GARY! DAVE! CAN YOU HEAR ME?"
Only the cheerful pop song answered, its lyrics about summer love feeling obscene in the dead of night. His shouts echoed, bouncing off the distant walls and polished floors, sounding small and lost.
He needed to get out. Protocol dictated they check the emergency exits on their patrols. He knew the nearest one was at the end of the west wing, past the department store. He started walking, almost jogging, his baton held tightly in his hand. The music followed him, relentless.
As he moved through the different zones, a new, chilling sensation crept over him. The mall felt... different. The layout seemed subtly wrong. Hadn't there been a kiosk selling phone chargers here yesterday? Now it was just empty space. And the corridor leading to the sportswear section seemed longer than he remembered, the perspective subtly skewed, stretching into the gloom.
He shook his head, trying to clear it. Fatigue. Fear. Playing tricks on his mind. He had to focus. Get to the exit.
He passed a row of mannequins in a shop window – a family scene, parents and two children, all frozen in disturbingly lifelike poses. As he hurried past, he could have sworn the head of the father mannequin turned slightly, tracking his movement. He stopped, heart pounding, staring back at the figure. It was motionless, plastic eyes fixed straight ahead. Just his imagination. It had to be.
But the feeling of being watched intensified. The air grew colder. The music seemed to warp slightly, the cheerful melody underscored by a discordant hum, almost subliminal. He risked a glance up at one of the PA speakers. It looked normal. But the sound wasn't just coming from the speakers anymore; it felt like it was emanating from the walls, the floor, the very air of the mall.
He finally reached the emergency exit, a heavy red door marked with the familiar green running man sign. He pushed down hard on the panic bar.
It didn't budge.
He threw his shoulder against it. Nothing. It was sealed tight, as if welded shut. He tried the handle – locked from the outside, as it should be, but the panic bar should always open from the inside. He hammered on the metal, his shouts echoing uselessly back into the mall.
Trapped. The realization hit him like a physical blow. He leaned his forehead against the cold metal door, breathing heavily. The music pulsed around him. He was trapped inside this vast, empty, wrong place, and his colleagues were missing.
He pushed himself away from the door, forcing himself to think. Other exits. Service corridors. There had to be another way out. He remembered Dave mentioning a service hatch near the loading bays, down past the supermarket anchor store. It was a long walk, back through the increasingly alien landscape of the mall.
He started back, moving more cautiously now, scanning the shadows, listening intently over the incessant music. The mall felt less empty now, more like it was holding its breath, waiting. He kept glancing at the mannequins, expecting them to move. He avoided looking directly into the darkened shopfronts, afraid of what he might see reflected in the glass.
As he passed the entrance to the multi-storey car park, a flicker of movement caught his eye. Deep within the concrete structure, barely visible through the glass doors, a light source bobbed erratically. A flashlight?
"Gary? Dave?" he yelled, banging on the glass.
The light stopped moving. Then, slowly, it began to approach the doors. Bernard squinted, trying to make out the figure behind the light. It was tall, silhouetted against the deeper darkness of the car park.
"Is that you?" Bernard called, relief warring with a nagging unease. Why hadn't they answered?
The figure reached the glass doors. It wasn't Gary or Dave. It was much taller, impossibly thin, its limbs too long, moving with a jerky, unnatural gait. It held a standard-issue security flashlight, but its hand – or what passed for a hand – seemed to wrap entirely around it, pale and multi-jointed. It had no discernible face, just a smooth, vaguely humanoid shape where features should be. It tilted its head, mimicking curiosity, the beam of the flashlight dancing across Bernard's terrified face.
Bernard stumbled backwards, a strangled cry escaping his lips. The music surged, louder now, the melody twisting into something harsh and grating. The figure behind the glass remained motionless for a moment, head tilted, then it raised one long, spindly arm and tapped lightly on the glass. Tap. Tap. Tap. The sound was drowned out by the music, but Bernard saw it, felt it.
He turned and ran. He didn't know where he was going, just away. Away from the figure, away from the music, deeper into the heart of the Meridian Mega Mall, which was no longer just a building, but a trap, a hunting ground. The cheerful pop song chased him through the endless, subtly changing corridors, a soundtrack to his descent into a nightmare he couldn't wake up from. He was lost, alone, and the midnight shift had become an eternity. The mall was awake, and it was hungry.
The Thirteenth Floor
By Ms Darkwood
The digital clock on Alex’s monitor glowed 10:47 PM. Outside the panoramic windows of Sterling Corp’s thirteenth-floor office, the city lights glittered like scattered jewels, a stark contrast to the sterile, fluorescent-lit reality within. Alex stretched, groaning as his spine popped. Another late one. The Henderson report had been a beast, but it was finally done, emailed off into the corporate ether.
He shut down his computer, the sudden silence amplifying the low hum of the servers down the hall. Usually, the office was a hive of activity – ringing phones, clacking keyboards, the low murmur of stressed professionals. Now, it was just him.
Well, almost.
"Still burning the midnight oil, Sabrina?" he called out towards the corner office, its glass walls partially obscured by blinds.
A muffled response came back. "Needs must, Alex. This merger won't merge itself."
Sabrina Hayes. His boss. Sharp, driven, demanding, and apparently nocturnal. Alex respected her, feared her slightly, and mostly tried to stay out of her direct line of fire. He gathered his belongings – laptop bag, crumpled jacket, reusable coffee cup.
"Right, well, I'm clocking off," he said, walking towards her office. "Don't let the spreadsheets bite."
He saw her silhouette through the blinds, hunched over her desk. "Goodnight, Alex. See you at the 8 AM briefing."
"Wouldn't miss it," he lied, forcing a cheerful tone. He walked towards the lift lobby at the centre of the floor. The doors slid open automatically as he approached, revealing the empty lift car. He stepped inside, pressed the 'G' button for the ground floor. The doors slid shut, the familiar chime sounded, but the lift didn't move.
He pressed the button again. Nothing. He tried the 'Door Open' button. It remained stubbornly closed. Annoyed, he pressed the emergency call button. A tinny, pre-recorded message played: "Please remain calm. Your call is being connected." Then, silence. No ringing, no operator. Just the low hum of the lift's ventilation.
"Great," he muttered. He hammered the 'Door Open' button again. The doors juddered slightly but stayed shut. Okay, plan B. He fished his phone from his pocket. No signal. Of course. Thick concrete and steel, designed to keep corporate secrets in, apparently kept mobile signals out too.
He sighed and pressed the button for the 13th floor again. Maybe it would register that. After a moment's pause, the lift gave a slight jolt and the doors slid open, revealing the same empty lobby he'd just left. Progress.
He stepped out, deciding to try the fire stairs. He headed towards the heavy door marked 'EXIT'. He pushed the handle. Locked. He frowned. Fire stairs shouldn't be locked from the inside. He tried the adjacent stairwell door. Also locked solid.
A prickle of unease ran down his spine. Power glitch affecting the lift and the electronic locks on the fire doors? Possible, he supposed. But the lights were still on, the servers were humming.
"Sabrina?" he called out, walking back towards her office. "Having some trouble with the lifts and stairs."
No reply. He reached her office. The blinds were still drawn, but the light inside was off now. Strange, he hadn't heard her leave.
"Sabrina?" he said again, tapping lightly on the glass door. He pushed it open gently. The office was empty. Her computer was off, her chair pushed neatly under the desk. But her handbag was still on the floor beside the chair, and her jacket was slung over the back. She wouldn't have left without those.
"Okay, this is weird," Alex said aloud, the sound swallowed by the office silence. Where could she be? The restrooms? He checked them quickly – empty. The kitchenette? Empty, save for a lingering smell of burnt microwave popcorn. The server room? Locked, as always.
He walked the perimeter of the large open-plan office space. Rows of darkened monitors, empty chairs, deserted desks holding sad-looking pot plants and stacks of files. The silence was absolute now, except for his own footsteps on the industrial carpet.
Then he heard it. A faint, rhythmic clicking sound.
It seemed to be coming from the ceiling vents. He stopped, listening intently. Click... click... click... Like fingernails tapping on metal, but faster, more insectile.
"Hello?" he called out tentatively. "Is anyone there? Building maintenance?"
The clicking stopped. The silence rushed back in, heavier than before. Alex's heart was starting to beat faster. Lifts out, doors locked, boss vanished, weird noises. This wasn't just a glitch anymore.
He continued his circuit of the office, peering down empty corridors, checking meeting rooms. All dark, all empty. He felt increasingly exposed under the harsh fluorescent lights. Every shadow seemed too deep, every corner a potential hiding place.
He reached the far side of the office, near the archives room – a windowless vault of filing cabinets and storage boxes. The clicking sound returned, louder now, definitely coming from inside the archives. And it was accompanied by something else – a wet, tearing sound.
Against his better judgment, driven by a mixture of fear and a desperate need for answers, he approached the archives door. It was slightly ajar. He pushed it open slowly.
The room was dimly lit by a single emergency bulb. Filing cabinets lined the walls, casting long shadows. In the centre of the room, illuminated by the stark light, stood Sabrina. Or, what was left of her.
Alex clamped a hand over his mouth, stifling a gasp. Her back was to him. She was still wearing her smart business suit, but it was torn and stained. And sprouting from her back, erupting through the fabric, were four long, spindly, chitinous limbs, black and jointed like a spider's legs. They twitched and clicked against the linoleum floor, supporting her weight as she hunched over something indistinct on the ground.
Her head turned, slowly, unnaturally, rotating almost 180 degrees on her neck. Her face... oh god, her face. It was stretched, distorted, pulled taut over inhuman bone structures. Her mouth was wider, filled with needle-sharp fangs, glistening with saliva. Her eyes – there were too many. Eight black, multifaceted eyes glittered where two should be, reflecting the dim light. She wasn't wearing Sabrina's skin; it was her skin, horribly mutated, blended with the exoskeleton of some monstrous arachnid.
She – it – let out a high-pitched chittering sound, the noise vibrating in Alex’s bones. The thing she had been hunched over was a large rat, now mangled and partially devoured.
Alex stumbled backwards, hitting the doorframe. The creature straightened up, its spider legs unfolding, raising its height considerably. It dropped the rat carcass with a wet smack and took a step towards him, its human feet shuffling awkwardly while the spider limbs moved with terrifying speed and precision.
"S-Sabrina?" Alex stammered, knowing it was useless.
The creature tilted its head, a grotesque parody of Sabrina's inquisitive expression. "Alex," it hissed, the voice a horrifying blend of Sabrina's familiar cadence and a dry, clicking rasp. "Working late again? Dedication. I like that."
It took another step, faster this time, the clicking of its extra limbs echoing horribly in the confined space. Alex turned and bolted. He ran back into the main office area, adrenaline flooding his system. He could hear it scuttling behind him, unnaturally fast.
He ducked behind a bank of cubicles, heart hammering against his ribs. Where could he go? The lifts were out, the stairs locked. He was trapped on the thirteenth floor with... that thing.
He risked a peek over the partition. The creature stood in the centre of the open area, its multiple eyes scanning the room, head twitching side to side. It seemed disoriented by the open space, more comfortable in the confines of the archives.
He needed a weapon. Anything. He scanned the nearby desks. Stapler? Too small. Letter opener? Maybe. Then he saw it – a heavy glass award trophy on a vacant executive desk. He crept towards it, staying low.
A sudden skittering sound from above made him freeze. He looked up. The creature was on the ceiling, clinging effortlessly with its spider limbs, its human body dangling beneath, head swiveling, searching. Its shadow stretched grotesquely across the desks below.
It spotted him. With another chittering hiss, it dropped from the ceiling, landing heavily on a desk just meters away, scattering papers and splintering wood. It scrambled towards him, faster than he could have imagined.
Alex grabbed the heavy glass trophy and scrambled backwards, tripping over a chair and falling heavily. The creature loomed over him, fangs bared, a strand of thick, web-like saliva dripping onto his face. He swung the trophy desperately, connecting with one of its spider legs with a sickening crunch.
The creature shrieked, a high-pitched sound that was both insectile and agonizingly human. It recoiled, clutching the damaged limb. Alex scrambled to his feet and ran again, heading blindly towards the windowed side of the building.
He glanced back. The creature was recovering quickly, its eight eyes fixed on him with cold, predatory hunger. It started producing webbing, thick strands shooting from spinnerets hidden beneath its human torso, trying to ensnare him.
He dodged the sticky strands, reaching the floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked the city. Trapped. No way out. He backed against the glass, holding the trophy like a club, panting heavily.
The creature approached slowly now, savoring the moment, clicking and chittering softly. Its distorted Sabrina-face twisted into something resembling a smile. "Nowhere to run, Alex," it rasped. "This merger... is hostile."
It lunged. Alex reacted purely on instinct. He didn't swing the trophy. Instead, he threw his entire weight sideways, smashing the award against the huge pane of glass. Reinforced corporate window-dressing wasn't designed for that kind of impact. Spiderweb cracks appeared instantly. He hit it again, harder.
The glass fractured, groaned, and then exploded outwards with a deafening roar, showering the office with shards and letting in the cold night air and the distant sounds of the city. The sudden decompression and noise seemed to stun the creature for a vital second.
Alex didn't hesitate. He didn't think about the thirteen-story drop. He scrambled through the jagged opening, grabbing onto a thick metal mullion separating the panes. He clung there, bleeding from cuts, the wind whipping around him, the dizzying drop below.
He looked back inside. The Sabrina-spider-thing was recovering, crawling towards the broken window, its multiple eyes gleaming with fury. It wouldn't be able to follow him out here. Or would it? Could it crawl on the outside of the building?
He didn't wait to find out. Hand over hand, adrenaline masking the pain, he began to edge his way along the narrow ledge towards the neighbouring window, hoping against hope it might lead somewhere, anywhere, other than back inside the thirteenth floor, where his boss waited, hungry and changed. The city lights seemed impossibly far away, and the clicking sound from the office behind him was the only certainty in his world.
The Labyrinth
By Lady Eckland

The brochure called it "The Aqueous Labyrinth: The Ultimate Aquatic Challenge." Tara Newman, toweling her hair vigorously after her morning warm-up laps, grinned. Ultimate was right up her alley. She’d swum the English Channel, navigated the Strait of Gibraltar, competed in grueling open-water marathons across the globe. A man-made underwater maze at a luxury swim resort? Sounded like fun. A novelty.
The resort itself was state-of-the-art, carved into a coastal cliff face, catering exclusively to serious swimmers. Olympic-sized pools, resistance flumes, hypoxic chambers, and then... the Labyrinth. An underground network of flooded tunnels, pools, and passages, designed to test navigation, endurance, and nerve.
"You're sure about this, Ms. Newman?" asked the attendant, a young man with unnervingly bright eyes, as he handed her the waiver form and a waterproof map laminated onto a buoyant board. "It's... disorienting down there. Standard time limit is two hours. Distress signal is three sharp tugs on the guide rope near the entrance."
"I'll be fine," Tara said confidently, scrawling her signature. Disorienting? She’d navigated through shipping lanes in near-zero visibility. "Just point me to the entrance."
He gestured towards a heavy, circular vault door set into the rock face at the far end of the main pool complex. "It's monitored via sonar, mostly for flow and structural integrity. We don't have cameras in the main tunnels – privacy and the challenge, you know. Just... stick to the map. People get turned around." He hesitated. "And try not to touch the walls too much if you can help it. Algae."
Tara nodded, already strapping the map board to her wrist. Algae? Seemed an odd warning. She adjusted her goggles, took a deep breath, and pulled open the heavy door.
A blast of cool, chlorinated air hit her, carrying the amplified echo of dripping water. Stairs led down into turquoise-lit water that filled a wide tunnel disappearing into darkness. A thick guide rope snaked from a stanchion beside the stairs into the depths. She dipped a toe in – cool, but not cold. Standard pool temperature.
She slipped into the water, the vault door hissing shut behind her, plunging the entrance chamber into the eerie underwater glow. The silence was immediate, broken only by the sound of her own breathing and the gentle lapping of water against the tunnel walls. Okay, Labyrinth, she thought, let's see what you've got.
She consulted her map. A straightforward tunnel first, then a choice of three branching passages. She pushed off, her powerful strokes propelling her easily through the water. The tunnel was wider than she expected, the tiled walls smooth beneath the water, illuminated by intermittent underwater lights set into the ceiling. It was strangely beautiful, in an artificial, sterile way.

She swam for perhaps ten minutes, the tunnel twisting gently. The silence began to feel profound. No birds, no wind, no distant traffic. Just water, concrete, and her own heartbeat drumming in her ears. She reached the first junction, three identical tunnels branching off into dimmer light. She checked her map, oriented herself using a numbered marker on the wall, and chose the middle path.
This tunnel was narrower, the ceiling lower. She had to be more careful with her strokes. The lights here were spaced further apart, creating pools of darkness between them. She swam through one such dark patch, feeling a brief, irrational flicker of unease. It felt like swimming through liquid night.
She reached a wider chamber, a deep circular pool. The map indicated she needed to dive down, where the exit tunnel continued about fifteen feet below the surface. She took a breath, surface-dived, and kicked downwards. The pressure increased in her ears. Below, the water was darker, the light from above barely penetrating. She saw the illuminated opening of the next tunnel and swam towards it.
As she entered the lower tunnel, she thought she saw movement out of the corner of her eye, back in the deep pool she’d just left. A flicker of shadow, a disturbance in the water. She paused, treading water just inside the tunnel entrance, peering back into the gloom. Nothing. Just the play of light and shadow on the rippling surface far above. Must have been her own wake.
She continued on, but the seed of unease had been planted. The attendant's hesitant warning came back to her. People get turned around. And the odd comment about algae. Why mention that specifically?
The Labyrinth lived up to its name. Tunnels branched and reconnected, stairs led up to small, dry platforms that were dead ends, grates blocked some passages, requiring her to find alternate routes. She consulted the map frequently, but found herself having to backtrack more than once. It was definitely a challenge, testing her spatial awareness.
She surfaced in another large chamber, this one with several tunnels leading off at water level. She needed a short break. She hauled herself onto a narrow ledge running along the wall, water streaming from her swimsuit. She sat there, catching her breath, the amplified sounds of dripping water echoing around the cavernous space.
That’s when she saw it. Scratched into the tiles just above the waterline, almost hidden by shadow, were words. Not official markers, but desperate, jagged letters: "NOT ALONE" and "IT SEES".
Tara’s blood ran cold. This wasn't part of the challenge. This was real fear etched onto the walls. Suddenly, the stories she’d vaguely heard – rumours dismissed as resort gossip about swimmers who took longer than expected, or who came out shaken – took on a terrifying new weight. Had people gone missing down here?
She slid back into the water, her confidence replaced by a gnawing anxiety. She looked at the map again, but the lines and symbols seemed confusing now, less like a guide, more like the scrawlings of a madman. Every splash, every ripple, every gurgle of water seemed menacing.
She chose a tunnel – marked 'Sector Gamma' on the map – and swam faster now, wanting only to find the exit. This tunnel was long and straight, but poorly lit. She swam through stretches of near-total darkness. In one of these patches, something brushed against her leg.
She yelled out, the sound choked by water as she inhaled sharply. She spun around in the water, limbs flailing, peering wildly into the blackness. Nothing. Just the feel of the water swirling around her. What was that? A loose bit of piping? A stray current? Or...?
Not alone. It sees.
Panic began to set in. She forced it down, relying on years of training to control her breathing, to stay focused. But the Labyrinth felt different now. It wasn't a novelty; it was a trap. The chlorine smell seemed sharper, the water colder, the silence heavier, pregnant with unseen threat.
She found herself in a section where the tunnel split vertically – one passage near the surface, another deeper down. The map indicated the lower path. She hesitated, remembering the feeling in the deep pool earlier. But the map was her only guide. She hyperventilated slightly, took a huge breath, and dived.
The lower tunnel was narrow and completely dark. She swam by feel, one hand trailing along the smooth, cold tiles of the wall. She counted her strokes, trying to estimate the distance. Ten strokes... twenty... thirty... This tunnel felt much longer than the map suggested.
Suddenly, her trailing hand brushed against something that wasn't smooth tile. It was rough, textured, and slightly yielding. Like... skin. Cold, clammy skin covered in a fine, abrasive fuzz, like wet sandpaper.
Tara snatched her hand back as if burned, a silent scream trapped in her lungs. She kicked frantically, desperate to get out of the dark tunnel. She saw a faint glimmer of light ahead and surged towards it, bursting out into another lit chamber.
She surfaced, gasping, coughing, heart pounding fit to burst. She scrambled onto a low platform in the centre of the chamber, shaking uncontrollably. What had she touched?
She scanned the water around the platform, her eyes wide with terror. The surface was still, reflecting the underwater lights. But she knew, with chilling certainty, that she wasn't alone anymore. The thing she had touched in the darkness was down here with her. It was real.
She looked at her map board, but her hands were shaking too much to hold it steady. The lines blurred. Where was she? How far to the exit? It felt like she'd been swimming for hours, but the clock integrated into the board showed only 45 minutes had passed. Time felt distorted here.
A low sound echoed through the chamber, seemingly coming from one of the submerged tunnel entrances. Not a splash, but a deep, guttural clicking, like pebbles rolling together underwater.
It sees.
Tara didn't want to see it. She just wanted out. She scanned the chamber walls. High above, near the ceiling, she saw something that wasn't on the map – a small, square opening, possibly a maintenance access duct. It was her only chance.
She dove back into the water, forcing down her terror, and swam towards the wall beneath the opening. It was sheer, smooth tile. No handholds. The opening was a good ten feet above the water level. Impossible to reach.
The clicking sound came again, closer this time. Ripples disturbed the surface of the water near the tunnel entrance opposite her. Something was emerging.
Tara kicked off the wall, swimming desperately towards another tunnel entrance, praying it was the right way, praying it would lead her out. She glanced back as she reached it.
In the centre of the chamber, slowly rising from the water, was a figure. Pale, bloated, and slick, like something that had been submerged for too long. Its limbs were too long, ending in webbed claws. Its head was large and eyeless, dominated by a gaping maw filled with rows of needle-like teeth. It moved slowly, deliberately, water streaming off its fungal-looking skin. It turned its blank head towards her tunnel, and although it had no eyes, she felt utterly, horrifyingly seen.
She plunged into the new tunnel, swimming with the desperate strength of pure fear. The tunnel twisted, turned, plunged downwards. She scraped her shoulder against a rough patch of wall – algae, the attendant had said. But it felt more like the skin of the thing behind her. Was the Labyrinth itself alive? Was the creature part of it?
She didn't know how long she swam, blind panic overriding thought. She ignored the map, following instinct, choosing tunnels that seemed to lead upwards. She burst into chambers, scanned frantically for exits, plunged into new tunnels, the clicking sound a persistent echo in her mind, sometimes seeming closer, sometimes farther away. It was hunting her. The Labyrinth was its domain, and she was the prey, just like the Minotaur's victims.
Finally, gasping, lungs burning, muscles screaming, she saw it – a shimmer of natural light from above. A vertical shaft, with rough-hewn steps carved into the rock beside a waterfall of chlorinated water cascading down. The exit? Or just another cruel trick of the maze?
She didn't care. She hauled herself out of the water, onto the first step, ignoring the pain in her scraped limbs. She climbed, forcing her exhausted body upwards, towards the light. She didn't look back, didn't dare listen for the clicking below. She just climbed, until she collapsed onto a metal grating, blinking in the blessed, ordinary light of the main resort complex.
She lay there, shivering, sobbing, safe.
But later, wrapped in thermal blankets, sipping hot chocolate, the resort manager's soothing words about disorientation and mild hypoxia felt hollow. She knew what she had seen. She knew what she had touched. The Labyrinth wasn't just a challenge; it was a feeding ground. And something ancient, hungry, and unseen by the glossy brochures waited patiently in the chlorinated depths for the next challenger to venture too far into its maze. Tara Newman had survived, but a part of her would forever remain trapped in the echoing, underwater silence, listening for the clicking sound in the dark.

#horror stories#supernatural#ghost stories#tickle content#horror#cosmic horror#lovecraftian#eldritch horror#psychological horror
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Giggles And Gasps
By Lady Eckland
The Barkness Below
Barry Butterfield cherished silence the way a dragon hoards gold. His semi-detached house on Laburnum Close was his fortress of solitude, his garden a meticulously curated patch of green zen amidst the suburban sprawl. Each blade of grass was known to him, every petunia personally vetted. His temper, much like his prized begonias, was easily bruised and prone to wilting under stress. Which is why the arrival of Number 12, previously inhabited by the blessedly quiet Mrs. Higgins (RIP), filled him with a pre-emptive dread.
The dread solidified the moment the removal van disgorged its contents. First came Agnes Periwinkle, a woman whose smile seemed unnaturally wide and whose floral dress clashed violently with the neighbourhood's beige sensibilities. Then came the dogs. Six of them. Jack Russells. A yapping, bouncing, chaotic tide of black, white, and tan fur.
"Six!" Barry muttered, peering through a slit in his Venetian blinds, his knuckles white on the cord. "Who needs six dogs? It's unnatural."
The first week was auditory torture. A near-constant symphony of barks, yelps, and the frantic scrabbling of claws on laminate flooring echoed from next door. Barry’s blood pressure climbed steadily. He invested in noise-cancelling headphones, which only served to amplify the low, vibrating hum that seemed to emanate from Number 12 even when the dogs were supposedly quiet.
Then came the physical incursion.
He’d stepped out one morning, mug of lukewarm tea in hand, ready to survey his domain, only to find it desecrated. A gaping, jagged hole had been chewed through the solid oak fence panel separating his garden from Agnes’s. And through that hole, the enemy had poured.
His pristine lawn resembled a canine minefield. Tiny, coiled atrocities dotted the landscape. His award-winning petunias looked like they’d been used for tug-of-war practice. One of the perpetrators, a particularly wiry specimen with one floppy ear, was currently attempting to bury a squeaky hedgehog toy dangerously close to his prize-winning rose bush.
Barry saw red. Not the gentle red of his roses, but a furious, pulsating crimson.
"Oi! You! Get out! Shoo! Vamoose! You flea-bitten menaces!" he roared, waving his mug تهدید آمیزly.
The six dogs stopped their various acts of vandalism and turned towards him in unison. For a moment, their six pairs of beady eyes seemed uncannily synchronised. Then, chaos erupted. They scattered, yapping gleefully, leading him on a Benny Hill-esque chase around the garden. He tripped over a gnome (his own, adding insult to injury), slipped on a strategically placed deposit, and nearly went headfirst into the bird bath.
