Beverly drifted in a haze of pain and confusion, her consciousness flickering like a candle flame in a bitter wind. She caught snatches of sound and sensation – the blare of alarms, the acrid scent of smoke, the jostling motion of being carried. But nothing seemed real, nothing made sense through the fog of drugs and trauma that enveloped her.
Dimly, she was aware of Angele and Joanna’s presence, their voices urgent and strained as they navigated the chaos of the facility. Beverly tried to focus on their words, to cling to the familiarity of their touch, but her mind kept slipping away, dragging her back down into the depths of oblivion.
In her moments of semi-lucidity, Beverly caught glimpses of the incredible lengths her friends were going to in order to save her. She saw Angele’s body ripple and change, her limbs elongating into sinuous tentacles as she grappled with a group of armed guards. She heard Joanna’s voice, normally so gentle, rise in an otherworldly screech that sent their pursuers stumbling back in shock and pain.
But even as Beverly marveled at the incredible abilities her friends possessed, she couldn’t shake the sense of unreality that pervaded everything. The world around her seemed to be breaking apart, the very fabric of reality fraying at the edges. She wondered if this was what it felt like to die, to have one’s consciousness unravel and dissolve into the ether.
And yet, through it all, Angele and Joanna remained her anchors, her lifelines in a sea of chaos and uncertainty. They cradled her broken body close, whispering words of comfort and encouragement even as they fought their way through the labyrinthine halls of the facility. They used their own bodies as shields, their alien flesh absorbing the impact of bullets and blows that would have surely killed a human.
Time lost all meaning as they raced through the complex, dodging patrols and circumventing security systems with a skill and intuition that seemed almost supernatural. Beverly faded in and out of awareness, catching only glimpses of their progress – the flash of emergency lights, the clang of metal doors, the distant wail of sirens.
And then, suddenly, they were outside, the cool night air washing over Beverly’s feverish skin like a balm. She forced her eyes open, blinking against the harsh glare of floodlights and the swirling chaos of smoke and debris. In the distance, she could see the perimeter fence, a tangled mass of razor wire and electrified metal that seemed to stretch on forever.
For a moment, Beverly was gripped by a surge of despair, certain that they would never make it past such formidable defenses. But then she felt Angele and Joanna’s grip tighten on her, their bodies coiling with a fierce, determined energy. They exchanged a glance, a silent communication passing between them, and then, as one, they began to change.
Beverly watched in awe as her friends’ human forms melted away, their flesh rippling and reshaping itself into something altogether alien and extraordinary. Their limbs elongated and multiplied, their skin taking on a slick, iridescent sheen. Their faces split and reformed, eyes blossoming like strange, luminous flowers across their bodies.
And then, with a surge of incredible speed and agility, they were moving, their transformed bodies carrying Beverly effortlessly across the ground. She felt the rush of wind against her face, the powerful flex and coil of their muscles as they vaulted over obstacles and raced towards the fence.
In a matter of heartbeats, they were there, their tentacles lashing out to tear through the metal and wire like paper. Beverly felt a jolt of electricity course through her as they breached the perimeter, but it was nothing compared to the exhilaration of knowing that they were free, that they had escaped the clutches of those who sought to destroy them.
As they plunged into the darkness beyond the fence, Beverly finally allowed herself to slip back into unconsciousness, secure in the knowledge that she was safe, that she was loved, and that whatever challenges lay ahead, she would face them with Angele and Joanna by her side.
When the pastries first went viral, people called them Ganymuffins, though, to be honest, they weren’t even remotely related to the muffin family, or even to the Jupiter moon, Ganymede, for that matter. The actual ingredients remained a mystery until Doughmenic Bakery, Inc. filed a patent and listed the horribly renamed ConstellaScones as:
a laminated soy-based dough, deep-fried in pumpkin seed oil, which is then dusted with confectioners sugar, filled with a proprietary fruit preserve recipe and glazed.
This turned out to be a big fat lie.
It wasn’t until much later that we learned the real ingredients and how the baked goods were actually made. Then, everyone called them blood doughnuts, which should have affected sales, but by then it was far too late. We had been hooked on them for at least a decade.
***
Maybe that wasn’t the best way to start. My father always told me I couldn’t tell a story good and proper, always back to front with everything jumbled up in the middle. Perhaps I should have begun by mentioning our first contact with the Tiiwarnias? Sound good to you? Okay, let’s rewind and give that one a go.
On August 15, 1977, while searching for extraterrestrial intelligence, the Big Ear radio telescope located at Ohio State University received a strong narrowband radio signal that appeared to originate from the constellation Sagittarius. Dubbed the Wow! signal after Astronomer Jerry R. Ehman circled the recorded data on a computer printout and wrote the comment Wow! beside it, the anomaly lasted a full 72 seconds and bore the expected hallmarks of extraterrestrial origin.
A set of first contact protocols were rushed into draft that essentially stated if anyone received an extraterrestrial signal they were obligated to share the information with the rest of the world and were warned against broadcasting any replies without international consultation. In actuality, we could have taken our time composing the protocols because it took decades for the extraterrestrials to receive the reply and by the time they had, they were already here.
World governments rallied together and held a conference to (1) devise a plan of action to the potential threat posed by these unknown extraterrestrials and their alien motivations; and (2) discuss making the right first impression, whether we should tell the aliens all the bad things about humanity, or just the good things, and what language we would use. What would be the official first contact language of Earth?
In the end, none of it mattered.
As the Tiiwarnias touched down on American soil, all reports came through the White House which, of course, caused tensions with the rest of the world. The U.S. government agreed to work together with the United Nations to create a team of scientists and researchers from each nation to join in the first contact mission.
The public was informed through government officials and the White House Press Secretary that the aliens couldn’t speak any of our Earth languages and expert linguists made the determination that we would never be able to speak theirs, so a hybrid-speak was mutually adopted that combined the simplest words of all the languages, which the news explained as a sort of interstellar pig Latin. Because of this, it was nearly impossible to determine their level of intelligence but it was simply assumed that beings capable of interstellar spaceflight were orders of magnitude smarter than the brightest among us. From our increased dealings with them, they appeared to be beyond thoughts and acts of aggression and war and treated us with immense consideration and respect.
