Anais Returned – Found Footage Horror

For the 13 days leading up to Halloween, I am trying an experiment by rewriting the same story in 13 different styles, reflecting the various horror subgenres as part of my Thirteen For Halloween series. You can find the original version HERE. So, feel free to come back and weigh in with your opinion of which style worked the best!

[Video Title: Unearthed Footage: Anaïs’s Haunting Reunion]

[Scene 1: A dimly lit room with cobwebbed corners, decaying wallpaper, and dusty family portraits that seem to look back at you. An older camcorder’s timestamp glitches before settling on 03:07 AM. A shaky hand sets the camera on a creaking, antique table, opposite a tattered couch where Anaïs lies, draped in a worn-out blanket. The footage is grainy, distorted, with ephemeral artifacts.]

Voiceover (muffled, unnervingly breathy): “I had to see if the legends were true, especially after what happened to my sister… Recording this as proof.”

[Scene 2: The unmistakable sound of a door groaning open. Takashi cautiously steps in, his eyes widening at the sight of Anaïs. “Did you find her, Kaito?” The camera operator—now identified as Kaito—nods almost imperceptibly. Clock ticks to 03:12 AM. The room darkens as though swallowing light. Static flares on the screen.]

Voiceover: “Takashi, look! The static… and Anaïs is…”

Takashi (nervously): “Kaito, we’re violating sacred ground. We need to go.”

[Scene 3: Anaïs’s eyes flash open, glowing an unnatural hue. The camera’s auto-focus spirals out of control. A shadowy mist encircles her like a halo of darkness.]

Voiceover (stuttering): “She’s awake? Is she really awake?”

Takashi: “This is straight out of the village folklore! The girl who vanished after invoking forbidden gods…”

[Scene 4: Anaïs rises, and a visible chill permeates the room; frost forms on the lens. A corrupted lullaby creeps into the audio, originating from an antique music box that wasn’t there before.]

Voiceover (quivering): “What… what is that tune? And this cold… it’s unbearable.”

[Scene 5: As Anaïs moves, the camera captures a disconcerting change—a family photo now includes Anaïs, her eyes glaring from the frame. Ghostly whispers crescendo in the audio.]

Takashi (voice breaking): “The legends… they said she just wanted her family back. Is this what it means?”

Voiceover: “I don’t know, but we can’t stay. We need to leave this forsaken place.”

[Scene 6: A quick pan to a window reveals not Tokyo but an endless, foggy void. Anaïs draws closer, her eyes locking onto the lens as if peering into the soul of the viewer.]

Voiceover: “She’s onto us, Takashi. We have to shut it off—”

Takashi: “Wait! Do you hear that?”

[A shrine bell tolls. The camera malfunctions, pixelating Anaïs’s face into something monstrous.]

[Scene 7: The footage jumps. The timestamp glitches before stopping at 03:33 AM. The room is deserted but changed—more decayed, as if years have passed in minutes. The lullaby descends into an unsettling silence.]

Voiceover (distorted, almost inhuman): “She’s not here. But she’s not gone. She’s searching for them. For us. Beware.”

[End of Footage: The screen plunges into blackness. A laughter that blends youthful innocence with malevolent intent fills the void. Text materializes: “This footage was discovered on a camcorder left at a shrine. Kaito, Takashi, and Anaïs are still missing.”]

Anais Returned – Japanese Horror

For the 13 days leading up to Halloween, I am trying an experiment by rewriting the same story in 13 different styles, reflecting the various horror subgenres as part of my Thirteen For Halloween series. You can find the original version HERE. So, feel free to come back and weigh in with your opinion of which style worked the best!

Hidden amidst Tokyo’s glaring neon labyrinth, in a dim chamber veiled by time and dust, lay Anaïs—her form lifeless on a tatami mat. Her white kimono glowed ghostly in the flickering light of paper lanterns, themselves aging, as if fearful of the being beneath them.

The room exhaled the weight of centuries, as shamisen strings bled through the walls, intertwining with the synthetic pulse of modern beats. Outside, the aroma of sacred incense and sizzling street food collided in an incongruous dance.

Hiroshi, a historian bewitched by folklore, had just acquired this relic of a property. Driven by legends of a woman entangled in forbidden rituals and an ill-fated love with a samurai, he sat in the adjacent room, a sea of ancient scrolls spread before him. As he deciphered archaic text, a sound—a rustle, almost a sigh—pulled his eyes away.

