MysteryStory - Tumblr Posts

1 year ago

The Vanishing Village Shaina Tranquilino September 4, 2024

The Vanishing VillageShaina TranquilinoSeptember 4, 2024

The villagers of Oakhaven had long learned to live with the curse that haunted their quiet existence. Every 50 years, on the same night, the entire village would disappear from the map, swallowed by an eerie mist that rolled in without warning. The village would reappear the next morning, untouched, its people unharmed but with memories hazy and fragmented, as if they had slipped into a collective dream. It was a mystery that had defied explanation for centuries. Sandra Drake, an investigative journalist with a reputation for uncovering the darkest secrets, had heard rumors of Oakhaven's strange phenomenon. The stories were dismissed by most as folklore, but Sandra sensed there was truth buried beneath the layers of myth. She decided to visit the village as the fateful night approached, determined to unravel the mystery that had confounded the world for so long.

Oakhaven was nestled deep within the Whispering Woods, a forest so dense and ancient that it seemed to breathe with the weight of forgotten history. The villagers welcomed Sandra cautiously, their eyes betraying a deep-seated fear. They spoke little of the curse, as if discussing it might summon its wrath sooner. But Sandra was relentless. She pressed on, speaking to the elders, combing through the village archives, and piecing together fragments of the past.

As the night of the 50th year drew closer, the atmosphere in Oakhaven grew tense. The villagers began to withdraw, their usual routines disrupted by an unspoken dread. Sandra, however, felt she was close to a breakthrough. She had discovered an old journal, hidden in the attic of the village’s oldest house, belonging to a woman named Eliza Grey. The journal told a tale of love, betrayal, and a curse born from unimaginable grief.

In the late 1700s, Eliza Grey had been the daughter of the village's headman, betrothed to a man named Thomas Hale. The two were deeply in love, but their happiness was not to last. A traveling stranger arrived in Oakhaven, a man of wealth and influence, who became infatuated with Eliza. He sought her hand in marriage, but she refused, her heart already belonging to Thomas. The stranger, consumed by jealousy and rage, cursed the village in a fit of vengeful fury.

"On the night when the mist descends, let this village be lost to time," the stranger had proclaimed, his voice echoing with unnatural power. "And may the soul of she who rejected me be forever bound to the mist, neither alive nor dead, until a love pure as hers sets her free."

That night, Eliza vanished, and the village was swallowed by the mist for the first time. When it reappeared the next morning, Thomas was found dead, his body cold and lifeless in the center of the village square. Eliza’s body was never found. The villagers mourned, but they quickly realized that the curse was real. Every 50 years, they would be taken by the mist, and each time, Eliza's ghostly figure could be seen wandering the village, searching for the love she had lost.

Sandra's heart ached as she read the final entry in Eliza’s journal. The woman had been trapped in the mist for over two centuries, her soul bound to the village, waiting for the curse to be broken.

On the night the mist was due to return, Sandra waited in the village square, determined to confront the specter of Eliza Grey. As midnight approached, the air grew thick, and a dense fog began to swirl around Oakhaven. The villagers retreated to their homes, but Sandra stood firm, her pulse quickening.

The mist enveloped the village, and soon, the world around Sandra faded into a ghostly, silent expanse. From the fog emerged a figure, pale and ethereal, with eyes full of sorrow. It was Eliza, her form barely discernible in the shifting mist.

"Who are you?" Sandra whispered, though she knew the answer.

"I am bound by a curse," Eliza replied, her voice like a breeze through autumn leaves. "My soul cannot rest until the curse is broken."

Sandra felt a deep connection to the tragic figure before her. She reached out, her hand trembling. "How can I help you?"

Eliza’s eyes softened. "Find the one who cursed us. Only by confronting him can the curse be undone."

Sandra nodded, determination hardening her resolve. She had learned from the journal that the stranger had not died but had disappeared after casting the curse, his fate unknown. If he were still out there, perhaps his power lingered in the mist, keeping Eliza trapped in her eternal limbo.

As the night wore on, Sandra wandered through the mist-shrouded village, feeling the weight of the curse pressing down on her. She searched for any sign, any clue, that might lead her to the source of the curse. Hours passed, and just as despair began to settle in, she heard a voice, low and venomous, whispering her name.

Turning, Sandra saw a shadowy figure materialize from the mist. It was the stranger, unchanged by the centuries, his eyes cold and cruel.

"You dare challenge me?" he sneered. "This village is mine, and so is the soul of Eliza Grey."

Sandra's heart pounded, but she stood her ground. "You’ve kept her trapped for centuries. It’s time to let her go."

The stranger laughed, a hollow sound that echoed through the mist. "And what makes you think you can break my curse?"

Sandra clenched her fists, recalling the words of the journal. "Love as pure as hers can set her free," she said, her voice steady. "You cursed her out of spite, but your power is not absolute. It’s tied to the village, to her pain. If I can bring her peace, your curse will end."

The stranger's expression faltered for a moment, but then he sneered again. "You are but a mortal. What can you possibly do?"

Sandra stepped forward, her voice filled with resolve. "I may be mortal, but love transcends even death. I will not let you continue this torment."

As she spoke, the mist began to swirl around her, responding to her determination. The ghostly form of Eliza appeared beside her, a look of hope in her eyes. The stranger, sensing his power waning, snarled and lunged at Sandra, but the mist surged between them, repelling him.

Sandra reached out to Eliza, her hand closing around the ghost’s cold, insubstantial fingers. "Eliza," she whispered, "you are loved, even now. Let go of the pain. Be free."

Eliza’s eyes welled with tears, and she nodded. The mist around them began to glow with a soft, golden light. The stranger let out a furious cry as his form disintegrated, consumed by the very curse he had cast. The mist lifted, the village returning to the world of the living.

As dawn broke, Sandra found herself standing alone in the village square. The mist had vanished, and with it, the curse that had plagued Oakhaven for centuries. The villagers emerged from their homes, blinking in the morning light, their memories clear for the first time in generations.

Sandra smiled, knowing that Eliza Grey had finally found peace. The village would no longer disappear into the mist, and the story of Oakhaven’s tragic curse would be remembered as a tale of love that transcended time itself.


Tags :
1 year ago

The Phantom Train Shaina Tranquilino September 6, 2024

The Phantom TrainShaina TranquilinoSeptember 6, 2024

It was a chilly autumn evening, the kind where the mist rolled in from the hills like an ethereal blanket, cloaking the world in a thick, silvery haze. Sophie and Kent, a young couple on their way back from a weekend getaway in the countryside, stood at the edge of the old, dilapidated platform. The station, seemingly abandoned, had an eerie feel to it. The rusted sign above them creaked in the wind, and the distant hoot of an owl sent a shiver down Sophie's spine.

"Are you sure this is the right place?" Sophie asked, glancing nervously at her husband.

Kent nodded, though he seemed unsure himself. The small, crumpled ticket in his hand was their only proof that they were in the right place. It had been given to them by an old woman at the inn where they’d stayed, who insisted that they take this particular train.

"It's a local secret," the old woman had said, her voice raspy with age. "A special train for special travelers. But it only comes on misty nights like this one."

Now, as they stood on the deserted platform, the mist swirling around them, Sophie began to wonder if they had made a mistake. The silence was oppressive, broken only by the distant sound of rustling leaves and the faint whistle of the wind. No lights, no people—just the two of them and the cold, creeping fog.

Just as Sophie was about to suggest they leave, a distant rumble reached their ears. It started as a low vibration, barely noticeable, but quickly grew into the unmistakable sound of an approaching train. The mist thickened, and suddenly, the silhouette of a locomotive emerged from the fog, its headlights cutting through the gloom like knives.

The train was old—much older than any Sophie had ever seen. Its once-polished metal was tarnished and covered in grime, the windows were clouded with age, and the entire train seemed to exude a ghostly aura. Yet, it was undeniably there, solid and real, as it came to a smooth stop in front of them.

The door of the nearest carriage creaked open with a loud, mournful groan. Kent glanced at Sophie, and she could see the unease in his eyes. But curiosity outweighed fear, and together they stepped aboard.

Inside, the train was strangely luxurious. Velvet seats lined the carriages, lit by dim, flickering gas lamps. The air was thick with the scent of old wood and something else, something Sophie couldn’t quite place—like a distant memory of something sweet, long forgotten.

They walked down the aisle, noticing the other passengers. Men and women dressed in old-fashioned attire sat quietly, staring straight ahead, their faces pale and expressionless. None of them seemed to notice the young couple's presence.

"Hello?" Kent tried to speak to one of the passengers, but there was no response. The man he addressed, dressed in a suit from another era, continued to stare out the window, his eyes hollow and empty.

Sophie felt a growing unease, her heart pounding in her chest. "We need to get off this train," she whispered urgently to Kent.

But when they turned to go back, the door they had entered through was gone. In its place was a solid wall of dark wood.

Panic began to set in as they moved through the carriages, searching for an exit. Each door led to another carriage, identical to the last, with the same silent, unmoving passengers. The mist outside grew thicker, pressing against the windows like a living thing.

Finally, they reached the end of the train—a luxurious parlor car, empty except for a grand, ornate mirror on one wall. The air in this carriage was colder, and the strange, sweet scent was stronger here. It was then that Sophie noticed the small plaque below the mirror:

“In memory of those lost to time, bound forever to the journey they never completed.”

As Sophie read the words aloud, the mirror began to shimmer. The mist outside the windows seemed to seep into the room, swirling around them. And then, slowly, the mirror's surface began to change.

Reflected in it was not the empty parlor car, but a scene from another time. The train was alive with people—men and women laughing, talking, their faces full of life. But as Sophie and Kent watched, the image in the mirror shifted. The train lurched violently in the reflection, passengers were thrown from their seats, screams filled the air—and then, fire. The train in the mirror was engulfed in flames, the reflection showing a disaster that had taken place decades ago.

Sophie gasped as the horror unfolded before their eyes. Kent pulled her close, his grip tight. "This train," he said, his voice trembling, "these people—they're all... they're all..."

"Ghosts," Sophie finished, her voice barely a whisper.

Suddenly, the door at the far end of the parlor car opened with a loud bang. The old woman from the inn stood there, her face somber.

"You shouldn't have come," she said, her voice carrying a note of sorrow. "This train is cursed, forever bound to relive that night. The passengers are souls trapped between worlds, never able to reach their destination."

"But why us?" Kent asked, his voice filled with fear and confusion.

The old woman sighed. "The train calls to those who are at a crossroads in their lives. Those who are lost, unsure of the path ahead. You were drawn here, but you don't belong. Not yet."

"How do we leave?" Sophie asked, desperation in her voice.

The old woman stepped aside, revealing the open door behind her. "You must leave before the journey ends, or you will be bound to this train forever."

Without hesitation, Sophie and Kent ran through the door, the mist enveloping them as they leaped from the moving train. They tumbled onto the cold, damp ground of the platform, the sound of the train's whistle echoing in the distance as it disappeared into the fog.

When they looked up, the train was gone. The platform was empty, silent, and the mist began to dissipate, revealing the night sky dotted with stars.

Breathing heavily, Sophie and Kent clung to each other, shaken but alive. The phantom train had vanished, leaving no trace of its eerie presence.

As they made their way back to the village, the old woman's words echoed in their minds: "The train calls to those who are lost..."

But now, having faced the ghostly specter of the past, they knew exactly where they were headed. And with each step away from the haunted platform, they felt the weight of the past lifting, replaced by the certainty of their future together.


Tags :
1 year ago

The Cursed Locket Shaina Tranquilino September 7, 2024

The Cursed LocketShaina TranquilinoSeptember 7, 2024

James Cartwright was an antique dealer of some repute, known throughout London for his discerning eye and the uncanny ability to procure rare and valuable artifacts. His shop, tucked away in a narrow alley of Covent Garden, was a treasure trove of history. Shelves groaned under the weight of dusty books, ornate candelabras, and delicate porcelain figurines. But it was the jewelry section that held James' true passion—rows of rings, brooches, and necklaces, each with a story waiting to be uncovered.

