『Raven's Gate Night Whispers』のカバーアート

Raven's Gate Night Whispers

Raven's Gate Night Whispers

著者: Jamison Walker
無料で聴く

Step beyond the iron gates into a world where the shadows have voices. Raven's Gate Night Whispers is a premium horror anthology podcast featuring original, long-form tales of psychological dread, gothic nightmares, and the unseen terrors that linger in the mind. Each episode is a cinematic journey written by Jamison Walker and designed to be heard in the dark. From unsettling funeral rites to family curses that defy explanation, these are the whispers you weren't meant to hear. Settle in, lock your doors, and listen closely—but remember, some stories are best left in the shadows.

horror podcast, scary stories, creepypasta, horror fiction, supernatural horror, psychological horror, gothic horror, dark fiction, horror anthology, night whispers, ghost stories, haunted horror, thriller podcast, suspense fiction, dark tales, horror storytelling, chilling stories, nightmare fuel, spine tingling, horror short stories

Jamison Walker 2026
戯曲・演劇
エピソード
  • The Voicemail
    2026/06/01

    Nolan James Webb was found in the crosswalk at Burnside and Twentieth at 11:42 PM on a Sunday in November. Hit-and-run. The driver never stopped.

    Audrey's last text to him: "Bring back chips if you remember."

    He didn't bring back chips.

    She's been paying forty-seven dollars a month for three years to keep his phone number active. Not to call him. To hear his voicemail. Two seconds of his voice: "You've reached the voicemail box of Nolan James Webb." Every night, in the dark, phone on the pillow where his head used to be. Her therapist calls it a transitional object. Her sister Diane calls it unhealthy.

    On a Thursday in November, the phone rings instead of going to voicemail. And Nolan answers.

    Groggy. Confused. Like he's waking from deep sleep. He doesn't know where he is. He doesn't know he's dead. His actual phone is in a plastic bag on a shelf in Audrey's closet, battery dead for three years. She's calling his number, not his phone. Something else picked up.

    They fall back into the old pattern. They'd dated long-distance for two years, Portland and Seattle, seven hundred and thirty nights of phone calls before he moved in. Their whole relationship was built on disembodied voice.

    Forty nights. His voice fading a little more each call, like a radio station losing signal. By night twelve, he notices something is wrong. He can't remember anything except the dark and waiting for her to call. No days. No life outside the conversations.

    He asks her on night thirty-two. "What happened to me?"

    She doesn't tell him. She can't. If he knows, the connection might break.

    But he's fading. And so is she. Eight pounds lost. Dark circles. Curtains drawn. Phone on the pillow. Diane finds her in bed at two in the afternoon with nothing in the fridge.

    One of them has to say it. One of them has to hang up.

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    33 分
  • The Seat
    2026/05/28

    Row G, seat 14. Every Tuesday at seven-thirty for eleven years. She sat in 14, Dana sat in 15. The Rialto Theater on Fourth Street, ninety-six seats, single screen. They never missed a week.

    Dana has been dead for two years. She still goes every Tuesday. Still sits in 14. Leaves 15 empty.

    One November Tuesday, a woman is sitting in her seat.

    Small. White-haired. Green cardigan buttoned to the neck. Reading glasses pushed up on her forehead. Eating peanut M&Ms from a box in packaging that was discontinued in the 1990s. She refuses to move.

    Her name is Bette Olsen, from Duluth, Minnesota. She was married twice. First to Walter, thirty-two years, the love of her life. Then to Phil, three years, a mistake. Walter died of a heart attack in 1983. In seat 14 of the Rialto. He and Bette had attended every Tuesday for twenty-six years.

    Bette died of a stroke in her kitchen in 1997. She's been coming back to the Rialto every Tuesday since. Sixteen years alone before the narrator started coming. Thirteen more years of watching from the dark.

    She took the seat on purpose. "I took your seat so you'd have to sit somewhere new. So the pattern would break."

    They watch movies together through the winter and into spring. Bette shares her M&Ms. The narrator shares her grief. And Bette grows fainter week by week, the projector light passing through her shoulder, Walter pulling like a tide from wherever he's been waiting since 1983.

    The last Tuesday is in June. When the credits roll, seat 14 is empty. A box of peanut M&Ms sits on the armrest with one left inside.

    The narrator sits in seat 14 now. She eats peanut M&Ms at every movie. And when a young woman with red eyes sits down alone in seat 16, she offers her the box.

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    29 分
  • The Recipe Box
    2026/05/26

    Helen died in her sleep in February. Frank ate frozen dinners for four months. Lost twenty pounds. Their daughter Beth left groceries on the counter and tried not to say anything, and then said everything, and none of it mattered because Frank couldn't boil water and didn't care to learn.

    In June, looking for a Phillips head screwdriver to fix a loose cabinet hinge, he found the recipe box in the junk drawer.

    Wooden. Craft-fair quality. Eight inches by five by two, with a brass clasp. Inside: dozens of index cards organized with tab dividers cut from cereal box cardboard, labeled in Helen's blue ink. Pot roast, chicken parm, beef stew, meatloaf, Sunday sauce, shrimp scampi, chicken soup.

    Every card had notes in the margins. Not general cooking tips. Instructions written directly to Frank, anticipating his specific mistakes.

    The first attempt was pot roast. He burned it. Set off the smoke detector. The second was chicken soup. Barely edible, but he ate it at the table for the first time since February.

    The third was beef stew on a rainy day, and the kitchen got warm in a way that had nothing to do with the stove. The fluorescent light stopped buzzing. A trace of vanilla and floral perfume drifted through the room. The stew came out perfect despite everything he did wrong.

    It happened every time after that. The oven that runs twenty degrees hot corrected itself. Under-salted food arrived seasoned. A wooden spoon migrated back to its old position in the drawer. And a tuneless humming filled the kitchen from everywhere at once.

    Helen is teaching Frank to feed himself from the other side of wherever she is.

    The last card is in an envelope at the bottom of the box. Scrambled eggs. The simplest recipe. The note underneath says: "You can do this one yourself, Frank. I know you can. I love you. Now eat a real breakfast."

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    27 分
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