Closet Monster [2026 Edition]
Felix’s patchy wings buzzed once, twice. “I’ll learn. Maybe I’ll scare a few nightmares of my own.” He glanced back, amber eyes soft. “Hey, kid. The stuff you’re hiding? It doesn’t have to live in a closet forever.”
Felix’s ears flattened. “That’s the problem. I’ve been in this closet for twelve years. Twelve years, and not a single nightmare. Not one good scream. I’ve tried everything—scratching, whispering, making the hangers clink—but the kid who used to live here outgrew me. And your mom just stores shoes.”
“Who’s there?”
Some monsters, he realized, aren’t the things you run from. Some are the things you finally let out.
Connor nodded. “Will you be okay?”
Connor laughed despite himself. “So why are you still here?”
Connor froze. The voice was small and dry, like dead leaves skittering across pavement. Closet Monster
Connor found the mask on a Tuesday, tucked behind his mother’s winter coats in the hall closet. It was smooth, white porcelain, featureless except for two small eyeholes and a faint, smudged smile that looked like it had been painted on by a child. He held it up, and the weight of it surprised him—heavier than plastic, colder than the dark around him.