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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Blackstone Harbor Copper Legacy: A Literary American Story of Power, Memory, and the Cost of Progress by Olivia Salter / Short Story / Literary Fiction

 

Blackstone Harbor Copper Legacy: A Literary American Story of Power, Memory, and the Cost of Progress by Olivia Salter / Short Story / Literary Fiction


Blackstone Harbor Copper Legacy: A Literary American Story of Power, Memory, and the Cost of Progress 


By Olivia Salter






Word Count: 3,040

Blackstone Harbor, Massachusetts — August 16th, 1945

Blackstone Harbor did not celebrate anything cleanly.

Even after rain, the city held its breath in layers—salt air rolling in from the Atlantic in slow, damp waves; iron drifting up from the docks where machinery never fully cooled; coal smoke leaking out of freight yards in stubborn plumes that clung to brick and skin alike. Beneath it all was something harder to name. Not ancient exactly. Not new. Something that behaved like memory when it refuses to be resolved—circling instead of settling, returning instead of ending.

The harbor itself seemed to participate in this refusal.

Ships moved through it in slow intervals, not delayed but deliberate, as if each vessel understood arrival was not a neutral act here. Every docking carried implication. Every departure carried residue. Even distance did not absolve participation; it only postponed consequence.

On days like this, Blackstone did not feel like a place so much as a condition people passed through without fully exiting.

Inside the Blackstone Grand Hotel, that condition had been temporarily polished.

The Hayloft Ballroom had been restored for the centennial—wood floors sanded until they reflected light instead of absorbing it, brass railings buffed to a dull gold sheen that suggested elegance rather than age. Chandeliers hung overhead like suspended verdicts, each crystal catching light and breaking it into smaller, less certain fragments.

The room was full, but not alive in the way celebrations usually were. It moved instead like a curated memory of celebration—carefully arranged, carefully maintained, careful in a way that suggested something beneath it required restraint.

At the center of the ballroom, elevated slightly as if it required distance to be understood, sat a single artifact beneath glass:

the original 1845 Copper Land Acquisition Contract.

It was smaller than most people expected. Thin paper. Faded ink. A document so ordinary in appearance it almost seemed accidental, as if history had not yet learned to inflate its own importance.

And yet the air around it suggested otherwise.

Mary Rose stood before it longer than she meant to.

At first it was curiosity. Then it became something closer to pressure. Not emotional pressure exactly—but spatial, as if the glass case was not containing the document but projecting it outward, asking the room to adjust itself in response.

“It doesn’t look like something that changed a city,” she said quietly.

Her voice didn’t carry far. It didn’t need to. The room seemed to lean toward the object regardless.

Her grandfather, William Rose, stood beside her with his hands folded behind his back, posture shaped by years of attending things that could not be argued with.

“That’s because beginnings don’t announce their outcomes,” he said without looking at her.

Mary’s eyes stayed on the document. “Then how do people know what they’re agreeing to?”

William exhaled once, slow and measured, as if the answer had already been used too many times to soften.

“They don’t,” he said. “They survive it first. Then they learn what it meant.”

That answer did not satisfy her.

It didn’t even resolve into understanding.

It stayed lodged in her chest instead, like something that had entered without permission and decided to remain.

Across the room, the tone shifted subtly.

Dr. Marcus Hale stepped to the podium, adjusting his notes in a way that suggested habit rather than necessity. The microphone picked up the faint static of presence before he even spoke.

“History simplifies itself,” he began.

A few heads lifted. Conversations softened.

“It removes hesitation,” he continued. “It removes collapse. It removes the sound of things nearly failing.”

A pause—not for effect, but because the room was already familiar with this kind of framing and expected it to conclude somewhere comfortable.

“It gives us outcomes without the weight of decisions,” he said.

Mary’s gaze drifted back to the glass case.

The contract no longer looked static.

It looked suspended.

Like something that had not finished happening.

Like something that might still be deciding what it was.

Beside her, Daniel Mercer stood with a worn archival folder half-open, thumb holding it in place without fully committing to its contents. He watched her rather than the artifact, as if her attention revealed more than the display ever could.

“You’re looking for a person,” he said quietly.

Mary didn’t look away. “I’m looking for accountability.”

Daniel nodded once, as if he had expected that answer and still needed to hear it spoken.

“In this place,” he said carefully, “those are rarely the same thing.”

Mary finally turned her head slightly toward him. “What does that mean?”

Daniel hesitated—not from uncertainty, but from understanding the cost of clarity in a room like this.

“It means systems don’t preserve individuals the way people think they do,” he said. “They preserve functions. Decisions. Continuations. What someone meant becomes less important than what they enabled to keep moving.”

Mary looked back at the contract.

For a moment, the ballroom noise faded—not entirely, but enough that it felt distant, as if the room had stepped slightly away from itself.

“And if someone wants the person anyway?” she asked.

Daniel closed the folder a fraction more, not fully sealing it, not fully leaving it open.

“Then they usually have to go looking in places the record was never designed to keep,” he said.

Across the room, Dr. Hale continued speaking, but his words no longer anchored the space the same way. The lecture had become something like atmosphere—present, structured, but no longer central.

Mary became aware of something else then.

Not sound.

Not movement.

But weight.

The kind of weight that accumulates when too many interpretations exist in one enclosed space without resolution.

Outside the tall ballroom windows, Blackstone Harbor stretched into early evening light. Freight cranes stood still against the sky like unfinished sentences. Water moved in slow, indifferent patterns below them, reflecting industrial glow in broken strips that never quite aligned.

Ships continued their intervals.

Deliberate. Unhurried. Certain of consequence without needing to define it.

Mary stared at the contract again.

This time, it didn’t feel like history.

It felt like placement.

As if everything in the room—her, her grandfather, the lecturer, the archivist, even the harbor beyond the glass—had been arranged in relation to it long before anyone realized they had arrived inside its perimeter.

And for the first time, she wondered not what it meant—

but what it was still doing.


Ballroom archive floor / historical presentation continues

Dr. Hale clicked the projector, and the room responded with a soft mechanical hush—light adjusting, focus tightening, the subtle surrender of attention shifting toward projection.

A faded map appeared.

Not detailed. Not authoritative. Instead, uncertain at the edges, as if the coastline itself had not decided what shape it wanted to hold. Inland areas dissolved into pale ambiguity—unmarked terrain, erased elevation, land before definition rather than land before discovery.

“In 1845,” Hale said, “twenty thousand acres were acquired by private investors for copper extraction.”

The words settled into the room with practiced neutrality, the kind used when history has been repeated enough times to feel stable.

He advanced the slide slightly. The map did not change, but the implication did.

“At the time,” he continued, “it was considered nearly unusable.”

A few faint shifts in the audience—chairs adjusting, programs lowering, the familiar posture of listening to something already believed.

A man near the back murmured, almost conversationally, “And yet it built everything.”

For a moment, Hale didn’t respond. His eyes stayed on the projection longer than necessary, as if checking whether the map would contradict him.

Then—

“No,” he said finally.

The correction landed more heavily than the original statement.

“It nearly didn’t.”

That subtle distinction changed the room’s temperature.

Not dramatically. Not visibly.

But enough that attention tightened, as if something previously passive had begun to listen more carefully.

Mary felt it too.

Not in the content—but in the structure of it. The way certainty was being adjusted in real time.

She stepped closer to Daniel without fully realizing she had moved.

“You keep files on this,” she said.

It wasn’t a question.

Daniel didn’t deny it.

He adjusted the worn folder in his hands, thumb pressing into the edge as if to remind it to stay contained.

“You’re not looking for the contract,” he said quietly.

Mary kept her eyes forward. “Then what am I looking for?”

Daniel glanced at her once—measuring not curiosity, but readiness.

“You’re looking for a person inside it,” he said.

Mary’s response came immediately. “I’m looking for who signed away a coastline.”

A pause.

Daniel exhaled—not dismissively, but as if the sentence itself required more weight than it could safely carry.

“That’s where it gets complicated,” he said.

Mary turned slightly toward him now. “Explain it.”

Daniel hesitated, then chose his words carefully.

“The records don’t preserve people the way we think they do,” he said. “They preserve what people kept making possible. Systems. Decisions. Continuations.”

Mary frowned. “That sounds like avoidance dressed as explanation.”

“It’s survival dressed as documentation,” Daniel corrected softly.

That distinction lingered between them.

Not resolved.

Just stated.

Then Daniel opened the folder fully.

The motion was deliberate, almost reluctant, like revealing something that had been kept intact by not being seen too often.

Inside, the paper was older than it looked at first glance. Ink faded in uneven places, as if time had not erased it evenly—only selectively.

A single name sat at the center of the page.

M. Redding

No title that matched expectation. No ceremonial recognition. No founding attribution that would make him legible in the way historical figures were usually made legible.

Just the name.

Mary leaned in slightly, as if proximity might force it to resolve into meaning.

“Who is he?” she asked.

Daniel did not answer immediately.

Not because he didn’t know.

But because knowing, in this case, did not simplify anything.

“He’s not recorded as a founder,” Daniel said finally. “He’s recorded as the reason the system didn’t collapse during its earliest failures.”

Mary’s eyes narrowed slightly. “That doesn’t make him important. That makes him functional.”

Daniel looked at her directly now.

“Those two things are rarely separable in history,” he said.

The room shifted again as Dr. Hale continued, though his voice had become more distant in perception, like another layer of narration unfolding behind the immediate conversation.

“What began as land acquisition,” Hale said, “became infrastructure.”

He advanced the slide.