In that moment, the room transformed. Anaïs’s eyes snapped open, iridescent in the lantern’s dim glow. She levitated slightly, her movements imbued with spectral grace. Time staggered, and objects in the room, including a porcelain mask with twisted features, bent in unnatural postures.

“What monstrosity are you?” Hiroshi stepped in, his voice a blend of awe and dread.

Anaïs’s whisper sliced through the tension, “I am the void left when love turns to ash and rites crumble to desecration.”

Hiroshi’s eyes widened. “So, the legends were not mere tales. But why manifest now?”

Her answer came with a haunting, ambiguous smile. “The tendrils of this era beckon me. It offers a sanctuary for my malevolent essence.”

Dread intertwined with an insatiable curiosity in Hiroshi. “If I guide you through this world, will you abstain from wreaking havoc?”

“A compelling proposal,” she mused, her voice a whisper yet carrying the weight of eons. “Guide me, and your Tokyo may remain unscathed.”

As they wandered through a city pulsating with light and life, Anaïs’s malevolent aura caused ripples—phones died, screens flickered, and social media feeds contorted into unrecognizable nightmares.

Simultaneously, Hiroshi texted Yumi, a Shinto priestess versed in the art of pacifying wayward spirits. The urgency was unspoken; Tokyo’s digital landscape was disintegrating, succumbing to Anaïs’s malevolence.

Within an obscure shrine, Yumi initiated a potent ritual, her chants reverberating through the dimensions. As she chanted, Hiroshi uncovered ancient letters, the ink almost fading, but the words screaming of a love torn asunder by fate.

And then, a jolting realization gripped him. Memories not his own flooded his consciousness. He had been that samurai. He had loved Anaïs.

Confronting her amidst the chaos, Hiroshi’s voice trembled, “I remember us. We cannot repeat the sins of our past lives.”

Anaïs’s eyes softened for the first time, morphing from predatory orbs to wells of despair and longing. “Perhaps we can rewrite our story.”

But fate was a cruel author. Yumi’s ritual reached its zenith, tearing Anaïs back into the spirit realm. Hiroshi was left gasping, love and loss now haunting both his past and present.

And so, in an obscure corner of Tokyo, a new legend was whispered—one of a historian and a restless spirit, bound yet separated by time, forever questing through alternating realms of existence.

Anais Returned – Post-Apocalyptic

For the 13 days leading up to Halloween, I am trying an experiment by rewriting the same story in 13 different styles, reflecting the various horror subgenres as part of my Thirteen For Halloween series. You can find the original version HERE. So, feel free to come back and weigh in with your opinion of which style worked the best!

Half-buried in an abandoned bunker beneath the rubble of a world undone, Anaïs lay still on a makeshift bed. Shadows flickered on the walls, cast by the dying embers of an ancient lantern. Its fuel, like the hope that once ignited humanity, was almost spent. The air carried the weight of rotting metal and damp soil, a putrid tribute to the civilization that once thrived.

Suddenly, the dwindling light seemed to get sucked into Anaïs’s eyes as they snapped open. Her eyes glowed a menacing red, illuminating her twisted smirk. Casting aside the cloak of deathly torpor, she rose to her feet.

From the corner of the dim room, a quivering voice emerged. “Anaïs? Is that you?” Leo, a skeletal figure garbed in tattered clothing, stumbled into her light, his eyes wide in a blend of recognition and terror.

Anaïs, her form now grotesque and shadowy, looked down upon him. “Leo,” she intoned in a chilling whisper, void of warmth or love.

“You disappeared for days, Anaïs. What happened to you?” His voice cracked, eyes teary, as if grappling between hope and an unspeakable dread.

Her surroundings recoiled from her as if she exuded an anti-life force. “The world happened, Leo. I’ve become what it made me.”

At that moment, a distant growl reverberated through the bunker walls, punctuated by human screams—ugly reminders of the mutants and survivors clawing for existence in the wasteland above.

Anaïs made a move for the exit, but Leo grasped her hand. She looked down, her eyes softening for just a moment. “Don’t,” she warned, but her voice wavered.

He tightened his grip. “You were my mentor, Anaïs. You taught me to fight, to survive. Let me fight for you now.”

