Elysia felt the weight of a gaze before she heard a sound. It was the prickle of static on her skin, the sensation of someone leaning over her, breathing in the rhythm of her own sleeping heart. She desperate to open her eyes, yet she was paralyzed by a singular, chilling certainty: to look would be to invite a nightmare from which there was no waking.
Inside her mind, a cacophony began glitched whispers and rhythmic thrums that felt less like voices and more like the pulse of her own veins. For days, the iron-scent of blood had been her only companion. It wasn’t just a smell; it was a tether. She felt connected to something ancient and hungry, an evil entity that haunted the red-darkness behind her eyelids.
Her forehead was slick with a cold sweat; her vision flickered like a dying bulb even with her eyes shut. Then, the sensation changed. A slow, heavy warmth began to soak into the soles of her feet.
She couldn't help it. The instinct to survive overrode the instinct to hide. When her eyes snapped open, the world was a visceral horror. Her bed was no longer a sanctuary; it was a pooling lake of deep, arterial red. There was no wound, no puncture, no opening the blood simply was.
The room was swallowed by shadows, save for the sickly yellow glow of a single lamp. Her soul felt as though it were hovering inches above her trembling skin.
"Grandpa," she whispered, her voice a fractured thread.
The door didn't just open; it was reclaimed by the dark. A man stepped into the sliver of lamplight. He wore a black dress shirt, the first three buttons undone to reveal skin as pale and cold as polished marble. She couldn't see his features his face seemed to be made of the very shadows that filled the corners but she could feel the gravity of him.
"Just twiddle your thumbs," he said, his voice a low, melodic threat that vibrated in her bones. "I will be chasing you to death."
Then, the world blinked.
The weight vanished. The copper tang of blood evaporated. Elysia found herself staring at the white, indifferent ceiling, the silence of the room so absolute it felt like a scream. She was alone, but the imprint of his voice remained, cold as a tombstone.