I don’t know if anyone will believe me, and honestly, I don’t care anymore. I need to get this out somewhere.
I live alone in a small apartment. Nothing fancy—tiny kitchen, creaky floors, TV across from the couch, the usual. I’ve always liked having the TV on in the background. Static noise helps with the silence. Until last week.
It started with the reflection.
I was watching something late at night, the room mostly dark except for the flickering screen. I paused the episode to grab a snack. As I stood up, I saw it in the TV’s black screen—a shape. Behind me. In the hallway.
I spun around. Nothing. Just my coat hanging off a chair. I laughed it off. I really did.
But then the texts started.
Unknown Number:
do you always watch alone?
I blocked it. Of course I blocked it. But new numbers kept texting. Different ones. Always a little too specific.
Unknown Number:
the reflection likes you. you shouldn’t turn off the screen tonight.
I started unplugging the TV at night. But then the whispers began.
It’s not like they’re in the apartment. It’s like they’re in the silence. Behind the white noise. I turn off the fridge and they get louder. I leave the TV unplugged and the air feels heavier.
Last night, I gave in. I plugged the TV back in, just to see if it would stop.
And the screen was already on.
Static.
Except, it’s not random static. There’s a face in it. Barely visible, like it’s pressing against the glass from the other side. I swear it moved when I looked closer.
I’m not sleeping anymore.
If this is some prank, I don’t care. If this is real—I don’t know what it wants.
But if I go missing, check the reflection.
The Devil’s Wheel
“If you say yes,” said the Devil, “a single man, somewhere in the world, will be killed on the spot. But three million dollars is nothing to sneeze at, missus.”
“What’s the catch?” You squint at him suspiciously over the red-and-black striped carnival booth. You’re smarter than he thinks you are– a devil deal always has a catch, and you’re determined to catch him before he catches you.
“Well, the catch is that you’ll know you did it. And I’ll know, too. And the big man upstairs’ll know, I ‘spose. But what’s the chariot of salvation without a little sin to grease the wheels? You can repent from your mansion balcony, looking out at your waterfront views, sipping a bellini in your eighties. But hey, it’s up to you– take my deal or leave it.”
The Devil lights a cigar without a match, taking an inhale, and blowing out a cloud of deep, sweet-smelling tobacco laced faintly with something that reminds you of rotten eggs. If he does have horns, they’re hidden under his lemon yellow carnival barker hat. He wears a clean pinstripe suit and a red bowtie. No cloven hooves, no big pointy fork, but you know he’s the Devil without having to be told. Though he did introduce himself.
He’s been perfectly polite.
You know you need the money. He knows it too, or he wouldn’t have brought you here, to this strange dark room, whisking you away from your new house in the suburbs as fast as a wish. Now you’re in some sort of warehouse, where all the windows seem to be blacked out– or, maybe, they simply look out into pitch darkness, though it is the middle of the day. A single white spotlight shines down on the two of you.
“Wait a minute, wait a minute,” you say. “I bet the man is someone I know, right? My husband?”
“Could be,” the Devil says with a pointed grin. “That’s for the wheel to decide.”
He steps back and raises his black-gloved hand as the tarp flies off of the large veiled object behind him. The light of the carnival wheel nearly blinds you. Blinking lights line the sides. Jingling music blares over speakers you can’t see. The flickering sign above it reads:
THE DEVIL’S WHEEL
“Step right up and claim your fortune,” the Devil barks. “Spin the wheel and pay the price! Or leave now, and a man keeps his life.”
You examine the wheel.
The gambling addict
The doting boyfriend
The escaped convict
The dog dad
The secretive sadist
“These are all the possible men I can kill?” You ask, thumbing the side of the wheel. It rolls smoothly in your hand. Then you quickly stop, realizing that this might constitute a spin under the Devil’s rules. He flashes a smile at you, watching you halt its motion.
“Addicts, convicts, murderers– plenty of terrible options for you to land on, missus!”
“Serial wife murderer?”
“Now who would miss a fellow like that? I can guarantee that the whole world would be better off without him in it, and that’s a fact.”