For a moment, her cruel facade cracked. “You don’t know what you’re asking.”

The air outside was a chaotic blend of ashes and lost hopes. As Anaïs emerged, her eyes surveyed the skeletal skyline, monuments to human folly. Leo followed, catching up to her.

“Stop, Anaïs. We can reverse this. Find a cure,” he pleaded.

Her laughter was a cacophony of despair. “No cure can absolve the world’s sins, Leo.”

He took a step closer, unwavering. “Then let me help you find your way back to what you were. Even if it’s the last thing I do.”

As they stood there, whispers of dread and awe began to emanate from the shattered remnants of the world. A new force had risen, darker than the night—Anaïs. But alongside her was Leo, a stubborn glimmer in the all-consuming darkness.

Anaïs’s eyes shifted nervously, her malevolent glow faltering. “They’re here,” she hissed suddenly, eyes widening as her gaze fixed on something horrifying in the distance.

Leo followed her eyes to see shadows—dark, monstrous forms—moving rapidly toward them.

And so, as the last rays of the dying sun disappeared below the horizon, two figures stood in the wasteland—one embodying its utter despair, and the other, its last shred of hope. But looming before them were shapes far worse than either, and the night was yet young.

Anais Returned – Southern Gothic

For the 13 days leading up to Halloween, I am trying an experiment by rewriting the same story in 13 different styles, reflecting the various horror subgenres as part of my Thirteen For Halloween series. You can find the original version HERE. So, feel free to come back and weigh in with your opinion of which style worked the best!

The glory days of the plantation house had long since faded, now marked only by aging wood, creeping kudzu, and the weight of unpaid debts. Inside, Anaïs lay restless on a timeworn chaise. Tattered drapes and peeling wallpaper stood as silent witnesses to years of opulence and moral decay, sins of past generations stitched into the very fabric of the walls. This was a home that had once pulsed with life, its intricate architecture a spider’s web woven from strands of Southern gentility and exploitation.

When the grandfather clock in the corner tolled the witching hour, Anaïs felt a chilling breeze cut through the stifling heat. Legend had it that it was the ghost of Delphine, a woman unjustly hanged a century ago, serving as a nightly reminder of the South’s contorted legacy. Anaïs’s eyes flared open, burning with an unholy fire as a cruel yet sorrowful smile twisted her lips.

“You always remember, sugar, the dark heart hidden within beauty,” whispered a spectral voice—it was her mother’s timbre, a mantra passed down through generations drowning in lore and bigotry.

Rising from her reclining position, Anaïs felt the room’s temperature plummet. The floorboards creaked and groaned as if rejecting her newfound malevolent nature. Her high heels echoed through the rotting hallways like a metronome of impending doom. She felt the scornful gazes from framed family portraits—generations of Confederate officers, enslaved laborers, and betrayed wives—each contributing to the twisted tapestry that was her lineage.

As she descended the grand staircase, a memory flashed in her mind: Father Josiah, the local priest, had once described her home as an Eden, tainted and fallen. And now, Anaïs realized, she was its snake. Generations of malice surged within her like an overflowing cauldron of venom.

Stepping onto the porch, she noticed the air was thick, almost palpable. A dog howled mournfully in the distance, mourning her metamorphosis. The magnolias, once symbols of Southern elegance, sagged under the same wickedness now coursing through her veins. The Mississippi River before her seemed to halt its flow momentarily as if bracing for the sorrow she would imprint upon its banks.

Then, the footsteps. Caleb, her former lover, naive enough to think he could draw her back to a simpler life. He materialized from the shadows, his eyes uneasy.

“You’ve changed,” he remarked cautiously, the hairs on his neck standing up.

“Oh, Caleb,” Anaïs cooed, circling him like a predator sizing up its prey. “You could never comprehend how much.”

An ethical dilemma rose within her—a fleeting pang of love or guilt—but it dissolved as swiftly as it had appeared. She looked into Caleb’s eyes and saw reflected not just her individual malice, but the collective darkness of an entire region’s history. For a brief moment, she wondered if she should release him, question the cycle she was perpetuating. The thought vanished almost as soon as it had formed, eclipsed by an irresistible urge for malevolence.

