Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition

Chapter 1190: Story 1190: When Time Screamed



It began at 2:17 a.m., though no one could remember what day. The clocks didn't break. They just… stopped knowing how to be clocks.

In the heart of Dreadmoor, time had always moved strangely. But that night, it screamed—a soundless wail that folded the sky like wet paper and sent shadows bleeding from under doors that should never have existed.

The sound came from the Cracked Spire, a ruined tower stitched into the fabric of forgotten calendars. No bell had hung in that spire for centuries. Yet every soul in the city heard its toll—twice. Once in their ears, once in their bones.

People awoke with ashes in their mouths and teeth missing from their dreams.

Time was unraveling.

Clara Veil, the street performer touched by the void, had been watching the city with a third eye painted beneath her real ones. She saw it before the others: the second moon hovering just behind the first, visible only through mirrors.

She walked to the spire, barefoot, dressed in strings of bells that made no sound. With each step, the world trembled, uncertain whether it had already occurred.

At the steps of the Cracked Spire, the ground pulsed with inverted heartbeats.

Inside, time was a room.

And it was screaming.

The Spire's interior was an impossibility: staircases looping back into birth, dust falling upward into decay, and paintings of events that hadn't yet happened. Clara passed a mural of herself burning in a place she hadn't yet found. She paused to admire the detail.

At the center of it all stood the Clock of Flesh and Thought, a timepiece forged from the memories of the dying. Its hands were blades. Its numbers were screaming mouths.

But the hands weren't moving.

They were twitching.

Beneath the clock sat a child with no face, humming something in reverse, fingernails drawing spiral patterns into the stone. The child held an hourglass filled with human teeth. And it was nearly empty.

Clara approached. The child turned its blank face toward her.

"Are you the one who screamed?" she asked.

The child nodded.

"I need to know why."

The child pointed upward—through the tower's broken dome, where the sky had become an eye, and it was watching.

Time, the child said—not aloud, but in thoughts screamed directly into her skull—was not a river.

It was a body.

And someone had wounded it.

Outside, people began to age backwards. Others became trapped in repeating loops—dying the same death again and again. Children grew old in seconds. Graves burst open, not with the dead, but with versions of the living from moments that never happened.

Clara realized: Time wasn't dying.

It was trying to remember itself.

She took the hourglass from the child and turned it over.

The screaming stopped.

But something laughed in its place.

And the clock's hands began to tick once more…

…backwards.


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