Yet, despite the aliens’ politeness, there was something… off. The way official reports danced around certain questions. The way scientists who had once been eager to discuss first contact suddenly went quiet. No leaks, no whistleblowers, no “anonymous sources” spilling classified details to reporters in dimly lit parking garages. Just silence.
And then there was the biggest red flag of all: no footage.
Not one single leaked video, blurry photo, or grainy livestream of the Tiiwarnias outside the government’s carefully orchestrated press events. Not even a rogue intern snapping a pic for clout. Either we’d suddenly become a species capable of keeping a secret, or someone was scrubbing every unauthorized glimpse before it ever saw the light of day.
And if there’s one thing history has taught us? When the government tells you everything is fine, everything is definitely not fine.
The Tiiwarnias earned their name from a television field reporter who attempted the nearest pronunciation our human tongues could manage of a word the alien visitors repeated frequently.
As far as shared technology went, the aliens were absolutely uninterested in our advancement and theirs was so beyond our understanding there was no way to adapt it to our systems or reverse engineer it. Even their seemingly limitless power source was both visible and touchable yet not liquid or gas or matter in any way we could measure or analyze. We weren’t capable of using it as a fuel or power source and more importantly, it existed beyond our ability to be weaponized. So while an international team of theoretical physicists continued to study it and create theories to explain it, the world at large lost interest in the Tiiwarnias.
That was until the press conference.
Until their television appearance, the public hadn’t laid eyes on the aliens. There had been artist renditions based on reports but none came close to capturing their unique alienness. When the broadcast cut to the live feed, the world finally saw them—and let me tell you, the artist renditions hadn’t even come close.
The Tiiwarnias were… unsettling. Not in a monstrous, tentacled-horror kind of way, but in the way your brain struggled to place them. Like an optical illusion that made sense only until you looked too long. They had faces, but not the kind you’d instinctively trust. Too symmetrical, too smooth, like something designed by a committee that couldn’t agree on what a person should look like. Their mouths were thin suggestions of shape, never quite moving when they spoke, and their eyes—God, their eyes.
Not black, not pupil-less, not the soulless void Hollywood loved to slap onto anything alien. No, these were worse. Multi-layered, refractive, shifting between colors like an oil slick catching the light. When they turned their gaze to the cameras, I swear you could feel it. Like looking at something that was looking back with interest, but no real understanding.
They were tall, but not towering. Their limbs just slightly too long, their fingers tapering into delicate, unnecessary points. Their skin—if you could call it that—was pale but not white, translucent but not see-through, as if they were composed of something that hadn’t quite decided whether it wanted to be solid or liquid.
And yet, they moved with an almost absurd grace, like dancers trained in a gravity different from our own. Effortless. Unnatural.
No wonder the government hadn’t shown them to us sooner. The moment they appeared on-screen, every human instinct screamed wrong.
And then they presented us with donuts.
At first, nobody moved.
The President—flanked by a dozen tight-lipped officials—stared at the silver tray piled high with what, by all appearances, looked like donuts. A slight sheen of glaze, powdered sugar dusted over the tops, the kind of thing you’d find in any grocery store bakery aisle.
A long silence stretched between species.
Were they serious? This was first contact—the moment humanity had dreamed of for generations—and the first thing they did was roll up with intergalactic Krispy Kremes?
The press, bless them, snapped out of the collective daze first. Murmurs rippled through the room, cameras flashing, reporters already forming the inevitable what does it mean? headlines.
The President glanced at his Chief of Staff, then at the tray. His face betrayed deep suspicion, but also something else: the impossible weight of being the guy who either (A) rejected the first gift from an alien race, potentially causing an interstellar diplomatic incident, or (B) took the first bite and died on live television.
The room held its breath.
Finally, in a move that could only be described as passing the buck, the President turned to Dr. Marina Solano, head of the international First Contact Research Division. She blinked, pointed at herself, and mouthed, me?
A slight nod.
Swallowing hard, Solano stepped forward, selected a donut—no, not a donut, a ConstellaScone, a name Doughmenic Bakery would shove down our throats later—and hesitated just long enough for every camera in the room to zoom in.
Then she took a bite.
And her face changed.
It wasn’t a oh, this is good change. It wasn’t even a holy hell, this is the best thing I’ve ever eaten change. It was something deeper, something more visceral—as if every pleasure receptor in her brain had just been hardwired into something beyond human comprehension.
Her breath hitched. Her pupils blew wide.
The entire world watched as Dr. Marina Solano, esteemed astrophysicist, decorated scholar, and one of the most rational minds on the planet, devoured the rest of the donut like a starving animal.
A second of stunned silence.
Then the rest of the delegation lunged for the tray.
The aliens, eerily patient, merely watched as the most powerful figures on Earth shoveled bite after bite into their mouths, eyes glassy, hands trembling, as if they had just been offered the answer to a question they didn’t even know they were asking.
By the time the press got their hands on the leftovers, it was already too late.
We were hooked.
***
As mentioned before, the Tiiwarnias ship touched down planetside deep within a national forest on a 140-acre ranch in Sedona, Arizona, that belonged to a Hollywood stuntman and was used as a filming location for several movies. It also just so happened to be one of the most popular destinations in America for spotting supposed unidentified flying objects.
The ranch was reported to have been confiscated by the U.S. Government and certain areas of the national park were deemed off-limits but there were individuals who operated clandestine tours at night and that was how I became involved.
I worked for a rag named, Candor Weekly, as an investigative reporter, and my assignment was to infiltrate the base where the aliens were being held and uncover the things the government wasn’t sharing with us. So, I joined the Truth Seekers tour group and rented the suggested pair of night vision glasses and binoculars that had seen better days, after I signed an accident waiver and release of liability form, in which I agreed to hold harmless, and indemnify Truth Seekers Tours from and against all losses, claims, damages, costs or expenses (including reasonable legal fees, or similar costs). I wondered which one of these Einsteins thought they would be able to enforce the document for their illegal tour company that routinely trespassed on government land?
The tour group gathered two hours before sunset for orientation where we had been given a brief history of the strange occurrences that happened almost nightly since the aliens arrived.
“First, all of the animals on the ranch, dogs, and horses mostly, became sick with diseases that none of the vets in these parts were able to explain,” Tourguide Flint said and quickly followed with, “But not to worry, though, whatever bug is flying around out there only affected animals. I’ve been conducting these tours nightly and my doc says I’m fit as a fiddle!”
