
By Cal Asher
The dark hit me first.
Not suddenly. Not violently.
Like something that had been waiting long enough to be certain.
Before sound. Before breath.
The room felt heavier than it should have, as if winter had learned the shape of walls and settled into them. I lay still, already aware that whatever was there did not need to announce itself. It had come into a place that knew it.
Then the sound arrived—
a slow, deliberate slap… slap… slap
of flesh meeting flesh, close enough that I felt it more than heard it. The rhythm didn’t rush. It didn’t hesitate. It carried the confidence of something that knew it would be answered.
I tried to move and found I no longer belonged to my body.
I tried to open my eyes.
Nothing obeyed.
Something stood beside the bed, close enough that its cold sank through skin and bone, not reaching for me, not threatening—just occupying the space as if it had always been entitled to it.
A shape pressed itself into the darkness where the light should have been, dense enough to feel, indistinct enough to refuse form.
And the pounding continued—steady, patient—
as if it were syncing my heartbeat to its own.
Then—
Not with sight.
Not with thought.
With memory that felt older than breath.
The shadow didn’t threaten.
It just waited, fist pressed into palm,
like it was giving me a choice I’d already made before this life ever began.
Outside, the snow whispered its high, frozen frequency—
that deep-winter sound the world makes
when it holds its breath for something coming.
And under it all, vibrating through my ribs,
was the truth:
I hadn’t been visited.
I’d been found.
The air thickened.
My lungs locked.
My spine burned.
My pulse fell in sync with the rhythm of that pounding:
slap—slap—slap
Not violent.
Not warning.
A summons.
My chest tightened as if a strap were pulled across my sternum,
turning every soft part in me brittle, breakable, temporary.
And yet—
I felt something in me rising to answer.
It wasn’t pounding to threaten me.
It was warming its hand.
Testing its strength.
Calling itself back into shape.
My mind didn’t beg or question.
It just said one thing, clear as steel:
Finally.
Because what stood over me wasn’t a stranger—
it was the part of me I’d spent years locking in the dark,
now stepping out to claim what I had no right to pretend was gone.
The shadow hadn’t entered my room.
It had stepped out of me.
A twin built in the dark—the part of me that never bowed, never softened,
never forgot what it was made for.
It was standing over me like a verdict.
And I felt it settle back into my chest,
like it was choosing where to live now.
The room is still when I wrench myself awake.
My wife sleeps beside me, untouched.
Whatever came wasn’t meant for her.
It came for the part of me that still had a heartbeat.
And it’s still here—
coiled under my sternum,
listening to my pulse like it’s deciding whether to keep it.
It didn’t come to warn me.
It came because the winter outside
finally found its mirror in me.
Because the dark recognized its blood.
And as that presence locks itself beneath my ribs,
cold fingers closing around the center of who I was,
the truth cuts clean as a blade fitting between bone:
I didn’t wake up.
I was taken.
And the one who opened his eyes
was never meant to sleep.
* * *
Cal Asher is a fiction writer whose work explores psychological tension, interior collapse, and the quiet violence of restraint. His stories favor implication over explanation and lean into the darker edges of human experience. He lives in the United States.