Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition
Chapter 1433: Story 1433: The One That Answers
CHAPTER 1433: STORY 1433: THE ONE THAT ANSWERS
The arcade’s shadows were thin shelter. Every broken archway framed a view of the plaza, where the tendril now arched high above like a pillar holding up the fractured sky. The darkness in the fissures overhead thickened, folding inward as though something immense was turning in its sleep.
The air changed. The cold that had been sharp and cutting became heavy, damp, clinging to their skin like a second layer. Mira’s breath no longer steamed—it vanished as soon as it left her lips, swallowed by the air itself.
A tremor ran through the ground, deeper than before, enough to send chunks of masonry falling from the arches. Elena ducked, shielding her head, then looked at Mira with wide, urgent eyes.
“It’s not just calling—” She stopped, her voice faltering as the sound reached them.
It wasn’t a roar, or a howl, or even anything they could place in nature. It was pressure. A low, rising hum that pressed into the spaces between bones, vibrating teeth in their sockets. The fissures in the ground widened in response, and from within them came a dim red glow, as if magma were bleeding through—but it pulsed like a heartbeat.
The tendril froze mid-motion. All along its surface, the Choir shapes began to thrash. Some tore themselves free, only to disintegrate in midair, their molten bodies collapsing into steam. Others screamed soundlessly as the tendril’s membrane stretched to absorb them faster.
Mira gripped the edge of the wall, her palms slick with sweat despite the cold. “It’s answering,” she whispered, and the words didn’t feel like hers.
From the largest fissure in the plaza’s center, something began to rise—not quickly, but with terrible inevitability. At first it seemed like another tendril, but as more of it emerged, the truth became clear.
It was a hand.
If it could be called that. The fingers were impossibly long, jointed in too many places, and each one ended in a hooked black claw that glistened like wet obsidian. The skin—or whatever covered it—was the same translucent membrane as the tendrils, but thicker, reinforced with lines of bone-like ridges beneath the surface.
The hum deepened. The hand flexed, and when it did, the cracks around it expanded outward like a spiderweb across the plaza.
Elena’s voice was a rasp. “That... thing’s bigger than the tower.”
The tendril that had pursued them bent low, curling toward the hand in what looked almost like reverence. Its tip touched the clawed fingers, and the contact sent a ripple through the ground that knocked Mira and Elena to their knees.
In Mira’s head, the voice returned—louder than ever.
The hinge turns. The key is ready. The gate will open.
The hand sank again, dragging its claws through the stone, carving trenches that filled instantly with the pulsing red light from below. The tendril followed, disappearing into the same fissure like a serpent diving into the sea.
And then, abruptly, silence.
The ground stopped moving. The air stilled. Only the faint glow from the cracks remained.
Elena swallowed hard. “We need to leave now.”
Mira didn’t argue. But as they crept from the arcade, she glanced back at the plaza—at the fissure still faintly pulsing.
Because deep down, she knew the silence wasn’t safety.
It was waiting.