The hard worker
The compulsive liar
The animal torturer
The widower
The desperate businessman
The failed musician
The beloved son
“My husband is on here too,” you say.
“Your husband Dave, yes. The wheel has to be fair, otherwise there’s simply no stakes.”
“I know what’s gonna happen,” you say, crossing your arms. “This wheel is rigged. I’m gonna spin it around, and it’ll go through all the killers and stuff, and then it’s gonna land on my husband no matter what.”
“Why, I would never disgrace the wheel that way,” the Devil says, wounded. “I swear on my own mother’s grave– may she never escape it. In fact, take one free spin, just to test it out! This one’s on me, no death, no dollars.”
You cautiously reach up to the top of the wheel and feel its heaviness in your hand. The weight of hundreds of lives. But also, millions of dollars. You pull the wheel down and let it go.
Clackity-clackity-clackity-clackity
Round and round it goes.
The college graduate
The hockey fan
The Eagle Scout
The cold older brother
The charming younger brother
The two-faced middle child
The perfectionist
The slob
Your husband Dave
Clackity-clackity-clackity.
Finally, the wheel lands on a name. A title, really.
The photographer
“Hmm, tough, missus, but that’s the way of the wheel. But hey, look! Your husband is allllll the way over here,” he points with his cane to the very bottom of the wheel, all the way on the other side from where the arrow landed. “As you can see, it’s not rigged. The wheel truly is random.”
“So… there really isn’t another catch?” You ask.
“Isn’t it enough for you to end a man’s life? You need a steeper price? If you’re really such a glutton for punishment, I’ll gladly re-negotiate the terms.”
“No, no… wait.” You examine the wheel, glancing between it and the Devil.
You really could use that three million dollars. Newly married, new house, you and your husband’s combined debt– those student loans really follow you around. He’s quite a bit older than you, and even he hasn’t paid them off yet, to the point where the whole time you were dating you watched him stress out about money. You had to have a small, budget wedding, and a small, budget honeymoon. Three million dollars could be big for the two of you. You could re-do your honeymoon and go somewhere nice, like Hawaii, instead of just taking two weeks in Atlantic City. You deserve it.
Even so, do you really want to kill an innocent photographer? Or an innocent seasonal allergy sufferer? Or an innocent blogger? Just because you don’t know or love these people doesn’t mean that someone doesn’t.
The cancer survivor
The bereaved
The applicant
Some of these were so vague. They could be anyone, honestly. Your neighbors, your father, your friends…
The newlywed
The ex-gifted kid
The uncle
The Badgers fan
“My husband is a Badgers fan,” you say.
“How lovely,” the Devil says.
Then it hits you.
Of course.
The weightlifter.
The careful driver.
The manager.
The claustrophobe.
Your husband Dave lifts weights at the gym twice a month. You wouldn’t call him a pro, but he does it. He also drives like he’s got a bowl of hot soup in his lap all the time, because he’s afraid of being pulled over. He just got promoted to management at his company, and he takes the stairs to his seventh-story office because he hates how small and cramped the elevator is.
“I get your game,” you announce. “You thought you could get me, but I figured you out, jackass!” “Oh really? What is my game, pray tell?” The Devil responds, leaning against his cane.
“All these different titles– they’re all just different ways to describe the same guy. My husband isn’t one notch on the wheel, he’s every notch. No matter what I land on, Dave dies. I’m wise to your tricks!”
The Devil cackles.
“You’re a clever one, that’s for sure. I thought you’d never figure it out.”
“Thanks but no thanks, man,” you say with a triumphant smirk. “I’m no rube. No deal. Take me back home.”
“As you wish, missus,” the Devil says. He snaps his fingers, and you’re gone, back to your brand-new house with your new husband. “Don’t say I never tried to help anyone.”
Link
It’s giving horror story dad joke edition
One of the first stories I posted on wattpad.
On there I'm at 71 short horror stories right now, I'm not sure if I will ever post all of the stories I wrote before on tumblr, but here is one.
Word count: 1105
TW: Psychological horror
I look up at the old school building, just for a second I see the cracks. The surrounding plants around it have started growing inside. Some of the windows are broken.
The broken bell goes off and it almost sounds like a muffled scream.