One rainy afternoon, a man in a worn trench coat entered the shop, carrying a small, velvet-lined box. His eyes darted around nervously as he approached the counter, his hands trembling slightly as he placed the box in front of James.

"Interested in buying?" the man asked, his voice barely above a whisper.

James' curiosity was piqued. He opened the box to reveal a gold locket, intricate and old, with an ornate filigree design. The locket was heavy in his hand, and as he examined it closely, he noticed a small inscription on the back: "To E., Forever Yours. 1889."

"Beautiful craftsmanship," James remarked, though his mind was racing. The inscription rang a bell, something he had read long ago. "Where did you find this?"

The man shifted uncomfortably. "It belonged to my grandmother," he lied. "She passed away recently, and I need the money."

James nodded, sensing there was more to the story, but not pressing further. He offered a fair price, and the man accepted with a relieved sigh before hurrying out into the rain. As James watched him disappear into the mist, a nagging feeling tugged at the back of his mind. There was something familiar about that locket.

Later that evening, after closing the shop, James retired to his study. He poured himself a glass of brandy and settled into his leather armchair, the locket resting on the table beside him. He reached for an old book of unsolved mysteries, a collection he had inherited from his father. Thumbing through the pages, he stopped at a passage that made his heart skip a beat.

The Disappearance of Elodie Blackwood, 1889.

Elodie Blackwood had been a celebrated socialite, known for her beauty and charm. She vanished without a trace one autumn evening, leaving behind a scandal and a mystery that had never been solved. The last known item she was seen wearing was a gold locket, a gift from her secret lover. The inscription in the book matched the one on the locket now sitting on James' table.

The coincidence was too strong to ignore. He picked up the locket, and as he did, a sudden chill ran through the room, causing the candle flames to flicker. The locket felt cold in his hand, unnaturally so. He tried to open it, but the clasp was stuck fast.

Undeterred, James decided to investigate further. The next morning, he visited the local archives, where he spent hours poring over old newspapers and records. Every detail about Elodie Blackwood's life and disappearance pointed to the locket as the key to the mystery, but nothing explained what had happened to her. The locket had never been found—until now.

That night, James was awakened by a strange noise, like the whisper of fabric brushing against the floor. He sat up in bed, straining to listen. The noise grew louder, and then he saw it—a shadowy figure standing at the foot of his bed, the outline of a woman in a flowing dress.

"Elodie?" he whispered, though he wasn't sure why.

The figure did not move or speak, but the air around him grew colder. James' eyes darted to the nightstand, where the locket now lay open, though he hadn't been able to pry it apart earlier. Inside was a small, faded photograph of a woman, her face hauntingly beautiful, her eyes filled with sadness.

The figure raised an arm and pointed toward the locket. James felt an overwhelming compulsion to touch it again, to delve deeper into its past. As his fingers brushed the photo, a searing pain shot through his hand, and the room spun wildly. When the dizziness subsided, he found himself no longer in his bedroom, but in a grand ballroom, filled with people dressed in Victorian attire.

He recognized the scene from descriptions he had read—this was the night Elodie Blackwood had disappeared. The locket was warm now, pulsing with a life of its own as it guided him through the crowd. He saw Elodie, her eyes wide with fear as she clutched the locket around her neck. A man approached her, his face obscured by shadows, and whispered something in her ear. Elodie's face went pale, and she fled the room, the man following close behind.

James felt himself being pulled along as if tethered to Elodie by an invisible thread. He followed her through the darkened halls of the mansion, down a spiral staircase, and into the cellar. The man caught up with her there, his voice low and menacing.

"You know too much, Elodie," he hissed. "The locket—it's cursed. It binds you to the truth, but it will also be your undoing."

Elodie backed away, but there was nowhere to run. The man lunged, and there was a brief struggle before he pushed her. She stumbled, her scream echoing off the stone walls as she fell into an open well in the centre of the cellar. The locket slipped from her neck, landing with a clatter on the floor.

James awoke with a start, drenched in sweat. The vision had been so vivid, so real. He knew now what had happened to Elodie, but the locket still held its curse. It had bound her to that moment of betrayal and death, trapping her spirit in a loop of endless torment.

Realizing what he had to do, James took the locket to the site of the old Blackwood estate, now a crumbling ruin outside the city. The well was still there, hidden beneath overgrown vines and debris. With a heavy heart, he tossed the locket into the well, hearing the faint splash as it disappeared into the darkness.

For a moment, the air was still, and then a breeze rustled through the trees, carrying with it a sense of peace. The curse had been lifted; Elodie's spirit was finally free.

James returned to his shop, feeling lighter than he had in days. But as he unlocked the door and stepped inside, a small velvet-lined box on the counter caught his eye. His blood ran cold. The locket was back, sitting there as if it had never left.

It seemed that some mysteries were never meant to be solved.


Tags :
1 year ago

The Unopened Letter Shaina Tranquilino September 8, 2024

The Unopened LetterShaina TranquilinoSeptember 8, 2024

Leah Smith sat at her kitchen table, sipping her morning coffee as the sun’s first rays filtered through the curtains. The quiet hum of the neighborhood was punctuated only by the occasional chirp of birds outside. It was a peaceful start to what she assumed would be a routine day, until the sound of the mail slot clattering echoed through the hallway. She rose from her chair and made her way to the front door, picking up the small stack of envelopes. Bills, a postcard from a friend, and a single, yellowed envelope with a fading stamp caught her eye. The handwriting was elegant, the kind of script you don't see anymore, and the address was clear enough. But as Leah's gaze fell on the name written at the top, her heart skipped a beat.

"Mrs. Andrea Smith," it read.

It was addressed to her grandmother.

Leah stared at the letter, her mind racing. Andrea Smith had passed away nearly ten years ago. She had been the matriarch of the family, a woman of grace and strength, who had never spoken much about her past. Leah had always admired her, but now, holding this letter, she realized there was so much she didn't know.

Curiosity gnawed at her. She debated with herself for a moment before making the decision. With trembling hands, she carefully opened the letter, unfolding the brittle paper inside. The script was as elegant as the handwriting on the envelope, but there was a slight shakiness to it, as if the writer had been under great stress.

“Dearest Andrea,” it began.

“I pray this letter finds you well, though I fear it may never reach your hands. The world is a different place now, and what we did—what you did—must remain hidden, for both our sakes. The consequences of our actions are too great to bear, but I trust in your strength and your resolve to keep this secret.

Do you remember the night we met? The air raid sirens blared, the ground shook with the terror of falling bombs, and yet there you were, calm as ever, helping those who could not help themselves. It was that night I knew I could trust you, that you were not like the others. You had a heart of gold, but a spirit of steel.

The work we did in those dark days—smuggling information, sheltering those in danger, and deceiving the enemy—was dangerous, but necessary. You were the linchpin, Andrea. Without you, many lives would have been lost. But there was a price to pay for our courage, and I have borne it silently all these years.

Andrea, my dear, the truth must remain buried with us. No one can ever know what really happened in the depths of that war. I have destroyed all evidence, save for this letter, which I send to you as a final goodbye. I do not know if you will ever read this, or if fate will intervene, but I could not leave this world without expressing my gratitude and my sorrow for what we had to do.

If anyone finds this letter, they must destroy it immediately. The world has moved on, and so must we, even in death.

Yours eternally, Richard.”

Leah's hands shook as she finished reading the letter. She sat down, the weight of the revelation pressing down on her. Her grandmother had never spoken of a man named Richard, nor of any involvement in the war beyond what was typical for women of that era—rationing, supporting the troops, and caring for the wounded. But this letter hinted at something far more clandestine, something that could have changed the course of lives and history itself.

She folded the letter back up, her mind racing with questions. Who was Richard? What exactly had her grandmother done during the war? And why had this letter arrived now, after so many years? Was it lost in the postal system, only to be delivered by some quirk of fate? Or had someone found it and sent it on, unaware of the Pandora’s box it would open?

Leah knew she needed to find out more. But as she stared at the envelope, she realized the enormity of what she had uncovered. This was not just a family secret—it was a part of history that had been deliberately hidden, for reasons she could only begin to understand.

She knew one thing for certain: her grandmother had been a far more complex and courageous woman than she had ever imagined. And now, it was up to Leah to decide whether to let the secret die with Andrea, or to uncover the truth that had been hidden for so long.

The unopened letter had been opened, and with it, a door to the past that could never be closed again.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Disappearing Room Shaina Tranquilino September 9, 2024

The Disappearing RoomShaina TranquilinoSeptember 9, 2024

Daniel Mercer stood before the grandiose facade of Ashgrove Manor, his newly purchased estate. The towering spires and weathered stone walls exuded an air of mystery and history. It was an impulse buy, something that felt right the moment he saw it in a listing online. The price was suspiciously low, but Daniel, newly retired and seeking adventure, found the idea of owning a mansion irresistible.

The real estate agent, a thin man with an unsteady smile, had been eager to hand over the keys. “There’s just one thing, Mr. Mercer,” he had mentioned almost as an afterthought. “This house has a… peculiarity. A room that appears and disappears at will. No one knows when or where it’ll show up next.”

Daniel had laughed at what he assumed was an eccentric marketing ploy, but as he stood in the cavernous entrance hall, he wondered if there was some truth to it. The house was silent, the only sound the ticking of an ancient grandfather clock. Sunlight streamed through the dusty windows, casting long shadows across the polished wooden floors.

For the first few days, Daniel explored his new home. It was filled with forgotten rooms, each one more intriguing than the last. He found a library lined with books whose spines were cracked with age, a ballroom with a chandelier that sparkled with forgotten grandeur, and bedrooms filled with antique furniture. But there was no sign of the disappearing room.

On the fifth night, as a storm raged outside, Daniel was awakened by a low rumble. The house seemed to groan in response to the wind. As he climbed out of bed, he noticed a faint light seeping from beneath a door at the end of the hallway. A door that hadn’t been there before.

Heart pounding, Daniel approached the door. The handle was cold under his fingers, and as he turned it, the door swung open soundlessly. Inside was a small, dimly lit room that looked like it hadn’t been touched in decades. The walls were lined with old photographs, and in the center of the room stood a table with a single item on it: an old leather-bound journal.

Daniel stepped inside, feeling an inexplicable chill. He picked up the journal and opened it, revealing pages filled with neat handwriting. The entries were dated from the 1920s and told the story of a man named Edward Ashgrove, the original owner of the mansion.

Edward’s journal detailed his obsession with discovering the secret of the house. He wrote of a room that would appear without warning, containing clues to a mystery that had haunted his family for generations. The journal entries became increasingly frantic as Edward described following the room from one end of the house to the other, piecing together cryptic messages left within.

The final entry was particularly chilling: “The room holds the truth, but it comes with a price. I fear what I must do to uncover it.”

Daniel set the journal down, unease creeping into his thoughts. He looked around the room and noticed a photograph on the wall that hadn’t been there moments before. It was a portrait of Edward Ashgrove, standing with a woman and a young child. The woman’s face had been scratched out, but the child’s was clear. It was a boy, no more than six years old, with a striking resemblance to Daniel.

A sudden dizziness overtook him, and when he blinked, the room was gone. He was back in his bedroom, the journal clutched tightly in his hands. The storm outside had intensified, lightning flashing through the windows. Shaken, Daniel realized that the room wasn’t just a figment of his imagination. It was real, and it was playing with him.

Over the next few days, the room appeared and disappeared at random, each time in a different location. Each appearance brought with it new clues—fragments of letters, faded photographs, and strange symbols etched into the walls. The puzzle pieces began to fit together, revealing a dark secret about the Ashgrove family.

Daniel discovered that Edward Ashgrove had been trying to save his family from a curse, one that condemned the firstborn of every generation to a tragic fate. The curse was tied to the house, to the very room that now tormented Daniel. Edward had believed that solving the mystery of the room would break the curse, but he had disappeared before he could finish his work.

The final piece of the puzzle came one night when the room appeared at the very top of the house, in the attic. This time, the room was bare except for a single sheet of paper on the floor. Daniel picked it up and read the words scrawled hastily across it:

“To break the curse, the firstborn must make a choice: Sacrifice the room or themselves.”