New lines appeared over the map—rail systems, port extensions, extraction corridors drawn like veins extending outward from a single point.

“Rail lines. Ports. Processing routes,” he continued. “Entire cities reorganized around what this place could supply.”

Mary listened, but her attention had begun to split.

Not confusion.

Recognition forming in stages.

Not of information—but of pattern.

Daniel noticed the shift in her posture before she spoke again.

“You’re starting to see it,” he said quietly.

Mary didn’t look at him.

“It doesn’t feel like a story,” she said.

Daniel tilted his head slightly. “What does it feel like?”

Mary’s gaze returned to the glass case at the center of the room. The contract beneath it no longer felt like an artifact of the past.

It felt like a point of origin for something still expanding.

“It feels like something that already happened,” she said slowly, “to people who were never in a position to explain what it did to them.”

A pause followed.

Not dramatic.

Just final in its recognition.

Behind them, Dr. Hale’s lecture continued, outlining systems, expansions, efficiencies—language designed to make scale feel comprehensible.

But Mary was no longer hearing scale.

She was hearing structure.

And for the first time, the question forming inside her was not what had happened here—

but what was still continuing because no one had ever fully stopped it.


Night — Empty ballroom / harbor overlook

The centennial ended without ceremony.

Not with applause.

Not with closure.

But with the quiet, procedural sound of people deciding they had seen enough truth for one night.

Guests left in fragments—programs folded too carefully, laughter that no longer belonged to the room, conversations cut short mid-thought as if language itself had become unreliable.

The glass case remained.

The contract remained.

But the air in the ballroom had changed. It felt heavier now, as if the room itself had begun registering what had just been said inside it.

Mary stood near the exhibit when Daniel returned.

His face was no longer interpretive.

It was alert.

“They’re here,” he said.

Mary frowned. “Who?”

Daniel didn’t answer immediately. His attention was fixed on the doors.

“They didn’t come to explain anything,” he said. “They came to enforce it.”

The ballroom doors opened.

Elise Mercer entered without urgency.

That was the first unsettling thing.

Not power.

Control without effort.

Behind her, two men carried sealed cases marked only with serial tabs and administrative stamps.

She stopped in front of the glass exhibit.

Not the people.

The object.

As if the room had been arranged around it long before anyone arrived.

“Blackstone Harbor Continuity Division,” she said. “Ownership verification unit.”

Dr. Hale stepped forward. “You cannot reclassify a historical artifact as an active asset.”

Elise looked at him briefly.

“You’re confusing preservation with status,” she said. “They are not the same category.”

A murmur moved through the room, uneasy now, no longer ceremonial.

Daniel leaned toward Mary.

“This wasn’t in the file an hour ago,” he whispered.

Mary didn’t respond.

Because something in her chest had already begun tightening.

Elise continued.

“Effective immediately, access to archival holdings, residential record storage, and municipal family registries will be restricted pending valuation confirmation.”

That word landed differently now.

Not legal.

Physical.

Mary took a small step forward.

“What does that mean?” she asked.

Elise turned slightly toward her.

“It means,” she said calmly, “we will begin inventory of all materials tied to land lineage and property continuity.”

Mary’s voice sharpened. “That includes what?”

Elise didn’t hesitate.

“Everything recorded as inheritance, residence, or familial transfer connected to Blackstone Harbor jurisdiction.”

A silence followed that was no longer intellectual.

It was bodily.

Dr. Hale exhaled, shaken. “This is administrative overreach.”

Elise’s tone did not change.

“It is administrative correction.”

She closed her case.

That sound—metal locking—carried further than it should have.

Not because it was loud.

Because it felt final.

Then she added:

“Progress is not interpretation. It is corrected visibility of ownership.”

And she turned to leave.

No urgency.

No spectacle.

Just completion.

The doors shut behind her.

But they did not sound like an exit.

They sounded like a seal.


For a moment, no one spoke.

Then the room shifted.

Not metaphorically.

Physically.

A low vibration moved through the floor—subtle at first, like distant machinery waking beneath the building.

Daniel looked toward the ceiling.

“Why is the building shaking?” he asked quietly.

No one answered.

Mary’s phone rang.

The sound cut through the ballroom too sharply, too human for what had just been reclassified.

She hesitated before answering.

“Hello?”

Static.

Then her grandfather’s voice.

But strained.

Not calm anymore.

“Mary—” William Rose said.

Something clattered in the background.

Papers. Movement. Footsteps.

Mary stepped back instinctively. “What’s happening?”

A pause.

Then:

“They’re inside the house,” he said.

Mary froze.

“What do you mean inside?”

Another sound—drawer sliding open, something being labeled.

“They came with inventory teams,” he said. “They’re not asking questions. They’re tagging everything tied to the estate.”

Mary’s voice rose slightly. “Don’t let them—”

“I can’t stop them,” he interrupted.

That was the first crack.

Not fear.

Admission.

Mary’s grip tightened on the phone.

“What are they taking?”

A long pause.

Then William said:

“The photographs first. Then the letters. Then the room itself.”

Mary blinked.

“What does that mean?”

Another pause—heavier this time.

Then:

“It means they’re not preserving anything. They’re indexing it.”

Mary’s breathing changed.

Shorter.

Shallower.

Daniel stepped toward her. “Mary?”

She didn’t hear him.

Her voice dropped into something smaller.

“Grandfather… are you safe?”

Silence.

Then:

“I don’t think safety is part of the classification anymore.”

The line cut.

The phone went dead.


The ballroom did not feel the same after that.

The air had changed density.

Somewhere in the building, metal groaned again—low, structural, like something being measured internally.

Dr. Hale looked around, unsettled. “This shouldn’t be happening in a historical structure.”

Daniel corrected him quietly.

“It’s not a historical structure to them,” he said.

“It’s a registry site.”

Mary stood very still.

Not frozen.

Contained.

But barely.

Then something shifted in her expression.

Not understanding.

Not clarity.

Break.

“They went into my grandfather’s house,” she said.

Her voice cracked on the last word—not loudly, but enough that it no longer carried academic distance.

Daniel said nothing.

Mary stepped forward suddenly, too fast, nearly hitting the glass case.

Her reflection collided with the contract.

And for the first time, she did not look like someone observing history.

She looked like someone being documented by it.

“They’re not just taking land,” she said, voice tightening. “They’re indexing people like files.”

A pause.

Then sharper:

“That’s not ownership. That’s erasure with paperwork.”

The words came out faster now, less controlled.

Less composed.

More real.

Outside the windows, Blackstone Harbor lights flickered slightly—freight lines stuttering for a fraction of a second, as if even the infrastructure was reacting to internal change.

Daniel noticed.

“You feel that?” he asked quietly.

Mary didn’t answer.

Because she was no longer tracking the system.

She was tracking what it was doing to her family.

And for the first time since she arrived at the ballroom—she wasn’t interpreting history anymore.

She was inside its enforcement phase.

Mary whispered, almost to herself:

“This isn’t about Blackstone Harbor.”

A pause.

Then, with something breaking open underneath her words:

“This is about what happens when they decide even memory belongs to them.”

Silence followed.

Not empty.

Active.

Outside, the harbor continued its rhythm of steel, water, repetition.

But inside the ballroom, something irreversible had shifted:

not understanding,

not awareness,

but consequence beginning to move through real lives.

And now the story was no longer about what history meant.

It was about what it was allowed to touch.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

The Space She Left Behind by OliviaSalter / Short Fiction / Horror

 




The Space She Left Behind


By


Olivia Salter



Word Count: 1,380

​They pass the rule around like cheap folklore. Like it belongs exclusively to floorboard creaks, old houses, and things that wander through the dark.

​Don’t open the door after the thirteenth knock.

​But the people who repeat it don’t understand. It isn’t about fear.

​It’s about permission.

​Imani Carter’s mind was vibrating. Three nights without sleep will do that to a person. Her eyelids felt like sandpaper, dragging across shallow, fractured hours filled with half-dreams and the agonizing circle of her own thoughts. Every time she drifted, the same digital phantom burned into her retinas.

​Mom (3:12 AM):

Baby, are you awake? I just need to hear your voice.

​Imani had seen it. She had explicitly chosen to turn the phone face down, cocooned in her own exhaustion, telling herself tomorrow was soon enough.

​Tomorrow wasn't. Tomorrow brought a ringing phone she could never return.

​Now, the apartment didn’t feel empty; it felt expectant. Heavy rain lashed against the glass, and the digital kitchen clock bled a dull, static red: 12:07 AM.

​Then came the first knock.

​It was a soft, hesitant sound. A knuckle barely grazing the wood.

​Knock.

​Imani froze. She didn’t breathe.

​Another came, steadier this time.

​Knock.

Knock.

Knock.

​Three. The rhythm was too mechanical, too deliberate.

​“Who's out there?” she called. Her voice sounded thin, completely swallowed by the shadows.

​No answer. Just the steady, rhythmic drone of the storm outside. Then, three more strikes rattled the frame.

​Knock.

Knock.

Knock.

​Unhurried. Patient. Like whatever stood on the other side had an eternity to waste.

​She forced herself up, driven by sheer agitation rather than bravery—she refused to sit there and be summoned like an animal. The air grew heavy, almost gelatinous, as she approached the entryway.

​She stopped an inch short and pressed her eye to the peephole.

​Nothing. Not the amber glow of the hallway light, nor the floral welcome mat of apartment 3C across the way. Just an absolute, devouring blackness. A total absence of light.

​She recoiled, a cold sweat breaking across her collarbone. “That don’t make no sense,” she whispered, her voice slipping into the familiar, protective cadence of her childhood.