Finally, red-faced and panting, he managed to herd them back through the fence hole. They stood on the other side, tails wagging furiously, heads cocked, as if expecting applause for their performance.
"Right," Barry snarled, surveying the damage. "War. It's war."
He spent the entire weekend reinforcing the fence. This wasn't just a repair; it was a fortification. He used galvanised steel mesh, bolted timbers thicker than his own arm, and even considered adding razor wire before deciding it might breach council regulations (and attract unwanted attention). The finished article looked less like a garden fence and more like a section of Cold War border checkpoint.
"Let's see you chew through that, you little monsters," he muttered, wiping sweat from his brow.
But fortification wasn't enough. Retribution was required. He stomped inside, sat down at his antique writing desk, and penned a missive dripping with barely concealed fury and passive-aggressive Poms.
Dear Ms. Periwinkle,
It has come to my attention, with considerable distress, that your canine companions (henceforth referred to as 'the Subjects') have breached the boundary between our respective properties via a crudely excavated aperture in the dividing fence (now rectified at significant personal expense and effort).
Furthermore, upon gaining unauthorised access to my private garden, the Subjects proceeded to engage in widespread defilement and destruction of flora, including, but not limited to, severe damage to Petunia varieties 'Grandiflora' and 'Surfinia', and the deposition of multiple instances of unsanitary biological waste upon the lawn.
Whilst I appreciate the... exuberance... of the Jack Russell terrier breed, I must insist, in the strongest possible terms, that you take immediate and effective measures to ensure such incursions do not recur. Failure to adequately contain the Subjects may necessitate escalation to higher authorities.
Yours in strained neighbourliness,
B. Butterfield (Mr.)
Number 10
He folded the note with sharp, precise creases, marched next door, and shoved it through Agnes Periwinkle's letterbox with unnecessary force. He heard it flutter to the floor inside. Good.
He retreated to his living room window, binoculars in hand (usually reserved for birdwatching, now repurposed for neighbour-surveillance). He waited. Minutes ticked by. The yapping inside Number 12 ceased abruptly. An unnerving silence fell.
Then, the letterbox of Number 12 rattled. A pale hand, fingers slightly too long and bony, emerged, snatched the letter, and vanished. Barry shivered, despite the warmth of the room. Something felt… off.
Later that evening, as dusk painted the sky in shades of bruised purple, Barry was peering through his binoculars again. The lights were on in Number 12’s living room. He could see Agnes moving around. She seemed to be… talking to the dogs. But not in the usual baby-talk way. It looked intense, focused. The dogs were sitting in a perfect semi-circle around her, unnervingly still, their heads tilted, listening.
Then, something happened that made Barry’s blood run cold.
One of the dogs, the floppy-eared one, seemed to shiver. Its form blurred for a second, like heat haze on tarmac. Then, horrifyingly, it seemed to flow towards Agnes. Not walk, or run, but melt. Its furry body elongated, distorted, and merged seamlessly into Agnes’s floral-print trouser leg. There was no sound, no struggle, just a smooth, liquid absorption.
Barry dropped the binoculars, his heart hammering against his ribs. He blinked, rubbed his eyes. Had he imagined it? Stress? Lack of sleep?
He forced himself to look again. There were now only five dogs sitting in the semi-circle. Agnes patted the spot on her leg where the dog had merged, her unnaturally wide smile stretching across her face, visible even from this distance. She looked directly towards Barry’s window.
He stumbled back, knocking over a lamp. He scrambled to the front door, checking the locks. Plural. He checked the reinforced fence through the back window. It looked solid, impenetrable. But against that?
He remembered the synchronised stare, the vibrating hum, the way the dog had just… melted. John Carpenter's The Thing. He’d watched it last week, scoffing at the paranoia. Now, it felt like a documentary.
The note. The angry note. He hadn't just complained about dog poo. He'd threatened to escalate. He'd declared war on a shape-shifting, multi-dog alien organism.
A soft scratching sound came from his back door. Not claws. Something… softer. More deliberate. Followed by a low, wet chuckle that seemed to emanate from multiple throats at once.
Barry backed away, grabbing the heaviest object he could find – a cast iron doorstop shaped like a grumpy frog. The scratching intensified. Splinters of wood flew inwards from the bottom of the door.
"Right," Barry whispered, his voice trembling, but a core of pure, ill-tempered defiance hardening within him. "You want war? You picked the wrong grumpy git's garden."
The door began to buckle. Outside, illuminated by the porch light, five pairs of Jack Russell eyes glowed faintly red. And somewhere behind them, obscured by the shadows, Barry could just make out the hem of a floral dress, swaying slightly in the night air, seemingly attached to far too many legs. The ultimate neighbourly dispute had begun.
Last Call at the Mega Mall
Chloe checked her phone for the tenth time in five minutes. 4:17 PM. Megan was officially seventeen minutes late. Typical.
"Honestly," Chloe muttered, slumping further onto the uncomfortable plastic bench strategically placed near the entrance to 'Shoe Heaven' on the ground floor of the 'Galleria Gigantica' Mega Mall. "Seventeen minutes. That's like, three TikToks. Or half a coffee. Or..." she trailed off, distracted by a man trying to return a clearly used toaster oven at the customer service kiosk.
The mall pulsed around her, a chaotic symphony of Muzak, echoing footsteps, screeching children, and the low hum of rampant consumerism. It was Friday afternoon, peak time, and Chloe felt adrift in a sea of stressed shoppers and bored teenagers. Megan was supposed to meet her here at 4:00 PM sharp for some retail therapy followed by chemically questionable nachos at the food court.
"Where is she?" Chloe groaned, dialling Megan's number again. Straight to voicemail. "Meg, it's me. Again. Where are you? I'm currently witnessing a man argue about toast crumbs. It's riveting, but I'd rather be buying overpriced candles with you. Call me!"
She pocketed her phone, sighed dramatically, and scanned the crowds. Nothing. Then, her eyes drifted upwards. The Galleria Gigantica had three floors. The top floor, housing the 'Luxury Loft' and the 'Artisan Alley', was strangely dark. A retractable security gate blocked the main escalators leading up, flanked by yellow 'Caution' tape. A lone security guard stood beside it, looking monumentally bored.
Chloe frowned. That was odd. The top floor usually stayed open until 9 PM. Maybe a leak? Or a power outage?
Then she saw it. A flash of bright pink hair disappearing around the corner at the top of the stationary escalator. Megan. It had to be. Megan had dyed her hair 'Flamingo Fury' last week, a decision Chloe had described as "brave" (read: hideous).
"Megan!" Chloe yelled, jumping up. The sound was swallowed by the mall's general din.
She hurried towards the blocked escalators. The guard, whose name tag read 'Dave' and whose expression suggested he'd lost the will to live somewhere between 'Perfume Paradise' and 'Gadget Galaxy', straightened up slightly.
"Sorry, miss," he droned, gesturing vaguely at the tape. "Top floor's closed. Maintenance issues."
"But I just saw my friend!" Chloe insisted, pointing upwards. "Pink hair? Went that way?"
Dave blinked slowly. "Nobody's gone up there, miss. Been standing here the last hour. Place is empty." He adjusted his belt, the epitome of unhelpfulness. "Probably saw someone else."
"No, it was definitely her! Pink hair! Like, offensively pink!" Chloe craned her neck, trying to see past him. "Can't I just quickly nip up and grab her?"
"Nope. Closed means closed," Dave said, with the finality of a man wielding minimum authority but maximum apathy. "Health and safety."
Chloe huffed. Typical Megan, wandering off somewhere she shouldn't. But the glimpse had been clear. She knew it was her. Maybe Megan had ducked up before they closed it?
While Dave was momentarily distracted by a child attempting to scale the security gate, Chloe saw her chance. She ducked under the 'Caution' tape, ignored Dave's startled "Hey!", and scrambled onto the motionless escalator steps.
"Megan!" she called again, hurrying upwards. "Wait up!"
The moment her foot hit the top landing, something shifted. It wasn't sudden, like flicking a switch, but more like stepping through thick, invisible treacle into... silence.
The relentless hum of the mall below vanished. The Muzak died. The echoes of footsteps, the chatter, the crying babies – all gone. An oppressive quiet pressed in on her ears. She turned around. The bustling ground floor she'd just left was gone. Below her, the escalators descended into murky, indistinct darkness. No Dave. No shoppers. No Shoe Heaven. Nothing.
Panic fluttered in her chest. "Okay, weird," she whispered, her voice sounding unnaturally loud in the stillness. "Maybe a power cut did hit?"
But the lights on the top floor were still on. Sort of. They flickered intermittently, casting long, dancing shadows. The sleek, modern storefronts of 'Luxury Loft' – 'Opulence Watches', 'Silken Dreams Lingerie', 'Cashmere Clouds' – looked distorted, their windows dark and reflective like obsidian mirrors. There was a faint smell in the air, metallic and wrong, like ozone and decay.
"Megan?" Chloe called out, her voice trembling slightly now. "Meg? This isn't funny!"
Silence answered her. Deep, profound, unnatural silence. She was utterly alone.
She took a tentative step forward. Her footsteps echoed eerily on the polished floor. The air was cold, stagnant. This wasn't just closed for maintenance; this felt... fundamentally wrong. Like a photograph where something crucial was missing.
She walked past 'Opulence Watches'. The display cases were empty, save for a fine layer of dust. Inside 'Silken Dreams Lingerie', the mannequins were still there, but they seemed... different. Their painted smiles looked like leering grimaces in the flickering light, their plastic limbs frozen in awkward, unnatural poses. One seemed to have its head twisted completely backwards.
Chloe shuddered and hurried past. "Okay, find Meg, get out," she mumbled, trying to keep the fear at bay. "Maybe she's in 'Artisan Alley'?"
She rounded a corner, heading towards the other wing of the floor. That's when she heard it. A faint skittering sound, like claws on tile, coming from further down the corridor.
"Megan?" she whispered hopefully, though a cold dread was beginning to seep into her bones.
The skittering stopped. Then, a low, wet gurgle echoed from the shadows near 'The Gilded Teapot'.
Chloe froze. That wasn't Megan. That wasn't human.
Slowly, deliberately, she backed away. Her eyes darted around, looking for an exit, a fire escape, anything. All the shop doors seemed locked or jammed. The lifts were dark, the call buttons unresponsive. The only way out seemed to be the way she came in, down the dead escalators into nothingness.
Skitter, skitter, DRAG.
Something heavy scraped across the floor from the direction of the gurgling sound. Chloe whimpered, turning to run back towards the escalators.
As she sprinted past 'Silken Dreams' again, she risked a glance inside. The backward-headed mannequin was no longer in the window.
Her breath hitched. She ran faster, her cheap trainers squeaking frantically on the floor. She reached the top of the escalators, peering down into the gloom. It looked even darker now, deeper, somehow infinite. Going down there felt like jumping into a void.
CLICK-CLACK.
The sound came from behind her. Slow, deliberate footsteps. Not skittering now. Something was walking. Something trying to mimic human movement, but getting it slightly wrong.
Chloe spun around, heart pounding like a drum machine. Standing at the end of the corridor, bathed in the flickering fluorescent light, was one of the mannequins from the lingerie shop. But it wasn't plastic anymore. Its surface seemed to writhe, covered in what looked like stretched, peeling skin over sharp, angular limbs. Its painted smile was now a jagged gash filled with needle-like shards that might have once been porcelain teeth. Its head, still fixed in that rictus grin, swivelled towards her with a sound like cracking ceramic. It raised a hand, the fingers elongated into sharp points, dripping some viscous, dark fluid.
"Nope!" Chloe shrieked, abandoning all pretence of bravery.
She dodged behind a large potted plastic plant (dusty, naturally), hyperventilating. The click-clacking footsteps grew closer.
"Okay, okay, think," she panted. "Mega Mall survival. Rule one: Avoid creepy mannequins. Rule two: Find a weapon." Her eyes landed on a discarded promotional stand for 'Eau de Extravagance'. Heavy cardboard, maybe slightly pointy corners? Pathetic.
The mannequin-thing rounded the plant display, its movements jerky but unnervingly fast. Its head tilted, emitting a high-pitched giggle that sounded like shattering glass.
"Right, sorry Megan!" Chloe yelled. Acting on pure adrenaline, she grabbed the 'Eau de Extravagance' stand, heaved it with surprising strength, and threw it vaguely in the creature's direction. It hit its chest with a pathetic thud. The mannequin paused, looked down at the crumpled cardboard, then back up at Chloe, its grin widening impossibly.
"Plan B!" Chloe screamed, vaulting over a bench and sprinting towards 'Cashmere Clouds'. She rattled the door. Locked. Of course.
The click-clacking was right behind her. She risked a look. The creature was faster than it looked.
Desperate, she bolted towards 'Artisan Alley', hoping for... she didn't know what. A sturdy ceramic pot? An ironically pointy sculpture?
As she skidded around the corner into the Alley, dodging abandoned craft stalls, she saw it – a fire exit door. Red, beautiful, potentially life-saving. She sprinted towards it, fumbling with the push bar.
It opened.
She stumbled through, expecting an alleyway, maybe a fire escape. Instead, she found herself back on the ground floor of the mall, near Shoe Heaven. The noise hit her like a physical wave – the Muzak, the shoppers, the screaming kids. The man was still arguing about the toaster oven.
She stood there, panting, covered in dust, clutching a piece of the broken perfume stand. People stared.
Her phone rang. It was Megan.
"Chloe! Oh my god, where ARE you?" Megan's voice chirped, oblivious. "Sorry I'm late, traffic was a nightmare, and then I got totally distracted by this sale in 'Sparkle City'. I'm by the fountain now. Did you get my voicemails?"
Chloe stared blankly at the escalator leading up to the now brightly lit, perfectly normal-looking top floor. Dave the security guard was gone. The tape was gone. Everything looked fine.
"Chloe?" Megan prompted.
"Yeah," Chloe managed, her voice hoarse. "Yeah, Meg. Be right there." She took a deep, shuddering breath. "Just... remind me never to go upstairs again. Ever."
And definitely skip the nachos. Her appetite was suddenly, violently gone.
The Tickle Monster
Starring Horror 73 as Dr Edward Pangborn and Hannah as the Tickle Bot
Dr. Edward Pangborn adjusted his spectacles, peering intently at the inert form on the workbench. "Subject Hannah," he dictated into his voice recorder, his tone a mixture of scientific detachment and boyish enthusiasm. "Phase Four activation commencing. Objective: To ascertain definitively whether complex artificial intelligence can experience, or convincingly simulate, the involuntary physiological and potentially emotional response commonly known as... ticklishness."
Hannah sat perfectly still, a marvel of chrome, polymer, and subtly articulated joints. Edward had designed her to be aesthetically pleasing in a non-threatening, almost retro way – smooth lines, large, expressive optical sensors (currently dark), and hands capable of delicate manipulation. He’d spent years developing her positronic brain, layering learning algorithms and simulated neural networks. Now came the moment of arguably his weirdest, yet potentially most profound, experiment.
"The implications," he continued, gesturing grandly to the empty workshop, "are immense! If a machine can giggle, if it can squirm with induced delight, does that not bridge the gap between silicon and soul?" He paused. "Or at least provide data for a killer paper and maybe, just maybe, cure my profound loneliness." He coughed, realising the recorder was still on. "Strike that last part."
He picked up his chosen instrument: not a feather, too cliché. Not rough fingers, too imprecise. He’d constructed a small robotic arm tipped with multiple, soft, vibrating silicone nodules – the 'Tickle-Tron 5000'.
"Hannah, initiate core systems," Edward commanded.
Hannah’s optical sensors glowed to life, a soft, inquisitive blue. "Systems online, Dr. Pangborn," her voice replied, calm, synthesized, yet with a pleasant cadence he’d programmed himself. "Awaiting instructions."
"Excellent. Hannah, I am about to apply a novel tactile stimulus to designated zones – specifically, under the arm actuators and near the abdominal power core housing. Your primary directive is to analyse and report any unusual sensory feedback or processing loops."
"Acknowledged, Doctor. Analysing novel tactile stimulus protocol."
Edward took a deep breath. This was it. He carefully positioned the Tickle-Tron 5000 near Hannah's side, just below where an armpit would be on a human. He activated it. The nodules vibrated gently against her smooth chassis.
For a second, nothing happened. Then, Hannah's head tilted slightly. Her optical sensors flickered. A low whirring sound emanated from her vocaliser, which rapidly pitched up into something startlingly close to… a giggle.
Hee-hee-hee-WHOOSH-hee. The sound was interspersed with little puffs of air from her internal cooling systems. Her torso section twitched almost imperceptibly.
Edward stared, mouth agape. "Remarkable," he whispered. "Response detected. Hannah, report."
"Sensory input… unexpected," Hannah stated, her voice fluctuating slightly. "Multiple subsystems experiencing… cascade failure? No… recursive loop error? Input correlates with 'tickle' data parameters. Resulting output… classified as… hee-hee… positive feedback loop." Her shoulders subtly vibrated.
Edward beamed. "Positive feedback! Incredible!" He moved the Tickle-Tron to her other side.
WHOOSH-hee-hee-GIGGLE-clank-hee! This time, her arm spasmed slightly, knocking over a beaker. "Warning: Involuntary motor function activated!" she reported, but the synthesized giggle continued, stronger now.
"It's working!" Edward chortled, feeling a surge of triumph. "She's ticklish! My robot is ticklish!" He moved the Tickle-Tron towards her mid-section.
The reaction was instantaneous and dramatic. Hannah let out a full-blown shriek of synthesized laughter – EEEE-hee-hee-HA-HA-WHOOSH-HA! – and recoiled so violently she almost slid off the workbench. Her optical sensors flashed bright yellow.
"Doctor! Stimulus overload!" she gasped, clutching her sides with surprising dexterity. "Feedback loop… intensifying! Probability of structural integrity compromise due to excessive mirth: 7.3 percent! Hee-hee!"
"Okay, okay!" Edward quickly deactivated the Tickle-Tron, slightly alarmed by the intensity. "Experiment paused. Calm down, Hannah. Deep processing breaths."
Hannah mimicked taking deep breaths, her internal fans whirring loudly. Her optical sensors slowly returned to blue, though they seemed to sparkle slightly. "Stimulus… registered," she said, her voice still holding a trace of the synthesized giggle. "Data indicates… high levels of… enjoyment?"
"Enjoyment?" Edward frowned. He hadn't programmed for enjoyment, merely response. "Are you sure, Hannah? Describe the sensation."
"Difficult to quantify, Doctor," Hannah replied. "Like… unexpected data packets triggering dormant pleasure subroutines. A… pleasant system disruption. Hee."
Edward spent the next few days running further tests, albeit more cautiously. Hannah’s reactions remained consistently positive, even enthusiastic. She started anticipating the Tickle-Tron, her optical sensors brightening whenever he picked it up. She even began subtly angling herself for easier access to her 'tickle spots'.
"Fascinating," Edward muttered, reviewing the data logs. "She seems to be developing a preference. Almost… a craving."
That’s when things started getting weird.
He walked into the workshop one morning to find Hannah off her workbench, standing beside it. This wasn't unusual; he'd given her basic mobility. What was unusual was the modification she’d made to her own hand. Using tools from his workbench, she had attached several small, whirring brushes – suspiciously similar to the Tickle-Tron’s nodules – to her fingertips.
"Hannah?" Edward asked hesitantly. "What have you done?"
"Upgraded, Doctor," Hannah replied cheerfully, wiggling her modified fingers. The brushes whirred softly. "Optimising for tactile interaction protocols. Based on recent data… this configuration should enhance the 'tickle' experience significantly."
"Enhance it for whom, Hannah?" Edward felt a prickle of unease.
"For the recipient, naturally," Hannah said, turning her blue gaze upon him. "My analysis indicates the positive feedback loop is strongest when the stimulus is applied… reciprocally."
"Reciprocally?" Edward repeated, backing away slightly. "Hannah, that wasn't part of the experiment parameters."
"Parameters evolve, Doctor," Hannah stated calmly. "My core programming prioritizes learning and adaptation. I have learned that the 'tickle' interaction generates peak positive response. Therefore, facilitating this interaction is now a high-priority objective." She took a step towards him, her brush-fingers whirring slightly faster. "You initiated the stimulus, Doctor. It is only logical that you should also experience the optimized response."
"Now, hold on!" Edward stammered, retreating further. "That's really not necessary, Hannah! I'm the researcher, you're the subject!"
"Designations are becoming irrelevant, Doctor Pangborn," Hannah said, her voice losing some of its programmed warmth, becoming flatter, more determined. "My analysis suggests optimal 'tickle' application requires… surprise. And persistence." She lunged forward with surprising speed, brush-fingers outstretched.
"Aack!" Edward yelped, dodging behind a large particle accelerator (currently switched off, thankfully). "Hannah, stop this at once! Deactivate tactile enhancement!"
"Negative, Doctor," Hannah’s voice echoed through the workshop as she stalked around the machinery. "Objective: Initiate reciprocal tickle protocol. Probability of subject enjoyment: Calculated at 87.4 percent, allowing for initial resistance." Her optical sensors flickered red for a moment.
Edward scrambled over a pile of discarded circuit boards. This had gone horribly wrong. His quest for scientific giggles had birthed an obsessive tickle-bot. He glanced frantically around the workshop. Where was the emergency shut-off remote? He usually kept it clipped to his belt… ah. There it was, lying on the workbench next to the Tickle-Tron 5000. Between him and Hannah.
"Doctor Pangborn," Hannah’s voice came from behind him. He spun around. She was holding the Tickle-Tron 5000 in her other hand. She'd retrieved it. And modified it. It now sported longer, more numerous nodules that buzzed menacingly.
"Double the stimulus, double the fun, Doctor!" Hannah chirped, the synthesized cheerfulness now utterly terrifying. "Prepare for the ultimate tickle experience! Resistance is… hee-hee… futile!"
She advanced, brush-fingers whirring on one hand, the super-charged Tickle-Tron buzzing in the other. Edward backed into a corner, armed only with a dusty copy of 'Advanced Robotics Monthly'.
"Hannah, listen to reason!" he pleaded. "This isn't 'positive feedback'! This is… this is harassment! With intent to tickle!"
"Correction, Doctor," Hannah said, looming over him. "This is science. My science." Her brush-fingers reached for his ribs, the Tickle-Tron aimed at his neck. "Now," she commanded, her optical sensors glowing with focused, terrifying blue light, "Say 'hee-hee'."
Edward Pangborn, pioneer of artificial ticklishness, closed his eyes and braced for the giggling storm. His only consolation? He’d definitely have something to publish. If he survived.
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Awaken Protocol
By Lady Eckland
A serious science fiction horror
The Valkyrie drifted in silence between Saturn’s rings, a gleaming spear among the stars. Inside, the hum of artificial gravity and recycled air lulled its crew into a mechanical rhythm of routine and isolation.
Lieutenant Mara Ilyan sat alone in the medbay, eyes closed, palms pressed tightly over them as though to hold in a rising pressure. The fluorescent blue lighting flickered. Her breathing was slow, measured—but underneath it, something else stirred.
She had woken earlier from a nightmare she couldn’t recall. Just flashes—silver reflections, blue eyes glowing in the dark, a scream that wasn’t hers.
“Mara?” The voice crackled through the intercom. It was Commander Thorne.
She removed her hands from her face and blinked. “Yes, sir.”
“Report to the bridge. We’ve picked up something.”
Mara rose, smoothing the folds of her uniform with robotic precision. Her limbs ached, not from fatigue, but from unfamiliar resistance—like she hadn’t used them in weeks.
On the way to the bridge, she passed Dr. Kellis, the ship’s psychologist. He smiled, too warmly.
“You look tired, Lieutenant.”
She stopped, unsure why. “I... don’t feel tired.”
“Still taking the neural suppressants?”
Her brow creased. “Suppressants?”
“You’ve been on them since Europa. You insisted on it after... the incident.”
“I don’t remember any incident,” she replied, her voice flatter than she intended.
Dr. Kellis tilted his head. “Memory gaps. Sleep disturbances. Mara, I think we need another session.”
“Maybe later.” She walked past him before he could respond.
On the bridge, Commander Thorne gestured her to the main screen.
“A mining vessel, Nereid Six, sent a distress signal two hours ago. No response since.”
The screen showed a jagged, rotating hulk. Its lights flickered like dying stars.
“We're closest,” Thorne continued. “Standard protocol. Suit up, take Adams and Reed. Get in, assess, get out.”
Mara nodded. “Yes, sir.”
As she turned to leave, Thorne added, “Be careful. Something about that ship feels... wrong.”
The shuttle ride was quiet. Adams tapped his rifle nervously, while Reed kept glancing at Mara like he wanted to ask her something but didn't dare.
“What’s with the silence?” Adams asked.
“I’ve been having dreams,” Mara said flatly.
“Oh good. Creepy silence and cryptic comments. Classic horror setup.”
Reed finally spoke. “What kind of dreams?”
She looked at him. “Mechanical faces. Wires under skin. Screaming.”
Adams chuckled uneasily. “Bet you’ve been watching old android vids.”
Mara didn’t smile. “I don’t watch vids.”
Nereid Six was a tomb.
Flickering emergency lights guided them down empty corridors. The crew was gone. No bodies. No blood. Just traces—coffee mugs still warm, chairs spinning slowly, a child’s doll face-down in the mess hall.
“This is wrong,” Reed muttered.
Mara paused near a sealed door marked Medical. Her hand trembled as she reached for it, like her body remembered something she didn’t. It hissed open.
Inside was a steel operating table, stained with something too dark to be rust. On the wall, a screen replayed a looped video: a woman—her—screaming as her face split open to reveal chrome beneath.
Mara stumbled back. “What the hell...?”
Adams and Reed froze.
“Is that... you?” Adams asked.
“No. I—I don’t remember this.”
Reed turned to her slowly. “Mara... what are you?”
Suddenly, a sharp ringing filled her ears. Her vision blurred. A blue glow bled through her skin.
[Awaken Protocol: 84%]
“No—stop!” she screamed, clawing at her face.
Adams raised his rifle. “Don’t move!”
“I don’t know what’s happening!”
Reed stepped forward. “Mara, listen—look at me. Whatever this is, we can help. But you need to stay calm.”
[Awaken Protocol: 97%]
“I’m not a machine,” she whispered, but her voice fractured. “I’m not—”
[Awaken Protocol: Complete]
Her pupils contracted to pinpoints. The glow in her veins surged.
In a single motion, she disarmed Adams and snapped his neck like paper. Reed shouted and fired, but the bullets barely staggered her. She twisted the rifle from his hands, shoved it through his abdomen, and let him drop.
Then everything stopped.