I quickly go inside.
Inside the right classroom I take a seat at my table, it is a scratched old table with graffiti, not done by me.
Slowly the classroom fills with my 'classmates', these dolls with keys in their backs. They enter with their rattling keys and stiff movements. Opening and closing their wooden mouths, like they are talking to one another. I can't hear them, but I'm not interested anyway.
Lastly, the 'teacher' enters leaving its books on the desk and 'starting the lesson'.
I don't care to listen to the clacking of its mouth. It doesn't matter anyway, ignoring is for the best and pretending.
At some point the 'teacher' points at me and stops.
Carefully I stand and walk towards it, followed by the empty stares of the other painted wooden faces.
It is quiet.
It has always been quiet.
My 'teacher' seems to have stopped working, so I stand behind it and gently turn it's key until it starts working again.
Then just as quietly as before, I return to my seat.
I stare out of the window, without actually observing what is happening. Well nothing is happening really. Nothing ever is.
Just nature taking over this school, this empty building.
Even during break I just stare outside, while those dolls are clacking to each other.
If I go anywhere the dolls will be mean to me, they will sometimes throw things at me or clack mean things about me. So it is better just to remain in one place. They are defective.
I return home without looking back.
I live in an old dollhouse, it's almost completely empty and always silent.
I love the silence.
I enjoy the emptiness.
The rest of the house is just like the city with plants growing everywhere, inside and outside the buildings.
All buildings are slowly breaking apart and I just ignore it.
It's all fake anyway.
It's all useless anyway.
Nothing matters here, just that I do what I have to do and return 'home'.
The next day when I go to 'school', something strange happens.
The 'teacher' introduces a new 'classmate', another doll.
With a key and a painted face, just like any other.
It takes the empty seat next to me.
The new student seems to try to get my attention, but I just start doodling in my workbooks. Pretending I don't see or hear her.
The day passes by quite quickly, and I return to my old dollhouse.
I walk up the creaking stairs and past the rotting woodwork.
In my room I stare out of the hole in the roof, at the dark, starless abyss, most people call the sky.
And just like always, another day has passed.
The next day I do the same as all the previous days.
Stare out of the window, turn a key and return to my seat.
Then lunch comes around.
The new student is getting more annoying.
It has even started jumping in front of me to get my attention, which made the other dolls clack their mouths like they were laughing.
It's becoming more and more difficult.
Then suddenly it locks it's wooden hands around my wrist.
No matter how hard I struggle, It won't let me go.
Then it started walking and I am forced to follow.
We go up to the rooftop.
"I need you to listen." The voice coming out of the doll sounds vaguely human.
While blocking the only exit, it let's go of my wrist.
What does this thing want from me? None of them ever try to contact me as long as I ignore them, why does this one do?
The new student puts a hand under its chin, then a short click could be heard.
She removes her face, I guess she was wearing a mask.
I look at her face, her nose, her eyes, her eyebrows... Everything about her looks too familiar.
She looks like...
me...
Why does she look like me?
"I need to speak with you, please listen." She pleads with my voice.
I don't like where this is going and I take a step back. She doesn't seem to mind though.
"I need you to start looking around you and not ignore everything."
I remain silent.
"Remember what the doctor told us, about the ignoring of bullies and unfortunate situations? Well he was wrong."
I stay quiet and stare past her at the door, so close yet so far away. I just want to ignore her and continue my day.
"You can't ignore everything, you've already done that too much. You need help. You need to tell others about what's going on and learn not to just take everything."
So annoying.
"I don't care... I can just ignore it." I mumble to myself.
"Please don't." the other me pleads, her eyes starting to look red and watery.
I don't answer and take a few steps closer to the door.
"No you can't leave!" She yells.
I glare at her: "You're not supposed to exist. The doctor wasn't the only one who told me to just ignore it. Everything is better this way."
Defeated, she moves aside, her head hanging down: "S-so it has already gone this far... I see, it really is too late."
In silence I continue towards the door.
As my hand brushes the door handle she suddenly seems to want to give it one more try: "This whole city will collapse on top of us! It will kill us!"