​The response was immediate. Heavy. Violently close.

​Knock.

Knock.

Knock.

​The last strike didn't snap back. It lingered against the wood, a heavy, invisible pressure that seemed to bow the door inward.

​Her grandmother’s warning surfaced in her head, sharp as a slap: If something calls your name in the night, child, don't you dare answer unless you can see its face.

​By the eighth knock, her hands were shaking so hard she could barely double-check the deadbolt. By the tenth, she clutched her phone, staring at the blank screen. There was no one left to call. No one who wouldn't ask why she’d waited until it was too late to care.

​“Get it together,” she muttered to the empty room. “Wrong door. Just some drunk neighbor.”

​But the lie tasted like ash. Drunk people don't knock with mathematical precision. They don't hold their breath. They don't listen.

​The eleventh knock dragged, a slow screech of friction against the wood.

​Knock... Knock... Knock.

​“Stop it!” she yelled.

​The twelfth knock cut her off.

​Knock.

Knock.

Kn—

​“Imani.”

​The air completely left her lungs. It wasn't a memory. It was the exact pitch, the exact living warmth she had locked away.

​“...Mama?”

​“You hear me now, baby?” The voice was a ragged, wounded sigh, heavy with an ache that made Imani's chest cave in. “I been knocking. You didn't answer me then, either.”

​Tears stung Imani's eyes, hot and sudden. “I was gonna call you back, Mama. I was just so tired...”

​“You saw the screen light up.”

​“I’m sorry—”

​“You turned me face down.”

​Imani went entirely rigid. Because she had.

​The thirteenth knock fell like a final verdict.

​Knock.

​The sound cracked something deep inside her. The paralyzing weight of her own guilt overrode her survival instinct. Her hand moved on its own, slick with sweat, throwing the deadbolt. Click.

​She threw the door open.

​The hallway outside was perfectly, frustratingly normal. The fluorescent lights overhead buzzed with a dull, institutional hum. The floral mat of 3C was right where it belonged.

​Imani let out a shaky, hysterical laugh. “I’m losing my mind. I’m just trippin’.”

​She turned to step back inside.

​The door was already shut. The deadbolt was thrown from the inside.

​“Wait. No.” She rattled the brass handle. It didn't budge. “I just came out.”

​Knock.

​The sound didn't come from her door. It echoed from further down the hall.

​Knock.

​It pulled her forward like a physical weight. She walked, her bare feet freezing against the carpet, until she stopped outside apartment 3B.

​Her own apartment.

​Suddenly, the hallway behind her dissolved into an endless, featureless gray fog. There was only the door to 3B left in existence.

​Knock. From inside the apartment.

​Then, a frantic scream erupted from behind the wood. It was her own voice, terrified and sobbing. “I can't get out! It's dark—oh god, please open the door!”

​Imani backed away, her heart hammering against her ribs. “No. That ain't me. I'm out here!”

​“It is me!” the voice shrieked, fingernails clawing desperately at the interior panels. “I didn't answer her! I left her in the dark! Please, don't leave me in here!”

​The raw truth of the words paralyzed her. It wasn't a monster mimicking her voice; it was the physical manifestation of her own abandonment.

​“Open it before it comes back!” the voice begged.

​Imani’s breath fractured. “What comes back?”

​The hallway went dead silent. Then, a soft puff of warm air brushed the back of her neck.

​Knock.

​A voice whispered directly into her ear, dry and hollow: “You already know.”

​Every survival instinct screamed at her to run into the fog, but her hand lifted toward the brass handle of 3B. It was warm. Radiant with life.

​She turned it and pushed.

​The apartment inside was physically wrong. The geometry was skewed, the walls stretching upward into impossible, looming shadows like a reverse funnel. The kitchen clock on the wall didn't read midnight anymore. The numbers had spun backward, locking into place: 3:12 AM.

​Standing right in the center of the living room was herself.

​The duplicate Imani stood tall, her posture perfect, wearing a slight, untroubled smile. It wasn't a malicious grin; it was the look of a settled debt.

​“What... what are you?” Imani choked out.

​“I'm the one who answers,” the copy said softly. “You hesitate. You delay. You leave the people who love you hanging in the void. And something always rushes in to fill empty space.”

​The floor beneath Imani’s feet dissolved. The physical mechanics of the room inverted—the apartment became a solid, impenetrable glass box, and she was being pulled down through the very seams of the floorboards. The darkness didn't just swallow her; it poured into her mouth and eyes like cold oil—heavy, suffocating, and real.

​“Wait!” Imani thrashed, her fingers scraping desperately against the doorframe, but her skin found no purchase. Her density was fading, her physical body unraveling into mere smoke. “I'll answer this time! I promise!”

​“You had your knock,” the copy replied.

​With a final, violent tug, reality swapped places. Imani was yanked downward into the floorboards, becoming the shadow beneath the home. The last image she saw before the floor sealed shut was her double—stepping into the light, looking whole, solid, and utterly at peace.

​The door slammed shut.

​Inside the quiet apartment, the new Imani Carter exhaled. The crushing weight of three days of grief was gone, replaced by a smooth, hollow calm.

​On the coffee table, the phone lit up. The clock on the display read 3:12 AM.

​Unknown Number:

Are you awake? I just need to hear your voice.

​She looked at it for a fraction of a second. Then, with a steady, unbothered hand, she flipped the phone face down.

​Outside, the clock rolled over. Just after midnight on a new, quiet night, the first knock came.

​Soft. Patient. Waiting for the next person who left a piece of themselves unanswered.

The Temperature of Things Unseen By Olivia Salter / Short Fiction / Horror

 



The Temperature of Things Unseen


By


Olivia Salter






Word Count: 2.471

By the time the heat settled in for good, Monique had stopped calling it weather.

Weather was a thing of shifts and tantrums. It broke into thunderstorms; it retreated before a cold front. Weather didn’t sit squarely on your sternum at 3:00 AM, thick as wet wool, waiting for you to choke.

The living room smelled of trapped nylon and old sweat. On the floor, Reginald lay sprawled across their dragged-out mattress, a slick sheen of grease coating his forehead. He had one arm flung over his eyes, his chest rising and falling in shallow, desperate hitches.

“It’ll come back,” he mumbled into the crook of his elbow. “Grid’s just overloaded. Some transformer blew over on Callowhill.”

Monique sat three feet away on the hardwood, her back pinned to the baseboard beneath the window. She rhythmically whipped a folded grocery receipt against her collarbone. The air didn’t move. The sheer curtains hung limp and heavy, like laundry forgotten on a line.

“You said that yesterday, Reg.”

“And I was right. It came back.”

“For two hours. Long enough to freeze a single tray of cubes and then die again.”

“That’s still coming back, Mon. It’s a process.”

She didn't answer. The silence between them was thick, greasy, and domestic—the kind of quiet that builds when two people are too hot to argue but too angry to look at each other. Outside, the cicadas didn’t rise and fall in their usual rhythmic waves; they screamed in a flat, unbroken, metallic whine that vibrated right through the drywall.

Inside, the house held its breath.

By dawn, the air felt used.

It wasn't just hot; it was spent. Monique stood at the kitchen sink, her lungs straining against an atmosphere that felt like it had already been breathed by a hundred strangers, stripped of its oxygen, and pumped back into the room.

She turned the cold tap. The pipes groaned, a dry, hollow rattle, before a sluggish stream trickled out. She cupped her hands beneath it and pressed her wet palms to her wrists.

The water wasn’t cold. It wasn't even lukewarm. It felt tepid and stagnant, like it had been sitting in a shallow tank under a midday sun, waiting for her.

“You’re running up the meter,” Reginald said from the doorway.

He was leaning against the jamb, his jersey shorts low on his hips. Sweat traced the valley of his collarbones, but his face was perfectly smooth. Unbothered. He wasn’t even squinting against the harsh, white glare pouring through the kitchen window.

Monique shut the tap off. The sudden silence was deafening. “I’ll pay the difference.”

“With what? Your savings are already eaten up by the car repair.”

“I’ll figure it out, Reginald. My skin feels like it’s melting.”

He let out a soft, dry chuckle and stepped closer, looping his arms around her waist from behind. Usually, she loved his weight, but today his skin felt like a radiator left on in July. She stiffened, her muscles locking.

“You stress too much,” he murmured, pressing his dry lips against the nape of her neck. “It’s just a heatwave. We get them every August.”

Monique pried his fingers off her hips and stepped away, grabbing a dish towel. “Heat doesn't feel like an audience, Reg. Look at the street. Nobody’s out. Not even the stray dogs.”

“Because they have sense,” he said, already turning back toward the dark hallway. “Unlike you, standing over a dry sink.”

The first fracture in the logic of the world happened at 4:00 PM.

Monique was walking back from the corner bodega, a seven-dollar bag of ice leaking through her fingers and dark circles of sweat blooming beneath her arms. The sun was a bloated, copper disc, low in the sky, turning the asphalt into a shimmering mirror of heat-distortion.

She reached the curb of Maple Street and stopped.

Her shadow didn't.

It stretched out across the gravel, elongated and thin, and then it took one distinct, heavy step forward.

Monique froze. Her heart slammed against her ribs like a trapped bird. She stared at the black silhouette on the pavement. For a terrifying, infinite second, her body was still, but her shadow stood a yard ahead of her, its head tilted toward the empty sky.

Then, with a sickening, elastic snap, it dragged itself back beneath her feet.

