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The Ebon

Where Hunger Consumes the Memory of Life

By Jason “Jay” BenskinPublished 10 months ago 3 min read
Photo Credit: Mario Sanchez Nevado

Challenge by Marie381UK: Death to Rebirth Short Story Challenge.

Marcus did not die.

Death would have been too kind.

Instead, he was peeled, like the skin from fruit, like the meat from bone, until nothing remained of what he once was—just a shape that remembered pain. A vessel of emptiness, stretching wider and wider, starving beyond the limits of flesh.

He tried to hold himself together, but his body was not his anymore. His ribs gaped, no longer a cage but an invitation. His stomach churned with something other, something infinite. And inside that endless, writhing void, the voices begged.

"Feed us."

"More."

"More."

The alley was gone. The city was gone.

He stood in a place between, where the sky was a wound in the world, pulsing, leaking a darkness that had no end. The air was thick, wet, breathing, sighing with something that had once been human but was not anymore.

And around him—The Ebon waited.

They stood shivering, weeping soundlessly, their faces unfinished, half-formed and dripping like wax. Their mouths were too wide, their eyes missing, black holes that stretched deep into something worse than emptiness.

And they were hungry.

Not for food.

For him.

For the thing inside him.

For the ending that only he could give them.

Marcus tried to speak.

His lips cracked. His tongue split in half. His throat tore open like wet paper, and something laughed inside him—something old, something that had lived in the marrow of the world since before the first dawn.

"Not yet," it whispered, curling inside his bones.

"Not until there’s nothing left."

The first one came forward.

A child.

Or something that had once been a child.

Her hands trembled as she reached for him. Her fingers melted on contact, dissolving into strands of pulsing red, sinking into his skin like teeth, like roots, like flesh remembering how to grow.

She gasped. Her mouth stretched into a soundless, shuddering moan—not in pain, but in relief.

Marcus felt her unravel.

Not just her body.

Everything.

Her memories slid into him. Her pain. Her love. Her tiny, shattered joys. The way her mother smelled like oranges. The sound of rain against her bedroom window. The aching loss of a father whose name she could no longer recall.

All of it bled into him, rushing through the black maw of his being, feeding the endless thing inside him.

And then she was gone.

Not dead.

Not even erased.

Just… forgotten.

The others came next.

One by one.

Hands reaching, trembling, desperate for his touch, for oblivion, for the final release of their empty, starving souls.

And Marcus—or what was left of him—gave it to them.

The woman who had lost her son.

The man who had forgotten the sound of his own name.

The mother who could still feel her baby kicking inside her but could not remember why there was no child in her arms.

Each one willingly stepped into his hunger, letting it drink them dry, letting it unmake them, letting it erase even the ache of their suffering.

And the void inside him grew, stretching wider, deeper, a black abyss that swallowed the world one forgotten life at a time.

He tried to stop.

God, he tried.

But the thing inside him loved this.

It craved it.

It thrived in the soft, silent surrender of the lost.

"More."

"More."

"More."

He did not remember when the sky stopped existing.

He did not remember when the streets turned to bone, when the buildings crumbled into dust, when the world ceased to be anything at all.

Only the hunger remained.

A yawning, bottomless emptiness stretching outward forever, devouring the very memory of existence.

And Marcus—or what was left of him—stood at its heart.

Alone.

Silent.

Starving.

With nothing left to feed him.

And in that final, endless blackness, where even the concept of time had been swallowed away, the last voice whispered:

"There is no rebirth."

"Only hunger."

And Marcus—or what was left of him—screamed.

Forever.

HorrorPsychologicalMysterypsychological

About the Creator

Jason “Jay” Benskin

Crafting authored passion in fiction, horror fiction, and poems.

Creationati

L.C.Gina Mike Heather Caroline Dharrsheena Cathy Daphsam Misty JBaz D. A. Ratliff Sam Harty Gerard Mark Melissa M Combs Colleen

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insights

  1. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  2. Easy to read and follow

    Well-structured & engaging content

  3. Excellent storytelling

    Original narrative & well developed characters

  1. Expert insights and opinions

    Arguments were carefully researched and presented

  2. Eye opening

    Niche topic & fresh perspectives

  3. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

  4. Masterful proofreading

    Zero grammar & spelling mistakes

  5. On-point and relevant

    Writing reflected the title & theme

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Comments (6)

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  • Marie381Uk 10 months ago

    Ohhhhh boy you nailed that challenge. It captures the readers from that first few lines. Nothing made me want to take my eye off this story. I hope you get Top Story I really do. Well done ✍️🏆♦️💙

  • Mark Graham10 months ago

    This is a thriller that will have the reader wonder about things and ideas. Good job.

  • Rohitha Lanka10 months ago

    Very interestingly drawing the reader is drawn into a world where suffering and oblivion intertwine.The slow unraveling of Marcus and those around him is both filling and tragic. A compelling read.I wish your post will be one of the table top

  • Marie McGrath10 months ago

    Wow. Engrossing and gripping. Your stying of words is sublime.

  • What a story, great work 👏

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