Caleb didn’t sleep.
Every time he closed his eyes, he saw the folder glowing on his nightstand like a nightlight from Hell. He’d tried hiding it under his bed, shoving it into his laundry basket, even tossing it in the trash chute—yet somehow, every time he turned around, it was back on the nightstand. Finally, in a fit of 3 a.m. logic, he stuffed it into the freezer. Between a bag of frozen peas and half a pint of melted ice cream, it hummed softly like an unplugged refrigerator with opinions. By sunrise, Caleb was on his couch, eyes bloodshot, sipping stale coffee that tasted like burnt cardboard. He’d convinced himself he could just ignore it. He could out-stubborn Hell. “It’s paper,” he muttered into his mug. “Paper can’t hurt me. Paper doesn’t have teeth. Paper doesn’t—” The ceiling light flickered. He froze. From somewhere deep inside the walls came the faint sound of scratching. Like nails dragging across wood, slow and deliberate. “…probably a rat,” Caleb added weakly, though his tone suggested even he didn’t buy it. He turned the TV on for noise, but even the canned laughter of a rerun sitcom felt hollow against the humming in his freezer. The laugh track seemed to mock him. Ha ha, you’re doomed, laugh along! By late morning, Caleb was half-asleep sitting upright, trying to trick his body into rest, when the door burst open. Lena barged in without knocking, as usual, her sneakers squeaking on the floor. She had that determined stride of a woman on a mission. An intervention kind of stride. “Jesus, Caleb,” she said, fanning her hand in front of her face. “This place smells like a campfire in a dumpster. When was the last time you showered?” “Define ‘shower,’” Caleb croaked, his voice hoarse. “Define ‘time.’ Actually, define—” “Never mind.” She dropped a plastic grocery bag on the counter. “I brought bagels. And ibuprofen. And soap, because clearly you’ve forgotten how human hygiene works.” Caleb tried to smile but only managed something between a grimace and a seizure. Lena marched straight to the fridge, opened it, and then froze. “Why… is there a file folder in your freezer?” Caleb bolted upright. “Don’t touch it!” Her eyebrows shot up. “Why not? Is it radioactive? Is it full of stolen exam answers? What, Caleb? Because if you’re running some weird organ-smuggling side hustle, I want in. Rent’s expensive.” Caleb’s mouth opened. Closed. Opened again. Words clogged in his throat. How do you explain that your roommate isn’t a rat, but the Devil’s accountant in business casual? “Fine,” Lena said finally, when he failed to answer. “Keep your secrets. But seriously, you need sleep. Or therapy. Or, like, an exorcist.” Before Caleb could fire back, the doorbell rang. Three sharp chimes. He froze. His blood turned to ice. Lena tilted her head. “You expecting someone?” He shook his head, slow and deliberate. The doorbell rang again—this time louder. Longer. As if whoever stood outside wasn’t just waiting but demanding. “Maybe it’s your landlord?” she guessed. “Landlords don’t ring twice,” Caleb whispered, his voice breaking. The scratching sound returned. Not from the walls this time. From the other side of the door. Slow. Steady. Claws dragging down the wood. Lena’s expression faltered. “Okay. That’s… officially creepy. Should I call the cops?” “Yeah, sure,” Caleb said, laughing nervously. “And tell them what? ‘Hi, my lease is haunted, can you send backup?’ They’ll arrest me. Or worse, bill me for the call.” The doorknob rattled. Lena’s eyes widened. “Someone’s trying to get in!” Caleb snatched the nearest thing resembling a weapon—his guitar stand. He gripped it like a baseball bat, though his hands trembled so badly he nearly dropped it. The scratching stopped. Silence. Then, in the politest voice imaginable, muffled through the door: “Knock, knock.” Lena’s lips parted. “What the hell…” Caleb’s grip slipped. He knew that voice. Smooth. Calm. Polite. The same voice that had explained the lease’s terms. Corporate, like a customer service rep who’d rather see you burn than offer a refund. “Knock. Knock,” the voice said again. Slower this time. Like a teacher waiting for a child to answer correctly. Lena’s face drained of color. “Caleb. What is this?” The freezer hummed louder. The folder, still peeking out from behind the peas, began to tremble. Pages flapped open as if blown by an invisible breeze, and jagged black ink bled across the paper: Answer, or default. The door creaked. The frame groaned as if someone far stronger than human pressed against it. The chain lock rattled violently. Dust rained from the ceiling. Lena staggered back. “Caleb, what—what is happening?” Caleb raised the guitar stand higher, though his arms felt like wet noodles. His knees buckled. “W-who’s there?” he croaked. The voice chuckled. Cold. Patient. The kind of laugh that suggested time meant nothing to it. Then, low and deliberate, it whispered the punchline: “Collection.” The chain snapped. The lock flew. And the door began to swing open.
