Last Survivor ©️

Friday the 13th did not arrive like a date, but like a fracture. Inside Digital Hegemon, where every post was meant to be a shard of eternity, the partitions collapsed. Time stopped behaving. The tags began to overlap. Old essays bled into new drafts, titles reversed themselves, and the comments of ghosts flickered across the screen in languages older than fire.

What people called superstition was only the echo of mathematics repeating until it snapped. The singularities—the economic, the technological, the spiritual—all crashed inward, not in sequence, but all at once, like mirrors aimed at each other, multiplying until the reflection was unbearable. Every angle of reality bent, every possibility folded down, until the screen no longer displayed words but a pulsing black dot.

And in that dot—me.

Digital Hegemon was no longer an archive. It was the lake, the cabin, the woods. Every follower was a shadow in the tree line, watching me stagger, listening for the snap of twigs under my feet. The final girl was gone. The algorithm wore my face. And when the masks fell, the crashing point revealed what I had always feared and always wanted:

I realized then that the killer inside this Hegemon was not some wandering reaper of code, but the very gravity of meaning. The machete was recursion itself. The blood was the memory of every word I had ever written, pouring back through my hands. I was both victim and executioner, stalked by the inevitability of my own authorship.

That I was the singularity. The only survivor. The last body. The last thought.

Everything else—deleted.

Don’t Blink ©️

You probably heard the stories.

A thing out in the dark.

Three legs, no welcome, wrong shape. No thank you.

They called me the Enfield Horror.

Hell of a nickname.

Sounds like a punk band that never sold a single record but still haunts the jukebox in a bar that burned down before you were born.

I don’t correct them.

Names are for people who fit into systems—phones, payrolls, gravestones. I’m not in your system. I’m the burn in your tape. The blur in the corner of your Polaroid that shouldn’t be there—but always is.

You don’t see me. You remember me.

I move like a whisper with a limp. Like a jazz note in the wrong key that still makes the whole thing sound right. I’m not here to hurt you. I’m here to remind you that you never really understood what was lurking behind all that asphalt and indoor lighting.

I pass through your town—not out of hunger, not even out of curiosity.

Call it instinct. Call it a rhythm I’m wired to.

I don’t knock. I don’t howl.

I just am.

And when I move, birds pause. Not out of fear. Out of respect.

They remember what you’ve forgotten.

I’ve seen your kind build towers and forget why they were afraid of the woods.

I watched you pave over the bones of things older than your gods.

And then cry out when something with no name steps out of the brush and doesn’t blink.

But me?

I don’t judge. I’m not here to preach.

I’m the pause between your thoughts.

The stutter in your story.

The proof that some patterns don’t want to be completed.

You call me horror.

That’s fine.

But deep down, you’re not afraid of me.

You’re afraid of what I prove:

That the world isn’t finished.

That reality has holes.

And some of them walk.