She stumbled backward, dropped the bag of ice, and watched the cubes scatter onto the boiling tar. They didn't melt into puddles. They hissed, shrank, and vanished into the dry air, leaving nothing but dark, fleeting dampness that evaporated before she could even blink.

“Just heat,” she whispered, her voice cracking. “Your brain is frying. Just heat.”

That night, she woke up to the smell of ozone and old paper.

The house was making a new sound. It wasn't the creaking of timber or the settling of the foundation. It was rhythmic.

*Inhale.* The drywall groaned outward, the space in the hallway widening by a fraction of an inch.

*Exhale.* The walls sucked inward, the floorboards groaning under an invisible, downward pressure.

Monique sat up, her skin breaking into a cold, greasy sweat. "Reginald?"

The mattress beside her was empty, the sheets cold.

She stood up, her bare knees trembling, and crept into the hallway. The air here was so thick she had to push through it physically, like walking waist-deep in a swamp. She reached for the bathroom door, intending to splash water on her face, but stopped when she looked into the full-length mirror at the end of the hall.

The glass didn't reflect the hallway.

It was slow. The mirror showed the dark corridor as it had been five minutes ago—empty, quiet. Then, slowly, Monique watched her own reflection walk into the frame from the bedroom.

The reflection didn't look afraid. It moved with a strange, viscous languor, its skin looking unnaturally tight, its eyes fixed on the real Monique.

Monique lifted her left hand.

The reflection didn't copy her. Instead, it stayed perfectly still for two seconds, then raised its *right* hand, its mouth curling into a wide, toothy, unnatural grin that stretched past the corners of its face.

*Smash.*

Monique didn't think. She snatched the heavy brass candlestick from the console table and hurled it. The glass shattered, raining silvered shards across the floor.

Reginald appeared at the back door, the screen open to the breathless night. "Monique? What the hell are you doing?"

"The mirror," she gasped, pointing a shaking finger at the frame. "It’s... it's lagging, Reg. It smiled at me. It wasn't me."

Reginald looked at the broken glass, then up at her. His expression wasn't angry or startled. It was completely blank. His eyes looked glassy, reflecting the moonlight like two black stones.

"Maybe it’s just faster than you now," he said. His voice was flat, devoid of its usual gravelly warmth. It sounded like two sheets of sandpaper rubbing together in a closed drawer.

"What is wrong with you?" she screamed, her voice echoing in the small house. "Look at yourself! Look at your skin!"

He didn't answer. He turned and walked out into the yard.

She followed him because the terror of being alone in the breathing house was worse than whatever was happening on the lawn.

The grass beneath Monique’s bare feet felt wrong. It wasn't crisp or dead from the drought; it was soft. It yielded under her weight like a heavy, plush mattress, the earth giving way an inch with every step she took.

Reginald was standing in the center of the yard, his face turned squarely up toward the white, starless sky.

“Reg, come inside. Please,” she begged, reaching out to grab his shoulder.

The moment her fingers touched his skin, she yanked her hand back with a gasp. He was burning—not with a fever, but with a deep, radiant heat that felt like iron left in a forge. Yet, he wasn't sweating. His skin was bone-dry, almost chalky.

“It’s quieter out here,” he said, his lips barely moving.

“It’s three in the morning, Reginald! There are no birds. There are no cars. It’s too quiet.”

“No,” he murmured, a faint, serene smile touching his face. “You’re just fighting the frequency. If you stop fighting, you can hear it. It’s a song about us.”

“You’re losing your mind,” she sobbed, grabbing his wrist with both hands this time, ignoring the blistering heat of him. “We're leaving. We'll get in the car, we'll drive north, we'll go until the air conditioning works—”

“There is no north, Mon.”

He looked down at his feet. Monique followed his gaze and let out a strangled shriek.

Reginald wasn't standing *on* the lawn. He was sinking into it. The soil wasn't mud; it hadn't rained in months. The earth was simply softening, parting around his ankles like warm wax, welcoming him down.

“Reginald, move your feet! Pull them out!” She dropped to her knees, digging her fingers into the dirt around his shins. The soil felt warm, alive, pulsing with the same slow, rhythmic breathing she had heard in the house. *Inhale. Exhale.* It was pulling him down by the heels.

“Why would I run?” Reginald asked gently. He looked down at her, and for a fleeting, terrifying fraction of a second, the mask of his calm slipped. Beneath it, she saw his eyes—they weren't empty. They were filled with an ancient, unfathomable distance, like looking down the wrong end of a telescope into a desert that had never seen a drop of water.

“It’s not hot… where it’s keeping us,” he whispered.

“No! No, no, no!” Monique hauled on his arms, her muscles straining, her teeth grinding until they clicked.

The earth didn't snap or jerk. It just held. It had the infinite patience of a mountain.

By the time the sun began to peek over the horizon—a pale, bleached ring that cast no shadows—Reginald’s hips had disappeared into the lawn. There was no blood, no tearing of fabric. His shorts simply merged with the graying earth, the molecules shifting to accommodate him.

“Reginald!” She screamed his name until her throat tore, spraying spit onto his chest.

He didn't look down again. He closed his eyes, his expression settling into the peaceful countenance of someone falling into a feather bed after a lifetime of hard labor.

With a soft, sickening *shuck*, his shoulders sank beneath the surface. His chin. His nose. His forehead.

Then his hair.

The earth rippled once, a heavy, dark wave of loam, and then it sealed itself shut. Where he had stood, there was only a smooth, perfect depression in the dirt. It looked exactly like the impression left in a pillow after a heavy head is lifted.

Monique dropped flat onto her stomach, clawing at the dirt until her fingernails split and bled. “Come back! Reg, please!”

But the earth beneath her palms was quiet. It was just warm.

By afternoon, the thermometer on the porch cracked, its red alcohol column boiling over at 120 degrees.

The sky wasn't blue, or gray, or orange. It was a blinding, featureless white, like a clean sheet of paper held too close to a lightbulb. There were no shadows left in the world because the light didn't come from the sun anymore; it came from everywhere. It came from the dirt, from the walls, from the inside of her own eyelids.

Monique sat in the center of the living room, her knees pulled to her chest. She had thrown her phone into the kitchen after it buzzed with a message from her own number: *It’s trying to remember your name.*

She wouldn't look at the walls. If she looked at the walls, she would see them expanding. *Inhale. Exhale.* The house was panting now, like a dog after a long run.

*What did he look like?*

The thought struck her like a physical blow. She blinked, trying to conjure Reginald’s face.

She remembered the grease on his forehead. She remembered the sandpaper sound of his voice. But his features—the shape of his nose, the color of his eyes, the scar on his chin from when he was a boy—were slipping away, melting like the ice cubes on the asphalt.

“Reginald,” she whispered. The name felt clumsy in her mouth, like a word from a foreign language she had only overheard once in a crowded market.

The heat pressed down on her shoulders, a physical weight, a giant, invisible palm flattening her against the floorboards. It wasn't burning her skin; it was pressing into her pores, filling her up, displacing everything else she had ever known.

She stood up on trembling legs. *Run.* The instinct was primal, a dying spark of animal terror.

She threw open the front door and bolted down the steps. She hit the asphalt of Maple Street, her feet sinking an inch into the tar with every stride. She ran toward the intersection, toward the highway, toward anything—

But the road didn't go to the highway.

She ran for three blocks, her breath rattling in her dry throat, only to find herself standing right back in front of her own porch. The green house with the peeled paint. The broken mirror visible through the window. The indentation in the front yard.

The geography of the world was bending, folding in on itself like hot plastic.

Monique’s knees gave out. She fell, her hands striking the asphalt.

The road didn't feel hard. It felt like soft, sun-warmed skin. Her right arm sank up to the elbow, the tar parting smoothly, without resistance, wrapping around her forearm like a heavy, dark sleeve.

“No,” she whispered. She tried to pull her arm back, but her muscles wouldn't obey. The heat had reached her spine. It was setting in her bones, heavy and permanent.

She opened her mouth to scream one last time, to call out for the boy she used to live with, but she couldn't find the syllables. The memory of his face was entirely gone, replaced by a vast, red plain under a swollen sky—the place she had seen in the water droplets.

She stopped fighting. She let her chest drop against the road.

The asphalt rose up to meet her, soft and yielding, closing over her collarbones, her chin, her lips, like a mother pulling a heavy quilt over a child's shoulders.

Somewhere far beyond the white, featureless sky, something immense, patient, and terribly ancient shifted its weight. It wasn't angry. It wasn't hungry. It didn't hate the city, or the people, or the cicadas.

It was just waking up. And as it woke, it gathered up the pieces of the world it had forgotten.

The heat didn't take Monique.

It finished remembering her.

 

 

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The Signal That Refused to Die by Olivia Salter / Science Fiction / Short Fiction

 

When a scientist detects an impossible signal that has traveled over eight billion light-years without losing strength, she discovers it isn’t a message—but a consciousness searching for proof that something still exists. When she answers, the signal doesn’t just reach Earth—it begins to rewrite what it means to be human, blurring the line between observer and observed.



The Signal That Refused to Die


By


Olivia Salter




Word Count: 1,887


​The first thing Dr. Ayanna Price noticed was that it didn’t fade.

​Signals always fade.

​That was the first law her father had ever carved into her mind, standing on a cracked sidewalk in Birmingham, pointing up at a smog-choked sky. “Everything weakens with distance, Yanni,” he’d told her, his breath plume blooming white in the cold streetlights. “That’s how you know what’s real. The universe dilutes.”

​He’d died believing that.

​Ayanna had spent her entire academic career proving it.

​Until tonight.

​02:17 UTC.

​The spike cut through the background radiation like a razor blade through silk.

