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Most recently published stories in Horror.
My Reflection Blinked Before I Did
The first time it happened, I told myself I was tired. The second time, I stopped trusting my own eyes. It was late. Not the dramatic kind of late where the world feels haunted—just ordinary late. The kind where your room is quiet, your phone is charging, and your thoughts are louder than they should be. I stood in front of my bathroom mirror, brushing my teeth, half-awake and half somewhere else. I looked at myself the way I always do—quickly, carelessly. A glance, not a study. And then my reflection blinked. Before I did. It was subtle. So subtle I almost missed it. A fraction of a second. But I’m sure. I hadn’t blinked yet. My eyes were still open when the version of me in the mirror closed his. I froze. My first instinct was denial. I blinked deliberately this time, slowly. The reflection copied me perfectly. I tilted my head. It tilted too. I raised my hand. It followed. Normal. I leaned closer to the mirror. My heart was beating faster now, not from fear but from confusion. Maybe my brain had lagged. Maybe I blinked without realizing. Maybe exhaustion plays tricks. I turned off the light and went to bed. But sleep didn’t come easily. The next morning, I avoided the mirror. I washed my face without looking up. It felt ridiculous—being scared of glass. I laughed at myself in the kitchen. “You imagined it,” I whispered. “You’re just stressed.” All day, the thought followed me. Not like panic. More like a question I couldn’t answer. That night, I stood in front of the mirror again. I don’t know why. Maybe to prove something. Maybe to challenge it. The bathroom light hummed softly. My reflection stared back at me. Same messy hair. Same tired eyes. Same small scar near the eyebrow I got when I was twelve. We stood there, watching each other. I decided to blink first. Slowly. Deliberately. We blinked together. I exhaled. Then it happened again. Not a blink this time. A smile. A small one. Almost invisible. But it wasn’t mine. My face was neutral. I know it was. I felt my muscles still, relaxed. But in the mirror, the corners of my mouth twitched upward for just a second. It wasn’t a happy smile. It looked… knowing. My stomach dropped. I stepped back quickly. The reflection did too. Perfect synchronization, like nothing had happened. Like I had imagined it. “Stop,” I muttered to myself. I turned off the light and left, but something had shifted. Over the next few days, I started noticing tiny delays. Not always. Just sometimes. When I moved too quickly. When I wasn’t fully focused. It felt like my reflection was catching up instead of mirroring me instantly. Or maybe it was waiting. I stopped standing too close. I stopped staring too long. I covered the bathroom mirror with a towel one night, telling myself it was just temporary. But mirrors are everywhere. In my phone screen. In windows. In the dark surface of the TV. One evening, while my phone was black and locked, I saw my reflection staring back at me. I wasn’t looking directly at it—just holding the phone loosely. And then it blinked. I hadn’t. I dropped the phone. My breathing became shallow. My hands were shaking now. Not because I thought something supernatural was happening. But because something felt wrong inside me. It didn’t feel like a ghost. It felt like… me. Or a version of me. The more it happened, the more I started questioning something terrifying: What if it wasn’t the reflection acting first? What if I was the one lagging behind? The thought stuck with me. I began to notice how often I moved on autopilot. Smiling when I didn’t feel like it. Nodding in conversations I wasn’t fully present in. Saying “I’m fine” before checking if I actually was. What if the mirror wasn’t ahead of me? What if it was showing the truth before I allowed myself to feel it? The night everything changed, I stood in front of the mirror without fear. Just exhaustion. “Okay,” I whispered. “What do you want?” My reflection stared back. For a long moment, nothing happened. Then it blinked. Before I did. And this time, it didn’t copy my next movement. I lifted my hand slowly. The reflection didn’t. It stayed still. Watching me. My heart pounded so loudly I could hear it in my ears. My reflection’s eyes looked darker somehow. More focused. More aware. It wasn’t evil. It was calm. Calmer than me. Then it did something I wasn’t prepared for. It leaned closer. I hadn’t moved. It leaned closer to the glass, studying me the way I had studied it days ago. And then it spoke. Not with sound. With expression. A tired one. A disappointed one. Like it had been waiting for me to notice. Suddenly, something inside me cracked. I realized how long I had been ignoring myself. Ignoring stress. Ignoring fear. Ignoring the parts of me that needed attention. I had been performing so well for the outside world that I stopped checking in with the inside one. The mirror version wasn’t ahead of me. It was honest before I was. It blinked first because it wasn’t pretending. It smiled first because it knew things I refused to admit. Tears welled up in my eyes. And this time, when I blinked, it blinked with me. Perfectly. In sync. The reflection softened. The tension in its face disappeared. It mirrored me completely again—no delay, no independence. Just glass. Just me. I stood there for a long time after that. Nothing supernatural has happened since. No early blinks. No independent smiles. But sometimes, when I look at myself too quickly, I remember that feeling. And I slow down. Because maybe the scariest thing isn’t that your reflection moves first. Maybe it’s realizing that part of you has been awake the whole time—waiting for you to catch up.
