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Nyx



Estimated reading time — 12 minutes

I’ve always been a night person.

Even as a small child, I can still remember my stepmother affectionately referring to me as ‘her little night owl’ when she’d wake up to use the bathroom and find light pouring out from beneath my doorframe. This natural tendency towards the nocturnal wasn’t particularly enjoyable during the school year, especially as I entered high school and was expected to reach my bus stop by 6AM sharp. For somebody who got their second wind at around 11PM, it was incredibly hard to convince my brain to wind down and go to sleep rather than stay up all night going on my favorite internet forums, working on my old-school Geocities-hosted blog, or chatting the night away with internet friends I’d made on the other side of the globe. Many nights, I’d end up netting only one or two hours of sleep – if at all. High school was little more than a blur of drowsy days and nerdy nights, yet somehow I still managed to successfully graduate on time.

After I moved on to college, my devotion to the night became easier. Online courses had just become commonplace, so I managed to take almost my entire courseload via the web. I got a job stocking a nearby grocery store overnight, and daylight became less and less of a familiar sight for me.

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When you live your entire life in the dark, it ceases to frighten you. My friends would ask me how I could manage to walk my dog at 4am without any fear, or if I didn’t get a little spooked by how quiet my dorms and apartment buildings always were as I went about my daily business. For me, the answer was always the same: I wasn’t scared at all. This might sound odd, but the best allegory that I can think of is that warm, cozy, yet closed off feeling one gets during a snowstorm. You’re inside, safe and warm, though admittedly cut off from the world. Living almost entirely at night is similar; I find it so familiar and easy, but I’m still aware that my city is almost entirely asleep when I’m awake. I’m somewhat isolated, yes, but it’s a comfortable solitude, not a painful loneliness.