“Also, you’re gonna want to take pictures because there’s some freaky stuff that goes on out there especially during the last hour of twilight,” Flint continued.
“What kind of freaky stuff?” I asked.
“All kinds. From crazy light shows in the sky to bigfoot and dinosaur sightings and the biggest of them all, thelight portal!”
“The what?”
“Hey, man, I don’t invent it, I just record it,” Flint held up his hands in a don’t shoot the messenger fashion. “I’ve got plenty of photographic proof over there in the tour log book. Now, I’m not saying that it allows beings from other dimensions to travel here and vice versa, like some of the less reputable tour guides claim, but the portal’s the real deal, man, as real as it gets!”
“Oh, and there are two things you should know,” Flint added. “One: we’re uninvited guests on government land so it’d be a smart thing to turn off your camera’s flash. You don’t want to give our presence away, do you? And two: your electronic devices will not work out there, so the cameras on your phones will be useless. Not to worry though, we sell disposable cameras with 400-speed film which is excellent for taking nighttime photos.”
Probably a lie and scam to part the tour group with more of their money, but I bought a couple of cameras just to be on the safe side.
“Uh, sorry for all the questions,” I raised my hand.
“Knowledge is essential, man,” Flint smiled. “Ask away.”
“If this place is as heavily guarded as people say, how are you able to take tours out each night?”
“That’s because most of the barracks you’ll see are all decoys, man. The real base is underground, accessible by an elaborate tunnel system, used by both the military and the extraterrestrials.
“Course, some folks went poking around to find the real deal,” Flint said, lowering his voice like he was letting us in on some deep, dark secret. “Journalists. UFO nuts. Couple of rich boys with more money than sense.”
“And?” I asked.
“And nothing.” He gave me a knowing look. “Because they were never seen again. Oh sure, you’ll hear the usual excuses—car accidents, sudden retirements, tragic boating mishaps. But we all know what’s really going on. You get too close, you stop being a problem real quick.”
A woman in the group laughed nervously. “You’re just trying to scare us.”
“Am I?” Flint shrugged. “All I’m saying is, some questions ain’t meant to be answered. And some things? They stay buried for a reason.”
He clapped his hands together, jolting the group out of the heavy silence. “Now! Who’s ready to see some UFOs?”
I forced a grin, but my gut twisted. Because if half of what he was saying was true, I wasn’t just looking for a story anymore.
I was walking into a cover-up.
If there was a base out there, this was most likely true.
Once the sun set, the tour began with a two-hour meditation walk starting at the Amitabha Stupa, supposedly Sedona’s most spiritual vortex. Flint took us through a painfully boring guided meditation that ended at a well-known hot spot of UFO activity where we were guaranteed sightings of UFOs, using special night vision goggles. People in the group swore up and down to have spotted objects. I turned up a big fat goose egg.
Flint began rambling again about the “decoy barracks” and “elaborate tunnel systems” and while the rest of the tour group nodded at the prospect of uncovering the truth of the government UFO cover-up, I found myself in the grip of an irresistible gravitational pull, to be anywhere else at the moment.
But maybe there was something to the whole elaborate tunnel thing, so I slipped away from the oblivious group and I must have done some fantastically good deed in a former life, because after fifteen minutes of mindless wandering with my borrowed night-vision goggles, I luckily stumbled upon something.
A maintenance door? An emergency exit? Whatever it was, it was discreetly tucked behind what appeared to be a Hollywood movie prop of a pile of boulders. My heart raced as I dug my fingers into the seam and managed to pry the door open with the kind of stealth usually reserved for midnight snack raids.
The narrow tunnel was dim, lit only by the intermittent sputter of the night-vision goggles. The silence was oppressive and every step echoed, mingling with a faint, almost mocking aroma of something being baked—a scent that brought me back to childhood Sunday baking days with Mom, which was profoundly out of place in an underground labyrinth.
The descent into the heart of darkness felt like it went on forever but eventually the tunnel opened to a vast, cavernous chamber and in the middle of it lay a massive structure that could only have been described as an alien ship. Not the sleek, awe-inspiring craft of sci-fi cinema, but a crumpled, battered wreck, half-swallowed by the earth. Its metal skin, scarred by impact and time, gave off that same beguiling aroma of freshly baked goods. I hesitated for a moment before the allure of inexplicable contradictions forced me to press on.
Creeping along the ship’s rusted exterior, I discovered a side entrance open just enough to allow me to slip inside undetected. The interior was bizarre beyond words: stark, high-tech surfaces clashed with an oddly domestic atmosphere. And then I saw it—a surreal assembly line of sorts. There, strapped to a conveyor belt contraption that could have been ripped straight from a mad inventor’s sketchpad, was a creature whose features were unmistakably alien yet curiously reminiscent of a human in an uncanny valley sort of way. It was bound in restraints, its pale, unearthly skin lit by the harsh glare of a single overhead lamp, and from its body—of all things—continued to emerge a steady stream of what looked unmistakably like ConstellaScones.
I was never what anyone would have ever called “quick on the uptake” but my breath hitched in my throat and my heart pounded with horror, because I instantly knew what I was looking at. And the absurdity of it all was almost too much to comprehend: an alien was being forced into a subservient role that even the most desperate and despicable of culinary con artists wouldn’t consider. Before I could fully process the scene, I heard muffled voices coming from a nearby room or compartment or whatever they were called on an alien ship.
Slipping into a narrow passage, I pressed my ear to a cold, metallic wall and caught fragments of conversation between two individuals: one whose tone was clinical and detached, the other brimming with a greasy sort of enthusiasm.
“—so, you’re telling me it’s exactly the same as donuts?”
“Chemically, there’s no difference,” the clinical and detached speaker said. “I know you’re new here but surely you can smell it, can’t you? And have you tasted one? It’s donuts. Addictive as hell, and beyond our wildest indulgences.”
The other voice, smoother yet laced with dark humor, replied, “In the briefing they said only two of them survived the crash, and that one of them recently died and the other one’s been on a permanent strike ever since they started the forced-feed routine. So, how are they still shipping out ConstellaScones?”
“It turns out if you break them down to raw materials, you can manufacture a whole new batch.”
