Short Fiction
  • 93
  • 0
  • 34
  • Reads 93
  • 0
  • Part 34
Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A creeping dread clings to these pages, exhaled from the shadowed corners of a fractured psyche. Shelley doesn’t offer grand horrors, but a slow, insidious unraveling – a descent into the melancholic rot of lives haunted by unspoken griefs and the weight of inherited despair. Each tale breathes with the damp chill of forgotten crypts, echoing with the rustle of silk skirts against decaying wallpaper. Here, the boundaries between dream and waking blur, and the specters of regret linger just beyond the periphery. A stifling domesticity breeds a subtle terror, where the true monsters are not stitched from corpses, but woven from the unraveling threads of the heart. Expect whispers of madness carried on the wind, portraits that watch with vacant eyes, and a pervasive sense of isolation that clings like grave mold to bone. These are stories steeped in the amber light of dying embers, where the darkness doesn’t rush in, but settles, suffocating the last embers of hope. The air itself feels thick with the scent of decay, promising not a scream, but a slow, elegant surrender to the encroaching night.
Copyright: Public Domain
This license allows anyone to use your story for any purpose, including printing, selling, or adapting it into a film freely.
Recommended for you
30 Part
A creeping fog clings to the village of King’s Abbots, mirroring the suffocating secrets held within its shadowed lanes. The late Roger Ackroyd, a man of standing, lies dispatched with a silver dagger in his study – a room thick with the scent of old money and unspoken dread. But the true horror isn’t the act itself, but the confession whispered to a bewildered Dr. Sheppard, a man now bound by a pact of silence, a complicity that chills him to the bone. The house itself breathes with a stifled history, each antique object a witness to the decaying morality of its inhabitants. Whispers follow Sheppard through the darkened hallways, hints of illicit affairs, concealed debts, and the simmering resentments of a household poised on the brink of collapse. Every face observed through the leaded windows is a mask concealing a hidden motive. The investigation is a descent into a labyrinth of deception, where the truth is buried beneath layers of polite society and the weight of unconfessed sins. A sense of decay permeates every interaction, a sense that the very foundations of this idyllic village are riddled with rot. The reader is drawn into the suffocating grip of a narrative where every conversation feels like a carefully constructed lie, and the final revelation will leave a lingering chill long after the last page is turned. The darkness doesn’t come from the crime, but from the monstrous humanity that orchestrated it.