The Graveyard Grin
At 2 a.m., Akash finally submitted the project to his overseas client. Thirteen hours of relentless work had left him utterly exhausted, and the looming workload of the next day weighed heavily on his mind. Although he lived in the densely populated city of Delhi, his office was located in a quiet, sparsely populated suburb, which felt even more isolated in the stillness of the early morning.
Akash started his car and began the lonely drive home. The streets were eerily deserted, not a soul or a vehicle in sight. As he navigated through the empty roads, he noticed a familiar figure walking towards his office. It was his neighbor, Angali, an attractive young woman with whom he had exchanged pleasantries a few times. Her face was unmistakable even in the dim streetlights.
He pulled over and rolled down his window. “Angali, what are you doing out here at this hour?” he asked, concerned.
She looked at him with a strange, almost mechanical smile. “My aunt fell sick, and she called me to come to her house. My car broke down a block away, so I started walking.”
Without hesitation, Akash offered her a lift. “Hop in, I’ll take you there.”
Angali accepted gratefully and got into the car. As soon as she settled in the passenger seat, Akash felt a chill run down his spine. Something was off, but he couldn’t quite place it. He asked her for the address.
“Just drive straight,” she replied, her voice devoid of emotion.
Akash obeyed, though his fatigue made it harder to concentrate. After a while, Angali instructed him to turn left. He followed her direction but quickly realized they were heading towards the old, abandoned graveyard. The road ahead was dark and desolate, with no houses or lights in sight.
Suddenly, Akash’s mind flashed with the urban legend that had circulated in Delhi for years: the story of a beautiful girl who asked for a lift in the dead of night, only for her benefactors to be found unconscious or never seen again. His heart pounded in his chest as fear gripped him.
“Angali, are you sure this is the right way?” he asked, his voice trembling.
“Just keep going,” she insisted.
Goosebumps prickled Akash’s skin as he continued driving towards the looming graveyard. Desperate to know if she was real or something else. Terrified to look directly at her face, he nervously glanced down at her feet. His blood ran cold when he saw that they were twisted backward in a grotesque manner.
His heart pounded like a war drum. Terror seized him as he finally dared to look at her face. The once familiar features were distorted, replaced by a mask of darkness. A grotesque, almost inhuman grin split her face. In that horrifying moment, Akash understood. This was no ordinary woman.
The car spun out of control, hurtling towards the graveyard. The last thing Akash saw was the spectral figure of Angali, her laughter echoing in the night, a haunting melody that would forever haunt his dreams.
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