Chapter 1450: Story 1450: The Bone Corridor - Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition - NovelsTime

Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition

Chapter 1450: Story 1450: The Bone Corridor

Author: Sir Faraz
updatedAt: 2025-08-30

CHAPTER 1450: STORY 1450: THE BONE CORRIDOR

The crack in the ribs spat them out into a long tunnel, narrow enough that their shoulders brushed both sides. The walls were not smooth—each surface jutted with broken fragments of bone, some sharp enough to slice through fabric.

Mira pressed her palm to one jagged point. It was warm.

Not from heat—from blood.

The corridor throbbed faintly, not in a steady heartbeat, but in uneven, twitching spasms, as if the thing they were inside was agitated. Somewhere behind them, the muffled clicks of the rib-blade creature echoed, now joined by the low groan of the chamber they’d fled.

“We have to keep going,” Mira said, shoving herself forward.

Elena’s voice was shaky. “It’s... closing in.”

She was right. The ceiling and floor were inching closer together. At first, it was almost imperceptible, but after a few paces, they had to stoop. The bones underfoot shifted with each step, some rolling like loose joints, others snapping under their weight.

Then came the whisper.

Not human—more like the rasp of teeth grinding together, but it formed shapes. Words. Eat... stay... inside...

Mira froze. “Did you hear that?”

“Yes,” Elena said. “And I think it’s coming from the walls.”

One of the bone fragments beside them moved—not from their touch, but of its own accord. It slid out of the wall, revealing that it wasn’t embedded bone at all, but a white, hooked finger. Another followed, then another, until a skeletal hand was reaching for Mira’s throat.

She ducked, ramming her shoulder into the opposite wall. That side erupted too—long, spindly arms unfurling like spider legs, clawing at their clothes.

“Run!” Mira shoved Elena ahead, ignoring the talons that tore at her jacket. The narrowing tunnel forced them into a crouch, then onto their hands and knees.

The whispers grew louder, now overlapping into an almost giddy chant: Stay stay stay stay—

Ahead, the bone corridor split into three openings. Each was barely wide enough to crawl through, and each pulsed with a different color of faint light—one red, one yellow, one a sickly green.

Elena hesitated. “Which one—?”

The green light blinked, like an eye winking.

“Not that one,” Mira said instantly, pulling her toward the red.

But the floor betrayed them—tilting sharply, spilling them into the yellow-lit tunnel. It wasn’t a smooth fall. Jagged bone ridges raked at their arms and legs as they tumbled.

They landed in a circular chamber, breathless and bleeding. The yellow glow came from hundreds of tiny orbs embedded in the walls, each one housing something curled and twitching.

One of the orbs cracked. A skeletal hand pushed through the membrane. Then another.

The wall began to hatch.

Mira grabbed Elena’s arm. “We don’t wait to see what they look like.”

They bolted for the far side, where a narrow, uneven gap promised escape—if they were fast enough.

Behind them, the first of the skeletal newborns shrieked, a sound sharp enough to rattle the bones in their own skulls.

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