🏆 Contest #301 Winner!

Horror

This story contains sensitive content

THE FIRST TIME I ate someone’s grief, it was an accident.

My aunt had just died, and my cousin couldn’t stop crying at the funeral. She clutched her mother’s wedding ring so tight her knuckles grew white. When she hugged me, she pressed the ring into my palm.

“I can’t look at it anymore,” she said. “Just take it away.”

I slipped it into my pocket, and something strange happened on the drive home. A warm sensation spread through my gut, like I’d swallowed a shot of good whiskey. By the time I parked in my driveway, I felt freaking amazing—light, almost euphoric.

Meanwhile, my cousin called to thank me. She’d finally slept through the night. “It’s like a weight lifted,” she said.

I didn’t make the connection until two weeks later. I was stress-eating a gas station cherry cupcake—the kind with that nuclear-red icing that stains everything it touches. The ring remained in my pocket, and when I pulled it out to look at it, some of that sticky icing smeared across the metal. Without thinking, I licked it clean, and when the ring touched my tongue, it dissolved, melting like cotton candy while that same warmth flooded my system, only stronger this time. Much stronger.

That’s when I understood what had happened. Somehow, I ate her grief.

Five years passed, and I turned it into a business. Not officially, of course. You can’t exactly put “Grief Eater” on a business card. But word spread among the desperate.

The process was simple. Bring me something that connects you to your dead loved one. Something that holds your pain. I consume it, and your grief disappears. I charged based on the intensity—a thousand for a parent, five hundred for a sibling, two-fifty for a grandparent. Pets were a flat hundred. The pricing wasn’t based on science, but on how much the grief would screw me up afterwards.

But I didn’t tell my clients what happened to their grief afterward. It didn’t disappear. It lived inside me. I’d consumed the emotional trauma of seventy-eight dead loved ones, and each one had left something behind—a whisper, an itch, a memory—that wasn’t mine.

I called them the Chorus.

Most days, I could handle them. They were just background noise, the mental equivalent of a TV left on in another room. But lately, they’d been getting louder. More demanding. The whispers had become conversations. Conversations had escalated into arguments. Pleas had replaced the arguments.

Let us out. Let us see them. We miss them.

I ignored them and kept eating. The warmth that followed consuming grief had become addictive, better than any drug I’d tried. And I’d tried plenty. The business was just an excuse to keep feeling that rush.

Ever since I was a kid, I’d had the same recurring nightmare—being trapped inside my body, conscious but unable to move or speak, while something else controlled me from within. I’d wake up screaming, drenched in sweat, grateful to be back in control. As I got older, the nightmares became less frequent, but more intense. The idea of being reduced to a passenger in my own flesh terrified me more than death itself. I’d rather cease to exist than exist as a prisoner inside my body.

I never connected these nightmares to my new profession. Never saw the warning signs. Until it was too late.

On a rainy Tuesday, a woman brought me her brother’s baseball cap. He’d killed himself three months ago, and she hadn’t slept well since. She passed me the cap with trembling hands.

“Will it hurt?” she asked, her fingers still gripping the frayed edge.

“Not you,” I said.

When she left, I locked the door and stuffed the cap into my mouth. The fabric dissolved against my tongue, releasing a bitter wave of sorrow that made my eyes water. I chewed faster. The sooner I got it down, the sooner the pain transformed into that familiar warmth.

Except this time, something different happened.

As the last threads disappeared down my throat, I heard a man’s voice, clear as day, say, “Finally.”

And then my hands weren’t my hands anymore.

I tried to move them, but they stayed flat on the desk. I tried to stand, but my legs ignored me. My breathing sped up, but I wasn’t the one speeding it up.

“You’ve been so selfish,” the voice said. “Keeping us all in here. Not letting us reach them.”

I tried to respond, but my mouth wouldn’t open. Panic crawled up my spine as I realized what was happening. I was still here, still conscious, but I wasn’t in control anymore. I was a passenger in my own body.

My lifelong nightmare was unfolding in real time. The terror I’d woken from a hundred times was now my waking reality.

“It’s our turn now,” another voice in my head said. A woman’s voice, elderly, unfamiliar. “You’ve kept us quiet long enough.”

The next few hours were a blur of psychological torture. My body moved without my permission. My hands opened drawers, searched through files, and found my client list. My mouth formed words that weren’t mine, practicing different voices, different cadences. The Chorus was figuring out how to drive.

