The Box

“Vengeance? You’re kidding,” Ashish replied, bursting into laughter. “How cliché!”  Srinidhi’s mood quickly darkened. “And what if this isn’t some movie script? What if it is a real curse? We should get rid of it.” 

The Box

Srinidhi Ranganathan had always considered himself a skeptic. An astute marketing strategist with a rapid-fire wit, he thrived off statistics, logic, and reason. Yet, when the envelope appeared on his desk that fateful Tuesday morning, he felt an unsettling shift in the air. The box, unassuming in its shape—a dull brown rectangle with no return address—prompted a lingering dread in his chest, exacerbated by furrowed brows and whispering voices echoing in the back of his mind. 

"Hey, Srini, you’re not going to open that thing, are you?" chimed in Ashish, his sarcastic colleague with a mop of unruly hair and a penchant for horror movies. "What if it’s a cursed relic? Or worse—a failed marketing campaign?!"

"You mean like those weird cat videos that keep popping up on your feed?" Srinidhi shot back, a slight smile creeping up despite the ominous weight of the package. 

"Touché," Ashish retorted, spinning in his office chair. "But you know how I feel about horror—open that box, and you might release some vengeful spirit ready to ruin your marketing career."

Srinidhi rolled his eyes but kept his gaze focused on the box, which suddenly felt like a Pandora's box—tempting yet treacherous. 

It had arrived so abruptly that he hadn't even had time to think about its implications. Had he been expecting anything? During the last quarter, his office had received bizarre gifts before—outlandish promotional items to generate buzz—but nothing like this. This was different. The dull surface seemed too plain, too ordinary, as if trying to conceal its sinister intentions. 

"Heck, it’s just a box, right?" Srinidhi responded, trying to dismiss the chilling aura surrounding it. With a quick flick of his wrist, he adorned the box with a knife from his desk—his trusty multi-tool. He slid the blade beneath the packing tape, and with each small cut, a sense of excitement rivaled the dread within him.

As he peeled open the box, the cardboard hissed softly like an uncoiling snake, revealing its contents—an antique-looking mirror housed in a bed of dark velvet. The mirror was framed in twisted vines, and a sense of the macabre enveloped it, even from a distance. Srinidhi's heart raced; this was no ordinary gift. 

The surface of the mirror was dust-streaked, casting shadows that seemed alive, whispering secrets beyond the veil of logic. He gently lifted it, its weight surprisingly heavy. Ashish leaned over Srinidhi’s shoulder, his curiosity piqued. 

“Man, that’s… weird,” Ashish muttered, eyes wide. “Looks like something from a scary movie. You’re sure you want to keep that?”

“Sure, but let’s take a closer look,” Srinidhi took his chance.

With every angle he examined, the mirror appeared more menacing. The surface rippled like a stormy sea, almost beckoning him closer, pulling him into its depths. He shunted the dark thoughts away. Marketing campaigns didn’t thrive on fear; they thrived on trust and connection.

While Srinidhi examined the mirror, Ananya, their fierce and efficient project manager, enveloped the scene with her presence. “What did I miss? Did Ashish pass out from fright yet?”

“Better than that,” Ashish quipped, “Srini just opened the most cursed box we’ve ever seen.”

Ananya’s brow knitted in concentration as she stepped closer. “You really think it’s cursed? You of all people should know that such tales are just exaggerations!”

“True, there’s probably a logical explanation for it,” Srinidhi began, but his words faltered, held back by the mirror’s unsettling glances that danced within its depths. 

Ananya peered into the mirror, attempting to pierce through ignorance. “I don’t see anything except my reflection.” 

“No, look deeper,” Srinidhi urged, both scared and captivated. “It feels like it’s… staring back.” 

Their shared gazes trailed into the mirror, and for an instant, it reflected an opulent yet grotesque ballroom filled with ghostly silhouettes swirling across the surface. Ananya gasped, jolting back. “What the hell was that?”

“Just tricks of light. I’ve seen them plenty of times; it’s called perception,” Srinidhi reasoned, although the root of uncertainty dug deeper inside him. 

“That’s not just perception, man. Something feels wrong,” Ashish insisted, his tone shifting from jest to concern. “Where did this box even come from?”

Srinidhi ignored them, drawn closer to the mirror once more. As he leaned in, a chill cut through the air. In that moment, a whisper—barely audible but sickeningly clear—slithered through his mind: “Finish me.” 

Nearly trembling, he recoiled, clenching the sides of the box. Heart hammering, he shot a distracted gaze towards his colleagues. “Okay, this is getting too weird. Maybe we should just call it a day?”

“No way, man! I want to know more!” Ashish declared. 

This unexpected enthusiasm from his colleague was both alarming and enthralling—someone willing to brave the mystery while Srinidhi sat paralyzed like a deer caught in headlights. 

“Let’s… Let’s do a background check,” Ananya suggested, fingering her phone. “Maybe there’s an online record of this mirror or something bizarre attached to it?”

As they scoured the internet, the atmosphere brimmed with anxiety. Srinidhi, meanwhile, couldn’t shake off the whispers swirling within his mind. “Finish me!” The shadowed reflections in the mirror began to mingle with visions of tendrils creeping forth, calling him into their depths. 

After a tense hour, Ananya slammed her phone onto the desk, a look of cringing disbelief painted on her face. “You won’t believe this, but there’s a legend associated with mirrors that look just like this,” she said, hastily reading from her screen. “An artifact stolen from an ancient temple said to be a prison for spirits seeking vengeance.”

