The water rippled, dark and oily, as the first of the creatures emerged from the depths. Joel’s breath caught in his throat. The thing that rose from the water had no clear shape, no defined limbs or body. It was a mass of slick, writhing blackness, as though the oil itself had gained sentience. Its surface shimmered with an unnatural gloss, reflecting the dim light of the rig’s dying flames, while something deep within its body seemed to pulse with malevolent life.
Joel’s stomach twisted in revulsion. These weren’t just animals or creatures. They were something far worse—things that didn’t belong in the world. Their bodies rippled and twisted, shifting from form to form like the sea itself, only darker and infinitely more sinister. Yet, as formless as they were, they moved with a horrifying intelligence. Eyes, if they could be called that, glistened like oil slicks in the dim light, staring with a focused malice at the remaining wreckage of the rig—and at the few survivors still nearby.
One of the creatures, its body twisting into a jagged, serpentine shape, slithered across the water’s surface toward a lifeboat that hadn’t drifted far enough from the rig. The men inside barely had time to scream before the thing was upon them, its oily mass engulfing the boat. In seconds, the lifeboat and the men were gone, absorbed into the creature’s shifting, liquid body.
Joel stared in horror as the creature swelled larger, its mass bloating with the remains of its victims. Another one, slightly smaller, rose beside it, and then another—each one a shifting, formless mass of darkness and oil. They twisted and writhed like things out of a fever dream, both a part of the oil and something more, something alien.
"They’re absorbing everything," Joel muttered, his voice barely a whisper, his heart pounding in his chest. He watched as the creatures reached out with tendrils of black sludge, pulling in debris, wreckage, and even the occasional flailing bird that got too close to the water. The oily forms twisted and coiled, constantly changing, always moving, always hungry.
Craig, his face pale, was frozen in place beside Joel. “What the hell are they?” he whispered, though Joel knew no answer would be comforting. These things weren’t from their world. They couldn’t be.
The largest of the creatures, now towering over the water, swayed as it moved. Its mass rippled like waves, shifting and bending. For a moment, it seemed to turn its many eyes toward the raft, the cold, calculating intelligence behind them making Joel’s blood run cold.
“Paddle!” Joel barked, his voice breaking through the paralysis of fear. “Get us the hell out of here!”
The men grabbed their paddles, but the water itself fought them. Every stroke felt like pushing through sludge, and the air seemed to thicken, as if the presence of these things was warping reality itself. The creatures didn’t chase after them, but they didn’t need to—their reach was expanding, their forms spreading across the water like an infection. Each moment, they grew larger, absorbing the remains of the rig, devouring anything living or dead in their path.
Behind them, another explosion rocked the remains of the platform. Flames licked the sky, sending a plume of smoke and ash into the air, but the creatures didn’t flinch. They continued their slow, methodical advance, pulling everything into their oily void.
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Joel’s heart hammered in his chest as the raft drifted further from the rig. The monstrous forms grew smaller in the distance, but the threat they posed loomed large in his mind. This wasn’t over. They were still too close to the oil, too close to the nightmare that was now unfolding across the ocean.
“We need to get to shore,” Joel muttered, his voice raw with desperation. “Those things—they’re not going to stop.”
The others nodded in grim agreement, their faces pale and hollow, the reality of their situation sinking in. Whatever had happened to the world—whatever the merge was—had brought with it a horror they couldn’t even begin to comprehend.
And now, their only hope was to outrun it.
But that hope vanished as quickly as it had come.
The water near one of the distant rafts bulged, rising in a slow, ominous swell. A thick, black tendril of oil broke through the surface, sleek and shifting, its form twisting like a serpent in the darkness. It slithered silently toward the raft, leaving no wake, no ripple—just pure, unnatural blackness moving with purpose.
"Did you see that?" Craig hissed, his voice barely above a whisper, but the panic was clear.
Before Joel could answer, it happened. The void-like tentacle lashed out, quick as lightning, wrapping around the edge of the raft. The men aboard it screamed, their voices piercing the eerie quiet of the ocean. They tried to push it away, but the tentacle was too strong. It yanked, dragging the raft down with a violent jerk. One man toppled overboard, his hands grasping at the air as he was pulled beneath the surface without a sound.
"No!" Blake shouted, but it was too late.
Another raft, closer now, was attacked next. From the depths, more tendrils emerged—writhing masses of liquid shadow that lashed at the boat. The water churned violently, waves sloshing against their own raft as they watched in horror.
The thing that emerged next froze Joel’s blood. A gaping maw of nothingness opened at the base of one of the tendrils, its teeth stark white against the void of its form. The only color in the endless black were those sharp, jagged teeth, glistening in the faint light as they bit down into the raft and its terrified passengers. The men’s screams were swallowed by the darkness as the boat was pulled under, disappearing into the depths.
Joel’s heart raced, his breath caught in his throat as he watched, helpless. The creatures moved with sickening precision, like sharks circling their prey, except there was no grace, only a twisted malevolence. The survivors on the other rafts didn’t stand a chance. One by one, they were dragged beneath the surface, consumed by the monstrous tendrils and their gaping, tooth-filled maws.
“We have to move!” Craig yelled, his voice cracking with terror as he and Blake frantically paddled. “It’s coming for us next!”
Joel barely heard him, his eyes still fixed on the place where the last raft had disappeared. His knuckles whitened as he gripped the edge of their raft, feeling the tremor in his hands. This wasn’t just survival anymore. Whatever these things were—these oil-drenched horrors—they weren’t mindless. They were hunting, and there was nothing natural about it.
He glanced back at the others, fear and desperation etched into their faces, but beneath that, there was something else—determination. They wouldn’t let these monsters take them without a fight.
“Paddle harder!” Joel barked, his voice low but sharp, cutting through the noise of the churning water. “We have to get out of here now, before we’re next!”
The group paddled furiously, the raft gliding through the water, but the creatures weren’t far behind. And Joel knew, deep down, that this was only the beginning