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Fiction Horror

This story contains themes or mentions of physical violence, gore, or abuse.

Darkness.


Not the kind that comes when you close your eyes. This is something else—heavy, dense, like the world’s been erased. It’s pressing down, sinking through me. I can’t breathe—can I? My chest should be moving, doing…something.


I don’t know why I expect that.


Then…something else. A noise. No, not a noise. A memory.


“I love you, babe.” A woman’s voice—warm, laughing. I can almost feel her next to me, see her face, smell her perfume, something like freshly peeled oranges—


Gone. Just like that.


I try to hold onto it, but it slips away like smoke. Something aches where the memory was, filling empty spaces, like something…lost.


Am I…lost?


No, I’m here. Here in the dark, here in the earth pressing in on all sides. It is cold, deep in my bones. In my flesh. No, no, it’s wrong.


I feel something slipping, a part of myself loosening, unraveling, sinking into the dark. I try to reach for it, to grab hold of me, but it’s fading fast, sinking below the surface like a drowning man. I tell myself, I’m still here, I’m still someone. But it feels like a lie.


Why can’t I move?


I try to lift an arm, a hand, anything, but everything’s sluggish. My fingers claw at nothing. Something below, above. Heavy. Settled. I should be moving, I should be—


Then it hits me, clear and sharp, like a broken bone.


I’m dead.


I’m dead. I don’t breathe. My chest is still, cold, rotting.


A surge of panic hits, a sensation I didn’t know I could still feel. I close my eyes—or maybe they were already closed—and try to piece together bits of memory clinging to me. A bright day. A laughing face. A small, sticky hand in mine. Gone. Gone before I can feel it.


The weight around me presses harder like the ground itself is claiming me, holding me down. I don’t know how I know, but I know I shouldn’t be here, shouldn’t be this. I should be…someone else.


“Happy Birthday!” Her voice, echoed through me, through the dark. I don’t know who she is, but the words cut through me, raw.


I remember her laughing, brushing a stray hair behind her ear, her eyes catching the light in that way that always made me stop and stare. She’d squeeze my hand and whisper, “You’re my forever.” The words are faint now, slipping away, but the warmth of them lingers, enough to hurt.


I claw at the darkness. I don’t mean to; I don’t have to. My fingers curl through the dirt, tearing, dragging myself upward. My hands pull, dig, until I feel the damp, cold earth under my nails, grinding against bone. The part of me that still thinks cringes. The other part? It just keeps going.


It’s like I’m watching from far away, a thought pulsing through my mind: Get out. Get out. Not a choice, an order I can’t ignore, from deep inside, where the human parts of me are fading fast.


I don’t know how long I claw, but the earth loosens above me, cold air seeping in, something other than the dirt. It’s thin, stale, the first taste of the world outside, and it makes me feel…alive. Alive and wrong.


My head breaks the surface, and the night air hits me, sharp. I gasp, but the air scrapes through me like glass. The world is blurry, washed out under the moonlight. Grave markers surround me, jagged teeth against the sky.


This is where I came from. Where they buried me. I’m a corpse, crawling out of my own grave.


The thought jolts, but it’s distant, almost faint, like something I heard once and already forgot.


Then that hunger—the one buried under memories, under voices—stirs, an ache deep in what’s left of me. Stronger than anything else. I push forward, not thinking. Just moving, pulled by instinct, by the urge rising, undeniable. I’m dead. I’m broken. But I need something.


I can’t stop.


I can’t go back.


The first thing I see, really see, under the sickly cast of the moon, is my hand. If you can call it that.


It’s a mess of sagging skin stretched over bone, torn in places, bits of muscle clinging to knobby joints, fingers twisted and rigid. Blackened nails caked with dirt and something else I don’t want to name. The sight—this thing I’m looking at, moving like it’s mine—hits me like an electric shock, horror rushing up, strangling me.


God. What am I?


I try to scream, but all that comes out is a sound—low, guttural, inhuman. Like an animal caught in a trap.


