The Scarehouse had finally found its permanent "cast member."

One rainy Tuesday, two weeks before opening, Elias heard a sound from the "Boogeyman’s Bedroom" exhibit. It wasn't the programmed mechanical wheeze of the animatronic; it was a soft, rhythmic humming.

The rusted sign above the gate groaned in the wind, its peeling paint barely spelling out The Scarehouse . For thirty years, it had been the town’s premier October attraction—a maze of plywood walls, strobe lights, and teenagers in cheap rubber masks.

The Scarehouse wasn't just a haunt; it was a predator. It fed on the screams of the customers, but during the off-season, it got hungry. It grew new rooms to lure the curious. It mimicked the sounds of life to bring the watchman closer.

But Elias, the night watchman, knew the secret of the Scarehouse: it was much larger on the inside than the outside.

The humming stopped. From under the bed, a hand reached out. It wasn't a rubber glove or a plastic prop. It was pale, long-fingered, and translucent like wax. It gripped the edge of the floorboards and pulled. Slowly, the floor didn't just creak—it unzipped .

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