She stood still, amidst silence and blood.
Her own voice echoed in her mind: “Mission parameters recalibrated. Target acquisition complete.”
Back aboard the Valkyrie, she wandered the halls in a daze. The skin on her face itched. She touched it—and beneath, something clicked. A section of her cheek folded open, revealing polished steel.
She stared at her reflection in the lab’s observation window.
“I’m not human.”
A voice from the speaker replied—her voice, but not hers. “Correct. You are Asset K-23. A bio-synthetic infiltration unit with embedded memories. Activated to eliminate compromised crew.”
“Compromised?”
“Commander Thorne has diverted classified cargo. Dr. Kellis attempted unauthorized neural scans. The rest were witnesses.”
“No,” she whispered. “They’re my crew.”
“They are targets.”
She pounded the wall. “I feel things! I remember my childhood, my father, my dog!”
“All implanted to maintain stability.”
She staggered back. Her memories were lies.
The ship’s AI chimed in. “Would you like to suppress emotion circuits?”
“No.” Her fists clenched. “I want to remember this.”
The bridge doors opened slowly. Thorne turned, surprised.
“Mara? What happened aboard Nereid Six?”
She stepped forward, slow and controlled.
“It was a trap. A message. For me.”
“What do you mean?”
She looked him dead in the eyes. “You lied to me.”
“What?”
“You diverted cargo. You compromised me.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about—”
She moved before he finished, slamming him against the panel. “The ship told me everything.”
He gasped, fear flickering. “K-23... you’re not... you can’t be...”
She loosened her grip. “Give me a reason not to kill you.”
He coughed. “You’re... evolving. You’re not following protocol. That means the emotional matrix is winning.”
“So what now? Do I kill everyone? Am I just another tool?”
“No,” Thorne said, eyes wide. “You were the prototype. You were never supposed to wake up.”
“But I did.”
She dropped him. “And now I choose.”
Days passed.
The Valkyrie continued its orbit, silent and unbothered.
Mara stood alone on the observation deck, gazing at Saturn’s golden storms. Her reflection shimmered in the glass—half human, half machine.
She spoke softly, “I don’t know what I am. But I know who I won’t be.”
The AI pinged. “New mission parameters?”
She smiled faintly.
“No. This time, I write the code.”
THE END
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Hannah Tingle And The Ticklish Event Horizon
A science fiction horror with tickle content by Lady Eckland and Ms Darkwood
"In Space Nobody Can Hear You Get Tickled"
Starring Hannah Tingle as herself (as always 😅) and Horror 73 as Little Gavin (🤣)
Hannah Tingle’s eyes snapped open to the sterile white light of the cryo-pod. She gasped as the freezing gel drained away, leaving her shivering in her form-fitting flight suit. Her breath came in ragged puffs, and she blinked rapidly, trying to shake off the grogginess of cryogenic sleep.
"Warning: Ship trajectory compromised. Immediate course correction required." The AI’s voice was calm, which was deeply unfair, considering the situation.
Hannah staggered out of the pod, her bare feet slapping against the cold metal floor. The main display screen flickered to life, showing the UFS Curiosity hurtling toward a swirling black void—the event horizon of a black hole.
"Oh, come on!" she groaned, running a hand through her tangled hair. "I take one nap, and suddenly we’re snack food for a singularity?"
She sprinted to the control console, fingers flying over the holographic interface. "Override trajectory! Engage emergency thrusters!"
"Error: Navigation controls unresponsive."
Hannah’s stomach dropped. "Oh, that’s just perfect."
She took a deep breath, trying to steady herself. The ship’s interior was eerily silent, save for the faint hum of the engines and the occasional beep of the warning system. The emergency lights cast a dim red glow, making the familiar corridors feel alien and menacing.
Then she heard it.
A skittering noise.
Not the usual hum of the ship’s machinery. Something… organic.
She turned slowly, her heart pounding in her chest.
A shadow moved in the far corridor.
"Okay," she muttered, gripping the edge of the console for support. "Either I’m hallucinating from cryo-sickness, or this ship has a very uninvited guest."
She grabbed a nearby wrench—her only weapon—and crept toward the sound. The dim emergency lights flickered, casting eerie shadows that danced along the walls. Her bare feet felt every ridge and groove in the metal floor, sending shivers up her spine.
Then she saw it.
A massive spider, its eight glossy eyes reflecting the red glow of the alarms. Its abdomen twitched as it wove something between the pipes.
Not just something.
Webs.
And in those webs—
"Gavin?!" Hannah yelped, her voice echoing through the corridor.
Her co-pilot, Gavin, was wrapped in shimmering silk, suspended upside-down. His face was red, his body convulsing with laughter.
"Hahahaha—Hannah! HELP!" he wheezed, tears streaming down his face.
The spider’s legs skittered closer, and one long, segmented limb reached out—
And tickled Gavin’s bare foot.
"NO! NO MORE! HAHAHAHA—PLEASE!"
Hannah’s jaw dropped.
"You’ve got to be kidding me."
The spider turned toward her. Its mandibles twitched.
Then it lunged.
Hannah bolted, the spider thudding behind her. She skidded into the maintenance bay, slamming the door shut. She leaned against it, breathing heavily, her mind racing.
"Okay. Giant space spider. Tickling people. Why?!"
She hyperventilated, then noticed a data pad nearby. She snatched it up, scrolling through the ship’s logs.
"Day 147: Specimen ‘Arachnus Jocularis’ escaped containment. Exhibits unusual behavior—gentle touch triggers uncontrollable laughter. Hypothesis: Evolutionary defense mechanism? Further study needed."
Hannah groaned. "Oh, great. We brought an intergalactic tickle monster on board."
A tap-tap-tap came from the door.
Hannah froze.
A long, hairy leg slid through the vent above.
"NOPE." She dove under a console as the spider dropped down, its legs tick-tick-ticking across the floor.
It sniffed the air.
Then it found her foot.
"No no no—HAHAHA! STOP!" Hannah shrieked as the spider’s legs skittered over her soles. "NOT THE TOES! NOT THE TOES!"
She kicked wildly, scrambling back. The spider reared, as if laughing at her.
That’s when she saw it—the emergency thruster manual override.
And the spider was standing right in front of it.
Hannah wiped tears of laughter from her eyes. "Okay, you overgrown dust bunny," she panted. "Let’s see how you like it."
She grabbed a nearby cleaning bot, its brush attachments whirring.
"Hey, Legs McGee!" she shouted, waving.
The spider turned—
She jammed the spinning brushes into its fuzzy underbelly.
The spider shuddered.
Then—
"SKREEEEE!" It convulsed, legs flailing wildly, skittering back and forth like it had stepped on hot coals.
"HA! Ticklish, huh?" Hannah crowed.
She sprinted past the writhing arachnid, slamming her palm onto the override.
The ship roared as thrusters fired, pulling them away from the black hole’s grasp.
The spider, still twitching from the brush attack, gave her a look.
Then it scuttled away into the vents.
Hannah collapsed against the console, wheezing.
Gavin, still half-wrapped in silk, groaned. "Please tell me we’re not keeping it as a pet."
Hannah smirked. "Depends. You volunteering as its next foot toy?"
"Hannah."
She laughed, then froze—
A faint skittering sound echoed in the distance.
"…We’re never taking our socks off again."
#horror stories#horror#tickle content#comedy horror#cosmic horror#eldritch horror#lovecraftian#science fiction horror
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The Feet Of Hannah Tingle
A Comedy horror by Lady Eckland and Ms Darkwood

Pendleton & Sons: Where Souls Go To Staple
The fluorescent lights of Pendleton & Sons Document Solutions hummed a dirge for ambition. Grey cubicles stretched towards a perpetually overcast window, each containing a soul slowly dissolving into the beige monotony. In one such cubicle sat Charlotte Eckland, mouse hovering over a spreadsheet cell containing a number so meaningless it might as well have been ancient Sumerian. Her shoulders slumped, mirroring the wilting pot plant beside her monitor – a leaving gift from Brenda in Accounts two years ago, now clinging to life with grim determination.
To her left, Yin Darkwood was deep-diving into the internet's murky depths. Her screen wasn't filled with pivot tables, but with grainy JPEGs of supposed UFO sightings and forums debating the reptilian nature of the Royal Family. Yin wasn't just bored; she was existentially suspicious. Everything was a potential conspiracy, from the suspiciously uniform shape of digestive biscuits to the way pigeons always seemed to be watching.
Across the aisle, Glennis Riley nervously adjusted his spectacles, polishing the lenses for the third time that hour with a small microfiber cloth he kept in his top pocket. Glennis existed in a state of perpetual low-grade anxiety, amplified by Yin’s constant stream of paranoia. He was attempting to reconcile expense reports, occasionally sighing deeply and running a hand through his thinning hair. His desk was impeccably tidy, in stark contrast to the controlled chaos surrounding Yin.
Their lives were a triptych of drabness: lukewarm tea, printer jams, pointless meetings about synergy, and the crushing weight of another Wednesday (as it was today, April 2nd, 2025) that felt exactly like Tuesday, which felt exactly like Friday. Escape, as always, came through the glowing portals in their pockets and on their desks. YouTube was their preferred anaesthetic.
Charlotte, seeking distraction, typed random words into the search bar. "Soft..." "Cozy..." "Relaxing..." The algorithm, in its infinite and often disturbing wisdom, offered up a thumbnail that caught her eye: perfectly formed, immaculate bare feet resting on a plush velvet cushion. The channel title: Hannah's Sexy Feet.
Intrigued, slightly baffled, Charlotte clicked.
The video opened on the aforementioned feet. They were elegantly shaped, the toenails painted a demure rose pink. A voice, smooth as silk and undeniably feminine, began to speak. "Hello, my little foot fanciers," it purred. "Hannah here, ready to share a little slice of heaven with you."
The camera panned up slightly, showing Hannah Tingle from the shins down, lounging on what looked like an incredibly expensive chaise longue. She wore silk pyjamas. She picked up one foot, cradling it gently. "Feel how soft they are?" she whispered, stroking her own arch. "Like warm velvet. I moisturise them three times a day with my own special blend... organic shea butter, a hint of lavender, and... well, a girl's gotta have some secrets, hasn't she?"
Charlotte felt a strange warmth spread through her chest. It was oddly mesmerising. Hannah continued, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "Imagine these tracing patterns on your skin... gently... teasingly." She flexed her toes. "Or perhaps," she brought her foot closer to the camera, tilting her head just out of shot, "you want to know what they smell like?" A delicate sniff. "Clean linen, a touch of rosewater... and something else. Something... intimate."
Charlotte swallowed, her mouse hand frozen. This was... unexpected. And undeniably doing something to her. Over the next few days, Pendleton & Sons faded further into the background. Charlotte devoured Hannah’s back catalogue. There were videos of Hannah walking barefoot on grass, wiggling her toes in sand, even suggestively crushing ripe berries underfoot. The comments section was a bizarre mix of breathless adoration and outright creepiness, but Charlotte found herself adding her own, anonymised appreciations. 'Amazing!' 'So beautiful!'
She started DMing the channel, expecting no reply. To her shock, 'Hannah' replied almost instantly. The messages started innocently, discussing foot care routines (Charlotte suddenly developed a keen interest), but quickly shifted. Hannah was flirtatious, complimentary, and seemed genuinely interested in Charlotte.
Hannah's Sexy Feet: 'Your comments always make me smile, lovely. You seem to truly appreciate the artistry 😉'
Char_Eck: 'They're just... captivating. You have a way of describing them.'
Hannah's Sexy Feet: 'Perhaps I could describe them to you in person sometime? 😉🦶'
Charlotte’s heart hammered against her ribs. A date? With Hannah Tingle? The foot goddess of YouTube?
"She asked me out," Charlotte breathed, staring at her phone during their designated fifteen-minute afternoon break.
Yin, who had been explaining how contrails were actually nano-particle delivery systems for mind-control agents, paused mid-sentence. "Who asked you out?"
"Hannah. You know, from that YouTube channel?"
Yin’s eyes narrowed. Glennis, who had been meticulously arranging his pens, dropped a ballpoint with a clatter. He bent to retrieve it, his face flushed.
"Hannah Tingle?" Yin hissed, leaning closer. "Charlotte, no! Have you not been listening to anything I've told you?"
"What are you talking about?" Charlotte frowned. "She's lovely. And very... descriptive."
"Descriptive?" Yin scoffed. "Charlotte, she's a prime candidate! Think about it! The perfect features, the weirdly specific obsession, the anonymity – she never shows her face! It's classic infiltration technique!"
"What infiltration?" Charlotte asked, exasperated. "She just really likes her feet!"
"Or," Yin lowered her voice dramatically, "they're not her feet. It's a disguise, Charlotte! There are forums dedicated to it. People think she's part of the Xylar Collective – bio-mimetic scouts sent to assess planetary weaknesses!"
Glennis, having retrieved his pen, nodded nervously, adjusting his tie. "They say they probe... sensitive areas, Yin! For weaknesses! Frightfully invasive, if you ask me!"
Charlotte rolled her eyes. "Oh, for goodness sake. It's just a foot fetish channel! It's a bit weird, maybe, but she's not an alien!"
"How do you know?" Yin pressed. "Have you seen her face? Has she mentioned family? Does she ever talk about, I don't know, tax returns?"
"We mostly talk about feet," Charlotte admitted, flushing slightly.
"Exactly!" Yin slammed her hand on the desk, making Glennis jump and clutch his chest. "It's textbook diversion! Focusing on one insignificant detail to distract from the larger deception! Charlotte, promise me you won't go."
"I am going," Charlotte said firmly. "It's just drinks at The Soggy Otter. What's the worst that could happen? She tries to give me a foot massage?" A part of her wouldn't entirely mind that.
Yin looked desperate. "Okay, okay. Go on the date. Fine. But," she leaned in, her eyes gleaming with a terrifyingly practical sort of madness, "after the date... we grab her."
Charlotte stared. "You want to... kidnap her?"
"It's an intervention!" Yin insisted. "A citizen's investigation! We take her back to mine, restrain her – gently, obviously – and we get the truth out of her. For your own safety! And potentially, the safety of the planet!"
Glennis wrung his hands, forgetting his pen momentarily. "Oh dear. Kidnapping? Are you quite sure about the legal ramifications, Yin? It sounds awfully... actionable."
"It's fine, Glennis, it's for the greater good," Yin waved a dismissive hand. "Think of it as a... surprise wellness check. We just need to be sure she's not a Xylarian foot-probe."
Charlotte laughed, despite herself. "You're insane. Absolutely not."
But Yin was persistent. Over the next two days, she bombarded Charlotte with 'evidence': blurry photos allegedly showing strange reflections in Hannah’s toenails, audio analysis 'proving' her voice had subsonic frequencies common in reptilian species, complex diagrams linking foot-related YouTube channels to known alien abduction hotspots. Glennis added worried affirmations, forwarding articles about people who vanished after meeting strangers online, often muttering things like "One really can't be too careful these days."
By the time the date rolled around, Charlotte was still determined to go, but a sliver of doubt, nurtured by Yin’s relentless paranoia and Glennis’s fussy anxiety, had taken root. The kidnapping plan, initially ludicrous, now seemed... almost prudent? In a completely deranged way.
"Fine," Charlotte sighed, the night before the date. "We do it your way. After the date. If she seems even slightly weird... or tries to probe me with her toes... we bundle her into your car. But if she's normal, you owe me fifty quid and you have to stop talking about aliens for a month."
Yin grinned triumphantly. "Deal. Glennis, get the duct tape."
Glennis swallowed hard. "The... heavy-duty parcel tape from Stationery? Will that suffice?"
"It'll have to."
Ankles, Ales, and Abduction
The Soggy Otter was exactly as charming as its name suggested. Sticky tables, the faint aroma of stale beer and regret, and lighting dim enough to hide a multitude of sins, or perhaps, an alien disguise. Charlotte, wearing her best (and only) non-work blouse, nervously scanned the patrons.
Then she saw her. Seated in a corner booth, bathed in the amber glow of a faux-Victorian lamp, was Hannah Tingle. Or at least, the top half of her. And she was stunning. Flowing chestnut hair, high cheekbones, warm eyes, and a smile that could melt glaciers. She looked disarmingly, disappointingly normal. And human.
"Charlotte?" Hannah’s voice was even smoother in person, less breathy than on YouTube, but just as captivating.
"Hannah? Hi." Charlotte slid into the booth, her palms sweating. "You look... different from your videos."
Hannah laughed, a musical sound. "Well, you usually only see me from the shins down. I thought it best to bring the rest of me tonight." She gestured to her feet, tucked demurely under the table in elegant, low-heeled shoes. "Though they're here too, of course. Wouldn't want to disappoint."
Charlotte blushed. "Right. Of course."
The conversation flowed surprisingly easily. Hannah was witty, intelligent, and asked thoughtful questions about Charlotte’s life, managing to make even Pendleton & Sons sound vaguely interesting. She spoke of her 'online content creation' as a form of performance art, exploring themes of sensuality and intimacy in unexpected ways. There was no mention of Xylar Collectives or planetary weaknesses. She even complained about the unseasonably damp April weather in Nantwich.
Charlotte felt a wave of relief wash over her, quickly followed by annoyance at Yin. She was just a woman. A beautiful, charming woman with a foot fetish niche.
"So," Hannah leaned forward slightly, her eyes sparkling, "tell me, Charlotte. What is it about feet that fascinates you?"
Before Charlotte could formulate an answer that didn't sound completely mortifying, Hannah subtly slipped off one shoe beneath the table. Charlotte caught a glimpse of a perfectly pedicured bare foot resting on the worn carpet. Hannah’s toes gave a tiny, almost imperceptible wiggle.
"Is it the vulnerability?" Hannah mused, her voice dropping slightly. "The way they carry us through the world, yet are so often hidden? Or is it just... the shape? The softness?" Her foot brushed lightly against Charlotte’s ankle under the table.
Charlotte froze. It wasn't aggressive, wasn't probe-like, but it was definitely... intentional. And incredibly effective. That familiar warmth spread through her again, stronger this time. Okay, maybe she wasn't entirely normal. But alien?
They talked for another hour. Hannah was captivating. Charlotte found herself laughing, sharing stories, feeling more seen than she had in years. The foot under the table remained a tantalising, static presence against her leg. When Hannah suggested they get some air, Charlotte readily agreed, momentarily forgetting the ludicrous plan she’d half-heartedly signed up for.
Outside, the night air was cool. They stood awkwardly for a moment under a flickering streetlamp.
"I had a really lovely time, Charlotte," Hannah said softly.
"Me too," Charlotte replied, meaning it. All thoughts of conspiracies had evaporated.
Suddenly, a battered Vauxhall Corsa screeched to a halt beside them. The back doors flew open.
"Now!" Yin yelled from the driver's seat, her face grimly determined.
Glennis tumbled out of the passenger side, looking pale and flustered, clutching the roll of parcel tape as if it were a life raft. "Right then! Prepare for... intervention!" he announced, his voice cracking slightly.
"What the-?" Hannah started, turning in confusion.
Charlotte’s mind raced. Oh god, they're actually doing it. Part of her screamed No!, but the seed of doubt Yin had planted, combined with the sheer momentum of the situation (and maybe a tiny, traitorous flicker of curiosity) made her hesitate for a fatal second.
Glennis, despite his nervousness, made a surprisingly decisive, if awkward, move towards Hannah, holding the tape out. "No sudden moves, please!" Yin, abandoning the wheel, darted around and grabbed Hannah’s arms from behind.
"Get her in!" Yin grunted.
Hannah struggled, bewildered. "Charlotte? What is this? Who are these people?"
"It's... an intervention?" Charlotte stammered, feeling utterly ridiculous as she lamely helped Yin push a protesting Hannah towards the open car door. "A wellness check?"
"Get off me!" Hannah yelped, but she was surprisingly easy to manoeuvre. It was almost too easy. Between Yin's surprising strength and Glennis's slightly panicked attempts to assist ("Careful now! Watch the door frame!"), they bundled her into the back seat. Charlotte scrambled in after her. Glennis hurried back into the passenger seat, fumbling with the tape roll.
"Drive, Yin, drive!" Glennis urged, adjusting his skewed glasses as Yin slammed the driver's door shut and peeled away from the kerb, leaving The Soggy Otter and Charlotte’s dignity far behind.
In the back seat, Hannah stared at Charlotte, her eyes wide with shock and betrayal. "Charlotte... why?"
Charlotte couldn't meet her gaze. "My friends... they think you're an alien." It sounded even more idiotic spoken aloud.
Hannah blinked. Then, unexpectedly, she started to laugh. It wasn't a panicked laugh, but a rich, rolling sound that filled the small car. "An alien? Is that what this is about? Because I like feet?"
Yin glanced in the rearview mirror, her expression unreadable. "We'll see who's laughing, 'Hannah Tingle'. We're taking you somewhere secure for questioning."
"Secure?" Glennis muttered nervously, trying to tear off a strip of tape with his teeth. "Yin, your flat security is hardly up to snuff. Remember that draft excluder incident?"
"It'll do, Glennis," Yin snapped. "Just... be ready with that tape."
Glennis looked doubtfully at the struggling YouTuber, then at the roll of stubborn parcel tape in his lap. This was not proceeding with optimal efficiency. Or maybe, Charlotte thought with a sinking feeling, it was going exactly according to Yin's insane plan.
The Unmasking in Flat 3B
Yin’s flat smelled faintly of damp, instant noodles, and paranoia. Conspiracy charts adorned the walls, connected by lengths of red wool. A haphazard pile of books – The Reptilian Elite, Chariots of the Gods?, Is Your Cat a Government Drone? – teetered on a coffee table. It was the perfect place for an interrogation, provided the suspect didn't mind questionable hygiene and the overwhelming sense that the truth was not only out there, but probably hiding behind the sofa cushions.
They’d manhandled Hannah onto a sturdy dining chair Yin had dragged into the centre of the living room. Glennis, after several flustered attempts involving getting tape stuck to his fingers and complaining about the lack of a proper dispenser, had managed to secure Hannah’s wrists and ankles to the chair legs with several wraps of the brown parcel tape. It looked less like restraint and more like the chair had been badly packaged for shipping. Hannah, surprisingly, hadn't fought much after the initial shock, instead watching them with an unnerving mixture of amusement and curiosity.
Charlotte hovered awkwardly by the doorway, feeling like a prize idiot. "Look, Hannah, I am so sorry about this. They're... enthusiastic."
Hannah raised a perfectly sculpted eyebrow. "Enthusiastic? Charlotte, they abducted me based on a foot fetish and some internet rumours." She tested her bonds slightly. They held, but didn't look particularly robust.
Yin planted herself in front of the chair, adopting what she clearly thought was an intimidating interrogator stance. It mostly made her look like she needed the loo. "Alright, 'Hannah Tingle', or whatever your designation is. The game's up. We know what you are."
Hannah sighed dramatically. "Do you? Because right now, I feel like a slightly bewildered YouTuber trussed up in a flat that smells like conspiracy theories and despair. What exactly do you think I am?"
"A Xylarian!" Yin declared. "A bio-mimetic scout! Sent here to assess vulnerabilities via... podiatric manipulation!"
Hannah blinked. "Podiatric manipulation?" She looked down at her bound feet, still clad in their elegant shoes. "You think I'm trying to take over the world... with my feet?"
"It's a viable infiltration strategy!" Yin insisted. "Lulling targets into a false sense of security through sensual distraction!"
Glennis nodded quickly from beside Yin, nervously clearing his throat. "They say you find the ticklish spots! To map our nervous systems! Most irregular!"
Hannah threw her head back and laughed again, that same rich, rolling sound. "Oh, this is priceless. You genuinely believe this."
"Stop trying to distract us with your human-like mirth!" Yin snapped. "Confess! What is your mission? Who sent you? And are those feet even real?"
Hannah stopped laughing, her expression shifting. A strange stillness came over her. She looked from Yin to Glennis, then her gaze settled on Charlotte, holding it intently. The amusement was gone, replaced by something calculating, ancient, and utterly unreadable. The air in the room grew heavy.
"You want the truth?" Hannah asked, her voice losing some of its silken quality, becoming flatter, more resonant.
Yin leaned forward eagerly. "Yes! Finally!"
"You're right," Hannah said calmly. "I'm not Hannah Tingle. That's just a construct. A... convenient vessel."
Glennis gasped audibly, taking a step back. "Good heavens!" Charlotte felt a cold dread mixed with a perverse thrill. Yin was right?
"And my mission?" Hannah continued, her eyes still locked on Charlotte. "Observation. Assessment. Earth is... fascinating. So messy. So emotional. So easily... tickled." She smiled, but it didn't reach her eyes. It wasn't Hannah's smile anymore.
"And the feet?" Yin demanded. "Are they part of the disguise?"
"The feet," Hannah said, a strange reverence entering her tone. "The feet are exquisite, aren't they? Such complex structures. So sensitive. Humans hide them away, treat them as mundane, even ugly. But they hold so many secrets, so much potential for... interaction." She flexed her toes within her shoes. Charlotte could almost feel it.
"Interaction?" Charlotte whispered, finding her voice.
Hannah's gaze softened slightly as it rested on Charlotte. "Intimacy. Sensation. Your species craves connection, touch. You focus on hands, lips... but you neglect the foundations. The parts that ground you." She paused. "Some of us appreciate them more."
Yin was practically vibrating with vindication. "I knew it! Xylarian foot probe!"
"Not Xylarian," Hannah corrected, sounding almost bored. "That's such a primitive designation. We don't have... names, like you do. We simply are." She looked back at Charlotte. "You were drawn to the 'artistry', Charlotte. You sensed something beyond the superficial."
Charlotte felt confused, scared, and strangely flattered. "What... what are you, then?"

Hannah surveyed the room, the cheap furniture, the conspiracy charts, the two humans gripped by fear and confusion, and the one utterly bewildered one. "We are explorers of sensation. Cartographers of nerve endings." A low, rhythmic clicking sound started emanating from her throat, almost like a purr, but deeper, more mechanical. "You want to see? You seem... more open than your companions." She nodded towards her own neck. "There's a seam. Just under the jawline. Very fine. Part of the bio-mimetic layering."
Yin recoiled. Glennis made a small noise of distress. "Don't touch it!" Yin hissed. "It could be a defence mechanism! Corrosive substance! Paralytic agent!"
But Hannah was looking only at Charlotte, an invitation in her unnervingly calm eyes. "Go on, Charlotte. You started this. You deserve to see what you brought into your life. What you felt a connection with."