I’m explaining this to you so that you understand just how serious what I’m about to tell you is. I’m not the kind of person who hears bumps in the night or sees monsters in shadows. The nighttime is my natural habitat, and I have always felt secure. So when I tell you that tonight, the darkness has managed to make me experience fear like no other, you should realize how unnatural that is.

~~~

It started like any normal day – er, night – for me. I woke up around 10PM and got my coffee perking. Seemingly fitting with my preference for night over day, I also favor incredibly dark coffee. The blend I made today was called Eclipse; both appropriate for its color as well as seeming like a strange portent to what would come later.

As I was frying up some bacon and eggs to go with my coffee, a loud crash from my living room rang through my apartment. It was followed by a strange crunching sound, and then a long, drawn-out creak. I almost dropped the pepper mill that I’d been holding, before coming to my senses and peeking around the corner into the living room.

It was, of course, completely empty. I live alone (well, except for my dog, who was currently perched on his dog bed in the kitchen and cocking his head back and forth at the noise) and keep my doors and windows locked at all times, and furthermore my apartment is what is called “shotgun” style – the front door and back door directly face each other, with the kitchen as the link between them. If anyone had come inside, they would have had to march right past my breakfast preparations. I can be spacey sometimes, sure, but even I would have noticed that!

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As I peered around the room, attempting to figure out what could have fallen and broken and caused the mysterious noise, I felt the strangest sensation. It was as if someone had just brushed past me. I’m sure that sounds incredibly by-rote ghost story league, but it wasn’t the cold and clammy touch that most people claim to feel. This was… pleasantly warm, and the touch felt as if someone was gently rubbing the most luxurious, plush velvet across my cheek. It was a strange conflict in emotions; the logical side of my brain was terrified by the combination of inexplicable noises and now a seemingly ghostly presence, yet something about the touch felt so wonderful and safe – it was somehow nostalgic, actually. Like all the good times I’d had staying up way too late and having fun during high school, the pleasure of a nighttime stroll with only my dog and my thoughts as company, the perversely satisfied feeling of seeing my neighbors having to scrape nighttime frost off their cars in the morning while I was winding down my day and only had to worry about which book to curl up with in bed – somehow, this one touch embodied all those emotions at once. I was struck momentarily dumb as my brain tried to work out exactly how to feel, but before I’d fully decided one way or the other, I found myself turning around.

The room behind me – where the presence had seemingly been heading – seemed empty upon first glance, but something was definitely off. It took me a moment of staring to realize it, but when I did, a sharp spike of terror pierced all my previously confused feelings.

My window was open, and the curtains were fluttering gently in the night breeze. This would be unusual in and of itself, but that wasn’t the part that had shocked me.

Not only were my normally robin’s egg blue curtains suddenly some new shade that seemed somehow darker than black, but when I looked past them out the window – the moon was gone.

The sky was a complete and impenetrable inky black. No moonlight, streetlights, or even the light from within my apartment seemed to be reaching the world outside. The hazy moon that had been present when I’d awoken had either somehow disappeared or been completely eclipsed; the security light that tends to go off if you even so much as look in the direction of the apartment building opposite mine wasn’t activating even when I rushed to the window and tried to squint through the darkness. It was so completely black that I couldn’t even make out anything beyond my window.

For the first time in my life, I experienced true terror. What was going on? How could this possibly be explained? Was the world ending? Was this some strange new war weapon, a black fog of chemicals that dulled the senses? I was coming up with mountains of strange scenarios, each just as improbable as the next, yet none managed to be stranger than what I was actually seeing.

That’s when I saw it. The slightest flutter of movement – a ripple in the obsidian blackness outside. If I could see, it would have been right next to the gardens that surround the mailboxes. Those gardens are a bit of a labor of love for the apartment complex’s groundskeeper; not a day goes by that he isn’t out there doing some mulching, pruning, or planting. When he met me and learned about my nocturnal lifestyle, he took it upon himself to add some night-blooming jasmine to the gardens so that I would have something lovely to see when checking my mail in the middle of the night. Actually, now that I was thinking about it, the shimmer of movement was right around the jasmine!

Before I could even understand why, I was out my front door and gliding down the stairs to the ground floor. I felt consumed by a desire – no, a need – to understand what was going on, and I suspected that the disturbance in the force – so to speak – was my quickest avenue to getting answers.

Just as I approached the area where the jasmine should be, I suddenly realized just how foolhardy I’d been, rushing out into the black. I considered turning back, but then decided that as the entity had been in my apartment already, I probably was just as safe out here as I was inside. I heard a faint woof, and looked back to see my dog trotting up to me, tail wagging. That was a comfort, I decided. He was usually quite vigilant; if he was acting normal and unfazed, perhaps there truly wasn’t any danger.

