u/Either-Inspector-370

WE WERE ALL WRONG (Existential Horror Story(

WE
WERE
ALL
WRONG

It took seven days. Nothing could explain what happened to us.

The sky did not change all at once.

At first, it was subtle enough to argue about. Sunsets became deeper. Reds lingered too long across the horizon, staining the clouds in violent ribbons.

Scientists flooded every platform they could still access with explanations, contradictions, frantic equations, and trembling reassurances. Dust in the atmosphere. Solar instability. Optical distortion. Instrument failure.

Then, gravity changed.

Not enough to sweep you into the sky... Not yet.

Just enough for everyone to notice. Coffee poured strangely. Steps felt wrong. Cars seemed lighter over bumps. Birds struggled against air currents that no longer behaved properly.

By the third day, satellites had failed, undersea cables were severed by inexplicable gravitational change, and we lost the ability to speak across the world about our doom.

The oceans had begun pulling strangely against the coasts, tides crashing with no rhythm humanity understood. Communication towers collapsed into silence one after another as electrical systems failed beneath stresses never meant to exist.

Even when they could speak, our world leaders had nothing to say.

On the cusp of the fourth day, we had seen night for the last time.

After sunset, the horizon did not fade. Furious red streams of light curled upward from every direction, painting the world in a dim crimson glow that never fully disappeared. We all knew, without speaking, that we were getting closer to this violent, angry star.

Morning came, night never truly returned. No one slept anymore. None of it mattered anymore.

Everyone already knew.

The sun had darkened from gold to amber, from amber to crimson. We could look directly at it now without the sting of previous blinding light. It hung in the sky swollen and hateful, larger each morning. People stopped everything to stand and stare. They asked themselves: Why?

Strangely, there was very little violence.

No great upheavals of government. No nuclear fire. No violent warlords trying to take advantage of an already violent end. What was the point? Humanity stood together at the edge of extinction beneath a bleeding sky, and all the little things that once divided us suddenly looked microscopic against eternity.

Some of us knelt at every altar and sobbed. This was not the end that was promised to us... were we all wrong?

Families drove across entire states to sit together in silence. Old, bitter rivals met one another with shaking voices just to say they were sorry. Men who had not cried in decades collapsed into their mothers' arms like children. Scientists continued trying until the very end. The poor children.. they couldn't begin to understand what was about to happen.

None of them found an answer.

On the fifth day, Yellowstone suddenly heaved and the air itself burned away as the massive volcano erupted.

We should have known it wasn't going to happen like we expected. The earth split open across hundreds of miles. Entire forests vanished beneath waves of fire and pulverized stone. Ash clouds climbed into the atmosphere in rolling towers darker than thunderheads.

Yet, the strangest part was not the eruption itself. It was what happened after.

Millions stood watching beneath the broken sky as lava burst upward from this golden red wound... and kept going. The molten rock arced into the sky like glowing rivers torn free from Earth itself. Gravity no longer held it properly. Fire streamed upward in beautiful impossible ribbons, twisting into the atmosphere and beyond until it looked filled with burning veins stretching towards infinity.

Though thousands of miles away, we stood in silence watching the horizon glow orange against the blood-colored sky. No one spoke. Some fell to their knees. Others simply stared.

By the sixth day, we weighed almost nothing. Walking became difficult. A strong gust could lift a child from the ground if someone was not holding onto them. The atmosphere itself felt thinner. Breathing carried a strange sharpness that made lungs ache.

The moon drifted visibly across the sky one last time Too close. Far too close. We watched as it was inevitably pulled away from us, past the planet. We watched as it drifted off towards that angry, oscillating orb.

And then, the sun no longer looked like a sun. It resembled an eye. A vast red iris staring down upon us. Some wailed in terror. Others looked away and closed their eyes, hoping they would wake up from this terrible nightmare.

On the final day, Sarah sat wrapped in blankets beside her husband on the roof of their home. There was nowhere else left to go. Cities across the world had descended into chaos. Not from violence, but from collapse. Buildings shifted and began to crack at their foundation. Roads cracked apart like angry dark fissures. Fires burned unattended. Yet, beneath it all, there remained a terrible quiet.

