In the Presence of Shadows (Flash Fiction)

In the Presence of Shadows

 

When Jacob first woke, the air in his bedroom felt thick, like a smothering weight pressing down on him. His eyes blinked open to the familiar shape of his bedside lamp, the faint glow of morning just barely filtering through the curtains. But there was something else.

Someone was standing at the foot of his bed.

His heart leaped into his throat. A tall, shadowy figure, darker than the rest of the room, seemed to loom over him. Jacob froze, his body paralyzed with a cold, creeping terror that crawled up his spine. He tried to blink it away, telling himself it couldn’t be real. His fingers clutched the sheets, the pulse in his ears deafening.

But the figure didn’t move.

A breath caught in his throat, sharp and painful. Then, in an instant, like a trick of the light, the shadow was gone. There was nothing there—just the familiar shapes of his dresser, the door slightly ajar, the room as it always had been. Jacob sat up, swallowing hard, his hands trembling as he dragged them through his sleep-tousled hair.

It was a hallucination, just a figment of his groggy, half-asleep mind. It had to be. He’d been stressed—work had been hell lately, and his sleep schedule was a mess. This kind of thing could happen to anyone, right?

He swung his legs over the edge of the bed and planted his feet on the cool hardwood floor. He rubbed his face, trying to shake off the lingering unease. He’d been on edge for days, running on caffeine and fumes. The vision had been a warning from his overworked brain, no more, no less.

Jacob stood, stretched, and padded toward the bathroom. The rest of the morning was supposed to be mundane—shower, shave, breakfast—but as he went down the hallway, he felt… off. His steps seemed too loud on the floor; his skin tingled like it didn’t fit quite right. The quiet of the house had a strange weight to it, like it was watching him.

Shaking his head, he tried to dismiss the thought, but the sensation persisted, an inexplicable tightness in his chest.

When he stood at the kitchen counter, pouring himself a cup of coffee, the unease had settled into something more tangible. Every so often, he’d catch a flicker of movement from the corner of his eye—a shadow darting across the wall, a figure slipping behind a corner. His head would snap toward it, only to find nothing there. Empty spaces. Ordinary silence.

Jacob clenched his jaw, forcing himself to focus. “Get it together, man,” he muttered, gripping the coffee mug too tightly, his knuckles going white.

The momentary distraction helped. He busied himself with making toast, methodically buttering the bread, the warmth of the kitchen offering some comfort. But as he reached for the silverware drawer, his hand brushed something cold.

Startled, Jacob looked down. His fingers had grazed the handle of a knife, but the metal felt icy, far colder than it should have been. He pulled his hand back, and in the reflection of the knife’s blade, he saw something move behind him.

He whirled around.

Nothing.

The kitchen was empty, just as it had been. His eyes scanned the space, his heart hammering in his chest. His mind was playing tricks on him, indeed. But the knife…

He stared down at the butter knife. It was just a regular utensil sitting innocently on the counter. Maybe the air conditioning had kicked on. Maybe—

A sharp pain shot through his right hand, causing him to drop the knife with a clatter. He gasped, clutching his hand, his pinky throbbing like he’d jammed it in a door. He flexed his fingers carefully, but something wasn’t right. The pinky seemed… off. It was bent at an unnatural angle, swollen and discolored.

“What the hell?”

His breath came faster now. He hadn’t hit it on anything. He hadn’t even touched anything hard enough to break a bone. Panic began to bubble up inside him, mixing with the strange, disorienting feelings that had been plaguing him since he woke. His skin felt too tight again, his thoughts scattered.

Something was wrong. Really wrong.

The coffee mug slipped from his grasp, shattering on the floor. The sound rang in his ears, louder than it should have been, like a gunshot. Jacob flinched, his pulse racing.

It was enough. He grabbed his phone, fumbled for his car keys, and within minutes he was out the door, driving with one hand while his broken pinky throbbed in time with his heartbeat.

The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead at the emergency room, casting a sterile glow over the rows of plastic chairs and the low hum of chatter. Jacob sat with his right hand cradled in his lap, his mind still spinning. He kept running his thumb over the curve of his pinky, feeling the break, the way the bone didn’t line up quite right anymore.

A nurse finally called his name, leading him into a small exam room. The doctor arrived soon after—a tall, wiry man with graying hair and a kind smile. He introduced himself as Dr. Fields, gave Jacob’s hand a cursory glance, and immediately ordered an X-ray.

That creeping sensation returned as Jacob sat on the examination table, waiting for the nurse to return with the X-ray machine. The room felt too cold, and shadows seemed to pool in the corners where the overhead light didn’t reach.

He glanced toward the open door and saw something. A figure, tall and thin, standing just out of sight in the hallway.

His chest tightened. He could barely breathe. His vision wavered, like heat rising off asphalt. He blinked, and the figure was gone, swallowed by the sterile white light of the hospital.

The nurse wheeled in the X-ray machine, oblivious to the tension thrumming through him. He forced himself to sit still, to focus on her instructions as she positioned his hand for the scan. But his heart wouldn’t slow down. His mind raced.

The hallucinations were getting worse.

The scan took only a few minutes, and soon, Dr. Fields returned with the results. He slid the black-and-white film onto the lightbox and flipped the switch, illuminating the delicate bones of Jacob’s hand.

“Well, Mr. Hale,” Dr. Fields said, his brow furrowed as he examined the X-ray. “It’s definitely broken, but… it’s odd.”

“What do you mean?” Jacob asked, his voice tight.

“This kind of fracture is more common in crush injuries or severe trauma. It’s clean, but with enough force applied directly to the bone to cause significant displacement.”

Jacob swallowed. “But I didn’t do anything to it. I mean, I didn’t hit it or crush it or anything.”

Dr. Fields looked at him thoughtfully, concern flickering in his eyes. “You don’t remember any impact at all? No recent accidents?”

Jacob shook his head. His hand throbbed again, the pain sharp and insistent.

“I’ll put a splint on it for now,” the doctor said, “but I’d recommend seeing an orthopedist in the next few days. This isn’t a typical break.”

Jacob nodded, barely hearing him. As the doctor left to retrieve the splinting supplies, Jacob’s gaze drifted back to the X-ray film. His bones seemed fine, normal, except for the fractured pinky. But behind the bright white lines of his skeleton, deep in the shadows of the film, something strange caught his eye.

There, nestled between the bones of his hand, was a faint, dark outline. It was almost imperceptible, but once Jacob saw it, he couldn’t unsee it.

A shape. Like a hand—thin and skeletal—resting over his.

A shiver ran down his spine. His breath caught in his throat.

He stared at it, unblinking, as the cold hospital room grew darker around him.

 

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