The tattoo artist warned him about
the ink.
“It’s old,” she said, rolling up her sleeves to reveal her
own tattooed arms. They curled in black vines up to her shoulders, twisting
around faded symbols. “Handed down through generations. It has a voice.”
But Nathan was adamant. “That’s the idea,” he replied.
He wanted something unique, something to speak secrets into
his skin. A ghostly script, an elegant script—something only he could
understand.
The needle buzzed. The ink bled into his arm. The pain was
sharp but bearable. As she worked, he swore he could hear something beneath the
hum of the machine, a faint murmuring just on the edge of sound.
By the time it was finished, the words curled along his
forearm in an ancient, flowing script. He ran his fingers over them. “What does
it say?”
The artist hesitated. “Only the wearer ever knows.”
That night, Nathan woke up to a voice breathing against his
ear.
“Awake.”
He sat up. The room was still. His phone screen read 3:13
AM. His curtains shifted slightly in a breeze he couldn’t feel.
He rubbed his arm, blinking in the dark. The ink felt warm
under his fingers.
“Nathan.”
The whisper didn’t come from the room. It came from his
skin.
“Someone is in the apartment.”
His ears strained. Silence. Just the soft whirr of the
fridge in the next room.
He almost laughed. It had to be his imagination. Some trick
of the mind. Maybe he’d let the tattooist spook him.
Then the floorboard creaked outside his bedroom door.
Another creak. Closer.
The voice on his arm spoke again.
“Run.”
He did. Out the window, onto the fire escape. His bare feet
hit cold metal as he climbed down into the alley. When he reached the ground,
he turned back.
Through the gap in his curtains, he saw a shape standing in
his bedroom. Motionless. Watching. A man with a knife in his hand.
Nathan hurried away.
The ink of the tattoo pulsed with warmth.
“You’re welcome.”
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