Laughing softly, a sound that melded into the night with an unsettling ease, Anaïs took her first step into a world teetering on the brink of chaos. Her laughter was a melody as dark as the murky depths of the Mississippi—a harbinger of a sorrow so profound that no historical account could ever hope to capture its essence.

And so, with an act too unspeakable to illustrate in polite company, Anaïs sealed Caleb’s fate and that of many others. It was a genesis of dread—a cruel inauguration of her reign. As she stood there, the world seemed to shudder as the malevolent influence within her unfurled, ensnaring not just the hearts of those who would cross her path, but weaving a new, haunting tapestry that would become part of the very soul of the South. A tapestry too grotesque for any loom, too intricate for any pen, but perfect for the next twisted chapter of her life.

Anais Returned – Modern Psychological Thriller

For the 13 days leading up to Halloween, I am trying an experiment by rewriting the same story in 13 different styles, reflecting the various horror subgenres as part of my Thirteen For Halloween series. You can find the original version HERE. So, feel free to come back and weigh in with your opinion of which style worked the best!

The minimalist apartment was awash in the soft blue light of a computer screen where Anaïs lay sprawled across a sleek, leather couch. Beside her, an empty bottle of sleeping pills rested on a glass coffee table, mirroring her own emptiness. The incessant ping of her phone’s notifications seemed a cruel counterpoint to her lifeless form.

Meanwhile, Jason, an ex-lover and now a therapist grappling with a deteriorating marriage, found himself unable to sleep. He stared at his phone, contemplating whether to check on Anaïs. After their breakup, he’d heard rumors—disturbing murmurs of a drastic change in her behavior. Finally, he sent a text: “Are you okay? We need to talk.”

As the clock on Anaïs’s wall edged closer to midnight, the atmosphere shifted. Static electricity seemed to charge the room. Anaïs’s eyelids flickered open, revealing eyes that glowed eerily in the screen’s pulsating light. A smirk unfolded across her lips, as if she’d uncovered a shocking but liberating truth.

Her first breath felt like inhaling a storm, unsettling yet invigorating. A series of fragmented memories—abuse, professional setbacks, societal disdain—surfaced, each fueling her transformation. No longer confined by morality or convention, she felt reborn as an agent of chaos.

Her phone buzzed with Jason’s message. Reading it, her smirk evolved into a devilish grin. “Oh, we will,” she whispered to the void, “but you won’t like what you hear.”

“You should be more careful, Jason,” she muttered, contemplating the irony. Here was a man who’d once belittled her ambitions, now struggling in his own professional life and troubled marriage.

Anaïs stepped out into the night, her stilettos pounding the pavement like a war drum, each step amplifying her dark aura. People—strangers, friends, even her own family—felt a magnetic yet unsettling pull towards her, sensing they were now pawns in a game only she understood.

Pausing outside a neon-lit bar, she caught her reflection in the glass. Instead of her eyes, endless voids stared back, black holes ready to consume all. She entered the bar, and within minutes, manipulated a heated argument between a couple, fanning their insecurities and fears into an explosive confrontation.

As she left the bar, her phone buzzed again: a news notification. “Local Therapist Found Dead in Apparent Suicide.” Jason. Anaïs’s grin widened into a triumphant smile. Not only had she set chaos into motion for the couple but also eliminated someone who might have pieced together her transformation.

Her malevolent will had only just begun to infiltrate lives. Just as a virus spreads unchecked, so too would her influence, fraying the fabric of her victims’ reality, leaving only a tattered tapestry of despair.

Inside her apartment, she picked up a chess piece—a queen—and placed it dominantly in the center of a board. Anaïs pondered her next move. The world was her chessboard, and she was prepared to deliver checkmate.

Anais Returned – Penny Dreadful

For the 13 days leading up to Halloween, I am trying an experiment by rewriting the same story in 13 different styles, reflecting the various horror subgenres as part of my Thirteen For Halloween series. You can find the original version HERE. So, feel free to come back and weigh in with your opinion of which style worked the best!

Ladies and Gentlemen, beware! What follows is a tale so twisted and complex, it dare not be contained within idle whispers or fleeting glimpses. Gird your spirits, for the tale that unfolds shall be an enigma, an anthology of despair and hidden sorrow, whispered through time as a cautionary litany!