My hand…my arm…no, this isn’t my body. It can’t be. The skin hangs in loose, rotting patches, where it’s not already gone, exposing sinew and yellowed bone. I look down and see my clothes—shredded, filthy, stained with patches that could only be—


I shut down the thought, but the nausea twists inside me, pulling me toward something deeper. And then, as the horror swells, something else creeps in.


It starts as a twitch. A need, deep and feral, like a slow burn crawling from my center outward. It coils in my stomach, my muscles, my bones, driving out everything else. A hunger, sharp, jagged. Specific.


I don’t just want food. I want…something else. Something alive.


No. No, don’t think it. Don’t even say it. You don’t want this.


But I do. It’s already there, growing, swelling, filling the hollow spaces inside until there’s nothing left but the hunger. I try to push it down, to hold it back, but it’s like caging fire. It flares, a force driving me to move, to push one unsteady, broken foot in front of the other, leaving damp streaks of earth where I walk.


Ahead, movement. Shadows, soft and slow. A person, bundled in a coat, walking the edge of the graveyard, flashlight in hand. I want to warn them, tell them to turn around, to run.


STOP! But my body doesn’t listen.


I lurch forward. I’m watching, screaming inside, but I’m just a passenger, shackled here, while something else—some twisted, primal urge—takes the reins. My mouth opens, something wet and rotten drips down my chin, spilling onto torn clothes, but I can’t stop.


I’m close enough now to see him clearly: middle-aged, a little tired, maybe a little sad. He notices me, stops, frowning.


“Are…you okay?” His voice shakes, holding the flashlight up, illuminating my face.


The light hits his eyes, wide with shock as he takes in my face. His jaw drops. His lips tremble.


“Oh…my…God…”


Run, I want to scream. Run!


But my mouth twists, letting out a moan, low and ragged, and it’s enough—enough to send him stumbling back, breath hitching in fear. He turns, but it’s too late. My body surges forward, faster than I should be able to move, faster than anything this decayed body should manage.


I catch him from behind, fingers sinking into his shoulders. I feel his body seize, the heat of him, the life. The hunger digs deeper, takes control of my hands, my teeth, drive into him, tearing at flesh like it’s some kind of drug, some twisted ecstasy.


He screams, his voice cutting through the night, but my body just keeps going. My teeth sink into his shoulder, the taste that hits my tongue—


It’s warm. Alive. It fills me in a way nothing else can, something thick and metallic spilling down my throat, coating my mouth, and there’s a sick satisfaction that follows. A relief, even. Like I’ve finally given in to something I didn’t know I wanted.


Stop. Please. God, just stop.


But there’s no stopping. My mouth pulls back, jaws snapping down, over and over, feeling skin and muscle tear, tasting the salt and the heat of his blood. His body twists, weak hands pounding against me, scratching, fighting, but his voice is breaking, giving way to soft, strangled cries.


It’s him and me. My body devouring his, my mind screaming in silent horror, torn between the repulsion and the craving, both so strong I don’t know where one ends and the other begins.


I taste his life fading, bit by bit, until he stops moving, limp beneath me. My hands fall to my sides, and I’m left there, panting, mouth and hands covered in his blood, insides roiling with satisfaction and disgust.


The hunger settles, just a little, but doesn’t go away. It sits there, dark, waiting. I know it’ll be back.


I look down at what’s left of him, the bloodied mess that used to be a person. Pieces of him are scattered around me, stained on my clothes, smeared on my hands, and I feel nothing. Not horror, not revulsion. Just…emptiness.


No. That’s not right. There’s something else—something worse.


I feel good. Sated.


A part of me is horrified by this, revolted. But that part feels so far away, drowned by the darkness, the hunger whispering again, like an old friend. Like a promise.


I don’t know what I am anymore. But I know what I’ll do. When the hunger comes back, I’ll follow.


There’s blood on my hands. Dark, drying, almost black in the moonlight. It stains the shredded skin, sinking into the folds and cracks as if it belongs there.


I stare, feeling nothing. But then a name surfaces in my mind, just a whisper that strikes like lightning: Emily. It hangs there, echoing in the dark.


A face appears, flickers, blurs—her eyes dark and warm, framed by wavy brown hair. I almost feel her, the laugh that carries through time. She’s saying something to me, but her voice is faint as if drowned.