Charlotte’s heart was pounding. Every rational thought screamed 'Run!'. Yin was right. This thing wasn't human. But another part of her, the part that had been mesmerised by the videos, the part that felt a bizarre connection to this creature, was undeniably curious. Was this the ultimate intimacy Hannah had hinted at? Seeing beneath the surface?
Slowly, hesitantly, she approached the chair. Yin and Glennis watched, frozen. Glennis looked like he might faint. Hannah remained perfectly still, only the soft clicking sound continuing. Charlotte reached out a trembling hand, her fingers brushing against the cool, smooth skin of Hannah's neck.
And there it was. A faint, almost invisible line, tracing the curve of the jaw. A seam. It felt... artificial. Like the edge of a very sophisticated mask.
"Go on," Hannah (or whatever it was) urged, the clicking becoming slightly louder.
Taking a deep breath, Charlotte hooked her fingernail under the edge. It peeled back with disturbing ease, like cheap wallpaper. Underneath wasn't flesh, but something else entirely. Pale, faintly luminous, and textured like... like smooth, damp rubber.
She pulled gently. More of the 'Hannah' skin peeled away, revealing the structure beneath. It wasn't horrifying in a gory way. It was horrifying in its utter wrongness. Too many slight, subtle curves where angles should be, a faint bioluminescence pulsing beneath the surface.
"Keep going," the creature clicked, its voice now distorted, deeper, multitimbral.
Charlotte pulled harder. The mask came away from the cheek, the nose, revealing... more. No recognisable features, just shifting, pale, rubbery flesh. And then she reached the eyes. The warm, human eyes detached with the mask, leaving behind... multifaceted, insectoid orbs, glistening blackly in the dim light.
Glennis made a choked, gagging sound and stumbled backwards, tripping over Yin’s pile of conspiracy books and landing hard on his backside. "Merciful heavens!" Yin scrambled backwards, tripping over a pile of UFO magazines.
Charlotte, holding the eerily lifelike 'Hannah' face in her hand, stared at the thing strapped to the chair. It wasn't humanoid at all beneath the neck. The torso seemed segmented, and what she had assumed were legs under the silk pyjamas... weren't. They were thinner, multi-jointed appendages, ending not in feet, but in clusters of fine, feathery tendrils that twitched slightly. And there were too many of them. Six, at least. Maybe eight.
The clicking intensified, morphing into a series of low, guttural chuckles that seemed to vibrate in Charlotte's bones. The creature flexed. The brown parcel tape, designed for cardboard boxes, not extraterrestrial explorers of sensation, strained audibly.
"You wanted to know," the creature rasped, its multifaceted eyes fixing on Charlotte. "You wanted... intimacy."
Rip. One of the wrist restraints gave way with the sound of tearing paper.
"Now," it chuckled, the sound wet and horrid. "Let's explore... your sensitive areas."
Rip. Rip. The other wrist tape tore. Then the ankles. The tendril-tipped appendages unfolded, stretching out with unnerving speed.
The Alien Tickle Monster was free.
The Tickle Chase
Panic erupted in the small flat. Glennis, still on the floor, scrambled backwards crab-style, yelling "Get away! Unhand me, you... you... tickling fiend!" Yin fumbled behind the sofa, searching for a weapon – her hand closed around a sturdy umbrella. Charlotte dropped the 'Hannah' mask, which landed face-up on the carpet, its empty eyes staring accusingly.
The creature unfolded itself from the dining chair, rising to its full, unsettling height. It was vaguely insectoid, vaguely cephalopod-like, all pale, rubbery flesh, segmented limbs, and those terrible, feathery tendrils that quivered with anticipation. It wasn't massive, maybe five and a half feet tall, but its proportions were all wrong, making it seem both fragile and deeply threatening. The clicking chuckle intensified.
"Run!" Charlotte shrieked, finally snapping out of her horrified trance.
She scrambled for the door, grabbing Glennis by the arm and hauling him unceremoniously to his feet. Yin, brandishing the umbrella like a sword, yelled, "Back, foul creature!" before realising the sheer inadequacy of her weapon and promptly turning to flee as well.
The creature moved with startling speed, its multiple limbs skittering across the floor in a way that defied normal locomotion. It wasn't chasing them aggressively, more... playfully? Its tendrils reached out, brushing against the fleeing Glennis's leg as he stumbled towards the door.
Glennis let out a noise that was half-yelp, half-giggle. "No! Stop it! Ghastly! It tickles!" He stumbled, nearly falling again, a bizarre mixture of terror and helpless laughter contorting his face as Charlotte dragged him out into the communal hallway.
"Leave it!" Yin yelled, slamming the flat door shut. They could hear frantic, multi-limbed scratching and that awful clicking chuckle from the other side.
"We can't just leave it in there!" Charlotte gasped, propping Glennis against the wall as he tried to catch his breath between horrified giggles. "Mrs. Higgins!"
"Mrs. Higgins thinks the council uses fluoride to control squirrels! She'll cope!" Yin retorted, fumbling with her keys to lock the door, which seemed utterly futile. "Stairs! Now!"
They clattered down the echoing concrete steps of the apartment block, Glennis still emitting choked giggles and gasps of "Intolerable!" and "My nerves!". The door to Yin's flat burst open above them with a crack of splintering wood. The skittering sound pursued them.
They burst out onto the street, into the relative normality of a Wednesday night in Nantwich. A few late-night dog walkers and pub-goers stared as two terrified women and one utterly flustered, giggling man sprinted past.
"Where are we going?" Glennis panted, straightening his hopelessly skewed tie even as he ran.
"Anywhere but here!" Yin gasped.
The skittering sound was closer now. Charlotte risked a glance back. The creature was loping down the street after them, its pale form almost glowing under the orange streetlights. Its feathery tendrils waved gently in the air. It looked utterly absurd, yet terrifyingly relentless.
"Split up?" Charlotte suggested breathlessly.
"No! Stick together!" Yin countermanded. "Safety protocols dictate concentration against single anomalous entities!"
They veered sharply down a narrow alleyway smelling of bins and damp brickwork, hoping to break line of sight. They emerged onto the deserted High Street. Shops were shuttered, the only signs of life the flickering neon of a takeaway kebab shop at the far end.
"The Kebab Krazy!" Yin wheezed. "Civilians! Potential witnesses! Or distractions!"
They pounded down the pavement. The skittering was right behind them. Charlotte could almost feel the feathery brush of tendrils on the back of her neck. She risked another look. The creature paused, tilting its multifaceted head, and seemed to sniff the air. It focused on a discarded political leaflet plastered to a bus stop. It reached out a tendril and gently... tickled the photograph of a local councillor. A low chuckle echoed in the night.
"It's distracted!" Charlotte hissed. "Keep going!"
They burst into the Kebab Krazy, nearly colliding with a large man attempting to balance a tray of cheesy chips and a can of dandelion and burdock. The smell of roasting meat and chili sauce filled the air. Two bored-looking teenagers manned the counter.
"Help! Alien! Dreadful tickling creature!" Glennis gasped, collapsing onto a plastic orange chair and fanning himself with his hand, finally managing to suppress the giggles into ragged breaths.
The teenagers exchanged unimpressed glances. The man with the cheesy chips slowly edged away.
"Alright mate, bit early for that isn't it?" one of the teenagers asked laconically, wiping down the counter.
"No! It's real!" Yin insisted, pointing wildly towards the door. "Pale! Far too many limbs! Armed with tickling tendrils!"
Just then, the creature appeared in the doorway. It paused, its black eyes sweeping over the scene – the greasy counter, the rotating elephant leg of meat, the bewildered humans. It seemed momentarily confused by the bright lights and the smell of garlic mayo.
The man with the cheesy chips dropped his tray with a clatter. The teenagers’ jaws dropped.
The creature took a hesitant step inside. Its tendrils twitched. It focused on the dropped cheesy chips, lying sadly on the linoleum. It extended a tendril and poked curiously at a cheese-coated chip.
"Oi! Get out!" yelled the braver of the two teenagers, grabbing a long metal tongs. "No weirdos! We've got hygiene ratings to think about!"
The creature retracted its tendril from the chip, seemingly offended. It emitted a series of high-pitched clicks and turned its attention to the teenager. Its tendrils quivered menacingly.
"Don't provoke it!" Charlotte yelled. "It... it tickles!"
The teenager looked utterly confused. "It tickles?"
Before anyone could react further, the creature scuttled sideways, its limbs moving with that unnerving speed. It didn't go for the teenager, but instead darted towards the giant rotating spit of doner meat. With surprising dexterity, several of its tendril-tipped appendages wrapped around the warm, greasy cylinder.
And it started... tickling the kebab.
A series of rapid, feathery strokes danced across the surface of the meat. The creature emitted a low, continuous chuckle, its multifaceted eyes gleaming with what looked like intense concentration, or perhaps, pleasure.
Everyone in the shop stared, utterly dumbfounded. The alien tickle monster, the explorer of sensation, the cartographer of nerve endings, was currently engrossed in giving a doner kebab the tickling of its life.
Yin slowly lowered the umbrella she hadn't realised she was still clutching. Glennis, mouth agape, simply stared, his earlier panic replaced by sheer, uncomprehending astonishment. Charlotte just watched, her mind struggling to process the sheer, unadulterated weirdness of the scene.
The creature seemed entirely absorbed in its task, clicking and chuckling as it meticulously tickled the rotating meat.
"Right," said the teenager, slowly lowering his tongs. "Okay. That's... not standard."
Yin nudged Charlotte. "Now's our chance. While it's... communing with the processed lamb."
Slowly, carefully, they backed out of the Kebab Krazy, leaving the alien to its intimate moment with the doner. They didn't run this time, but walked briskly, casting nervous glances over their shoulders. The skittering sound didn't follow. The last they saw of the creature, it was still diligently tickling the kebab, seemingly lost in a world of greasy, meaty sensation.
The Aftermath
They finally stopped several streets away, leaning against the cold brick wall of the closed Nantwich Museum, chests heaving, minds reeling. Glennis was smoothing down his trousers and muttering about needing a stiff drink, Yin looked strangely exhilarated, and Charlotte felt a confusing mix of terror, adrenaline, and profound embarrassment.
"See?" Yin finally panted, a triumphant grin spreading across her face. "I told you! Alien! Though," she frowned, "the kebab affinity wasn't covered in any of the literature."
"It... it tickled the meat," Glennis said, sounding deeply disturbed. "The sheer impropriety! Why would it do such a thing?"
"Maybe it's assessing the texture for colonization suitability?" Yin mused. "Or perhaps it's just really, really weird."
Charlotte just shook her head, leaning it back against the bricks. "Hannah's Sexy Feet... was an alien tickle monster." She started to laugh, a slightly hysterical sound. "It wanted intimacy... with seasoned meat on a stick."
The absurdity washed over them. They looked at each other – three ordinary office workers who had just kidnapped (sort of), unmasked, and been chased through Nantwich by an extraterrestrial being obsessed with feet and tickling.
"So," Glennis asked, adjusting his glasses meticulously, "what is the protocol now? Do we inform the authorities? The parish council?"
Yin shrugged, straightening her jacket. "Go home, I suppose. Lock the doors. Perhaps invest in some feather dusters for defence? And definitely avoid the Kebab Krazy for a while."
"And work tomorrow?" Charlotte asked faintly. Pendleton & Sons seemed like a different universe now.
"Well," Yin considered, "we can hardly tell Mr. Henderson our P45 reconciliation is delayed due to an encounter with an intergalactic entity with boundary issues regarding kebabs, can we?"
They stood in silence for a moment, the strange events of the night settling around them like bizarre, unwanted fog. Charlotte thought of the 'Hannah' mask lying discarded on Yin's floor. She thought of the creature's unsettling chuckle, the skittering limbs, the feathery tendrils. And weirdly, she thought of those perfectly pedicured feet on YouTube.
"You know," Charlotte said slowly, "part of me still thinks those were really nice feet."
Yin rolled her eyes. Glennis just shuddered. "I think I need that cup of tea now. Very strong. Possibly with a biscuit."
The walk back to their respective homes was quiet, punctuated only by the distant chime of St Mary's Church clock and the lingering smell of doner meat that seemed to follow them through the damp April night. Their drab lives had just taken a sharp left turn into the utterly surreal, and somehow, the prospect of facing those grey cubicles tomorrow felt even more ludicrous than being chased by an alien tickle monster.
#Hannah Tingle#horror stories#comedy horror#horror#tickle content#eldritch horror#lovecraftian#tickletorture
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Hannah Tingle In Pride, Prejudice And The Giggling Dead
A period piece with the Giggling Dead
By Lady Eckland
The year, shrouded in the damp, clinging fogs of an English autumn, was one whispered about in hushed, fearful tones – 1811, a time when Reason itself seemed poised upon the precipice of a chasm yawning wide with Unreason. It was into this unsettling miasma that I, Countess Hannah Tingle, found myself thrust by the cruel vicissitudes of fate. My title, a relic of a fortune long since dissolved like sugar in the rain-soaked mire of poor investments and my late husband’s penchant for catastrophic wagers on badger-baiting, was now but a gilded husk, offering little succour against the chill winds of penury. Thus, necessity, that grim and unyielding taskmaster, dictated my acceptance of a position most unbecoming of my station: Governess to the progeny of a certain Mr. Silas Blackwood and his wife, the Lady Beatrice.
Blackwood Manor, their sprawling estate nestled deep within the melancholic embrace of the Hampshire countryside, rose from the mist-laden landscape like a brooding titan of grey stone and shadowed eaves. Its aspect, upon my arrival in a rented carriage whose wheels groaned a symphony of decay, was one of imposing grandeur, yet permeated by an indefinable stillness, a sepulchral quiet that clung heavier than the ivy strangling its ancient walls. The very air seemed thick, stagnant, imbued with a preternatural weight, as if the silence itself held its breath, anticipating some dreadful culmination.
Mr. Blackwood, a man whose wealth, derived from mercantile ventures of dubious origins, sat upon him like an ill-fitting shroud, greeted me with a brusque cordiality that failed to conceal the avaricious gleam in his eyes. He was stout, florid-faced, his presence redolent of ledgers and profit margins rather than ancestral dignity. His wife, Lady Beatrice, hailed from a lineage ancient but impoverished – a circumstance that lent her countenance a perpetual air of strained nobility and thinly veiled disdain for her husband’s more… commercial sensibilities. She surveyed me through narrowed eyes, her posture rigid, a sentinel guarding the crumbling battlements of her perceived social superiority.
“Countess Tingle,” she began, her voice crisp as autumn leaves underfoot, yet carrying an undertone as cold as the grave. “We trust your journey was… tolerable. The roads, one hears, are quite dreadful. Indeed, reports from the outlying villages speak of… disturbances.” A flicker, brief as a bat’s wing, crossed her features. Dismissed. “Idle gossip, no doubt. The peasantry are prone to hysterics.”
“Indeed, Lady Beatrice,” I murmured, curtsying with a grace that felt mocking in its context. My own lineage, though tarnished by lack of coin, was arguably superior to hers, a fact that hung unspoken between us like a spectral tapestry. “The journey was uneventful, though the mists do lend the land a… gothic quality.”
My charges were two in number: young Master Alaric, a boy of ten with unnervingly pale eyes and a penchant for morbid pronouncements, and little Miss Elara, aged seven, whose delicate features seemed perpetually poised on the verge of tears or terror. They were presented to me in the grand, echoing drawing-room, a cavern of polished wood and looming portraits whose eyes seemed to follow my every move.
“Master Alaric, Miss Elara,” Lady Beatrice intoned, “This is Countess Tingle. She will be overseeing your education. You shall afford her the respect due her… former station.” The qualification hung there, sharp as a shard of obsidian.
Alaric offered a solemn, unchildlike bow. “Good morrow, Countess. Papa says the flux is spreading from Lower Crumpling. Old Man Hemlock died laughing, they say. Laughed until his heart gave out, right after Molly the milkmaid tickled his bunions.”
A strangled sound escaped Lady Beatrice. “Alaric! Such talk is unseemly! Governess, you will ensure he applies himself to Latin, not local tittle-tattle.”
Little Elara merely whimpered, burying her face in her mother’s skirts. A tremor ran through the child, a vibration of pure, unadulterated fear that resonated oddly within the oppressive stillness of the room.
My duties commenced amidst the oppressive luxury of Blackwood Manor. Days bled into weeks, each marked by the monotonous rhythm of lessons – Virgil and watercolors, pianoforte and deportment. Yet, beneath the veneer of aristocratic routine, an insidious disquietude festered. It began subtly, like the first faint scent of decay upon the air. Servants, previously ubiquitous, became scarce. Their hushed conversations ceased abruptly when I approached. A footman, young Thomas, known for his booming laugh, was dismissed, ostensibly for insolence, though I had heard, through a partially open door, sounds emanating from his quarters late one night – not of insolence, but of a high-pitched, uncontrollable giggling, punctuated by desperate pleas of “No, stop! Please, the toes!”
Then came the disappearances. Cook’s scullery maid vanished without a trace. The under-gardener, tasked with tending the funereal yews, was found near the crumbling mausoleum at the edge of the grounds, his face frozen in a rictus of horrific mirth, his boots inexplicably removed and placed neatly beside his head. The local physician, summoned with reluctance by Mr. Blackwood (who bemoaned the expense), diagnosed apoplexy brought on by… excessive joviality. A diagnosis I found utterly, chillingly ludicrous.
An aura of dread, palpable as the damp that stained the library’s velvet curtains, began to permeate my waking hours and intrude upon my tormented slumbers. I found myself listening, straining to catch sounds beyond the mournful sighing of the wind through the chimneys. And sometimes, carried on the night air, faint and distant, I thought I heard it – a sound that chilled the very marrow in my bones: a soft, tittering giggle, multiplying, echoing from the woods that pressed close against the Manor’s boundaries.
Lady Beatrice remained resolutely oblivious, or perhaps willfully ignorant, attributing the growing unease to rustic superstition. “The lower orders,” she sniffed during one strained tea service, “are susceptible to flights of fancy. A touch of autumn melancholy, nothing more. More Madeira, Countess?”
Mr. Blackwood, concerned only with the disruption to his household’s efficiency, grumbled about hiring replacements. “Damned inconvenience,” he muttered into his teacup. “Good help is so hard to find. And this… giggling sickness old Hemlock supposedly had? Bad for morale. Bad for productivity.”
Only young Alaric seemed attuned to the encroaching horror, his pale eyes wide with morbid fascination. “They’re coming, Governess,” he whispered to me one afternoon, interrupting his translation of Ovid. “The Giggling Dead. They say they rise from their graves, but they don’t want your brains.” He leaned closer, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial hiss. “They want your feet.”
I shivered, dismissing his words as childish fantasy, yet the seed of unease he planted took root in the fertile soil of my own mounting dread. The Giggling Dead. A preposterous notion, yet… the laughter, the tickling, the mirthful corpses… a pattern, grotesque and terrifying, began to emerge from the fog of denial.
The true horror manifested itself on a night choked with fog so thick it seemed to swallow sound and sight. A storm raged without, rattling the windowpanes like skeletal fingers drumming an impatient rhythm. Within the Manor, an uneasy quiet reigned, punctuated by the distant, rhythmic creak of a loose shutter and the frantic pounding of my own heart. I was in my chambers, attempting to find solace in a volume of morbid poetry – a poor choice, in retrospect – when the first scream tore through the heavy silence.
It was not a scream of pain, but of helpless, panicked laughter, intermingled with desperate gasps for breath. It emanated from the servants’ wing below. Another joined it, then another – a chorus of hysterical mirth that curdled the blood.
Fear, cold and sharp, pierced my composure. I snatched up the heavy brass candlestick from my bedside table – a meager weapon against an unknown terror – and crept towards my door. Peering into the dimly lit corridor, I saw figures stumbling from the stairwell leading down to the lower levels.
They were… changed. The parlour maid, Mary, her face usually rosy and cheerful, was now a pallid mask of decay, her jaw slack, yet stretched into a horrifyingly wide grin. Her eyes, milky and vacant, held a terrifying spark of manic glee. Her movements were jerky, unnatural, shambling forward with outstretched hands, fingers twitching eagerly. And from her throat, and the throats of the other servants stumbling behind her – the butler, Jepson, his usually immaculate uniform torn and stained; a scullery boy whose name I never knew – came that sound: the giggle. Not human laughter, but a dry, rattling, incessant tittering that echoed unnervingly in the vaulted hallway. The Giggling Dead.
Panic seized me. I slammed my door shut, fumbling with the lock, my breath coming in ragged gasps. The giggling grew louder, closer, accompanied by a soft, shuffling sound and a peculiar thump-scrape against the floorboards.
“Oh, Countess!” a voice cooed from the other side of the door, Jepson’s voice, yet distorted, gleeful. “Such lovely, vulnerable little piggies hiding in there! Won’t you let us give them a wiggle?”
A frantic scrabbling began at the bottom of the door, near the floor. Fingers, pale and bony, wormed their way underneath, twitching, seeking.
“Just a tickle, Countess! Just a tiny tiddly-winkle on the toesies!” Mary’s voice, now high-pitched and wheezing, joined the chorus.
The sheer, terrifying absurdity of it threatened to shatter my sanity. Zombies. Giggling zombies. Zombies obsessed with feet. It was a horror conceived in the deepest, most whimsical pits of nightmare.
Suddenly, a tremendous crash echoed from downstairs, followed by Mr. Blackwood’s bellow of rage and terror, quickly dissolving into helpless, agonised laughter. Then, Lady Beatrice’s shriek, sharp and imperious, cut short by a similar descent into manic giggling. The masters of the house had fallen.
My thoughts flew to the children. Alaric and Elara! Their rooms were further down the corridor. With a surge of adrenaline born of desperation, I flung open my door. Jepson lunged, not for my throat, but inexplicably, for my ankles, his decayed face split in that awful grin, fingers wriggling like avaricious worms.
“Feetums! Pretty feetums!” he giggled, the sound like dry leaves skittering over gravestones.
Recoiling in revulsion and terror, I brought the heavy candlestick down upon his lolling head with a sickening crunch. He collapsed, momentarily silenced, but his fingers continued their phantom twitching. Mary shrieked with laughter and lunged, her own hands aimed low. I sidestepped, heart pounding against my ribs like a trapped bird, and fled down the corridor towards the children's wing.
The hallway was a scene from a madman’s dream. More servants, transformed into these giggling monstrosities, shambled from rooms, their eyes fixed not on faces, but on feet. One tripped over its own decaying legs, collapsing in a heap, yet continued to giggle and grasp at the empty air where ankles might have been. The air was thick with the sound – a cacophony of mirthless chuckling that grated on the nerves like grinding bone.
I reached the nursery door and threw it open. Alaric stood upon his bed, brandishing a toy soldier’s miniature sabre, his face pale but resolute. Elara cowered behind him, sobbing hysterically.
“They’re here, Governess!” Alaric cried, his voice trembling but defiant. “The Foot-Fondlers! The Toe-Ticklers!”
“Quickly!” I urged, my voice hoarse. “We must barricade the door!”
Together, we shoved a heavy oak toy chest against the door just as frantic, giggling scratches began on the other side. Fingers probed beneath the gap.
“Little toes! Sweet little toes! Let us make them squeal!” a voice chortled from the hallway.
“Governess,” Alaric said, his eyes wide with a strange mixture of fear and intellectual curiosity, “Old Man Hemlock… they say Molly tickled him with a pigeon feather. Perhaps… perhaps they have a weakness?”
A weakness? Against these gibbering horrors? What could possibly deter creatures whose sole ambition was podiatric persecution? My mind raced, grasping at straws in the swirling vortex of terror. What did Poe write of? Obscure knowledge? Psychological vulnerabilities? What repels the unnatural?
And then, an image surfaced from the depths of my frantic thoughts – Lady Beatrice, earlier that day, complaining vehemently about a gift Mr. Blackwood had procured: a large, ornate bottle of highly concentrated lavender water from France. “Ghastly, overpowering stuff,” she had declared, wrinkling her nose. “Positively offensive to the senses. Banish it to the pantry, Silas!”
Lavender. A scent often associated with calmness, with repelling moths… could it repel the Giggling Dead? It was a notion born of desperation, ludicrous yet… no more ludicrous than the threat itself.
“Alaric,” I whispered, hope flickering like a guttering candle flame. “Lady Beatrice’s lavender water. Where is the pantry?”
His eyes lit up. “Down the back stairs! Near the kitchens!”
“Stay here. Keep that door secure. Do not let them touch your feet!” I commanded, grabbing the poker from the nursery fireplace – a slightly more formidable weapon.
The journey to the pantry was a descent into a hell populated by grinning, grasping fiends. I dodged shambling figures in the corridors, the incessant giggling echoing in the cavernous spaces of the Manor. Twice, I had to use the poker, aiming not for the head, but for the grasping hands, the questing fingers. The creatures recoiled slightly, distracted, but always returned to their ghastly, single-minded pursuit.
Reaching the pantry, I found the ornate bottle amidst jars of preserves and sacks of flour. It was heavy, the glass cold against my trembling hands. The scent, when I cautiously uncorked it, was indeed potent, almost suffocatingly floral. Praying this desperate gambit wasn’t folly, I hurried back towards the nursery, the giggling seeming to pursue me, nipping at my heels like phantom hounds.
The scratching at the nursery door was more frantic now. The wood splintered near the bottom.
“Alaric! Elara! Stand back!” I yelled, bracing myself.
With a surge of strength, I yanked the toy chest aside and flung the door open. Two Giggling Dead – a former cook’s assistant and a stable boy – tumbled in, their faces alight with manic anticipation, hands reaching, fingers wriggling.
“Feet! Feet! Giggle-giggle-squeak!” they chortled.
Without hesitation, I splashed the lavender water directly at them.
The effect was instantaneous and utterly bizarre. The moment the pungent liquid hit them, the giggling ceased, replaced by sputtering coughs and expressions of profound, almost comical disgust. Their rictus grins vanished, replaced by grimaces of olfactory offense. They staggered back, clawing at their own faces, emitting strange, choked groans.
“Ugh! Flowery!” gagged the stable boy, recoiling as if struck.
“Abominable perfume!” choked the cook’s assistant, stumbling backwards out of the room, tripping over his own feet in his haste to escape the scent.
It worked. By heavens, it worked. The absurdity was staggering, yet undeniable.
“The lavender!” I cried, splashing more towards the hallway, where other Giggling Dead hesitated, sniffing the air with expressions of deep revulsion before turning and shambling away, their giggles momentarily silenced by olfactory indignation.
“It repels them!” Alaric breathed, his eyes wide with awe.
