The demon spends six weeks flickering lights, whispering names from empty rooms, and crouching motionless in dark corners for hours waiting for someone to glance over. He has the power to drag the target straight to hell. He does this instead. Why?

The target is a widower, eight months into grief. The demon’s manufactured dread layers onto real sadness, and Gordon attributes all of it to grief, so the demon’s best work is invisible, misattributed, folded into a narrative the demon cannot touch. The wrongness the demon competes with, and loses to, is not another haunter. It is the grief itself.

The arc is craft over outcome: the demon does the work well, knowing it does not work, because the craft is the only thing he has made livable. A satirical horror novelette in twenty-three chapters about professional pride, meaningless work done well, and the quiet dignity of haunting someone who is already haunted.

Available on Amazon: $3.99 ebook | $7.99 paperback

Discussion & Related

Demons at Work: Doing Harmful Work Well

A demon who is very good at his job, and the quiet question underneath the horror: what is it to do harmful work well, on a schedule, forever?

April 16, 2026 · 6 min read

The Unbegotten: A Maker That Believes Itself Uncaused

A maker that only believes itself uncaused, lonely enough to fill the dark with worlds. On the debt between a creator and the things it creates.

June 27, 2026 · 6 min read

Measure: Indifference as Arithmetic

A mind reasons that its own death is the one event it can never undergo, then follows the arithmetic to a monstrous conclusion. On mistaking amplitude for meaning.

June 26, 2026 · 6 min read