Chapter 130 Story 130: The Gravedigger's Bride
Under the watchful gaze of the full moon, the cemetery was a place of eerie stillness, where the dead rested in their eternal slumber. But tonight, the peace was shattered by the sound of shovels piercing the cold earth.
Harlan, the gravedigger, was no stranger to the dead. He had spent years tending to the graves, his only companions the whispers of the wind and the hoot of distant owls. But Harlan was not just a gravedigger. He had a secret, one that kept him working long after the sun had set.
He was searching for something—or rather, someone.
For months, Harlan had been plagued by visions of a woman, her face as pale as the marble tombstones, her eyes wide with fear. He didn't know who she was, but he knew she was trapped, buried alive beneath the heavy soil. The visions became more vivid each night, until Harlan could no longer ignore them.
And so, he dug.
As the moonlight bathed the cemetery in a ghostly glow, Harlan's shovel struck something hard. He froze, his heart pounding in his chest. Could this be it? Could this be the woman from his visions?
With trembling hands, he cleared the dirt away, revealing a wooden coffin. He hesitated, then pried it open, his breath catching in his throat.
Inside lay a woman, just as he had seen in his visions. She was unconscious but alive, her chest rising and falling with shallow breaths. Her skin was pale, almost translucent, and her long, golden hair framed her face like a halo. She was beautiful, but there was something off about her, something otherworldly.
Harlan carefully lifted her out of the coffin, cradling her in his arms as he climbed out of the grave. But as he did, her eyes fluttered open, and she looked at him with a mix of fear and confusion.
"Who...who are you?" she whispered, her voice weak.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
"I'm Harlan," he said, his voice rough from disuse. "I saw you in my dreams. I knew I had to find you."
She stared at him, her eyes wide with terror. "You shouldn't have done this," she said, her voice trembling. "You don't know what you've unleashed."
Harlan frowned, but before he could ask what she meant, a cold wind swept through the cemetery, chilling him to the bone. The shadows around them seemed to grow darker, closing in like a suffocating shroud.
And then he saw them—the figures emerging from the darkness, their faces twisted in grotesque masks. They were the spirits of the dead, angry and vengeful, disturbed from their eternal rest by Harlan's actions.
"She was meant to stay buried," one of them hissed, its voice echoing in Harlan's mind. "You have broken the pact."
Harlan's grip tightened on the woman, his heart racing. "I was trying to save her!"
"She is not yours to save," the spirit snarled. "She belongs to us."
The woman looked up at Harlan, her eyes filled with sorrow. "I'm sorry," she whispered. "You should have left me."
But it was too late. The spirits closed in, their cold hands reaching out to drag her back into the grave, to return her to the earth where she belonged. Harlan tried to hold on to her, but their strength was too much. With one final, anguished cry, the woman was pulled from his arms, disappearing into the darkness.
The last thing Harlan saw before the darkness consumed him was her face, pale and sorrowful, as she was swallowed by the earth once more.
And then, there was only silence.
The cemetery returned to its eerie stillness, the grave resealed as if nothing had ever happened. Harlan was never seen again, but those who visited the cemetery after that night swore they could hear the faint sound of a shovel digging in the distance, accompanied by the soft cries of a woman, forever lost to the shadows.