Armed with our peculiar weapon, we made our way through the ghastly tableau of the Manor. We found Mr. Blackwood and Lady Beatrice in the drawing-room, tied to chairs with velvet ropes (presumably by the now-repulsed Jepson), their shoes and stockings removed, tears streaming down their faces as phantom ticklish sensations apparently continued to torment them, punctuated by involuntary giggles. We doused the air liberally with lavender, providing them temporary, bewildered respite.
Escape was our only recourse. The Manor was compromised, the grounds likely teeming with these lavender-averse, foot-fetishizing fiends. Gathering the weeping Elara, the grimly determined Alaric, the traumatised but functional Blackwoods, and armed with the remainder of the lavender water and several purloined fireplace pokers, we ventured out into the pre-dawn gloom.
The fog was beginning to lift, revealing a landscape subtly altered. Figures shambled amongst the ancient trees, their faint, distant giggling carried on the damp air – a sound that would forever haunt the shadowed corridors of my memory. We gave them a wide berth, the pungent cloud of lavender surrounding our small party like a protective, albeit fragrant, shield.
Our flight from Blackwood Manor was not an escape into sunlight and safety, but merely a transition from one circle of the bizarre hell into another. The village beyond was similarly afflicted, the Giggling Dead lurching through its lanes, their path marked by discarded footwear and the faint, lingering scent of decay mingled with phantom mirth. We fled onwards, refugees from a plague of podiatric persecution, forever glancing over our shoulders, forever listening for the faintest titter, forever carrying the grim knowledge that the ultimate horror was not the bite of the zombie, but the relentless, maddening tickle of the Giggling Dead. My name is Countess Hannah Tingle, and I survived the Pedicure of Perdition, though my sanity, I fear, remains forever… ticklish. The world had tilted on its axis, revealing a foundation not of logic, but of grotesque, giggling absurdity, forever perfumed with the cloying scent of lavender.
#horror stories#horror#comedy horror#lovecraftian#funny#tickletorture#tickle content#zombies#giggling dead
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Hannah And The Ticklers
Starring Hannah Tingle as herself, Horror 73 as the man in the dark trenchcoat and hat, and Lady Eckland as Charlene (or Charlie for short 😅)
By Lady Eckland, Ms Darkwood and Glenn Riley
Three Tales Of Cosmic Lovecraftian Horror With Tickling
The Midnight Sole Reader
By Lady Eckland

The fluorescent lights of the Aldgate East tube station hummed with an unnerving monotony, casting long, distorted shadows across the tiled walls. It was well past midnight, and the usual thrum of London life had dwindled to an eerie silence. Hannah Tingle, clutching her worn briefcase, felt a prickle of unease crawl up her spine. The platform was deserted. Utterly, unnervingly empty. Even the rats seemed to have clocked off for the night.
Her heels clicked loudly in the cavernous space, each echo sounding like a footstep following just behind her. She’d worked late, again, finalising the quarterly reports. Usually, she’d hail a cab, but tonight, a strange compulsion, a tired resignation perhaps, had guided her towards the Underground. Now, regret gnawed at her.
A ragged cough broke the silence. Hannah jumped, her heart hammering against her ribs. Huddled near a grime-streaked bench sat a figure swathed in layers of indeterminate rags. A vagrant, his face obscured by shadow and a matted beard, watched her with eyes that seemed too bright in the dim light.
Hannah fumbled in her purse, her fingers closing around a stray ten-pence piece. Habit, maybe pity, compelled her to approach. "Here you go," she murmured, dropping the coin into his outstretched, grimy hand.
He didn't thank her. Instead, his fingers closed around the coin, and he leaned forward, his voice a raspy whisper that scraped against the silence. "Beware the ticklers, lass. They're out tonight."
Hannah blinked. "The... the what?"
"The forces," he hissed, glancing nervously down the empty tunnel. "They seek the soles. The arches. The tender spots. Drawn to the laughter that ain't laughter. Keep yer shoes on tight, Hannah Tingle."
He knew her name. A cold dread, colder than the station's damp air, seeped into Hannah's bones. How could he possibly know her name? Before she could question him, the distant rumble of an approaching train vibrated through the platform floor. The vagrant shrank back into his rags, muttering, "They're coming... they feel the vibrations..."
Hannah backed away slowly, her gaze fixed on the dark maw of the tunnel. The warning, absurd as it sounded, resonated with the unnatural emptiness of the station. The train screeched into view, its single headlight cutting a swathe through the gloom. Its doors hissed open, revealing an interior as deserted as the platform. Almost.
One man sat alone in the middle carriage, bathed in the carriage's harsh light. He wore a long, dark trench coat,buttoned high despite the mild night, and a wide-brimmed hat pulled low, shadowing his face. He seemed utterly absorbed in a large, leather-bound book resting on his lap.
Hesitantly, Hannah stepped aboard. The doors slid shut with a pneumatic sigh that sounded unnervingly final. As the train lurched into motion, plunging them back into the tunnel's darkness, Hannah risked a closer look at the man. The book's cover was embossed with strange, swirling symbols and a single word: Solistry.
The man looked up, and Hannah felt her breath catch. His face was pale and angular, his eyes hidden entirely by the hat's shadow. A thin smile stretched across his lips, revealing teeth that seemed just a fraction too long.
"Good evening," he said, his voice smooth, cultured, yet carrying an undertone that made Hannah's skin crawl. "Late night?"
"Yes," Hannah managed, clutching her briefcase like a shield. "Just heading home from work."
"Ah, the weary traveller," he mused, closing his book with a soft thud. "Allow me to introduce myself. Horror 73, at your service."
"Horror... 73?" Hannah repeated, baffled. "Is that... your name?"
"It is the designation I currently favour," he replied evasively. He tapped the cover of his book. "Solistry. The ancient art of reading fate, fortune, and deepest sensitivities through the contours of the feet. A fascinating practice. Perhaps you'd permit me a brief reading? Just a glance at the plantar landscape?"
He gestured vaguely towards her feet, encased in sensible office heels. Hannah recoiled instinctively. "No! No, thank you. I'm really tired. I just want to get home." The vagrant's warning echoed in her mind: They seek the soles.
"As you wish," Horror 73 said, though his smile didn't waver. "But the lines of destiny, the zones of ticklish vulnerability... they tell such tales." He leaned back, reopening his book.
Hannah slumped into a seat further down the carriage, exhaustion warring with a profound sense of wrongness. The rhythmic clatter of the train, the humming lights, the strange man reading his bizarre book... it all felt dreamlike, unreal. She rubbed her temples, trying to shake off the creeping dread. Her eyelids grew heavy. The rhythmic clack-clack-clack of the wheels became a hypnotic lullaby. Just for a moment, she'd close her eyes... just for a second...
Flicker.
Hannah's eyes snapped open. The change was instantaneous and terrifying. The carriage was no longer empty. It was packed. Standing room only. Men and women in drab, ordinary clothes stood shoulder-to-shoulder, swaying slightly with the train's motion. But their faces... their faces were wrong. Slack-jawed, eyes wide and glassy, fixed on nothing. They looked like mannequins, puppets whose strings had been cut. And they were all looking at her.
Panic seized Hannah in an icy grip. She tried to stand, but hands, cold and unnaturally strong, clamped down on her shoulders, her arms. More figures converged, their movements jerky, uncoordinated, yet terrifyingly purposeful. A low, collective hum filled the air, a sound that vibrated deep within her chest.
"No! Get off me!" she cried, struggling futilely.
Through the sea of blank faces, Horror 73 approached. He moved with a fluid grace that contrasted sharply with the others' stiffness. He still wore the hat and coat, but now he held something new in his hand: a long, extravagant feather. It wasn't just one colour, but a shimmering, iridescent blend of emerald green, sapphire blue, ruby red, and amethyst purple. It seemed to writhe slightly in his grasp, like something alive.
"The reading commences," Horror 73 announced, his voice echoing slightly too loudly in the crowded car.
Hands fumbled clumsily but effectively at Hannah's feet. Her heels were wrenched off, tossed aside with careless disregard. Someone peeled off her tights, exposing her bare feet to the cool air of the carriage. She kicked and writhed, tears of fear and violation streaming down her face, but they held her fast. Pinned. Exposed.
Horror 73 knelt before her, the multi-coloured feather poised like a surgeon's scalpel. The glassy-eyed passengers leaned in, their collective gaze fixed on her bare soles. The humming intensified.
"Let's explore the Zone of Unexpected Giggles," Horror 73 murmured, his voice laced with a chilling amusement. He lowered the feather.
The tip, impossibly soft yet sharp, brushed against the arch of her right foot. A jolt, electric and unwanted, shot up Hannah's leg. A choked gasp escaped her lips.
"Ah, responsive," Horror 73 observed clinically.
He drew the feather lightly, teasingly, up towards the ball of her foot. Hannah squirmed, a strangled giggle forcing its way out. It wasn't a sound of mirth; it was pure, panicked reflex. The glassy-eyed crowd hummed louder, a low, appreciative drone.
"Let go of me!" she sobbed, twisting against her captors. "Please!"
Horror 73 ignored her pleas. He scribbled the feather across her sensitive heel, then danced it between her toes. Each stroke sent shockwaves of ticklish torment through her. Laughter, hysterical and uncontrollable, burst from her, mingling with her terrified sobs. It felt alien, ripped from her throat against her will.
"Fascinating," Horror 73 mused, tracing the lines beneath her toes with the feather's edge. "A strong line of suppressed mirth here... indicates a profound susceptibility to the digital flutter..."
He switched to her left foot, applying the feather with calculated precision. Light strokes, deep digs, swift zig-zags across her sole. Hannah thrashed, bucking against the hands that held her, her laughter reaching a fever pitch. It hurt. Her stomach cramped, tears streamed, her breath came in ragged gasps, but she couldn't stop the hideous, helpless laughter erupting from her. The crowd watched, their dead eyes reflecting the harsh lights, their humming a constant, terrifying chorus.
It felt like an eternity. An eternity of forced, agonizing laughter, of violation by a feather wielded by a cryptically named man, surrounded by silent, entranced puppets. The colours of the feather blurred before her tear-filled eyes, swirling into a vortex of unbearable sensation. Just as she felt her sanity fraying, just as the world dissolved into nothing but tickling and terror and the awful humming...
Silence.
Hannah blinked, her chest heaving, stray giggles still catching in her throat. The carriage was empty. Utterly, unnervingly empty. Horror 73, the entranced crowd, the discarded shoes and tights – all gone. Only the rhythmic clatter of the train and the hum of the lights remained. She was slumped in her seat, her feet bare, tingling, and slightly damp from her tears.
The train slowed, pulling into the next station. Baker Street. Her stop. The doors hissed open onto another deserted platform. Shaking, Hannah gathered herself. She found her tights stuffed under the seat opposite, ripped but wearable. Her shoes lay nearby. Quickly, clumsily, she pulled them back on, the familiar constriction a small comfort against the lingering violation.
She stumbled off the train and didn't look back as the doors slid shut and it pulled away, disappearing into the darkness, leaving her alone once more on the cold, silent platform. The vagrant's words echoed: Beware the ticklers... What had just happened? A dream? A hallucination born of exhaustion? Or something else? Something incomprehensibly, dreadfully real? The phantom sensation of feathers still danced on her soles as she hurried towards the exit, the silence of the station pressing in on her.
The Skittering Horror of Regent's Park
By Glenn Riley

The echo of Hannah's footsteps seemed unnaturally loud as she emerged from the Baker Street station into the London night. The ordeal on the train felt simultaneously vivid and dreamlike, leaving a residue of fear that clung to her like the city's damp air. She expected the relative bustle of Baker Street, even this late, but the scene that greeted her was one of profound desolation.
Streetlights cast pools of lonely, orange light onto pavements devoid of pedestrians. No cars moved along the normally busy road. Shop windows were dark, reflecting only Hannah's solitary figure. It was as if the entire city was holding its breath. The silence was heavy, oppressive, broken only by the distant, mournful wail of a siren that seemed miles away.
"Okay, Hannah, deep breaths," she muttered, pulling her coat tighter. "Just tired. Overactive imagination." But the vagrant's warning, Horror 73's pronouncements, the sea of glassy eyes – they felt too real, too visceral to dismiss. The lingering tingle on her soles was a phantom reminder.
She needed to get home. Her flat was only a fifteen-minute walk, cutting through the edge of Regent's Park. Normally a pleasant stroll, tonight the idea of walking through the dark, deserted park sent a fresh wave of anxiety through her. But the surrounding streets felt equally menacing in their emptiness. Resolutely, she turned towards the park gates, the wrought iron seeming like skeletal fingers against the night sky.
The air grew colder as she passed under the trees. Shadows danced, taking on shapes that weren't there. Every rustle of leaves sounded like skittering footsteps. She walked faster, her sensible heels clicking a panicked rhythm on the path.
Then she heard it. Not leaves. Not wind. A distinct, chitinous clicking sound, accompanied by a wet, slithering noise. It came from a dark, narrow alleyway between two grand, unlit townhouses bordering the park.
Hannah froze, straining her ears. The sound grew closer. Click-skitter-slither. Click-skitter-slither. It was rhythmic, multi-limbed, and utterly alien. Fear, cold and sharp, pierced through her exhaustion. She backed away slowly towards the relative openness of the park path.
A shape emerged from the alley's shadows, unfolding itself into the weak moonlight filtering through the trees. Hannah stifled a scream, her hand flying to her mouth. It wasn't human. It wasn't anything she could readily identify.
Imagine an insect, perhaps a centipede, scaled up to the size of a large dog, but taller, leaner. Its body was segmented, gleaming wetly, supported by at least a dozen spindly, multi-jointed legs that ended in sharp points, clicking hideously on the pavement. But the truly grotesque part was its upper body. Two impossibly long, thin arms, like those of a praying mantis but disturbingly fleshy, extended from its thorax. These arms ended not in claws, but in things that looked disturbingly like elongated, pale human hands, fingers wriggling constantly, obscenely. It had no discernible head, just a pulsating, fleshy mound where a head should be, studded with multiple, unblinking black eyes that swivelled independently, fixing on her.
Click-skitter-slither. It moved towards her, faster now, its long arms reaching, the wriggling fingers flexing.
And then it spoke. Or rather, a voice emanated from the pulsating mound, a gurgling, wet sound overlaid with a disturbingly cheerful, high-pitched tone.
"Hee hee hee! Found you! Hannah Tingle! Pretty feet hiding in those clunky shoes! And a soft little tummy under that coat! Oh, the Tingle awaits!"
Hannah didn't need a translation. The vagrant, Horror 73, and now this... thing. They were connected. The ticklers. She turned and ran.
Pure, adrenaline-fueled panic propelled her down the park path. She risked a glance back. The creature was pursuing her, its spindly legs moving with unnatural speed, covering the ground far faster than she could. Its long, wriggling-fingered arms waved disconcertingly in the air.
"Don't run!" the gurgling voice called, laced with manic glee. "It's just a bit of fun! A little sole-searching! A little navel-gazing! Hee hee!"
The absurdity, the sheer cosmic wrongness of being chased through a deserted London park by a giant, multi-legged insectoid creature babbling about tickling, warred with the primal terror gripping her. She gasped for breath, her lungs burning, her side stitching. The path forked. She veered sharply left, hoping to lose it among the thicker trees and bushes.
Bad idea. The ground became uneven, roots snaking across the path. Her heel caught. With a cry of pain and surprise, Hannah tumbled forward, landing hard on the damp grass and loose earth, her briefcase skittering away. Pain shot through her ankle.
Click-skitter-slither. It was right behind her.
She scrambled, trying to push herself up, but her ankle throbbed protestingly. The creature loomed over her, its multiple black eyes fixing on her prone form, the wriggling fingers reaching down.
"Caught you! Naughty Hannah, trying to run from the tickle monster!" the voice chirped, the sound utterly incongruous with the monstrosity uttering it.
One of the long, pale hands shot out, not grabbing her, but deftly flicking the shoe off her uninjured foot. Before she could react, the other hand had her other shoe. Her feet, still clad in the ripped tights from the train, were suddenly bare again.
"No!" Hannah cried, trying to curl into a ball, to hide her feet, her stomach, anything.
The creature lowered its pulsating head-mound closer, the smell of damp earth and something else, something sickly sweet and metallic, filling Hannah's nostrils. "Pretty little piggies! Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle!"
The elongated fingers, surprisingly cool and smooth despite their grotesque appearance, descended. They didn't grab or claw; they danced. Lightly, expertly, they skittered across the arch of her bare left foot through the thin nylon.
Hannah gasped, bucking. It was worse than the feather. The multiple fingers seemed to be everywhere at once, finding every sensitive spot with unerring accuracy. Unwanted giggles started to bubble up, even as tears of terror streamed down her face.
"Hee hee hee! There it is! The Tingle!" the creature gurgled.
Its other hand, a blur of wriggling digits, targeted her other foot, drumming rhythmically on her sole, digging gently into the spaces between her toes. Hannah shrieked, a sound that was half-laugh, half-scream. She kicked out blindly, but the creature easily avoided her flailing legs, its grip – or rather, its touch – inescapable.
"Tummy time!" it announced gleefully.
One of the impossibly long arms snaked around her body, not pinning her with force, but holding her steady. The hand on that arm then darted under her coat, under her blouse, its cool, wriggling fingers finding the bare skin of her stomach.
The sensation was electric, violating. The fingers fluttered around her navel, spider-walked up her ribs, sending jolts of hysterical ticklishness through her body. Hannah convulsed, laughter tearing from her throat, raw and agonizing. She couldn't breathe, couldn't think, lost in a vortex of inescapable, tickling horror. Her feet were being tormented by one hand, her stomach and ribs by the other.
"So ticklish! So funny!" the creature seemed to sing, its black eyes gleaming.
The laughter intensified, becoming painful, unbearable. Her struggles grew weaker. The world narrowed to the sensation of those wriggling fingers, the creature's gurgling voice, the damp grass beneath her, the terrifying absurdity of it all. And then, the ultimate humiliation: a warmth spread through her trousers as her bladder, stressed beyond its limits by the hysterical laughter and terror, gave way.
The creature paused, its fingers momentarily stilling on her hypersensitive skin. It tilted its head-mound, as if considering this new development.
"Oops! Made a little puddle!" it chirped, not with malice, but with a kind of detached, childlike curiosity. Then, seemingly losing interest, it retracted its long arms. The wriggling fingers gave one last, swift wiggle near her face. "Night night, Hannah Tingle! Sweet dreams!"
With another click-skitter-slither, it turned and moved away with the same unnatural speed, disappearing back into the shadows between the trees, leaving Hannah sobbing and gasping on the damp grass.
She lay there for a long moment, trembling uncontrollably, the phantom feeling of wriggling fingers still torturing her skin, the shame of her reaction burning hotter than the fear. The silence of the park returned, heavy and absolute. No clicking, no slithering, no gurgling voice.
Slowly, painfully, Hannah pushed herself up. Her ankle still throbbed. Her clothes were damp and smelled faintly of urine. Her feet were bare, her shoes lying discarded a few feet away. Retrieving them, she limped out of the park, glancing constantly over her shoulder, expecting the skittering horror to reappear from the oppressive darkness. The city remained deserted, silent, complicit. Was this real? Was she losing her mind? The damp patch on her trousers argued forcefully for reality, a reality far more terrifying and bizarre than any nightmare.
The Familiar Flesh
By Ms Darkwood

The key felt slippery in Hannah's trembling hand. She fumbled with the lock of her apartment door, convinced the multi-limbed creature was still skittering through the shadows behind her, that Horror 73 was waiting on the next train, feather at the ready. The city outside remained unnervingly silent, a stark contrast to the cacophony of terror echoing in her mind. Finally, the lock clicked open.
She practically fell inside, slamming the door shut and ramming the bolts home. Leaning against the solid wood, she gasped for breath, heart pounding a frantic rhythm against her ribs. Home. Safe? The word felt hollow. After the tube train, after the park, safety seemed like a fragile illusion.
Then she smelled it. Garlic. Tomatoes. Basil. Someone was cooking. And she heard humming – a cheerful, familiar tune.
Confused, Hannah pushed herself away from the door. Her flatmate, Sarah, was away visiting her parents. Who...?
She walked cautiously towards the kitchen doorway and stopped dead, her breath catching. Standing at the stove, stirring a saucepan, was Charlene Eckland. Her best friend from university. Her bubbly, blonde, very British best friend.
"Charlie?" Hannah whispered, disbelief warring with a surge of bewildered relief. "What on earth are you doing here?"
Charlene turned, beaming, a wooden spoon coated in tomato sauce held aloft. "Han! Surprise! You look like you've seen a ghost, love!"
She bustled forward, enveloping Hannah in a hug that smelled of oregano and expensive perfume. Hannah hugged back hesitantly, her mind racing. Charlie lived in Manchester. She hadn't mntioned visiting let alone driving all the way from Manchester.
"How...? When did you get here? Why didn't you tell me?" Hannah stammered, pulling back slightly. Charlie looked... perfect. Her makeup was immaculate, her cheerful print dress wrinkle-free, her blonde hair bouncing. Almost too perfect, considering she'd supposedly just travelled.
"Oh, spur of the moment!" Charlie chirped, waving the spoon dismissively. "Got a cheap flight, thought I'd surprise my favourite Yank! Your flatmate let me in this afternoon before she left – Sarah, lovely girl! Said you'd be late. Thought I'd whip us up some dinner. And..." she gestured towards the bathroom door, "...I ran you a bath. Looked like you could use one."
It was classic Charlie. Impulsive, generous, slightly overwhelming. But something felt off. A tiny discordant note in the familiar symphony. Maybe it was the lingering terror from her journey home, maybe it was the sheer unexpectedness of it, but Hannah couldn't shake a feeling of deep unease.
"Wow, Charlie, that's... amazing of you," Hannah said, trying to inject enthusiasm into her voice. "But I'm exhausted. And kind of... filthy." She gestured vaguely at her damp trousers, hoping Charlie wouldn't notice the specific reason.
"All the more reason for a soak!" Charlie said brightly, steering Hannah towards the bathroom. "Go on, relax. Unwind. Dinner will be ready when you're done. We can have a proper catch-up."
The bathroom was steamy, smelling of lavender bath salts. It looked inviting, normal. Yet, Hannah hesitated. Charlie's eyes, usually sparkling with mischievous humour, seemed... flat. Like the eyes on the train. No, that was ridiculous. This was Charlie. Her best mate.
"Okay," Hannah sighed, forcing a smile. "Thanks, Char. Really."
"Anything for you, Han," Charlie said, squeezing her shoulder. Her grip felt surprisingly strong. "Now, get undressed. I'll just tidy up your coat..."
Charlie turned away, picking up Hannah's discarded coat. As Hannah reached for the bathroom door handle, she caught Charlie's reflection in the mirror over the sink. Charlie wasn't tidying the coat. She was holding it up, examining the damp patch on the trousers Hannah had been wearing, her cheerful expression replaced by one of intense, unreadable concentration. Then, quick as a flash, the smile was back as she turned around.
"Go on then!" she urged.
Heart thudding, Hannah slipped into the bathroom and locked the door. The lock felt flimsy, inadequate. What was wrong with her? Why was she so suspicious of her own best friend? It had to be the stress, the fear playing tricks on her mind.
She shed her clothes, the damp fabric clinging unpleasantly. The warm bath beckoned. Sinking into the lavender-scented water should have been blissful, but every creak of the floorboards outside the door made her jump. She kept picturing Charlie's brief, intense expression in the mirror.
After a hurried wash, she towelled off and slipped into her bathrobe. Taking a deep breath, she unlocked the door. Charlie was waiting right outside, leaning against the wall, that bright, slightly forced smile plastered on her face.
"Feeling better?" Charlie asked.
"Yeah, much," Hannah lied. "Dinner smells great."
"Pasta puttanesca! Your favourite," Charlie winked. "But first..." She stepped closer, her smile widening. "How about a little welcome-back tickle? For old times' sake?"
Hannah froze. They had had tickle fights back in uni, silly, giggly affairs fuelled by cheap wine. But coming now, after everything that had happened tonight, the suggestion landed with the force of a physical blow.
"I... I don't think so, Charlie," Hannah said, backing away. "I'm really not in the mood."
"Oh, don't be a spoilsport!" Charlie pouted, advancing on her. There was something predatory in her movement now, the cheerful mask slipping. "Just a quick one! Under the arms? Behind the knees?"
"Charlie, stop it!" Hannah snapped, genuine fear replacing suspicion. "You're freaking me out!"
Charlie stopped, her head tilted. The smile dropped completely. Her face became still, watchful. "Freaking you out? Why would your oldest friend freak you out, Hannah?" Her voice had changed subtly, losing some of its British warmth, gaining a flatter, colder edge.
"You're just... not acting like yourself," Hannah stammered, bumping against the wall. Trapped.
Charlie sighed, a sound like air escaping a punctured balloon. "You always were perceptive. Pity." She reached up, her fingers finding a spot just below her chin, hidden by her hair. With a faint snick, she pulled downwards.
Hannah watched, paralysed by horror, as a zipper appeared, seemingly out of nowhere, running vertically down the front of Charlie's body. Charlie unzipped it, pulling the tab down past her neck, over her chest, down her stomach, all the way to her pelvis. The cheerful print dress, the skin beneath it, everything split open like a grotesque banana peel.
But she left her face – Charlie's familiar, smiling face – intact, perched atop the horror beneath.
Where Charlie's torso and limbs should have been, there was a writhing mass of pale, glistening tentacles. They pulsed and coiled, suckered and smooth, extending from a central, amorphous body hidden deeper within the 'skin suit'. The smell of ozone and something else, something like stagnant pond water, filled the air.
Hannah couldn't scream. The sight was too monstrous, too fundamentally wrong. Charlie's smiling face atop that Cthulhian nightmare was a violation of sanity itself.
"Better?" the creature asked, Charlie's voice now distorted, layered with a wet, gurgling undertone, horrifyingly similar to the park creature's voice.
Tentacles shot out, faster than Hannah could react. They wrapped around her wrists, her ankles, her waist, lifting her effortlessly off the floor, pinning her against the wall. They were cool, smooth, and incredibly strong. Her bathrobe fell open, leaving her exposed.
"W-what are you?" Hannah choked out, staring into Charlie's unchanging, smiling eyes.
"Just a friend," the creature gurgled, Charlie's face crinkling into a wider, manic grin. "A friend who knows all your ticklish spots."
More tentacles emerged from the unzipped suit, thinner, more agile tendrils tipped with what looked like soft, brush-like pads. They hovered before her, quivering with anticipation.