“So, they’ve been turning the dead bodies into alien donut poop?”
“Poop? Is that what they told you? The scientists discovered a while ago that we haven’t been eating their excrement at all. We’ve been snacking on their offspring.”
I nearly dropped my night-vision goggles. The implications ricocheted around in my head like a badly tossed frisbee at a Fricket match. Here I was, in a subterranean facility that smelt of freshly baked betrayal, and the dark truth was layered like a well-crafted éclair: a high-stakes, interstellar donut racket where survival, exploitation, and culinary perversion meshed into one twisted recipe.
As I absorbed the conversation, my mind raced with a cocktail of disgust, fascination, and a grim sense of responsibility. I knew I should retreat and report what I’d found, but the deeper I delved, the more I felt that the true story was just beginning to rise—like dough left to proof in the most unlikely of ovens.
Clutching my evidence—a hastily snapped photo of the conveyor belt and a recording of the hushed voices—I backed away from the macabre production line. My next move was clear: I had to expose this unholy alliance between extraterrestrial misfortune and human greed.
As I retraced my steps through the tunnel, the weight of what I’d uncovered pressed down on me like an overfilled jelly donut about to burst. My mind spun through the possibilities—if I got this story out, if people knew the truth, if they understood what they’d been eating, they’d…
They’d what?
Panic? Riot? Demand justice? Burn down every Doughmenic Bakery in righteous fury?
Or—
Would they shrug, lick the glaze off their fingers, and take another bite?
A cold realization slithered up my spine, slow and insidious. We’d been eating them for years. A decade of blind devotion, of cult-like devotion. We hadn’t just accepted the addiction. We’d embraced it.
Would I be exposing a horror? Or just ruining breakfast?
That’s when I heard it—a distant clink, the unmistakable scrape of a boot against stone.
As the weeks turned into months and the limits of what could be learned from studying Beverly while alive were reached, a grim consensus began to emerge among the scientists and officials overseeing her case. Whispered conversations in shadowy corners and behind closed doors gave way to a chilling realization: the only way to truly understand the nature of Beverly’s transformation was to examine her from the inside out.
At first, the idea was met with shock and revulsion. The notion of deliberately ending a human life, even one as altered and unprecedented as Beverly’s, seemed to cross a fundamental ethical line. But as the pressures and frustrations mounted, as the clamor for answers grew more and more urgent, the unthinkable slowly became the inevitable.
And so, without Beverly’s knowledge or consent, without even the courtesy of informing her family, the decision was made. Beverly would be euthanized, her body dissected and analyzed down to the cellular level. It was a betrayal of the most profound sort, a violation of the most basic principles of human dignity and autonomy.
When the day of the procedure arrived, Beverly was prepped and sedated like any other patient. She lay on the cold, sterile operating table, her body a patchwork of scars and mutations, her mind still clinging to the faint hope that somehow, someway, she might yet find a way back to the life she had once known.
Beverly lay on the cold, hard operating table, her mind foggy from the anesthesia that was slowly being administered to her. She had no idea what was happening, no clue that the people she had trusted to help her had instead decided to end her life in the name of scientific discovery.
As the drugs coursed through her system, Beverly’s thoughts became increasingly disjointed and hazy. She tried to focus on her surroundings, on the bright lights overhead and the masked faces of the surgeons looming over her, but everything seemed to be slipping away, fading into a distant, intangible dream.
Dimly, Beverly became aware of a commotion outside the operating room. There were raised voices, the sound of a scuffle, and then the door burst open, revealing two figures that Beverly would have known anywhere, even in her drugged and disoriented state.
Angele and Joanna stood in the doorway, their faces a mix of shock, horror, and fury as they took in the scene before them. For a moment, Beverly felt a surge of hope, a desperate belief that her friends had come to save her, to put an end to this nightmare once and for all.
But even as that hope flickered to life, Beverly could feel herself slipping away, the anesthesia dragging her down into a deep, impenetrable darkness. She tried to call out, to beg for help, but her lips wouldn’t move, her voice nothing more than a faint, gasping whisper.
The last thing Beverly saw before the void claimed her was the anguished, horrified expressions on Angele and Joanna’s faces, their mouths open in soundless screams of rage and despair. She wanted to reach out to them, to tell them that it was okay, that she understood, but it was too late.
As the darkness closed in around her, Beverly felt a final, fleeting moment of clarity, a sudden understanding of the true nature of the betrayal that had been perpetrated against her. She had been sacrificed, offered up as a lamb to the gods of science and progress, her life and autonomy stripped away in the name of a higher cause.
And with that realization came a crushing sense of despair, a feeling of utter hopelessness and isolation that threatened to consume her entirely. In that moment, Beverly knew that she was alone, that even the love and devotion of her friends couldn’t save her from the fate that had been chosen for her.
And so, with a final, shuddering breath, Beverly surrendered to the inevitable, her consciousness slipping away into a void from which there could be no return. The last thing she felt was a profound sense of loss, a deep, aching sorrow for all that had been taken from her, and all that she would never have the chance to experience.
And then, there was nothing. Only the cold, empty darkness, and the fading echoes of a life that had been cut short, a story that would forever remain unfinished, a mystery that would never be solved.
India hadn’t meant to open the invitation. The gold-embossed envelope had arrived weeks ago, hidden under a stack of unread mail. She told herself it didn’t matter, that revisiting her old college was pointless. But when she finally found it, half-crumpled and covered in coffee stains, her hands trembled.
The reunion.
And Keith might be there.
Keith. Even now, his name struck like a note of music she hadn’t heard in years but still knew by heart. The man she had loved—not just loved, but worshipped. He had been her Adonis, an impossible blend of androgynous beauty and untouchable charm. They had shared a summer—one incandescent, endless summer—before he disappeared.
She told herself it was youthful foolishness, that her adult self should scoff at such nostalgia. Yet she found herself staring in the mirror, wondering if she’d aged gracefully enough, wondering if he’d remember her the way she remembered him.
The weeks before the reunion were a blur of frantic preparation. A crash diet left her irritable and light-headed, but she rationalized it as dedication. She scoured boutique shops for the perfect dress, one that whispered sophistication while screaming “look at me.” The final touch was a makeover that erased every imperfection her 20s had forgiven but her 30s now flaunted.
