For seven years, Leo's survival was a question. Now, a knock on his door brings the terrifying answer. His escape from a haunted infirmary wasn't luck—it was a temporary, horrifying courtesy.
In this standalone episode of Why Me?, we present a chilling scary story about survivor's guilt and a debt that must be paid. This eerie narrative follows a man haunted by an urban exploration trip that went horribly wrong. It's a tale of supernatural fiction that explores what happens when your past isn't just a memory, but a patient predator waiting to collect.
The sound of a life not lived is a profound and terrible silence. It is the low vibration of a refrigerator in an empty apartment, the whisper of air through a vent, the hollow spaces between the ticks of a clock. It is the sound of waiting. But waiting for what? An ending? Or merely a different kind of beginning? We tell ourselves we escape our pasts, that we leave our ghosts in the dust. We move to new cities, we find new jobs, we force new, sterile routines upon ourselves until the memories blur. But some ghosts are patient. Some ghosts understand that the most exquisite horror is not in the chase, but in the granting of a long, meaningless reprieve before the inevitable collection. Some ghosts are, in their own way, terribly kind.
The hiss of the radiator was the only companion Leo kept. It was a faithful sound, a constant, low-pressure sigh that filled the sterile white box he called his apartment. He had lived here for seven years, seven years since the rust and the screaming. Seven years since he had left Marco in that decaying place. The doctors called it PTSD. They gave him pills that sanded the edges off his thoughts, leaving him dull and functional. He worked from home, a data entry job that required nothing from him but the rhythmic, hypnotic click-clack of his keyboard, a sound that almost, but never quite, drowned out the other sounds he remembered. Tonight, the radiator’s hiss felt different. It sounded less like steam and more like a whisper, a dry, sibilant breath dragging through the pipes.
He had survived. Marco had not. The question of why coiled in the base of his skull, a serpent in the dark. They were urban explorers, “ruin-chasers,” until they found the old children’s infirmary—a place whispered about in local lore. A place with a name: The Tattler.
They were looking for the 'Whispering Ward' when they heard it. A faint, dry, scraping noise. Rhythmic. Methodical. The sound of a single, gnarled finger dragging slowly, deliberately, down a rusted metal door. What happened next was a kaleidoscope of noise and panic. Leo ran. He survived. Marco did not.
Now, seven years later, the radiator hissed his name. A Polaroid from that final trip reveals a figure standing behind him in the shadows—a tall, thin shape with a wide, predatory smile. A sudden, sharp tap echoes from his apartment door. Tap. Tap. Tap. He finally understands. His survival hadn’t been a miracle. It had been a courtesy. The tapping stops. A dry, scraping sound begins to travel down the door. The doorknob begins to turn.
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