
The next day dawned gray and silent, as though the clouds themselves were holding their breath. Aryan stood at the motel window, staring into the fog that clung to the outer walls like a ghost refusing to leave. His night had been restless, haunted by sounds that should not have existed—a woman weeping softly through the vents, the scratching of nails on the inside of the wardrobe, and the faint echo of a lullaby.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAjvxsqo5e3L
He hadn’t told anyone what happened in Room 13. Not even Devlin. But something about that room had followed him into his dreams—and worse, into his waking hours. He glanced again at the photograph he’d taken of the room’s mirror. There was a shadow behind him in the image. But when he had taken it, he was completely alone.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAECEg1BWDaG
At breakfast, Aryan forced down a few bites of toast and made his way to the reception. Devlin was reading the newspaper again, same spot, same eerie stillness.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAtoWNXPucd3
"Devlin," Aryan said carefully, "has anyone ever... disappeared from Room 13?"
67Please respect copyright.PENANA9UTTV4UZu9
Devlin’s eyes didn’t leave the paper. "That room was closed for a reason. People who enter it sometimes leave pieces of themselves behind."
67Please respect copyright.PENANAfvPP5G8C4d
Aryan felt a chill trace his spine. "What do you mean by 'pieces'?"
67Please respect copyright.PENANAfnXpUPmSBi
"Memories. Sanity. Sometimes more."
67Please respect copyright.PENANA2837o7l7E8
Aryan’s throat went dry. He turned to leave but Devlin spoke again.
67Please respect copyright.PENANA0WBN37shwx
"If you're hearing her, it's already too late."
67Please respect copyright.PENANAiNSO0GqE1z
67Please respect copyright.PENANAicOuhqHcJi
---
67Please respect copyright.PENANA9yhEB3ocLe
Back in the room, Aryan opened his laptop to search local records, missing persons, anything. What he found froze his blood. Every year since 1983, exactly one person had gone missing in this town—each disappearance occurring in July, within a block of the motel.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAH0v6xJdjjL
And this year, July had just begun.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAhJD6s69mlt
As Aryan stared at the screen, the lights flickered. Then dimmed. Then a whisper.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAt3UOafp2K1
"Help me..."
67Please respect copyright.PENANAIA4EOenyBX
He whipped around. No one.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAkNZAIAAPzC
He turned back to the laptop—and every letter on the keyboard had changed. Rearranged themselves. Spelling out one sentence:
67Please respect copyright.PENANAXUvu7xK8hk
"You shouldn't have opened the door."
67Please respect copyright.PENANA7y0hSzndkh
Aryan slammed the laptop shut and backed away, only to find the closet door slowly creaking open behind him.
67Please respect copyright.PENANARSfUWQ11Rp
Inside wasn’t storage. It was... another hallway. A cold, dark corridor with peeling wallpaper and flickering lights.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAanoRhK3sk5
At the far end stood a little girl in a white dress, her head tilted, her eyes pitch black.
67Please respect copyright.PENANA0PZIOOORlY
She lifted her hand and pointed at him.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAsKkatiEymo
"He’s here," she whispered to someone unseen. "He remembers."
67Please respect copyright.PENANAjiVQnM0UbH
Aryan turned to run, but the motel room behind him had vanished. He was no longer in Room 13.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAY88hHZk82E
He was inside the wall.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAEGWgW3nyr7
And the walls were whispering his name.
67Please respect copyright.PENANAzImc8hQtqq
67Please respect copyright.PENANAHxHjIvcwNO
---
67Please respect copyright.PENANAf6z2FpuTMM
Would you like Chapter 3 next?
Chapter 3 coming 🔜
67Please respect copyright.PENANAEEUs75Xy5F