"I love you."


The statement hits me, and with it, shame, thick and heavy, curling around the hunger. 


And there’s a weight pressing on my chest, suffocating, even though I know I can't breathe. Guilt claws through the numbness, pulling her words up from wherever I tried to bury them.


But it’s gone, leaving only emptiness.


My head pounds, trying to piece together fragments of who I was. The flashes come and go, sharper, harder to bear.


The kitchen table, a family dinner, laughter. The smell of coffee, her voice as she hums. My wife. Her hand on my face, the love so clear I could cry.


Then it’s gone, and I’m left alone in silence. The hunger stirs again, gnawing through the warmth of memory.


Another face flickers into view. A child, a little girl with a gap-toothed smile, clutching a worn teddy bear, her eyes full of trust.


My daughter.


I’m holding her hand, somewhere bright, laughter filling the air. She’d giggle, squeezing my hand, saying, ‘Daddy, let’s do this forever.’ And I’d smile, say, ‘Forever, baby.' I feel it, warmth in my chest, something close to happiness, something I can almost touch.


The thought stabs through, sharp and real, and the pain that follows is worse than anything I’ve felt. I want to scream, to claw this feeling out of me, but it’s part of me, inseparable.


My family! I need to find them. NO!


And that’s when it hits, the full weight of it.


They’re gone. Forever. I’m the one left here, trapped in this rotting shell, condemned to this endless, gnawing hunger.


A laugh bubbles up, ragged, hollow. I’m dead, but I’m still here, clinging to what’s left of them in my mind, like some kind of pathetic penance. And yet, it’ll never be enough to fill the void they left.


The hunger stirs again, feeding on the pain, growing with each memory, each regret. But there’s something else, faint, a whisper from the last remnants of who I was.


You don’t have to do this.


I close my eyes, letting the memories wash over me, feeling their warmth, their pain. And for a moment, the hunger loosens, slipping back, and I’m just…me. A person. A father. A husband.


I can stop, I'm trying to cling to that sliver of clarity. I’ll stop.


But the hunger is there, lurking, waiting.


----------


I thought I could stop.


I was wrong.


The hunger comes back, an unrelenting, insatiable beast. It doesn’t care about vows or memories. It rises, drowning every thought, every last shred of who I was. All I know is the hunger, expanding, filling me like rot spreading through flesh.


I stumble forward, dragging my feet, each step closer to the living. A faint glow of streetlights in the distance pulls me, and even as I scream in my mind to turn back, it’s too late. My body isn’t listening.


A man steps out of a car, his whistling dying the second he catches sight of me. For a heartbeat, there’s confusion in his eyes—just a flicker of disbelief. But I’m close enough to feel the warmth radiating off him.


Run, I think, but he doesn’t get a chance. My hands dig into his shoulders, nails scraping bone. He tries to pull back but I clamp down my teeth shredding through his skin, hot blood gushes into my mouth. It's metallic and raw, filling me with a sick, animalistic thrill.


He's screaming, a primal sound that echoes through the night, but it only fuels my hunger. My teeth grind deeper, ripping flesh, crunching tendon. His warm blood splatters, hot and sticky, over my hands, down my chin...


“No…no…” The words spill out, garbled, thick with blood. Somewhere inside, I want to stop, loosen my grip, let him go. But the hunger claws at me, relentless, drowning out any shred of mercy. My hands keep moving, fingers tearing, teeth sinking deeper, until I’m lost in the raw, brutal rhythm—ripping, gnawing, consuming. I don’t stop until he’s just a bloodied, hollowed shell at my feet, a nightmare painted in red.


I stagger back, wiping my mouth. I can still taste him, feel him inside like he’s become part of me. 


I stumble away. 


The hunger gnaws, relentless, twisting inside me. 


I turn a corner, desperate to escape, but there’s someone else—a woman, walking her dog, oblivious.


No…please…not again… I beg, but it’s useless. My body moves on its own, drawn toward her warmth. 


