Chereads / Companion of the Dead / Chapter 1 - Prologue: Whispers of the Grave

Companion of the Dead

Phoxxy
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Synopsis

Chapter 1 - Prologue: Whispers of the Grave

A young woman lay in her dimly lit dorm room, the pale glow of a streetlight filtering through the blinds, casting faint, restless shadows on the walls.

She stared at the ceiling, her mind buzzing with overdue assignments and half-formed ideas, a fog of stress she couldn't shake. Amid the clutter of her thoughts, one stood out—the strange job post she and her friend Mia had found earlier. A grave cleaner at the local cemetery, with a midnight shift. She'd been skeptical, the timing and the eerie nature of the job gnawing at her, but the pay was tempting.

She turned her head slightly, glancing at her Mia on the upper bunk. As she wanted to talk about it, maybe voice her doubts, but Mia was already fast asleep. The soft, steady rhythm of Mia's breathing filled the quiet room, and She suddenly felt a wave of tiredness creeping in. With a sigh, her eyelids grew heavier.

Eventually, despite her racing thoughts, exhaustion won. Sleep came in slow, dragging waves, and when it finally took her, it brought with it a familiar weight—a dream she'd had too many times to count.

In the dream, she was more a presence than a person. She floated through a fog-shrouded cemetery, her form ethereal and indistinct, as though she wasn't fully there. Her body flickered at the edges, her silhouette shifting like a distant shadow barely holding a shape.

The scent of moss and decay hung thick in the air, each breath dragging a sense of foreboding deeper into her chest.

"What the hell is this place?" she muttered, panic clawing at her throat. Her pulse quickened, each beat drumming louder in the eerie silence.

She glanced around, eyes darting between the tombstones that loomed like silent sentinels, their inscriptions obscured by the mist. Shadows flickered at the edges of her vision, elusive, like memories she couldn't quite grasp.

"Wake up, Olivia," she said, her voice trembling. "This is just another dream. A bad one."

Panic crawled at the edges of her awareness, yet she moved forward, her floating weightlessly.

Her heart hammered in her chest, and she forced a nervous laugh. "You can't be this desperate for inspiration. Really, girl, a cemetery? What kind of cliché horror vibe is this?"

A chill swept through the air, more than just the cold of the night—it was a presence. Something ancient, watching her from the depths of the shadows. "Okay, creepy cemetery vibes? Can we not?" she whispered, her breath fogging in front of her. She hugged herself against the chill, though the feeling went deeper than skin. "I've seen enough horror movies to know this never ends well."

Despite the mounting fear, a strange force guided her toward one gravestone that stood apart from the others. Though the fog seemed to thicken as she neared, Olivia's shadowy outline remained pulled toward it. This tombstone was different, casting an aura that even in her dream-like state, she couldn't ignore. The air around it crackled with an unnatural energy, a warning.

She floated closer, unable to resist. Unlike the others, this stone bore no name, only a strange, intricate symbol carved into its weathered surface. The symbol felt ancient, forbidden, and it radiated a power she could feel in the marrow of her bones. Olivia's blurred hand reached out, her fingers trembling even as they wavered in the fog. She hesitated but was drawn to it as if by an invisible thread.

"This is ridiculous," she muttered, forcing a half-laugh as she said. "A tombstone with strange symbols on it. What kind of horror movie did I just wander into?"

Yet beneath her sarcasm, fear gnawed at her. The moment her fingers brushed the stone, a jolt of energy surged through her, so powerful that even in her dream state, she felt it. The stone she touched seemed to pulse, alive with a power older than she could fathom.

A ripple of fear ran through her, but deeper still was a connection—a sense that this stone was important, bound to her in ways she couldn't yet understand.

The whispers that filled the cemetery grew louder, sharper, like voices warning her to stop. The gravestone's energy pushed against her, resisting, but Olivia's touch remained. The ground trembled beneath her, the fog swirling in agitation. This was no ordinary tombstone. Even in the ethereal realm of her dreams, she sensed the danger of what she'd found.

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In the deepest part of the cemetery, a man stirred from his slumber.

He rose slowly, the familiar cold of the earth clinging to his skin like a second death. His body ached, not from the passage of time but from the weight of the curse that bound him. The air around him crackled with energy, a disturbance that sent shockwaves through the cemetery, rippling through the stones and the fog. Something had changed. Someone had touched it.

His eyes scanned the mist, narrowing as they found a figure in the distance. A ghostly young woman. She stood near the one place no one should ever go—the tombstone that even the grave keepers and supernatural beings feared. The stone that kept him here, bound for a very long time.

"Who's that?" he murmured, his voice rough from disuse. "No one goes near that grave. Not unless they want to disappear."

His lips twisted into a humorless smile, though curiosity gnawed at him. Who was she? And why had she, of all people, been drawn to that place?

The girl's outline wavered in the mist, but the pull between them was undeniable. He took a step toward her, his movement silent, more shadow than man. His mind raced with memories long buried, the curse that tethered him to this forsaken place reawakening as he watched her. Could she be the one to break it? Or had she come to suffer the same fate?

As he neared her, he saw her reach out, her fingers brushing the forbidden stone. A shock of energy jolted through him. She had touched it—the gravestone that had imprisoned him, the source of the power that kept him chained to this land of the dead.

As he watched her, a mix of curiosity and something deeper—something he hadn't felt in ages—stirred within him. He moved toward her, her blurred figure wavered in the fog, but the pull between them was undeniable. Her presence was a ripple in the still waters of his existence.

Olivia, sensing something behind her, turned slowly.

For a brief moment, their eyes met through the fog. He felt it—a connection, a surge of life in a world that had long forgotten him. His hand moved toward hers, drawn by the force that now pulsed between them. Their fingers brushed, and for the first time in ages, warmth blossomed in his chest, something he thought he'd never feel again. The cold grip of death loosened, if only for a heartbeat.

But as quickly as the connection formed, it was broken. Olivia's figure flickered, her ethereal glow dimming, and before he could react, she vanished into the mist. His hand grasped at nothing, the emptiness closing in once more.

"No... not yet," he whispered, his voice hoarse with desperation. She had been there. She had touched the source of his curse. And for a moment, he had felt something beyond the endless cold.

As the fog swallowed her, the man stood alone once again. But the air was different now. Restless. She had come. She had touched the tombstone that bound him. The shadows around him stirred, as if they too sensed the shift.

He looked toward the horizon, where the first pale fingers of dawn began to break. "She'll be back," he muttered, a flicker of hope igniting in his chest. "And next time, I'll make sure she doesn't leave."

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Back in her dorm, Olivia jolted awake, her heart racing, the memory of the gravestone and the strange figure lingering like a haunting melody. She rubbed her eyes, trying to shake off the eerie feeling that clung to her.

"Olivia! You're alive!" Mia burst into the room, her dramatic entrance shattering the silence.

"For a second there, I thought I'd have to start looking for a new roommate—preferably one who doesn't look like a zombie first thing in the morning."

"Ha ha, very funny," Olivia groaned, sitting up. "If I wanted to scare you, I'd just let you see my bank account balance."