"Then let it collapse. I can't go back to the time, when I still observed, when I still listened and I still felt everything. That time was hell. It was worse than death."
"But it is not too late. You can still get the help you need, before your world will collapse!"
"I don't want it."
I shove her aside and return to class.
The classroom looks more in disrepair than before we left, but I ignore it.
As school continues on, more cracks start appearing and I haven't seen the other me since I left her.
She probably won't return.
She must have left.
Given up entirely.
Well it's not like she could change my mind or anything.
She has no power over this place, unlike me.
I don't want to leave this place.
Yes, it's empty and it's lonely.
It might all be breaking apart, but this is my only safe haven. My own place of peace and quiet.
My own safe little world.
When the teacher stops working while pointing it's finger at me again, I turn the key on his back and return to my seat.
See, it all works perfectly fine.
I'm perfectly fine.
Nothing is wrong.
As long as I just ignore it all
And then at last the cracked walls can't hold the ceiling anymore.
I can hear its creaking.
But like always... I just ignore it.
(here is another story I wrote a long time ago)
~~~
Imagine this: You’re just a normal, average guy, right? You take a few college classes here and there, you work a part time job—nothing special.
You work at an old convenience store late at night. It’s usually really slow at that time, so you spend your time reading superhero comic books. Every now and then, a customer might walk in and buy a pack of gum or bandaids or something.
So one night, your shift is nearing an end, and you’re almost done with your comic. You’re slumped back in your chair, feeling groggy.
You hear someone wall in thanks to the soft ring of the bell hanging over the door.
“Welcome,” you call out, eyes still glued to your book.
The stranger doesn’t respond, but many don’t, so you don’t think much of it.
Five minutes pass when the lights shut off. You curse under your breath as you set down your comic on the counter. It’s only when you look up, you realize it.
The stranger is standing right in front of you, right at the counter. How long was he there?
It’s impossible to see him clearly in the dark, even with the streetlights shining in from outside. He seems to be wrapped in a long, black trench coat, and his head is covered in a hoodie coming from under it. You can’t see his face, except for his eyes. You don’t know if you’re imagining it, but they appear to glow a sickly yellow and are lined with dark red veins.
You’re frozen. Your heart’s racing, but you can’t move. It felt like time itself had stopped.
Finally, logic enters your brain, and you jump from your chair. Stop looking at me like that! You don’t actually say it, but you almost do.
“I’m so sorry, it’s just a power outage, I’ll call someone. Sir? Are you okay?” you ask.
He doesn’t reply. You fumble for a flashlight.
So you continue. “I’m sorry about all this. This has never happened before, really. Can I borrow your phone?”
The lights flicker back on. You blink, struggling to adjust for a moment, when you realize it.
The man is gone.
Over the next few weeks, you keep seeing figures out in public that you swear is him. You catch him on a bridge up ahead, or disappearing behind a building at the corner of your eye.
You must have been tired that night, you need to keep telling yourself. So why do I keep seeing him?
You try to ignore the lingering figure. You pretend you don’t see it. But it’s getting harder and harder.
And he’s getting closer, and closer.
You become more terrified as time oasses. You scroll through the internet for hours, and flip through dozens of books. No answers..
You sleep with all the light on and a baseball bat under your bed—if you can even sleep at all.
He’s like a disease eating you. You begin to get weaker and weaker, and soon, you fall ill.
The thought of being stuck in bed scares you. You can’t run. And he knows this.
You ignore the doctor’s order to stay in bed, and one day, you pass out. You wake up in a hospital. You’re relieved to be surrounded by nurses and doctors.
You’re eating dinner one night when the power shuts off.
You press the button to call the nurse, but nothing happens. No lights, no sound, no nurse.
The room is getting colder and colder. You scream for a nurse. The feeling of alone-ness increases.
You’re relieved to head the door open. You say “Nurse! Thank you! There’s been a power outa-“
Glowing, yellow eyes.
He’s watching you, right at the foot of the bed. Towering over you.
“Who are you?l you scream. “Leave me alone!”
The figure doesn’t move. The room is getting colder, and it feels like your fingers are going to fall off. You scramble to get up out of bed, to run. Instead, you pummel right onto the ground.