Her screams slice through the darkness as my hands latch onto her, fingers digging deep, holding tight. I bite down, tearing into her shoulder, the rush of her blood searing through me. It fills me, but somehow only sharpens the hunger, that endless, insatiable need that nothing—not even flesh—can satisfy.


Please, I think, let this end. Let me die.


But the hunger… it stirs again. I feel it, low and insistent, an ache that won’t go away.


I close my eyes, hoping for darkness, for an end. But there’s nothing. Nothing but the hunger, whispering. And I know, in the deepest part of me, that this will never end.


----------


I open my eyes, hunger gnawing at my bones, and find myself on a dark street lined with familiar houses. I don’t know how I got here.


One moment, I was somewhere else, sinking into darkness. Now I’m standing in front of a house that feels…known. The porch light flickers weakly, barely alive. My eyes trace the door, the windows, edges worn by years of something I can’t name.


A tightness clenches in my chest. I’m not supposed to feel anything. But this place presses on me, screaming from a fading part of me I can’t reach.


I step forward, feet dragging over concrete. My hand—what’s left of it—finds the door. I feel the metal, cold sinking into bone.


The door swings open.


Inside, the smell hits. Coffee. And something warm, like—


No. Stop.


But it’s too late. I know this smell. This place.


My feet pull me inside, down the dark hall. I’m moving without meaning to, my body betraying me, dragged forward. The hunger—that terrible hunger—pushes me on.


A sound from upstairs. A creak. Tiny feet across carpet. I know what it is before I see.


The hunger digs in, twisting me, urging me up the stairs. I don’t want to go, but I can’t stop.


At the top, a door stands slightly open, a strip of light spilling into the hall. In the center of it, a small shadow shifts.


“Daddy?”


The word hangs in the air. Her voice, fragile, like a whisper wrapped in cotton.


I try to say her name, to warn her, but all that comes out is a low, guttural growl. Her eyes widen; she steps back, dropping her teddy bear on the floor.


Her lips tremble. “Daddy…?”


Her face blurs, twisting, fading, but there’s something else—a flicker, faint, buried in what’s left of me.


Love.


It’s small, fragile, breaking through the cracks, just for a heartbeat. Her name is there, soft and warm. I remember her tiny hand in mine, her laughter, the way she’d look up at me with those trusting eyes, the way she’d curl up against me, safe, warm. I know I would do anything to protect her. Anything to keep her safe.


But then it’s gone, snuffed out as the hunger roars up, an endless, gnawing void swallowing everything I was, everything I am, shredding the last scraps of me, chewing up memories, swallowing every last trace of who I was. What’s left of me drowns, dragged down, a stone sinking in a black sea.


All I hear is the beat of her heart, pulsing warm in the silence.


Run. Please, baby…run.


But I lurch forward, teeth bared, hands reaching.


The hunger takes over. I am gone.

November 03, 2024 01:10

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49 comments

Tom Skye
13:56 Nov 26, 2024

This was beautifully written. I will never watch The Walking Dead the same way again :) The inner realization and loss of control was chilling. It reminded me of that short speech by Jeff Goldblum in The Fly where he is trying to suppress the fly's urges when confronted with Geena Davis. "Insects don't care for politics....they're very brutal..." But this story brought so much more to the concept. The returning of memories, experiencing emotions such as love, the fleeting compassion for his victim. And the ending knocked me out. I'm glad...

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Mary Butler
22:38 Nov 26, 2024

Wow, Tom, thank you so much! Your comment completely blew me away. Your reference to The Fly and Jeff Goldblum’s iconic speech is spot-on—it perfectly captures that tension between humanity and primal forces taking over, which I was aiming to explore. It means so much to me that you felt this story added something new to that concept. I’ve always wondered, when watching zombie flicks, if the zombie retained any sense of self but just couldn’t control their instincts. That idea has always fascinated me, and it’s what inspired this piece. It ...

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Tom Skye
22:46 Nov 26, 2024

Yeah you could even have multiple characters internally wrestling with different aspects of their past (living) life. It could be complex and super cool. I tried to play with a similar 'inner monologue' concept based on scientific work I have done in my day job. It's called Prison Chip. It was fairly well received on here so if you get a spare 10 mins I would love to know what you think of it. I love The Fly. I think if you approach that film as a tragic love story rather than a gore horror film, it is mesmerizing.

