Monday, February 10, 2025

Short Horror Story: The Thing in the Static



"The Thing in the Static"

Jerome had always been drawn to number stations—those strange broadcasts that echoed through shortwave radios, filled with cryptic strings of numbers. As a kid, he imagined they were part of some hidden code, maybe a secret communication between spies or government operatives. His obsession only deepened as he grew older, spending sleepless nights scouring the frequencies, hoping for a breakthrough.

He had listened to dozens of these stations, but none had disturbed him like the one he stumbled upon that fateful night.

It was just after midnight when the static began. At first, it was the usual hum—white noise—then the numbers:

"9-3-7-Black Hollow. 9-3-7-Black Hollow."

The voice was haunting, mechanical, and unnervingly calm. Each number echoed over the airwaves, like a mantra. The phrase repeated endlessly, but something in it seemed to demand attention. He couldn’t pull himself away, despite the discomfort creeping over him.

Black Hollow.

The name reverberated in his mind, like a familiar dream, but he couldn’t place it. He grabbed his phone and Googled it—nothing. Just an abandoned settlement deep in the Pine Barrens.

A ghost town from the 1800s, a place marked by strange disappearances and cryptic symbols carved into trees. There was something about it that didn’t sit right with Jerome—the eerie feeling that came with reading about it, like the place was a scar on the earth, left to fester.

But there was something else too. A new theory that popped up on a fringe website. It hinted at a secret government experiment gone wrong, one that had involved biological testing in the Barrens. Jerome had to know more. Was this some kind of failed experiment? A creature bred for unknown purposes, left to wander the woods? The idea seemed absurd, but it stuck with him.

He tried to shake the unease, but the obsession gnawed at him. He had to know more.

The Road to Nowhere

It was a cold, foggy morning when he set out to find Black Hollow. He had his backpack, supplies, and a camera. Jerome wasn't sure what he expected—maybe just a rundown, forgotten place, just a relic of history. But something told him this wouldn't be just a normal investigation.

The deeper he drove into the Barrens, the stranger things became. The world outside his car seemed to fade, the trees growing thicker, their limbs tangled like gnarled fingers reaching out to grab him. The road curved in impossible directions, like it was leading him somewhere he didn’t want to go.

He tried to tune the radio again, hoping the station would return, but all he got was distorted noise—until suddenly, the voice came back.

"9-3-7-Black Hollow. We see you."

Jerome’s heart skipped a beat. The voice—familiar yet alien—spoke directly to him now. He slammed the brakes. His breath caught in his throat as the words repeated, but this time, they were closer, clearer, and somehow… more ominous.

"We see you, Jerome. You opened the door."

His hands trembled as he fumbled with the radio knobs. But the static continued. The words reverberated inside his skull. A cold sweat broke out on his forehead. He looked at the screen of his phone—no service, the signal completely cut off.

But then, a shadow moved outside his window.

A shape.

It was tall, too tall for any man, with limbs that twisted at odd angles. Its body was a mass of shifting shadows, like the figure was part of the very night itself, bending the light around it.

Jerome froze. He wanted to scream, but the words wouldn’t come. The creature—if it was a creature—stood in front of a grove of trees. Its outline seemed to bleed into the dark branches, like it was merging with the forest. The shadows around it seemed to pulse, growing and shrinking in a rhythm that didn’t make sense.

The radio crackled again, and the voice spoke:

"You are not alone."

The car’s headlights flickered—once, twice—before going completely dark. The sound of his own heartbeat thudded in his ears. The creature moved, or maybe it didn’t—it was hard to tell. The more he stared at it, the more it seemed to shift, becoming both closer and farther away in the same breath.

"You’re the one we were waiting for."

The words came in a whisper, curling through the air like smoke. They didn’t just fill the car; they pressed against his skin, seeped into his mind.

But then there was another noise—a rumble of engines—growing louder and louder. Jerome’s head snapped around. In the distance, headlights were approaching, blinding him. But the shadowy figure didn’t move. It just stared, like it knew what was coming.

Suddenly, black SUVs roared into view. They skidded to a halt, surrounding him. Armed men in tactical gear poured out of the vehicles, their faces hidden behind dark visors.

Government agents.

Jerome’s stomach twisted. He recognized them—FEMA, secret operatives working under classified contracts. They were connected to the rumors he'd read—experiments gone wrong, the government trying to cover up the truth. And now they were after him.

"Get out of the car, Jerome," one of the agents barked. "We know what you found."

His breath hitched. He turned his head, but the creature was closer now—too close. Its eyes burned with an unnatural light, like a computer screen flickering in the dark.

"It’s too late now, Jerome."

The agents approached cautiously, their weapons raised. One moved too quickly, and the creature lunged, its limbs twisting around the agent’s neck. The man screamed in horror as the creature's fingers dug deep into his throat. Jerome watched in terror as the body was yanked into the darkness, his scream swallowed by the woods.

The other agents fired, but the bullets seemed to go through it, as though the creature was made of pure shadow. It screeched—a sound that seemed to tear through the air itself—before vanishing into the trees.

Jerome knew, in that moment, that this thing wasn’t just a creature. It was something created, something bred in a lab as a weapon or an experiment gone horribly wrong. A government secret that had escaped and found its way into the Barrens.

The agents were now scrambling, terrified, trying to get back to their vehicles. But it was clear they had no idea how to stop it. They had underestimated what they'd unleashed.

Jerome, however, knew one thing for certain—he wasn’t just running from the creature. He was running from the government too, the people who had made it, and who would stop at nothing to silence anyone who knew the truth.

The Aftermath

Weeks passed before anyone noticed Jerome was missing. A hiker found his car, abandoned at the side of a forgotten road in the Pine Barrens. The doors were wide open, as if Jerome had fled in a panic. The battery was dead, the radio completely silent. His phone was gone, along with his backpack.

But the most disturbing thing was the laptop left behind. The screen was still on, displaying the last search Jerome had made:

“Black Hollow – last known location of Pine Barrens survey team, vanished 1872.”

The hiker called authorities, but by the time they arrived, the place was empty. No sign of Jerome, no footprints leading away from the car, and nothing but the unsettling silence of the Barrens.

The police searched for days. Nothing.

Later, they found a notebook in the car’s passenger seat. Jerome’s handwriting filled the pages, scribbled furiously as if he was racing against time. The most repeated entry was:

"It’s not a number station. It’s a signal."

As the weeks turned into months, rumors spread. People in the town nearby spoke of strange lights over the Barrens, of unnatural sounds coming from the trees at night. Some even said they’d seen things—figures moving in the woods, too tall, too thin to be human.

And then, the government agents—all former operatives—started disappearing. One by one, they were found, but not in the usual ways. Their bodies were torn apart, shredded, as though they had been attacked by something far worse than any animal.

The voice on the radio would return, periodically:

"9-3-7-Black Hollow. We see you."

But now, the agents knew it too. They had come to understand that there was no escaping the creature, no escaping the truth.

Some whispered it wasn’t just a number station. It was a signal—a beacon, guiding them home.