I crouched down, feeling around, trying to find the jasmine. I can’t explain why, but for some reason I just knew that I needed one of the blossoms. After a few failed attempts (and some thorn pricks from a nearby rose bush), my hand came upon one of the in-bloom flowers. I snapped it off its stem and held it up to my face, inhaling the scent.

That’s when it happened.

Starting from the bloom that I was holding in my hand, what I can only describe as a dark light began to glow. Imagine a paper lantern, but with all the paper completely black; or perhaps a black light in an already pitch dark room. The light – for lack of a better term, I’ll just call it a light – engulfed the area, and I could faintly see the outlines and shapes of my surroundings. Gardens, mailboxes, unlit streetlamps –

– and the form of a woman, only a few feet in front of me.

I’d love to be able to describe her in detail to you, you know, “she was incredibly beautiful and had lips like luscious fruit and eyes that glowed like precious gems” or whatever, but… I couldn’t see any features. It was more as if she was simply darkness taking the form of a woman; I could see the faint outline of an evening gown, heels, and long hair in some sort of updo, but that was was it. There seemed to be a slight, hazy, purple-black mist radiating off of her as well – leaving absolutely no question that whatever this woman was, she could not possibly be human.

I didn’t know what to do. I stood, frozen, gaping at this mysterious entity, desperately trying to think of how to react. My stupor came to a quick end as my dog decided to take action before I did – he moved in an instant and bounded over to the smokey shape before I could hold him back. All the horror movies and stories that I’d absorbed over my lifetime flashed through my mind, and I reached out to try and protect my faithful companion from the doom that he had almost certainly earned. While the woman-thing wasn’t displaying any open aggression at the moment, this couldn’t end well.

Then the unthinkable – or rather, the completely unpredictable – happened. The darkness reached out an elegant hand and simply placed it on my dog’s head, just as I would to acknowledge him when he was sitting quietly by as we watched television or something. The form and canine both stayed still for a moment, as if somehow communing, and then my dog gave a happy yip and took off into the darkness. I was stunned but relieved, and this strange event managed to break me out of my shock enough to speak – even if it was nothing more than a strangled “eh?” sound.

The shadow laughed, a deep, throaty chuckle that gave me the same odd feeling of being caressed by velvet as the presence in my apartment. It dawned on me that this woman-shade, then, must have been the one who had passed by me earlier. Was this all just a ruse to get me out here? The noises in my empty apartment, the brief touch, the sheer strangeness outside – it suddenly all seemed very calculated. Rather than being put at ease by the laugh and the seemingly friendly treatment of my dog, I felt myself become even more anxious. What was going on? What was this thing, and what did she – it? – want from me?

I gathered up all my courage and decided to ask, as I was getting the distinct impression that this entity was waiting on me for some reason. If I didn’t say something soon, my heart might give out before we stopped staring at each other. But for all my resolve, I could only manage to stutter out one single word:

“…What…”

The darkness moved like liquid mercury, slipping immediately to my side. Those elegant shadow-hands once again reached out, this time to gently cup my face. When the answer came, I heard it both out loud and deep within my brain, as if the shade was speaking to all of my senses at once. It was an incredibly unsettling feeling, but not more so than the answer I received.

“You don’t understand yet? Small one, we have lived as close as lovers for your entire life. Your companion knew me from the moment I arrived, and greeted me as such. Do you truly not recognize me?”

At that moment, I once again felt that rush of nighttime nostalgia – the constant awareness and acceptance of my solitude, the joy of utter freedom borne of having the night to myself, the warmth and comfort of normal nightly habits, the rush of fondness I felt as I talked to far-flung friends by the glow of a monitor, the quiet companionship as I walked under the stars with my dog… it was just like before. This time, I understood what the velvety touch was trying to convey. I looked at the mist-woman and saw the relationship that I’d been cultivating my entire life; because what did I love more than the night itself?

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“Ah. You see now,” the voice echoed. “You are correct. I am night itself; I am the one who you have dedicated your entire life to serving. I have come, dear one, to collect what is mine by right.”

Wait a minute, I found myself thinking at the voice. I don’t understand what you mean by that. Collect what is yours? Serve you? You’re making it sound like I’m some sort of sacrifice in an ancient cult to Nyx or something – I cut myself off and tried to think through the increasingly foggy, sleepy feeling that was encroaching upon my brain. Whether it was from her touch or from that increasingly heavy, sweet smell in the air, I was starting to feel a bit drugged. Everything’s trying to make me feel at ease and safe, but I can’t shake this deep, cold fear at the bottom of my stomach. Something isn’t right, but all I can sense is the thick floral scent and I’m starting to feel that pleasantly drowsy sensation you get from too many antihistamines and when did I get on my bed? But I’m in my pajamas and my dog is curled up next to me and the heater is on and it’s so warm and cozy and I’m just so sleepy and maybe just a nice nap in these dark velvet blankets will help me remember… because I’m trying to remember something… and that jasmine incense sure is nice and everything is so

comfortable

easy

sleepy

as I snuggled into the covers, I felt something fall from my outstretched hand.

