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.
The Lantern in Blackwood Forest
The town of Blackwood Hollow was a quiet place hidden between the misty forests of northern Europe. Travelers rarely stopped there, and those who did usually left before sunset. The locals had a rule they followed without question: Never enter Blackwood Forest after dark. Most outsiders assumed it was just another small-town superstition. Until they heard the story of the lantern. Emma Clarke was a travel blogger from London. She loved exploring forgotten places and mysterious towns across Europe. When she heard about Blackwood Hollow, she immediately decided to visit. “Perfect content,” she told her camera as she arrived in the village. “A haunted forest with old legends. Let’s see if the stories are real.” The town looked frozen in time. Stone houses, narrow streets, and a cold wind that carried the smell of pine trees from the forest nearby. Inside a small café, Emma met an old man named Henrik. His hands trembled slightly as he poured her tea. “You’re not planning to go into the forest, are you?” he asked. Emma smiled. “That’s exactly why I came.” Henrik’s expression turned pale. “People who follow the lantern never come back.” Emma laughed softly. “A lantern?” The old man leaned closer and lowered his voice. “Every night, after midnight, a single lantern appears deep inside Blackwood Forest. It moves slowly between the trees… as if someone is carrying it.” “Sounds like a night hiker,” Emma replied. Henrik shook his head. “No one holds the lantern.” That night, Emma prepared her camera and flashlight. “Tonight we’re exploring Blackwood Forest,” she whispered to her viewers. The forest entrance stood only a few minutes from the town. Tall pine trees formed a dark wall against the night sky. As Emma stepped inside, the sound of the village faded behind her. Soon there was only the wind… and the crunch of leaves under her boots. For nearly twenty minutes, nothing unusual happened. Emma began to think the villagers were just afraid of shadows. Then she saw it. A soft yellow light flickered between the trees ahead. A lantern. Floating. Emma stopped walking. “Okay… that’s strange,” she whispered. The lantern hovered about thirty meters away, gently swaying as if held by an invisible hand. It began moving deeper into the forest. Emma followed it. At first the distance stayed the same, but the deeper she walked, the darker the forest became. Her flashlight started flickering. “Probably the batteries,” she muttered. The lantern suddenly stopped. Emma stepped closer. And then she saw something that made her heart freeze. The lantern wasn’t floating. It was hanging from a rotted rope tied around a tree branch. But the rope was swinging… as if something had just let go. Emma slowly turned around. The forest behind her looked different now. The path she came from was gone. Instead, dozens of tall trees surrounded her in every direction. Then she heard it. Footsteps. Slow. Heavy. Circling her. “Hello?” Emma called out nervously. No answer. Only breathing. Very close behind her. Emma spun around. Nothing. But the lantern suddenly began to glow brighter. And in its light, she noticed something carved into the tree trunk beside it. Names. Hundreds of names. Scratched deeply into the bark. Tourists. Travelers. Explorers. All missing. Emma felt panic rising in her chest. The footsteps stopped. Then a voice whispered directly beside her ear. “Another one followed the light…” Emma screamed and ran. Branches tore at her jacket as she sprinted through the forest, desperately searching for the path. The whispering voice echoed behind her. “Don’t run…” “Stay…” “Join them…” The lantern light began appearing again between the trees ahead. But now there were many lanterns. Dozens. Each one swinging gently in the darkness. Emma realized something horrifying. Every lantern marked a place where someone disappeared. She kept running until she finally burst out of the forest and collapsed on the road leading back to the village. When she looked back, the forest was silent again. No lanterns. No footsteps. Nothing. The next morning, Emma packed her bags and left Blackwood Hollow without recording another video. But weeks later, hikers walking near the forest noticed something strange. A new lantern had appeared deep between the trees. And hanging beside it… was a small camera. Still recording. And if someone listens carefully to the final footage, they can hear Emma’s voice whispering from somewhere in the darkness: “Please… don’t follow the light.”
By Iazaz hussain20 days ago in Horror
My Neighbor Celebrates Valentine’s Day Every Night
When I first moved into the apartment building, I thought my neighbor was just lonely. His name was Victor. Mid-thirties, quiet, polite in that distant way some people are when they don’t want conversation to go further than “hello.”
By V-Ink Stories20 days ago in Horror
'WEAPONS' Review
Let me preface this by saying that I never watch trailers for new movies the majority of the time. To add more to that statement I normally don't watch them all the way through when I do watch them anymore. The reason for this being that in the last decade films began giving a little too much away in the trailer. That especially goes for the horror genre. Without rambling for too long about trailers lets get to the one at hand, 'Weapons'.
By Lyvia Jack22 days ago in Horror
Mon Ange (My Angel)
I was one of Louis XVI’s (sez) many black dot assassins. One wouldn’t suspect a woman, so it was easier to go through the city unnoticed, even without being on the arm of a man. I wore my hair differently (in a tight bun) and wore black street clothes. When I wore my hair in the popular noodle island curls with my signature white long teardrop earrings and my off-the-shoulder red ball gown, I became La Duchesse de DuBarry. While everyone else wore wigs, I slept in braids every night to achieve the curls they thought I naturally had. Oh, the blush was real. In those days a Vitamin D deficiency was favorable.
By Alexandra F22 days ago in Horror
Someone Is Watching -Chapter 3
The rain had stopped, leaving the city slick and glimmering, but the storm in Elena’s mind was only just beginning. She pressed her back to the apartment door, trembling, thinking that maybe — just maybe — she could get away. Her hands fumbled for the lock. For a moment, hope flickered. Then she saw it: the handle would not turn.
By Rosalina Jane24 days ago in Horror
The Homes Flagged for Follow-up. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
By eight each morning, our office smelled of coffee, disinfectant wipes, and printer heat, which is to say it smelled like concern that had learned to invoice. I unlocked the care-management dashboard and began assigning fifteen people to the homes where they would bathe strangers, sort pills, warm soup, and sign for it in blue ink.
By Jesse Shelley24 days ago in Horror








