Horror

Elias Corbett arrived at the farmhouse just after dawn. Headlights sliced through fog so dense it pressed the world flat, turning the fields into pale, unbroken sheets of gray. The gravel drive wound between stands of bare trees, their black limbs slick with dew, leaning inward as if conspiring.

Out the corner of his eye, he caught a flicker: tall, pale, gliding between the trunks, but gone before he could turn to see it properly. Only the hush of the misted field remained, though it seemed to breathe.

The house sat on a low rise, roof sagging, porch slumped like a mouth that had forgotten how to speak. Paint had peeled to gray flakes. The air smelled of wet earth and iron. The silence pressed against him, expectant. He paused, letting the fog wrap around his shoulders, before stepping to the door.

Inside, someone had clearly made a start on the restoration before abandoning the effort. A few walls had been stripped to bare timber, and their surfaces were raw, streaked with the faint impressions of old wallpaper. Elias ran his fingers along a beam and felt the fine ridges of the grain, faint pulses beneath. Cold, yet alive.

He’d been hired by a woman named Rusk. Never met her, only heard her clipped voice on the phone. She wanted him to “make everything sound.” Elias knew the work would be quiet, solitary. His father had said that wood remembered where it came from. “You just have to listen,” he had said, tapping a board. Elias listened now.

He began in the parlor. The first drag of sandpaper made a soft, whispering sound—not friction, but exhalation. He leaned close, watching the grain shimmer faintly.

When he turned, a shadow flickered at the doorway: thin, quick. He froze, then laughed, brittle, sharp. Too many hours alone with the boards, he told himself. He returned to his work.

Push, pull, breathe. Dust rose in lazy spirals and settled along the floor like pollen. At dusk, when he packed up, he murmured “good night” to the empty room. The floor answered with a single creak, a long, tired exhalation.

The days folded into each other.

Each day, he woke before dawn, brewed coffee that tasted of rust, and worked until his shoulders ached. The rhythm steadied him. But other sounds began to emerge: tapping deep in the walls, faint sighs drawn through the beams, the faint flex of timber that was too deliberate to be ordinary.

Tools moved when he wasn’t looking. A chisel buried itself in a beam overnight. Tape measures lay unwound across the floor like thin snakes. He blamed fatigue, sure he was imagining things, though unease curled in his chest, a cold, slow coil.

On one trip into town, the supply clerk looked up sharply at the address. “The Rusk place? You’re staying there?”

Elias nodded.

“Lumber from the Blackmarsh Woods,” the man said. “They said it screamed when they cut it. Superstition, of course.”

“Of course,” Elias replied, though the words sounded thin even to him.

Driving back, the roadside trees leaned closer to the truck, bark wet and shining. He thought he saw faces in the knots.

Behind a warped panel upstairs, he found a photograph: twelve men standing before a wall of felled trees, axes glinting. On the back, in pale pencil: She will regrow.

That night, he dreamed of sanding a beam that pulsed under his hand, warm as flesh, and splinters studded his palms when he woke.

Shaking, Elias lit the rusting stove in the kitchen and held a corner of the photograph in the sputtering flame until it ignited. The smoke rising from the picture smelled not of paper, but sap, faintly sweet, like rot.

The house began to resist the restoration. Boards he had planed flat buckled overnight. Nails slid from their holes as if pushed by unseen hands. Surfaces he had sanded smooth grew rough again by morning. His saw dulled on nothing.

One evening, leaning a hand against a beam, he felt it flex—a slow, deliberate movement.

He pressed again. Faintly. A heartbeat.

“Jesus,” he whispered.

A low, drawn-out creak replied, human-like: the sound of breath caught in a chest.

Subtler things emerged. Knots sometimes glimmered with moisture. Shadows pooled where they shouldn’t. When sanding, he heard faint murmurs, barely there, like the house itself thinking.

A week later, as he was trimming a bit of rot off the end of the rustic mantel, his saw caught on something dense. He pried it loose: a fragment of bone, pale and smooth, knucklish in shape, fused to the grain. He set it on the floorboards and stared at it. The surrounding wood curled inward, almost tenderly, like a wound closing.

That night, the house hummed. Low, resonant, vibrating through the floor and the walls, into his chest. He lay awake, listening. Imagined the house exhaling, settling around him like a dark, patient lung.

He stopped repairing. He began uncovering.

Plaster peeled away under his hands. Nails loosened without effort. The house guided him, showing where to strip, where to listen. Cuts crosshatched his palms. Blood sank into the wood, darkening it in constellations.

He heard words now in creaks and sighs, slow, drawn, in time with his sanding: Continue.

He obeyed.

The deeper he stripped, the stranger the wood became. Grain spiraled like veins. Knots widened into eyes. The air grew sharp, green, alive.

He pressed his ear to a wall. Beneath the hum, he felt a heartbeat.

He whispered, “I’m trying.” The rhythm quickened.

The wind rattled broken windows, carrying the old forest into the house. Branches scratched walls in patterns matching the grain inside. A crow perched on the roof, wet feathers black and gleaming, watching him.

He spoke to the house at night, murmuring apologies when nails tore, praising the timber when it shifted. The air thickened with sap and damp. The sighs in the walls became indistinguishable from his own breathing.

When Mrs. Rusk arrived a month later, weeds reached her knees. The truck rusted in place, sunken in soft earth.

Inside, the air was sweet and damp. Walls stripped to bare wood glistened faintly. Tools lay scattered, corroded, green with sap. Elias’s jacket rested neatly on a chair.

The beams caught the light strangely—wet, translucent, alive. Beneath the surface, shapes pressed outward: curves of hands, hints of faces.

The house shifted as she moved, a long, low sigh through the floorboards. She stepped back toward the door, heart hammering. Fog thickened outside, milky and still. She thought she heard her name whispered, soft and tender, before the wind swallowed it.

Posted Oct 20, 2025
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