Humanity thought they could exhaust themselves from fear. We weren't right about that, either.

The wind barely touched them now. The air itself seemed to be loosening from the planet. Sarah cried openly, her fingers dug tightly into her husband's shirt as though she could anchor both of them to the Earth by her love alone.

Beside her, he stared upward in silence. He looked calm. Not peaceful. Never peaceful. Just resigned. As though some hidden part of him had always suspected their universe would end this way. His jaw remained tight, his dark eyes hollow and opaque against the crimson light.

Outwardly, he had abandoned spirituality years ago. He accepted he couldn't know the unknown, and leaned on scientific theory to quiet that dark part of his mind. Reason became his answer to everything. Observable truths. Tangible laws. Measurable reality.

But now reality itself and everything he knew had broken.

And in the final moments, all the things he had buried came crawling back. Every cruelty. Every betrayal. Every moment he should have been kinder and chose not to be. The memories came fast near the end. Too fast.

Sarah pressed herself against him harder as the ground beneath the house began to shift. Above them the red sun pulsed unnaturally, dimming and brightening like a dying heart.

He realized this was the end foretold by all of humanity. We were right.

Then, suddenly, he sucked in a breath of thin air.

A broken sound escaped him.. the first true crack in the armor she had known for years.

His face collapsed into grief. Not fear for himself. Grief for her. He wrapped trembling arms around Sarah and buried his face against her shoulder as sobs finally overtook him.

“I'm sorry,” he whispered weakly. “My love... I'm sorry for everything.”

Sarah shook her head violently through tears, but he kept speaking.

“I hope we see each other again.”

She wanted to answer him. She wanted to say something comforting. Something certain. They had found each other and Sarah had never believed in souls or heaven or eternity. She believed in matter. Physics. The cold certainty of science. And, of course, deep, enduring love for the people close to her.

Science, reason, spirituality, religion, all just seemed wrong now. We were fools to think we were our own masters.

Then the sun vanished.

Not exploded. Not collapsed.

Vanished.

Light disappeared instantly as the star, within a single instant, went black. A perfect sphere of darkness replaced it, surrounded by warped halos of bent starlight that twisted the heavens into impossible shapes. For one frozen heartbeat, humanity stared upward together in absolute disbelief.

Then, we were lifted gently from our feet.

The atmosphere tore from Earth in vast streaming waves, roaring upward into the void. Oceans lifted from their shores. Mountains began to groan beneath stresses they were never meant to endure. The planet itself began to rise toward the terrible black eye hanging in the sky.

We looked down and saw the world come apart beneath us. We looked upon our loved ones we still held close. With our atmosphere gone, we looked about ourselves, unable to speak.

We were still afraid, but it somehow wasn't a terrible disquiet.

Sarah clung to him, sobbing uncontrollably at first. She expected agony. Expected her lungs to rupture and her flesh to boil beneath forces beyond comprehension.

Instead, there was only weightlessness.

Silence.

The Earth unraveled around them as continents split into glowing rivers of magma and stone, all of it spiraling toward the massive thing now above us. The only light with which we could see was from the desiccating planet itself. Around the black hole formed from our sun, reality itself bent into a soft red and yellow color and distorted ribbons of light. Stars stretched across the void like painted brushstrokes smeared across glass.

Then they crossed the event horizon. An absurd thought about spaghettification crossed her mind.. which startled her as she suddenly realized she was not dead.

Nothing happened.

No tearing flesh. No fire. No screaming torment.

Only light.

The darkness opened around them not as a void, but as something vast beyond understanding. Colors Sarah had no words for unfolded in geometric patterns that stretched infinitely in every direction, shifting like a living kaleidoscope across the fabric of existence itself.

Time no longer felt real. Neither did fear.

Beside her, her husband wept quietly, not from terror, but from awe.

Sarah stared forward, her entire understanding of the universe collapsing into something far larger than science, faith, or human language could ever contain.