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Deborah Sanders
09:50 Dec 08, 2024

Mary, I love this zombie point of view. The reader cannot help but feel a connection with this poor ‘man’ turned zombie who struggles to fight his urges and to hold on to his humanity. I like the repetitive nature of the hunger. I think this holds true to the title “Insatiable”. And, after all, most readers would agree that this is what zombies do - relentlessly pursue the flesh and blood of the living. But who would have thought, trapped within the dangerous outer zombie shell, lies the original human holding on to some of his/her capaci...

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Mary Butler
01:22 Dec 11, 2024

Thank you so much, Deborah, for taking the time to read my story and for sharing your thoughtful feedback! I’m thrilled that you enjoyed the zombie point of view—it means a lot to hear that the inner conflict resonated so deeply with you (oops, there’s that word—I mean connected so strongly!). Your insights into the protagonist’s struggle to hold on to his humanity while succumbing to his urges are exactly what I hoped readers would feel. The repetitive nature of the hunger was definitely intentional, so it’s wonderful to know that you found...

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Max Wightwick
21:41 Dec 07, 2024

Hi Mary, This was grim and fantastic. The narration feels surreal, with the pacing being perfect for how the story unfolds, and the flitting descriptions captivate. The humanity here is unique, and has me sympathising with the insatiable hunger, hahahah. In all, I really enjoyed this. I am excited to read its successor.

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Mary Butler
01:27 Dec 11, 2024

Thank you so much, Max! I deeply appreciate you taking the time to read my story and sharing such thoughtful feedback. Your words about the pacing and surreal narration mean a lot, and I’m thrilled you connected with the human aspects amidst the darkness. It’s always rewarding to hear when a story captures someone’s interest so vividly—especially when it evokes a touch of sympathy for even the hunger, haha! I’m so glad you enjoyed it, and your excitement for what comes next truly motivates me. Thanks again!

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Audrey Knox
19:06 Dec 06, 2024

I found this really compelling. The question surrounding the narrator’s identity at the beginning was horrifying, especially when we realize that he is self-aware *and* a zombie. After that first kill though, I felt the story was missing a narrative engine. I found myself getting bored. The sensation of the hunger returning was a repetitive beat. You did get me back at the end. I could see what was coming when he ended up at his family’s home. And I genuinely was curious about whether he would actually be able to resist eating his daught...

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Mary Butler
02:33 Dec 07, 2024

Thank you so much for your thoughtful feedback, Audrey! I’m really glad you found the narrator’s self-awareness compelling—that was such an important layer for me to explore. I wanted the hunger to feel like a sentient force, something almost alive, relentless, and separate from the person he used to be. I totally understand your point about the middle section feeling repetitive. I was trying to reflect the cyclical, inescapable nature of the hunger, but I can see how it might have slowed the pace. It’s something I’ll keep in mind for the f...

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Audrey Knox
16:32 Dec 08, 2024

Thanks for writing it, Mary! It's funny. I actually often joke that I would rather become a zombie than fight through a zombie apocalypse. I am fond of saying that being a zombie is just a radical rearranging of one's priorities. Though this conscious version of it sounds less fun. I wonder though, does the awareness eventually fade and the animal instinct take over? I can see why this is so much material for a novel. Good luck with it!

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Cedar Barkwood
16:39 Dec 06, 2024

This is a genius story. It was written with the perfect balance, and the relations between characters added so much. I love the twist on this story, it was a wonderful touch of reality. Great job, and thanks for sharing!

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Mary Butler
02:32 Dec 07, 2024

Thank you so much, Cedar! Your words truly mean a lot to me. I’m thrilled that you found the story’s balance and character dynamics compelling—it’s something I worked hard to achieve, so hearing that it resonated is incredibly rewarding. The twist was a way for me to explore something raw and real, and I’m so glad it added depth for you. Thank you for taking the time to read and share such kind feedback! It means the world to me. I am planning on expanding this small story into a trilogy!