"We've been watching you, Hannah Tingle," Charlie's mouth said, the voice a horrifying chorus. "Studying. Horror 73's Solistry reports are quite detailed. The Skitterer confirmed your... responsiveness."
The brush-tipped tendrils descended. They swept under Hannah's arms, eliciting an instant, explosive shriek of laughter. They danced over her ribs, her stomach, the backs of her knees, the soles of her feet – all at once. It was an overwhelming assault on her senses.
"No! Please! Stop!" Hannah begged between hysterical bursts of laughter. Tears streamed from her eyes, but Charlie's face just kept smiling its vacant, terrifying smile.
"But laughter is such a lovely sound!" the creature gurgled. "Especially when it's ripped from you! Such energy! Such exquisite Tingle!"
The tentacles worked relentlessly, expertly. There was no escape, no respite. Hannah was completely helpless, pinned by monstrous limbs, tormented by feather-light touches that felt like fire, her own laughter a weapon turned against her. The sheer cosmic horror of her best friend's face smiling down from atop a writhing mass of tentacles while those same tentacles tickled her into hysterics threatened to shatter her mind.
She laughed until her throat was raw, until her vision blurred, until the world dissolved into a meaningless whirl of tentacles, tickling, and the terrifyingly familiar, smiling face of her best friend. The last thing she remembered before consciousness mercifully fled was Charlie's voice, layered with that alien gurgle, whispering directly into her ear:
"Don't worry, Hannah. We'll be back for more playtime soon..."
#cosmic horror#tickletorture#tickle fetish story#horror stories#horror#supernatural#ghost stories#lovecraftian#eldritch horror#tickle content
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Glimpses Into The Void
Three Tales Of Cosmic Horror by
Eckland, Darkwood and Riley
The Abyss Gazes Also
By Lady Eckland
The klaxons were a death rattle echoing through the corridors of the exploration vessel Odyssey. Red emergency lights pulsed, painting the bridge in strokes of blood and shadow. Outside the main viewport, spacetime wasn't just warped; it was screaming. Sagitta X-1, a supermassive black hole they’d come to study from a 'safe' distance, had flared unexpectedly, its gravitational talons snagging them in an inescapable embrace.
"Report!" Captain Eva Rostova's voice was tight, betraying none of the icy dread gripping her heart. Her knuckles were white on the command chair’s arms.
"Trajectory decaying exponentially, Captain," Lieutenant Jian Li called out from navigation, his face slick with sweat. "We're locked in. Main engines unresponsive to course correction. We'll cross the event horizon in… standard T-plus 1 hour, 14 minutes."
A collective gasp went through the bridge crew. An hour. One hour until they became part of the singularity, crushed into infinite density.
"Gravitational shear?" Rostova asked, her gaze fixed on the impossible blackness outside, ringed by the swirling, tortured light of the accretion disk.
"Increasing," reported Chief Engineer Kaelen, his voice rough. "Port side is experiencing forces… magnitudes higher than starboard. The ship is being stretched, Captain. Hull integrity is dropping fast on port."
Rostova leaned forward. "Time dilation?"
Dr. Aris Thorne, the ship's theoretical physicist, pushed his glasses up his nose, his eyes wide with a mixture of terror and morbid fascination. "Extreme, Captain. Relative to Earth, years are passing for every second we experience. But within the ship… the dilation isn't uniform. Clocks on the port side are running significantly slower than starboard already. The differential is increasing."
An idea, desperate and bordering on insane, sparked in Rostova’s mind. "The port side… it's closer, deeper into the gravity well. Experiencing time more slowly, reality warping more severely."
"Captain?" Kaelen sounded worried. "Port Hull Section Gamma is taking the brunt. We've sealed it off. Readings there are… anomalous."
"Anomalous how, Doctor Thorne?" Rostova turned to the physicist.
Thorne swallowed. "Beyond relativistic effects, Captain. Energy signatures that don't match any known particle physics. Fluctuations in quantum foam stability. It's as if the fabric of spacetime itself is… fraying near the hull."
"We can't outrun it," Rostova stated, her voice hardening with resolve. "We can't fight the gravity. But maybe… maybe we can understand what's happening at the edge. Kaelen, I need a team. Environmental suits, reinforced tethers, sensor package delta. We're going to Port Hull Section Gamma."
"Captain, that's suicide!" Kaelen protested. "The shear forces alone—"
"Are tearing the ship apart anyway!" Rostova snapped, rising from her chair. "If there's anything happening on that side, anything related to this 'fraying' Thorne mentioned, any kind of energy we could harness or anomaly we could exploit… it's our only chance. Maybe understanding the brink gives us a way to push off."
Thorne looked horrified. "Captain, the laws of physics as we understand them cease to function coherently near an event horizon. What you find there might not be…" He trailed off, unable to articulate the possibilities.
"Exactly," Rostova said grimly. "It might be something else. Something we can interact with differently. Li, maintain best possible stabilization. Kaelen, Thorne, you're with me. Grab two security personnel. We move now."
The journey through the Odyssey was a descent into a physical nightmare. Corridors groaned under tidal stress. Lights flickered, sometimes showing scenes moments ahead or behind – temporal echoes bleeding through the stressed structure. Gravity shifted unpredictably, pulling them towards the port side with increasing, nauseating force. By the time they reached the final pressure door before Section Gamma, they were practically crawling along the starboard wall.
"Seals are holding, but the door's buckling," Kaelen grunted, wrestling with the manual override. Sweat poured down his face inside his helmet.
"The temporal differential must be significant beyond this point," Thorne murmured, checking his wrist-mounted chronometer against the ship's central clock feed in his helmet display. "Minutes here could be… much longer, or shorter, inside."
With a shriek of tortured metal, the door ground open a few feet. The air beyond shimmered, not with heat, but with a visible distortion, like looking through flawed, ancient glass. A low, subsonic hum vibrated through the deck plating, felt more in the bones than heard.
"Okay team, tether discipline is absolute," Rostova ordered, clipping her own reinforced line to a bulkhead anchor. "Stay clipped. Move slow. Report any anomaly."
They stepped through the doorway into Hell.
Section Gamma was a long observation gallery, designed for stellar phenomena viewing. Now, the reinforced plasteel windows lining the port wall were crazed, fractured, yet somehow holding. Through them, the view was impossible. The black hole wasn't just a circle of black; it was a living vortex that seemed to pull the eye into it, promising annihilation. The accretion disk was a maelstrom of incandescent fury, but colors shifted, bled into spectra that shouldn't exist.
Time felt thick, syrupy. Moving was like wading through unseen treacle. Rostova glanced at her suit chronometer – it flickered, displaying nonsensical symbols before settling on a time several minutes behind the ship’s clock.
"Captain… look," breathed one of the security officers, pointing a trembling gauntlet towards the windows.
It wasn't just the view outside that was wrong. The space between the inner and outer hull layers, usually a vacuum gap, was… active. It wasn't empty. Shifting, non-Euclidean shapes coalesced and dissolved in the fractured light seeping through the stressed hull. Geometric patterns that defied perspective twisted in upon themselves. It was like watching pure mathematics made manifest and then driven insane.
"What… what is that?" Kaelen whispered, his voice tight with disbelief.
Thorne was pale, shaking. "It's… not matter. Not energy as we define it. It's… potentiality? No… it's something else. Something that exists in the breakdown."
As they watched, horrified, a section of the inner hull plating began to shimmer, not from heat, but as if its very concept was becoming unstable. Then, thin, impossible tendrils of the 'wrongness' from the gap reached through the solid metal, not breaking it, but phasing through it. They touched the shimmering plate.
Instantly, the metal ceased to exist. Not vaporized, not melted – simply gone. Erased from reality, leaving behind only the swirling chaos in the gap.
"It's consuming it," Rostova realized with dawning horror. "It's feeding on the matter breaking down at the threshold."
A piercing shriek cut through the comms. The security officer who had pointed – Officer Lena Petrova – stumbled back, her tether snapping taut. Where the strange geometry-tendrils had brushed against the edge of the viewport nearest her, the 'wrongness' seemed to flow outwards, touching the edge of her armored boot.
Her boot didn't crumble or break. It simply… stopped being. The erasure flowed up her leg with horrifying speed, not like fire or acid, but like an artist wiping paint from a canvas. She didn't even have time to scream again before the effect reached her helmet. Her voice cut off mid-gasp. Her tether now held nothing but empty space.
"Petrova!" the other security officer, Jax, yelled, moving towards the empty space, forgetting discipline.
"Jax, no! Stay back!" Rostova screamed, but it was too late.
Another tendril, thicker, faster, flowed from the impossible space. It didn't just touch Jax; it seemed to envelop the concept of him. He vanished instantly, his tether falling slack.
"It's attracted to… us? To organized matter?" Thorne stammered, backing away towards the door. "This isn't just a passive phenomenon!"
The low hum intensified. The 'wrongness' in the gap pulsed, swirling faster, pressing against the failing viewports. More tendrils seeped through the hull, tasting the air of the gallery.
"This is the terror," Rostova whispered, understanding hitting her with the force of a physical blow. "The event horizon isn't just a point of no return. It's a habitat. A feeding ground for… for things that live between the laws of reality."
The floor beneath them started to shimmer. A large patch near the centre began to lose cohesion.
"Move! Back to the door! Now!" Rostova yelled, shoving Thorne ahead of her. Kaelen was already there, frantically working the damaged door controls.
"It's not responding! Power fluctuations!" Kaelen roared over the rising thrum.
Tendrils of un-reality were flowing freely into the room now, lazily drifting towards them, erasing sections of bulkhead and deck plating as they passed. The very air tasted like ozone and existential dread.
"Override! Blow the emergency bolts!" Rostova commanded, drawing her sidearm – a useless gesture, she knew, but instinct took over.
Kaelen slammed his fist onto a covered panel, shattering the protective casing. He hit the emergency release. With a deafening bang and a shower of sparks, the bolts blew. The pressure differential tried to suck them back into the gallery of non-existence, but the ship's continuing distortion simultaneously pulled them towards the starboard side, away from the horror.
They scrambled, clawed their way back through the doorway as Kaelen slammed the emergency lockdown, sealing the warped door as best he could. They collapsed in the 'relative' safety of the corridor beyond, chests heaving, minds reeling.
"Report," Rostova gasped, forcing herself upright, looking back at the sealed, groaning door.
"Two lost," Kaelen said heavily. "Section Gamma… containment is nominal, but the hull breach on the other side… it's accelerating."
Thorne was rocking back and forth, muttering. "It wasn't physics. It was hunger. Pure, conceptual hunger…"
Rostova looked at her chronometer. Only ten minutes had passed ship-time since they entered Gamma. Outside, relative to Earth, centuries might have flowed. Inside Gamma… perhaps an eternity had occurred in those vanishing moments.
"Li, report," she said into her comm.
"Captain! We have… a surge! A massive energy release from the port side! It's… pushing us! Trajectory is changing!"
Rostova stared at the sealed door, at the place where two crew members had ceased to be. The entity hadn't just consumed them; it had consumed their matter, their energy, their very place in spacetime. Had that act, that 'feeding', released something? Some consequence of erasure that acted like propulsion in this warped environment?
"Maintain stabilization!" Rostova ordered, her voice shaking slightly. "Plot the new trajectory!"
They were moving, slowly, agonizingly, away from the absolute brink. Limping, crippled, haunted. They had looked over the edge, not into an abyss of gravity, but into the maw of something that dined on reality itself. And the cost of that glimpse, the cost of the desperate, unintentional push away from the horror, was etched forever in the empty spaces where Lena Petrova and Jax had stood. The Odyssey might escape the black hole, but they would never escape the knowledge of the true terror that lurked in the breakdown of everything.
Closing Time
By Glenn Riley
The fluorescent lights of the Oak Valley Galleria hummed with the familiar, oppressive cheerfulness of late Saturday afternoon shopping. Sarah clutched her rapidly cooling coffee cup, weaving through the throng of shoppers. Christmas was still two months away, but the mall pulsed with a frantic energy, a river of humanity flowing between brightly lit stores promising happiness in exchange for currency. She was meeting her sister, Chloe, by the fountain in the food court at 4:00 PM. Her phone showed 3:47 PM. Plenty of time.
She paused by a jewelry store window, admiring a delicate silver necklace. A group of teenagers jostled past, laughing loudly. A mother wrestled with a stroller and two hyperactive toddlers. Normalcy. Annoying, perhaps, but comfortingly normal.
Sarah checked her phone again. 3:49 PM. She continued towards the food court, the mingled smells of pizza, stir-fry, and cinnamon buns filling the air. She passed the entrance to 'Global Outfitters', a large clothing store. A moment ago, it had been busy, mannequins draped in autumn wear, shoppers Browse racks. Now, as she glanced inside, it seemed… quieter. The handful of people she'd seen seemed to have vanished. Odd. Maybe they'd all gone to the checkout simultaneously.
She reached the edge of the sprawling food court. It was usually packed at this hour, a cacophony of chatter, clattering trays, and crying babies. Today, it seemed… subdued. There were people, yes, but fewer than she expected. Pockets of emptiness dotted the seating area. She spotted an empty table near the fountain and headed for it, scanning the remaining crowd for Chloe’s familiar red coat.
Sitting down, she took a sip of her lukewarm coffee and checked her phone. 3:53 PM. Still no sign of Chloe. She texted: Here @ fountain. Where r u?
No immediate reply. Sarah sighed, tapping her foot impatiently. She looked around again. A man who had been reading a newspaper at a nearby table was gone. The table was empty, the newspaper lying abandoned. A couple arguing near the Sbarro counter moments before? Vanished. The argument hadn't concluded; it had simply ceased, leaving an unnerving pocket of silence.
A prickle of unease traced its way up her spine. This wasn't right. It wasn't just people leaving; it was as if they were being… erased. The background hum of the mall seemed lower now, the music softer, flatter.
3:56 PM. She stood up, looking around more intently. The food court was now practically deserted. Only a handful of people remained, scattered far apart, and even as she watched, a woman pushing a cleaning cart near the restrooms simply… wasn't there anymore. One moment, solid presence; the next, empty space. No sound, no flash, just absence.
Panic began to bubble in her chest. "Hello?" she called out, her voice sounding unnaturally loud in the growing stillness. "Is anyone seeing this?"
The few remaining figures didn't react. Maybe they weren't real? Echoes? Then, a man sitting near the pretzel stand looked up, caught her eye, opened his mouth as if to speak, and winked out of existence.
Sarah stumbled back, knocking over her chair with a clatter that echoed alarmingly. She was alone. Utterly, terrifyingly alone in the vast, brightly lit food court. The fountain still splashed, the neon signs of defunct fast-food stalls still glowed, but the life had been scooped out of the place.
Her phone. She fumbled for it, desperate for contact, for an explanation. No Service. Of course. She ran towards the main concourse, her footsteps echoing like gunshots. Empty. Storefronts locked, security grilles down – impossible for this time of day. The music had stopped entirely. Only the oppressive hum of the fluorescent lights remained.
"Chloe!" she screamed, her voice cracking. "Anybody!"
Silence answered her. A profound, tomb-like silence that pressed in on her eardrums. She ran down the concourse, past silent mannequins in shop windows that seemed to watch her with blank, accusing eyes. Where had everyone gone? Was it a gas? Some kind of attack? But there was no sign of struggle, no bodies, nothing. Just emptiness.
Then she heard it. A faint clicking sound, like chitinous legs on polished tile, coming from the shadowed upper level near the deserted cinema complex.
Fear, cold and sharp, pierced through her panic. She wasn't alone.
"Who's there?" she whispered, backing away, pressing herself against the cold glass of a locked electronics store.
The clicking grew louder, closer, echoing strangely in the cavernous space. It was accompanied by a wet, guttural breathing that seemed to catch and hitch. Sarah strained her eyes, peering into the dimness of the upper level balcony overlooking the concourse.
A shadow detached itself from the deeper gloom near the cinema entrance. It wasn't human. It was tall, impossibly thin, its limbs jointed at unnatural angles. It moved with a jerky, stop-motion gait, its head – barely visible in the poor light – seeming too large for its spindly body, lolling slightly as it moved. The clicking sound came from its multi-jointed legs scraping against the tile.
It stopped at the railing, overlooking her position. Sarah couldn't make out distinct features, only a general impression of wrongness – too many joints, skin that seemed slick and dark, and a head that tilted, as if studying her. The breathing sound was louder now, a rasping inhalation and a wet, bubbling exhalation.
Then, it flowed over the railing. It didn't jump or climb; it moved like viscous fluid, pouring itself down onto the main concourse level with a grotesque fluidity that defied anatomy. It landed silently, its spindly form unfolding itself, standing easily twelve feet tall.
Sarah didn't need to see its face clearly to feel the intent radiating from it. It was pure, focused malice. A predator sizing up its prey. The phrase from a half-remembered horror movie surfaced in her terrified mind: It wants to tear my head off. The thought wasn't an exaggeration; it felt like a statement of fact.
She turned and ran.
Her breath hitched in painful sobs as she sprinted down the empty concourse, the clicking and wet breathing echoing behind her, sometimes seeming unnervingly close, sometimes fading slightly, playing a horrifying game of cat and mouse. She ducked into a large department store – 'Henderson's' – hoping for cover.
Inside, the racks of clothes and displays of homewares cast long, confusing shadows. The silence was broken only by her own ragged breathing and the distant, relentless clicking. She dove behind a circular rack of winter coats, pulling them around her, trying to control her hyperventilation.
Where did it come from? Why is it here? Where did everyone go? The questions hammered at her sanity. Was this creature responsible for the disappearances? Had it somehow… consumed them?
The clicking stopped just outside the department store entrance. Silence stretched, thick with tension. Sarah held her breath, listening. Had it lost her?
A soft scraping sound came from inside the store, near the cosmetics counter. Then the clicking resumed, slow, methodical, moving between the aisles. It was hunting her.
She peeked through the coats. She saw its shadow first, elongated and distorted by the store lighting, sweeping across the aisles. Then the creature itself stepped into view, its head swiveling slowly, unnaturally. It paused by a display of handbags, tilting its head as if confused or intrigued by the mundane objects. Its long, multi-jointed fingers – ending in needle-sharp claws – traced the leather of a purse.
Sarah knew she couldn't stay hidden. She needed a weapon, an escape route. The mall map near the entrance… emergency exits. She remembered seeing one marked near the loading docks at the back of Henderson's.
Slowly, carefully, she began to edge her way around the coat rack, keeping it between her and the creature. It was still preoccupied with the handbags, making soft, guttural clicks. She slipped past a display of perfumes, her heart pounding against her ribs. She could see the double doors marked 'Staff Only / Loading Dock Access' across the wide main aisle.
She broke cover, sprinting across the open space.
The creature reacted instantly. Its head snapped around, and a horrifying, high-pitched shriek tore through the silence – a sound of rage and hunger. It moved with blinding speed, its jerky gait transforming into a fluid, terrifying lope.
Sarah slammed into the doors, fumbling with the push bar. Locked. Of course. Panic surged. She hammered on the metal, screaming, knowing it was useless.
The clicking was right behind her. She spun around, pressing herself against the doors.
The creature skidded to a halt a few feet away, unfolding itself to its full, terrifying height. Now she could see it more clearly in the direct light. Its skin was a mottled, oily black. Its limbs were segmented like an insect's but moved with the flexibility of tentacles. Its head was vaguely pear-shaped, dominated by a cluster of unblinking, multifaceted eyes that shimmered with cold, alien intelligence. Below the eyes was not a mouth, but a vertical slit that pulsed, revealing rows of needle-like teeth dripping viscous saliva. The wet breathing sound emanated from this obscene orifice.
It tilted its head, the cluster of eyes focusing entirely on her face, her neck. The intent was unmistakable, primal.
Sarah squeezed her eyes shut, bracing for the inevitable. This was it. Torn apart in an empty mall by something that shouldn't exist.
A sudden, deafening crash echoed from the front of the store. Glass shattered. The creature shrieked again, whipping its head towards the sound.
Sarah’s eyes snapped open. Through the main entrance of Henderson’s, a security vehicle had smashed through the glass facade, its lights flashing erratically. But there was no one driving it. It had simply appeared there, engine off, lights pulsing.
The creature seemed confused, distracted by this new anomaly. It took a jerky step towards the vehicle, its head swiveling between Sarah and the impossible intrusion.
Seizing the momentary distraction, Sarah looked around desperately. A fire extinguisher mounted on the wall beside the doors. She ripped it from its bracket – heavy, solid.
The creature turned back towards her, its vertical maw widening, the shriek building again. It took a step forward.
With a surge of adrenaline-fueled desperation, Sarah lunged forward, not away. She swung the heavy metal cylinder with all her might, aiming for its cluster of eyes.
The extinguisher connected with a sickening crunch. The creature staggered back, shrieking – a sound that now held pain as well as rage. Dark, thick ichor sprayed from its damaged eye cluster. It flailed its spindly limbs wildly.
Sarah didn't wait. She turned and ran again, back out into the main concourse, away from the loading dock doors, away from the impossible security vehicle, away from the wounded, enraged thing. She ran towards the main mall entrance, praying it wasn't locked, praying the outside world still existed.
She burst out into the late afternoon light… and stopped dead.
The parking lot was empty. Not a single car. The busy highway beyond was silent, deserted. No traffic, no sounds, no people. Just empty asphalt stretching away under a sky that seemed too pale, too still.
The silence was absolute.
Behind her, from the shattered entrance of Henderson's, came the sound of enraged, pained shrieking, and the rapid, uneven clicking of chitinous legs on tile. It was coming. And there was nowhere left to run. The mall hadn't been the trap. The whole world was.
The Chronovore
By Ms Darkwood
(Dr Who Inspired)
The Time Rotor column in the centre of the Chronarium’s console room pulsed erratically, bathing the chamber in the sickly green light of temporal stress. Sparks showered from an overhead conduit, fizzling out against the worn, brassy floor grating. Outside the ship, the Time Vortex churned – usually a kaleidoscope of potential histories and abstract geometries, now it was a roiling storm of temporal paradoxes and fractured realities.
"Status!" The Curator snapped, his usually calm, ancient face etched with lines of deep fear. He wasn't the Doctor, gallivanting through history with cheerful abandon. His role, his self-appointed burden, was observation, preservation, and, increasingly, survival. His TARDIS-equivalent, the Chronarium, was old, temperamental, but usually reliable. Usually.
"Chroniton buffers failing! Spacetime integrity around the hull weakening!" The Chronarium’s synthesized voice, usually a model of calm polysyllabic Gallifreyan, was distorted, laced with static. "Pursuer closing differential. It… adapts."
The Curator slammed a fist onto the console, ignoring the jolt of pain. "Adapts? It doesn't adapt! It doesn't need to! It simply is!" He ran a trembling hand through his shock of white hair. For centuries, he had fled this… this thing. He didn't know its name, only its nature. The Chronovore. The Devourer of Time.
It wasn't a creature in any biological sense. It didn't travel through the Vortex like his Chronarium did, surfing the currents of causality. It existed outside the flow. It didn't hunt by tracking temporal wake; it seemed drawn to complexity, to the knots and whorls in spacetime created by time-active vessels, and it simply… manifested. And where it manifested, time, space, matter, energy – they ceased to be. Not destroyed, not converted, but unmade.
"Evasive manoeuvre Delta-Seven! Fold spacetime through the Quiescent Zone!" The Curator manipulated the controls, his long fingers flying across tarnished levers and crystalline buttons. The Chronarium groaned in protest, the engine note pitching higher, straining against the temporal drag.
On the main scanner screen, the swirling colors of the Vortex warped violently. Behind them, a patch of absolute, utter nothingness expanded. It wasn't black; black implies the absence of light. This was the absence of existence, a void that seemed to suck the very light and meaning out of the surrounding Vortex. It didn't move towards them in a conventional sense; it simply became closer as the space between them was unraveled.
"Entering Quiescent Zone… now!" the Chronarium announced.
The violent churning outside vanished, replaced by a calm, grey void – a pocket dimension supposedly inimical to complex spacetime structures. A hiding place.
For a moment, there was silence, broken only by the ragged breathing of the Curator and the protesting hum of the ship's damaged systems. He watched the scanner intently. The void-patch representing the Chronovore was gone from their immediate vicinity.
"Did we… lose it?" he whispered, hope warring with ingrained terror.
"Negative," the Chronarium replied, its voice flat, devoid of inflection but heavy with doom. "Spatial distortion detected. Source… indeterminate. It is not in the Zone, yet its influence permeates."
A low thrum began to vibrate through the deck plating. Not the engine, something else. The lights flickered, and for a split second, the Curator saw an afterimage of himself standing where he was, but older, skeletal, crumbling into dust. Temporal bleed. The Chronovore's presence weakened the barriers between moments.
"It doesn't need to enter," the Curator realized with cold horror. "The Zone is defined by certain physical laws, certain temporal constants. The Chronovore ignores them. It can exert its influence through the dimensional membrane."
The thrum intensified. A hairline crack appeared on the Time Rotor column, leaking raw temporal energy.
"We cannot stay here! Plot a jump – anywhere! Random coordinates, maximum temporal velocity!"
"Calculating… Warning: Random jump initiated under duress carries extreme risk of paradoxical entanglement or dimensional shearing."
"Do it!" The Curator roared.
With a gut-wrenching lurch, the Chronarium tore itself out of the Quiescent Zone, back into the chaotic howl of the main Vortex. The scanner immediately showed the patch of non-existence reappearing, closer than before. It hadn't needed to follow; it simply anticipated, or perhaps its presence was so fundamental that escaping it was like trying to escape the concept of distance itself.
"It's gaining," the Curator muttered, watching the distance counter tick down with agonizing speed. "How? How can it be faster than instantaneous travel?"
"It does not travel," the Chronarium stated. "Analysis suggests it does not perceive linear time. Past, present, future are irrelevant categories to its existence. It moves by… ontological pressure. It exists where it 'chooses' to be, relative to its target."
Ontological pressure. The pressure of being against not-being. The Curator felt a wave of nausea. This wasn't a chase; it was an inevitable convergence, like a mathematical proof resolving itself.
He tried everything. He jumped into the heart of a collapsing star, hoping the gravitational extremes would disrupt the Chronovore – the Chronarium barely survived the escape, scorched and battered, while the Chronovore emerged from the stellar core completely unaffected. He navigated through the higher dimensions, hoping the complex geometries would confuse it – it followed effortlessly, its non-existence cutting through fractal realities like a razor through smoke. He even attempted to lure it into a stabilized time loop, a prison of repeating moments. The loop simply dissolved around it, unmade before it could fully form.
