Chapter 120 Story 120 The Grinning Horror
Late one night, deep in the heart of a forgotten village, the wind howled through the desolate streets. This village had long been abandoned, the crumbling houses and overgrown pathways a testament to the terror that once plagued the town. No one dared to speak of what happened there, and those who knew had long since taken their secrets to the grave.
But something remained in that village, something old and malevolent. It lingered in the shadows, biding its time, waiting for someone foolish enough to venture into its domain.
Rebecca, a thrill-seeking paranormal investigator, had heard rumors of the village and its dark past. She had come alone, driven by a need to uncover the truth behind the ghost stories that haunted the local taverns. Armed with only a flashlight and a camera, she walked the lonely roads, her footsteps echoing in the eerie silence.
The moon was hidden behind thick clouds, casting the village in darkness. Rebecca's flashlight flickered, casting long, ominous shadows across the dilapidated buildings. She felt a chill in the air, but it wasn't just the cold. It was something more—a feeling of being watched, of being hunted.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
As she reached the center of the village, Rebecca noticed a small church, its steeple barely standing. The door was slightly ajar, creaking on its rusty hinges as the wind blew. Something compelled her to enter, as if an invisible hand was guiding her inside.
She pushed open the door, the wood groaning under the pressure. The inside was dark and musty, filled with the scent of decay. Her flashlight illuminated broken pews and shattered stained glass, but it wasn't the disarray that caught her attention. It was the figure standing at the altar.
Rebecca froze, her breath catching in her throat. The figure was tall, its back turned to her, long white hair cascading down its back. The light from her flashlight barely touched it, but she could see enough to know that this was no ordinary person.
"Hello?" she called out, her voice trembling.
The figure didn't respond. It stood motionless, as if it hadn't heard her. Rebecca took a step closer, her heart pounding in her chest. She was terrified, but something compelled her to keep moving forward.
As she drew nearer, the figure slowly turned to face her. Rebecca's blood ran cold. The face that stared back at her was not human. It was twisted, gaunt, and grinning with a mouth full of sharp, rotting teeth. The eyes, sunken and yellow, gleamed with a malevolent hunger that sent shivers down her spine.
Rebecca stumbled back, her flashlight slipping from her grasp. It hit the ground and rolled away, casting the church in near darkness. She could hear the creature's breath, a raspy, wet sound, as it began to move toward her.
Panic surged through her, and she turned to run, but her legs felt like lead. The door seemed impossibly far away. The creature's footsteps were slow, deliberate, echoing in the silence as it closed the distance between them.
Rebecca tripped over a broken pew, hitting the ground hard. She scrambled to her feet, desperate to escape, but the creature was already upon her. It loomed over her, its grin widening as it leaned in close, its putrid breath washing over her face.
The last thing Rebecca saw was that horrible, grinning face, those yellow eyes boring into hers. She screamed, but it was cut short as the creature lunged forward, its teeth sinking into her flesh.
When the villagers came the next day, all they found was Rebecca's camera, lying in the dirt just outside the church. The pictures it held revealed only darkness, save for the last image—a blurred, grinning face staring into the lens, its eyes gleaming with an insatiable hunger.
Rebecca was never seen again, and the village remained a place of nightmares, where the grinning horror still waits for the next unfortunate soul to wander too close.