June DWC 2026 Day 7 - Horrify, Render
TW: Death
Years had passed since the night of the sparrow. Zenithal was no longer a frightened child staring at a terrible miracle in the moonlight. He was older now, more knowledgeable, and far more dangerous because of it. His parents had taught him a great deal about death and the forces that surrounded it, but there were still subjects they refused to heavily discuss beyond a firm warning. Resurrection sat at the top of that list.
The prohibition only made it more fascinating. Every time he asked why it was forbidden, he received some variation of the same answer. He wasn't ready, he didn't understand enough, some boundaries existed for a reason. None of those explanations satisfied him, and if anything, they convinced him there was something important hidden behind the refusal. Zenith had spent years studying, practicing, and refining his abilities, and at fifteen, he no longer believed he was the child who had animated a sparrow by accident.
One autumn evening, when both his parents were away for the night, he slipped quietly from his room and made his way next door. The funeral parlor sat silent in the darkness, the familiar halls illuminated only by moonlight filtering through the windows. He knew every corner of the building because he had grown up there. It was the family business, so the preparation room and the morgue held no fear for him. At least not anymore.
The cold greeted him as he entered the lower level. Along one wall sat the rows of refrigerated mortuary cabinets used to store the dead before preparation. Zenith paused in front of one of the drawers, resting his hand against the metal handle. The man inside had died suddenly only two days earlier. No violence or prolonged illness. Alive one day, gone the next.
He stood there for several moments before pulling the drawer open. The body slid forward with a soft metallic sound, revealing a man who appeared to be middle-aged. His features were peaceful enough, and there were no obvious injuries. Looking at him, it was easy to imagine he was merely asleep.
A part of Zenith knew he should close the drawer and leave, but another part reminded him that opportunities to test his theories rarely presented themselves so conveniently. Curiosity had been winning that argument for months. If his parents were right, he would finally understand why. If they were wrong, he would prove it.
The process was nothing like what had happened with the sparrow years ago. There was no accidental instinct guiding him now. Every movement was deliberate, and every word chosen with care. He reached toward the body and focused on everything he had learned over the years. The room seemed to grow unnaturally still as the cold and invasive sensation settled over him, drawing at something unseen beneath the surface of the world.
The moment he truly committed to the process, he felt the magic respond. The cold spread through his arms and settled deep within his chest, far stronger than anything he had experienced before. It felt as though something was being pulled from him as much as it was flowing through him. Sweat gathered along his brow despite the chill of the morgue, and a dull ache began to form behind his eyes. He ignored it. Powerful magic always demanded something from the practitioner. That was simply part of the discipline.
For a long moment, nothing happened. Then the man's fingers twitched against the drawer. Zenith's pulse quickened as a shallow breath followed, then another. The man's chest rose steadily, and before long his eyes opened.
Excitement surged through Zenith so suddenly that he nearly stumbled backward. He had done it. Against every warning and every prohibition, he had succeeded. The man blinked several times, his gaze wandering across the ceiling before eventually settling on Zenith. For a few brief moments, he looked confused.
"Do you know who you are?" Zenith asked.
The answer came immediately. The man gave his name, even his wife’s and daughter’s names. He named the business he owned and the street where he lived. Every answer was correct and coherent. With each response, Zenith felt his confidence growing. He had expected confusion, gaps in memory, perhaps signs that something had been lost. Instead, everything appeared intact.
Then, the man fell silent. His eyes shifted past Zenith's shoulder and fixated on something that wasn't there. The confusion vanished so quickly it was almost unsettling. What replaced it was something far worse.
Fear.
Not ordinary fear. This was the look of someone who had seen something so terrible that merely remembering it threatened to break them. That expression alone was enough to horrify Zenith more than anything he had witnessed in his studies.
The color drained from the man’s face, his breathing quickened, and his entire body began to tremble. "No." The word was but a faint whisper. His gaze darted around the room wildly before returning to Zenith. "No. No. No."
Zenith felt a knot form in his stomach. The excitement that had filled him moments earlier began to evaporate. He stepped closer, intending to calm the man, but the moment he entered arm’s reach, a hand shot forward and seized the front of his shirt. The strength behind the grip startled him.
"Why did you do that?" The man's voice cracked as tears gathered in his eyes. "Why did you bring me back?"
For a moment, Zenith could only stare. He had imagined countless reactions to success. Gratitude, relief, maybe even confusion. Never this.
"I was gone." The man's entire body shook. "I was gone!"
A sharp pain shot through Zenith's skull, forcing him to brace himself against the edge of the cabinet. His vision blurred for a moment before slowly clearing. The effort of maintaining the resurrection was becoming increasingly apparent. Every breath the man took seemed to pull something from him in return. Was it supposed to feel like this?
The man's eyes remained fixed on him. "I wasn't supposed to come back." His voice was growing weaker now, but the terror within it had not diminished. "It was over." The words broke apart as he spoke them. "It was finally over."
Whatever memories had returned with him, whatever experience lay beyond death, Zenith wanted no part of it. The man's dread-filled expression was more than enough. He looked like someone standing before an open abyss. Not because he feared death, but because he had already crossed into it and been dragged back against his will.
For the first time that night, genuine doubt pierced through Zenith's confidence. He realized he had never truly considered what resurrection might feel like for the person being resurrected. He had approached the entire problem from his own curiosity and desire to know whether it could be done. The man inside the drawer had never been part of the equation.
Maintaining the connection became increasingly difficult. Every breath the man drew seemed to drain Zenith further. His muscles felt heavy, and his heart hammered against his ribs despite standing still. The room swayed around him, and his hands trembled from more than nerves. Years of study had taught him that necromancy carried a cost, but knowing that fact and experiencing it were very different things. Maybe he was still too young and inexperienced.
The realization settled heavily in his chest. He could render a body functional and restore movement, breath, and speech. But whatever made a person truly belong among the living seemed far more complicated than he had imagined. The difference between life and animation suddenly felt far greater than it had when he first looked upon that sparrow years ago.
The man's grip gradually loosened and his breathing slowed. The terror in his eyes remained until the very end. Then, little by little, the unnatural force holding him together began to unravel. Moments later his chest stilled, his eyes closed, and he became a corpse once more.
By then, Zenith's own legs were trembling. A deep exhaustion had settled into his bones, and every breath felt shallow and strained. He gripped the edge of the mortuary drawer to keep himself upright, staring at the body as the room slowly stopped spinning around him.
The silence that followed felt far heavier than any lecture his parents could have given him. Zenith remained there for a long time, replaying every moment in his mind. The victory he had imagined felt hollow now. He had achieved exactly what he set out to do, yet all he felt was unease.
As dawn approached, he finally pushed the drawer closed. The metallic sound echoed through the room, followed by an uncomfortable stillness. Looking at the man, he had found one answer. Looking down at his own shaking hands and feeling the lingering drain within himself, he found another. Some questions carried costs far greater than curiosity could justify.
@daily-writing-challenge