Daniel’s blood ran cold. The resemblance between him and the boy in the photograph was no coincidence. He was a descendant of the Ashgroves, the firstborn of his generation. The curse had followed him to the mansion, and now the room was demanding his choice.

With a heavy heart, Daniel knew what he had to do. He couldn’t allow the curse to continue, to let another generation suffer as Edward had. He returned to the room one last time, the journal in hand. As he stepped inside, he felt a sense of finality.

The room seemed to pulse with anticipation as Daniel placed the journal on the table. He whispered a prayer and made his decision.

The next morning, Ashgrove Manor was empty. The neighbors would later claim that they had seen a flash of light from the attic that night, but no one dared investigate. Daniel Mercer was never seen again, and the mansion was left to decay.

Years later, when the estate was auctioned off, the new owner discovered a small, dusty room hidden in the attic. Inside was a single photograph of a man standing before the house, a man who looked strikingly familiar. Beside it was a leather-bound journal, its pages blank, as if waiting for the next chapter of the story to be written.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Midnight Library Shaina Tranquilino September 12, 2024

The Midnight LibraryShaina TranquilinoSeptember 12, 2024

In the heart of a forgotten town, where the streets whispered secrets and the wind carried the scent of old memories, stood a library unlike any other. Its doors, carved from dark mahogany and etched with ancient symbols, only creaked open at the stroke of midnight. The townsfolk called it The Midnight Library, a place spoken of in hushed tones, where the brave—or the foolish—ventured in search of forbidden knowledge.

Rumours swirled that the library's shelves were filled with books that foretold the future. Some claimed to have seen visions of their destiny unfold between the pages, while others spoke of ominous warnings best left unread. But no one could resist the pull of curiosity for long.

Ethan Caldwell had heard the stories all his life, passed down from his grandfather who had once dared to cross the threshold. The old man had returned with wild eyes and a shaking hand, clutching a small, leather-bound book. He had never spoken of what he saw, but Ethan knew the terror in his grandfather’s eyes had come from that place. Yet, on the night of his twenty-ninth birthday, with the weight of unsolved mysteries pressing on his shoulders, Ethan found himself standing before the library.

The clock tower in the distance chimed midnight, each strike reverberating through the deserted streets. The doors of the library groaned open, revealing a dimly lit interior. Ethan hesitated for a moment, the air thick with anticipation, before stepping inside.

The air was cool, filled with the musty scent of ancient pages. Shelves towered above him, lined with books of every shape and size. Some were bound in rich leather, others in cracked, faded covers. There was no librarian in sight, no one to guide him. The library seemed to breathe, alive with the secrets it held.

Drawn by an invisible force, Ethan wandered deeper into the labyrinth of books. His fingers trailed across spines as he passed, feeling the pulse of the future within them. Then, as if guided by fate, his hand stopped on a book that seemed to glow with a faint, eerie light. It was unremarkable in appearance, a simple black cover with no title. But when Ethan opened it, he saw his name etched on the first page.

His heart raced as he flipped through the pages, each one filled with his life story. There were moments he recognized, memories that seemed distant yet vivid on the paper. But as he reached the final chapters, his breath caught in his throat. The words told of a future he had not yet lived, a future that seemed to be set in stone.

The book spoke of a night not far from now, where Ethan would find himself alone in his home, a storm raging outside. The lights would flicker, the windows rattling with the force of the wind. And then, as the storm reached its peak, a shadowy figure would emerge from the darkness, a figure Ethan would recognize as his own reflection. But this reflection would not be him—it would be something darker, a twisted version of himself, come to claim his life.

Ethan slammed the book shut, his hands trembling. He could feel his pulse pounding in his ears, his breath shallow and quick. The prophecy was clear—he was destined to die by his own hand, or rather, by the hand of a version of himself that had been corrupted by something evil, something he couldn’t yet understand.

He stumbled out of the library, the book still clutched in his hand. The doors slammed shut behind him with a finality that echoed through the night. As Ethan fled home, the book’s words burned in his mind. Was this his fate? Was there no way to escape the future that had been written for him?

Days passed, each one filled with a growing sense of dread. Ethan became obsessed with the book, reading and rereading the prophecy, searching for any detail that could change his fate. He stopped sleeping, his eyes sunken and bloodshot. He avoided mirrors, fearing the moment when his reflection would turn against him.

Then, on a stormy night, just as the book had foretold, Ethan found himself alone in his home. The wind howled outside, the lights flickering ominously. He felt a chill creep down his spine as the shadows in his home seemed to lengthen and twist, taking on a life of their own.

And then, in the dim light of his living room, he saw it—his reflection in the window. But it wasn’t him. The figure stared back with hollow eyes, a sinister smile playing on its lips. It moved when he didn’t, tilting its head as if mocking him.

“No,” Ethan whispered, backing away. “This can’t be real.”

But the figure stepped closer, emerging from the glass as if it were stepping through a doorway. It was him, yet not him—an embodiment of every dark thought, every fear he had ever harbored.

“You can’t change what’s written,” the doppelgänger whispered, its voice a twisted echo of Ethan’s own. “The future is set. The book never lies.”

Ethan’s mind raced, desperate to find a way out. But the prophecy had already begun to unfold, and he realized with horror that every action he took only brought him closer to the inevitable.

As the figure lunged, Ethan closed his eyes, bracing for the end. But in that final moment, a thought struck him—what if the book was wrong? What if the future wasn’t set in stone?

With a surge of defiance, Ethan reached for the book, still lying on the table where he had left it. He tore it open to the final page, where the prophecy ended, and with a shaking hand, he grabbed a pen. As the doppelgänger loomed over him, Ethan began to write, scrawling new words over the old ones, changing the story.

The figure paused, its form wavering, as if reality itself was unraveling. Ethan wrote furiously, his heart pounding in his chest. He wrote of a different ending, one where he survived, where he defeated the dark version of himself.

And then, as quickly as it had begun, the storm outside died down. The figure let out a final, piercing scream before it dissolved into shadows, vanishing into the night. The room was silent, save for Ethan’s ragged breathing.

He dropped the pen, staring at the book in his hands. The pages were filled with his own messy handwriting, a new story written over the old. He had changed his fate, rewritten his future.

As the first light of dawn crept through the windows, Ethan knew that The Midnight Library had given him not just a glimpse of the future, but the power to change it. He had confronted his darkest fears and emerged victorious. But the memory of that night would linger, a reminder of the thin line between destiny and choice.

And somewhere, deep within the shadows of the forgotten town, The Midnight Library waited for its next visitor, the doors silently creaking open as the clock struck midnight.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Silent Town Shaina Tranquilino September 14, 2024

The Silent TownShaina TranquilinoSeptember 14, 2024

The traveler came upon the town at dusk, just as the sun dipped below the horizon, painting the sky in hues of deep orange and purple. He had been on the road for days, weary from his journey and looking for a place to rest. The town, nestled between two hills and surrounded by a forest, seemed like the perfect refuge. A thin mist clung to the cobblestone streets, softening the edges of the world, and the houses were old but well-kept, their windows dark and empty.

He wandered into the heart of the town, expecting the usual hum of activity—a shopkeeper sweeping the sidewalk, children laughing, the murmur of conversation. Instead, the town was silent.

The traveler frowned, feeling an unsettling stillness in the air. He saw people—dozens of them—standing in front of their homes or sitting on porches. They watched him with blank, almost expectant expressions, but no one greeted him. No one spoke. There were no footsteps, no whispers, not even the rustle of fabric as they moved. It was as if the town held its breath.

He approached an old woman sitting on a bench, her eyes fixed on him. "Excuse me," he said. "Can you tell me where I might find an inn?"

The woman only stared, her lips pressed into a tight line. The traveler waited, expecting her to speak, but she remained silent. He glanced around, noticing the other townsfolk had turned their heads toward him, all with the same vacant, unmoving expressions. A chill ran down his spine.

Something was wrong.

"Is there an inn?" he asked again, louder this time, hoping someone—anyone—would respond. But the silence was absolute.

His footsteps echoed unnaturally loud as he made his way deeper into the town. He spotted a faded sign swinging gently in the breeze that read, The Weary Traveler. Relieved, he pushed open the door and stepped inside.

The inn's common room was dimly lit, the fire in the hearth barely flickering. A tall man stood behind the counter, his face gaunt, his eyes sunken but alert. The traveler approached.

"I need a room for the night," he said, his voice tentative now.

The innkeeper didn’t speak, merely nodded and handed him a key, his hands trembling slightly. The traveler accepted it, watching the man closely. There was a strange sadness in his eyes, a weariness that seemed deeper than exhaustion.

"What is wrong with this town?" the traveler asked. "Why won't anyone speak?"

The innkeeper flinched, his face paling. His mouth opened as if he wanted to say something, but he quickly shut it, glancing nervously around the room. Without another word, he turned away, retreating into a back room.

The traveler felt a creeping unease. He climbed the stairs to his room, the silence thick around him. When he reached his door, he heard something—a faint whisper, barely audible, coming from behind him. He turned, but the hallway was empty. The sound wasn’t quite human. It was as though the air itself was whispering.

Inside the room, he locked the door and sat on the edge of the bed, trying to shake the growing sense of dread. There had to be an explanation. Perhaps a religious vow or a tradition he didn’t understand.

As he lay in the dark, sleep came slowly, interrupted by uneasy dreams of shadowy figures watching him with hollow eyes, their mouths open in silent screams.

The next morning, the traveler set out to find answers. He wandered through the quiet streets, the townspeople still watching him in silence. He tried to speak to several of them—children, shopkeepers, even a priest standing outside a small chapel—but none of them made a sound.

Finally, he found himself in front of the town’s only church, an old stone building with a tall, weathered bell tower. Something about it drew him in. He pushed open the heavy wooden doors and stepped inside.

The interior was dim, the only light coming from a few flickering candles. At the far end of the room, a single figure knelt before the altar—an elderly man dressed in a long, tattered robe. He didn’t turn as the traveler approached.

"Are you the priest?" the traveler asked, his voice echoing in the vast space. "Do you know why no one here will speak?"

The man didn’t answer, but he rose slowly to his feet. His movements were stiff, as though he hadn’t moved in years. He turned, revealing a face lined with age and sorrow. His eyes, like the innkeeper’s, held a deep sadness.

"They cannot speak," the priest said at last, his voice hoarse and barely above a whisper. "Not anymore."

The traveler’s heart quickened. "Why?"

The priest’s gaze drifted to the altar, where an ancient, worn book lay open. "A long time ago, this town made a pact. A bargain with something... not of this world. The harvests had failed. The children were sick. People were desperate. A creature came to them in the night, offering salvation."

The traveler felt a cold knot form in his stomach. "What did it ask in return?"

The priest’s voice trembled. "Their voices. Their words. The people would never speak again, but in exchange, the town would prosper. The crops grew rich, the sickness vanished, and the town thrived."

"But at what cost?" the traveler asked, his voice barely a whisper.

"The creature feeds on their silence. It lingers in the shadows, watching, waiting. If anyone breaks the silence—if they utter even a single word—the creature returns. It takes more than just their voice."

The traveler stepped back, horror dawning in his mind. "How do you speak, then?"

"I am the last who remembers," the priest said, his voice fading. "But my time is ending. Soon, I will be silent too."

The traveler turned to leave, but something stopped him. From the corner of his eye, he saw a shadow shift in the far corner of the room. It was darker than the rest of the room, a shape that didn’t belong, and as he looked at it, the air around him seemed to thicken.

The priest's voice was barely a whisper now. "You must leave. Before it knows you’ve heard."

But it was too late.

The shadow moved, stretching toward him with unnatural speed. The traveler ran, his heart pounding, the silent screams of the town echoing in his mind. He fled the church, down the cobblestone streets, and into the woods, not daring to look back.

Behind him, the town remained still and silent. Forever cursed, forever watched, bound to their pact with the darkness that thrived in their silence.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Vanished Bride Shaina Tranquilino September 16, 2024

The Vanished BrideShaina TranquilinoSeptember 16, 2024

The story of my mother’s disappearance had become the stuff of legend in our small town. She vanished on her wedding day, slipping away from the reception like a shadow, leaving behind a confused husband and a lifetime of questions. I was only a baby, cradled in her arms during the ceremony. For years, people whispered about her—some saying she’d run away, others that something more sinister had occurred.