“You look amazing,” her best friend Nita said as they stood in front of the bathroom mirror on the night of the event.
“I have to,” India replied. “This might be the only chance I get to see him again.”
“India…” Nita hesitated. “What if he’s not who you remember?”
India forced a smile. “He will be.”
The reunion was held in the same hall where they’d once danced under string lights and cheap disco balls. Now it was all polished wood and faux elegance, with catering trays that couldn’t disguise the lukewarm taste of regret. India’s pulse quickened as she entered, scanning the crowd for a familiar face.
And then, she saw him.
Keith stood by the bar, but he wasn’t the Keith she remembered. Gone were the ethereal features she had worshipped: the soft golden curls, the flawless complexion, the delicate curve of his lips. In their place was a man weathered by time, his hair streaked with gray, his frame heavier, his eyes duller. He looked ordinary.
Her chest tightened.
“India?” His voice pulled her back.
Keith was smiling, his teeth slightly crooked in a way she didn’t recall. But there was warmth in his expression, the kind that spoke of recognition, not regret. He looked genuinely happy to see her.
“Keith,” she said, her own smile brittle.
“I didn’t think you’d come.” He laughed, and it sounded real. “It’s been, what, fifteen years?”
“Something like that,” she managed.
As they fell into conversation, Keith told her about his life—a career in graphic design, a failed marriage, two kids he adored but rarely saw. He spoke with a vulnerability that caught her off guard, as if he weren’t trying to impress her, only to connect.
But India struggled to listen. She couldn’t stop comparing this man to the memory of the Keith she’d idolized. That memory was pristine, untouchable, while the man before her was flawed and human.
The breaking point came when Keith excused himself to the bathroom.
India wandered to the edge of the room, gripping her champagne flute as the weight of disappointment crushed her chest. Why had she come? To relive a fantasy? To prove something to herself?
“Still hung up on him?” a voice asked.
India turned to find Nita. “What are you doing here?”
“You looked like you needed backup,” Nita said with a shrug. “Also, I’m nosy.”
India laughed bitterly. “He’s not the Keith I remember.”
“Of course he’s not,” Nita said. “Neither are you. But the question is, why does that matter so much? What were you hoping for, India? That he’d sweep you off your feet and everything would magically fall into place?”
India’s throat tightened. “Maybe. I don’t know.”
“Well, you’ve got him right here. Flaws and all. You can walk away if you want, but don’t pretend this is about him. You’re the one stuck in the past.”
When Keith returned, India was still at the edge of the room. He hesitated, his hands shoved awkwardly into his pockets.
“Hey,” he said. “Are you okay?”
She took a deep breath. “I don’t know if I ever told you this, but back in college… I thought you were perfect.”
Keith blinked, surprised. “Perfect? Me? India, I was a mess.”
She smiled despite herself. “Yeah, I can see that now.”
They both laughed, and for the first time that night, India felt the tension ease.
“Listen,” Keith said, his voice soft. “I’m glad you came. You were always… special to me.”
The words hung between them, not quite a declaration, but more than a polite courtesy.
India studied him—the lines on his face, the silver in his hair, the warmth in his eyes. For the first time, she saw him as he was, not as she had idealized him to be. And she realized she had been chasing a ghost, not just of Keith, but of herself.
As they said their goodbyes, India felt lighter. She didn’t know if she and Keith would stay in touch or if their connection had run its course. But as she walked away from the reunion, heels clicking against the pavement, she didn’t feel regret.
Because in seeing Keith for who he truly was, she had begun to see herself the same way—flawed, human, and still worthy of love.
As the chaos and confusion surrounding her case reached a fever pitch, Beverly found herself at the center of a storm that threatened to consume everything and everyone she had ever known. The constant barrage of tests and procedures, the endless parade of doctors and scientists and government officials, all blurred together into a surreal, never-ending nightmare.
Cut off from her loved ones and the outside world, Beverly felt herself slipping deeper and deeper into a state of hopeless despair. The isolation and uncertainty of her situation weighed heavily on her mind, eroding her sense of self and leaving her questioning everything she had once believed about her life and her future.
She watched helplessly as her story became fodder for the 24-hour news cycle, her face plastered across every screen and her name on every tongue. The speculation and conspiracy theories ran rampant, with everyone from fringe bloggers to respected pundits weighing in on what her condition might mean for the fate of the world.
Some claimed that she was a harbinger of an impending alien invasion, a human-hybrid created by extraterrestrial beings as a way to infiltrate and conquer our planet. Others insisted that she was the product of a secret government experiment gone wrong, a bio-engineered weapon or a test subject for forbidden technologies.
As the theories grew wilder and more outlandish, the truth became increasingly difficult to discern. Beverly found herself questioning her own memories and perceptions, wondering if perhaps there was some kernel of truth hidden beneath the layers of speculation and conjecture.
Meanwhile, on the global stage, Beverly’s case had become a flashpoint for international tensions and diplomatic maneuvering. Foreign governments and health organizations clamored for access to her medical records and research data, each one seeking to gain some advantage or insight in the face of the unfolding crisis.
There were whispers of cover-ups and conspiracies, of backroom deals and clandestine operations. Some nations even went so far as to threaten military action if they were denied a seat at the table, arguing that the potential implications of Beverly’s condition were too great to be left in the hands of any one country or organization.
Amidst all of this, the scientific community found itself grappling with profound ethical questions and moral dilemmas. The drive to understand and potentially harness the mechanisms of Beverly’s transformation pushed the boundaries of what was considered acceptable research and experimentation.
Debates raged over issues of consent and autonomy, with some arguing that Beverly’s unique situation justified a more aggressive approach to studying her condition, while others insisted that her basic rights and dignity as a human being had to be protected at all costs.
For Beverly, caught in the middle of this maelstrom of competing agendas and conflicting interests, the toll on her mental and emotional well-being was immeasurable. She felt like a pawn in a game that she couldn’t begin to understand, a specimen to be poked and prodded and analyzed until there was nothing left of her former self.
As the days stretched into weeks and the weeks into months, Beverly found herself retreating deeper and deeper into her own mind, seeking some form of escape or solace from the unrelenting pressure and scrutiny. She lost herself in fantasies and daydreams, imagining a world where she was free from the constraints of her altered body and the expectations of those around her.