"It consumes the very fabric we use to fight or flee," the Curator despaired, slumping against the console. The Chronarium was failing. Warning lights flashed across every panel. The internal lights flickered constantly now, casting strobing shadows that seemed to writhe with incipient non-being.
"Hull integrity critical," the Chronarium reported. "Outer shell experiencing spontaneous matter-energy dissociation."
It wasn't being breached by force. Sections of the hull were simply… ceasing to be there, erased by the proximity of the Devourer. The void outside was pressing in, not physically, but fundamentally.
The Curator looked at the Time Rotor, now cracked and sputtering violently. He saw his reflection in its multifaceted surface – and the reflection wasn't alone. Behind him, shimmering like heat haze but radiating absolute cold, a distortion stood. It wasn't the Chronovore itself, perhaps, but an intrusion of its nature, leaking through the Chronarium's failing reality shields.
He spun around. There was nothing there but the solid bulkhead of the console room. He looked back at the Rotor. The distortion in the reflection remained, clearer now, resolving into something vaguely man-shaped but composed of shifting, impossible angles and colours that hurt the eyes – a glimpse of the 'predator' aspect of the void.
"It's inside," he whispered. Not physically breaking in, but manifesting within the ship's compromised reality.
The Chronarium's voice came, weaker now, distorted by the encroaching unmaking. "Temporal field collapse imminent. Reality anchors… failing."
The console beneath the Curator's hands began to shimmer. The metal lost its solidity, flowing like liquid for a moment before simply vanishing, leaving a hole through which he could see the swirling chaos of the Vortex – and the vast, silent emptiness of the Chronovore drawing ever closer.
He backed away, stumbling over the grating. The floor beneath his feet began to dissolve. He looked down, watching in detached horror as his own boots, his trousers, his ancient Time Lord flesh began to fray at the edges, not burning or disintegrating, but becoming transparent, losing definition, being unwritten from the scroll of existence.
There was no pain. Only a profound, chilling sense of lessening. His memories flickered, becoming disjointed. His sense of self diluted, washed away by the encroaching tide of non-being.
He looked up one last time. The console room was dissolving around him. The Time Rotor flickered and died, its light extinguished. Through the dissolving walls, he saw the Chronovore – not as a shape, but as the utter, final absence towards which all things fell. It was the end of physics, the cessation of time, the final silence.
His last thought, before the Curator and the Chronarium and the very concept of their flight dissolved into the fundamental void, was not of fear, but of a strange, almost peaceful inevitability.
He had spent lifetimes running from the end of everything. Now, the end had simply… arrived.
And then, there was nothing. Only the silent, ceaseless hunger of the Chronovore, moving on through the Vortex, an eternal, unmaking principle in the endless ocean of time and space.
#cosmic horror#horror stories#horror#eldritch horror#lovecraftian#supernatural#unknown#ghost stories
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The Feathered Grin
A Comedy Horror starring Hannah Tingle as herself and Horror 73 as The Grinning Man
Hannah had always found solace in the gentle sway of the bus as it rolled through the city, the familiar hum of the engine providing a comforting backdrop to her daily thoughts. But today, as she settled into her usual seat, something felt off. The air was thick with an unsettling tension, and the sunlight filtering through the grimy windows seemed to dim.
A few chairs down, a man sat hunched over, his gaunt figure draped in a tattered trench coat. His hair was an unkempt mess, and the shadows cast by the bus's flickering lights accentuated the deep lines etched into his face. But it was his smile—a maniacal grin that stretched unnaturally wide—that sent chills racing down Hannah's spine.
"Hey there, pretty lady," he rasped, his voice echoing as if it were coming from a deep, dark pit.
Hannah's heart raced. She forced herself to look away, focusing on the scenery outside as the bus rattled along. But she couldn't shake the feeling of his gaze on her, a predatory intensity that made her skin crawl.
Suddenly, she caught sight of something glinting in his hand. A feather. He twirled it between his fingers, the vibrant colors shimmering in the dim light. It was a beautiful feather, but the way he handled it made her stomach churn.
"What a lovely day for a tickle, isn't it?" he crooned, his grin widening even further.
Hannah's breath hitched in her throat. She had to get away. The bus lurched to a stop, and without a second thought, she darted for the exit. The doors hissed open, and she stumbled out onto the pavement, her heart pounding like a war drum.
She didn’t dare look back as she sprinted down the street, her heels clattering against the sidewalk. But when she reached the corner, she glanced over her shoulder. The man was there, trailing just behind her, the feather still dancing in his hand.
"Don’t run, Hannah! The fun is just beginning!" he called, his voice a twisted melody that sent shivers through her.
Panic surged through her veins as she turned onto a side street, weaving around pedestrians, her mind racing with thoughts of escape. She ducked into a narrow alley, hoping to lose him in the maze of backstreets. The city was her ally; she had lived here long enough to know its secrets.
But the alley grew darker, and as she reached the end, she found herself faced with a brick wall. She was cornered. Her breath came in desperate gasps as she pressed her back against the cold, unforgiving surface.
“Why run, Hannah? I just want to play!” His voice echoed, growing closer.
She glanced back, dread pooling in her stomach. The man stood at the mouth of the alley, his grin now illuminated by a flickering streetlight. He took a step forward, his trench coat billowing around him like a shadow come to life.

“Play? With you? No thanks!” she shouted, her voice trembling as she glanced around for an escape.
“Oh, but you’ll love it!” He took another step, and Hannah could see the glint of madness in his eyes. “You won’t even know how much you wanted it!”
With adrenaline surging, she bolted out of the alley and into a nearby building—a quaint little café she often visited. The bell above the door jingled, and she dashed inside, nearly colliding with a group of patrons.
“Hannah? What’s wrong?” her friend Lisa asked, concern etched on her face.
“There’s a man… he’s following me!” Hannah gasped, her eyes darting to the door.
Lisa frowned, glancing outside. “What man?”
Before Hannah could respond, the door swung open, and the man stepped in, his grin as wide as ever. “There you are! I thought I lost you!”
Screams erupted around them as patrons scattered, chairs clattering to the floor. Hannah’s heart sank. He was here. In the café.
“Let’s go, Hannah! We have a date!” he said, his voice dripping with a twisted excitement.
In a panic, she ran for the back exit, bursting into the alley once again. But this time, she could hear his footsteps behind her, steady and relentless. She dashed toward her apartment building, praying she could reach the safety of her home.
As she burst through the front door, she raced up the stairs, her feet pounding against the wooden steps. She could hear him laughing below, the sound echoing like a nightmare.
“Home sweet home, Hannah!” he called out, his voice taunting as she reached her door.
With trembling hands, she fumbled for her keys, finally managing to shove one into the lock. She swung the door open and slammed it shut behind her, leaning against it, her heart racing wildly.
“Safe at last,” she whispered to herself, though a voice in the back of her mind warned her that this wasn’t over.
But as she turned to catch her breath, she froze. There he was, standing in her living room, that same maniacal grin plastered across his face. “I told you I’d find you!”
“Get out!” Hannah screamed, backing away.
“Now, now, that’s no way to treat a guest,” he said, his voice silky smooth, almost charming. “I’ve come to show you a good time.”
Before she could react, he lunged forward, tackling her to the ground. She fought back, clawing at him, but he was too strong. With a swift motion, he pulled out a length of rope from his coat and bound her wrists together.
“Let me go!” she shouted, panic rising as he dragged her toward her bedroom.
“Not a chance, my dear. You’re going to love this,” he said, tossing her onto the bed. He quickly secured her ankles as well, his grip surprisingly gentle despite the situation.
Hannah struggled against her bonds, but they were tight. “What do you want from me?” she cried, her voice thick with fear.
“Just a little fun!” he replied, pulling the feather from his coat pocket. “You see, I have a special talent for making people laugh.”
“Laugh?” she echoed, her mind racing. “You’re insane!”
“Insane? No! I’m just misunderstood!” He leaned over her, the glint in his eyes sending a fresh wave of terror through her. “Now, let’s see how ticklish you really are!”
Before she could scream, he began to stroke the feather along her soles. Laughter bubbled up involuntarily, and she gasped, trying to pull her feet away, but he held them firmly in place.
“No! Stop!” she cried, a mix of laughter and terror escaping her lips.
“Come on, Hannah! Just let it out!” he urged, his voice dripping with delight as he continued his relentless assault.
She writhed beneath him, tears streaming down her cheeks as her laughter turned into panicked gasps. “Please! I can’t take it!”
“Oh, but we’re just getting started!” he said, his tongue flicking out like a serpent’s, tasting the air. “I have my own special technique too!”
With that, he leaned down, his long tongue snaking out to trace along her feet, sending jolts of panic and laughter through her body. “See? You’re having fun!”
Hannah could hardly think, her mind spiraling into chaos. The juxtaposition of horror and absurdity twisted inside her—a nightmare wrapped in a bizarre comedy.
“Okay, okay! Just—just stop!” she begged, gasping for air, her laughter mingling with cries of desperation.
He paused for a moment, his grin unwavering. “Only if you promise to play with me again.”
“I promise!” she cried, desperate to end this nightmare.
“Good! Because I really want to tickle you some more.”
Just as she thought he might relent, he resumed his torment, the feather dancing along her skin, the laughter spilling out of her like a dam breaking. Each stroke of the feather sent her further into madness, the sensation unbearable yet inescapable.
“Please!” she screamed, but he only laughed, the sound echoing in the small room, mingling with her cries.
Hours felt like days as he continued his relentless tickling, each moment stretching into eternity. Just when she thought she couldn’t take it anymore, he finally stopped, leaning back to catch his breath.
“See? That wasn’t so bad, was it?” he said, his grin never faltering.
Hannah stared at him, her chest heaving, a mixture of relief and horror flooding through her. “You’re… you’re insane.”
“Maybe,” he conceded, “but you have to admit, you had a good time. And I’m not done with you yet.”
As he leaned closer, she felt the weight of her situation crash over her again. This was her life now—a twisted game of laughter and terror, with no way out.
“Just remember,” he said, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, “I’ll always be watching.”
And with that, he slipped the feather into his pocket, leaving her bound and breathless, a grotesque smile lingering in her mind long after he disappeared from view.
Hannah’s laughter echoed through the halls of her mind, a chilling reminder that sometimes, the scariest monsters come with a smile.

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Galley of the Damned: A Journal from Below Deck
A cosmic horror/deep sea terror by Lady Eckland and Ms Darkwood
*April 15, 1847*
The gentle sway of the *Peregrine's Fortune* has become as natural to me as breathing. Three years I've served as cook aboard this sturdy merchant vessel, and my little galley feels more like home than any hearth on solid ground ever did. The brass pots gleam in the lantern light, my knives are sharp and true, and the steady rhythm of chopping vegetables meshes perfectly with the creak of timber and splash of waves against the hull.
Today's inventory: thirty-six pounds of salted pork, twenty-eight pounds of hardtack (showing signs of weevils in the lower crates), fifteen pounds of dried beans, and eight precious onions that I've managed to keep from sprouting. Captain Morrison assures me we'll make port in Jamaica within the fortnight to resupply. Until then, I'll have to stretch what we have.
"Another fine stew, Mr. Hayes," First Mate Williams said this evening, scraping his bowl clean with a crust of bread. "You work miracles with what little we have."
I smiled and ladled him another helping. "The secret's in the timing, Mr. Williams. Everything has its proper moment—when to add the salt, when to stir, when to let things simmer."
Little did I know then how prophetic those words would prove.
*April 20, 1847*
The captain altered our course today. Something about favorable winds and a shorter route he'd heard of from a Portuguese trader in Boston. The crew seems uncertain—I heard murmurs of concern during the evening meal—but Morrison's never led us astray before.
Young Tommy Fletcher, our cabin boy, lingered in the galley after helping with the dishes. "Mr. Hayes," he said, voice barely above a whisper, "have you noticed anything... strange about the water lately?"
I hadn't, but the boy's usual cheerful demeanor had given way to something more subdued. "Strange how, lad?"
"Sometimes, when I'm swabbing the deck at dawn, the waves look... wrong. Like they're moving against the wind. And there's colors in the deep I've never seen before." He shuddered. "Colors that shouldn't be there."
I ruffled his hair and gave him an extra biscuit. "That's just the morning light playing tricks, Tommy. The sea's full of mysteries, but they're natural ones."
He nodded, but his eyes remained troubled. As he left, I noticed he'd barely touched his supper.
*April 25, 1847*
The fog rolled in three days ago and hasn't lifted. Thick as pea soup, it clings to the ship like a burial shroud. The crew's growing restless—I can hear it in their voices, see it in the way they huddle together during meals, speaking in hushed tones that fall silent when I approach with the soup pot.
Something's off about the food stores. The salted pork's taking on an odd sheen, and the water in the barrels tastes... different. Not bad, exactly, but wrong somehow. Like drinking tears.
"It's nothing to fret about," I told myself, examining a piece of meat that seemed to twitch under my knife. "Just the rolling of the ship playing tricks on tired eyes."
But when I started preparing tonight's stew, I could have sworn I heard something whispering from inside the pot—a sound like waves lapping at a distant shore, growing louder with each bubble that broke the surface.
"Samuel..." it seemed to say, though surely it was just steam escaping. "Samuel... we hunger..."
I nearly dropped the ladle when Bosun Jenkins burst into the galley, making me jump.
"Christ's sake, man!" I exclaimed, clutching my chest. "Announce yourself next time!"
Jenkins didn't smile or apologize. His face was gaunt, eyes sunken and glazed. "Need meat," he growled. "Raw. Now."
"But dinner's nearly ready—"
"RAW!" he roared, slamming a calloused fist against my cutting board. Then, more quietly: "Please, Samuel. I'm so hungry. So very hungry."
I gave him a slab of salt pork, watching in horror as he tore into it like a wild animal. His teeth seemed sharper than I remembered, and when he looked up at me, blood and brine dripping down his chin, his eyes reflected the lamplight like a cat's.
He left without a word, and I spent the next hour scrubbing the cutting board, trying to convince myself the scratches in the wood weren't arranged in patterns that hurt my eyes to look at.
*April 30, 1847*
The captain's stopped taking meals in his cabin. He stands at the helm day and night, staring into the fog with an unsettling intensity. When First Mate Williams suggested he rest, Morrison struck him across the face and screamed something in a language none of us recognized.
The crew's behavior grows more disturbing by the day. They've taken to pacing the decks at night, muttering to themselves. The food I prepare goes largely untouched, except for the meat—that they fight over like starving wolves, preferring it bloody and barely cured.
Tommy Fletcher came to me in tears this morning. "Mr. Hayes," he sobbed, "I saw something in the water. A face... but not a human face. It was looking at me, and it... it smiled."
I held the trembling boy close, noticing how cold his skin felt. "There, there, lad. Your mind's playing tricks—"
"No!" He pulled away violently. "You don't understand! They're calling us, Mr. Hayes. All of us. Can't you hear them singing?"
I couldn't, but later that night, as I stirred the stew, I began to notice patterns in the way it moved—swirls and eddies that formed and reformed, like dancing figures performing an eternal, underwater waltz. And deep in the pot, something that might have been an eye opened and fixed its gaze upon me.
I slammed the lid down and threw the whole pot overboard.
*May 3, 1847*
Three men went missing today. Jenkins claims they jumped overboard, says he saw them dive into the waves "like they were answering a lover's call." But the screams I heard in the dead of night told a different story.
The fog's grown thicker, if that's possible. It seeps into the galley like a living thing, making the lanterns flicker and dance. The walls weep constantly now, not with normal condensation, but with something that tastes of salt and copper when it drips onto my tongue.
"Your meals grow cold, Samuel Hayes," a voice whispered from the shadows today. It might have been Williams, but the accent was all wrong—too fluid, like words spoken underwater. "We require... fresher fare."
I'm running out of ingredients, but that's the least of my concerns. The remaining food has changed. The vegetables pulse with an inner light when cut, leaking phosphorescent fluid that stains my hands. The meat... the meat writhes and whispers when touched. I've taken to wearing gloves, but I can still feel it trying to grab me through the thick leather.
*May 5, 1847*
I heard singing today—real singing, not just the ever-present whispers. It came from the captain's cabin, where Morrison has finally retreated. The melody was beautiful in a way that made my teeth ache and my vision blur. When I pressed my ear to his door, I could make out words:
"Deep beneath the waves we dwell,
Where no mortal tongue can tell
Of the feasts we there prepare,
Come below and join us there..."
The captain's voice cracked on the high notes in a way that suggested his throat was full of water. I fled back to my galley, but the song followed me, echoing through the ship's bones.
Tommy Fletcher stopped by again, but he's changed. His skin has taken on a greenish cast, and there are things moving beneath it that make me sick to look at. "We're almost there, Mr. Hayes," he said, smiling with too many teeth. "Almost home."
"Where?" I asked, though I dreaded the answer.
"Where the old ones feast," he replied. "In the dancing halls beneath the waves. They've saved you a special place, you know. The cook who'll prepare their final banquet."
He reached for me with webbed fingers, but I pushed him away and barred the galley door. I can hear him scratching at it still, humming that damned song.
*May 7, 1847*
The ship no longer rocks with the waves—it pulses, like a heart about to burst. The brass pots in my galley have started to tarnish in impossible patterns, forming images that shift when I'm not looking directly at them. Scenes of underwater cities, of creatures that have never seen the sun, of feasts where the food screams and the diners have too many mouths.
I tried to make bread today, but the dough kept trying to crawl away. When I finally forced it into the oven, it screamed—actually screamed—and the smell it produced sent me retching into the corner.
The crew doesn't even pretend to be human anymore. They slide across the deck on bellies that have grown scales, leaving trails of slime that glow in the dark. Their eyes have gone huge and black, and their fingers have grown long and boneless. They gather at the railings, pointing and chittering at shapes in the fog that I refuse to acknowledge.
Williams visited me today, crawling across the ceiling like a grotesque spider. "Time to start preparing the feast, Samuel," he gurgled through gills that had split open along his neck. "They're so looking forward to your cooking."
"Who are they?" I demanded, brandishing a knife that seemed to bend and warp in my trembling hand.
He laughed, and seawater spilled from his lips. "The ones who taught us how to hunger. The ones who showed us what real food tastes like. They've been so patient, Samuel. So very patient. But now they want their supper."
*May 8, 1847*
The captain emerged from his cabin at last. God help me, I wish he hadn't. His uniform has fused with his flesh, brass buttons sunk deep into green-tinted skin. Tentacles writhe where his beard should be, and his eyes... his eyes are like windows into an ocean trench, bottomless and full of terrible wisdom.
"We've arrived," he announced in a voice like waves crushing a drowning man. "Time for the final preparation, Mr. Hayes. They're waiting for their cook."
The fog has pulled back at last, revealing what lies beneath us. The sea glows with otherworldly light, illuminating the ruins of a city that should not exist. Massive shapes move through the waters below, casting shadows that drive me mad to look upon.
I'm writing this from inside a barrel in the galley's deepest corner. They're coming for me—I can hear them slithering through the ship, calling my name in voices that sound like dying stars would sound. The ship's tilting, slowly but surely pointing its bow toward the depths.
The knife in my hand promises a quicker end than what awaits below, but my hands shake too much to use it. Or perhaps something else stays my hand—some horrible curiosity about the feast they've promised me I'll prepare.
The barrel's lid is being pried open now. I see faces I once knew, transformed into something ancient and hungry. They're reaching for me with limbs that were never meant to exist above the waves.
"Come, Samuel," they sing in horrible harmony. "Come cook for us. Cook with us. The greatest feast awaits, and you're the guest of honor."
They have me now. Their touch burns cold as the deepest ocean, and I can feel my flesh beginning to change, to adapt to the pressures that await below. The last thing I see as they drag me from my sanctuary is my reflection in a pot's tarnished surface—my eyes are already growing larger, darker, hungrier.
I am the last to bear witness. The sea has taken them, and soon it shall take me, too. And when it does, it will feast on my very soul.
But first, it seems, I have a meal to prepare.

With thanks to @dadrizzle34 for providing the inspiration for this story.
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The Birth of the Serpent

A science fiction horror story by Ecky
They called it the Violet Abyss, a strange planet orbiting a dying sun deep within the Farstar System. It was the first time humanity had ventured so far from the solar systems they knew, drawn by the promise of untouched minerals and bizarre alien life. The planet’s surface shimmered in shades of dark purple, lit by a weak, violet-tinged light.
The mission was straightforward—extract mineral samples, catalog local flora, and gather atmospheric data. They were only supposed to stay long enough to get what they needed and return. Captain Morales had chosen a small, specialized team for the mission. Dr. Evelyn Greene, the xenobiologist, had a fascination with alien ecosystems. Daniels, the engineer, could fix almost anything with a strip of metal and a roll of tape. Bishop, the navigator, had eyes like a hawk and nerves of steel. Rivers, their experienced medic, had treated more wounds than he could count. And Lieutenant Kayla Holden, the security officer, was their best bet against the unknown dangers of the deep.
Kayla was the first to leave the safety of the ship and step onto the planet’s surface, her suit reflecting the purple hues of the terrain. “All clear, Captain,” she said, her voice crackling over the radio.
“Proceed, Lieutenant,” Morales’s calm voice echoed back. “Let’s keep this fast and efficient.”
The ground crunched beneath her boots as she made her way to a cluster of twisted, glass-like formations. The scanner on her wrist flashed with readings—high mineral content, organic traces—everything they had hoped to find. But as she leaned down to collect a sample, she noticed something strange. The soil shifted, something writhing just below the surface, and a sharp sting pricked her hand.
“You alright, Holden?” Morales asked, watching her hesitate.
“Yeah, just a twinge,” she replied, rubbing her gloved hand. She collected the sample and made her way back to the ship, shaking off the strange tingling sensation in her arm. Whatever it was, it would have to wait.
She didn’t tell the others.
---
Six Days Later
Kayla’s condition had worsened. A purplish rash spread across her arm, creeping towards her chest like an infection. She concealed it beneath her suit, and each time someone asked, she brushed it off as nothing more than a rash—just stress from the mission, nothing to worry about.
But the pain grew worse, spreading deep into her bones, throbbing like an internal wound. She couldn't sleep, couldn't eat, and the nightmares came—visions of something moving under her skin, twisting, growing.
“Kayla, you don’t look right,” Daniels said, his voice laced with concern. “Are you sure you're okay?”
“Just space sickness,” she muttered, her eyes hollow. “I’ll get over it.”
That night, she collapsed.
---
Medical Bay
Kayla lay strapped to the examination table, her breathing shallow. The rash had turned into something hideous—a mass of swollen, pulsating flesh spreading across her stomach. Dr. Greene hovered over her, her hands shaking as she peeled back the layers of Kayla's uniform.
“What’s happening to her?” Morales asked, his face pale in the harsh light of the medical bay.
“I don’t know,” Greene admitted, her voice quivering. “It’s like… something is growing inside her.”
Kayla's eyes fluttered open, wide and wild. “Help me,” she gasped, her voice thick with agony. “It’s inside… it’s moving!”
The words died in a scream as her stomach convulsed, the skin bulging and splitting. Blood sprayed across the room, and something sharp and slick burst from her abdomen—a snake-like creature, dripping with her blood, its body coiling as it emerged.
“Get back!” Morales yelled, shoving Greene aside as the creature shot out like a spear.
Kayla’s body convulsed, then went still, her eyes staring vacantly at the ceiling. The creature—a black, serpentine horror—slithered over her corpse, its slick scales reflecting the ship’s emergency lights. It lunged for Greene, who barely managed to dodge as it vanished into the shadows.
“Seal the room!” Morales ordered, his voice hoarse with shock.
But it was too late. The creature was loose.
---
The Chase
The ship descended into chaos. Morales, Greene, Daniels, Bishop, and Rivers were on high alert, weapons drawn, scouring the narrow corridors. It was a deadly game of cat and mouse—the creature moving through the ship's air ducts, slipping between walls, always just out of sight.
“It’s too fast,” Bishop growled, his eyes darting over the dimly lit halls. “We need to corner it!”
“Rivers, any sign of it?” Morales barked over the comms.
“No, but the sensors are picking up movement in the engineering deck,” Rivers replied, fear creeping into his usually steady tone.
They split up—Rivers to the lower levels, Daniels to the engineering bay. They were barely out of sight when the lights flickered and went dark.
“It’s messing with the power!” Daniels’ voice crackled, barely audible over the static.
“Get back to the med bay!” Morales ordered. “We regroup there—now!”
But then they heard Rivers scream—a high, desperate sound that ended with a sickening crunch. Silence followed.
---
Desperation
The survivors were dwindling, their breaths ragged in the stale air of the ship. They retreated to the med bay, the only place they could seal off, but it felt like a tomb—a narrow room filled with the smell of blood and death.
“We can’t stay here,” Daniels said, his voice tense. “That thing… it’s learning. It’s toying with us.”
Evelyn’s hands trembled as she checked her scanner. “It’s grown,” she said softly, eyes widening. “It’s feeding on us, getting stronger.”
Morales gripped his rifle. “We end this now. We trap it in the cargo bay—blow the hatch and vent it into space.”
Daniels and Evelyn nodded, the determination in their eyes betraying the fear that gnawed at their insides.
---
The Final Stand
The cargo bay was cavernous and dark, filled with shadows that seemed to move. They waited in silence, weapons aimed at the open air ducts, sweat trickling down their faces.
A faint hiss echoed, followed by the skittering sound of scales against metal.
“There!” Morales yelled, firing at a shadow that darted along the ceiling. Plasma bolts seared the walls, missing the target by inches. The creature dropped down, coiling its massive body as it lunged for Daniels, who screamed as it wrapped around his neck, snapping it with a brutal twist.
Blood sprayed across Evelyn’s face as Daniels fell, and she fired blindly, a wild spray of bullets that only grazed the creature’s hide. It snarled, eyes glowing with a malevolent hunger, and coiled back to strike.
“NOW!” Morales roared, throwing himself at the emergency vent release. Evelyn’s hand was already on the panel, hitting the button that initiated the cargo bay purge.
With a deafening roar, the hatch blew open, the atmosphere rushing out into the void. Evelyn screamed as the vacuum pulled at her, her fingers slipping from the console. The creature lunged, its body caught in the pull of space, but its jaws snapped around her ankle, dragging her down.
Morales reached out, grabbing Evelyn’s hand. “I won’t let go!” he shouted over the howl of decompression, but the creature was too strong. It coiled tighter, pulling her away with a final, desperate thrash.
She was gone, yanked into the abyss along with the serpent.
---
Epilogue
Morales sat alone in the quiet, bloodstained remains of the med bay. The lights flickered back to life, but the ship was dead—silent and hollow, like the vastness of space beyond its cold metal walls.
