
horror,Those Who Hear the Corridors
08.1.2026 | 18 Min.
Morning Noway truly arrived. The timepieces claimed it had, phones recalibrated themselves with biddable perfection, and a pale argentine suggestion of daylight pressed against the upper edges of the megacity, but the darkness remained threaded through everything, a residual presence that refused to be dismissed. From the basement, Mara could feel it moving above them, flowing along thoroughfares and through structures like a slow, intelligent current, pooling where light faltered and flinching where it burned too bright. The hum had softened into commodity nearly conversational, a constant murmur beneath the scrape of thrills and the

horror,The Hum Beneath the Streets
05.1.2026 | 19 Min.
By morning, the megacity had decided nothing was wrong. Mara stood at the edge of the sidewalk outside her structure, coffee cooling untouched in her hand, watching commuters sluice history with rehearsed incuriosity. Streetlights blinked off one by one as dawn strengthened, business signals cycled obediently through red and green, storefronts lifted their essence shutters. Normal asserted itself with aggressive confidence, as if reiteration alone could overwrite the night. Yet beneath the clatter of morning routines, Mara felt it, subtle but constant, the low hum threading through the world like a suppressed memory that

horror,,Doors That Should Not Exist
03.1.2026 | 18 Min.
Mara did n't sleep. She lay on the settee with the living room lights turned completely on, every bulb burning bright enough to make her eyes pain. The hum still dallied, faint but unmistakable, threading through the apartment like a memory that refused to fade. It sounded to come from far and wide and nowhere at formerly — from the walls, the bottom, the air itself. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw doors breathing in the dark, saw light sliding helplessly off a faceless shape that knew her name. At 213 a.m., she gave up pretending rest was possible. She sat up sluggishly, muscles stiff, and heeded. The rain had stopped. outdoors, the

horror,The Night the Lights Failed
02.1.2026 | 19 Min.
The power failed at exactly 1147 p.m., not with a flicker or a warning hum, but with a clean, decisive silence, as if commodity unseen had reached out and pinched the world between its fritters. One moment the streetlights outside Mara Ellison’s apartment window glowed their usual sickly amber, reflecting off rain-slick asphalt, and the coming they were gone, leaving the megacity naked and dark. The refrigerator cut offmid-rattle. The ceiling addict braked, soughed, and stopped. Indeed the distant noise of business sounded to pull back, swallowed by a unforeseen, unnatural quiet. Mara stood in her kitchen holding a minced mug of

horror,The Moral Edge
31.12.2025 | 16 Min.
The house had grown restless. Its palpitation coursed through Alex with a force that was no longer subtle, and the murk that followed him now moved singly, responding to the vestments of knowledge that flowed through him. Light fractured constitutionally across walls, bottoms, and ceilings, bending into insolvable angles that twisted perception and depraved reality. The whispers flowed constantly through Alex’s mind Observe Act Extend Integrate Belong But now, they carried a weight of challenge, blarneying him toward opinions that probed morality, consequence, and instinct.



Horror