They let me surface just enough to feel the full horror of my situation. I screamed, but they pushed me back down into the darkness. The claustrophobia of being caged inside my skull was worse than any physical pain I’d ever experienced—like being buried alive but still able to watch the world through a window.

By nightfall, they had a plan.

I woke up on my kitchen floor surrounded by shattered glass. The clock said 3:47 AM. I’d lost nine hours.

My phone showed seventeen missed calls from unknown numbers. There was blood under my fingernails, and my mouth tasted like copper and salt. When I tried to stand, the world tilted sideways.

“What the hell?” I said, but the words felt wrong in my mouth, like my tongue had forgotten how to shape them.

“We’ve been waiting for this,” a voice that wasn’t mine said. It was coming from inside my head, but it wasn’t a thought. It was someone else. Someone new. “For someone who could hold enough of us.”

I stumbled to the bathroom and flipped on the light. In the mirror, my face looked wrong. My expressions weren’t mine. My eyes focused and unfocused, as if someone else was controlling them.

“No,” I said. “This isn’t happening.”

“Oh, but it is,” the voice replied. “You’ve been so generous, making space for us. And now we’re going to return the favor.”

My hand rose to my face, but I wasn’t the one moving it. I tried to scream, but my lips stayed sealed.

My worst nightmare had always been this: losing control. Being trapped inside while someone else drove. And now it was happening. This wasn’t a metaphor or an exaggeration—this was the literal manifestation of the terror that had haunted my sleep since childhood, come to life in the waking world.

“Don’t fight it,” whispered another voice, a woman’s this time. “You’ll just make it worse.”

And suddenly, the Chorus wasn’t background noise anymore. They were front and center, rising like a flood, and I was drowning in them.

They took my body out for a test drive, and I remained conscious for every terrible moment of it. I saw everything through my eyes, but I was just a passenger now. They used my voice to talk to each other, arguing over who got control next.

“The brother should go first,” said my mouth in a voice that wasn’t mine. “He’s the newest. He hasn’t seen his sister yet.”

My head nodded without my permission.

“Fifteen minutes each,” said another voice using my vocal cords. “Until we figure out a better system.”

They were dividing me up like I was a time share property. And there was nothing I could do but watch.

The suffocating horror of being reduced to an observer in your own life is impossible to describe to someone who hasn’t experienced it.

My body drove to the woman’s house, the one who brought me her brother’s cap yesterday. The Chorus knew where she lived because her brother knew. They rang the doorbell.

When she answered, her face transformed from confusion to terror.

“Tommy?” she said.

“Hey, sis,” my mouth said in her brother’s voice. “I’m back.”

She backed away, shaking her head. “No. You’re that person—the one who took the cap. What are you doing?”

“It’s complicated,” my mouth said. “But I needed to see you. To tell you, it wasn’t your fault.”

They were using me like a puppet, and I couldn’t even scream. Every childhood fear of possession, every adult anxiety about losing autonomy—it was all playing out in high definition. This wasn’t just a nightmare; it was the nightmare that defined me.

The woman was crying now. “This isn’t funny. You need to leave.”

“Remember that summer at Lake Michigan? When I pushed you off the dock and you lost your new sunglasses? I said a fish took them.”

Her face went pale. “Nobody knew about that.”

“I did. I do.” My hand reached out to touch her face. “I need you to do something for me now.”

“What?” she whispered.

“I need you to give him something else. Something with more grief in it. My journal. It’s under the mattress.”

No! I screamed inside my mind. Don’t listen to him!

But of course, she couldn’t hear me. Nobody could. I sat trapped in the passenger seat of my body, watching as they used me to collect more grief, more memories, more souls to add to the Chorus.

Over the next three days, they visited seven of my clients. Each time, the newest member of the Chorus took control to convince their loved ones to hand over more grief-soaked items. Some were suspicious, but most were so desperate to believe they were communicating with their dead that they did whatever we asked.

The pattern remained the same. My body would show up unannounced. My voice would say things only the dead person could know. My hands would take whatever they offered—journals, photographs, wedding rings, even clothing. And then my mouth would consume them, adding each new voice to the Chorus.

With each new object I consumed against my will, the Chorus grew stronger. I felt myself shrinking, compressed into a smaller and smaller corner of my mind. The nightmare was consuming me, becoming more real with each passing hour. By the fourth day, I only got control for minutes at a time, usually when they were sleeping.

During these brief windows, I tried everything to fight back—pain, alcohol, even smashing my head against the wall. Nothing worked. They just laughed and took back control, their voices overlapping in a discord of mockery.

