Chapter 26: Phobia
This novel is translated and hosted on bcatranslation
The temperature inside the building dropped suddenly, but facing the unknown fear, the new investigators were not too terrified.
They strictly followed the internal rules of the bureau and assembled various equipment from their backpacks as quickly as possible.
These devices all had corresponding numbers. The investigation bureau was continuously trying to combat abnormal events with various means, and the equipment brought by the newcomers was their “weapon.”
“Is this thing useful?” Gao Ming asked curiously.
“Ninety-nine percent of the time it’s not, but as long as there’s a one percent hope, we’ll keep trying until we find something that can affect the unknown,” the burly driver clenched his fist. “It’s because of the ability to use tools that humans became humans.”
“Communication was disrupted when we opened the door of room 405. That child and his parents once lived in this room,” Bai Qiao picked up a flashlight and headed towards room 405.
Without weapons to counter the horror or any effective protective measures, Bai Qiao, knowing the danger, still headed towards room 405.The initial posting of this chapter occurred via N0v3l.B11n.
“I’ll do it,” Gao Ming stepped forward first: “You are the core of the team, let me handle the exploration.”
The tiny chains on his wrist, stimulated by the shadows and resembling moving tattoos, appeared on Gao Ming’s wrist. He extended his left hand and gently pushed open the door of room 405.
The ninety-square-meter rental house was filled with a strange smell. Five huge black plastic bags were piled up by the living room door, containing some yellowed bedding and children’s clothes.
“Be careful,” Bai Qiao raised her flashlight to light the way for Gao Ming.
It seemed like a struggle had occurred in the living room. The dining table was overturned, chairs were lying on the ground, and there were solidified food scraps and broken porcelain bowl shards on the cement floor.
“It wasn’t just one-sided domestic violence. Both parties in the fight had lost their minds,” Gao Ming found a small piece of scalp with short hair in the corner of the wall, belonging to a man: “The situation is worse than I imagined.”
Touching the wall, Gao Ming felt the mold on it. He looked around; even with the doors and windows shut, the room was very damp. The wardrobe, under the sofa, behind the TV, all were covered in large patches of mold.
“If I rented a room like this, I would feel bad too,” the burly driver divided the newcomers into three teams: one followed Gao Ming into the room, one stayed at the door, and one was responsible for backup support.
Pressing his fingers over every inch of the rag doll, Gao Ming felt nothing strange inside. He then opened the box of crayons. The lid had a sentence written on it in crooked letters – “I wish I could hide in a place no one can find.”
“It seems the abnormal event helped the child’s wish come true,” Gao Ming thought of his own birthday wish. He suddenly felt that the abnormal event was very eager, seizing human vulnerabilities and desperately trying to fill them, but in a bloody and terrifying way.
After a basic inspection of room 405, the newcomers following Gao Ming took out their equipment to collect items from the room, even the mold on the walls.
“Be careful, we might be involved in more than a first-level abnormal event,” Gao Ming whispered, then sat on the child’s bed, deep in thought.
He had played a game about finding a lost child called “Hide and Seek,” where seven ghosts and a child play. Finding the real child meant clearing the game. But that game didn’t correspond to this abnormal event, which brought shadows to the child not from ghosts but from his parents.
“The parents often had conflicts and fought, sometimes even venting their anger on the child. Living in such a family, the child would inevitably develop various psychological problems.”
Gao Ming had encountered similar cases when doing psychological counseling in a high-security prison. Some offenders had often suffered rough treatment from their parents since childhood.
“In such a family atmosphere, the child’s personality could go to two extremes: either extremely timid and weak, or abnormally irritable and excessive. Judging from the scene, the child of room 405 was likely the former.”
Everyone likes obedient children, but there are different types of obedience. If a child is always forced to appear well-behaved, their inner world gradually becomes twisted.
The most direct expression is timidity, fear of making mistakes in everything because they are worried about angering others, so they want to hide themselves.
Looking at the “quilt wall” around the bed, Gao Ming curled up his body, trying to lie on the child’s bed.
“The parents were in the living room, throwing and smashing things, beating each other, full of foul language. The child couldn’t get protection from either parent and had to always be careful not to become their venting tool.”
“In this situation, the most likely emotion to arise is fear.”
Gao Ming thought of the graffiti on the stairwell wall. When the figures representing the parents started arguing, many red figures would crawl out of them, disassembling their body parts, all running towards the child.
“Maybe those red figures were the child’s way of expressing fear,” Gao Ming gradually recalled another game, a more ominous one called “Phobia.”
There were no specific ghosts in it, nor overly bloody scenes, but its destructiveness and threat were even greater than the typical ghost story!
The content of the game was simple. One day “Phobia” suddenly erupted, spreading and infecting the entire city, plunging everyone into fear.