In a secluded chamber of woeful elegance, where the air was thick with the scent of wilted roses and tallow, Anaïs, once a meek heiress scorned by love and burdened by destitution, reclined upon a tattered chaise longue. Her garb was of the finest silk, though frayed and faded, a mocking contrast to her pauper’s existence. Shadows wove an intricate ballet, orchestrated by some unseen maestro of the dark arts.

Ah, mark this moment, fair reader, for at the stroke of midnight, as the ancient clock groaned its mournful toll, something most unnatural stirred! An ancient grimoire, perched precariously on an oak table scarred by time, flew open as if possessed. Its pages settled upon an incantation of such malevolent power, it could darken the sun. Anaïs’s eyes—those once timid portals to her fractured soul—flared open, ablaze with an unholy light.

“Yes! Finally!” she crowed, a symphony of twisted elation and hideous revelation echoing in her voice. Her body lifted, suspended in air by an unseen force before settling back onto the ground. “The words of the cursed Book of Forgotten Souls did not lie!”

But brace yourselves! For as she spoke, the chamber recoiled as if wounded. A wave of eldritch frost swept through, turning her breath to icy mist and causing the very walls to shed tears of frozen dread. Gone was the pitiable girl, replaced by an entity whose malevolence defied description.

Just then, dear reader, the door creaked open, and in stepped Eliza, the unsuspecting chambermaid. Her face, a paragon of guileless innocence, twisted into a mask of horror. “Heavens, what evil is this?” she cried, making to escape. Alas! The door slammed shut, seized by spectral tendrils.

Anaïs beheld her captive audience with contempt. “Ah, sweet, naive Eliza. Do you not see? My transformation was never about mere power, it was about reclaiming my destiny, twisted and marred by those who took my love, my dignity! You will be my harbinger; your despair will herald my reign.” Her malevolent eyes fell upon an aged map of the world, strewn upon a stone altar. She traced a circle around a remote village, its innocence betrayed by her vile intent, and a surge of dark energy filled the room.

Eliza, summoning a hidden reservoir of courage, lunged for the book, her fingers nearly grazing its cursed pages. “Fool!” Anaïs snarled, and with a flick of her wrist, a bolt of shadow pinned Eliza against the wall, her face a tapestry of eternal agony. “This book, its dark knowledge, they are but a fraction of my newfound arsenal.”

Now attend, for Anaïs departed that loathsome chamber, a specter of malevolence trailed by a shadow that bled into the night like an ink stain of impending doom. Yet, as she left, a flicker of what might have been regret—or was it longing?—crossed her visage, a remnant of her shattered humanity.

So ends this lamentable chapter—but take heed, gentle souls, for the odious symphony of Anaïs is far from its finale. Her name shall reverberate in the depths of our nightmares, an ever-present reminder of the malevolence that lurks in the shadows, waiting for its moment to strike!

Thus, the curtains tremble, both in anticipation and dread, at what malevolent deeds are yet to unfold. Who, if anyone, can halt this juggernaut of malevolence? Dare you continue, you shall find your answers in the next unsettling installment of this tale most dire!

So I ask you, are you ready for the horror that awaits?

Anais Returned – Cosmic Horror

For the 13 days leading up to Halloween, I am trying an experiment by rewriting the same story in 13 different styles, reflecting the various horror subgenres as part of my Thirteen For Halloween series. You can find the original version HERE. So, feel free to come back and weigh in with your opinion of which style worked the best!

The corpse of Anaïs was strewn across a divan within an ancient chamber that was shrouded in darkness and filled with an oppressive smell of decay. Shadows danced on the walls, their haunting movements etching an eldritch ritual into her carcass. She had lived a life of mundane events and aching solitude, but a whisper—a prophecy from the cryptic Codex of Umbral Lore—had promised her transformation at the stroke of midnight.

A grandfather clock atop a crumbling mantel struck midnight and a palpable change tore through the room as if the very walls were gasping. Anaïs’ eyes snapped open, glowing with an otherworldly luminescence. “So, it begins,” she muttered, her voice tinged with a mixture of awe and dread. She rose, feeling an alien force coursing through her, compelling her upright.

“Is this liberation or damnation?” she wondered aloud. A cold mist emanated from her body, freezing the air and transforming the rotting walls into grotesque artworks of horror. Her humanity, once her anchor, now felt like a distant memory.