By Faizan Malik21 days ago in Horror
The abandoned prison
The abandoned prison stood at the edge of town like a silent witness to the horrors of a past nobody wanted to remember. Its walls, once painted a hopeful white, were now cracked, faded, and streaked with the grime of decades. Rusted iron bars, twisted and broken, clanged softly whenever the wind whispered through the empty corridors. I don’t know why I found myself drawn to this place, but there was something about it—a pull, almost magnetic—that demanded I see it with my own eyes.
By sagar dhital21 days ago in Horror
The Seat That Was Already Reserved. AI-Generated.
The bus station closed after midnight. Not officially — the lights stayed on, the ticket window remained open — but the world itself seemed to abandon it. Conversations became whispers, footsteps softer, and even engines sounded distant, like memories rather than machines.
By shakir hamid21 days ago in Horror
5 Best Female Duos in Horror Movies
Female duos in horror films often embody a complex blend of friendship, rivalry, and transformation, showcasing the multifaceted nature of women's relationships. These characters frequently navigate themes of identity, power, and survival, making their dynamics both compelling and relatable. Below, we explore the qualities of several notable female duos in horror cinema.
By Ninfa Galeano22 days ago in Horror
Whispers of the Old Library. AI-Generated.
Rania had always loved libraries. The quiet, the scent of paper and ink, and the way rows of books seemed to hold entire worlds fascinated her. When she discovered the old municipal library tucked behind a narrow alley in her city, she felt like she had found a secret place meant only for her. The building was grand but neglected, with dust motes floating in the sunlight that filtered through tall, grimy windows. The wooden shelves creaked under the weight of decades of books, and the faint smell of mold lingered in the corners. On a rainy afternoon, she wandered through the aisles, running her fingers along spines and titles, enjoying the comforting solitude of a place untouched by modern chaos.
By Sudais Zakwan23 days ago in Horror
The Last Train Home. AI-Generated.
Zara had missed the last train, and the station was nearly empty except for the dim flicker of the fluorescent lights overhead. Rain poured outside, pooling along the tracks, and the wind made the station feel colder than it should have been. She had been working late and had lost track of time, and now the realization that she would have to wait in the empty, echoing building made her stomach tighten. The benches were wet from condensation, the ticket booths abandoned, and the usual murmur of late-night travelers absent. She wrapped her coat tighter and tried to focus on the soft hum of the electric boards, ignoring the sense of being watched.
By Sudais Zakwan23 days ago in Horror
When the Clock Stopped at 3:17
Daniel never believed in superstitions, but he did believe in routine. Every night, he placed his phone on the bedside table, set his alarm for 7:00 AM, and fell asleep to the soft ticking of the old wall clock across his room. The clock had belonged to his grandfather, a heavy wooden piece with long black hands and a faint crack across the glass. It had never failed to keep time. Not once.
By Sudais Zakwan23 days ago in Horror
The Girl Who Spoke to Shadows
The first time the lights flickered in Areeba’s room, she thought it was a wiring problem. The house was old—older than anyone in her family—and it made sounds that could easily be blamed on age. Wood expanded. Pipes groaned. Wind pressed softly against the windows at night. There was always a reasonable explanation.
By Sudais Zakwan23 days ago in Horror