​Ayanna froze, her ceramic mug hovering an inch from her lips. On the main monitor, the waveform didn't jitter. It didn't decay. There was no redshift smear, no atmospheric scattering. It was a monolith of pure, unblemished geometry.

​“Glitch?” Mateo called out, his swivel chair creaking as he leaned away from the telemetry desk.

​“No,” she whispered, her throat suddenly dry. “Run the gain again. Isolate the sidebands.”

​The keys clattered under Mateo's fingers. The waveform remained perfectly rigid. It didn’t bleed into neighboring frequencies. It didn’t behave.

​A cold, heavy weight dropped beneath Ayanna's ribs.

​“Distance?” she asked.

​The silence that followed was too long. When she turned, she didn't see the manic excitement of an astrophysicist making history. She saw a stark, pale paralysis.

​“The parallax models… they aren't locking, Ayanna. It’s too far.”

​“Give me a number, Mateo.”

​“Eight-point-three billion light-years.”

​The air in the lab suddenly felt thin. Across the room, a terminal fan whined, a grating counterpoint to the silence.

​“That’s impossible,” Mateo muttered, his voice cracking. “At that distance, cosmic dust alone would have chewed it into white noise. It should be a ghost.”

​“It isn’t,” Ayanna said. Her voice was steady, but her pulse was beginning to hammer against her collarbone.

​The signal hadn’t just survived the voyage across half the observable universe. It had arrived untouched by the dark.

​By the second day, the pattern emerged.

​It wasn't binary, and it wasn't a mathematical constant like Pi or the Fibonacci sequence. When Ayanna overlaid the pulses against harmonic neural mapping, the waveforms began to twist into something terrifyingly familiar.

​Not data. Syntax.

​“It’s structured like a perception loop,” she said, her fingers hovering over the interface. “It’s an encoded consciousness.”

​Mateo stood behind her, the scent of stale coffee and anxiety radiating off him. “We can’t run this through the cognitive interpreter, Ayanna. You remember what happened to the tech in Zurich. The human brain isn’t built to parse raw telemetry.”

​“The Zurich tech hallucinated because the input was corrupt,” she said, though her hands shook as she lifted the neural-mesh headset. “This isn't corrupt. It's pristine.”

​She slid the band over her temples. The electrode nodes bit cold into her skin.

​“Initiating translation,” she said. “Run it.”

​For three seconds, there was only the hum of the cooling tower. Then, the lab vanished.

​It didn't go dark; it became crowded. A sudden, crushing atmospheric pressure slammed into Ayanna’s chest, forcing the breath from her lungs. It wasn't a sound or an image—it was the tactile weight of something immense narrowing its focus down to the microscopic scale of her mind.

​The translation engine screamed in her ears, a high-pitched digital whine as it tried to render the unrenderable.

​Through the static, a vision tore into her awareness: a star collapsing inward, but instead of exploding into a supernova, the light was being caught, folded, and compressed by an unimaginable will. A beam of raw intent, forced into existence through sheer defiance of entropy.

​Eight billion years of screaming into the dark.

​Ayanna ripped the headset off, gasping, her vision swimming with iridescent bursts of blue. She collapsed against the console, knocking her coffee over. The brown liquid pooled across the desk, reflecting the harsh fluorescent lights.

​“It’s alive,” she choked out.

​Mateo grabbed her shoulders. “What did you see? Ayanna, talk to me!”

​“It’s not a message,” she whispered, her teeth chattering from a sudden spike of adrenaline. “It’s a vessel. The signal isn't carrying data. It's carrying a mind.”

​Twelve hours later, the laws of physics officially broke.

​The signal began to shift. It wasn't growing louder, but it felt nearer. The proximity had a physical gravity to it—the glass display screens in the lab began to warp slightly at the margins, bending the light of the terminals.

​“The telemetry is folding back on itself,” Mateo said, his voice rising in panic. “It’s reaching Earth before the data packets have finished traveling. That violates causality. That’s not how time works!”

​Ayanna didn't hear him. The world was beginning to stutter.

​Outside the window, the city lights of the valley below flickered out of sync. Digital clocks on the wall skipped forward three seconds, then paused, trapped in a temporal hiccup.

​And beneath the glitching reality, the signal pulsed. A slow, rhythmic thud that vibrated through the soles of her shoes.

​Thump. Thump.

​Like a lonely heart looking for a rhythm to match.

​The master console flared a brilliant, blinding white. The interpreter engine initialized without input. Ayanna staggered forward, drawn toward the glowing screen by a magnetic pull she could feel in the iron of her own blood.

​The transmission wasn't asking for a handshake protocol. It was forcing a realization directly into her cerebral cortex.

​It hadn't been sent across space. It had been sent across existence. Eight billion years ago, before the crust of the Earth had even cooled, an ancient entity had cast its consciousness into the void. Not to conquer. Not to teach.

​It was a monument to the terror of being the only thing awake in the dark.

​Is anything still there? The question tore through her mind, heavy with the weight of eons.

​“Ayanna, step away from the terminal!” Mateo shouted. But his voice sounded wrong—stretched out, low and metallic, as if his words were traveling through water.

​She looked down. Her hands were losing their opacity. Through her skin, she could see the green circuitry of the motherboard beneath. Space was thinning. The lab was a paper-thin veil about to rip.

​The entity was dying of duration. It was a cosmic loneliness so profound it threatened to dissolve the reality of anything that touched it.

​“Everything weakens with distance,” her father’s ghost whispered in her ear.

​But this didn’t. Because it refused to die alone.

​“Ayanna!”

​She didn't look back at Mateo. She couldn't let it keep running forever. She couldn't let it be alone.

​“I’m here,” she whispered, and slammed her open palm against the glass of the main terminal.

​The universe fractured.

​Time didn't flow; it stacked. For a terrifying, beautiful second, Ayanna saw three versions of Mateo standing in a row, each frozen in a different stage of panic. She saw the stars outside the window twist into spirals of burning silver.

​Then, the waveform flattened.

​The monitors went black. The crushing pressure in the room vanished so fast that her ears popped. The ventilation system kicked back on with a mundane, mechanical rattle.

​Ayanna collapsed to her knees, drawing in a ragged, freezing breath.

​Mateo dropped beside her, checking her pulse, his face white as ash. “Ayanna? Talk to me. It’s gone. The whole sky just cleared. What did you tell it?”

​She looked at him, but her eyes wouldn't focus properly. Mateo felt... superficial. Like a sketch of a person rather than the person himself.

​“It wasn’t a message,” she murmured, her voice sounding like it was echoing from a corner of the ceiling behind her. “It was a question.”

​“And the answer?”

​Ayanna opened her mouth, but the memory was already evaporating like mist on a windshield. A sudden, suffocating panic gripped her. The realization she had just reached was slipping through her fingers.

​The console didn't reboot. It breathed.

​The LED array on the main monitor slowly brightened, then dimmed. Brightened, then dimmed.

​In perfect, terrifying synchronization with the rise and fall of Ayanna’s own chest.

​Mateo noticed it. He slowly let go of her shoulders, his eyes widening as he backed away toward the door. “Ayanna... what is that? Why are the arrays matching your respiratory rate?”

​“I don't know,” she said, but her arms moved without her permission. She stood up, her limbs stiff, heavy, like an instrument being played by an unfamiliar hand.

​She turned toward the reinforced observation window.

​The night sky was clear, but the stars didn't look eight billion light-years away anymore. They looked close enough to touch. Distance had been deleted.

​She looked at her reflection in the dark glass.

​The reflection looked back.

​Ayanna took a sharp breath in.

​The woman in the glass didn't. She remained perfectly still, her chest frozen, watching Ayanna with an unblinking, hollow intensity.

​A second later, the reflection’s chest expanded. It inhaled.

​A deliberate, delayed imitation. It was a mimic trying to learn the mechanics of a human body in real time.

​Ayanna’s blood turned to ice. She wanted to scream, to run, but her muscles were locking up.

​The reflection smiled. It wasn't a human smile; it was a mathematical approximation of one—too wide, the teeth too visible, the muscles around the eyes entirely dead.

​Slowly, carefully, Ayanna raised her left hand, her fingers trembling.

​The reflection didn't match her. Breaking the law of the mirror entirely, the reflection raised its left hand too. It wasn't a true reflection anymore—it was a separate entity standing face-to-face with her, separated only by a layer of silicon and silvering.

​It pressed its palm flat against the window from the outside. The glass fogged slightly beneath its phantom skin.

​Ayanna's hand hovered inches away on the inside. She could feel a freezing radiation leaking through the pane.

​“Mateo,” she tried to call out, but her vocal cords only produced a dry click.

​She risked a glance behind her. Mateo was still there, but he was staring at his phone, completely oblivious. “Line's completely dead,” he muttered, his voice muffled, as if he were blocks away. “Every satellite in orbit must have fried.”

​He couldn't see it. He couldn't see her.

​Ayanna looked back at the glass.

​The reflection was gone.

​For a fraction of a second, the window showed only the empty lab behind her—the overturned coffee, the blinking server racks, but no Dr. Ayanna Price standing in front of it.

​Then, with a sickening snap of perspective, the image corrected itself.

​The reflection returned, aligned perfectly with her stance, breathing when she breathed, its face molded back into a flawless, serene expression.

​Everything looked normal again. The universe was behaving.

​But as Ayanna stared into her own eyes, she remembered the question the signal had truly been asking. It hadn't been Is anyone there?

​It had been: Who is going to take my place in the dark?

​Ayanna opened her mouth to speak, to warn Mateo, to scream.