Growing up, my father never spoke of her. The wedding photos were removed from the house, her belongings stored in dusty boxes in the attic. I was raised by my father and grandmother, two ghosts who pretended the past was a forgotten dream. But it wasn’t forgotten. Not by me.

On the day of my twenty-first birthday, I found the letters.

It was a stormy night, and the attic had always held a strange pull for me. My father was out of town on business, and the house was eerily quiet, save for the rain tapping against the windows. I climbed the creaky stairs and sifted through the old boxes until I found one with her name on it: Presley Beckford.

I hesitated before opening it. The scent of aged paper and lavender lingered in the air as I carefully pulled out an old bridal veil, brittle with age, and a stack of yellowed envelopes tied with a faded ribbon. They were addressed to my mother in handwriting I didn’t recognize, and each one was dated a week before her wedding day.

I untied the ribbon and began reading.

The first letter was brief: “My dearest Presley, I know you love him, but you cannot marry him. There are things you don’t understand, things that would ruin you if they came to light. Meet me at the old chapel before it’s too late.”

It was signed only with the initials J.H.

The letters that followed grew more frantic. Whoever J.H. was, they were desperate for her to call off the wedding, warning her of secrets hidden in my father’s past. He spoke of betrayals, of dangerous lies, of a promise broken long ago. I couldn’t reconcile the man in these letters with the father I’d known my whole life. But the final letter was the one that stopped my heart.

“Presley, If you go through with this, everything will fall apart. I have done everything I can to protect you, but I can no longer stay silent. I know you’ve kept our daughter’s birth a secret from him, but soon the truth will come out. Please meet me tonight at the chapel. This is our last chance to escape.”

I dropped the letter, my hands trembling. Our daughter? I was born before the wedding? My father wasn’t my father?

The pieces began to fit together in a sickening clarity. My mother hadn’t simply vanished on her wedding day—she had run. But not alone.

I rushed to the old chapel on the outskirts of town, my heart pounding. It had long been abandoned, overgrown with ivy and forgotten by time. I pushed open the heavy wooden doors, the scent of damp stone and decay filling the air.

There, in the flickering light of my flashlight, I found an inscription etched into the stone wall behind the altar: “Presley Beckford, 1972-1995. May you rest in peace.”

A chill ran through me. I knelt, brushing away the dirt, revealing a hidden compartment in the floor. Inside, I found a small box. Inside that box was a photo—my mother, standing beside a man who wasn’t my father. J.H., I realized. The letters had been from him, my real father.

I pieced together the truth that had been buried for so long. My mother had fled the wedding to be with the man she truly loved—the man she had already had me with. But something had gone wrong. Perhaps they had been caught. Perhaps my father, the man who had raised me, had discovered the truth.

And in that moment, I knew—she hadn’t just disappeared. She had been silenced.

The letters had led me here, to her final resting place, hidden in plain sight.

I left the chapel, the rain washing away my tears. The truth had been uncovered, but justice was still waiting.

I would make sure it found its way.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Time Traveler's Diary Shaina Tranquilino September 17, 2024

The Time Traveler's DiaryShaina TranquilinoSeptember 17, 2024

The storm had raged all night, beating against the windows of Diane Holzer's quiet cottage at the edge of town. It was the sort of night that stirred unease, though she could never quite say why. The wind howled through the trees, and the rain fell in sheets, but there was something else—a feeling in the air, like a change was coming.

It was just after dawn when the storm finally relented. Diane, an avid collector of antiques, decided to visit the nearby estate sale that had been advertised. The house belonged to the late Professor Edward Harrington, a reclusive man whose death had sparked curiosity in the village. He was rumored to have been obsessed with strange theories of time, but no one ever took him seriously.

Inside the dusty old mansion, Diane wandered the rooms, browsing through relics of the professor’s life—old maps, stacks of books, tarnished silverware. In a corner of his study, beneath a pile of forgotten papers, she found it—a leather-bound diary. The cover was worn, but the pages inside were crisp, as if they had been written only recently.

She tucked the diary under her arm, paying for it along with a few other trinkets. Back at home, with a cup of tea in hand, she opened the diary, expecting musings on the professor’s eccentric work or perhaps personal notes about his reclusive life. Instead, what she found unsettled her immediately.

November 17, 2123

If you are reading this, then I know my calculations were correct. My name is Nicholas Harrington, and I am writing to you from 2123. You, Diane Holzer, are my ancestor—my great-great-grandmother, to be precise. And I need your help.

Diane blinked at the words, her heart pounding in her chest. This had to be some kind of elaborate joke. She skimmed the next few lines, her mind racing.

You will find this diary on the 17th of September, 2024, just after a storm. The estate sale of Professor Harrington, your neighbor, will bring you to it. I have no doubt that you will be skeptical, but I urge you to keep reading. The events I describe are real, and they concern your future—and mine.

Diane closed the diary for a moment, trying to catch her breath. The date was correct. Today was the 17th of September, and she had found the diary just as it described. But how could this be?

Curiosity got the better of her, and she opened the diary again, continuing to read.

In my time, the world is on the brink of collapse. Climate disasters, political unrest, and technological failures are pushing civilization to the edge. But it wasn’t supposed to be this way. History was altered, and I believe it has something to do with our family.

I am writing to you because you hold the key to preventing this future. In your lifetime, you will come into possession of an object—a small, unremarkable pocket watch. This watch, though it may seem ordinary, is anything but. It contains a mechanism that was developed long ago by a group of scientists working in secret—among them, our ancestor, Professor Edward Harrington.

This watch can manipulate time.

Diane stared at the page, her heart thudding in her chest. She didn’t own a pocket watch. Or did she? She hurried to her bedroom, rummaging through the box of trinkets she had purchased that morning. There, beneath the brass candlestick and faded postcards, was a small pocket watch—old and weathered, but still ticking.

The watch has the ability to create small tears in the fabric of time, allowing its user to see potential futures or even influence certain events. But it is dangerous in the wrong hands. In your time, someone will come for it—a man named Stanley Dodds. He will seem like a friend, but he cannot be trusted. He seeks the watch for his own purposes, and if he gets it, everything I know will fall apart.

Diane's hands trembled as she held the watch. The name Stanley Dodds was all too familiar. He was a charming historian she had met at a conference only weeks before. They had shared a pleasant conversation over coffee, and he had mentioned his interest in antique timepieces. He had even offered to help her appraise some of her collection.

Her phone buzzed on the table, and she jumped, startled by the sudden noise. The screen flashed with a message.

Stanley Dodds: Are you free for lunch today? I’d love to see your new finds.

Her blood ran cold. She glanced at the diary again, flipping through the pages.

When Stanley comes for the watch, you must not let him have it. You must hide it, or use it yourself. I have only been able to send this diary back through time, but with the watch, you can do more. You can change the future.

I know this is a lot to ask, but you must trust me. Your decision will shape the lives of generations to come—including mine.

Diane's mind raced. How could she possibly believe this? A time traveler’s diary? A watch that could control time? And yet—everything the diary had said so far had been true. The storm. The date. Stanley Dodds.

She stared at the watch in her hand, its surface gleaming faintly in the soft light of the morning. If what Nicholas had written was true, she had a decision to make—and quickly. Stanley would arrive soon, and she had no idea what he was capable of.

Taking a deep breath, Diane stood and walked to the window. Outside, the world seemed deceptively calm, the sky clearing after the storm. But inside her, a storm raged.

She didn’t know what the future held, but she knew one thing: the watch was hers, and she would decide how it was used.

As she turned the watch over in her hand, she felt a strange, shifting sensation in the air—a ripple, almost. The world seemed to shimmer for a moment, and then, in a flash, she was gone.

The diary lay open on the table, the ink on the last page still fresh.

November 17, 2123

Thank you, Diane. You made the right choice.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Shadow House Shaina Tranquilino September 18, 2024

The Shadow HouseShaina TranquilinoSeptember 18, 2024

Dr. Marie Landers had always been drawn to anomalies. As a researcher specializing in quantum phenomena, she was used to puzzling through the inexplicable. But nothing had prepared her for the enigma of the Shadow House.

It was a sprawling, decrepit mansion on the outskirts of town, standing alone on a barren hill. Built in the early 1900s, the house had long since fallen into disrepair. The locals whispered about it—how it had never been occupied for long, how strange noises echoed at night, and most of all, how its shadow didn’t match its shape.

That was why Marie had come. For weeks, she had pored over reports from townspeople who swore that the house cast a shadow too large for its size, with angles and shapes that didn’t belong to the physical structure. Some claimed to have seen movement within the shadow, a flicker of something otherworldly. And yet, no one had ever dared investigate.

Until now.

Marie parked her car at the bottom of the hill, clutching her bag of equipment. The air was unnaturally still, and the sun, hanging low on the horizon, cast the house in an eerie light. From a distance, she could already see the shadow—a looming, dark mass that stretched unnervingly far across the land, its contours sharper and more jagged than the house itself. It bent at strange angles, as though the sun were shining through a different structure altogether.

Marie approached, her breath shallow with anticipation. As she walked around the perimeter, the shadow didn’t shift as expected. It clung to the ground in defiance of the sun’s movement, frozen in place like a dark stain on the earth.

She reached the front door, old and weathered, and pushed it open with a groan. The air inside was thick with dust, and the wooden floors creaked beneath her boots. Sunlight streamed through cracked windows, but even inside, something felt wrong. The shadows in the house were too long, too deep, as if they were not merely the absence of light but something more tangible.

Marie set up her equipment, a mix of sensors and cameras designed to detect electromagnetic anomalies and disturbances in the fabric of reality. She moved through the house, her mind racing with possibilities. Was this a quirk of physics? A natural phenomenon? Or something else entirely?

She paused in front of the grand staircase. At the top was a long hallway leading to several rooms. The floor plan didn’t seem unusual, but the shadow outside suggested something different. She pulled up the blueprints she had found in the town’s archives and studied them.

Then she saw it—a subtle but significant discrepancy. The house’s shadow was casting an image of a structure that didn’t exist in the blueprints. There was a room, a hidden section of the house that shouldn’t be there.

Marie's pulse quickened. She raced up the stairs, her footsteps echoing in the empty halls. At the end of the hallway, there was a door she hadn’t noticed before, one not marked on any map. It was small, unassuming, with an old brass knob. Her hand trembled as she turned it.

The door creaked open to reveal a narrow room, bathed in a dim, unnatural light. At first glance, it was empty. But as Marie stepped inside, her skin prickled with an electric charge. The shadows in the room moved. They didn’t simply shift with her movements—they reacted to her, pulsing like a living thing.

She reached out a hand, and the shadows recoiled, then surged forward. With a flash of realization, she understood—these weren’t mere shadows. This was a gateway, a threshold to something beyond.

Marie pulled a small, handheld scanner from her bag and waved it through the air. The readings went wild. The air here was charged with energy she had never encountered before—an energy that bent the rules of reality.

Taking a deep breath, she stepped further into the room. The shadows thickened around her, and for a brief moment, the world seemed to tilt. Then, with a soft hiss, the wall in front of her shimmered and peeled away, revealing a tear in the fabric of space itself.

Beyond the tear, she glimpsed a world that was both familiar and alien. The landscape was an inverted mirror of her own—a dark, twisted version of the house and the hill, with strange structures rising in the distance, all bathed in a faint, otherworldly glow.

Figures moved within that shadowed world. Tall, elongated beings with hollow eyes and shimmering skin. They moved with an eerie grace, watching her silently from across the divide. Marie felt their gaze on her, cold and penetrating, but they made no move to cross over.

Her breath caught in her throat. She wasn’t just looking into another dimension—this place was alive, aware, watching her as much as she was observing it.

Suddenly, the shadows around her began to swirl faster, and the tear in the wall started to close. Panic surged in her chest. She needed to gather more data, to understand what she had discovered. But the portal was shrinking, and the pull of that other world grew stronger. It felt as if it was calling her, beckoning her to step through.