The only time they let me surface was when they needed me to know something. Like tonight, as my body lay on my bed, staring at the ceiling with eyes that no longer belonged to me.

“We’re going to the cemetery tomorrow,” explained the first voice, my cousin’s mother. “We’ve decided it’s time to expand our operation.”

“What do you mean?” I thought at them.

“Fresh grief is the sweetest,” said another voice. “We’re going to find those in mourning and offer our services directly.”

“No,” I thought. “I won’t let you.”

They laughed, a cacophony of unique tones all using my vocal cords. “You don’t have a choice anymore. You’re just the vessel now.”

And I realized they were right. I’d been so focused on fighting for control that I hadn’t considered the alternative. Maybe I couldn’t drive anymore, but I could still crash the car.

While they debated their plans, I reached deep inside myself, to the place where my own grief lived. Not their grief—mine. The pain I’d been running from my whole life.

I found the memory of my father’s death—the overdose I discovered when I was fourteen. My mother’s suicide two years later. The friend who died in my apartment while I was out buying more drugs for us. All the grief I’d never processed, never acknowledged, never consumed.

I pulled it up like poison from a well, and before the Chorus realized what I was doing, I turned it on them.

Grief is a living thing. It grows, changes, evolves. And when you feed it, it gets stronger.

My grief flooded through the mental space the Chorus occupied. As the grief-feeding entities touched them, they screamed—entities unfamiliar with grief themselves. They’d only been the echoes, the impressions left behind. Never had they been the source.

“Stop!” they shrieked as my grief engulfed them.

“You wanted grief,” I told them. “Here it is. All you can eat.”

I forced every painful memory through my consciousness—every loss, every regret, every moment of despair I’d ever experienced. I’d spent my life running from these feelings, but now I embraced them. They were my weapons.

The Chorus splintered under the assault. Some voices faded altogether. Others fragmented into whispers. A few of the strongest pushed back, trying to regain control, but the assault weakened them.

For the first time in days, I moved my hand when I wanted to. I dragged myself to the bathroom, teeth clenched against the battle still raging in my mind. In the mirror, my face was gaunt, eyes bloodshot. I looked like I’d aged a decade.

But they were my eyes again. At least for now.

“This isn’t over,” hissed one of the remaining voices. “We’ll wait. We’ll grow stronger again.”

“No,” I said aloud, my voice hoarse but my own. “You won’t.”

I opened the medicine cabinet and removed a pocket knife. The one my grandfather gave me before he died. The one object I’d never consumed despite its grief potential, because it was too precious.

I put it in my mouth.

Cold metal touched my tongue. I bit down, feeling it dissolve. But this time, instead of swallowing the grief, I focused on my grandfather’s love. The pride in his eyes when he gave me this knife. How he taught me to whittle. Wonderful memories accompanied the pain.

The knife dissolved into a burst of emotion—not just grief, but joy, love, pride, nostalgia.

And I realized my mistake all these years. Grief? It’s not the pain that destroys you. It’s all that love suddenly homeless, pounding on your ribcage, demanding somewhere to exist. And by consuming only the pain, I’d been creating these hungry ghosts, these fragments of people composed of sorrow.

I opened my mouth, ready to tell them this revelation, but there was no response. The Chorus had gone silent.

For now, at least.

The next morning, I purged my apartment of all the grief-objects I’d collected over the years. Not by eating them—I’d never do that again—but by returning them to the families they belonged to. Some people were angry when I showed up at their doors. Others were confused. A few even begged me to take their grief back. I couldn’t. I wouldn’t.

Each returned object lifted a weight from me. With every tearful conversation, every awkward explanation, every apology, the voices in my head grew fainter. Not gone completely—I could still hear them sometimes, especially at night—but more like memories than invaders.

I thought of them not as the people they once were, but as wounds that needed healing—both theirs and mine.

For the first time in months, I slept without the old nightmare. The terror of being trapped in my own body had lost its power over me, not because it wasn’t frightening anymore, but because I’d lived through the real thing and survived. I’d faced my worst fear and come out the other side.

I stopped taking clients, moved to a different neighborhood, and changed my phone number. But people still found me, desperate for relief from their pain. Instead of eating their grief, I listened to their stories. Sometimes that was enough. Sometimes it wasn’t. But it was honest work, at least.

A week after my liberation, a man brought me his daughter’s teddy bear. Cancer. She was seven.

“Can you take it away?” he asked, tears streaming down his face. “I can’t live with this pain.”

I sat with him for hours as he talked about her. Her favorite ice cream flavor. The way she insisted on wearing mismatched socks. How brave she was at the end.

