Horror
The Property Management Asked Us to Leave
Three months after I moved into Old River Bend, the old lady next door died. While I was helping clear out her belongings, I found a diary.
The first page read: “My daughter died three years ago. The person living next door to me is a ghost.”
But I knew there was something wrong with her daughter from the very first day, because I’m a ghost, too.
Rules Rewritten by Me
Rules Rewritten by Me On my first day being pulled into the infinite game, the System announced that the survival rate for novices was a mere 3%.
However, when the broadcast read out the first death rule, I suddenly smiled.
That specific rule was the very opening I had written with my own hands three years ago.
Demon Angel 3: Hunting the Beast
A serial killer targeting young women had appeared in our small town.
He even had a following of brainless sycophants who helped spread his message: “Women are better off staying in their place.”
As I was about to head out, my neighbor cautioned me, “Are you wearing a skirt? It’s not safe lately.”
I smiled. “You’re right. He isn’t safe.”
It is a little-known fact that criminals are even more vulnerable than women or children.
After all, whether they end up dead or maimed, they can never step into the light.
Why couldn’t he just stay in his place?
He just had to go and catch the eye of a lunatic like me.
The Eleventh Step at Dawn
At one o’clock in the morning, I counted the Eleventh Step on the western staircase of my office building.
Resting on that single step was a white sneaker, its laces tied into the same blue dead knot my missing best friend always used.
Five years ago, a woman had died in this building.
Now, the security guard who holds the elevator for me every day looked up and flashed a smile.
“Miss Tang, you shouldn’t go around counting stairs.”
The Sixth in the Morgue
At three in the morning, the funeral home’s Morgue was only supposed to have five registered bodies, yet I found a sixth, unregistered, nameless female corpse in locker number six.
A slip of paper was pressed against her chest with nothing but my name written on it.
Even more terrifying was the moment my hand brushed her wrist; I saw the last seven seconds of her life and heard her raspy, blood-choked voice whisper: “Shen Nian, don’t trust your father.”
That was the night I realized that sometimes, the dead don’t come to say goodbye-they come to reopen a case.
There Is No Grandma in the Forest
The night Grandma draped the red cloak over my shoulders, there was still unwashed blood tucked beneath her fingernails.
She told me to take a cake to the Cabin in the Woods to visit “sick Grandma,” yet I had seen her with my own eyes returning from that very cabin only last night.
Glass Slipper Filled with Ashes
On the night of my wedding, the Queen ordered her guards to pin me down and force those Glass Slippers back onto my bleeding feet. She said that if the shoes were not sated by my blood before the thirteenth bell toll of midnight, she would carve out my heart to feed the mirror. The entire hall waited for me to become a Princess Consort, but only the groom, Su Zhichuan, leaned in and whispered into my ear, his voice trembling and hoarse. He said, “Don’t believe in fairy tales. Kill me before dawn, or you’ll be the one who dies.”
Hold On! Survival in the Apocalypse with Caution First
The roars of zombies echoed from the street below.
Inside the apartment, my mother and I were tied together, forced to watch as my so-called “friends” ransacked our entire food supply, their faces twisted with disdain.
“Is this it? This will barely last a month or two. If we bring these two along, it won’t even last us a month.”
Liu Jinjin shot a meaningful look at her burly boyfriend. Taking the hint, he picked up a knife and started walking toward us. They were going to kill us!
Devil Angel 1: Hunting the Bullies
The neighbor’s kid jumped off the building after being bullied.
She landed directly on my brand-new car, her head lolling, hanging off the windshield.
She died, and her mother lost her mind.
When the neighbors held the funeral, several of the bullies actually showed up at the scene.
They mocked the mother relentlessly: “Your family line is completely dead now. You don’t even have a single relative left, do you?”
They were making too much noise.
I slowly pushed open my door to teach them a lesson: “A near neighbor is better than a distant relative.”
Besides, her neighbor might just be insane.
Alice’s Nightmare Rules
Chapter 0
I unexpectedly entered Wonderland.
But what awaited me was a rules-horror nightmare.
Players who violate the rules will become the red paint used to color the white roses.
Rule 2: Both cookies and potions are poisonous. Please consume with caution.
Rule 3: The hat is the Mad Hatter’s most precious possession. Do not touch it lightly.
Rule 6: Mr. White Rabbit’s pocket watch is faster than the actual time.
Rule 10: Under no circumstances should others be allowed to see your rules.
Welcome to Alice’s Nightmare.
Good luck, Player Tong Yu.
I stared at the playing card that had appeared in my hand at some unknown moment, printed with these bizarre rules, and fell into deep thought.
Five minutes ago, I was still sitting in a theater seat, quietly waiting for the post-credits scene of the movie Alice in Wonderland.
I had seen this animation when I was a child. While shopping at the mall, I had unexpectedly won a free movie ticket, so I stopped by to revisit the classic.
After the film ended, I intended to leave directly like most of the audience, but the theater staff blocked the exit and suggested we stay to watch the surprise post-credits scene before leaving.
Was my memory failing me? In my impression, there were no post-credits scenes at the end of this film.
It wasn’t until the credits finished rolling that the big screen suddenly went blank, and all the lights in the theater extinguished simultaneously.
The next second, a blood-covered, red-eyed rabbit suddenly appeared on the screen.
Accompanied by the screams of the audience, a terrifying giant rabbit crawled out from the two-dimensional screen, opened its bloody maw, and swallowed everyone whole.
When I opened my eyes again, I had arrived in this strange world along with the other audience members.
A mysterious forest and a White Rabbit in formal wear looked almost identical to the scenes from the film.
It had been exactly one week since the last time I entered a bizarre and absurd fairy tale world.
I had thought it was just a premonitory dream.
But the card in my hand with the eerie rules seemed to tell me that this was likely only the beginning.
Standing in the center of the crowd, Mr. White Rabbit glanced at the pocket watch on his chest, cleared his throat, and said:
“Everyone, welcome to the first stage of Alice’s Nightmare Trial: Broken Pocket Watch.”
As soon as the White Rabbit finished speaking, an identical pocket watch suddenly appeared in everyone’s hands.
“Adjust the time to the correct position and press the button on top of the pocket watch to submit your answer.”
I leaned in and saw the time on the pocket watch on his chest.
It displayed a fixed moment that never advanced.
20:27.
I lowered my head and re-examined the rules.
The only useful information was Rule 6: Mr. White Rabbit’s pocket watch is faster than the actual time.
But how could I know exactly how much faster it was?
There are thirteen ranks in a deck of cards, but I had only received four scattered cards.
The other half of the clues for this puzzle should be on the other cards I hadn’t received.
This was a game that required cooperation.
Just as I was planning to look for teammates among the people around me, the man standing in front of me suddenly exploded into a blur of flesh and blood.
Droplets of blood splashed onto my card.
At the same time, explosions began to occur one after another throughout the crowd.
The White Rabbit held a paint bucket, collecting plasma while saying, “A reminder to everyone: once an answer is submitted, it cannot be changed. Please cherish your only chance.”