When the Moon Turned Red ©️

It was one of those warm Los Angeles nights where the heat doesn’t settle — it breathes. We’d left the windows open, not because we needed air, but because it made everything feel freer, looser, less confined. Roman was away in London. I was eight and a half months pregnant, swollen and exhausted, but glowing in a way only new mothers understand. I had friends over — Jay, Abigail, Voytek. People I trusted, people I loved. That house on Cielo Drive, for all its oddities, felt like a cradle suspended between earth and sky.

I had just finished brushing my hair in the dim mirror when I heard something strange — a crunching noise in the gravel drive, not urgent, but deliberate. I remember freezing, my hand halfway through the motion. You know how sometimes your instincts tap you on the shoulder before your brain catches up? That was the moment. A presence, like static in the air.

Jay was talking in the other room. Laughter, muffled music. Then silence.

Then the scream.

Not mine — not yet. His.

It was short. Cut off. I walked into the hall and looked toward the front room, and suddenly there she was.

A girl — young, wild-eyed, filthy, barefoot — standing inside my home like she’d grown out of the floorboards. She held a knife, but it wasn’t the blade that terrified me. It was the smile. The kind of grin children draw on cartoon monsters — wide, thrilled, absolutely vacant.

Behind her, more came. A tall man with dead eyes. A wiry boy muttering under his breath, face twitching like a broken marionette. Another girl — darker, heavier, chanting something I couldn’t make out.

Time unraveled then. What happened wasn’t a scene — it was a flood. I remember voices, commands that made no sense. “Pig.” “Rise.” “Kill the pigs.” They weren’t talking to us — they were talking through us. Like we were props in their theater of apocalypse.

I begged.

I wasn’t ashamed of it. I begged them to let me live, not for me — but for the baby. “Please. You can kill me after he’s born,” I said. I remember the way my voice cracked — not with weakness, but with conviction. I thought a mother’s plea would mean something.

The girl smiled.

She told me, “You’re gonna die, and that’s all there is to it.”

Then the knives came down. Again. Again. Again.

There’s a moment when pain becomes static — not because you stop feeling it, but because your mind splits. I remember seeing Jay on the floor, lifeless, face-down. I remember Abigail trying to crawl. Voytek screaming in Polish. The floor slippery. The air thick.

And through it all, I felt this — presence. He wasn’t there, but he was. Charles Manson. The conductor. The myth. The void in human shape.

He sent them. Told them to do something “witchy.” And they obeyed. Not because they were hypnotized — but because they believed him. That’s the horror people misunderstand. It wasn’t mind control. It was faith — the kind that grows in poisoned soil.

My final thought wasn’t about death. It was about the baby. About how I’d never hold him. About how Roman would come home to silence.

And then it was over.

They made headlines. They made cult lore. They made nightmares.

But I was a person. Not a symbol. Not a scream in someone else’s story. My name was Sharon. I was 26. I had dreams. I had love. I had a child growing inside me.

And that night, madness walked through my door — wearing the faces of children who thought they were angels of some twisted revelation.

But let it be known: I did not go quietly.

I fought with everything I had — because love does that.

Because mothers do that.

Because I was real.

And I still am.

Transformers Transform ©️

It All Started At The End

Chayton

In the shadowed depths of a hidden laboratory, far from the prying eyes of the modern world, a man known only as Hawk stood on the precipice of an impossible dream. Hawk was not his birth name but a moniker given by the Lakota elders, a title bestowed upon him in recognition of his unwavering devotion to their cause. He was no ordinary man; he was a visionary, a scholar of history, and a benefactor with vast resources at his disposal. Hawk had spent his life immersing himself in the rich traditions of the Lakota, but he knew that preserving their heritage wasn’t enough—he had to rewrite their fate.

For years, Hawk had poured his wealth into a project so clandestine that even its existence was known only to the tribal leaders sworn to secrecy under the gravest penalties. The plan was audacious: to build a time machine, a device that would allow them to send the tools of survival—vaccines and modern arms—back to the days before the European settlers had unleashed their wave of conquest. The goal was clear: to alter the course of history and arm the Native American tribes with the means to resist and endure the coming storm.

