Cara In Creekmaw -halloween 2024- By Ariaspoaa -

From its pocket came a small mirror, rimed with frost. In its glass, Cara saw Creekmaw as it truly was: drowned church steeples, lanterns floating on black water, children waving from beneath the soil.

Cara stopped at the crossroads where the old sycamore split toward heaven and underworld both. Someone had left a wreath of dried marigolds and black feathers at its roots. She didn’t touch it. She knew better.

Here’s a short atmospheric piece inspired by : Cara in Creekmaw – Halloween 2024

“You came,” whispered a voice like wind through bones. Cara in Creekmaw -Halloween 2024- By Ariaspoaa

And somewhere, Ariaspoaa drew the first line of what would become the year’s most haunting image.

She didn’t scream. She never did.

“Every year,” Cara replied. “What do you want this time?” From its pocket came a small mirror, rimed with frost

Creekmaw had always been the kind of town that forgot itself between autumns, but tonight, the forgotten things remembered her . A child’s laugh echoed from the cemetery gate. No child had lived on that road for thirty years.

The doppelgänger smiled. “Not want. Remember. Someone has to.”

Instead, she took the mirror, shattered it against the sycamore, and whispered the town’s oldest prayer: “Let the dead walk one night, but let the living leave by dawn.” Someone had left a wreath of dried marigolds

This Halloween felt different. Heavier.

The fog rolled into Creekmaw just after sunset, thick as old linen and twice as cold. Cara pulled her cloak tighter, boots squelching on the rain-softened path. Lanterns flickered from crooked porch posts—carved pumpkins grinning with secrets rather than light.

Cara walked home alone, past darkened windows and grinning pumpkins. Behind her, Creekmaw breathed—just for Halloween.

The fog ate her words. The doppelgänger nodded once and crumbled into dry leaves.