Marie hesitated for only a moment. With a final glance at the strange beings, she turned and fled back through the house. As she burst out the front door, the shadow outside flickered, and for a brief second, it snapped into place with the true outline of the house.

Then, just as quickly, it shifted back, once again casting its distorted, impossible shape across the land.

Breathing heavily, Marie looked back at the house, now silent and still, but forever changed in her mind. The Shadow House was more than just a mystery—it was a threshold between worlds. And though she had escaped, she knew that whatever lurked on the other side was still watching.

Waiting.

And she couldn’t shake the feeling that someday, she might not be able to resist its call.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Crimson River Shaina Tranquilino September 19, 2024

The Crimson RiverShaina TranquilinoSeptember 19, 2024

Dr. Kenton Laverdiere stood at the edge of the Crimson River, his breath misting in the cool evening air. A full moon hung heavy and bright in the sky, casting a silver glow over the water. It looked ordinary now, dark and still, as if waiting. But by midnight, it would run red like blood—just as it had every full moon for over two centuries.

Kenton had spent months studying the river, documenting its unusual behaviour. He was a man of science, a geologist by trade, and he had dismissed the local legends when he first arrived in the small, isolated village of Harrington. The villagers spoke of curses, of ancient tragedies that stained the water. But Kenton believed there was a natural explanation. There had to be.

He glanced at his watch—11:48 PM. Twelve more minutes. He adjusted the lenses of his binoculars, scanning the area. The trees lining the riverbank stood tall and silent, their shadows long and eerie. Everything seemed normal, but he could feel something—an oppressive weight in the air that tugged at his nerves.

Kenton had set up a series of instruments along the riverbank: water samplers, cameras, spectrometers. He was determined to capture every detail, hoping this would be the night he unraveled the mystery.

At precisely midnight, a soft breeze stirred the leaves. The river began to move. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, the water darkened. Kenton leaned in, eyes wide, heart racing.

The river turned crimson.

He snapped a series of photos and bent down to collect a water sample. It was thick, viscous, like fresh blood. His mind raced. Could there be an underground vein of iron deposits, seeping into the water during the full moon? It was a possibility, though an improbable one.

Just as he straightened, a cold wind swept through the trees, howling like a distant scream. His breath caught in his throat. The air had changed, felt heavy and electric.

Then, he heard it—a faint whisper, a distant murmur that seemed to rise from the water itself. Kenton turned, scanning the riverbank, but saw nothing. Just the dark, rippling water.

The whispers grew louder, swirling around him. He took a step back, his pulse quickening. Logic told him it was the wind, the way it echoed through the forest. But deep down, he knew it was something else.

Then, the river began to move in ways it shouldn't. It churned violently, the crimson water bubbling and foaming. In the midst of the chaos, shadows began to rise from the depths—dark, indistinct forms that slowly took shape.

Figures.

Kenton froze, his blood turning to ice. One by one, the figures emerged from the water—men, women, and children, their eyes hollow and their faces twisted in pain. They floated just above the surface, their translucent bodies shimmering in the moonlight.

They were the dead.

The massacre.

Kenton had heard whispers of it from the locals, but no one spoke of it in detail. The village of Harrington had been founded over two hundred years ago, built by settlers looking for a new life. But one night, during the height of a bitter land dispute, a group of men had slaughtered an entire family by the river—men, women, children—all to claim their land. The river ran red with their blood that night, and it had never stopped.

Kenton stumbled back, his heart pounding. The ghostly figures hovered there, staring at him, their eyes filled with a sorrow so deep it chilled him to his core.

A woman stepped forward, her hair dripping wet, her dress torn and bloodstained. She raised a pale, trembling hand, pointing directly at Kenton.

"Why have you come here?" her voice echoed, cold and hollow.

"I-I’m here to understand," Kenton stammered. "To learn the truth."

The woman's face twisted in agony. "The truth was buried long ago. Forgotten. But the blood never fades. It remains, as we remain, bound to this river."

Kenton felt a sudden pressure in his chest, a suffocating weight. He realized now why the villagers feared this place, why no one dared come near the river at night. The spirits were trapped, tethered to the site of their slaughter, and the river ran red as a reminder of the atrocity that had condemned them.

"I can help," Kenton said, his voice shaky. "I can tell the world what happened here. I can—"

"You cannot help," the woman interrupted. "You cannot undo what was done. No one can."

The other spirits began to whisper again, their voices rising in a cacophony of despair. The river churned violently, as if the earth itself were weeping for the lost souls trapped within it.

"Go," the woman said, her voice softening. "Before it’s too late. Leave this place, and never return."

Kenton hesitated. He wanted to stay, to ask more, to learn. But the weight of their suffering, the overwhelming sense of hopelessness, pressed down on him like a vise.

Then, the river surged violently, the water rising to his ankles. The spirits’ whispers grew into a deafening roar. Panic surged through him.

He turned and ran, his heart pounding in his chest as he fled the riverbank. He didn’t stop running until he reached his car, gasping for breath, his clothes drenched with sweat and the river’s eerie mist.

As he drove away, he glanced in the rearview mirror, half-expecting to see the figures still standing there by the water’s edge, watching him. But there was nothing—just the dark, winding road leading back to Harrington.

Kenton never returned to the Crimson River. He wrote his report, cataloging the strange phenomenon in scientific terms, but he left out the ghosts, the whispers, the forgotten massacre.

Some truths, he realized, were better left buried with the dead.

And still, on every full moon, the Crimson River runs red.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Vanishing Portrait Shaina Tranquilino September 20, 2024

The Vanishing PortraitShaina TranquilinoSeptember 20, 2024

Draydon Cunning, a reclusive artist, stood before his latest work, wiping the sweat from his brow. He had no idea where the inspiration had come from, but the face of the man he had painted felt strangely familiar. He hadn’t met him in real life—at least, he didn’t think so—but the figure had haunted his dreams for weeks, compelling him to paint.

The painting, now completed, stared back at him. It was a man in his late thirties, with piercing green eyes, dark hair, and a strong jawline. His expression was one of melancholy, like someone who had seen too much of life’s darker side. Every stroke of Draydon's brush had brought the man to life, and now, he stood framed in silence in the centre of Draydon's studio.

Draydon felt uneasy. The dreams were always the same. The man would appear in a dense fog, walking toward him through a forest at dusk. He never spoke, but his eyes—those same green eyes—were filled with desperation, pleading for help. Draydon would wake each morning, drenched in sweat, and rush to his easel, compelled to finish the portrait before it faded from his mind.

As he stepped back to admire his work, the air in the room felt heavy. He couldn’t shake the feeling that the man in the painting was trying to tell him something. The sensation was so intense, it bordered on paranoia. Draydon shook his head, laughing at himself. He needed fresh air.

After stepping outside for a cigarette, he returned to the studio only to be struck by a strange detail. The painting had changed.

The man’s eyes, once gazing downward in melancholy, now stared directly at Draydon, wide with terror. His lips, previously set in a solemn line, were parted slightly, as if frozen mid-sentence. Draydon's heart raced. He hadn’t altered the painting himself—he was sure of it.

He blinked, convinced he was overtired. But the sense of urgency in those green eyes wouldn’t leave him.

Unable to sleep that night, Draydon scrolled through the news on his phone. A headline caught his eye: "Man Missing for Weeks: Police Offer No Leads." He clicked the article, and his blood ran cold. Staring back at him from the screen was the same face he had painted.

The man was real. His name was Adam Marrow, a local history professor who had vanished a month ago while hiking in the nearby woods.

Draydon's pulse quickened. How could he have known? The image from the dream and the real man—there was no mistaking it.

The next morning, he contacted the police. At first, they were skeptical, dismissing his claims as coincidence or a product of his overactive imagination. But the detective assigned to the case, Detective Serrano, took a lingering look at the painting.

"Let’s say you didn’t meet him," Serrano said, scratching his chin, "but you say you saw him in a dream? That’s hard to swallow, Cunning."

Draydon could only nod, feeling like he was falling deeper into something he didn’t understand.

That night, Draydon couldn’t rest. His dreams were more vivid than ever. He saw Adam standing in the same fog-filled forest, but this time, the landscape seemed more distinct. A twisted oak tree stood in the distance, its branches gnarled like reaching fingers. Nearby, a large, jagged rock jutted out of the earth.

When Draydon woke the next morning, his eyes flew to the painting. Once again, it had changed. Adam’s body had shifted in the frame. Instead of standing in an empty space, a faint background had emerged—a shadowy silhouette of the same forest from Draydon's dream, the twisted oak tree barely visible in the distance.

The realization hit him hard. The painting was showing him something—something real. A location. A clue.

Draydon grabbed his sketchpad and hurriedly sketched out the forest and rock formation from his dream, adding every detail he could recall. His heart pounded as he contacted Detective Serrano again, showing him the updated painting and the sketch.

Serrano, to his surprise, didn’t dismiss it outright this time. "There’s a place about twenty miles from here," the detective muttered, his eyes narrowing as he studied the sketch. "The rock, the tree—they match a spot near Timber Falls. It’s known for hiking trails. It’s possible Marrow went that way."

Against his better judgment, Draydon offered to go with Serrano to the location. They trekked into the forest, each step more unnerving than the last. The trees loomed above them, casting long shadows across the trail. The deeper they went, the more familiar the terrain became to Draydon. It was as if he had walked these woods a hundred times before.

After nearly an hour, they reached the twisted oak tree from his dream. It stood tall and sinister, just as he had seen it. Serrano gave Draydon a wary glance but pressed forward, toward the jagged rock.

Near the base of the rock, partially hidden by underbrush, they found something. A torn piece of fabric, stuck to a branch. It matched the description of the clothing Adam Marrow had been wearing when he disappeared.

Then, something else caught their attention—an old, shallow well, its stone edges crumbling with age. Draydon’s stomach twisted. He didn’t know how he knew, but something about the well was wrong. He could feel it.

Serrano leaned over the edge, shining his flashlight into the darkness below. His breath caught in his throat.

There, at the bottom, was Adam Marrow.

The man’s body was lifeless, but it was clear he had been alive until recently. Claw marks on the stones suggested he had tried to escape, but the well was too deep. The authorities later confirmed that Adam had fallen into the well while hiking and had been unable to climb out. He had survived for days, perhaps even weeks, before succumbing to dehydration.

Draydon stood silently as the rescue team pulled Adam’s body from the well. He felt a strange sense of relief but also an overwhelming sadness. The man who had haunted his dreams, the man he had unknowingly painted, had been crying out for help all along.

Back in his studio, Draydon stared at the now-empty canvas where the portrait had once been. The painting had vanished, as mysteriously as it had appeared. In its place was nothing but a blank white surface, as if the canvas itself had purged the tragedy it had borne witness to.

But Draydon knew the truth: the portrait hadn’t disappeared.

It had simply fulfilled its purpose.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Golden Key Shaina Tranquilino September 21, 2024

The Golden KeyShaina TranquilinoSeptember 21, 2024

In the small, quiet town of Eldenford, nestled between misty hills and shadowed woods, stood the old stone church of St. Agnes. The townspeople spoke little of it, save to warn the children away. It was said to be the oldest building in the town, far older than any of the records could confirm. Its heavy wooden doors were always shut, and the gargoyles perched above seemed to watch the streets with their hollow, knowing eyes. Laurel was not like the other children. While most her age ran through the fields or played by the river, she found herself drawn to St. Agnes with a fascination she couldn’t explain. Every day after school, she would pause on the way home to gaze at the church’s weathered stones, her eyes tracing the intricate carvings that adorned the arched entrance.

One rainy afternoon, as she walked by the churchyard, a flicker of gold caught her eye. Buried half in the mud at the base of an ancient oak tree was a small key. Laurel knelt and picked it up. It was cold to the touch, heavier than it looked, and engraved with symbols she didn’t recognize. A sense of importance buzzed around it, as though it hummed with some forgotten power.

Her heart raced. Could this be the key to the church’s locked door? She had never seen anyone go in or out, and no one seemed to know where the key to St. Agnes was—or if there even was one.