Before he left, I told him the truth, that grief is just love with nowhere to go. That the pain he felt was the other side of how much he loved her. That healing doesn’t mean forgetting.

“Keep the bear,” I said. “She loved it, and you loved her. Let it hurt for now. Eventually, it’ll hurt less, but you’ll still have the love.”

As he walked away clutching the bear, I felt something shift inside me. A few more voices in the Chorus faded, replaced by a peaceful silence.

I still don’t know exactly what I am or how this strange ability works. But I know what I’m not anymore.

I’m not a grief eater. I’m just someone who’s learning, finally, to digest my own.

Posted May 09, 2025
Share:

You must sign up or log in to submit a comment.

121 likes 126 comments

Kay Smith
21:05 May 21, 2025

What is this salty discharge coming from my eyeballs?! Oh my goodness! Where to begin?

Profound, well-written, resonant, and unique!
This imagery is so visceral; the sensory details are so rich and vivid! Your MC has such a crystal clear arc - beautifully executed!

“…the kind with that nuclear-red icing that stains everything it touches.”
-- Love it! Lol!

“I’d rather cease to exist than exist as a prisoner inside my body.”
-- Truer words were never spoken!

“My lifelong nightmare was unfolding in real time. The terror I’d woken from a hundred times was now my waking reality.”
-- Applause!

“The claustrophobia of being caged inside my skull was worse than any physical pain I’d ever experienced—like being buried alive but still able to watch the world through a window.”
-- Awesome! I can feel the words.

“Grief is a living thing. It grows, changes, and evolves. And when you feed it, it gets stronger.”
-- poétique!
« Before he left, I told him the truth, that grief is just love with nowhere to go.”
-- There goes that damned salty discharge again!

Congratulations! A well-deserved victory!

Reply

21:10 May 21, 2025

Oh my gosh, Kay, thank you so much for the kind, supportive words. Sorry for the salty discharge! :-)

Reply

Nick Migliaccio
20:49 May 21, 2025

heart warming horror? an unusual blend like jalapeno pepper and chocolate, and equally as exciting.

Reply

21:02 May 21, 2025

Thanks, Nick, love the comparison!

Reply

Story Time
16:32 May 21, 2025

A really unique and poetic view of grief and grieving. Well done.

Reply

21:05 May 21, 2025

Thank you so much, Story Time!

Reply

09:12 May 21, 2025

Powerful messaging. Very well done!

Reply

11:58 May 21, 2025

Thanks Chris!

Reply

Jan Keifer
16:45 May 20, 2025

Wow. That was a great read. I couldn't stop once I started. Great moral to your story also.

Reply

21:44 May 20, 2025

Thanks, Jan, I really appreciate your comments. Also, thank you for working in the cancer field! I'm sure the days can hard, but your service helps people, so thank you.

Reply

Jan Keifer
00:03 May 21, 2025

Thank you also for your support.

Reply

Lee Kendrick
15:24 May 20, 2025

A clever plot and original. Great characters and atmosphere throughout the story.
Well done to winning the contest Daniel.
Best wishes
Lee

Reply

21:46 May 20, 2025

Thanks Lee!

Reply

Maxwell Pacilio
13:48 May 20, 2025

I really loved this story. I have always liked the idea of a person who can heal other's pain but at a detrimental cost to themselves. The way your MC fights back against The Chorus is brilliant, melancholic, and inspirational. Very well written. Congrats on your win!

Reply

14:52 May 20, 2025

Thank you so much, maxwell! Best to you on your writing goal of a short story a week! And thank you for being teacher!

Reply

09:44 May 20, 2025

I think l connect to this story at a much deeper level than l actual think. this my second time reading this and l will make sure l share the story, wherever l go. thank you so much for writing this story, l am in love with it.

Reply

12:17 May 20, 2025

I'm honored that you would do something like that. It means so much more than a contest win for sure! Thank you.

Reply

Tuan Shehizan
08:10 May 20, 2025

A great contrast of horror and mystery, well done!

Reply

12:15 May 20, 2025

Thank you, Tuan.

Reply

Shelley Blevins
22:15 May 19, 2025

You have perfectly described what grief does to someone when they hold onto it. I have tried for many years to share with a friend that by her holding on to her grief for all the trauma and loss she has endured is slowly killing her. She doesn't eat her grief, she drinks it until she is numb. Alcoholism, depression, drug use, it is all just a bandaid to cover up grief that they haven't healed from. I rarely comment, but your story had me from the very first sentence. Thank you for sharing your talent.