~~~

And suddenly, here I am. I’m wide awake and aware that I’m outside, almost completely enveloped in shadow. The jasmine-lantern is on the ground at my feet, and it seems that dropping it has broken the spell. I scramble backwards, kicking pointlessly at the wisps of black smoke that are still curling around my legs.

“Tch, such a rebellious child,” I hear Nyx’s voice, but this time it’s not in my head, she’s speaking out loud. “I have to admit that I wasn’t expecting you to resist; after all, you worship me with every facet of your life. It’s only natural that you return to me. Why do you fight?”

I sense true puzzlement in her question, not malice.I shake my head.

“I… it’s true that I’ve enjoyed living with you, but that’s just it: I’ve enjoyed living. I don’t understand, why are you trying to take me? What prompted this? I… I don’t want to die!” I shout the last part, trembling as I realize just how truthful my plea just now was. Oh, God, please let me survive this.

Nyx examines my face and, somehow, I get the feeling that she is frowning at me.

“But it’s impossible, dear one. You belong to me. I’ve left too much of a mark on you; can you even remember the last time that you saw daylight?”

I shake my head. It’s true; it’s probably been years since I’ve seen the sunshine and I never found it particularly troubling. That’s what Vitamin D supplements are for, right?

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“It has been precisely three years that you’ve lived in complete darkness. Three years that you’ve dedicated yourself completely to me, forsaking Hemera in every way. You’ve reveled in my presence these past three years; I have felt your adoration calling to me. You’ve even presented me with flowers from my own domain as an offering,” she stated as she paused to pluck one of the jasmine blossoms.  I watched her raise the flower up to her face and smiled as she inhaled its heady, thick floral scent. After a moment, she lowered the petals and continued:

“Tonight is the night that I am allowed to officially claim you as my child and take you home. You’re saying that you did not intentionally follow this rite? I’m sorry to say, but it cannot be reversed now. As I’ve said, you are mine, and I have come to collect what belongs to me.”

I’m so focused on her words, that I don’t even realize at first that Nyx has, once again, begun to envelop me in her shadows. I let out a small gasp and turn to run, only to have my arm gripped by a wreath of black mist.

“You still do not understand, child. It’s not a matter of some malevolent desire on my part; I simply cannot allow you to remain on this plane for fear of what will become of you. You are mine, and this means that you will cease to exist if you allow Hemera’s Day to catch you. If you want to be saved, you must allow me to take you. There is no alternative.”

I am chilled to the bone by her words. If she’s saying what I think she’s saying… I am in an impossible situation. It’s either allow her to “collect” me – and seemingly let my individual consciousness slip away, if what happened before was any indication – or cease to exist entirely once dawn’s light hits.

“In my embrace, it’s true that you will cease to be an individual entity. You will become the night itself. Is this truly so bad? Is it really worse than the decay that will meet you when Hemera awakens?”

It’s hard to accept. Part of what I loved about being alone at night was the sheer freedom I often felt; total self-reliance and the lack of normal societal demands left me feeling more alive than I can properly explain. And now my choices are to either completely lose my self and become… well, part of Nyx’s shadows, I assume… or to cease existing entirely. Is there even any difference between the two? At least if I die by day, I’ll still be myself at the end… if I let Nyx take me, will I even know if I die? It’s just so unknown, and that scares me.

Nyx speaks her next words softly. “Small one, as a boon for your years of love, I will offer you the choice. Come to me of your own free will, or allow the day to be your end. This is my mercy to you. I warn you, though: Hemera approaches. You have but a few minutes to decide.”

As she says this, I see the faintest glimmer of light on the horizon. Nyx speaks the truth. Dawn is coming, and I have only a few moments left.

I feel the tears begin to fall, and a wisp of satiny smoke whisks them away, then quickly recedes, as if Nyx is a mother trying to decide between consoling her weeping child or letting them handle their sorrow as an adult.

In some form or another, I am about to die.

I raise my eyes and attempt a determined nod. I will face this with all the strength that a human can muster.

My decision has been made. I know that I don’t have to bother vocalizing it. I’m dealing with goddesses, after all. I’m sure they can sense the resolve in my heart.

Nyx smiles, and I reach my end.

Credit To: Emilie Magnus

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48 thoughts on “Nyx”

  1. holy poop I was writing a story with the same name but backwards (I gave up and it was going to be about an entity called XYN)

  2. Wow. This story was very well written and was easy to understand. You could feel the feelings of the main character and felt the things he felt

  3. nocturnal extreme owl

    Gods!! The story ain’t creepy at all except when Nyx arrived .I mean for a nocturnal like me I love night and darkness too but Nyx bargain was worse I mean he’s dying because of the day.When me and my friends do RPG I usually host Nyx it’s like after reading this I stopped staying up until morning except now. It’s 2 am I’m still studying. But it creeps me out if Nyx were standing right here now. Good fictional story!!!