Latest Chapter
Chapter ten: The first entry
The air outside the apartment complex was as sharp and merciless as a new bill. Caleb was on the stoop, holding the black notebook like a very tiny, very damned book. Everything else seemed to be just… ordinary. A man in a business suit rushed by, speaking on his phone. A little kid, six at most, was trying to ride a training-wheel bike that squealed around each bend. A woman was watering some plants. The sun was shining bright, the birds were singing sweet melodies, and all the air was filled with the scent of fresh pavement and coffee. It was an incredibly beautiful, typical morning, and Caleb felt like a fraud to walk through it.He was a new soul hunter. The thought was so ridiculous, so utterly insane, that he almost laughed. Almost. But then he remembered the mooing milk and the starving trash can, and the chuckle stuck in his throat. This wasn't funny. This was reality. He was a man who spent his afternoons trying to write a brilliant chorus, and now he was doing this. He was a
Chapter nine: The Notebook
The garbage can shook once more, an enraged, leaping jig that caused the recycling can beside it to sway. A pool of soy sauce spread along the floor, one black line of liquid ink-thick that declared HUNGRY, the words trembling slightly as the can heaved. A soft, greenish glow emanating from within beat with a life of its own. It was an ugly, gut-roiling spectacle.Caleb’s heart hammered a frantic rhythm against his ribs. He stood in the middle of his kitchen, a frozen statue of abject terror. He’d faced down an impossibly perfect demon, a terrifyingly ordinary accountant, and a smug eternal coffee drinker, but this? This was new. This was different. The mundane had become monstrous.Just as the garbage can trembled with one last violent jerk, and the hum along the baseboards started to build to a frenzy, it all just ceased.Immediately.The glow went away. The garbage can landed gently with a click. The humming stopped, leaving a silence so profound it felt like a physical void. The o
Chapter eight: Walls, not Wallet.
Caleb sat hunched on the couch, chin in his hands, glaring at the pizza box humming on the counter like it was mocking him. The smell still hung in the apartment—cheesy, greasy, way too alive for anything edible. It wasn’t even food anymore; it was a dare. His stomach growled like an angry dog. “No,” he muttered, jabbing a finger at the box like it could hear him. “You don’t get me twice. I’m not about to have another heart-to-heart with pepperoni.” The pizza hummed louder, like it was offended. Caleb dragged himself to the fridge. He yanked it open, bracing for more horrors—maybe glowing milk, or an apple that coughed—but what he found made his eyes widen. Sitting dead center was a neat black plastic tray of sushi. Salmon rolls. Tuna. Even a tiny container of soy sauce, like it had been catered by some five-star Japanese place. Caleb blinked. “Oh… oh my God. Actual food.” He didn’t even question it. Hunger bulldozed suspicion. He grabbed the tray, popped it open, and dunked a
Chapter seven: Proximity Clause
The room was so quiet, Caleb could hear the hum of the cursed pizza box vibrating like it was waiting for someone to open it again. He sat on the edge of his bed, palms sweating, eyes flicking between Lena and Dev like he was caught between a firing squad and a stand-up act.Lena had her arms crossed, eyebrows locked in their most terrifying formation — the one that meant she wasn’t just angry, she was disappointed.“Thirty days,” she repeated, voice flat. “You signed something that gave you thirty days before—what? Before you’re dragged screaming into eternal damnation?”Caleb winced. “Well, when you say it like that, it sounds—”“Dumb?” she snapped.“… yeah.”Dev stirred his latte with a plastic straw like they weren’t having the world’s worst intervention. “Technically, it’s thirty calendar days. Business days would’ve been generous. Hell’s not big on federal holidays.”Lena’s glare snapped to him. “You knew? You’ve been stringing him along like some kind of—”“Handler,” Dev cut in
Chapter six: Welcome home, Caleb
Caleb woke up to the smell of pizza.Not a normal pizza smell either — not grease-slick delivery boxes, not frozen cardboard reheated at three a.m., not even Lena’s half-burnt homemade “I followed the recipe, I swear” attempts.This was perfection.The kind of smell that made your stomach growl before your brain even caught up. Dough kissed by smoke, cheese melting like sunlight, toppings arranged with the mathematical precision of a god.He opened his eyes.There was a steaming, perfectly boxed large pizza sitting on his nightstand.Caleb sat up so fast he nearly headbutted it. “What the—?”The box was pristine. No grease stains, no delivery stickers, no receipt shoved under the lid. Just a little embossed symbol on top: a circle with a tiny devil tail curling off the edge.“Oh, hell no,” Caleb muttered. “Literally hell no.”But his stomach betrayed him. He hadn’t eaten since yesterday, when Lena had confiscated his “emergency ramen stash” after discovering it was six months expired.
Chapter five: Past due
The door didn’t just open—it unraveled.The wood groaned like it was tired of existing, peeling apart in long strips as if soaked in invisible acid. Paint bubbled. Dust rained down. A line of black veins spread across the frame, cracking out like spiderwebs.Lena screamed and stumbled back, nearly tripping over the coffee table. Caleb, running on nothing but panic and caffeine, did the bravest thing his brain could manage: he swung his guitar stand like a sword.It wasn’t sharp. Or heavy. Or remotely intimidating. But it was something between him and the nightmare clawing its way in.Except—it wasn’t a nightmare.On the threshold stood… a man.Not a monster. Not a demon. A man.No horns, no flames, no dripping fangs. He was dressed like an overworked bank manager: scuffed loafers, wrinkled button-down, tie hanging loose. His glasses slipped halfway down his nose, and he had that permanent hunched posture of someone crushed by paperwork.In one hand, he carried a clipboard. In the othe
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