The sky split open, unleashing a torrent of rain that cut like shards of glass. Snow mixed with the downpour, falling in jagged flurries as if the heavens were weeping for a forgotten soul. A damp chill clung to the bones of the living, but I felt none of it. My cold was deeper—a frost of the soul, bound in chains that death had only tightened.
I hovered above my open grave, an intruder among the living. A field of black umbrellas swayed like wilted flowers in the wind, their owners clutching them in vain against the storm. I had no need for shelter, but their grief—their muted cries—clawed at my mind. A grotesque dance, these mourners, caught in the rhythm of loss they didn’t understand.
Below, a mahogany coffin waited—an empty vessel where my body should have rested. But it wasn’t my body they mourned. I watched with a hollow, burning rage, invisible to all but the darkness itself. My killer had orchestrated it all—ensuring I watched the false ritual, ensuring I would know my body would never rest in peace.
The truth of my death unfolded slowly, a cruel revelation whispered from beyond the veil. My death had not been an accident. No, it had been carefully crafted, and now I, the ghost, was left to wander—a pawn who had been cut from the board too soon.
I was not free. I was trapped between realms, tethered to the world by an insatiable need for vengeance. My ethereal form moved with the wind, silent and unseen, but I knew I wasn’t powerless. The hunt was mine to begin.
The first sign was the cold. A creeping, unnatural chill that followed my murderer, sinking into their skin, gnawing at the edges of their sanity. It started as a discomfort, a breath of cold air in a warm room. But soon, the chill grew deeper—frost on their breath, ice in their veins. Their windows, no matter how tightly shut, let in the biting air. They couldn’t sleep, their nights haunted by the gnawing sense of being watched.
I made sure of it.
I watched as their unease grew, as the world twisted around them. Shadows clung longer than they should, stretching into shapes that whispered my name. The clocks, once steady, began to tick out of rhythm, a maddening staccato of time unraveling. Their reflection in the mirror became distorted, the faintest hint of me—a flicker in the corner of their eye. I was always there. They could never be alone.
The trail of their guilt led me to their doorstep, each step heavy with the weight of their betrayal. They had been my friend once—trusted, loved even. Now, they were nothing more than prey, the target of a justice that death could not erase. I stood outside their door, a figure in the rain, invisible to the world but all too real to the one who had wronged me. The night pressed in, thick with tension.
I reached out with a thought, and the door creaked open.
Inside, they sat alone, clutching a glass of whiskey, its amber contents trembling in their hand. They had aged in a way that wasn’t natural. Fear had stolen the vitality from their face, replaced by the hollow-eyed look of someone who knew they were damned.
“Show yourself!” they cried, their voice cracking in desperation. They knew. They had always known it was me.
I made them wait. The silence stretched on, filling the room with the weight of the grave. Then, slowly, I let myself manifest—a cold breath on their neck, a shift in the air. My form flickered into view, pale and translucent, but unmistakable.
Their eyes widened, filling with terror as they scrambled backward, knocking over the chair in their haste. “It wasn’t supposed to happen like this,” they stammered, their voice barely above a whisper. “It was an accident—”
But I knew the truth. The memory of that knife, cold and final, sinking into my back, burned within me like a wound that would never heal. They had plunged it in with purpose, a betrayal as sharp as the blade itself.
The room around us warped as my anger flared—walls groaning, lights flickering, the air thick with the stench of death. “You took my life,” I hissed, my voice hollow and echoing. “Now, I’ll take yours.”
Their breath quickened, coming in ragged gasps. I watched as their face contorted in panic, as they stumbled and fell, crawling away on their hands and knees. But there was no escape. I was everywhere—the creaking floorboards, the rustling curtains, the reflection in the shattered glass. My presence filled the space, choking the life from the air.
I could feel their pulse, frantic and wild, pounding in their chest as they tried to flee. I let them run, let them feel the hopelessness of it. My vengeance would not be swift—it would be slow, drawn out, until they begged for the end.
“You won’t outrun me,” I whispered, my voice curling in the shadows. “Death is inevitable. And so is my revenge.”
They stumbled into the bedroom, slamming the door behind them. But doors could not keep me out. I was the darkness, the cold, the thing they feared in their nightmares. I drifted through the walls, a cold fog filling the room as they cowered in the corner.
I could hear their whispered prayers, desperate and incoherent. Prayers that would go unanswered.
When I finally moved, it was with the force of all the fury I had held back. I surged forward, grasping their throat with icy hands, feeling the warmth of life beneath my fingers. They gasped, choked, clawing at nothing as the air left their lungs.
Their wide, pleading eyes locked onto mine, but I offered no mercy. Only the cold, hard truth—revenge was all I had left.
As their body went limp and the light faded from their eyes, I felt a release. The storm outside ceased, the wind falling silent. The room was still once more, and my killer lay at my feet, lifeless. The final chapter of their betrayal had been written in blood.
I turned away, drifting back into the night. The world no longer called to me. My task was done. The tether that bound me to this place unraveled, and with it, the bitterness that had gripped my soul for so long.
I returned to my grave, to the coffin that had once been empty, but now held the weight of my vengeance. The snowflakes continued to fall, a blanket of white, covering the earth in silence. I lay down in the earth, finally at peace, my story etched in the annals of the afterlife.