  4. Wow I must say that this pasta is a masterpiece. At least to me. I always like the Greek mythologies, and this pasta is giving me the vibes. Well, its not scary but I do feel the mystery, anxious, and somehow heartwarming. I’ll give 9/10 for this.

  5. My friends would ask me how I could manage to walk my dog at 4am without any fear, or if I didn’t get a little spooked by how quiet my dorms and apartment buildings always were as I went about my daily business. For me, the answer was always the same: I wasn’t scared at all.

    Ehrm. O.O Yeah, same here. People make such a big deal about early morning walks and late night shifts.

    Anyway, amazing story for the most part. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this and I hope you make more stories like this. It didn’t have the vibe of a CreepyPasta, but it was a good read either way. I just didn’t feel very creeped out by this story, that’s all. That’s just my opinion however. Anyone who fears the unknown and darkness would probably be creeped out by this, both of these things I am resistant to. (Final fantasy pun) ;)

    I rate this 7/10! X)

  6. The Old King Critic

    Very good pasta and honestly the only error I saw was a double was early on and as a writer I know that happens from time to time. That and I really did feel as if the main character was a daughter or just female. I think this because nocturnalism (yes i just made that word) tends to be a female thing. To want to sleep all day and stay up all night just seems female trait to me.

  7. i liked this story. it was very refreshing. however one part bugged me a bit..the protaganist hasnt seen sunlight in 3 years , yet he said he would get his mail at midday..

    1. The Old King Critic

      Re read this because she or he mentions that fact that the groundkeeper planted the night flower just for her for when she gets her mail.

  8. Full 10/10. I absolutely loved this story. Being able to identify with the protagonist certainly helps (Im a huge night owl) but still just an excellent fun read. I enjoy the incorporation of Greek mythology and even though at no point was it creepy/scary it still entertained the bejesus out of me. Very beautiful, and a great idea. Well Done!

  9. This was a nice story. Not scary, per say, but soothing. It made me want to fall into a dreamless slumber and not wake up for a while.

  10. You Obviously Love Oreos

    Moral of the story: Don’t live in the night, or Nyx may mistake you for a worshipper and steal your soul.

  11. the kishin soul

    That was such a great story. I read some others and they just creeped me out (which was the goal of the writers) but this one is more comforting than scary. You should seriously write books!

  12. I just simply have to ask, do you really have experience on the reversed sleeping rhythm? Because I personally do (even though unlike our protagonist here, I did not graduate on time… still working on that) and I must say, how it is to live during the night without being bothered by it, is very much how you described it!
    This was a fine piece of story without a doubt, as stated before, not much of a creeper but very beautiful nonetheless.

  13. a nervous hobbit

    If you literally hadnt seen the sunlight in years, you would have to sleep from like 5 or 6 in the morning until 9 that evening in the summers. That’s what’s troubling me.

  14. This was really poorly written and full of failed attempts to appear cleaver (“disturbance in the force”? Really?). The story had no logical progression or consistency. It starts out with the main character telling us the story as if it happened in the past, and at the end, it’s implied that he dies and it was actually happening as it was being told to us. The main character seemed to suddenly become aware of facts for no reason. It was just all round terrible.
    Also it’s not the slightest bit scary, it shouldn’t even be on this site.

    1. This site is CREEPYpasta, not scarypasta. difference there is. possibly the protagonist decided to upload this before deciding. and can’t a character make a culture reference? i for one found the lack of gore of any kind to be quite refreshing…

      irsh hakar despoor shorngia and i’m looking for a way to break the forth wall. that’s a bit out of place, but i really want to call my armies. don’t worry, i’ll just explore the void, not go on a rampage…

  15. What a lovely atmospheric piece. I enjoyed reading this. I love the fact that you don’t reveal explicitly one way or the other what fate the narrator chooses. I like stories with a little (though just a little) ambiguity in them. It makes me think about what I read and what I know and that helps me decide what my own head canon will be for the story. The only thing that I found odd was that Nyx would wait until THE night before making any contact or before the narrator saw anything strange about his nocturnal lifestyle. Otherwise, fun read, and I hope to see more!

