Beverly sat in the therapist’s office, her teenage octopod body seeming to shrink into itself under the weight of the silence that filled the room. The therapist, a middle-aged woman with kind eyes and a gentle smile, had been trying for the better part of an hour to coax Beverly into talking, into opening up about the pain and trauma that had consumed her since Gabby’s death.
But Beverly remained stubbornly, resolutely silent, her tentacles tucked tightly against her body as if to shield herself from the probing questions and well-meaning concern of the woman across from her. She knew why her parents had arranged this session, knew that they were worried about her, that they had seen the way she had withdrawn into herself, become distant and unreachable in the wake of her best friend’s tragic passing.
But how could she explain to them, to anyone, the true depths of the horror that had consumed her, the twisted, nightmarish reality that had shattered her sanity and left her a broken, fragmented shell of her former self? How could she put into words the gut-wrenching terror of being buried alive, of feeling the weight of the earth pressing down upon her, the fetid breath of the imaginary monster hot and rank in the suffocating confines of the coffin?
The therapist leaned forward, her voice soft and gentle as she spoke. “Beverly, I know that what you’re going through is incredibly difficult, that the pain of losing someone you love can feel like an unbearable burden. But holding it all inside, refusing to talk about it, isn’t going to make it go away. You need to let yourself grieve, to process the emotions that are tearing you apart from the inside out.”
Beverly felt something snap inside her, a sudden, white-hot surge of anger and defensiveness that burst forth from the depths of her fractured psyche. “You don’t know anything about what I’m going through,” she snarled, her tentacles unfurling from her body like the coils of a snake ready to strike. “You have no idea what it’s like to be trapped in a nightmare you can’t wake up from, to feel like your own mind is a prison, a torture chamber that you can never escape.”
The therapist’s eyes widened, a flicker of surprise and concern crossing her features. But before she could respond, Beverly was on her feet, her tentacles propelling her towards the door with a speed and agility that belied her fragmented, unraveling state of mind.
She burst out of the office, her chest heaving with ragged, gasping breaths as she fled down the hallway, the sound of the therapist’s footsteps echoing behind her. Beverly didn’t know where she was going, didn’t have any destination in mind beyond the desperate, all-consuming need to escape, to put as much distance as possible between herself and the suffocating confines of the therapist’s office.
But as she stumbled out into the street, her eyes blinking against the harsh, unforgiving glare of the midday sun, Beverly felt a sudden, sickening lurch of fear and confusion. For there, idling at the curb, was a black SUV, its windows tinted and its engine humming with a low, menacing rumble.
Before Beverly could react, before she could even begin to process the sight before her, the doors of the SUV swung open, and two men emerged, their faces hard and expressionless beneath the brims of their dark, nondescript hats. They moved with a swift, brutal efficiency, their hands closing around Beverly’s arms like vices as they dragged her towards the waiting vehicle.
Beverly screamed, her tentacles flailing wildly as she fought against their grip, but it was no use. The men were too strong, too determined, and in a matter of seconds, she found herself being shoved into the back seat of the SUV, the door slamming shut behind her with a sickening, final thud.
As the vehicle pulled away from the curb, the therapist’s cries of alarm and protest fading into the distance, Beverly felt a cold, creeping dread beginning to take hold, a sickening certainty that whatever awaited her at the end of this journey would be worse than anything she had ever faced before.
For she was alone now, cut off from everything and everyone she had ever known, a prisoner in both body and mind. And as the SUV sped through the streets, the city blurring past the tinted windows in a dizzying, nightmarish haze, Beverly could feel the last fragments of her sanity beginning to crumble, the twisted, malevolent forces that had consumed her mind tightening their grip on her shattered psyche.
She had thought that the horrors of the grave, the suffocating darkness of the coffin and the fetid breath of the imaginary monster, were the worst that she could ever face. But as Beverly huddled in the back seat of the SUV, her tentacles trembling with fear and despair, she knew that her nightmare was only just beginning, that the road ahead would be a gauntlet of horrors beyond anything she had ever imagined.
And in the depths of her fractured mind, in the dark, haunted corners of her psyche where madness and despair held sway, Beverly could feel a cold, creeping sense of hopelessness beginning to take hold, a sickening certainty that no matter how desperately she fought, no matter how hard she tried to cling to the tattered remnants of her sanity and self, there could be no escape from the twisted, malevolent forces that had claimed her for their own.
Not. The. End.