That night, long after her parents had gone to bed, Laurel slipped out of the house with the golden key clutched tightly in her hand. The rain had stopped, leaving the streets slick and gleaming under the pale moonlight. Her breath fogged in the cool night air as she made her way to the church. The ancient stones loomed before her, and the gargoyles seemed to tilt their heads ever so slightly as she approached.

With trembling hands, Laurel inserted the key into the door’s heavy lock. For a moment, nothing happened. Then, with a slow, creaking groan, the door swung inward, revealing the dark interior of the church.

Laurel stepped inside, her heart pounding in her chest. The air was thick, not with dust as she had expected, but with something else—something old, something forgotten. She glanced around. The nave was dimly lit by the flickering remnants of long-burnt-out candles, but everything else seemed untouched by time. The pews stood in perfect rows, the altar gleamed faintly at the far end, and the stained glass windows glowed with muted colours in the moonlight.

But it wasn’t the sanctuary that drew Laurel forward. There was something more, something hidden. Her feet seemed to move on their own as she walked deeper into the church.

Behind the altar, in a shadowed alcove, was another door. It was small, barely noticeable, as if the stone walls themselves were trying to swallow it. It had no handle, no visible lock—except for a small, circular indentation near its center.

Without hesitation, Laurel pressed the golden key into the indentation. The door clicked softly and swung open, revealing a staircase that spiraled down into the earth.

Her pulse quickened, but curiosity overcame fear. She descended, the stone steps cold beneath her feet, the air growing thicker and warmer with each step. Faint sounds reached her ears—whispers, like a distant chant, though the words were unintelligible.

The stairs ended in a vast chamber, far below the church. Torches flickered along the walls, casting dancing shadows across the floor, and in the centre of the room stood an ancient altar, surrounded by strange, twisting statues. They were not like the saints or angels Laurel had seen in pictures. These figures were distorted, their faces wild and terrifying, their bodies frozen in unnatural poses.

And yet, they seemed alive.

Laurel took a hesitant step forward. The air felt electric, as if the chamber itself was breathing. Before the altar lay a pool of black water, perfectly still, its surface like glass. Above it, suspended in the air, hung a golden thread—thin and delicate, glowing faintly with an otherworldly light.

The whispers grew louder. Laurel could almost understand them now—names, maybe, or prayers in a forgotten language. They beckoned her forward, urging her to touch the thread.

Her fingers hovered above it. As soon as she made contact, the room shifted. The statues’ eyes glowed with life, and the water in the pool began to ripple. Slowly, impossibly, figures began to rise from the water—shapes of gods long forgotten, their forms vast and incomprehensible.

They were not like the gods of the stories Laurel had heard. These were beings of shadow and light, of stone and flame, their faces both beautiful and terrible. She could feel their presence pressing down on her, ancient and powerful.

"Who calls us?" one of them spoke, its voice a rumble that seemed to shake the very foundation of the earth.

Laurel's mouth went dry, but she could not speak. The gods’ gaze fell upon her, their eyes burning with a hunger for recognition, for worship.

"You have the key," the voice continued. "You have unlocked what was meant to be forgotten."

The weight of their words crushed her. She wanted to flee, to escape back to the safety of the town above, but her legs would not move.

Another figure spoke, its voice softer, more insidious. "We are the gods before gods. The ones the world has turned away from. But you, child—you can bring us back."

The key in Laurel's hand pulsed with warmth, as if urging her to make a choice. The gods awaited her answer, their forms rippling with barely contained power.

Laurel took a breath, steadying herself. Her mind raced. She had found something wondrous, but it was also terrifying. Could she release these beings back into the world? Could she bear the consequences?

Slowly, she turned and ran.

The golden key fell from her hand, clattering to the floor as she fled up the stairs, through the door, and back into the cold night. Behind her, the church door slammed shut with a thunderous boom, sealing the hidden world once again.

Laurel never returned to St. Agnes. But every now and then, she could feel the pull of the golden key, the weight of what she had uncovered. The gods still lingered beneath the church, waiting for another to find them.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Enchanted Typewriter Shaina Tranquilino September 23, 2024

The Enchanted TypewriterShaina TranquilinoSeptember 23, 2024

It was an unassuming afternoon when Ryan Kane found the typewriter. The air in the old shop was thick with dust, cobwebs clinging to the edges of forgotten shelves, but the antique store had always been his retreat from the world. It was tucked away at the end of Willow Street, one of the last places in town where time seemed to stand still.

Ryan was a writer. Or, at least, he was trying to be. His ideas had dried up months ago, and the blank pages of his manuscript taunted him daily. He was supposed to be working on a novel, but inspiration had evaded him like a distant echo. That's why he was here, searching for something—anything—to spark his creativity.

The typewriter sat near the back of the shop, nestled between an old brass lamp and a set of dusty novels. It was a faded Remington, the kind that would have been the pinnacle of modern technology in the 1920s. The keys were tarnished, but the machine had an odd gleam to it, as though it had been waiting for someone to notice it.

"How much for the typewriter?" Ryan asked the shopkeeper, an elderly man named Amos with a penchant for tall tales.

Amos raised a bushy eyebrow. "That old thing? Found it in a basement after a flood. Not sure it even works."

Ryan felt a strange pull toward it, though he couldn't explain why. "I'll take it."

Amos chuckled. "If you're looking for stories, maybe that old typewriter will give you one. Just be careful. It has a mind of its own, they say."

Ryan smiled politely at the odd remark and left the shop with the typewriter under his arm, feeling a glimmer of excitement for the first time in weeks. He placed it on the worn desk in his study, the keys gleaming under the soft lamp light. Something about it felt... alive, almost.

That evening, Ryan decided to test it out. He slid a piece of paper into the machine and began to type. The keys were stiff under his fingers, but as he pressed each one, a satisfying clack echoed through the room. However, no words came to mind. Frustrated, he stepped away to make himself a cup of tea, hoping a break might stir his imagination.

When he returned, the typewriter had typed a full line.

"They buried him in the woods, where no one would find him."

Ryan froze, staring at the sentence. He hadn’t typed that. The room was empty, and the door to the study was closed. He glanced at the window. It was shut too, not a breath of wind stirring inside.

Tentatively, he touched the keys again. Nothing happened. He sat back down and tried typing the words, but as soon as his fingers rested on the keys, the machine seemed to resist his touch.

And then it typed on its own.

"The truth lies beneath the willow tree, hidden by those who fear it."

His heart pounded as he read the words. It was as though the typewriter had a story to tell—a story it was determined to share with him. Ryan, both unnerved and intrigued, grabbed his notebook and jotted down the lines.

That night, the typewriter continued to reveal more cryptic sentences, each more puzzling than the last.

"They called it an accident, but the town knows better."

"The storm washed away the evidence, but not the guilt."

As the words unfolded, Ryan realized the typewriter was revealing something dark, something the town had long buried. He had grown up in Bramblewood, a sleepy place where nothing much happened. But this... this was a secret history, one that no one had ever spoken of.

He returned to the shop the next morning, the unease gnawing at him. Amos was behind the counter, polishing a glass with a rag. "Back already?" the old man asked, eyeing Ryan with curiosity.

"The typewriter..." Ryan hesitated. "It’s... it’s writing things on its own."

Amos chuckled. "Told you it had a mind of its own. Figured you’d like that, being a writer and all."

"But these are not just random words. It’s... it’s telling a story. A story about this town. About something hidden." Ryan leaned forward, lowering his voice. "About a murder."

Amos’ face darkened, and he set the glass down slowly. "What did it say?"

Ryan recounted the sentences, watching as the shopkeeper’s expression grew more guarded with each line.

"I don’t know about any of that," Amos said quietly, though his tone lacked conviction. "Old towns like this, they have their share of ghost stories. You’d do well to leave them be."

"Amos, I need to know if this is real. Is there something you’re not telling me?"

The old man sighed, rubbing the back of his neck. "There’s an old story, from way back before the flood. A man named Charles Mason went missing. Some folks said he left town, others said he drowned in the river. But there were whispers... rumors that he’d been killed. Buried somewhere out in the woods."

Ryan felt a chill crawl up his spine. The typewriter had mentioned a burial in the woods.

"And no one ever looked into it?"

Amos shook his head. "Back then, folks didn’t ask too many questions. They preferred things to stay quiet."

Ryan returned home, the weight of the mystery pressing down on him. That night, as the wind howled outside, he sat at the typewriter again, staring at the blank page. He didn’t even touch the keys before the machine began to type.

"He waits beneath the willow tree, his bones washed clean by the rain. The truth is there, but so is the danger. Some secrets are meant to stay buried."

Ryan's hands trembled. The willow tree. There was only one place in town with a tree like that—Willow Grove, an overgrown patch of land just outside town. No one went there anymore, not since the flood had turned it into a swampy ruin.

The next morning, Ryan made his way to the grove. The ground was soft beneath his feet, the smell of damp earth filling the air. He found the willow tree easily, its branches hanging low, brushing the ground like a shroud. His heart raced as he began to dig, his hands sinking into the wet soil.

After what felt like hours, his fingers brushed something hard. He pulled it out—an old, rusted box. Inside, wrapped in rotting cloth, was a skeleton, fragile bones stained by time and mud.

And there, at the bottom of the box, was a small, weathered notebook. Flipping through its brittle pages, Ryan found the final piece of the puzzle.

It was a confession, written by the town’s former mayor, detailing how Charles Mason had been killed to cover up a land deal that had gone wrong. The town had known. They had all known, and they had all stayed silent.

The typewriter had told him the truth. But as he stood there, staring down at the uncovered grave, Ryan knew one thing for certain—some secrets were not meant to be unearthed.

And as if in agreement, the wind whispered through the branches of the willow tree, carrying with it the faint echo of a typewriter's clacking keys.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Phantom Detective Shaina Tranquilino September 24, 2024

The Phantom DetectiveShaina TranquilinoSeptember 24, 2024

Detective Tammy Westbrook stared at the yellowing scrap of paper she had just pulled from the old filing cabinet in the precinct’s archives. Its corners curled with age, the ink faint but unmistakable: a name, an address, and a time. The handwriting was jagged and oddly familiar, as if she’d seen it before—but that was impossible. She had spent the past three nights buried in cold cases, trying to find some sort of breakthrough in a string of disappearances that had been haunting her city. Five people, gone without a trace over the last six months. No suspects. No witnesses. No clues.

Until now.

Her gaze lingered on the name at the bottom of the note: Detective Levi Cross.

Tammy frowned. Levi Cross had been a legend—once. He’d solved cases no one else could, seen patterns where others saw chaos. But he was no longer a detective. He wasn’t even alive. Cross had been dead for over fifty years.

How could his name be on a note about a case he could never have known?

The address was a run-down warehouse on the outskirts of town, a place Tammy had already been to twice during her investigation. Both times, she’d found nothing. Tonight, though, something told her it would be different.

As she prepared to leave, she slipped the note into her coat pocket, her thoughts swirling in uncertainty. The clock in her office read 10:45 PM. The time written on the note was 11:30 PM. She had less than an hour.

The warehouse loomed in the darkness, its rusted metal walls barely illuminated by the flickering streetlights. Tammy parked her car in the shadow of a crumbling building and made her way toward the entrance. The heavy doors creaked as she pushed them open, the sound echoing in the vast, empty space.

For a moment, the only thing she could hear was the soft drip of water from somewhere deep inside the warehouse. She glanced at her watch. 11:28 PM.

The moment she stepped forward, her phone buzzed in her pocket. She pulled it out, expecting to see a message from the precinct, but what she found made her breath catch in her throat.

The screen displayed a single text, no sender.

“Follow the light.”

As she read the words, a faint glow appeared in the distance, a soft, unnatural light filtering through the cracks in the far wall. Tammy's pulse quickened. She hadn’t noticed any light before.

She crossed the vast warehouse floor, her footsteps muffled by dust. As she approached the glowing wall, she realized the light was coming from behind a stack of decaying wooden crates. Pushing them aside, she found a small, hidden doorway. It had been sealed, the edges rusted shut, but now it stood slightly ajar.

She hesitated for a moment, her instincts warning her to turn back, but her curiosity overpowered her caution. She pulled the door open and stepped through.

