fiction
Horror fiction that delivers on its promise to scare, startle, frighten and unsettle. These stories are fake, but the shivers down your spine won't be.
Burn the Witch
The house at the end of the cul-de-sac wasn’t a place of magic; it was a rotting blemish of crumbling limestone and damp half-timbering. It slumped tiredly against the city wall, as if trying to melt into the shadows of the battlements. There lived the widow—a woman whose sole remaining sin was that she had simply outlived her usefulness to anyone.
By C.G. Burns30 days ago in Horror
The Signal From Tomorrow. AI-Generated.
The signal arrived at 2:46 AM. Dr. Adrian Cole had been staring at the monitors for hours inside the silent control room of the Orion Deep Space Observatory. Most nights were uneventful—just endless waves of cosmic noise drifting through space.
By Baseer Shaheen 30 days ago in Horror
The Telling Bone
Introduction This was kicked off by Catweazle's name for the telephone. Catweazle was a medieval sorcerer who ended up in modern times (the nineteen seventies). The full episode is all over Youtube and most of my readers might not even recognise what he is holding as a landline telephone handset.
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred about a month ago in Horror
The Rain That Brought Johnny
Cassie had always believed that her life would remain simple and predictable. She lived in the quiet little town of Greendale where nothing unusual ever happened. Every morning she walked to school, every afternoon she worked at the small bookstore on Maple Street, and every evening she sat beside the fireplace reading novels.
By Fawad Ahmadabout a month ago in Horror
Pripyat, Ukraine: The Abandoned Ghost City of Chernobyl
The Rise and Sudden Silence of Pripyat Pripyat, Ukraine, was established on February 4, 1970, as a model city in the Soviet Union, intended to be the home of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant staff. It emerged to become a flourishing city inhabited by close to 50,000 people, comprising engineers, scientists, families, and kids, with shops fully stocked, kindergartens, schools, hospitals, a cultural palace with cinemas and gyms, sports halls, and an Olympic-sized swimming pool, among other amenities. Life was normal, with kids playing, people working, and the city alive with normal ambitions and aspirations powered by the promise of nuclear energy.
By Kyrol Mojikalabout a month ago in Horror