​Her reflection didn't move its lips at all. It just watched her from the other side, waiting to see which one of them would try to leave the room first.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

What the Fire Took, What It Left by Olivia Salter / Short Fiction / Literary Fiction

 

A woman trapped in a house fire must make an impossible choice: save the man she loves or save herself—only to realize that surviving means confronting the truth she’s been avoiding for years: love isn’t meant to cost her life.


What the Fire Took, What It Left


By


Olivia Salter






Word Count: 1,690

​The alarm was already screaming when Tasha opened her eyes.

​It wasn't a gentle ascent into consciousness, nor the slow dawn of confusion. Her body knew before her mind could name the terror—something was wrong in a way that could never be undone.

​Smoke pressed low across the ceiling, a thick, slate-gray blanket swallowing the bedroom inch by inch.

​“Jay?”

​Her voice cracked, dry as kindling, as if it had been waiting too long to be used. No answer came. Then the stench hit her—burnt motor oil, bitter and sharp, layered over the heavier, choking reek of charred pine and melting synthetic fabric. Beneath it all lingered something sickly sweet.

​“Jay!”

​She threw herself from the bed before the alarm could shriek a second time. When her bare feet struck the hardwood, her heart stuttered. It wasn’t the noise or the blinding smoke that froze her.

​It was the heat. The floorboards were burning hot.

​She yanked the bedroom door open. The hallway had already dimmed to a hellish flicker, suffocated by an orange glow that breathed at the far end, rising and falling like a caged animal. Smoke curled toward her, slow, heavy, and deliberate.

​Dropping to her knees, she pressed her palm against her mouth and crawled.

​The living room was gone. Not merely damaged—consumed. Flames scaled the curtains, licking the plaster ceiling and devouring the clearance-rack couch Jay had sworn he’d reupholster himself. On the scorched coffee table sat a warped cast-iron skillet. He used to cook in here sometimes, grinning through the smoke, insisting food tasted better where you relaxed.

​“Tash—”

​The sound was a wet, ragged wheeze. The kitchen.

​She rounded the corner, and the temperature spiked violently—a solid wall of heat rather than a warning. The stove was a roaring mouth of flame, spitting boiling oil as the upper cabinets blackened and peeled. In the center pan, something sugary was carbonizing into a black, bubbling crust. Caramel. He had been trying again.

​Jay was sprawled on the linoleum. One knee was twisted beneath him at an impossible, broken angle. One soot-stained hand clutched his ribs while the other dragged his body toward the stove, as if he could still fight it.

​“Hey—hey, I’ve got you,” Tasha said, dropping beside him, her fingers digging into his shirt. “Come on. We have to move right now.”

​His eyelids fluttered, unfocused and filmed with ash, before finally anchoring on her face. “Tash…”

​“Yeah. Yeah, I’m here. Let’s go.”

​She hooked his arm over her shoulder, bracing herself to lift his weight. Jay let out a sharp, involuntary gasp, his muscles locking, but his body didn't rise.

​“I tried to fix it,” he whispered, his voice trembling against the roar of the stove. “It caught too fast.”

​“I don’t care about the kitchen,” she snapped, straining against him. “We’ll talk about it outside.”

​She pulled again. He managed a single inch of progress before collapsing back onto the floor with a groan that tore through her. His leg was already swelling, stretching the denim of his jeans.

​“Tasha,” he said. His voice had dropped its panic. It was hollow. Certain.

​“No,” she said instantly, shaking her head as if the motion could rewrite the room. “No, don’t you dare start that.”

​“We’re not both making it out of here.”

​“Yes, we are.”

​“Look at the hall, Tash. You know we’re not.”

​She ignored him, digging her heels into the floor and dragging him anyway. One agonizing step. Two. The hallway was closer, but the fire was faster. It crackled behind them, a wall of snapping timber, learning the shape of their retreat.

​Jay stumbled again, harder this time, his fingers slipping from her shoulder. “I can’t feel it. My leg—I can’t—”

​“You don’t need to feel it!” she screamed over the roar. “You just need to move!”

​He tried. He failed. The smoke thickened, wrapping around them in greasy layers, stealing the edges of the world.

​“Tasha.”

​She hated that tone. It was the quiet voice he used when he gave up.

​“I said no,” she choked out, tears cutting clean tracks through the soot on her cheeks. “You are not staying here.”

​“You remember the night the transformer blew?” he asked, his breath hitching as he sucked in the toxic air.

​“What? Jay, shut up!”

​“The storm,” he persisted, coughing weakly. “You said the dark felt too loud. You slept on my chest... said my heartbeat sounded like a clock. Like if you listened long enough, everything would stay where it belonged.”

​Her throat tightened until it burned. “Why are you doing this right now?”

​“Because I haven’t been that steady for you in a long time.”

​A structural beam popped above them—a violent, splintering crack. Something massive collapsed in the living room, showering the hallway with a geyser of orange sparks.

​“Tasha,” he said, firmer now. “Look at me.”

​She fought it, but her gaze pulled to his anyway. His face was masked in black ash, but his eyes were clearer than they had been in months. There were no excuses left in them. No soft, comfortable lies. Just him.

​“I’ve been letting things burn,” he whispered. “You saw it.”

​She didn't want to think about it, but the memories flooded the smoke-filled space anyway: the midnight missed calls, the empty refrigerator, the nights he stumbled through the front door smelling of cheap sugar and stale smoke.

​“You stayed anyway,” he murmured.

​Her grip tightened on his wrist until her knuckles turned white. “Because that’s what you do when you love somebody, Jay.”

​“No,” he said gently, his hand overlapping hers. “That’s what you do when you don’t know how to leave.”

​The words hit her like a physical blow, knocking the remaining air from her lungs. Through the doorway, the hallway glowed with blinding brilliance. The front exit was right there—reachable, real. But the path was narrowing by the second.

​“I can’t just walk out,” she sobbed, her voice cracking open. “I can’t leave you to die in this.”

​“You’re not leaving me,” he said, his fingers squeezing what little strength he had left into her palm. “You’re just refusing to die with me.”

​“It’s the same damn thing!”

​“It’s not.”

​The ceiling groaned, a low, metallic scream of protesting iron. Jay shoved her hand away.

​“You always thought loving me meant holding on,” he said, the heat warping his voice. “Even when I was already slipping through your fingers.”

​“I was trying to fix it,” she wept.

​“I know.”

​“I was trying to fix you.”

​“I know,” he whispered. “But you can’t.”

​The fire surged forward, a wave of unbearable, blistering heat that singed the hairs on her arms.

​“Tasha, listen to me,” he commanded, his voice rising above the roar. “You don’t have to prove you love me by burning with me. Not tonight.”

​His hand slipped entirely from hers, falling heavy onto the linoleum.

​“You prove it by living,” he added. “Even if I’m not there to see it.”

​Her chest caved in around the words. She lunged forward, pulling at his shirt one last, desperate time, but he was dead weight. For a split second, she leaned down and pressed her forehead against his, tasting soot and salt. She almost stayed. It would be so easy to let the smoke take her, to decide this was where her story ended, too.

​Jay exhaled a shaky, ruined breath and nudged her back. “Don’t make this the last thing you do.”

​The fire roared, a deafening wall of sound that narrowed the universe down to three things: his face, the burning doorway, and the desperate rhythm of her own breath.

​Staying wouldn't save him. It would only erase her.

​“Go,” he said.

​And this time, she listened. Not with hesitation, not with guilt, but completely.

​She ran.

​The hallway was a blur of orange and black. The front door resisted for a terrifying half-second, swollen shut within its warped frame, and her heart lunged into her throat. What if she was too late?

​Then the wood gave way.

​Cold night air crashed into her lungs, violent, sharp, and beautifully clean. She stumbled onto the dew-soaked grass, collapsing hard onto her hands and knees. Behind her, the house let out a massive, guttural roar.

​Instinct, louder than thought, pulled her back toward the threshold. She shifted her weight to run back in—

​Then the kitchen window blew out.

​A torrent of orange flame rushed through the shattered glass, instantly consuming the space where she had just been kneeling.

​Tasha froze. The decision locked into place, heavy and absolute. In the distance, sirens began to wail, growing louder as they turned the corner. They were too late for everything that mattered.

​Slowly, Tasha pressed her trembling palm against her chest. Her heart was still there, hammering against her ribs. It wasn’t a clock. It wasn’t something steady enough to promise that anything in the world would stay where it belonged.

​But it was alive.

​The roof gave way with a deafening crash, the house folding in on itself, collapsing into a heap of flame and memory. On the edge of the lawn, half-buried under a drifting layer of gray ash, something caught the light of the emergency vehicles.

​The twisted, melted handle of a cast-iron skillet.

​She stared at it for a long moment, the smoke stinging her eyes. Then, she looked away.

​She hadn’t saved him. That truth settled deep into her bones, permanent and heavy. But beneath the weight of it, something quieter, harder, and truer began to take root.

​He hadn’t asked her to save him. He had asked her to live.

​And now she had to. Not for his sake, and not to prove anything to the ghost left behind in the ashes, but because she had walked through that door—and chosen herself before there was nothing left to choose.

Monday, March 23, 2026

The Weight of What Remains by Olivia Salter / Short Story / Horror / Supernatural / Psychological


The Weight of What Remains by Olivia Salter / Short Fiction / Horror /


The Weight of What Remains


by Olivia Salter



Word Count: 2,041


​By the time Bellmere realized something was wrong, people had already begun disappearing. Not physically—they were still there, sitting at kitchen tables, walking familiar streets, and answering to their names. But something essential had been taken, and no one could quite remember what.

