Depraved Town File
I turned to run, but the door was gone. The walls were cobblestones. The cobblestones were teeth. And the rain began to fall—not water, but warm, thick, and red.
That night, I walked the alley behind the old slaughterhouse. The walls were painted with murals of angels weeping blood. A woman in a red dress offered me a drink from a flask. “First one’s free,” she whispered. “Then the town owns you.” I asked about my sister. The woman laughed—a dry, rattling sound. “Honey,” she said, “your sister owns the town now.”
Welcome to Mercy Falls. Population: everyone who ever tried to leave. depraved town
I came back because my sister wrote me a letter. One sentence: “Come find me before the town finds you.” She’d been missing three months. The sheriff—a man with a cigar burn on his hand shaped like a brand—told me she’d run off with a carnival worker. “Happens all the time,” he said, and smiled with too many teeth.
“What happened to you?” I asked.
At the end of the alley, a door opened into a basement. Inside, the air was thick with jazz and incense. There, on a velvet throne, sat my sister. She wore a crown of rusted nails and a smile that didn’t reach her eyes. “You shouldn’t have come,” she said. Behind her, the townsfolk knelt—not in prayer, but in worship of something older than God.
By dusk, the neon signs flickered to life like sores: Lustre Lounge , The Velvet Noose , Eden’s Ashes . Beneath them, the citizens moved in a half-dream—dealers with hollow eyes, saints with dirty collars, children who learned to pick pockets before they learned to pray. The clock tower in the square had stopped at 11:47 twenty years ago. Some said time itself had given up on Mercy Falls. I turned to run, but the door was gone
She tilted her head. “I stopped fighting. The town doesn’t break you, brother. It accepts you. And once you accept it—you never leave.”