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Shirley Medhurst
14:02 Nov 21, 2024

WOW! and that was your first submission??? Welcome to REEDSY - can't wait to read more of your writing.... This was VERY powerful. I loved the inner turmoil of the MC, and - what an ending! BRAVO!!!

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Mary Butler
23:16 Nov 21, 2024

Thank you so much, Shirley! Your words truly mean a lot to me, especially since this was my first submission to Reedsy and my first attempt at writing horror—something I’ve always loved but never explored creatively until now. I’m so thrilled you enjoyed the inner turmoil of the MC and the ending—it was such a rollercoaster to write! Outside of fiction, I’ve also written and published an educational resource for chicken keepers, helping them learn to raise their chickens holistically. Right now, I’m working on a cozy mystery series, which i...

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Shirley Medhurst
10:17 Nov 22, 2024

My pleasure… That sounds intriguing - raising chickens holistically??? You’re certainly a very busy bee ! 😃

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Mary Butler
12:03 Nov 23, 2024

It’s been an incredible journey! I’ve been raising chickens for 12 years, and for the past 8 years, I’ve embraced a holistic approach. Along the way, I’ve even managed to cure ailments that many consider incurable. Most of my flock is thriving at an impressive age of 7-10 years old, with a few younger members at 3 and 4 years old. Interestingly, my love for chickens inspired my cozy mystery series, The Hen House Mysteries! In the series, the protagonist has a small flock of backyard chickens that cleverly assist her in solving crimes—yes, y...

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Shirley Medhurst
12:43 Nov 23, 2024

How fabulous! Egg-citing, indeed 😁 I’m definitely with you re holistic & natural remedies (altho, admittedly, I know nothing about chickens 🤣) I wish you the best of luck with your project

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Mary Butler
16:37 Nov 23, 2024

Thank you, Shirley! This has truly been such a fun project to work on. The idea actually came to me one day while I was out tending to my chickens. It’s funny how inspiration can strike when you least expect it! I often talk to my chickens in the same way I talk to my dogs and cats—that is how the idea of my protagonist of The Hen House Mysteries came to life. I’ve always been passionate about holistic remedies, so I decided to incorporate them into my care for the chickens. That’s what inspired me to write the book—I wanted to share what ...

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Thomas Wetzel
10:17 Nov 20, 2024

Okay, I think we all know now who just won this week's contest. I am not anywhere near as articulate as you, so please pardon my French. THIS WAS COMPLETEY FUCKING AWESOME!!! Zombie POV story? If you don't love this then me and you are just entirely different people. This was nothing short of spectacular. "No. That’s not right. There’s something else—something worse. I feel good. Sated." Absolutely chilling. So good. Can't wait to read what comes next!

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Mary Butler
00:29 Nov 21, 2024

Wow, Thomas, thank you so much for this incredible feedback! Your words honestly made my day—scratch that, my week. I’m so thrilled that you enjoyed the story, especially since I was a bit nervous about trying something from a zombie’s POV. Hearing that it resonated with you (and your enthusiastic French!) means the world to me. That you picked out the “I feel good. Sated.” line as chilling really makes me smile in the creepiest, most grateful way possible—because that’s exactly the kind of reaction I was hoping for. I wanted to explore the...

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Thomas Wetzel
01:20 Nov 21, 2024

No, thank you. That was a truly unique and creative story and I loved it. Looking forward to seeing how you bring the heat next! I wrote four horror stories in October (for Halloween spooky season) and you might like them. If you want to see my version of something along these same lines check out "Just Beyond The Fence". Hope you like it.

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Mary Butler
23:19 Nov 21, 2024

Thomas, you’re awesome! Thank you again for all your encouragement—it really fuels my creativity and makes me even more excited to dive into new stories. I’m definitely going to check out Just Beyond The Fence—I’m heading over to read it right now! The fact that it’s in a similar vein has me beyond intrigued, and I can’t wait to see your take on something spooky and atmospheric. Writing four horror stories in October? That’s impressive, and I love that you embraced the Halloween spirit like that. I’m already sure your storytelling is going ...