“The Codex was right,” she hissed, a malicious grin replacing her previous expression of wonder. Her voice was now tinged with malevolence, any vestige of her former self seemingly eradicated.

As the grandfather clock struck its final bell, a shiver down Anaïs’ spine. She realized the celestial alignment that empowered her was transient; it would dissipate at dawn. Time was of the essence.

Moving toward an altar built from crumbling stones, she studied an ancient map of Earth. “Now, where shall I begin?” Her fingers danced in the frozen air, inscribing runes only she—and the forbidden gods—could see. Her eyes fixed on a small, isolated town. “Ah, the perfect testing ground for my newfound powers.”

Her face twisted into an unholy snarl as she grabbed a dark, jeweled dagger from the altar. With swift strokes, she carved an arcane symbol into the map, right over the unsuspecting town. “Tonight, they will know fear; they will know me,” she vowed.

In that moment, a bone-chilling howl erupted from the depths of the chamber, answering her in a cacophony of voices that sounded suspiciously human. The shadows on the wall quivered, then stretched out as if reaching toward the small town on the map.

Anaïs’ eyes widened with a mixture of triumph and horror. What had she unleashed? Had she become the harbinger of doom the prophecy foretold, or a pawn in a cosmic game she barely understood?

As she exited her sanctum, even the shadows seemed to bow before her, whispering her name with a mix of reverence and existential dread. The world remained ignorant of the doom that was about to befall it—doom that now had a name.

Anaïs.

Anaïs Returned – Original Version

Time for another experiment. Beginning tomorrow, for the 13 days leading up to Halloween, I will be rewriting this story in 13 different styles, reflecting the various horror subgenres as part of my Thirteen For Halloween series. So, feel free to come back and weigh in with your opinion of which style worked the best!

Though dilapidated, the mansion, long forgotten by the residents of the nearby towns, was shrouded by a history of betrayal and sorrow. Within its husk, Anaïs lay upon an antique chaise lounge. The ornate carvings on its wooden frame told tales of generations past, and its faded fabric bore witness to countless secrets. Her lifeless form, dressed in a once-vibrant gown, was surrounded by shadows that seemed to mourn her death.

As the grandfather clock chimed midnight, a gust of wind from a broken window pane stirred the room. Anaïs’s eyes flickered open, revealing a sinister gleam that pierced through the gloom. A wicked smile, borne of ancient grudges and suppressed rage, curled upon her lips. Slowly, she rose, as if buoyed by the dark energies of the mansion itself.

The cold, metallic scent of blood hung in the air, a remnant of the betrayal that had led to her untimely demise. Freed from her mortal constraints, a malevolent aura enveloped her, its chill seeping into the mansion’s very stones.

Whispers from ancestral portraits lining the hallway seemed to recognize her transformation, their painted eyes following her ethereal movements. The world beyond the mansion’s heavy oak doors remained blissfully ignorant of the vengeful spirit they had awakened.

Venturing forth, Anaïs’s path was illuminated by the pale moonlight, her silhouette a harbinger of doom. The hunger for revenge and chaos burned within her, and she reveled in the power of her spectral existence.

In a nearby village, the townsfolk slept soundly, unaware of the shadow creeping into their dreams. Those unfortunate enough to cross her path were met with visions of their darkest fears, a taste of the terror Anaïs would soon unleash.

As dawn’s first light threatened the horizon, the village church bell tolled, its somber notes a warning to all. The world would soon witness the wrath of a spirit wronged, for Anaïs, with her dark legacy, had returned.

Beware, for as the sun gave way to another night, the vengeful specter of Anaïs prepared to etch her malevolence onto the world. The mansion’s dark history had come alive, and no soul was safe from its haunting grip.

Lost For Words

Imagine, if you will, a bustling city in the not-so-distant future known for its technological advancements. The inhabitants of this metropolis thrived in their busy lives, heavily relying on a revolutionary app called ‘WordSmith.’ The app was simple; it allowed people to communicate not with their own words but by suggesting the ‘perfect’ phrases or sentences for any given situation. Whether it was a complex business negotiation or a casual chat with a friend, ‘WordSmith’ had you covered. Over time, people started depending on it to such an extent that they lost the ability to form sentences on their own.