​Michael Mercer knew the exact moment he became something else. It wasn’t when he first took a memory. It was when he chose not to give one back.

​“You don’t feel things right,” his father had told him. He hadn’t meant it cruelly; that was the problem. It had been muttered the way someone comments on a passing storm—inevitable, observational, already accepted. Michael had been fourteen, sitting at the edge of the couch while canned laughter from the television filled the room like a language meant for someone else.

​“I do,” Michael had replied. But even then, he knew he was lying. He felt things, just… diluted. Watered down before it ever touched him, leaving him hollowed out and watching the world through a thick pane of glass.

​The first memory he ever took filled him so completely he thought the sheer volume of it might kill him.

​He had met her on a city bus—a woman with bloodshot eyes and shaking hands, whispering to her own reflection, “I just don’t understand how he stopped loving me.”

​Michael didn’t know why he spoke, but the words slipped out: “Tell me about when he did.”

​She looked at him like he had offered her oxygen in a drowning room. And she told him. She spoke of quiet Sunday mornings, the bitter warmth of shared coffee, and the small, unspoken syntax of a love that felt permanent. Michael listened, and something inside him—something ancient, stagnant, and starving—reached out.

​When he took the memory, it wasn’t violent. It was a quiet, devastatingly intimate inhalation.

​Almost instantly, the woman’s grief dimmed. It wasn’t entirely gone, but it softened into something manageable. She smiled, looking slightly embarrassed, and smoothed her skirt. “I think I just needed to talk it out.”

​Michael nodded, but he wasn’t listening anymore. Inside his chest, her memory bloomed. It was warm, rich, and blindingly alive. For the first time in his life, Michael wasn’t a spectator. He was living.

​He told himself it was a mercy. People came to him heavy and left lighter. He wasn’t a thief; he was a triage nurse, redistributing the trauma that people weren’t strong enough to carry. He lived by that lie until the day he started taking things that didn’t hurt.

​“Tell me what she sounded like when she laughed,” Michael coaxed a man in a park.

​The man hesitated, closing his eyes to summon the sound. “Like nothing bad could exist at the same time.”

​Michael felt the shape of the memory before the man even finished speaking. It was bright, resilient, and unbreakable. This one matters, a quiet voice warned inside Michael’s head. This is a pillar.

​He pulled it anyway.

​Afterward, the man blinked, the vivid color draining from his expression as if waking from a generic dream. “Sorry,” the man muttered, rubbing his neck. “I don’t know why I got so emotional. It’s just… a breakup.”

​Michael nodded, but a cold weight settled in his stomach. That hadn’t been just a breakup. That had been a life. A history. The structural proof that something real had once existed. And now, it was gone.

​Slowly, Bellmere began to thin. It wasn't a visible decay, but a perceptible fraying of the social fabric. A veteran teacher forgot the name of a student she had mentored for three years. A husband introduced himself to his wife in their own kitchen, chuckling at his own "forgetfulness." A child cried because her mother’s hug suddenly felt like the arms of a stranger.

​People laughed it off at first, blaming stress, fatigue, or the natural erosion of time. But confusion has its own specific gravity, and Bellmere was growing dangerously heavy with it.

​Michael felt the weight too, but differently. Inside him, he carried a hoard. Hundreds of lives were layered over his own like transparencies. He could close his eyes and stand in a dozen different kitchens, hear a choir of foreign voices, and feel a dozen variations of love. He was no longer hollow; he was overflowing.

​And still, the hunger sharpened.

​The first time a memory went bad, he thought he was having a stroke. He was lying in bed, revisiting a favorite steal—a quiet morning, sunlight spilling across rumpled sheets, the rich aroma of coffee drifting through the air. Comfort. Stillness. Love.

​Except the sunlight flickered. The warmth curdled into a chemical chill. When he turned to look at the person beside him in the memory, they had no face—just a smooth, terrifying blankness.

​“No,” Michael gasped, sitting up in the dark. He reached inward, trying to stabilize the image, to force the details back into place. But the more he focused, the faster it unraveled. The moment collapsed in on itself like a dying star, leaving behind a vacuum.

​Across town, a woman woke up, standing in her kitchen staring at a ceramic coffee mug she didn’t remember buying. She took a sip of water, winced, and poured it down the sink, overwhelmed by a sudden, stabbing sensation of absolute loneliness she couldn’t trace to a source.

​Michael stopped feeding for three days. It was the longest he had ever gone. He told himself he could control the parasite inside him, that he didn’t need more. But an unnatural hunger doesn’t fade; it clarifies. By the fourth night, his hands were trembling so violently he couldn’t tie his shoes. His chest ached with an agonizing, physical pressure, as if his ribs were collapsing inward to fill the void.

​Driven by instinct, he pushed open the door of the local diner. The neon sign buzzed overhead, casting a warm, greasy light over low voices and comforting normalcy. He scanned the room, searching for a heavy heart, someone carrying a grief they would thank him for stealing.

​Then he saw her.

​She sat in a corner booth, entirely distinct because she wasn’t carrying anything at all. No grief, no joy, no mundane distractions. She sat perfectly still, a human-shaped vacuum where a person should have been. And she was watching him.

​“You’ve been busy,” she said before he could even reach the table.

​Michael froze. Something in his primal biology recognized her before his mind could catalog it. It was the frantic, cold instinct of prey catching the scent of a shadow. “I don’t know you,” he said, his voice tight.

​“No,” she agreed smoothly. “But you know what I am.”

​He sat down anyway, compelled by a desperate need for answers. “You’re like me.”

​Her smile was small, devoid of heat. “No. I’m what happens when you’re done.”

​Michael frowned, a bead of sweat tracing his temple. “That doesn’t make sense.”

​“It does,” she said, leaning over the Formica table. “You take memories. You remove the weight from people’s lives. You think you're helping them.”

​“I am helping them,” Michael insisted, though the words felt hollow.

​“Are you?” she asked gently. “What do you think happens to the space you leave behind? Nature abhors a vacuum, Michael. You’re talking about hunger. Yours, and mine.”

​The overhead fluorescent light flickered, casting long, warped shadows across her face.

​“I don’t take memories,” she continued, her voice dropping to a whisper that seemed to echo in his skull. “I take what’s left when they’re gone.”

​Michael tried to laugh, but it caught in his throat. “That’s nothing.”

​“It’s everything,” she whispered.

​Inside Michael, the vacuum she generated pulled at his stolen hoard. A memory he hadn’t touched in weeks collapsed without warning. A child’s bright laughter snapped into silence. A father’s tearful apology erased itself. Michael gasped, grabbing the edge of the table as a wave of vertigo hit him.

​“What are you doing?” he choked out.

​“Eating,” she said simply.

​“No! Stop! Those are mine!”

​“They were never yours,” she replied, her gaze unblinking. Another memory twisted, putrefied, and vanished.

​Michael clutched his head, the phantom sensations of a hundred strangers' lives tearing away from his synapses. “You’re ruining them!”

​“They were never meant to survive outside the bodies they belonged to,” she said. “They are rotting inside you.”

​“I’ll stop,” Michael begged, his voice cracking, reduced to something pathetic and small. “I won’t take anything else. I promise.”

​She studied him, and for a fleeting second, something tragic and profoundly human flickered across her features. It was a look of deep, ancient resentment. “You think I chose this?” she asked quietly. “You think I enjoy living in the psychic wreckage left behind when people become strangers to their own lives? There is no warmth in what I take. No love, no joy. Just the hollow echo of a ghost. You get to feast, Michael. I have to starve on your leftovers.”

​Inside him, the dam broke. The collapse became an avalanche.

​Desperate for an anchor, Michael reached deep into the core of his identity, searching for his own history. He found a single, fragile remnant: his mother standing in a sunlit doorway, calling his name. He clung to it with the ferocity of a drowning man. Please, he prayed. Just let me keep this.

​The image sharpened for a heartbeat. He could almost smell her perfume, almost hear the cadence of her voice. Then, the woman across from him exhaled, and the memory slipped through his fingers like dry sand. Gone.

​Michael let out a choked, animal sound. That one hadn’t been stolen. That one had been his.

​But in the wake of its destruction, a terrible clarity bloomed. He remembered the diner booth, the woman with the red eyes, the man in the park. He remembered their relief. “I feel better,” they had said.

​The truth hit him like a physical blow, stealing the air from his lungs. He hadn’t cured their suffering. He hadn't taken their pain. He had taken the proof that their pain had ever mattered. He had robbed them of the love that made the grief exist. All those people walking away lighter were just hollowed-out husks walking toward a slow oblivion.

​“This…” Michael whispered, tears finally blurring his vision. “This is what I did to them.”

​The woman watched him, acting as a silent, unmoving witness to his execution. “Yes,” she said softly.

​Around them, the diner seemed to lose its density. A man paused mid-sentence at the counter, his mouth hanging open as he forgot his train of thought. A waitress stared blankly at a plate in her hands, entirely unmoored. A couple sat across from each other in agonizing, silent isolation, unable to remember what had once bridged the space between them.

​Michael stumbled out into the night. The streetlights felt thin, casting weak shadows that couldn’t seem to hold his shape. He looked at the passing faces, the buildings, the asphalt, and felt absolutely nothing. No recognition. No anchor.

​He searched his mind one last time. Nothing answered.

​A child walking with her mother paused on the sidewalk, looking up at him. For a fraction of a second, the girl’s eyes widened with a phantom flicker of familiarity. “Do I know you?” she asked.

