Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition

Chapter 1136: Story 1136: Night of the Bleeding Sky



It began with the stars vanishing.

Not one by one, but all at once—blinking out like candles smothered by unseen fingers. The villagers of Stonegrasp stood in their doorways, staring at the sky, whispering prayers that felt brittle on their tongues. The moon turned dark. And then the sky began to bleed.

At first, it looked like mist—rosy, glimmering, almost beautiful. But it thickened, pulsed, and poured down in long, trailing strands like threads of living silk. By midnight, it was a rain of red. Not water.

Blood.

And it was warm.

By morning, the roads were thick with it—coagulated rivers carving paths through fields and into wells. Livestock refused to drink. The trees leaned inward. Birds fell silent. People began to whisper of an omen, of the return of the Hollow One, of old oaths broken beneath the stars.

But no one spoke above a whisper.

No one dared.

Because those who did… disappeared.

The first was Old Mayor Werrin. He stood atop the watchtower and shouted to the villagers to evacuate, to flee into the deeper hills.

His body was found an hour later in the town square.

Hung from the rafters by his own entrails, mouth sewn shut with black thread. And above his body, on the brick wall, the blood had spelled a word:

"STAY."

As night fell again, the sky bled thicker.

And the whispers returned.

They came with the wind, curling through the blood-soaked streets. Not voices. Names. Spoken softly, intimately, as if the air itself remembered every sin, every secret regret.

People locked their doors. They sealed windows with tar and cloth. But nothing stopped the red rain, nor the soft coo of the voices outside.

And those who heard their names... they opened their doors.

Every time.

Jaren, the blacksmith, opened his door and saw his dead wife standing in the blood. She reached for him with burned hands, eyes full of ash. He followed her into the dark.

Lenna, the apothecary, heard her father's voice—dead these ten years—begging her to listen. She disappeared into the woods, barefoot, humming a lullaby no one else could hear.

And the sky kept bleeding.

By the third night, only a few remained in Stonegrasp. Those who could resist the voices. Those who remembered the ancient pact: to never speak the name of the Hollow One, no matter what was promised.

But the blood began to rise.

It flooded cellars. It soaked floorboards. It pooled in the church aisles and behind the eyes of the living.

One man, a wandering priest named Thalen, looked to the sky and whispered a final benediction.

"He is coming."

And from the bleeding heavens, something stirred. A shape. Vast. Eyeless. Crowned in thorns of bone and smoke.

The sky cracked.

And Stonegrasp was no more.

They say the sky never stops bleeding there.

Only now, it weeps quietly.

Waiting.


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