The room beyond was smaller, musty, and barely furnished. But there, in the center, sat a table—and on it, another note, identical in texture to the one she’d found earlier. She approached cautiously, her fingers trembling as she picked it up.

“The answers are in the past, Detective Westbrook. Dig deeper.”

She blinked in disbelief. Whoever was sending these messages knew her. They knew about the case. They knew about her personally. But how?

“Who are you?” Tammy whispered, her voice swallowed by the silence.

There was no response. Only the faint drip of water, the oppressive darkness, and the eerie glow that now seemed to dim.

She pocketed the note, her mind spinning. If she wanted answers, she needed to look into Levi Cross. It seemed insane—how could a dead man be involved? But whoever was sending these messages knew things only Cross could have known. That was impossible, unless—

Unless Cross wasn’t as dead as everyone thought.

Back at the precinct, Tammy combed through the archives, pulling every file connected to Levi Cross. His last case had been in 1971, a series of brutal murders that had gone unsolved. Cross had been obsessed with it—according to old reports, he’d spent months following leads that led nowhere, until one night, he vanished. His body had never been found.

Tammy stared at a grainy photograph of Cross. His sharp eyes seemed to bore into her even through the faded image. There was something almost familiar about him, as if she’d seen that intensity before.

She flipped through the reports again. Among them was a photocopy of his personal journal, filled with cryptic notes and musings about his cases. One entry caught her eye, dated just days before his disappearance:

“The pattern repeats. The city calls for its protector. I will not be there to answer, but someone will.”

Chills ran down her spine.

That night, she barely slept, her dreams filled with the image of Levi Cross, standing in the shadows, always just out of reach.

The next morning, Tammy visited the last known address of Cross’s old partner, Frank Harris. Harris had retired years ago, but if anyone knew more about Cross, it would be him.

She found the aging detective in a modest house on the edge of town, sitting by the window, watching the world go by.

“Harris,” Tammy began, after introducing herself. “I’m looking into Levi Cross’s old cases. I need to know—did he ever mention anything about coming back? About finishing what he started?”

The old man’s eyes narrowed. “Cross? You’re barking up a haunted tree, kid. Cross was… different, but he didn’t believe in ghosts.”

Tammy handed him the notes she’d found, her breath catching as she saw his expression change.

“This is his handwriting,” Harris muttered, his voice barely a whisper. “But that’s not possible. He’s been dead for decades.”

Tammy leaned forward. “Do you think he could still be out there? Trying to finish what he started?”

Harris shook his head slowly. “Cross was a great detective, but he wasn’t immortal. If someone’s leaving you these notes, it’s not him.”

Tammy left, more confused than ever. Yet as she drove back to the precinct, she couldn’t shake the feeling that Levi Cross wasn’t entirely gone.

That night, another note awaited her on her desk. It simply read:

“The final piece is where it all began.”

Tammy stood in front of the old, crumbling house that had once belonged to Levi Cross. The air was thick with the weight of history, the building abandoned, forgotten. She stepped inside, the floor creaking beneath her boots.

In the corner of the darkened living room, she saw it—a stack of old newspapers, files, and notes, untouched for decades. Among them, another letter, waiting for her:

“I never left, Detective Westbrook. The truth is buried here. Finish what I could not.”

She looked around, realizing the truth. Cross hadn’t been sending her these messages from beyond the grave—he had died all those years ago. But in his obsession, in his determination to solve the unsolvable, he had left behind a trail. A phantom detective, still working through her, guiding her to the final clue.

Tammy knelt down and sifted through the files. There, beneath the dust and time, she found it—the key to solving both Cross’s final case and the disappearances haunting her city.

Levi Cross had never stopped investigating.

And now, neither would she.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Hidden Manuscript Shaina Tranquilino September 26, 2024

The Hidden ManuscriptShaina TranquilinoSeptember 26, 2024

Ed Huxley had spent a lifetime collecting rare books. His townhouse was a sanctuary of old tomes, dusty volumes, and forgotten manuscripts. It was his way of feeling close to the past, to lost histories and obscure knowledge. He lived alone, a bachelor by choice, with nothing but his books for company. On this particular evening, as rain tapped against the windows of his study, he received a package that would change his life forever.

It arrived wrapped in brown paper, tied with a simple piece of twine. There was no return address. Curious, Ed placed the package on his desk and cut the twine with a flick of his pocket knife. Inside, he found an old manuscript bound in cracked, black leather. The pages were yellowed and brittle, but the ink remained sharp, each word meticulously crafted. The cover bore no title, but when he opened it, the words at the top of the first page sent a chill down his spine:

"The Ritual of Blood and Bone."

His hands trembled slightly as he read further. The manuscript described an ancient ritual, one that promised to unlock hidden knowledge and power. The instructions were written in cryptic language, but Ed, who had studied esoteric texts his entire life, deciphered it with ease. The ritual required a few specific ingredients—bones of an ancestor, a drop of blood, and a particular incantation spoken at midnight under the light of a full moon.

His eyes scanned the room, heart pounding. This manuscript—there was something about it, something darker and more dangerous than anything he had encountered in his many years of collecting. And yet, he felt compelled to continue. It was as if the words on the page had embedded themselves into his very mind, urging him to follow the ritual.

That night, Ed stood in his study, the manuscript open on the desk before him. The ingredients were laid out: a small bone fragment from his mother’s burial urn, a needle to draw a drop of his blood, and a black candle to illuminate the room. The house was silent, save for the ticking of the grandfather clock in the hall. As the hour approached midnight, he could feel something shift in the air—a heaviness, a presence.

Taking a deep breath, he pricked his finger with the needle, letting a single drop of blood fall onto the bone fragment. The candle flickered as if in response, casting strange shadows on the walls. He began to recite the incantation, the ancient words foreign on his tongue but oddly familiar, as if he had known them all along.

The moment he spoke the final syllable, the room seemed to breathe. A gust of wind, though the windows were closed, swept through the study, extinguishing the candle and plunging the room into darkness. Ed's heart raced. His hands fumbled for the matches, but before he could light the candle again, a cold, raspy voice echoed in the room.

"Blood of the Huxley line… it is time."

Ed froze, his breath catching in his throat. He turned slowly toward the source of the voice, but the room was empty. Yet, the voice seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere, reverberating in his bones. His pulse quickened as he stumbled back, knocking into the desk. The manuscript, still open, began to glow faintly, the ink on the pages shifting and reforming before his eyes.

The text he had just read vanished, replaced by a single, damning sentence: "The price has been paid."

Suddenly, a sharp pain shot through his chest, as if something deep inside him was tearing apart. He gasped, clutching his chest, but it wasn’t his heart. It was something deeper, something ancient, awakening inside him.

In his mind’s eye, Ed saw flashes of memories that were not his own. Faces of ancestors long dead, voices whispering secrets, and a cold, endless darkness stretching back centuries. He saw his great-grandfather, his eyes wild with terror, standing over the same manuscript, performing the same ritual. He saw others—his ancestors, all members of the Huxley family—each one performing the ritual at different points in time, always drawn to the manuscript, always paying the price.

A terrifying realization dawned on him. This was not just a ritual for power or knowledge—it was a binding contract. The Huxley family had been cursed, bound to this ritual for generations. Each time a member of the family found the manuscript, they would be compelled to perform the ritual, sealing their fate. It was a cycle, one that could not be broken. And now, it was Ed's turn.

His vision blurred as the memories overwhelmed him. He stumbled toward the manuscript, desperate to close it, to end this nightmare. But as his fingers brushed the pages, he felt a searing pain in his palm. The manuscript had come alive, its pages wrapping around his hand like tendrils, pulling him closer.

"No…" Ed whispered, trying to pull away, but the manuscript held fast. The ink on the pages began to flow, like blood, spreading up his arm and across his skin. His reflection in the window showed the truth—his face was changing, becoming hollow, skeletal. He was becoming one of them.

With a final, desperate scream, Ed collapsed to the floor. The manuscript lay open beside him, its pages blank, the ritual complete.

By morning, the townhouse was quiet once more, save for the ticking of the grandfather clock. The manuscript, now dormant, sat on the desk, waiting for the next Huxley to find it.

And the cycle would begin again.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Mysterious Benefactor Shaina Tranquilino September 27, 2024

The Mysterious BenefactorShaina TranquilinoSeptember 27, 2024

The rain drummed steadily on the roof of the small, run-down house, its once vibrant red paint now chipped and fading. Inside, the Urban family huddled together in the dim light of a single flickering lamp. Susan Urban sat by the table, her face etched with worry, as she scanned the stack of overdue bills. Her husband, Tom, sat across from her, his hands calloused from years of manual labour, his eyes distant as he pondered their bleak future. Their young daughter, Asha, played quietly on the floor with a worn-out doll, oblivious to the storm brewing inside her parents' hearts.

Suddenly, there was a knock at the door.

Tom stood up, startled by the unexpected visitor. He opened the door to find no one there, just the cold wind and the steady patter of rain. But at his feet, resting on the porch, was a small package wrapped in brown paper and tied with string.

“Who could it be at this hour?” Susan asked, her voice tinged with suspicion.

Tom picked up the package and brought it inside. He placed it on the table, and the three of them stared at it in silence for a moment. The handwriting on the note attached was elegant and unfamiliar:

"For the Urbans. May this ease your burden."

Cautiously, Tom untied the string and unfolded the paper. Inside were neatly stacked bills—thousands of dollars. Enough to pay off their debts and more.

Susan gasped, her hand flying to her mouth. "This can't be real," she whispered. "Who would do this?"

Tom shook his head, equally baffled. "There’s no name, no explanation. Just the money."

Despite their disbelief, the Urbans used the money to settle their bills, pay off the mortgage, and buy a few essentials they had gone without for so long. The relief was immense, and for the first time in years, they felt a glimmer of hope.

But the gifts didn’t stop.

Every week, another package arrived at their door. Sometimes it contained more money, other times fine clothes for Asha, groceries, or even luxurious items they could never have afforded on their own. Each one came without a trace of the benefactor's identity, just the same cryptic note:

"For the Urbans. May this ease your burden."

At first, the Urbans were overwhelmed with gratitude. They no longer worried about their next meal or the mounting bills, and Asha seemed happier than ever. But as the weeks passed, Susan began to feel uneasy. Who could be sending them these gifts? And why?

She voiced her concerns to Tom one evening after another anonymous package had arrived.

“We can’t just keep taking these things,” Susan said. “It feels wrong not knowing who’s behind it. What if there’s a catch?”

Tom frowned. “We’ve searched for clues, asked around the neighbourhood, even checked the mail routes. No one knows anything. Whoever they are, they clearly don’t want to be found.”

“I don’t care,” Susan said firmly. “We have to find them. There’s something off about all of this.”

The next week, when the familiar knock came at the door, Tom was ready. He rushed outside, hoping to catch the mysterious benefactor in the act. But once again, no one was there—just the rain-soaked street and the faint echo of footsteps vanishing into the night.

Determined, the Urbans began their investigation. They asked neighbours, tracked down delivery drivers, and even visited the local post office, but every lead came up cold. No one had seen anything suspicious, and no one could explain the origin of the packages.

Then, one night, Asha came to her parents, holding something tightly in her hand. "Mama, Papa, look what I found," she said, her innocent eyes wide.

She opened her palm to reveal a small, gold-embossed pin in the shape of an eye. It had been tucked inside the latest package, hidden beneath layers of fine silk.

Susan's heart raced as she studied the symbol. It was unfamiliar, yet somehow it filled her with a deep sense of dread. "Where did you find this?" she asked.

"It was in the box," Asha replied, shrugging. "I thought it was pretty."

Tom took the pin, his face darkening. "I’ve seen this symbol before," he said quietly. "There’s an old lodge on the outskirts of town—I've passed it on my way to work. They have this emblem on the gate."

The next day, Tom and Susan went to the lodge. It was a sprawling, gothic structure surrounded by high walls, hidden deep within the woods. The gate was adorned with the same eye symbol. It seemed abandoned, but a faint light flickered inside.

They knocked on the door, half expecting no one to answer. But to their surprise, the door creaked open, revealing a tall man in a dark suit. His eyes were cold, his smile unsettling.

“Ah, the Urbans,” he said, as if he had been expecting them. “Please, come in.”

