The fog rolled in thick and heavy, swirling like smoke across the desolate landscape, swallowing everything in its path. Sarah stood on the cracked sidewalk, her breath forming small clouds in the frigid air as she stared into the shifting mist. The world beyond had vanished. The trees, the road, even the faint outlines of buildings—everything was consumed by the dense, creeping fog that seemed to pulse with life of its own.
The events of the previous days hung over her like a noose tightening around her throat. The cemetery. The grave with her name on it. The Crawler. Each encounter had pushed her further toward the brink, the boundaries between reality and nightmare blurring until she no longer knew where one ended and the other began.
She hadn’t planned to leave the house. The mere thought of stepping outside sent chills down her spine, her mind still plagued by the hollow eyes and broken smile of her duplicate. But when the fog rolled in, thick and unnatural, something inside her stirred. That same pull she had felt in the cemetery dragged her forward, compelling her into the mist, as though something waited for her out there, hidden just beyond the veil.
She shivered, pulling her jacket tighter around herself as she walked into the fog. The air was damp, cold, and thick, pressing against her skin like invisible hands. Her footsteps echoed faintly against the pavement, the sound swallowed by the fog almost as soon as it was made.
It wasn’t long before the faces began to appear.
At first, they were nothing more than faint shapes, barely perceptible among the swirling mist. But as she ventured deeper, they became clearer. The outlines of mouths, eyes, noses—faces twisting and forming in the fog. Sarah’s breath hitched as she realized what she was seeing.
They were the faces of the dead.
Each one was pale and gaunt, their skin stretched tight over sharp cheekbones, their hollow eyes locked onto hers. The faces swirled around her, shifting and twisting in the mist, their mouths moving soundlessly, as though they were speaking to her. Whispering. Their words carried on the wind, faint at first, but growing louder with each passing second.
“You’re next.”
Sarah’s heart pounded in her chest, a cold sweat breaking out along her skin as she stumbled backward, her eyes darting from face to face. There were so many of them—dozens, hundreds, all mouthing the same words, their hollow eyes filled with something dark, something that reached into the pit of her stomach and twisted.
“Stop,” she whispered, her voice trembling. “This isn’t real.”
But the faces didn’t stop. They pressed closer, the fog tightening around her, suffocating her in a wall of death and whispers. She recognized some of them now—their twisted expressions, their cold, lifeless eyes. People she had known. People she had seen on the news. The missing. The ones claimed by the Crawler.
The fog swirled faster, the faces multiplying, their mouths opening wider, stretching in silent screams. The air grew colder, biting at her skin, as though the fog itself was draining the life from her. Her breaths came in shallow gasps, her hands shaking uncontrollably as she backed away, but there was nowhere to go. The fog pressed in from all sides, the faces growing more frantic, their mouths moving faster now, desperate.
Unauthorized reproduction: this story has been taken without approval. Report sightings.
“You’re next.”
The words echoed in her skull, louder, more insistent, as if they were being whispered directly into her mind. The fog pulsed around her, the faces twisting, contorting in agony, their hollow eyes pleading, accusing. And then, she saw a face she could never forget.
Raymond Hale.
The detective who had disappeared. The one who had left behind nothing but a notebook and a smear of blood. His face emerged from the fog, gaunt and pale, his eyes hollow, his mouth twisted into a grimace. His lips moved in the same silent chant as the others.
“You’re next, Sarah.”
“No,” she gasped, stumbling backward, her vision swimming with panic. “No, no, no…”
But the fog was relentless, pressing tighter, closer, until she could barely breathe. The faces swirled faster now, a cacophony of death and whispers, all of them demanding the same thing. She was next. They knew it. She knew it.
Her hands flew to her ears, trying to block out the voices, but it was no use. The words weren’t coming from outside anymore. They were inside her, crawling through her mind like a virus, infecting her with the cold, bitter truth of her fate.
“You’re next, Sarah.”
The fog shifted again, and this time, the figure that emerged from the mist was no ghost. No mere reflection of the dead. This time, it was him.
The Crawler.
Its hollow eyes gleamed from the mist, its twisted grin spreading impossibly wide as it stepped forward, its body tall and gaunt, pale as bone. The fog clung to it like a second skin, twisting around its limbs, hiding and revealing its jagged, unnatural movements. It moved closer, its steps slow, deliberate, savoring the moment as the faces around her continued their silent chant.
Sarah’s legs trembled, her breath shallow, panic roaring in her chest as she watched the thing approach. She wanted to run, to scream, to tear herself away from the nightmare that had ensnared her, but her body wouldn’t move. The fog held her in place, as though it had become a living thing, a cold, suffocating mass that had wrapped itself around her like a vice.
The Crawler smiled, its jagged teeth glistening as it reached out a hand toward her, its voice low and mocking.
“You know what comes next, don’t you, Sarah?”
Her heart raced, her mind spinning as she fought to break free from the fog’s grip. She could feel the cold fingers of the Crawler inches from her skin, the darkness of its hollow eyes pulling her in, consuming her. But there was something else now—something deeper. A flicker of resistance, of defiance.
Her mind flashed back to the whispers, to the faces of the dead. They weren’t just warning her. They were begging her. Begging her to fight. Begging her to stop the thing that had claimed them, the thing that would claim so many more if she didn’t.
“You’re next.”
The voices twisted in her mind, not just a warning, but a challenge. She wasn’t next. She wouldn’t be.
The Crawler’s hand was inches from her throat, its cold breath brushing against her skin. But just as it reached for her, Sarah moved. She jerked back, her body breaking free from the fog’s grip, and for the first time, she felt something that had been missing for so long: control.
The Crawler’s smile faltered, its hollow eyes narrowing in confusion as Sarah took a step back, then another. The fog swirled violently around her, but she kept moving, kept pushing through it, her mind racing with the realization that she wasn’t trapped.
Not yet.
“You’re not taking me,” she whispered, her voice shaking but determined. “Not today.”
The Crawler’s grin returned, wider than before, but its hand dropped to its side, its hollow gaze following her every step. “We’ll see,” it whispered, its voice cold and dripping with malice. “You can’t outrun what’s already inside you.”
The fog closed in behind her as Sarah turned and ran, the faces of the dead watching her retreat, their mouths still moving, but the words were lost in the wind. She could hear the Crawler’s laughter echoing through the mist, a dark promise of what was to come.
But for now, she had escaped.