At the very end, a single tear rolled down her cheek as she gazed upon the most beautiful thing she had ever seen.

reddit.com
u/Either-Inspector-370 — 9 hours ago
▲ 32 r/Dreading+1 crossposts

WE WERE ALL WRONG

WE
WERE
ALL
WRONG

It took seven days. Nothing could explain what happened to us.

The sky did not change all at once.

At first, it was subtle enough to argue about. Sunsets became deeper. Reds lingered too long across the horizon, staining the clouds in violent ribbons.

Scientists flooded every platform they could still access with explanations, contradictions, frantic equations, and trembling reassurances. Dust in the atmosphere. Solar instability. Optical distortion. Instrument failure.

Then, gravity changed.

Not enough to sweep you into the sky... Not yet.

Just enough for everyone to notice. Coffee poured strangely. Steps felt wrong. Cars seemed lighter over bumps. Birds struggled against air currents that no longer behaved properly.

By the third day, satellites had failed, undersea cables were severed by inexplicable gravitational change, and we lost the ability to speak across the world about our doom.

The oceans had begun pulling strangely against the coasts, tides crashing with no rhythm humanity understood. Communication towers collapsed into silence one after another as electrical systems failed beneath stresses never meant to exist.

Even when they could speak, our world leaders had nothing to say.

On the cusp of the fourth day, we had seen night for the last time.

After sunset, the horizon did not fade. Furious red streams of light curled upward from every direction, painting the world in a dim crimson glow that never fully disappeared. We all knew, without speaking, that we were getting closer to this violent, angry star.

Morning came, night never truly returned. No one slept anymore. But none of it mattered anymore...

Everyone already knew.

The sun had darkened from gold to amber, from amber to crimson. We could look directly at it now without the sting of previous blinding light. It hung in the sky swollen and hateful, larger each morning. People stopped everything to stand and stare. They asked themselves: Why?

Strangely, there was very little violence.

No great upheavals of government. No nuclear fire. No violent warlords trying to take advantage of an already violent end. What was the point? Humanity stood together at the edge of extinction beneath a bleeding sky, and all the little things that once divided us suddenly looked microscopic against eternity.

Some of us knelt at every altar and sobbed. This was not the end that was promised to us... were we all wrong?

Families drove across entire states to sit together in silence. Old, bitter rivals met one another with shaking voices just to say they were sorry. Men who had not cried in decades collapsed into their mothers' arms like children. Scientists continued trying until the very end. The poor children.. they couldn't begin to understand what was about to happen.

None of them found an answer.

On the fifth day, Yellowstone suddenly heaved and the air itself burned away as the massive volcano erupted.

We should have known it wasn't going to happen like we expected. The earth split open across hundreds of miles. Entire forests vanished beneath waves of fire and pulverized stone. Ash clouds climbed into the atmosphere in rolling towers darker than thunderheads.

Yet, the strangest part was not the eruption itself. It was what happened after.

Millions stood watching beneath the broken sky as lava burst upward from this golden red wound... and kept going. The molten rock arced into the sky like glowing rivers torn free from Earth itself. Gravity no longer held it properly. Fire streamed upward in beautiful impossible ribbons, twisting into the atmosphere and beyond until it looked filled with burning veins stretching towards infinity.

Though thousands of miles away, we stood in silence watching the horizon glow orange against the blood-colored sky. No one spoke. Some fell to their knees. Others simply stared.

By the sixth day, we weighed almost nothing. Walking became difficult. A strong gust could lift a child from the ground if someone was not holding onto them. The atmosphere itself felt thinner. Breathing carried a strange sharpness that made lungs ache.

The moon drifted visibly across the sky one last time Too close. Far too close. We watched as it was inevitably pulled away from us, past the planet. We watched as it drifted off towards that angry, oscillating orb.

And then, the sun no longer looked like a sun. It resembled an eye. A vast red iris staring down upon us. Some wailed in terror. Others looked away and closed their eyes, hoping they would wake up from this terrible nightmare.

On the final day, Sarah sat wrapped in blankets beside her husband on the roof of their home. There was nowhere else left to go. Cities across the world had descended into chaos. Not from violence, but from collapse. Buildings shifted and began to crack at their foundation. Roads cracked apart like angry dark fissures. Fires burned unattended. Yet, beneath it all, there remained a terrible quiet.