The time machine, a marvel of both engineering and indigenous wisdom, stood ready in a cavern deep beneath the Black Hills. Hawk had gathered the finest minds, both indigenous and from the world beyond, to perfect this technological wonder. But it was not just technology that powered this device; it was infused with the spiritual essence of the tribe, a blend of science and spirit that no outsider could comprehend. The machine hummed with a low, powerful vibration, resonating with the ancient chants of the Lakota shamans.

The tribal council had convened in this hidden chamber, their faces stoic but their eyes burning with the fire of purpose. They knew the risks—they knew that tampering with time was playing with forces far beyond human understanding. Yet the vision of a future where their people thrived, where the smallpox and rifles of the invaders were met with immunity and firepower of their own, was too compelling to ignore. Hawk stood at the controls, flanked by the tribal elders who had entrusted him with their most sacred secrets. With a final nod of agreement, the machine was activated, and a shimmering portal opened—a gateway to the past.

Through this portal, crates of vaccines and arms were sent, carefully packaged and accompanied by coded messages to their ancestors. The mission was clear: to distribute these lifesaving tools discreetly among the tribes, to unite them with the knowledge and power to resist the onslaught that was coming. The secrecy was paramount; any deviation, any ripple that attracted unwanted attention, could unravel the entire plan.

As the last crate vanished into the past, the portal closed with a thunderous finality. The council knew there was no turning back. The success of their plan would not be known for years, decades, or perhaps even centuries. But they had done what no others had dared—taken the fight to the very foundations of history itself.

In the stillness that followed, Hawk felt a deep sense of peace wash over him. He had given the tribes a fighting chance, something they had been denied in the original timeline. He knew the risks, the potential for paradoxes and unintended consequences, but he also knew that sometimes, to preserve a way of life, one had to defy the natural order.

As the council members dispersed into the night, returning to their roles in a world that would never know the truth of what had been done, Hawk stood alone in the cavern. The time machine, now silent, stood as a monument to their defiance, a symbol of their refusal to accept the fate that had been written for them. Hawk knew that history would judge them, but he also knew that, for the first time in centuries, the tribes had a voice in that judgment—a voice that echoed across time itself.

Black Graphite ©️

The Tale of Hassan and the Treacherous Vizier

Hakim al-Baghdadi

In the bustling city of Baghdad, under the rule of a just but distant Sultan, there lived a young man named Hassan. Hassan was known for his kindness and diligence, working as a humble merchant in the city’s grand bazaar. His life was simple, but his heart yearned for adventure and wealth beyond his modest means.

One day, as Hassan was closing his stall, a mysterious man approached him. This man, cloaked in the finest silk, introduced himself as the Vizier’s emissary. He spoke with honeyed words, praising Hassan’s reputation and offering him a night of unparalleled luxury and pleasure in the Vizier’s palace. Intrigued and tempted by the promise of a night away from his monotonous life, Hassan accepted the invitation.

Hassan was led to the Vizier’s palace, a magnificent edifice adorned with precious stones and fragrant gardens. Inside, he was offered a pipe filled with the finest hashish. Unfamiliar with its effects, Hassan smoked the pipe and soon found himself in a state of blissful euphoria. He was then taken to a room filled with the most beautiful women he had ever seen, their beauty rivaling that of the houris described in holy texts. They attended to his every desire, and Hassan’s night was filled with intoxicating pleasures beyond his wildest dreams.

When the morning sun pierced through the curtains, Hassan awoke not in the opulent palace, but in a squalid room in an unfamiliar town. Confused and disoriented, he was approached by a stern handler who revealed the grim truth. The night of pleasure was orchestrated by the Vizier, who now demanded a favor in return. If Hassan wished to return to the paradise he had experienced, he must assassinate a prominent political leader who opposed the Vizier’s plans.

Hassan, desperate to relive the ecstasy of the previous night, reluctantly agreed. He was given a dagger and precise instructions. His target was a wise and noble man, beloved by the people, who stood as an obstacle to the Vizier’s sinister ambitions.

With a heavy heart, Hassan carried out the assassination. The blood of the innocent man stained his hands, and the weight of his deed pressed upon his soul. As he fulfilled his grim task, the handler appeared once more, promising to take him back to the paradise he had tasted.

However, once the deed was done, the Vizier had no intention of keeping his promise. To ensure there were no loose ends, Hassan was executed by the Vizier’s guards, his life snuffed out as swiftly as it had been entangled in the Vizier’s web of deceit.