The succubus. A figure shrouded in mystery and allure. This entity has captivated imaginations for centuries. Its origins trace back to ancient civilizations. The story begins in Mesopotamia, around 4000 BCE. Here, the Sumerians spoke of Lilith. She was a night demon, a figure of seduction and danger. Lilith was said to prey on men in their sleep. She embodied both desire and fear.
As time passed, the tale of Lilith evolved. The ancient Hebrews adopted her into their folklore. In Jewish mythology, she became Adam’s first wife. Unlike Eve, Lilith refused to submit. She sought independence. This defiance led to her banishment. She transformed into a demon, haunting the night. Lilith became synonymous with seduction and vengeance. Her story laid the groundwork for the succubus.
In the medieval period, the concept of the succubus flourished. The term “succubus” comes from the Latin “succubare,” meaning “to lie beneath.” This reflects the succubus’s role in folklore. She was a female demon who seduced men in their sleep. The male counterpart, the incubus, would visit women. Together, they formed a dark duo of desire.
The Church played a significant role in shaping the narrative. During the Middle Ages, sexual repression was rampant. The Church condemned lust and desire. The succubus became a symbol of temptation. She represented the dangers of unchecked passion. Men who experienced nocturnal emissions were often blamed. They were said to have been visited by a succubus. This belief led to widespread fear and paranoia.
The tales of the succubus spread across Europe. In France, she was known as “la succube.” In Germany, she was called “Alp.” Each culture added its own twist. The succubus became a reflection of societal fears. She embodied the struggle between desire and morality. The stories often ended in tragedy. Men would lose their lives or sanity after encounters with her.
The Renaissance brought a shift in perception. Art and literature began to explore the theme of the succubus. Poets and painters depicted her as both beautiful and dangerous. She became a muse for artists. The allure of the succubus was undeniable. Yet, the underlying fear remained. The duality of her nature fascinated many.
In the 19th century, the succubus found new life in literature. Writers like Edgar Allan Poe and H.P. Lovecraft drew inspiration from her. The succubus became a symbol of forbidden love. She represented the darker side of human desire. The stories were filled with passion, danger, and intrigue. Readers were captivated by the thrill of the unknown.
The 20th century saw the succubus evolve once more. With the rise of psychology, interpretations changed. Sigmund Freud explored the subconscious. He linked the succubus to repressed desires. The figure became a representation of inner conflict. The succubus was no longer just a demon. She was a reflection of human nature.
In modern times, the succubus has become a pop culture icon. Movies, television shows, and video games feature her prominently. She is often portrayed as a seductive anti-heroine. The lines between good and evil blur. The succubus is no longer just a villain. She is complex, multifaceted, and relatable.
The fascination with the succubus continues. She embodies the eternal struggle between desire and morality. Her story resonates with many. The succubus challenges societal norms. She invites exploration of the darker aspects of human nature. In a world that often shuns desire, she stands as a symbol of empowerment.
The origins of the succubus are steeped in history. From ancient Mesopotamia to modern pop culture, her tale has evolved. Yet, the core elements remain. She is a figure of seduction, danger, and desire. The succubus invites us to confront our fears. She encourages us to embrace our passions. In doing so, she remains a timeless figure. A reminder of the complexities of human nature.
As we delve deeper into her history, we uncover layers of meaning. The succubus is not merely a demon. She is a reflection of our desires, fears, and struggles. Her story is a testament to the power of myth. It reveals how folklore shapes our understanding of the world. The succubus challenges us to question our beliefs. She urges us to explore the shadows within ourselves.
In conclusion, the succubus is a captivating figure. Her origins are rich and varied. From ancient myths to modern interpretations, she has left an indelible mark. The succubus embodies the duality of human nature. She is both a source of fear and fascination. As we continue to explore her story, we find ourselves drawn to her allure. The succubus remains a powerful symbol. A reminder of the complexities of desire and the human experience.
As news of Beverly’s condition spread through the medical world, it was only a matter of time before the pharmaceutical industry caught wind of her case. Within days, representatives from some of the world’s largest drug companies were descending on the government facility where she was being held, each one eager to stake their claim on what they saw as the discovery of the century.
To them, Beverly was more than just a patient or a research subject – she was a potential goldmine, a key to unlocking new treatments and therapies that could revolutionize medicine as we know it. Her unique biology, they argued, held the secrets to curing everything from cancer to Alzheimer’s to aging itself.
The bidding war that ensued was fierce and ruthless, with companies offering vast sums of money and resources in exchange for exclusive access to Beverly’s case. They promised state-of-the-art research facilities, teams of world-renowned scientists, and cutting-edge technologies that could unlock the mysteries of her condition in record time.
But even as the pharmaceutical giants battled for control of Beverly’s future, her family found themselves caught in the crosshairs. They were approached by armies of lawyers and executives, each one promising a different vision of what Beverly’s legacy could be.
Some offered money, vast sums that could set the family up for life and ensure that Beverly received the best possible care. Others promised fame and recognition, the chance to turn Beverly’s story into a symbol of hope and inspiration for millions around the world.
But through it all, Beverly’s loved ones remained wary and skeptical. They had seen firsthand the toll that her condition had taken on her, the way it had ravaged her body and mind and left her a shell of the person she once was. They knew that any decision they made would have profound consequences, not just for Beverly, but for the entire world.
As the pressure mounted and the offers grew more and more extravagant, Beverly’s family found themselves torn between their desire to protect her and their desperate need for answers. They knew that the pharmaceutical companies’ motives were not entirely altruistic, that they saw Beverly as a means to an end, a tool to be exploited for profit and power.
But at the same time, they couldn’t help but be tempted by the promise of hope, the chance to find a cure for Beverly’s condition and to spare others the same fate. They spent long, agonizing hours debating their options, weighing the risks and rewards of each path before them.
In the end, it was Beverly herself who made the decision. In a rare moment of lucidity, she called her family to her bedside and spoke to them in a voice that was barely above a whisper. She told them that she wanted her suffering to mean something, that she wanted her story to be one of progress and discovery, not just pain and tragedy.
And so, with heavy hearts and a sense of trepidation, Beverly’s loved ones signed the papers that would grant one of the pharmaceutical companies exclusive rights to her case. They watched as teams of researchers and scientists descended on the facility, their faces alight with excitement and ambition.