Humanity thought they could exhaust themselves from fear. We weren't right about that, either.

The wind barely touched them now. The air itself seemed to be loosening from the planet. Sarah cried openly, her fingers dug tightly into her husband's shirt as though she could anchor both of them to the Earth by her love alone.

Beside her, he stared upward in silence. He looked calm. Not peaceful. Never peaceful. Just resigned. As though some hidden part of him had always suspected their universe would end this way. His jaw remained tight, his dark eyes hollow and opaque against the crimson light.

Outwardly, he had abandoned spirituality years ago. He accepted he couldn't know the unknown, and leaned on scientific theory to quiet that dark part of his mind. Reason become his answer to everything. Observable truths. Tangible laws. Measurable reality.

But now reality itself and everything he knew had broken.

And in the final moments, all the things he had buried came crawling back. Every cruelty. Every betrayal. Every moment he should have been kinder and chose not to be. The memories came fast near the end. Too fast.

Sarah pressed herself against him harder as the ground beneath the house began to shift. Above them the red sun pulsed unnaturally, dimming and brightening like a dying heart.

He realized this was the end foretold by all of humanity. We were right.

Then, suddenly, he sucked in a breath of thin air.

A broken sound escaped him.. the first true crack in the armor she had known for years.

His face collapsed into grief. Not fear for himself. Grief for her. He wrapped trembling arms around Sarah and buried his face against her shoulder as sobs finally overtook him.

“I'm sorry,” he whispered weakly. “My love... I'm sorry for everything.”

Sarah shook her head violently through tears, but he kept speaking.

“I hope we see each other again.”

She wanted to answer him. She wanted to say something comforting. Something certain. They had found each other and Sarah had never believed in souls or heaven or eternity. She believed in matter. Physics. The cold certainty of science. And, of course, deep, enduring love for the people close to her.

Science, reason, spirituality, religion, all just seemed wrong now. We were fools to think we were our own masters.

Then the sun vanished.

Not exploded. Not collapsed.

Vanished.

Light disappeared instantly as the star, within a single instant, went black. A perfect sphere of darkness replaced it, surrounded by warped halos of bent starlight that twisted the heavens into impossible shapes. For one frozen heartbeat, humanity stared upward together in absolute disbelief.

Then, we were lifted gently from our feet.

The atmosphere tore from Earth in vast streaming waves, roaring upward into the void. Oceans lifted from their shores. Mountains began to groan beneath stresses they were never meant to endure. The planet itself began to rise toward the terrible black eye hanging in the sky.

We looked down and saw the world come apart beneath us. We looked upon our loved ones we still held close. With our atmosphere gone, we looked about ourselves, unable to speak.

We were still afraid, but it somehow wasn't a terrible disquiet.

Sarah clung to him, sobbing uncontrollably at first. She expected agony. Expected her lungs to rupture and her flesh to boil beneath forces beyond comprehension.

Instead, there was only weightlessness.

Silence.

The Earth unraveled around them as continents split into glowing rivers of magma and stone, all of it spiraling toward the massive thing now above us. The only light with which we could see was from the desiccating planet itself. Around the black hole formed from our sun, reality itself bent into a soft red and yellow color and distorted ribbons of light. Stars stretched across the void like painted brushstrokes smeared across glass.

Then they crossed the event horizon. An absurd thought about spaghettification crossed her mind.. which startled her as she suddenly realized she was not dead.

Nothing happened.

No tearing flesh. No fire. No screaming torment.

Only light.

The darkness opened around them not as a void, but as something vast beyond understanding. Colors Sarah had no words for unfolded in geometric patterns that stretched infinitely in every direction, shifting like a living kaleidoscope across the fabric of existence itself.

Time no longer felt real. Neither did fear.

Beside her, her husband wept quietly, not from terror, but from awe.

Sarah stared forward, her entire understanding of the universe collapsing into something far larger than science, faith, or human language could ever contain.

At the very end, a single tear rolled down her cheek as she gazed upon the most beautiful thing she had ever seen.

reddit.com
u/Either-Inspector-370 — 12 hours ago