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Charlotte Morse
12:57 Nov 19, 2024

What a truly excellent story Mary, I was hooked from the first line right through to the very last! Your description of his inner turmoil, vainly clinging to memories of love whilst attempting to battle against his all embracing need was extremely well written, so believable and real. I did suspect that he may come face to face with his family, but hoped that his love would ultimately win - the fact that it didn't made for an even better ending!

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Mary Butler
00:31 Nov 21, 2024

Charlotte, thank you so much for your thoughtful and encouraging words! I’m so glad the story hooked you from start to finish—that really means a lot to me. Writing about his inner turmoil and the tug-of-war between his memories of love and the overwhelming hunger was such a balancing act, so it’s wonderful to hear that it felt believable and real to you. I had a feeling some readers might suspect he’d come face-to-face with his family, and I debated how that encounter would unfold. Ultimately, I felt the darker ending—where the hunger wins...

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Charlotte Morse
10:54 Nov 21, 2024

You're very welcome Mary :)

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Tony Thatcher
12:03 Nov 19, 2024

Thank you Mary. This is truly terrifying - the nightmare starts with the realisation of being 'undead' and continues through cannibalism and crescendoes with the ultimate horror of the protagonist killing his own daughter. I was particularly appalled by the description of the compulsion to kill being both inexplicable and irresistible. The level of gore was perfectly pitched to complement the story without distracting from it. Frightening because it could be believable!

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Mary Butler
00:33 Nov 21, 2024

Thank you so much for your feedback, Tony! I’m thrilled that the story had such an impact on you. I really wanted to explore the layers of horror, starting with the protagonist’s initial realization of being undead and spiraling into something far darker and more personal. Knowing that it resonated and unsettled you as intended means a lot. The compulsion to kill was one of the hardest parts to write, so I’m glad it came across as both terrifying and believable. I aimed to balance the gore so it enhanced the story without overshadowing the ...

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09:12 Nov 15, 2024

What a creepy and tragic tale. Well written. I had to read until the end. No happy ending. So sad. Great story for the prompt.

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Mary Butler
12:59 Nov 15, 2024

Thank you so much for taking the time to read my story, Kaitlyn, and for sharing your thoughtful feedback. I had hoped to give the story a happy ending, but ultimately, I felt this conclusion better aligned with the overall tone and essence of the narrative.

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Carol Stewart
04:49 Nov 15, 2024

The way this is written, the movement in it, can't help but drive the reader on in a similar way to your zombie. Excellent work.

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Mary Butler
13:01 Nov 15, 2024

Thank you so much for taking the time to read my story, Carol, and for sharing your feedback. Writing this tale was a step outside my comfort zone, so I’m thrilled to hear it had the intended impact. While I usually write cozy mysteries, I’m also a huge horror fan!

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Jesse Cade
23:13 Nov 13, 2024

One of the best zombie shorts I’ve read. Seriously. Consider a full length novel with this premise. Have you heard of the movie, “Warm Bodies”? The idea of a zombie still retaining human consciousness but being unable to course correct innate desires is such a terrifying concept. Nicely done!

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Mary Butler
01:57 Nov 14, 2024

Thank you for taking the time to read my story, Jesse. Thank you so much for your feedback! I have seen the movie Warm Bodies, which was the movie I thought of when I settled on the prompt I wanted to use. A full-length novel is also something I was thinking of because this was fun to write, in a macabre sort of way. I write supernatural cozy mysteries, so branching out into horror was different. I had over 10,000 words so I had to do major cuts to make the word limit. I am so glad the story still held the concept in shorter form.

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Susan O'REILLY
19:31 Nov 13, 2024

briliant write the inner struggle described so well, and a horrific sad ending sláinte

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Mary Butler
21:23 Nov 13, 2024

Thank you for taking the time to read my story, Susan and for your feedback. I really wanted to give it a happy ending, but it just didn't fit the narrative.

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Tom Hunter
18:36 Nov 13, 2024

Wow. The juxtaposition between the horror and humanity is spot on. If this was solely a story about a flesh-eating zombie, I would still consider it excellent as I feel I'm in the monster's mind the whole time. The immediacy of the moments of terror and anguish. You captured it all in as few words as possible. Well-crafted indeed.