For Beverly, the days that followed were a blur of tests and procedures, of endless rounds of questioning and experimentation. She was poked and prodded, subjected to every cutting-edge technology and technique the company’s vast resources could provide.
Kevin McClure matched with Bianca Forester three days ago. Her profile had been strangely compelling—a chef specializing in heritage Black Forest cuisine, with photos of her meticulously layering dark chocolate sponge, kirsch-soaked cherries, and thick cream into elaborate cakes.
Her bio mentioned she’d recently moved from Germany’s Black Forest region, and her messages had been oddly formal yet playful. A mix of old-world charm and something he couldn’t quite place.
When she invited him to her restaurant, Schwarzwald, for a private after-hours tasting, he jumped at the chance. The reviews were stellar—but something about the place was elusive. The website had no menu, no listed hours. When he searched for photos, they all seemed… wrong—as though the restaurant itself didn’t want to be seen.
Kevin arrived at 9 PM sharp. The street was empty. Schwarzwald stood in the dim glow of a single lantern, its heavy wood-and-iron door cracked open, inviting him inside.
The restaurant was dark except for a single table, bathed in candlelight. The walls were lined with twisted wooden beams that looked almost organic, as though the building had grown from the ground itself.
Bianca greeted him in a crisp white chef’s coat, her dark hair pinned back, except for a few loose strands curling around her pale face.
“I hope you’re hungry,” she said, leading him to the table. Her accent was soft, but deliberate, like someone who had spoken English for centuries but never quite let go of their mother tongue.
She brought out the first course—thin slices of Black Forest ham, deep red with marbled white veins.
“Cured in-house,” she explained. “Traditional methods. The smoking process takes months. But the preparation?” She smiled. “That begins with the first bite.”
Kevin picked up a slice and placed it on his tongue.
The taste was indescribable.
At first, it was rich, velvety, almost intoxicating. Then—something shifted. A creeping feral musk. The deep, loamy taste of soil after rain. The lingering bitterness of pine resin. Something ancient. Something alive.
Bianca watched him intently.
“What’s your secret ingredient?” he asked, the question half a joke, half a plea.
Her smile widened. “We preserve more than just meat in the Black Forest.”
She disappeared into the kitchen.
Kevin’s vision swam. The candle flames flickered strangely, their shadows elongating, twisting, moving when nothing else did.
The walls seemed… closer. The beams had shifted, hadn’t they? The wood looked like bones now—not carved, but grown that way, shaped by centuries of wind, time, and hunger.
Bianca returned, setting down a slice of Black Forest cake before him. The cherries glistened wetly in the candlelight, dark as coagulated blood.
Kevin blinked. His fingers felt numb. He tried to stand, but his legs wouldn’t move.
“What… what’s happening?” he slurred. His fork clattered against the plate.
Bianca tilted her head. Her pupils were too large now, swallowing the color of her irises, and her shadow on the wall was… wrong.
Too tall. Too jagged.
Branches. Not arms.
“The Black Forest is old, Kevin,” she murmured, voice deepening, growing rough, raw, and layered—like a chorus of voices speaking through her. “The trees, the roots, the soil—we learned long ago how to preserve more than just flesh. Time. Memory. Life itself.”
The walls creaked. No—breathed.
Kevin’s body felt heavy, sinking into the chair as if the wood had begun to absorb him.
Bianca stepped closer. Her shadow branched outward, dark tendrils splitting and stretching across the walls like reaching roots.
“You ate the ham.”
Her fingers brushed his face, and Kevin saw.
A flash of dark trees stretching skyward. Something vast and watching beneath the canopy. A hunger older than the bones of the world.
The restaurant wasn’t a place—it was a threshold. A piece of the Black Forest, still alive, still feeding, still growing.
And now, so was he.
Bianca leaned in, whispering in his ear.
“The smoking process takes months.”
She pressed a hand to his chest.
“But the preparation… that begins with the first bite.”
Three days later, Schwarzwald unveiled a new special.
A house-cured Black Forest ham, unlike anything diners had ever tasted.
“The depth of flavor is incredible,” a patron murmured over candlelight, slicing into the delicate meat. “What’s the secret?”
Bianca smiled from the kitchen doorway, watching, waiting.
“Family tradition,” she said.
She turned back inside, where the restaurant sighed, exhaling softly, the wood of the beams shifting, growing.
On the dating app, a new profile appeared.
Someone seeking adventurous diners interested in sampling authentic Black Forest cuisine.
As the media frenzy surrounding Beverly’s case reached a fever pitch, it was only a matter of time before the government took notice. The first to arrive were the CDC, a team of top epidemiologists and infectious disease experts dispatched to investigate the possible public health implications of Beverly’s condition.
They descended on the hospital like a swarm of locusts, commandeering entire floors and setting up a makeshift command center. They pored over every scrap of medical data, interviewed every doctor and nurse who had come into contact with Beverly, and collected samples of everything from the air in her room to the lint in her bedsheets.
But even as the CDC conducted its investigation, other branches of the government were taking an interest in Beverly’s case. The NIH began its own parallel research effort, assembling teams of geneticists and molecular biologists to study the fundamental mechanisms of her transformation.
And then there were the whispers, the rumors that began to circulate in the halls of power. Some suggested that Beverly’s condition was the result of a deliberate attack, a new form of bioterrorism unleashed by a foreign power or a rogue non-state actor. Others speculated that she was the product of a secret government experiment, a classified military program that had gone horribly wrong.
As these rumors gained traction, the Department of Homeland Security was put on high alert. Teams of agents were dispatched to the hospital, their presence a constant reminder of the growing sense of unease and paranoia that had taken hold.
For Beverly, the arrival of the government only added to the surreal nightmare that her life had become. She was questioned relentlessly, subjected to endless rounds of interrogation by stone-faced agents who seemed more interested in her potential as a threat than in her well-being.
And then, one day, everything changed. Beverly was awakened in the middle of the night by a team of heavily armed soldiers, their faces obscured by gas masks and their weapons trained on her. They bundled her onto a stretcher, strapped her down with heavy restraints, and loaded her into the back of an unmarked van.
She was being moved, they told her, to a secure government facility where she could be studied and contained more effectively. Beverly’s mind reeled with terror and confusion as the van sped through the empty streets, the city lights flickering past the tinted windows.
