The Teratology Letters

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The Teratology Letters

[OTMES:TI=98|M=(88,80,75)|N=(49,42,25)|K=(0.3,0.5,0.2)|A=135|TL=0.75|STYLE=Dark_Literary_Horror|]

Dr. Clara Reeve should have turned back when the generator died. Should have sat in the dark and waited for the storm to pass. But Clara was a scientist, and scientists didn't believe in omens. They believed in data. And the data said that the specimens in the basement fridge were still viable, even without power. For now.

She took the flashlight and went down the stairs. The basement of Research Station Kilo-Niner was a place most people would have found terrifying. Clara found it fascinating. Row after row of glass jars, each containing something that shouldn't exist. A frog with six legs. A bird with translucent skin. A fish that generated its own light.

The fridge was still cold. Barely. Clara checked her watch. She had maybe four hours before the temperature rose above the threshold. Four hours to figure out what was causing the mutations, or lose three years of research to the Scottish heat.

She was reaching for the first jar when she heard it. A sound from the far end of the basement. Clara froze. The flashlight beam cut through the dark, revealing—nothing. Just empty shelves and shadows.

Then the sound again. Scrape. Pause. Scrape. Something was moving in the dark. Something that didn't belong in a research station in the middle of a storm.

Clara backed away slowly. Her hand found the railing of the stairs. She started to climb. And that was when the power came back on.

The lights flickered, hummed, and then blazed to life. And in that sudden brightness, Clara saw what had been making the sound. It was one of the specimens. The six-legged frog. Only it wasn't a frog anymore. It was something with too many eyes and teeth like needles. And it was looking right at her.

Clara ran. She ran up the stairs, through the laboratory, out into the rain. She didn't stop running until she reached the radio room. She had to call for help. Had to warn someone that the specimens had escaped, that the mutations were accelerating, that the thing in the basement was no longer a frog but something that belonged in a nightmare.

She picked up the microphone. 'Mayday, mayday, this is Station Kilo-Niner—'

Static. Then a voice, breaking through the storm. 'Dr. Reeve. I told you not to open that fridge.'

Clara went cold. She knew that voice. It was Dr. Harland, her former supervisor. The man who had fired her. The man who had called her research 'dangerous nonsense.'

'Harland,' Clara said. 'What have you done?'

'I've done what needed to be done,' Harland's voice came back, distorted and far away. 'Those specimens aren't natural, Clara. They're a warning. And you've let them out.'


[END OTMES:TI=98|STORY=The_Teratology_Letters|VARIANT=V03|]




© 2026 - Authored by Z R ZHANG...

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