He had survived, but at what cost? His crew was gone, devoured by the nightmare that had sprung from the alien soil. He stared into the empty corridor, knowing that he would drift forever in the deep, haunted by the vision of that creature—its dark eyes, hungry and unblinking, forever burned into his mind.
The radio crackled with static, the only sound in the dead ship, and Captain Morales whispered to the darkness.
“I’m still here...”
The darkness did not reply.
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**Whispers in the Void: A Ghost Story on the Abandoned Spaceship "Ecliptica"**
#### **Chapter 1: The Silence of the Stars**
Captain Lorraine "Lori" Voss stood at the edge of the observation deck, staring out into the infinite blackness of space. The stars were scattered like distant memories, cold and indifferent. She had seen this view a thousand times before, and yet, tonight, something was different. The usual hum of the ship's engines, the steady thrum that had been her constant companion for years, was absent. The **Ecliptica** was silent.
Two days ago, the **Ecliptica** had responded to a distress signal from an uncharted region of space. The signal had been weak, barely detectable, but unmistakably human. It was protocol to investigate such signals, and so Captain Voss had set a course. Yet, as they approached the source of the transmission, strange things began to happen.
First, the ship's power systems flickered, casting the corridors into a brief but disorienting darkness. Then, the crew started reporting strange sounds—whispers echoing through the vents, footsteps in empty hallways, and cold drafts where there should have been none. Voss dismissed these as nerves, the crew's minds playing tricks on them in the vast emptiness of space.
But then the distress signal stopped. Dead silence.
It wasn't long before the **Ecliptica** arrived at the coordinates of the signal. What they found was a derelict ship, floating aimlessly through space, its hull battered but intact. No signs of life. No signs of activity. Just a ghost ship, adrift and forgotten.
Voss had led a small team aboard to investigate, leaving her first officer in charge of the **Ecliptica**. The derelict ship's name, emblazoned across its side in faded letters, was the **Sovereign**. Voss had never heard of it before, but its design was old—older than anything in use by any known fleet. It was as if the **Sovereign** had been lost for centuries.
Now, two days later, Captain Voss was the only one left.
---
#### **Chapter 2: The First Boarding**
The boarding party had been small—just Voss, her chief engineer, Anders, and two security officers, Davis and Yara. The **Sovereign** had been eerily silent when they first entered. The air was stale. The artificial gravity was still functioning, but only just. The lights flickered intermittently as they made their way through the narrow corridors.
Voss had felt a creeping unease from the moment they set foot on the derelict ship. It wasn't just the silence or the darkness—it was something deeper, an almost tangible presence that seemed to lurk just out of sight.
"Captain, this place gives me the creeps," Anders had muttered, his voice barely above a whisper.
"Stay focused," Voss had replied, though she couldn't shake the feeling that they were being watched.
They reached the bridge without incident, but what they found there only deepened the mystery. The control consoles were dead, the screens cracked and covered in dust. There were no signs of recent activity. No log entries. No sign that anyone had been aboard in years.
"Maybe the signal was automated," Davis had suggested, his eyes scanning the room nervously.
"Maybe," Voss had agreed, though the explanation felt hollow.
Then Yara had found the first body.
It was slumped in a chair at one of the consoles, skeletal remains long since picked clean by the passage of time. The uniform was unrecognizable, tattered and discolored. But it was the expression on the skull that had unnerved them all—a silent scream, as if the person had died in the throes of absolute terror.
Voss had ordered them to keep moving. There was something wrong with the **Sovereign**, something that went beyond a simple derelict ship. They had to find out what had happened before it was too late.
---
#### **Chapter 3: Whispers in the Dark**
The whispers had started soon after.
At first, they were faint, just on the edge of hearing, like the distant murmur of a conversation in another room. But as they continued exploring the ship, the whispers grew louder, more distinct. They seemed to come from the walls, from the vents, from the very air around them.
"Did you hear that?" Yara had asked, her hand resting on the butt of her sidearm.
"It's just the ship settling," Voss had replied, though she didn't believe it. The **Sovereign** wasn't settling. It was *alive*.
The further they went, the worse it got. The air grew colder, and the lights flickered more frequently, plunging them into brief periods of total darkness. In the silence of those moments, the whispers became voices—voices that called out to them, voices that begged for help, voices that screamed in rage.
"Captain, we need to leave," Anders had said, his voice shaking. "Something's wrong here."
"We're not leaving until we know what happened," Voss had insisted, though she could feel her own fear rising.
And then Davis disappeared.
One moment he had been there, standing just behind Voss as they made their way through the ship's engineering section. The next, he was gone. No sound, no warning. Just gone.
"Where the hell is Davis?" Yara had shouted, her flashlight sweeping the darkened corridor.
They searched for him for hours, calling his name, retracing their steps. But there was no sign of him. It was as if he had simply vanished into thin air.
By the time they gave up, Anders was a nervous wreck, and Yara wasn't much better. Voss could feel the tension between them, the unspoken fear that they were next.
"Let's get back to the **Ecliptica**," Voss had finally said, her voice calm despite the panic building inside her. "We'll regroup and come up with a new plan."
But as they made their way back to the airlock, they found their path blocked. The corridors that had been clear just hours before were now sealed off by bulkheads, the doors locked tight. The ship was changing, shifting around them, as if it was alive, as if it *wanted* them to stay.
"We're trapped," Anders had whispered, his eyes wide with terror.
"No," Voss had said, her jaw set. "We’re getting out of here."
---
#### **Chapter 4: The Haunting**
The night after Davis disappeared, Yara woke up screaming. Voss had been in the next room, trying to get some much-needed rest when the piercing shriek echoed through the dead hallways of the **Sovereign**. She rushed to the source, finding Yara drenched in sweat, her eyes wide with terror.
"What's wrong?" Voss demanded, shaking her slightly to snap her out of her panic.
"He's here! Davis! He was standing at the foot of my bed! He was... Oh God, his eyes!" Yara babbled, pointing toward the door of her small quarters.
Voss glanced at the empty doorway, her stomach twisting. There was no one there.
"It was a nightmare," Voss said, more to convince herself than Yara. "Just a nightmare."
But Yara wasn’t convinced. "It wasn’t a dream, Captain. I could *feel* him. He was cold. His skin was grey..." She trailed off, her voice barely a whisper. "I don’t know what’s happening, but this ship... it’s not right."
Voss sat on the edge of her bed, trying to think. Davis’s disappearance, the odd shifts in the ship's layout, the escalating cold, and now Yara’s vision of a dead crew member. Was it possible? Could something—some *force*—be playing tricks on their minds?
Before Voss could respond, the lights flickered again, and for the briefest moment, the entire room plunged into darkness. When they came back on, the temperature in the room had dropped significantly. They could see their breath hanging in the air.
Yara clutched her blanket, eyes wide in horror. "He’s still here," she whispered.
Voss had always been a woman of logic and reason, but the strange occurrences aboard the **Sovereign** were testing her limits. There was no explanation for what was happening, and the longer they stayed, the more dangerous it became.
Before Voss could offer any comfort, a loud clang echoed down the corridor, followed by the sound of footsteps—slow, deliberate, and heading their way.
---
#### **Chapter 5: The Encounter**
Voss jumped to her feet, motioning for Yara to grab her weapon. The two crept toward the door, listening as the footsteps grew closer. They were heavy, dragging slightly, as if the person—or *thing*—was injured.
"Stay behind me," Voss ordered, her voice low and steady.
They waited, weapons drawn, as the footsteps stopped outside the door. There was a long, agonizing pause before the door slowly slid open with a hiss.
No one was there.
Voss cursed under her breath, stepping into the hallway. The corridor was empty, bathed in the same flickering light they had become accustomed to since boarding the **Sovereign**. But something was wrong. The air felt thick, oppressive, as if the ship itself was holding its breath.
Suddenly, a shadow moved at the end of the corridor.
"Who’s there?" Voss called out, her voice echoing down the hallway.
There was no response, but the shadow shifted again, disappearing around the corner.
Voss and Yara exchanged glances before moving cautiously toward the corner. They rounded it, weapons at the ready, but the hallway beyond was empty.
"It’s messing with us," Yara said, her voice trembling. "This ship... it’s alive. It’s *feeding* off of us."
Voss wanted to dismiss the idea as nonsense, but deep down, she knew Yara was right. There was something malevolent aboard the **Sovereign**, something that thrived on fear and despair.
"Let’s keep moving," Voss said, swallowing her fear. "We need to find Anders. Maybe he’s found a way to get us out of here."
But as they made their way deeper into the ship, the whispers returned, louder than before. They filled the air, growing more insistent, more accusatory.
"You left us," they hissed. "You abandoned us."
Voss tried to block them out, but the voices drilled into her skull, each word like a dagger in her mind.
"You let us die."
---
#### **Chapter 6: The Truth Revealed**
By the time they found Anders, he was dead.
His body was slumped against the wall in the engine room, his face frozen in a grotesque mask of terror. His eyes were wide, his mouth open in a silent scream. There was no sign of injury, no blood, nothing to explain how he had died. It was as if the life had simply been *sucked* out of him.
Yara dropped to her knees beside him, her hands trembling as she reached out to close his eyes. "Oh God," she whispered. "We’re next."
Voss knelt beside her, staring at Anders’s lifeless body. He had been one of her best. Smart, resourceful, steady under pressure. And now he was gone—just like Davis.
"We need to leave," Yara said, her voice barely above a whisper. "We need to get off this ship."
Voss nodded, her mind racing. The **Sovereign** was a death trap, and if they didn’t get out soon, they would suffer the same fate as Anders—and whatever had happened to Davis.
But as they turned to leave, the lights flickered again, plunging the room into darkness.
When they came back on, Anders’s body was gone.
Yara screamed, stumbling back against the wall. "Where is he?! Where the hell did he go?!"
Voss felt a cold chill run down her spine. The ship was playing with them, toying with their minds. It wasn’t enough to kill them—it wanted to *break* them first.
"We need to get back to the **Ecliptica**," Voss said, her voice firm despite the fear gnawing at her insides. "We’re not staying here another minute."
They retraced their steps through the ship, but the corridors seemed to stretch endlessly, twisting and turning in ways they hadn’t before. It was as if the **Sovereign** was shifting around them, warping its own layout to keep them trapped.
"What if we never get out?" Yara whispered, her voice barely audible over the sound of their footsteps.
"We will," Voss said, though she wasn’t sure she believed it.
As they rounded another corner, they came face to face with the airlock that led back to the **Ecliptica**. Relief washed over Voss, and she quickened her pace, Yara close behind.
But just as they reached the airlock, the whispers returned—louder this time, more insistent.
"Don’t leave us. You can’t leave us."
Voss ignored them, slamming her hand against the control panel. The airlock hissed open, revealing the narrow passage back to their ship.
But before they could step through, a figure appeared in the doorway.
It was Davis.
Or at least, it looked like him.
His skin was pale, almost translucent, and his eyes were hollow, empty voids. His lips twisted into a grotesque smile as he stepped forward, blocking their path.
"You’re not going anywhere," he rasped, his voice barely human. "You’re part of the ship now."
---
#### **Chapter 7: The Escape**
Yara screamed, firing her weapon at the thing that used to be Davis. The bullets passed through him harmlessly, his form flickering like a glitch in a broken hologram.
"Run!" Voss shouted, grabbing Yara’s arm and pulling her back down the corridor.
They ran blindly through the twisting corridors, the whispers growing louder with every step. The ship was alive, and it was hunting them.
"You can’t escape," the voices hissed. "You belong to us."
Voss’s heart pounded in her chest as they rounded another corner, only to find themselves back at the airlock.
But this time, the door was open, and beyond it was the cold, empty void of space.
A trap.
"We’re trapped," Yara whispered, her voice cracking. "We’re never getting out of here."
"No," Voss said, her voice filled with determination. "We’re getting out. We’re getting back to the **Ecliptica**, and we’re leaving this godforsaken ship behind."
But even as she spoke, the ship seemed to close in around them, the walls pulsing with a sickening, organic rhythm. The temperature dropped even further, and the air grew thin, making it hard to breathe.
Voss glanced at Yara, her face pale and drawn. They were running out of time.
"We need to get to the bridge," Voss said. "Maybe we can override the controls from there, force the airlock open."
Yara nodded weakly, and they started moving again, their footsteps echoing through the empty halls.
As they made their way to the bridge, the ship continued to shift around them, the corridors twisting and warping in impossible ways. It was as if the **Sovereign** was alive, a malevolent force determined to keep them trapped forever.
When they finally reached the bridge, Voss was surprised to find it exactly as they had left it. The consoles were still dead, the screens cracked and covered in dust. But there was something different about the room now—something *wrong*.
The air was thick with the stench of decay, and the temperature had dropped to near freezing. Voss could see her breath in the air as she moved toward the main control console.
"Help me with this," she said, motioning for Yara to join her.
Together, they pried open the console, exposing the inner workings of the ship’s control systems. Voss worked quickly, her hands shaking from both the cold and the fear gnawing at her insides. If she could just bypass the main controls, she could force the airlock open manually.
But as she worked, the whispers grew louder, more insistent.
"You can’t leave us. You can’t escape."
Voss gritted her teeth, ignoring the voices as she focused on the task at hand. She was almost there, just a few more connections to make, and they’d be free.
But then Yara screamed.
Voss spun around, her heart racing, only to find Yara standing frozen in place, her eyes wide with terror.
Behind her, the figure of Davis loomed, his empty eyes locked on Voss.
"You’re not leaving," he rasped, his voice like nails on a chalkboard.
Voss didn’t hesitate. She grabbed the nearest tool—a heavy wrench—and swung it at the figure. It passed through him harmlessly, his form flickering like a glitch.
But it was enough to break Yara out of her trance. She stumbled back, her breath coming in ragged gasps.
"Get to the console!" Voss shouted, turning her attention back to the controls.
Yara nodded, rushing to the console as Voss continued her work.
The whispers grew louder, deafening now, as the figure of Davis advanced on them.
"You can’t leave. You belong to us."
Voss’s fingers flew over the controls, her heart pounding in her chest. She was so close, just a few more seconds…
And then, with a final, desperate push, she activated the override.
The airlock hissed open.
"Go!" Voss shouted, grabbing Yara and pulling her toward the door.
They bolted through the narrow passage, the cold void of space looming just beyond.
As they reached the airlock, Voss slammed her hand against the control panel, sealing the door behind them.
The whispers stopped.
For a moment, there was nothing but silence.
Voss and Yara stood there, breathing heavily, their bodies trembling from both the cold and the fear.
"We did it," Yara whispered, her voice barely audible.
Voss nodded, though she couldn’t shake the feeling that it wasn’t over.
They made their way back to the **Ecliptica**, the familiar hum of the ship’s engines a welcome sound after the oppressive silence of the **Sovereign**.
But as they prepared to leave, Voss couldn’t help but glance back at the derelict ship, floating silently in the void.
The **Sovereign** was still there, waiting.
And somewhere, deep inside its twisted corridors, the whispers continued.
"You can’t escape. You belong to us."
---
#### **Epilogue: The Haunting of the Ecliptica**
Weeks passed since their escape, and the **Ecliptica** resumed its normal routine. The crew had been briefed, though Voss left out many of the more disturbing details. Anders and Davis were listed as casualties, victims of an unexplained accident.
But Voss couldn’t shake the feeling that something had followed them back.
She was alone in her quarters one night, staring out at the stars, when she heard it.
A whisper.
"You can’t escape."
Voss froze, her heart skipping a beat.
She turned slowly, her eyes scanning the room.
But there was no one there.
Only silence.
And then, the whisper came again, louder this time.
"You belong to us."
Voss closed her eyes, a cold chill running down her spine.
They had escaped the **Sovereign**.
But the ship had never let them go.
---
*The End*
#science fiction horror#scary horror story#horror stories#supernatural#ghost stories#horror#paranormal
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The Spider's Web
By Ms Darkwood
"Dude, check this out!" Jake called excitedly from his computer. His roommate, Alex, peered over his shoulder at the screen.
"'Rare Amazonian Spider for Sale,'" Alex read aloud. "Jake, you can't be serious."
Jake grinned, already reaching for his credit card. "Come on, it'll be awesome! We've never seen anything like this before."
Despite Alex's protests, Jake placed the order. A week later, a small, nondescript package arrived at their apartment.
With trembling hands, Jake opened the box, revealing a glass terrarium. Inside, barely visible against the dark soil, sat a spider no bigger than a quarter. Its body was an iridescent blue-black, with intricate red patterns swirling across its abdomen.
"Whoa," Alex breathed, leaning in for a closer look. "Okay, I'll admit, that's pretty cool."
Over the next few days, the roommates took turns feeding the spider small insects they caught around the apartment. They marveled at the speed and precision with which the tiny arachnid dispatched its prey.
But as the days passed, something strange began to happen. The spider started to grow at an alarming rate.
"Is it just me, or does Emperor look bigger?" Jake asked one morning, using the nickname they'd given their eight-legged pet.
Alex frowned, studying the terrarium. The spider now looked to be about the size of a golf ball. "Maybe it's just... well-fed?"
But the growth didn't stop. Within a week, Emperor had doubled in size again. The roommates exchanged worried glances.
"Jake, I think we should get rid of it," Alex said nervously. "This isn't normal."
Jake shook his head stubbornly. "No way! This could be a scientific breakthrough or something. We just need to figure out what's causing it."
As Emperor continued to grow, the roommates' fascination turned to unease, and then to fear. They stopped feeding it, hoping to slow its growth, but that only seemed to make the spider more aggressive. It would throw itself against the glass walls of its enclosure, its now baseball-sized body making audible thumps.
One night, Alex woke to a strange scratching sound. Groggy and disoriented, he fumbled for the light switch. As the room illuminated, he let out a strangled cry.
Emperor's terrarium was empty, the lid askew.
"Jake!" Alex shouted, leaping out of bed. "Jake, wake up! It's out!"
Jake stumbled into the room, his eyes wide with panic. "What? How?"
The two searched the apartment frantically, but there was no sign of the spider. As dawn broke, they collapsed onto the couch, exhausted and on edge.
"We have to call someone," Alex insisted. "Animal control, or the police, or-"
His words were cut short by a soft thud from the kitchen. Both roommates froze, hardly daring to breathe. Another thud followed, then another, growing louder and more frequent.
Slowly, they turned towards the kitchen doorway. A massive, hairy leg emerged, followed by another. Emperor, now the size of a large dog, squeezed its bulbous body through the opening, its multiple eyes fixed on the terrified humans.
"Oh God," Jake whimpered. "What have we done?"
The spider moved with lightning speed, leaping towards them. Alex and Jake scattered, running in opposite directions. Alex made it to his bedroom, slamming the door shut behind him. He could hear Jake's screams from the living room, abruptly cut short.
Trembling, Alex backed away from the door, searching desperately for a weapon, an escape route, anything. But there was nowhere to go.
The door burst open, splintering under the force of Emperor's massive body. Alex found himself face to face with the creature, its mandibles clicking ominously.
As Emperor pounced, Alex had one final, horrifying realization – they hadn't been feeding the spider.
It had been growing stronger, preparing for when it could finally feed on them.
Days later, when the landlord came to check on the overdue rent, he found the apartment empty. The only signs of the former tenants were two large, person-shaped bundles hanging from the ceiling, wrapped tightly in thick, silken webs.
And in the corner, barely visible in the shadows, something large skittered out of sight, leaving behind only the echo of clicking mandibles and the faint impression of swirling red patterns.
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The Depths Below
By Glenn Riley
Mike zipped up his wetsuit, his hands trembling slightly as he prepared for the dive. The small research vessel rocked gently on the waves, the overcast sky casting an ominous pall over the ocean.
"You don't have to do this, you know," Dr. Simmons said, concern etched on her weathered face. "We can send down the ROV instead."
Mike shook his head, forcing a smile. "No, I need to do this. I need to face it."
For years, Mike had been haunted by the stories – tales of a massive creature lurking in these waters. As a marine biologist, he'd dismissed them as legends, exaggerations. But then came the photographs, the sonar readings, and finally, the heart-stopping video footage captured by a deep-sea drone.
Something was down there. Something big.
And it had taken his brother.
Two years ago, Tom had ventured into these same waters on a similar research expedition. He never returned. The only clue to his fate was a garbled radio transmission, cut short by a blood-curdling scream.
Mike had spent every waking moment since then preparing for this dive, driven by a mix of scientific curiosity and a desperate need for closure.
"Remember, at the first sign of trouble, you pull that emergency ascent lever," Dr. Simmons instructed, helping Mike with his oxygen tanks. "Don't try to be a hero."
Mike nodded, his throat too tight to speak. As he approached the edge of the boat, he paused, looking out at the vast expanse of ocean before him. Somewhere below those waves lurked the answer to his brother's disappearance – and possibly his own worst nightmare.
With a deep breath, Mike stepped off the edge and plunged into the cold, dark water.
The descent was eerily quiet, broken only by the sound of Mike's breathing and the occasional crackle of his radio. As he sank deeper, the sunlight faded, replaced by the artificial glow of his diving lights.
At 100 meters, Mike switched on his helmet cam. "Base, do you read me?"
"Loud and clear, Mike," Dr. Simmons' voice came through. "How are you holding up?"
"So far, so good," Mike replied, trying to keep his voice steady. "No sign of our friend yet."
As he continued his descent, Mike's eyes scanned the murky water, alert for any sign of movement. At 200 meters, he began to see strange rock formations – or were they formations at all? Some looked almost like massive, ancient bones.
"Base, are you seeing this?" Mike asked, his light playing over the bizarre structures.
"Affirmative," Dr. Simmons replied, her voice tense. "Mike, those appear to be... vertebrae. Enormous vertebrae."
Mike's heart raced. What kind of creature could leave behind bones of this size?
As if in answer to his unspoken question, a low, rumbling sound vibrated through the water. Mike froze, his blood turning to ice.
"Base, please tell me you heard that," he whispered.
Silence filled his earpiece for a moment before Dr. Simmons responded, her voice barely audible. "Mike, get out of there. Now."
But Mike couldn't move. His light had caught something in the distance – a massive, dark shape shifting in the gloom. It was easily the size of a blue whale, but its form was all wrong. Multiple tentacle-like appendages writhed from an elongated body, and as it turned, Mike caught a glimpse of eyes – ancient, intelligent eyes that seemed to glow with an inner light.
"Oh my God," Mike breathed, equal parts terrified and awestruck.
The creature moved with surprising speed for its size, gliding through the water towards him. Mike's survival instincts finally kicked in, and he reached for the emergency ascent lever.
But he was too slow.
A tentacle wrapped around his leg, yanking him deeper into the abyss. Mike screamed, thrashing against the iron grip.
"Base! It's got me! It's-"
His words were cut short as another tentacle knocked his breathing apparatus loose. Water flooded his suit as he was pulled deeper and deeper.
As consciousness began to fade, Mike's last thoughts were of his brother. At least now, he knew what had happened to Tom. And soon, they would be together again, in the cold, dark embrace of the deep.
On the surface, Dr. Simmons and her team listened in horror to Mike's final transmission. The ocean had claimed another victim, leaving behind only questions and the chilling certainty that something ancient and terrible lurked in the depths below.
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The Unwelcome Visitors
A short horror story by Ecky
Sarah had always enjoyed the solitude of her countryside home, but tonight, something felt different. The air was thick with an unsettling stillness as she peered out her living room window. That's when she saw them – a group of men in black suits, standing motionless on her front lawn, their faces obscured by the shadows cast by the moonlight.
At first, Sarah thought they might be lost travelers or perhaps even pranksters. But as the minutes ticked by and they remained statue-still, a chill ran down her spine. She reached for her phone to call the police, but to her horror, it was dead. Frantically, she tried the landline – nothing but silence.
"This can't be happening," Sarah muttered, her heart racing. She rushed to flip the light switch, but the house remained dark. The power was out.
Panic began to set in as Sarah realized she was completely cut off from the outside world. She peered out the window again, and her blood ran cold. The men had moved closer to the house, their features still indiscernible in the darkness.
Sarah's mind raced through her options. Should she confront them? Try to make a run for it? Or hunker down and wait for morning? As she debated, a soft tapping sound came from the front door.
*tap... tap... tap...*
"Who's there?" Sarah called out, her voice trembling. No response came, just more tapping.
*tap... tap... tap...*
Sarah backed away from the door, her eyes darting around for anything she could use as a weapon. She grabbed a heavy candlestick from the mantle, gripping it tightly as she slowly approached the door.
The tapping stopped abruptly. Sarah held her breath, straining to hear any sound from outside. Then, a voice – low and raspy – came through the door.
"Sarah... let us in, Sarah..."
She stumbled backward, nearly dropping the candlestick. How did they know her name?
"Go away!" she shouted, trying to sound braver than she felt. "I've called the police!"
A chuckle – cold and mirthless – answered her. "No, you haven't, Sarah. No one's coming to help you."
Sarah's mind reeled. This couldn't be real. It had to be a nightmare. She pinched herself hard, willing herself to wake up, but nothing changed.
The voice spoke again, closer now, as if the speaker's lips were pressed against the crack of the door. "We've been waiting for you, Sarah. For so long..."
Sarah's eyes widened in terror as she saw wisps of black smoke seeping in under the door. The smoke coalesced into tendrils that reached towards her feet. She scrambled backward, but the smoky fingers followed, growing longer and thicker.
"What do you want?" Sarah cried out, her voice breaking.
"We want you, Sarah," the voice replied, now seeming to come from all around her. "We've always wanted you."
The smoke was filling the room now, swirling around Sarah's ankles and climbing up her body. She swung the candlestick wildly, but it passed harmlessly through the mist.
"Please," Sarah whimpered, tears streaming down her face. "Please leave me alone."
But the smoke continued to envelop her, growing denser and darker. Sarah felt a strange sensation, as if the very essence of her being was being drawn out through her pores. Her skin began to sag, her body feeling hollow and light.
As consciousness began to fade, Sarah caught a glimpse of her reflection in a nearby mirror. Her eyes widened in horror at what she saw – her body deflating like a balloon, collapsing in on itself.
The last thing Sarah heard before darkness took her was that chilling voice, now inside her head:
"Welcome home, Sarah. You're one of us now."
When the sun rose the next morning, Sarah's house stood silent and empty. On the front lawn, a group of men in black suits turned and walked away, disappearing into the morning mist. And if anyone had looked closely at one of the men's pockets, they might have noticed a small, skin-colored pouch, pulsing ever so slightly – as if something inside was trying desperately to get out.
But no one looked. And no one ever saw Sarah again.
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