When they arrived at the facility, Beverly was struck by the sheer scale of it – a vast, sprawling complex of buildings and fences that seemed to stretch on forever. She was wheeled inside, past checkpoints and guard stations and endless corridors of sterile white tile.
Her new home was a stark, featureless room, its walls lined with monitoring equipment and its air thick with the hum of machinery. A team of doctors and scientists in hazmat suits hovered over her, their faces obscured behind layers of plastic and rubber.
And so began a new chapter in Beverly’s ordeal, one marked by even greater isolation and uncertainty. She was poked and prodded, subjected to endless tests and experiments, all in the name of unlocking the secrets of her condition.
But even as the government’s top minds worked tirelessly to unravel the mystery of her transformation, Beverly could sense a growing unease among her captors. They seemed almost afraid of her at times, as if they knew something she didn’t, as if they had glimpsed some dark truth that they dared not share.
The sky over Hickory Glen shimmered a bright, cloudless blue on the day of the Autumn Harvest Festival. Banners of orange and gold fluttered in the breeze as townsfolk bustled around the main street, a charming stretch lined with century-old shops and pumpkin-laden wagons. A faint smell of hay and caramel apples wafted through the air. Laughter and conversation filled every corner, while the clucking of prized chickens and the lowing of well-groomed cattle filled the gaps.
On one end of the festival grounds stood long tables groaning beneath the weight of homemade jams, pies, and preserves. Beyond that, an impromptu stage had been set up, where local kids in scarecrow outfits performed folk dances to the beat of a fiddler. Everywhere, people admired massive gourds and towering stalks of corn, hoping to win ribbons for the largest or most unusual produce.
Around mid-morning, a stranger arrived unnoticed. He wore white face makeup, dark eyeliner exaggerated his eyes, and he was dressed in black from head to toe—a mime. He began to stroll through the crowds, weaving silently between booths, gesturing at onlookers with animated movements.
Some of the festival-goers found him delightful, clapping at his pantomimed pretend walls and invisible ropes. He plucked an imaginary flower and offered it to a giggling child. But others felt something…off about him. Perhaps it was the way he never broke character, not even to smile or to nod. Or maybe it was the shifting shadow at his feet that seemed a touch too dark, as though the sun couldn’t touch it.
By afternoon, the mime had set up an impromptu performance circle near the center of town. Families paused on hay bales to watch. The mime mimed the act of juggling, yet no one could see what he might be tossing in the air. Children clapped anyway, cheering him on. Then he tipped an imaginary hat and started “pulling” something out of it.
That was when the first strange thing happened.
The light in the square seemed to flicker, as if clouds had suddenly drifted across the sun—yet the sky remained free of any. The wind stilled; no more pleasant breeze teased the flags and ribbons. A hush spread across the festival as the mime continued to pull and pull from his invisible hat. Slowly, a shimmer appeared in the air, like heat waves rising off asphalt. People pressed closer, uncertain if it was some clever trick.
Then, with a silent snap, a shape formed in midair—a grotesque, quivering thing covered in ropy, black tendrils. It hovered before the mime as though he were holding it by a leash. A collective gasp rippled through the crowd. The mime stared at his conjuration, moving his gloved hands with expert precision, guiding it. The shape pulsed once, twice, and then slithered across the dusty pavement before vanishing into the shadows beneath a booth.
Parents snatched their children away, hugging them close. The festival’s host, Mayor Rosalee Hightower, rushed to the scene, demanding an explanation. But the mime said nothing. His chalk-white face remained impassive, eyes flitting from person to person as though searching for his next target.
Almost at once, the feeling in Hickory Glen curdled. The sweet smell of caramel apples turned sour in the nose. Far across the green, a bleat of terror rose from the livestock pen. People ran to investigate, only to find the animals huddled and shaking. One of the prized goats was missing—just gone without a trace. A thick patch of black ichor stained the ground where it had stood.
Meanwhile, the mime pressed on. He performed a silent routine of “feeding” an invisible something in front of him. Though no one could see the shape, they sensed its presence—a malignant energy that made their skin crawl. The shadows around him lengthened in impossible ways. A second later, a thunderous crack echoed overhead, though the sky remained rainless.
Panic seeped through the crowd. The once-bustling festival grew quieter as people backed away. Some tried to run for their cars, only to find the road barricaded by twisted illusions: towering figures that flickered into existence, shifting between solid and spectral. They loomed over the escaping townsfolk, forcing them back.
A desperate hush fell. Mayor Hightower ordered the local deputies to intervene. They approached the mime cautiously, guns drawn. He stared them down with a look of eerie calm. With one graceful gesture—hands miming the shape of a box—he trapped them behind invisible walls. Their frantic cries were muted, as though they stood behind thick, soundproof glass.
By now, the most elderly residents were whispering old folktales about a creeping evil that once haunted Hickory Glen long before it was settled. They spoke of a traveling performer who had, according to legend, bargained with dark entities in forgotten woods. Though none had believed the stories for generations, it all felt too real now.
As sunset approached, the festival lights flickered on. The swirl of color and warmth did nothing to dispel the suffocating fear. The mime took center stage once more, his gloved hands raised to the bruised-purple sky. With each measured movement, the rifts of shimmering air tore open around the square. Something like diseased roots or ancient tentacles pressed against the edges of reality, threatening to break through in multiple places at once.
Children screamed and clung to their parents. Strong farmers who’d once wrestled livestock into pens turned pale and helpless. The top prize for the largest pumpkin sat, still unclaimed, next to a half-finished pie contest. In the distance, a church bell began tolling on its own, each peal more ominous than the last.
And the mime was smiling now—barely, but definitely smiling. A faint curve of the lips painted in stark white. In that moment, the townsfolk realized this wasn’t an act. Something unfathomable had chosen their celebration as a gateway.
An unspoken question gnawed at every survivor watching: could this horror be stopped, or was Hickory Glen doomed to become a silent, abandoned ruin beneath an ancient darkness?
No one dared breathe too loudly as the mime continued his performance, weaving illusions into life, each one more terrifying than the last. What had begun as a day of pride and joy—bounty from the land—had become a nightmare beyond mortal comprehension. The mime’s white face caught the glow of lanterns, and in his eyes, there was a silent promise that the worst was yet to come.