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img img Fantasy img Serenity's Hunger

About

Tim Mercer has always been alone. Awkward in conversation and uncomfortable in crowds, he spends most nights inside his small apartment with only his cat and the glow of a television for company. Until the night the power goes out. Bored and curious, Tim pulls an old Ouija board from a dusty closet and asks the darkness if anyone is there. Something answers. She calls herself Serenity, a beautiful woman trapped between worlds. At first, she is gentle. Comforting. Everything Tim has ever wished someone could be, but every night she visits, Tim grows weaker. Serenity isn't looking for love, she's feeding.

Chapter 1 The Quiet Life

Timothy Mercer lived alone in a small third-floor apartment that always seemed a little too quiet. The building itself was old, the kind of place that had been renovated just enough to be livable, but never quite comfortable. The carpet in the hallway outside his door was thin and worn from decades of footsteps. The fluorescent lights flickered occasionally, humming faintly like tired insects. Most of the tenants kept to themselves, which suited Tim just fine. He liked the quiet. Inside his apartment, things were simple.

The living room held a sagging gray couch facing a large television that Tim had bought during a holiday sale. A narrow coffee table sat in front of it, usually cluttered with soda cans, takeout containers, and a couple of video game controllers. Along one wall stood a tall shelf crammed with video games, horror movies, and a few books he had started but never finished.

A computer desk sat near the window, the chair slightly worn where he spent most of his time. His laptop, headphones, and a tangled collection of cables covered the surface like a small electronic jungle. The rest of the apartment followed the same pattern, functional, cluttered, and quiet.

The kitchen was rarely used for cooking. Tim preferred takeout, something easy he could order while browsing the internet or playing games. The refrigerator usually held leftover cartons of noodles, pizza boxes, and energy drinks more than anything that required preparation. It wasn't glamorous, but it worked.

More importantly, it didn't require him to interact with people very much.

Tim worked remotely doing simple technical support for a software company. Most of his job involved answering emails and occasional chat messages from customers. It was the perfect kind of work for someone like him. Conversations happened through a keyboard instead of face-to-face, giving him time to think before responding. Words came easier that way. In person, things were different.

Tim had always been a little awkward around people. It wasn't something he could easily explain. His mind worked fine-sometimes too well-but when conversations started, something in him seemed to stall. Thoughts that felt clear in his head suddenly tangled together before they reached his mouth.

Silence would stretch out longer than it should and other people noticed.

It made simple things like meeting new people or making friends harder than they should have been. Over time, Tim had simply grown used to staying home instead. It was easier. The one steady companion in his life padded lazily across the living room floor most evenings, Pumpkin.

The orange tabby had been a stray when Tim found him two years earlier behind a grocery store dumpster during a rainstorm. The cat had glared at him with such stubborn attitude that Tim had laughed out loud despite himself. He had brought the animal home with a towel and a cheap bag of cat food.

Pumpkin had stayed ever since.

The cat now ruled the apartment with lazy confidence, jumping onto the couch whenever Tim sat down and occasionally demanding attention with loud, dramatic meows. Pumpkin had a thick orange coat and a round belly that suggested he enjoyed apartment life far more than his days in the alley. Tim didn't mind. If anything, the cat made the apartment feel less empty. Most evenings followed the same quiet routine.

Pumpkin would curl up beside him, purring like a small engine. For a few hours, the world outside didn't matter. Tim didn't think of himself as unhappy exactly. Lonely, maybe. loneliness had become such a familiar part of his life that it almost felt normal. Like background noise you eventually stop hearing. He had tried to change things before. Occasionally he pushed himself to go out. Sometimes he would accept invitations from coworkers or attempt dating apps after encouragement from his sister Megan. Those efforts rarely lasted long.The outside world always seemed louder, faster, and more complicated than the quiet space he had built for himself.

One evening, as the sun dipped below the buildings outside and the sky turned a dull purple, Tim sat at his computer finishing a game session. The room glowed faintly from the monitor's light. Pumpkin slept nearby, sprawled across the couch like an orange pillow. Tim leaned back in his chair and stretched, listening to the quiet hum of his apartment.

Another ordinary night. He stood, walked to the kitchen, and grabbed a soda from the fridge before returning to the living room. The television flickered on, bathing the walls in pale light. Pumpkin opened one lazy eye, watched him for a moment, then settled back down again.Tim sank into the couch.

Outside, the city moved on without him. Cars passed. People talked somewhere down the street. Laughter drifted faintly upward before fading again.

Inside the apartment, it was just Tim and the cat. He picked up the controller and started another game.

Night settled around the building slowly, wrapping the world in quiet darkness. Tim didn't notice. He had grown used to living this way.

Alone.

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