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Mary Butler
21:22 Nov 13, 2024

Thank you for taking the time to read my story, Tom and for your wonderful feedback. It was originally around 10,000 words long. I had such a difficult time deciding what to cut. I am so glad that what remained still gave the story depth.

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Corina P
09:01 Nov 11, 2024

This is a carefully crafted, vivid horror story! The images you created, the mention of hunger, feels almost like the personification of immorality and the constant internal dilemma of the character makes the story even more thrilling. Well done.

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Mary Butler
11:39 Nov 11, 2024

Thank you so much for reading and for your thoughtful words! I’m thrilled that the story’s imagery and the character’s internal struggle resonated with you. The zombie genre has always fascinated me, especially the idea of transformation—the clash between what’s left of our humanity and the relentless, consuming hunger that takes over. Your feedback really captures what I was trying to convey, and it means a lot to know that you connected with the story’s emotional depth. Thank you again for your kind words!

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Anthony Andrés
23:39 Nov 10, 2024

A brilliant and haunting story. The awareness of losing one’s humanity is described in such a way that sticks with you.

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Mary Butler
01:00 Nov 11, 2024

Thank you so much, Anthony! I’m thrilled that the theme of losing humanity stuck with you—that struggle was really at the heart of the story. I wanted the awareness of slipping away, piece by piece, to linger with readers. Your feedback means a lot to me!

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Jace Keeler
22:50 Nov 10, 2024

“Then it hits me, clear and sharp, like a broken bone.” I loved your descriptive writing; it’s so vivid and poetic. I could see every detail you described, and it felt like I was walking alongside the creature, watching his journey and feeling an emotional connection to him. This is wonderfully written. If I woke up to find myself dead and buried, I’d have the same questions—where am I? How’d I get here? How do I get out? It was all so believable, making the story even more compelling. And those faint memories, trying to grip onto something ...

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Mary Butler
01:03 Nov 11, 2024

Thank you so much, Jace! Your feedback is truly incredible and means more than I can say. I’m thrilled that the imagery and the creature’s inner struggle resonated with you. Writing those visceral moments—where he’s both trapped in his decaying body and haunted by fragments of who he once was—was such a challenge, so hearing that it felt vivid and believable is just amazing. I wanted readers to feel that same helplessness and dread, questioning what’s real, what’s left of him, and what he’s becoming. I’m so glad it all came through and kept ...

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Jace Keeler
01:10 Nov 11, 2024

Of course, I’m so glad I could spread a little joy in return for such a great read (not a bad deal if you ask me, lol). You absolutely achieved every goal you aimed for with this one, and I look forward to seeing what you’ll write next!

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Mary Butler
01:27 Nov 11, 2024

This was a bit of an adventure outside my usual genre. It’s always exciting to try something new! Cozy mysteries are my usual comfort zone, but I couldn’t resist exploring something darker. I have always been an avid horror fan! Thanks again for your kind words—I can’t wait to share more with you!

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Helen A Smith
09:37 Nov 10, 2024

The hunger of this neither alive nor dead corpse. Unable to beat the awful urges to suck the life out of the living and not wanting to destroy. A living purgatory. Great descriptions. I wanted to keep reading more. A tragic creature.

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Mary Butler
11:04 Nov 10, 2024

Hi Helen! Thank you so much for your thoughtful response—it means a lot, especially as horror is new territory for me! I’m usually immersed in cozy mysteries, so exploring the mind of a tragic creature battling an unyielding hunger was both challenging and thrilling. There’s something hauntingly fascinating about the concept of a “living purgatory”—a state of being where human instincts and monstrous urges clash. Writing this story helped me dive into that duality, the torment of not wanting to destroy yet being driven to it. I’m so glad you...

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Helen A Smith
11:16 Nov 10, 2024

It’s definitely rewarding trying out different genres, as your story demonstrates. I think the main thing in your story was being able to identify with a trapped being.

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Mary Butler
00:58 Nov 11, 2024

I’m so glad the feeling of being trapped resonated with you. Trying out that theme in a new genre was a fascinating challenge.

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RBE | Illustrated Short Stories | 2024-06

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