Popcorn Weather
Flash Fiction | Liminal Horror | Psychological Paranoia | Techno-Suspicion

He sat on his porch every night, eyes glued to the black sky, the bucket of popcorn perched like a crown on his knee.
The neighbors laughed at first, calling him “Big Popcorn”—until they stopped answering their doors.
For thirty nights he watched the flickering lights above, convinced they whispered secrets only he could hear, while the popcorn salted his hands and coated his mind with delirium.
Doors creaked open and slammed shut without explanation; muffled screams melted into the rustling leaves.
They never invited him over anymore, their smiles fading like old film.
By the end of the month, the street was silent—just broken windows and empty doorways, the kind of quiet that settles after a long series of small, private tragedies. Later they said it was fraud, or cult stuff, maybe some kind of scam where people thought they were helping.
But he knew better. He’d seen them—the lights—and he never missed a night.
As the wind stirred a torn blanket across the lawn, he bent to pick it up and read the tag stitched into the corner, faded but still legible:
Made in China.

🛒 Affiliate Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn a commission from qualifying purchases at no additional cost to you.
About the Creator
Jesse Shelley
Digital & criminal forensics expert, fiction crafter. I dissect crimes and noir tales alike—shaped by prompt rituals, investigative obsession, and narrative precision. Every case bleeds story. Every story, a darker truth. Come closer.



Comments (1)
GOOD WORK.....MAKE THIS NATURAL