Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition

Chapter 1174: Story 1174: The Black Bell



They said the bell hadn't rung in a hundred years.

Above the abandoned Cathedral of St. Elian, it hung like a blackened fang in the sky, cloaked in soot and rust, heavy with silence. The priests once claimed it tolled only when the veil between the world and the afterlife thinned.

Then one night, it tolled again.

A single, thunderous chime rolled across the gaslit streets of Greyhall, cracking windows, shattering sleep. Stray dogs howled. The birds in the cemetery trees flew in spirals until they dropped like stones. Those who remembered the old warnings stayed inside and locked their doors.

But Clara Veil did not stay inside.

She had heard the bell in her dreams for weeks—a hollow sound underwater, each chime drawing her closer to that lonely tower where time had rusted to stillness. And when the true bell tolled, her eyes opened and her feet moved without thought.

The cathedral was wrong.

Its stones wept a black ichor that dripped like wax. Stained glass windows shimmered with scenes that changed when looked at too long: saints bowing to horned figures, angels weeping blood, children holding candles over yawning graves.

Clara entered through the warped doors, her footsteps echoing louder than they should. The pews were empty—but not untouched. Dusty impressions suggested recent occupants. Candles burned, though none had been lit in years. Something had gathered here, something that remembered ritual.

The bell tolled again.

This time, Clara screamed. It was no longer just a sound. It was a command. It rang inside her bones, dragged her breath from her lungs, made her see the moment of her death reflected in every wall—burned, twisted, whispering her own name in reverse.

She climbed the spiral stair to the bell tower, each step heavier than the last. Her fingers bled from gripping the stone too tight. The air thickened, choked with soot and salt and a scent like spoiled roses.

At the top, the bell waited.

But she was not alone.

A figure stood beside it—cloaked in funeral cloth, its face wrapped in gauze, hands black as obsidian. It held the rope in one hand. The other reached toward Clara.

"You were called," it said in a voice that rattled the glass.

Clara took a trembling step forward. "Why me?"

"The bell only answers what echoes. You have been echoing for years."

With sudden violence, the bell rang once more.

Clara fell to her knees. In her mind, cities burned. Lovers screamed. Her own face melted in a mirror as a black sun rose.

"You may stop it," the figure said. "One price. One silence."

Clara looked up. Her voice.

The bell would never ring again if she gave it.

And so she whispered her last word: "Yes."

The bell cracked down the middle, splitting the tower in two. The figure vanished. And Clara, voiceless, walked from the rubble into the dawn.

They say the bell is broken.

But in the silence, something still listens.


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