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Tuesday, May 05, 2026

Gallow's Creek - Chapter X: Survival

ElliotElliot hit the tree line at full speed.

And stopped.

Because he understood now.

This was the plan.

They didn’t want to drag him in.

They wanted him to walk in.

To choose it.

He turned back.

The town stood behind him.

Watching.

Silent.

No one stepped forward.

No one helped.

Because this—

This was the cost.

Elliot laughed.

Breathless.

Tired.

“Yeah,” he said. “Figures.”

He turned back to the woods.

The figures waited.

Patient.

“You don’t have to be alone,” they whispered.

Elliot smiled.

For the first time since he came back—

A real smile.

“I’m not,” he said.

And he meant it.

Because surviving Gallow’s Creek—

Was never about belonging.

It was about refusing to disappear.

Elliot stepped back.

Out of the tree line.

And into the road.

The figures didn’t follow.

They couldn’t.

Not without permission.

Not without the town allowing it.

Elliot looked at the people watching him.

“You don’t get to choose anymore,” he said.

And for the first time—

They looked afraid.

Real fear.

Because Elliot understood something they didn’t:

The agreement worked both ways.

And it could be broken.

The wind picked up.

The trees behind him screamed.

Not with sound—

But with presence.

And for the first time—

The things in the woods—

Didn’t feel patient.

They felt—

Hungry.

And no longer satisfied.

Elliot lit a cigarette.

Hands steady.

“Yeah,” he said softly.

“Now we’ve got a problem.”


Epilogue: The Man Who Stayed

Gallow’s Creek didn’t change overnight.

That would’ve been too easy.

Too clean.

At first, nothing happened at all.

The town woke up the next morning like it always did. Coffee brewed. Doors opened. Curtains twitched.

People watched.

They always watched.

But something underneath it had shifted.

Not visibly.

Not loudly.

But undeniably.

The woods were no longer quiet.

At night, you could hear them.

Not voices—not exactly.

Something deeper.

A low, constant sound that pressed against your skull like a distant scream stretched thin across miles of dark.

People started locking their doors earlier.

Closing their blinds tighter.

Pretending not to hear it.

Pretending it was still the same.

It wasn’t.

Elliot Vance made sure of that.

He didn’t leave.

That surprised them.

They expected him to run. To disappear. To escape while he still could.

But Elliot stayed.

He moved through the town like a man who had already faced the worst thing possible—and found something worse behind it.

Something that didn’t scare him.

Not anymore.

He kept his routine simple.

Coffee in the morning.

Walks through town.

Occasional stops at places that used to pretend he didn’t exist.

They didn’t pretend anymore.

Now, when Elliot walked into a room—

People looked away.

Not in judgment.

In fear.

Because something about him had changed.

It wasn’t obvious.

Not at first glance.

But if you looked too long—

You noticed.

Sometimes, his reflection didn’t quite match.

Sometimes, his shadow stretched just a little too far.

Sometimes—

If the light hit him wrong—

You could swear there was more than one set of eyes looking back.

Elliot noticed it too.

He just didn’t comment on it.

Because he understood something now.

The hollowing never stopped.

He hadn’t escaped it.

He’d interrupted it.

Redirected it.

And whatever space they had carved out inside him—

Something else had taken hold.

Not them.

Not fully.

But not entirely him, either.

A balance.

An intrusion.

A presence.

It didn’t speak to him.

Not like before.

But it watched.

Through him.

With him.

And sometimes—

It smiled when he didn’t.

The disappearances changed after that.

They didn’t stop.

But they weren’t quiet anymore.

People vanished in ways that couldn’t be ignored.

Doors left open.

Lights left on.

Footprints that led nowhere.

And always—

Always—

Closer to the centre of town.

The woods had started reaching.

The agreement had broken.

And the things inside didn’t care about “belonging” anymore.

They were hungry.

One night, Old Man Dyer came to see Elliot.

That alone was enough to make people whisper.

Dyer looked worse than before.

Thinner.

Pal er.

Like something had already begun taking pieces of him.

“You broke it,” Dyer said.

Elliot didn’t deny it.

“They were going to take me anyway,” he replied.

Dyer nodded slowly.

“That’s not the point.”

Elliot lit a cigarette.

Exhaled.

“No,” he said. “The point is—they don’t get to decide who disappears anymore.”

Dyer studied him.

Long.

Hard.

“And what replaces that?” he asked.

Elliot met his gaze.

“Me.”

Silence.

Heavy.

Final.

Dyer swallowed.

“You think you can control this?”

Elliot glanced toward the tree line.

Even from town, you could feel it now.

That pressure.

That awareness.

“No,” he said honestly.

A faint smile tugged at the corner of his mouth.

“But they can’t control me either.”

Dyer didn’t look relieved.

He looked terrified.

“Then God help us,” he whispered.

Elliot watched him leave.

He didn’t say anything.

Because he knew—

There wasn’t anything left to say.

That night, Elliot walked to the edge of the woods.

Alone.

The trees shifted as he approached.

Not violently.

Not threateningly.

Expectantly.

Like something recognizing its own reflection.

Elliot stopped just short of the line.

“You don’t get to choose anymore,” he said quietly.

The air thickened.

Shapes moved between the trees.

Watching.

Waiting.

The same as always.

But different now.

Because they hesitated.

For the first time—

They hesitated.

Elliot smiled faintly.

“Yeah,” he said.

“That’s what I thought.”

Behind him, the town sat in silence.

Watching.

Always watching.

But now—

They weren’t just watching him.

They were watching the woods.

And for the first time—

They didn’t know which one they should be more afraid of.

Elliot took one step forward.

Not into the trees.

But close enough that the darkness seemed to lean toward him.

Close enough that something inside it leaned back.

A boundary.

A line.

Not broken.

But no longer fixed.

Elliot exhaled slowly.

“Let’s see how this goes,” he murmured.

The woods answered.

Not with words.

But with something deeper.

Something that sounded—

Almost—

Like understanding.

And far behind him—

In houses with locked doors and closed blinds—

People lay awake in their beds.

Listening.

Because now—

When something called their name in the dark—

They didn’t know who it belonged to anymore.

The woods.

Or the man who survived them.

Source: Some or all of the content was generated using an AI language model

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