Supernatural
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.
A Reply from Beyond
Three years after my death, Zhou Jibai won his first Best Actor award.
At the awards ceremony, the host asked, “At this moment, do you have any words you’d like to share?”
Zhou Jibai dialed a number, but no one picked up. A mocking smile played on his lips. “On the day we broke up, someone told me that if I ever won Best Actor, she would jump off the eighteenth floor.”
“Why is she afraid to answer the phone now? She didn’t actually jump, did she?” I was currently floating right beside him, trying to touch that trophy, but I nearly choked back to life at those words.
… Zhou Jibai, how rude can you get?
A Call Across Time
On the night of February 2, 2011, my daughter was lured to a park under the guise of a part-time job.
There, she was raped and her body was discarded. At least three people were involved in the assault, but the killers were never found.
On New Year’s Eve, 2026, I prepared a table full of poisoned food and looked at my daughter’s photograph. “It’s been fifteen years, and I still haven’t found the people who destroyed you.
I don’t want to spend another New Year without you. I’m coming down to join you now.”
As the poison began to take effect, I set down my chopsticks and leaned over the table, retching. Just then, my phone rang.
When I answered, a familiar voice came from the other end: “Dad, I’m at the park. Wait for me, I’ll be home soon.”
He Died Before Spring
He Died Before Spring When Lu Chen died before my eyes for the sixth time, I finally stopped trying to block that car, that river, and that fire.
I no longer clung to a medical report, fruitlessly arguing with fate.
Over the past three years, I had dragged him back from the brink of spring time and time again, only to finally realize that someone eventually has to walk that path to the end.
But I still couldn’t let go. At the very least, this time, I wanted to tell him I loved him to his face before he closed his eyes for good.
The Shrine Finally Opens Today
On the very first day I hung up my sign offering a “Protection Charm for a Happy Marriage,” the handsome guy from next door came to make a wish: he wanted to be a normal person.
That night, he collapsed beneath the Torii of my home, drenched in blood that shimmered like liquid gold.
My small shrine, which hadn’t seen a single offering in three months, had suddenly picked up a deity on the verge of being reclaimed by the heavens.
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!
Meeting You in Another World
When I was six years old, I first discovered I could see things that didn’t belong to this world.
My grandfather passed away that year, and we moved into his home in the Grain Bureau Residential Compound.
A week after he died, I saw him at home again. He was leaning on a dragon-head cane, tottering toward the bathroom all by himself.
I followed him, only to find the bathroom completely empty.
I told my dad about it, and he slapped me hard across the face.
Grandma said I was seeing “unclean things.”
But later, I realized I could see more than just the dead; I could see the living, too.
For instance, Aunt Chen from the compound had been away on a business trip to Beijing for several days. Yet one afternoon, I ran into her in the stairwell-just a fleeting glimpse.
I ran off to tell the adults who were outside enjoying the cool air. As a result, when Aunt Chen finally did come home, she and her husband had a massive row.
The Underworld’s New Ghost Agent
I’m a rookie Ghost Agent for the Netherworld.
To crush my KPIs and earn a promotion, I started staking out my targets three days before their scheduled deaths.
My first subject was an elderly woman.
Out of nowhere, she turned to me and asked, “Am I about to die?”
Belated Love
I’ve read so many novels about the “crematorium” trope-where the husband has to crawl back and beg for forgiveness-but I never expected to find myself starring in one.
Except there’s no chasing, only the crematorium.
Because I’m actually dead.
I’ve become a ghost, watching the man who betrayed me. Seven days after my death, he finally seems crushed by a delayed sense of grief. In the home I can never return to, he howls in agony, acting as if life is no longer worth living.
You want to know how I feel?
I just stand there blankly, carefully admiring every inch of pain etched onto his face.
I listen intently to his desperate wails, triggered by my departure.
Beyond the desolation and heartache in my soul, a massive wave of schadenfreude suddenly wells up within me.
A joyful, blissful sense of schadenfreude.
It’s a sensation so sharp it borders on thrill. I cover my mouth and begin to laugh.