Enter Leo Cortez, a college professor of linguistics and a staunch critic of the ‘WordSmith’. He believed in the power and beauty of human-generated language. One evening, after delivering a passionate lecture on the importance of genuine human conversations, Leo returned home only to find that his phone had automatically updated and installed ‘WordSmith.’

The next morning, Leo woke up to a nightmare. He found he couldn’t form a single sentence on his own. Every time he tried to speak or write, his mind drew a blank, forcing him to rely on ‘WordSmith’ suggestions. It was as if the app had hijacked his ability to use words.

Desperate, Leo tried to uninstall the app, but it was futile. He sought the help of experts, but they were at a loss. The world around him seemed unfazed, as everyone was so engrossed in the convenience of ‘WordSmith.’

In his struggle, Leo stumbled upon Dianne, a deaf-mute artist. Through gestures and her art, Dianne communicated with Leo, reminding him of the myriad ways humans can express themselves. Inspired, Leo started a movement encouraging people to explore non-verbal forms of communication. Mime, dance, art, and music became the new mediums of expression in his classes.

The movement gained traction, and soon many rediscovered the joy of genuine, unscripted communication. They realized they had been ‘Lost For Words’ in the truest sense. With Dianne’s help, Leo managed to create a counter-app, which, when installed, would restore a person’s innate ability to generate words.

As the city slowly returned to its verbal senses, ‘WordSmith’ became a cautionary tale, a stark reminder of the dangers of over-reliance on technology. People once again celebrated the beauty of words, cherishing every genuine conversation, every heartfelt letter, and every sincere confession. And Leo and Dianne, having found words and beyond in each other, stood as a testament to the timeless power of human connection.

Beggars and Monsters Part 2: The Unraveling Thread

Read Part 1 HERE

Alex went to the subway station that had the least amount of police presence, a small rear platform entrance without a teller. The moment he hopped the turnstile, he felt a shiver travel up his spine. It wasn’t just the memory of the Entity that lurked in these underground tunnels—it was the weight of the decisions that came with surviving such a malevolent force.

Rick, his former companion, had gone his separate way after the subway ordeal. Yes, what they had experienced was beyond words, the sort of event that either solidifies a friendship for life or shatters it completely, leaving each to grapple with the aftermath alone. Unfortunately for Alex and Rick, it was the latter.

Alex’s only consolation was the memories that saved his life that night, but there were only so many times he could replay the happier moments in his former life before the truth dawned that nostalgia was a liar. It gilded memories, transforming the harshest realities of yesteryears into golden snapshots. Alex knew this well, especially when it came to New York City. His city. Or at least, it used to be.

Born here. Raised here. Shuffled from one borough to the next, from Queens to Harlem, the Bronx to Staten Island, and the epicenter of it all, Manhattan. Alex’s roots were as entangled in this city as the labyrinthine subway system beneath its streets.

Once upon a time, you could stand in the heart of each neighborhood and feel its unique pulse. Greenwich Village hummed with artistic endeavors, Times Square buzzed with perpetual chaos, Central Park held tranquil heartbeats, and Harlem? Harlem thrived on the rhythm of resilience. But those days were gone, washed away in the sea of gentrification, commercialism, and a desperate need for societal homogeneity.

Yet it wasn’t about laying blame on city administration or the tech moguls buying up properties like Monopoly cards. No, it was about the eradication of soul, of ambience, of community. What remained was a dilution of culture, a bland slop lacking the spices that once made this city the world’s melting pot.

And for people like Alex, forced to make their beds on the cold concrete of this soulless city, it wasn’t just the landscape that changed. It was the very fabric of their existence. As he navigated through another sleepless night, bouncing from one makeshift bed to another, avoiding both police and nutters, he couldn’t help but wonder—How long until I lose myself in this barren metropolis?

Tonight, as he looked for a spot to rest among the weekend revelers returning from their Manhattan adventures, Alex felt an unsettling vibe. The city, already stripped of its personality, felt darker, more ominous.

Alex sat on the subway station floor with his good luck styrofoam cup—that, like him, had seen better days—and it seemed like it was going to be an ordinary night—until he spotted the man. Alex had seen countless faces like his, but something was different about this guy. The air around him was thick, almost viscous, as if he were wrapped in an invisible shroud.