  16. This story seemed to be on very sound footing during the preamble, but the longer it ran (and it does run for rather a long time) the further afield it drifted. I do not think it is a particularly good story but I do think the writer should continue working on it and I’d encourage him/her to continue submitting other material, as there is a tangible degree of craftsmanship here. With that in mind, I’m going to single out one really crucial point that could improve the story considerably, and then maybe one or two nitpicks as well.

    The most important thing to remember (with any story, really, but its particularly pronounced in this one) is that you should have some degree of confidence in your reader. If you don’t, then you’ll be inclined to spell out every little thing, and that really hurts the voice of your story. For example:

    “Seemingly fitting with my preference for night over day, I also favor incredibly dark coffee. The blend I made today was called Eclipse; both appropriate for its color as well as seeming like a strange portent to what would come later.”

    Look, your reader understands how irony and foreshadowing work. You don’t have to say “Seemingly fitting with my preference for night over day,” we would figure that part out on our own. You can just say, “I like black coffee,” and, trust me, the irony is quite apparent, and you can just say “The blend was called Eclipse,” without actually telling us directly that it’s foreshadowing, and I promise we will get it. This bad habit can really bring your prose down when you need it the most, as it does again later:

    “You’re making it sound like I’m some sort of sacrifice in an ancient cult to Nyx or something.”

    One more time: We get it. We probably got it just from the title. You don’t have to hover over your reader and point out every little nuance; it spoils the story. This is particularly harmful in places where you’d otherwise have a good thing going, like here:

    “It was as if someone had just brushed past me. I’m sure that sounds incredibly by-rote ghost story league, but it wasn’t the cold and clammy touch that most people claim to feel. This was… pleasantly warm, and the touch felt as if someone was gently rubbing the most luxurious, plush velvet across my cheek.”

    If you simply said, “I felt something brush past me; it was soft and warm,” then your reader will, in all likelihood, think something to the effect of, “Ah, the ghostly touch was warm rather than cold this time, that’s clever and unexpected.” Which is exactly the reaction you want. But you’re not allowing the reader to have that reaction naturally because you’re whapping them over the head with it. Which is too bad because it probably would have worked pretty well.

    There are more examples I could cite, but you’re probably getting the idea. Either you don’t have confidence in the reader’s powers of observation or you don’t have confidence in your own prose’s ability to communicate what you want to say in any way but the most direct way. But you should try to trust your reader a little; they’re your partner in this. If you give them a good throw, they will more than likely catch.

    One nitpick: If this guy is a night owl, why is he only out of bed at ten PM? There’s only like seven hours of the night left at that point. If he’s really never up during daylight, that means he must sleep 17 hours a day.

    Anyway, don’t feel discouraged; keep at it. I am certain there is a good story in here, but it needs work and its needs focus to find it.

  17. I was sort of in a constant degree of confusion as I read. One discrepancy, the dog following the narrator and becoming evident after a bark even though he claims to not be able to see, in particular made me stop to be sure I hadn’t missed something. I quite liked the “love story” themes but after it turned motherly and then oddly lethal left me scratching my head. I liked the narrator’s background and character, but I don’t feel like the reactions were very realistic. I for one would be asking questions, partaking in a bit of freaking out, and maybe questioning my own nocturnal sanity rather than freely and calmly accepting the words of my apparent idol. Also, I feel like the scene where he falls under the illusion of night again could have been better executed. More drawn out or told in a way that better transitioned from his state to reality. I also felt like the Nyx and Hemera references were slighted. I had no idea what they were and that the narrator had automatically known that was who he was dealing with.
    Please don’t take this as a flame. It was quite the read. I hope my comments helped.

