Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition-Chapter 930 Story The Hunger Below

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

930: Story 930: The Hunger Below

930: Story 930: The Hunger Below fɾēewebnσveℓ.com

The train’s whistle shrieked again, a sound that clawed at the survivors’ nerves as the Ghoul Train roared through the void.

Draven led the charge down the bloodstained corridor, shoving past decayed passengers that twitched in their seats.

Some stirred, their sunken eyes snapping open, mouths splitting into grotesque grins.

“They’re waking up,” Zara warned, keeping close to Mira.

The air grew thick with rot and whispers, the voices of the damned hissing between the walls.

The wooden panels bulged, shifting as if something beneath them was breathing.

Elias kicked open the next door, revealing a dining car frozen in time.

Chandeliers flickered above, casting a dim glow over long tables covered in rotting food and shattered dishes.

The chairs were occupied—skeletal figures slumped over plates of blackened meat, their jaws locked in endless grins.

Then, the table moved.

A hand—long, skeletal, and too many fingers—slithered from beneath the cloth.

Another emerged.

And another.

Dozens of hands, clawing at the table’s surface.

“What the hell is that?” Mira whispered.

The cloth was suddenly ripped away, revealing a horrific mass of bodies, fused together into a writhing, twisted creature.

Dozens of faces, mouths gaping, eyes rolling wildly, all speaking in a chorus of distant screams.

“Join us,” the voices wept.

“Feed with us.”

The thing lunged.

Draven fired his shotgun, the blast shredding through layers of decayed flesh, but the monster barely faltered.

Its limbs stretched, reaching for him.

Zara slashed her dagger, severing a grasping arm, but another took its place.

Elias tossed a Molotov, the glass shattering against the mass, flames igniting the writhing horror.

It shrieked, pulling away, its many mouths gnashing and howling as it burned.

“We need to keep moving!” Mira shouted, clutching the Cursed Book.

They burst into the next car, slamming the door behind them.

This car was different—the walls pulsed with something alive, the floorboards slick with black bile.

The train shuddered, a deep growl echoing through the walls.

Elias wiped sweat from his brow.

“We’re walking straight into something worse, aren’t we?”

Before Mira could answer, the lights flickered out.

Then, the ceiling peeled open, revealing rows of jagged teeth.

Something ancient was waking.

And it was hungry.