As the man maneuvered through the labyrinth of the subway station, dodging tourists and ignoring the occasional busker, Alex couldn’t shake the gravitational pull that drew him toward me. It could have been loneliness, sometimes people just needed another living soul to talk to, to unload their burdens on, or it could have been a Bible thumper looking to save a poor lost soul, or maybe just plain curiosity. But deep down, Alex sensed it was something more ominous.

The man approached cautiously, casting a glance at Alex’s styrofoam cup. It was mostly empty, save for a couple of coins. The man’s eyes met Alex’s for a moment, then darted away. Alex recognized that look—fear masked as politeness.

“Hey,” the man began awkwardly, “Mind if I sit?”

Alex looked up, surprised, but then gestured to the cold floor beside him. The man sat down and it was apparent from his expression that he was suddenly aware of the icy surface of the subway platform.

“Rough night?” he asked.

“You could say that,” Alex replied. “This city doesn’t sleep, but it sure does dream.”

Suddenly the air around them grew denser, as if filling with an unseen fog. The typical noises of the station—the distant conversations, the announcements over the PA system, the screech of incoming trains—seemed to grow muffled, swallowed by the encroaching darkness.

Alex looked up, his eyes widening. “Do you feel that?”

“Yes,” the man whispered, suddenly paralyzed. The space around them had become a vacuum, a void sucking in everything, even light itself. But it wasn’t just physical space; it was time, memories, emotions—all converging on them like a black hole.

From this dark vortex, the Entity emerged.

Its form was nebulous, an ever-shifting dark mass, its center a swirling vortex of unimaginable despair. It loomed over both men and as it did, tendrils of darkness reached out, latching onto Alex.

Alex gasped as the Entity pulled him out of the subway tunnel, and he found himself floating above a disintegrating New York City. Buildings crumbled into dust; streets were swallowed up by dark voids, and skies were red as if bleeding.

“Behold, the cost of your selfishness,” the Entity whispered in a voice like shattered glass.

Suddenly, Alex was catapulted into a terrifying vision of the future. He found himself in his sister Emily’s apartment. The atmosphere was heavy, thick with a malevolent presence. Then, tendrils of the Entity materialized, wrapping around Emily, sinking into her flesh as her eyes filled with unimaginable terror.

The scene shifted. Now, it was his ex-wife, Sarah, and their daughter, Lucy. The same cruel fate befell them—souls shredded, minds torn apart by the Entity.

“Do you see, Alex? This is what awaits them because you chose to defy me. Their souls are ripe for the harvest. Each a thread in the tapestry of your life, each a thread I will pull until it unravels.”

Suddenly, the man who had been with Alex in the subway reappeared beside him, looking noticeably ethereal but deeply concerned. “Don’t listen to it, Alex. It’s manipulating you. Your love for your family is strong, stronger than this abomination. You can fight it!”

Tears formed in Alex’s eyes as the weight of the Entity’s words sunk in. The vision vanished, and he was back above the crumbling city, the Entity’s tendrils still wrapped around him.

“You have a choice,” the Entity murmured. “Sacrifice yourself to me, and they live. Their threads remain intact. Or save yourself, and watch their lives unravel, their souls consumed.”

The man gestured to the healing city below them. “Your love has already started to mend the fabric of this world. You don’t have to sacrifice yourself. Fight it, Alex!”

The decision felt impossible, unbearable. Alex trembled as he thought about Emily’s laughter, Sarah’s love, Lucy’s innocent smile. Could he doom them for his own survival?

His mind drifted to a memory—a summer afternoon in Central Park with Sarah and a baby Lucy, the sun shining and the air filled with the sweet scent of blooming flowers. Life, at that moment, had felt incredibly beautiful.

It was a brief, passing moment but one that had felt like an eternity—a snapshot of what life could be, what it should be.

The choice was clear.

Alex looked the Entity in what he could only assume were its eyes and said, “If sacrificing myself means saving them, then so be it. But know this—I will fight you, even in the abyss, until the end of time.”

Something unexpected happened as he braced himself for the Entity to consume him. The tendrils began to loosen, and the crumbling world around him started to mend itself.

The man smiled. “You did it, Alex. You broke its hold. Your love, your will to fight, saved you—and them.”

Alex suddenly felt a pull, as if being yanked back to reality, but before he left this nightmarish dimension, he turned to the man. “Who are you?”

“You’ll find out soon enough,” the man winked, “but for now, let’s just say I’m someone who believes in you.”