  18. Giving myself to Nyx sounds terrible. I wouldn’t mind living in her plane as her “child”, that sounds like it has perks. But lose my entity and self and ability to think is terrible. One of my greatest fears is not existing, its why I’m so scared of dying and atheism. If there is no God or something similar, there’s no afterlife which means my death is the end of my mental development, my thoughts and my ability to interact with others. Its a sad death indeed. Sorry Nyx, you better drive a harder bargain if you want me to join.

    1. I beleive in god, but sometimes I have doubts, I think to myself that maybe god does not exist, This is all a lie and I will die. I am scared that there is no life after death, the human mind is not capable of understanding death, that your mind will be no more.

    1. Me too, the character really came off as female for me. I’m not exactly sure why; I think it’s just something about the language used, expressions like “curling up in bed” and so on. Of course, it could be a guy, but… yeah, the style seems feminine to me.

  19. I like it, it is not great but it is a good read and very detailed. I must say that I have never felt the feelings of a character often, alas I felt as if I could have been there. Being somone who tries to be more awake at night this hits rather close considering I have often thought about giving up my daylight hours to persue a good nightly routine. As Stormlilly has said though, it is not scary, actually I felt it was a calming read. I may have been a tad harsh up above but as I write this I feel as though it was actually better then good. I would love to read more things your write if you had any. Alas the only way of contact is my Enjin account as I do not check my E-mail for weeks at a time.

  20. It’s a nice story really. But strange as it may sound I don’t think it belongs here, it actually didn’t seem scary at all.

  21. Hey!

    I think this piece is one of the rarer breeds of creepies: the character-driven. Needless to say, this sort of creepy places emphasis on the characters, with a focus on personal horror. The audience is supposed to empathize with the characters and ultimately, see through their eyes – probably to meet their fears.

    I thought this pasta showed the core parts well. The prose does a very good job of illustrating the protagonist, detailing his present quirks and past nostalgia, his ultimate devotion to Nyx. He is also believable, both in his history (vitamin D, night courses) and his actions.

    IMO the theme helps: the darkness, something commonly used as a horror prop. Instead in this pasta we are asked to bond with her and know her as a character – Nyx herself, no less. The ability of this pasta to make the audience embrace commonplace horror really speaks to it’s characterization and prose.

    I thought this pasta had amounts of Gothic influence as well. The environment coming alive, themes of unreturned and rival romance (Nyx and Hemera) and the rituals to unite the lovers. The effect is highly subjective – some may find it sappy or such. I thought though that this pasta handled it’s influences well, managing to remind the reader that setting is modern but also slipping in the key ingredients.

    That being said, the Gothic does love melancholic horror; the pleasing sort of terror and tension that resolves itself. IMO, this pasta lacks a bit of creepy. Maybe the author could’ve added scenes of sacrifice (which would still keep to the theme); becoming Nyx’s shadow can’t be that pleasant?

    I found the last parts to be a bit lacking in emotional immediacy, if that’s the right term. I couldn’t really feel the protagonist’s fear of death/nonexistence, especially since he’s practically at home with the night, Nyx seems a nice enough entity and I’ve been led by the pasta to at least not fear darkness.

    Overall, I found this pasta to be a great character-driven piece, though maybe not quite creepy. Good work! 8.2/10

    1. I took it the the complete opposite. Maybe that’s what the writer was attempting at for us to decide what fate was chosen by the narrator. Which makes this story all that much more amazing.

  22. Hmn… I really liked this. It isn’t very scary, at least to me – but the sense of urgency and despair of the narrator are very believable and well written. Any fear I felt peaked shortly during the middle of the story, which is an unusual structure. The sense of nullness that so troubled the narrator didn’t really click with me. Maybe we’re all dooming our souls to Nyx here, though. Hah.

    I like seeing classical mythology in scary stories – it’s one of the reasons I like the Megaten franchise, and it’s one of the reasons I like this. Nyx seems fairly courteous, or at least affecting courtesy born of patience. Seems to work out pretty well for her, too!

    Maybe the reason this works so well for me, personally, is that the idea of doing something without knowing it – like living for so long without seeing the sun – and by doing so inviting the gaze of Others, beyond our knowing or sight – is one of my strongest fears and inspirations. I really enjoyed this story, hope to see more from you!

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