“Vengeance? You’re kidding,” Ashish replied, bursting into laughter. “How cliché!” 

Srinidhi’s mood quickly darkened. “And what if this isn’t some movie script? What if it is a real curse? We should get rid of it.” 

“Dispose of it? A perfectly good antique?!” Ashish shot back. “What about marketing? This could skyrocket our public image! ‘Mysterious mirror haunts marketing genius’—that’s gold!”

“No, Ashish, you’re not getting it—this isn’t a publicity stunt!” Ananya interjected, her voice now strained.

Srinidhi felt the support slowly wafting from his inferiors. They were consumed by curiosity, and as he looked towards the mirror one final time, its allure took root. “Fine. We’ll keep it for now,” he conceded, unwilling to crush their enthusiasm. “But I'm keeping the lid on it, and I’ll seal the box until we find out more.”

As days passed, strange occurrences began to plague the office. The whispers transformed into haunting echoes—the office lights flickered when Srinidhi was away, papers scattered as though restless spirits roamed, and ghostly shadows seemed to dance unbidden beyond the monotony of work.

When Ashish suggested they have a paranormal investigator take a look, Srinidhi hesitated for a moment, picturing himself in a horror film—an unsuspecting protagonist stocking up on ill-fated supplies, inching ever closer to doom.

After a rigorous debate on the ridiculousness of summoning an expert, they decided, against Srinidhi’s better judgment, to invite someone. That evening, a plume of tension filled the room when a woman named Kiran arrived. Dark with intensity and dressed in impenetrable black robes, she appeared more specter than sage. 

“So, you all think you’ve unlocked a mystery?” Kiran spoke, peering through lashes that glinted like silver threads. “Or have you unwittingly released something insidious?”

As she approached the mirror, the air thickened, and Srinidhi’s stomach coiled. 

With a calculated grace, Kiran made her way toward the reflective surface. Ashish gawked while Ananya looked torn between awe and dread. “What do you see?” Ananya inquired, her voice barely a whisper. 

Kiran’s hand reached toward the mirror’s surface, fingers brushing lightly against the gleaming frame. “A fragment of darkness... trapped. It seeks connection…”

Srinidhi could perceive Kiran’s breath quickening, seeing the mirror glint with a strange herald of energy. “We need to destroy it,” he implored hastily, desperate to sever ties with this malevolence. 

Kiran raised a hand, freezing everyone in place. “Do you understand what you are severing? If you destroy this mirror, the darkness could unleash into the physical realm—”

“Then what do we do?” Ashish interrupted. “Just let it live here like a pet? It’s already turning our lives upside down!” 

In that moment, the whispers grew louder, spiraling into a cacophony of anguished voices. The air flickered with static charges, prompting Kiran to shout an incantation, the words flowing like honey—ancient and powerful.

Suddenly, the lights burst, plunging them into darkness, and pandemonium erupted within the small office. Srinidhi backed away from the chaos as shadows sprang from the depths of the mirror, twisting around him.

“Stop! You’re only feeding it!” Ananya screamed, torn between panic and resolve.

Kiran’s voice rang like a war drum, steady and resonant, banging against the frightening melody. “I need focus! If you want to end this, create a circle around me!” 

Before Srinidhi could process the urgency, they all scrambled, huddling around Kiran, the haunting whispers now clawing at their sanity. Shadows rippled, rising, inching closer, their tendrils thirsting for freedom. 

With great resolve, Kiran continued her incantation, summoning strength through the remnants of the mirror’s curse. Srinidhi felt the energy rolling over him, a wave filled with electric anticipation. 

As the final word erupted from Kiran’s mouth, the mirror trembled. A shriek erupted, echoing against the walls, vibrating through to their marrow. The surface cracked and splintered under the darkness, pulling apart as if it were alive, swirling flames licking the broken edges.

Srinidhi covered his ears, feeling dizzy as the world around him warped. Shadows once trailing silently now screamed their rebellion while colliding against one another.

In one final surge, Kiran unleashed a wave of energy, and the office was engulfed in light—a light that began to swallow the darkness. With the final clashing of noise, as Kiran fell to the floor, the remnants dissolved, slipping away like rain under sunlight. 

The room pressed into silence, the shadows reclaimed, and the mirror, now a shattered heap of glass, lay mangled. Ananya sank into her chair, breathless. Ashish clutched the edge of his desk.

“Is it… over?” Srinidhi asked, his voice a rasp.

Kiran nodded weakly, heaving down on herself to catch her breath. “For now, yes.”

They remained silent, the void of echoes around them replaced by pulses of daylight filtering through the broken shards, revealing a sense of closure—a deep-seated relief. 

“I guess fortune favors the brave,” Ashish whispered, voice tremulous with disbelief.

“Let’s just forget this ever happened,” Srinidhi muttered tightly, gripping the edge of his desk as if it were solid ground. Shadows remained heavy, lingering like specters of their decisions. 

As they cleaned away the remnants of horror from their office, Srinidhi felt an emotion rise within him, a tip of raw possibility born from near-destruction. In the end, they had united against darkness, edging through the fear that bound them, a solid lesson pressed upon them like an invisible seal. The box's legacy was now one of mystery intertwined within their experiences—an ominous memory that may haunt their thoughts for days to come.