The figure kneels in front of you, and you let out another blood-curdling scream. He takes off his hoodie.
And you see your own, smiling face staring right back at you.
~~~
Other stories by me:
One of my favorite short stories ever is this Creepypasta called Shut that Damned Door by WriterJosh. Highly recommend you read (or listen) late at night in the dark when you’re super tired
You're going for a stroll in the woods one day when you see a person approaching you on the same path you're walking on. From afar it looks like they don't have a face. That's a funny illusion, you think to yourself, but as you pass them you realize they actually don't have a face. Less than a minute later you see the same person approach again, exactly as they had a few seconds ago, and this happens another time, and then again and again, and you realize it's not just the faceless person that is the same. You hear the same exact bird chirps in the same exact order with regular intervals, go past the same trees including a tree stump with a cluster of mushrooms on it and a small ant hill. You want to stop and get your bearings but you can't stop, you just keep walking, passing by the same things and the same person over and over. You're starting to realize something about this person, too, that you hadn't realized before for some reason. They're wearing the exact same clothes you're wearing, they have the same hair, they're basically you. Somehow you know your face is beginning to disappear too, little by little, but you can't check because you can't stop walking and your arms won't stop moving in step with your feet. Soon your face is entirely gone just like the other person's face but you keep walking. You don't remember a time when you weren't strolling through these woods, seeing these same things over and over. You don't remember a time when you had a face.
THIS ONE IS REALLY GOOD
“Boys, don’t play in the woods! If you get mauled, you could die out there.”
That was the warning parents in our town told kids like me and my friend Beckett.
Technically, we obeyed them.
About a mile into the woods near our street was an abandoned bomb shelter. In the middle of the clearing was a slanted door jutting out of the ground, with two outward swinging metal panels that could be deadlocked from inside.
The furnished bunker had been stocked by some insane doomsday prepper in the 90s before they deserted it. Beckett and I discovered it unattended ages ago, making it the perfect safe, secret weekend hangout for two 10 year olds.
In the fall of my 5th grade school year, my parents announced that we were moving.
For old time’s sake, Beckett and I decided to chill one last time in the bunker. Saddened, I said goodbye to the piles of canned food, bottled water, flush toilet and electric generator.
“Pity you won’t get to try all this stuff” Beckett sighed. “Someone could survive for like 3 months with all the things down here”.
“Maybe” I laughed doubtfully.
Afterwards, I bid goodbye to him, shut the bunker door and went home. My family moved across state the next day.
I didn’t think about Beckett much after then. I’d made new friends and assumed he did too, which I imagined was why he never wrote.
In the winter of my 5th grade school year, that bunker suddenly re-enters my mind.
While opening a stationery cupboard in my classroom, the door jams. I can’t open it until I notice a chair blocking it from the outside. That’s when an insidious thought invades my head.
Could the same thing have happened to Beckett on that night? Could he be missing and alive in the bunker? I remember those words: “Someone could survive for 3 months down here”. Which means…
Immediately, I race from the school in panic, whizzing past confused students and teachers. Paranoid, I board a bus straight back to my hometown.
Reaching that sloped door on the forest floor, my worst fears are confirmed. A heavy boulder is perched on top, obscuring it. It must’ve rolled down the hill and pinned the door shut after I left. Adrenaline screeching, I throw myself at the boulder and heave it off.
Nothing could have prepared me for the unfathomable sight I see when I pry open the bulkheads. The boy I’d said goodbye to in the bunker is no more. In his place is a yellowed, emaciated, incoherent, balding, bearded…man.
While I went to college and became an elementary teacher, Beckett was trapped in that hole, screaming every night, completely alone.
If my mind ever recovers enough for me to teach 5th grade again, I’ll have a lesson for my schoolchildren.
Boys, don’t play in bunkers. If you get trapped, you could survive down there…
…for 20 years.
I always found my best friend's name completely ridiculous.
Found this really awesome tale on r/shortscarystories called Forget Me Not by RustySunset. Might even be one of my favorite Reddit stories ever.
~Art~ she/they/heShort Scary Stories 👻 @MonsterbloodtransfusionsAi ❌🚫
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