Against their better judgment, they stepped inside. The interior was grand but suffocating, with heavy drapes and dark wood paneling. The man led them into a room where several others sat in silence, all wearing pins with the same eye symbol.

"Who are you?" Susan demanded, her voice trembling. "And why have you been sending us these gifts?"

The man’s smile widened, but it didn’t reach his eyes. "We are simply benefactors. We help those in need, those who can be…useful to us."

"Useful?" Tom echoed, his fists clenching. "What do you mean?"

The man’s gaze hardened. "Nothing is ever truly free, Mr. Urban. The gifts were merely the beginning. We have plans for you and your family. But do not worry, your loyalty will be rewarded. All we ask in return is…obedience."

Susan's blood ran cold. "We don’t want anything from you anymore. We never asked for this!"

The man’s smile disappeared. "It’s too late for that, Mrs. Urban. You’ve already accepted our gifts. Now you must honour your part of the bargain."

Before Tom could respond, the door behind them slammed shut, and the lights flickered ominously. The Urbans were surrounded by the silent figures, their faces expressionless, their eyes glinting with malice.

In that moment, Susan realized they had walked into a trap far darker than they could have imagined. The gifts had been bait—luring them into the clutches of something ancient and sinister. The benefactors weren’t saviours. They were puppeteers, pulling the strings of unsuspecting souls.

And now, the Urbans were caught in their web.

"We don’t belong to you," Tom growled, stepping protectively in front of his wife.

The man chuckled softly. "But you do. And soon, you will understand why."

The Urbans knew then that there was no escape—not from the gifts, nor from the dark society that had marked them.

The only question that remained was how much they were willing to sacrifice to be free.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Mirror of Truth Shaina Tranquilino September 29, 2024

The Mirror Of TruthShaina TranquilinoSeptember 29, 2024

In the quiet town of Regina Ridge, nothing ever changed. It was a place of routines, polite greetings, and secrets buried under layers of civility. Life was predictable, a clockwork of day-to-day activities. That was, until the mirror arrived.

It appeared one foggy morning in the window of Old Morton's Antiques, an unremarkable shop tucked between the grocer and the post office. The mirror was elegant, standing six feet tall with an intricately carved frame of dark mahogany. Its surface shimmered in an oddly captivating way, as though the glass held more than reflections.

Mrs. Jessica Fields, the postmaster’s wife, was the first to notice it. As she passed the shop on her way to the market, her eyes were drawn to the mirror. Something about it unsettled her, but she couldn't quite place what. She stepped inside the store, the bell above the door chiming softly.

Old Morton shuffled out from behind the counter. His bushy eyebrows rose in surprise.

"Morning, Mrs. Fields. Something catch your eye?" he asked, his voice raspy with age.

Jessica pointed to the mirror. "Where did you get that?"

Morton shrugged. "Came with a batch of old furniture from an estate sale. Strange thing though... couldn't find a price on it. Figure it's one of those one-of-a-kind pieces. Beautiful, isn't it?"

Beautiful wasn't the word Jessica would use. The mirror had an eerie quality to it, as though it were watching her. But curiosity got the better of her. She approached it, drawn to its strange allure, and stood before the gleaming surface.

For a moment, her reflection was ordinary—gray hair pinned up in a neat bun, lines of age creasing her face. But then the image flickered. The reflection shifted. Her face remained the same, but her eyes—her eyes were sharp and cruel, burning with malice. The smile that curled on the lips of the woman in the mirror wasn’t hers at all.

Jessica gasped, stumbling back. The image reverted to normal, her own startled expression staring back at her. Morton didn’t seem to notice anything unusual.

"You alright, Mrs. Fields?"

"I... I’m fine," she stammered, backing away from the mirror. "I’ll be going now."

She hurried out of the shop, her heart racing. As she walked down the street, she couldn’t shake the feeling that something had looked out at her from the other side of the glass. Something that wasn’t her at all.

Over the next few days, word spread about the mirror. Curious townsfolk stopped by the antique shop to gaze at it. Some saw nothing unusual, just their own reflections staring back at them. But others—those with deeper secrets—witnessed something far more unsettling.

Harold Thompson, the local banker, was next. As he stood before the mirror, he saw not his own stout, dignified figure, but a man hunched with greed, counting money with trembling, possessive hands. His reflection grinned maniacally as gold coins spilled from its pockets. Harold blinked, and the vision was gone, but he left the shop in a cold sweat.

Then came young Claire Turner, sweet and kind, adored by everyone in town. But when she stood before the mirror, she saw a twisted version of herself—eyes wild with envy, her hands clutching at jewels and gowns, her reflection sneering with bitterness. Claire fled from the shop, her heart heavy with a truth she never wanted to admit.

One by one, the townsfolk came, and the mirror showed them not who they were, but who they truly were. Desires long hidden, fears buried deep, and the dark corners of their hearts that they’d kept secret even from themselves.

It wasn’t long before the mirror became infamous, whispered about in hushed tones. People avoided Old Morton’s shop, crossing the street to avoid even a glimpse of the cursed thing. Regina Ridge, once peaceful and predictable, had become a town of suspicion and unease. People started looking at each other differently—after all, who could trust someone when they didn’t even trust themselves?

It was Pastor James who finally decided to confront the mirror. A man of faith and conviction, he refused to believe that a simple object could hold such power over the town. One evening, after sunset, he entered Old Morton's shop. The bell rang softly as he stepped inside, the dim light casting long shadows across the floor.

Morton looked up from his chair, his face drawn and tired. The mirror had taken its toll on him too. He nodded at the pastor but said nothing.

James approached the mirror, standing tall before it. For a moment, all he saw was his own reflection—calm, composed, and righteous. But then, just like with the others, the image shifted.

His reflection sneered back at him, eyes burning with hypocrisy. Behind the mask of piety, Pastor James saw his darkest desires—the pride he took in his power over the townsfolk, the secret disdain he held for their weakness. The reflection laughed, mocking him.

"No," James whispered, shaking his head. "This isn’t me."

But the mirror showed no mercy. His reflection’s hands reached out, as if to pull him into the glass, to merge the man he pretended to be with the man he truly was.

In a panic, James grabbed the nearest object—a heavy candlestick—and smashed the mirror with all his strength. The glass shattered into a thousand pieces, the reflection disappearing with a final, mocking grin.

Breathing heavily, he stepped back, staring at the broken shards scattered across the floor. It was over. The mirror was destroyed.

But as the townspeople gathered outside, drawn by the sound of breaking glass, they saw something strange. Each shard of the broken mirror still reflected their faces—distorted, twisted, revealing those same hidden truths.

The mirror was gone, but its curse lingered.

Regina Ridge would never be the same again.


Tags :
11 months ago

The Secrets of the Abandoned Theatre Shaina Tranquilino September 30, 2024

The Secrets Of The Abandoned TheatreShaina TranquilinoSeptember 30, 2024

The wind howled as Mia, Lucas, Sarah, and Ben stood before the crumbling façade of the abandoned Crestwood Theatre. The moon cast long, eerie shadows across the street, and the decaying building loomed over them, as if daring them to step inside. Crestwood had been closed for nearly fifty years, ever since the tragic fire that had burned it down during a performance. Rumour had it that the final show, The Phantom’s Masquerade, had never reached its conclusion. The fire had erupted without warning, claiming the lives of several cast members and the director. Ever since, people in town whispered that strange things happened inside the old theatre. Shadows moved on their own, strange melodies drifted out into the night, and lights flickered through the boarded-up windows—despite there being no electricity.

"Are we really doing this?" Sarah asked, her voice trembling.

Lucas grinned, shaking a flashlight in his hand. "Come on, it'll be fun. What’s a little ghost hunt between friends?"

Ben, always the practical one, folded his arms. "I don’t know. People say this place is cursed for a reason."

Mia, the quietest of the group, felt an odd pull toward the building. She didn’t know why, but something about the Crestwood had always fascinated her, even frightened her. It wasn’t just the tragic fire; it was something more, something… unfinished. Without a word, she walked toward the heavy, broken doors.

Inside, the air was thick with dust, and the remnants of a once-grand theatre lay in ruins. Red velvet seats, now torn and decaying, lined the sloping floor leading to a stage draped in thick cobwebs. A broken chandelier hung precariously from the ceiling, swaying ever so slightly in the cold draft.

Mia shivered, but it wasn’t from the cold. "We shouldn’t be here," she whispered.

Ben scoffed. "No kidding."

"Let’s just take a quick look around and get out of here," Lucas said, clicking on his flashlight and shining it across the rows of forgotten seats.

As the beam swept across the darkened theatre, something glinted from the stage. It was faint, barely noticeable, but enough to make Mia’s heart skip a beat. Without thinking, she moved toward the stage.

"Hey, Mia!" Lucas called after her. "Where are you going?"

She didn’t answer. Her eyes were fixed on the spot where she had seen the glint. There was something there—something waiting.

The others followed, reluctantly climbing onto the stage behind her. Up close, the smell of old smoke still lingered in the air, as though the fire had never truly gone out. The curtains, now tattered and singed, fluttered slightly as if moved by an unseen hand.

"This is giving me the creeps," Sarah murmured.

As they reached the center of the stage, Mia suddenly froze. There, lying at her feet, was a charred mask—half burned, half pristine. It was a prop from the final performance of The Phantom’s Masquerade. She bent down to pick it up, but the moment her fingers touched the mask, the theatre changed.

The air grew thick, and a deep chill swept through the building. A low hum of music began to play, distant but growing louder. The friends exchanged uneasy glances as the ghostly melody filled the room.

Suddenly, the dim emergency lights that lined the aisles flickered on, casting a sickly glow over the seats. Lucas swung his flashlight wildly, but it wasn’t his light that illuminated the room—it was something else. The theatre was coming alive.

Then, they heard it.

Soft whispers. Laughter. The distant applause of an invisible audience.

"Oh my God," Sarah whispered. "Do you hear that?"

Mia clutched the mask tightly, her heart pounding in her chest. "We need to leave. Now."

But before they could move, a shadowy figure emerged from behind the torn curtains. It was dressed in a tattered costume from the show, its face hidden beneath a mask identical to the one Mia held. The figure moved with a slow, deliberate grace, as if it were still performing the role it had been cast in all those years ago.

"It’s a ghost," Ben gasped, backing away.

The figure turned toward them, raising a hand as if beckoning them closer. Its mask glinted in the dim light, and behind it, Mia could swear she saw hollow, empty eyes staring back at her.

Suddenly, the stage beneath their feet began to shake. The wood groaned as if under immense pressure, and the faint smell of smoke grew stronger. Flames—tiny at first—licked at the edges of the stage, curling around the old, decaying wood.

"We have to go!" Lucas shouted, grabbing Mia’s arm.

But she couldn’t move. She was rooted to the spot, her eyes locked on the ghostly figure. The whispers grew louder, the laughter more intense. The ghost raised its other hand, and with a sudden, violent gust of wind, the flames surged higher, engulfing the stage.

"No!" Mia screamed, finally breaking free from her trance.

She threw the mask down onto the stage, and as it hit the floor, the flames vanished. The theatre fell silent. The whispers stopped, the music faded, and the figure disappeared into the shadows.

The friends stood frozen, staring at the charred mask, still lying on the floor where Mia had dropped it. The air was thick with tension, but the theatre was quiet again. Too quiet.

Without a word, they bolted for the exit, not daring to look back. Outside, the cold night air felt like a relief, though their hearts were still pounding with terror.

"What just happened?" Sarah gasped, clutching her chest.

"It was them," Mia said quietly, staring back at the dark theatre. "The cast. They never finished their final performance. They’re still trapped in there, reliving that night over and over again."

Lucas shook his head, disbelief in his eyes. "We have to tell someone—"

"No one would believe us," Ben interrupted, his face pale. "Besides, I think it’s better if we just… let them be."

Mia nodded, her thoughts still lingering on the mask and the shadowy figure that had haunted the stage. As they walked away from the theatre, the wind picked up again, carrying with it a faint, haunting melody.

The final performance of The Phantom’s Masquerade was far from over.

And it never would be.


Tags :