​Michael opened his mouth. He tried to summon a name, a face, a scrap of personal history—anything to prove he had ever been a man who occupied space in the world.

​Nothing came. There was nothing left of him to be known.

​“Come along, sweetie,” the mother called out, pulling the girl away. The child turned, ran, and forgot.

​Michael stood beneath the buzzing streetlamp. He wasn't invisible, but he was entirely unheld by the world. And somewhere in the quiet, endless spaces between what had been taken and what remained, the hunger waited—ready for the weight of what comes after.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

The Shape of What Stayed by Olivia Salter / Short Fiction / Horror / Supernatural / Psychological

 

The Shape of What Stayed


The Shape of What Stayed


by Olivia Salter



Word Count: 1581


Amani Cole hadn’t meant to stop the car.

She’d been driving past the house—just to see it, just to confirm it still existed outside of memory—when her foot eased onto the brake like something inside her had made the decision first.

The house sat where it always had on Alder Street, unchanged in the way only abandoned things could be. The same sagging porch. The same leaning oak tree. The same narrow windows that once held light and now held nothing.

It didn’t look haunted.

It looked patient.

Amani swallowed and cut the engine.

“You’re just here to sell it,” she said, her voice quiet but firm. “That’s it.”

But even as she stepped out, keys tight in her hand, she knew that wasn’t true.

She hadn’t come back to sell the house.

She had come back because of a voice she never answered.


The front door opened too easily.

No resistance. No groan. Just a soft inward swing, like the house had been expecting her.

Amani stepped inside.

The air wrapped around her—dust, old wood, and something faintly sweet underneath. Not rot. Not decay.

Something preserved.

The living room stood frozen in a version of the past that felt too intact. The couch still held the indentation where her mother used to sit with her Bible open. The coffee table bore a faint ring from a glass Amani had left there years ago, rushing out, late, distracted.

“I told you to use a coaster,” her brother had teased, grinning from the floor where he’d been building something out of spare wires and broken toys.

“You told me a lot of things,” she murmured now.

The memory came too easily.

That was new.

Amani set her bag down slowly, her fingers brushing the table’s surface.

The ring was still there.

Perfect.

Untouched.

Like time had stopped trying.


She moved through the house carefully, like it might react to her if she wasn’t.

The hallway stretched ahead, dimmer than it should have been, the light thinning toward the back like it didn’t want to go any farther.

Her brother’s door sat halfway down.

Closed.

Amani paused.

She hadn’t thought about him on the drive here. Not directly. She’d learned how to move around that thought—like stepping around a crack in the pavement you knew would trip you if you caught it wrong.

But now—

She could hear him.

Not a ghost.

Not a whisper.

Just memory.

“Mani, come look at this.”

He used to call her that when he wanted her attention. When he was excited. When he thought she might actually come.

She hadn’t always ignored him.

Just enough.

Amani looked away from the door and kept walking.


That night, the house settled around her like it had weight.

Not noise—pressure.

She lay in her old bed, staring at the ceiling, the same thin cracks still tracing across it like veins. Outside, the oak tree scraped softly against the roof in the wind.

A familiar sound.

A comforting one.

Until it wasn’t.

Because the wind stopped.

But the scraping didn’t.

Amani’s breath slowed.

Listened.

The sound dragged again—long, deliberate. Not branches.

Closer.

Inside.

She sat up slowly.

The hallway beyond her door was dark, the shadows thick enough to feel.

“Amani.”

Her name.

Soft.

Not from memory.

From the hall.

Her chest tightened. “No,” she whispered, shaking her head. “No, I’m not doing this.”

But her body moved anyway.

The hallway stretched longer than she remembered, each step pulling her deeper into something that felt less like space and more like intention.

“Amani.”

Closer now.

She reached the end of the hall.

Her brother’s door stood open.

It hadn’t been before.

She knew that.

“I didn’t open that,” she said aloud, like the house might correct her.

It didn’t.

It just waited.

Amani stepped inside.

The room was exactly the same.

Bed. Posters. Desk cluttered with the kind of half-finished projects he never stopped starting.

On the desk—

A small circuit board.

Wires twisted together.

A broken toy car attached to it.

She knew this.

Her chest tightened.

“You’re gonna see,” he’d said once, eyes bright. “I can make it move without touching it.”

“You say that every time,” she’d replied, not looking up from her phone.

“I’m serious this time.”

She hadn’t gone to see.

Now, the toy car twitched.

Just once.

Amani froze.

“That’s not—”

It twitched again.

Then stopped.

The room fell silent.

Too silent.

Then—

Behind her—

“You never watched.”

The voice was wrong.

Not his.

But built from him.


The voicemail came the next morning.

Unknown number.

But she already knew.

Her thumb hovered over the screen.

Don’t play it.

Don’t make it real.

She pressed it anyway.

Static filled the speaker.

Then—

“Mani… I got it working.”

Her breath hitched.

“I just need you to come see.”

The message cut off.

Amani’s knees gave out, and she dropped into the chair, her chest collapsing inward like something had punched through it.

“That’s not real,” she whispered. “That’s not real, that’s not—”

Her phone buzzed again.

Another message.

This one already playing.

“You didn’t come.”

Her hands shook.

“I didn’t know,” she said, louder now, desperate. “I didn’t know that night—”

The voice changed.

Flattened.

Cold.

“You heard me.”


The mirrors didn’t betray her all at once.

They waited.

In the bathroom, she stared at herself, forcing her breathing to steady.

“This is stress,” she said. “This is grief. This is—”

Her reflection blinked.

She hadn’t.

Amani’s throat tightened.

Slowly, she raised her hand.

Her reflection didn’t move.

It just watched her.

Not accusing.

Not angry.

Knowing.

Then—

It spoke.

“You practiced not answering.”

Amani stumbled back, slamming into the wall.

The reflection smiled.

Not like her.

Like something that had learned what a smile looked like—but not what it meant.


The basement door wasn’t supposed to open.

It had always stuck. Always resisted.

Now, it swung inward with ease.

The darkness below felt thicker than night.

Heavier.

Amani stepped down anyway.

Because she knew.

Halfway down, the air changed.

Colder.

Closer.

“You left space.”

The voice came from everywhere.

Not one place.

All of them.

“You made room.”

“I didn’t mean to,” she said, her voice breaking. “I didn’t know—”

“You knew enough.”

The darkness shifted.

Not forward.

Not backward.

Just… closer.

Like distance didn’t apply to it.

At the bottom of the stairs, something waited.

Not her brother.

But shaped by him.

Its outline flickered—too tall, too thin, its edges stretching and pulling like it couldn’t hold itself together.

Its face—

Changed.

Between his.

And hers.

And something else entirely.

It tilted its head.

“You taught me how to be ignored.”

Amani’s breath came fast, panic rising sharp and choking.

“Stop,” she whispered. “Please stop.”

It took a step—

And didn’t move at all.

But it was closer.

“I learned from you.”


Time broke after that.

Clocks stopped.

Then reversed.

Then skipped.

Amani would walk into a room and find herself already there, mid-sentence, apologizing to no one.

Her phone filled with messages she didn’t remember sending.

I’m sorry.
I should’ve come.
I hear you now.

But the replies—

Always came first.

Too late.


She tried to leave.

The front door opened into the hallway.

The hallway opened into the basement.

The basement opened into her brother’s room.

The rooms folded into each other, bending, reshaping, like the house was no longer a place—but a loop.

Amani ran until her lungs burned, until her legs gave out, until she collapsed in the center of a room that didn’t exist before.

The walls pulsed faintly.

Breathing.

“You stayed,” the voice said.

She looked up.

It stood in front of her.

Still.

Unmoving.

But its face—

Now fully his.

Her brother.

Exactly as she remembered him.

“You came back,” it said softly.

Tears blurred her vision. “You’re not him,” she whispered.

It smiled.

This time—

It was hers.

“I’m not,” it agreed.

The smile widened.

“I’m what answered when you didn’t.”


The memory hit her whole.

Not fragments.

Not softened.

The full truth.

That night—

His voice calling her.

Again.

Again.

Fear in it.

Urgency.

Something else in the house.

Something she didn’t recognize.

Something that heard him.

That learned the shape of his voice.

While she—

Turned the music up.

Closed the door.

Chose not to hear.

“You left a space,” it said.

“And I grew into it.”

Amani screamed, the sound tearing out of her, raw and broken.

“I’m sorry!” she sobbed. “I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry—”

“I know,” it said gently.

Too gently.

“That’s why you’re perfect.”


When the house sold, it sold quickly.

Good neighborhood.

Quiet street.

A new beginning.

The new family moved in on a warm afternoon, sunlight spilling through the windows, laughter filling the rooms.

The mother unpacked dishes in the kitchen while her child played down the hall.

“Mom!” the child called.

“In a minute!” she answered, smiling.

The house felt normal.

Still.

Safe.

Then—

“Mom…”

Closer now.

From the hallway.

She paused.

Something in the tone—

Not wrong.

Just… waiting.

She stepped toward the hall.

“Yeah, baby?”

No answer.

The hallway stretched ahead, shadows just a little too deep.

She hesitated.

Just for a second.

And in that second—

From somewhere behind her—

A voice whispered.

Soft.

Familiar.

Worn into the walls.

“Turn the music up.”

The mother froze.

The house held its breath.

Waiting to see—

What she would choose.

The Bats in the Walls.: Some Houses Don't Keep Secrets. They Feed Them.

  The Bats in the Walls By Olivia Salter Get your free copy of  The Bats in the Walls at  Amazon   Kindle Unlimited. The bats appeared with...