Reply

12:24 May 20, 2025

Thank you for sharing such a personal story about your friend. I hope she finds her way through the darkness. And please remember to care for yourself too - loving someone who's drowning their grief takes its own toll. You're carrying the weight of witnessing that slow fade, which is its own kind of grief. You're in my thoughts, Shelly.

Reply

Tommy Goround
17:31 May 19, 2025

The opener went right into it. Clapping.

(Nice show).

Reply

17:55 May 19, 2025

Thanks Tommy, I appreciate the comment!

Reply

Krystal Renee
21:25 May 18, 2025

This had me hooked from the beginning! What an innovative concept, original and unique. Loved the entire story!

Reply

22:52 May 18, 2025

Thanks, Krystal!

Reply

18:20 May 18, 2025

"Grief is just love with nowhere to go"... How profoundly beautiful! good story, kind of reminded me of the old twilight zone series.

Reply

20:55 May 18, 2025

Thank you so much, that's very cool! Loved Twilight Zone!

Reply

Keanna Maewyn
17:44 May 18, 2025

This was beautiful writing. Absolutely stupendous. There were no elongated fillers, which allowed the reader to soak up the true intentions of the story, and to end it on such a wholesome way of thinking was unexpected from the beginning. As someone who recently lost her mother and is still struggling to understand the grief of it all, this touched my soul in ways nothing else has been able to. You are truly a remarkable author and I hope great things for you in the future.

Reply

20:53 May 18, 2025

Thank you so much for your beautiful words. I'm so sorry about your mother, and I'm humbled that my story connected with you during such a difficult time. Your comment that it touched your soul in ways nothing else has is such a heartwarming gift as a writer.
Please be gentle with yourself as you move through this journey. Grief doesn't follow a timeline, and however you're feeling is exactly how you should be feeling.
Sending you warmth and healing thoughts. Thank you for sharing something so personal with me.

Reply

Sofia Puggioni
14:28 May 18, 2025

Whoah.
This story is really, really good.
How you talk about grief is thought-provoking, and the character's voice feels real.
Very deserved win and again congratulations for it!

Reply

20:46 May 18, 2025

Thanks so much, Sofia! All best to you on your writing journey!

Reply

Helen A Howard
09:49 May 18, 2025

A novel concept. Very effective storytelling as well as a poignant and meaningful resolution. Congratulations.

Reply

20:44 May 18, 2025

Thanks, Helen, much appreciated!

Reply

03:27 May 18, 2025

Wow that was incredible, for sure one of the most moving pieces I have ever read. Just a few questions, was eating the grief meant to be literal or figurative? And is the main characters ability to eat grief something other people in his society could do too or was it just him? Regardless this was an amazing piece of art and it definitely changed my perspective on many things.

Reply

20:43 May 18, 2025

Thank you so much for your comment! It made my day to hear the story moved you so deeply.
About your questions - I left some ambiguity around the grief-eating. I wanted readers to interpret it in whatever way resonated most with them. Some see it as literal within a magical world, others as a powerful metaphor for how we process others' pain. As for whether the main character is unique or not, I imagined him as having a rare gift, but again, I love hearing different interpretations!
What means the most to me is that the story changed your perspective on things. Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts - they make this whole writing journey worthwhile.

Reply

Ashlee Osborn
02:05 May 18, 2025

Definitely a well deserved win?

Reply

20:33 May 18, 2025

Thanks Ashlee!

Reply

Ava Graciaa
20:33 May 17, 2025

Wow, this is amazing! I am impressed. I wish could write this well.

Reply

20:33 May 18, 2025

Thanks, Ava. I think writing is like most skills -- it requires practice to improve. My writing today is so much more than what it was when I first started. And never stop learning about the craft. Keep at it and enjoy the process!

Reply

Iris Silverman
13:52 May 17, 2025

Wow, this was incredible. I had chill bumps for nearly the entire story. I was hooked from the opening sentence - what an interesting concept. The evolution of the character was fantastic and inspiring. It was such a unique commentary on grief and the ways humans try to suppress it, get rid of it, push it onto someone else. One of the best stories I've read on Reedsy to this date. I look forward to reading your future work

Reply

20:28 May 18, 2025

Wow back at ya! :-) Thank you so much for such wonderful comments about the story. Very honored, thank you!

Reply

RBE | Illustrated Short Stories | 2024-06

Bring your short stories to life

Fuse character, story, and conflict with tools in Reedsy Studio. All for free.