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The Person I Buried Came Back to My Door Tonight

Some goodbyes never stay buried — especially when the past decides to knock

By Muhammad ReyazPublished 3 months ago 3 min read

I wasn’t expecting anyone that late. It was nearly midnight, the kind of hour when even the street dogs stop barking, when the whole world feels like it’s holding its breath. I was sitting alone in my living room, the lamp flickering for the third time that night, when I heard it:
three slow knocks on the front door.

I froze.

Not because someone was knocking—people knock all the time.
But because of the way they knocked.

That slow rhythm.

That quiet insistence.

That exact pattern I knew by heart.

Knock… knock… knock.

The same one my brother always used when he came home late, so he wouldn’t wake our parents. The same knock I hadn’t heard in four years.

The same brother I had buried with my own two hands.

My breath caught in my throat.

For a moment, I convinced myself it was my imagination. Or a coincidence. Or maybe I had finally lost my mind from all the nights I spent thinking about him.

But the knocks came again, firmer this time, as if whoever was outside knew I was standing right behind the door.

My fingers trembled as I reached for the handle.
My heart was beating hard enough to bruise my ribs.

When I opened the door, the world tilted.

He was standing there.

My brother.
Same height. Same tired eyes. Same mole on his left cheek.

Same face I had seen in the coffin.

He didn’t look like a ghost.
He didn’t look like a hallucination.
He looked real—too real.

He was wearing the clothes we buried him in.

And they weren’t dirty.

They weren’t torn.

They weren’t decayed.

They were… new.

Like he had just bought them yesterday.

He smiled, but it wasn't the smile I remembered.
It was softer, thinner, stretched at the edges as if it took effort.

“Hey,” he said. “Can I come in?”

His voice.
It hit me like a punch.

I didn’t answer. Couldn’t answer. The door hung open, and cold air rushed past us into the house.

He took a step forward, but I instinctively stepped back.

“You look like you’ve seen a ghost,” he joked.

I wanted to speak—I really did. But my tongue felt heavy, like it was glued to the roof of my mouth. My brother… my dead brother… just stood there waiting.

Finally, I managed to whisper, “You’re not real.”

His smile dropped in an instant.

“Do I look unreal to you?” he asked quietly.

He lifted his hand.
His fingers brushed my cheek.

Warm.
Solid.
Alive.

Every part of me wanted to collapse.

I staggered back, gripping the wall. “I buried you. I saw you. I… I saw you die.”

He lowered his hand. “I know. And I’m sorry you had to go through that.”

The way he said it—calm, gentle, almost rehearsed—made something twist painfully inside me.

I stared at him, my mind racing. “If this is some kind of sick joke—”

“It’s not a joke,” he said. “But I can’t explain everything right now. I don’t have much time.”

Those words hit harder than anything else.

“Time for what?” I asked.

He looked past me, into the house, like he was searching for something. Or maybe remembering something.

“Time before they realize I’m gone.”

Every hair on my body stood up.

“Who?” I whispered.

He didn’t answer immediately. Instead, he stepped inside and closed the door behind him. The lock clicked softly.

Then he faced me again. His expression was no longer warm. No longer familiar.

It was scared.

Terrified, even.

“Listen,” he said. “You need to understand something. I’m not supposed to be here. They don’t like it when people come back.”

“Who are they?” I asked again, louder this time.

His eyes shifted to the window. “They’re the ones who took us.”

Us.

A cold shiver crawled up my spine.

My brother wasn’t just talking about himself.

He was talking about everyone we had buried. Everyone who had vanished. Everyone who had died under “unexplained circumstances.”

“You died in an accident,” I said, my voice shaking.

“That’s what they made you think,” he replied.

My stomach twisted violently. “What are you saying?”

“I’m saying I didn’t die,” he said. “Not the way you think. And I’m not the only one. We were taken—tested—studied. And now… now they want us back.”

A hard knock shook the door.

Then another.

And another.

But this time, it wasn’t gentle.
It wasn’t familiar.

It was angry.

My brother grabbed my arm. “They followed me. You have to choose. Do you trust me… or do you open that door?”

The pounding grew louder, rattling the frame. The lights flickered. The air felt charged, electric, wrong.

“They’ll break it down,” my brother whispered.

Outside, a voice hissed my name. Not spoken. Not shouted.

Whispered.

Inside my mind.

My brother squeezed my arm tighter. “Choose, now.”

My heart thrashed painfully. My breath came in sharp, shallow bursts.

He was dead.

But he was here.

But something else was out there.

And I—

I reached for the lock.

HorrorthrillerShort Story

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