Satpam: Episode 7 – The Next Shift

Episode 7: The Next Shift

Darkness did not end.

It changed.

Arman stood in it, or what was left of him did. Time no longer moved the way it had before. There was no sense of minutes or hours. Only awareness.

And even that felt thinner.

The last thing he remembered clearly was the voice.

You never left.

After that, everything became distant.

Muted.

Like watching something from far away.

Then, slowly, shapes began to return.

Not fully.

Not clearly.

Just enough.

The outline of the security post.

The desk.

The chair.

The door.

Arman sat in the chair.

Or something sat there.

Still.

Waiting.

The flashlight rested on the table, its beam dim, barely reaching the corners. The fluorescent light above flickered weakly, casting a pale glow over the room.

Everything looked normal again.

Almost.

But the silence had changed.

It no longer felt heavy.

It felt settled.

Like something had found its place.

Outside, the faintest hint of morning began to push through the darkness. A soft gray light filtered through the trees, touching the edges of the property.

The night was ending.

Footsteps approached from the distance.

Real footsteps.

Measured.

Familiar.

The gate creaked open.

Pak Surya entered the property, his pace steady, his expression unreadable.

He had seen this before.

Not exactly this.

But enough to recognize the signs.

He walked the path without hesitation, passing the trees, the building, the silence that lingered between them.

When he reached the security post, he stopped.

The door was slightly open.

He pushed it gently.

Inside, Arman sat at the desk.

Still.

Facing forward.

His posture straight.

Too straight.

“Arman,” Pak Surya said.

No response.

He stepped inside.

The air felt colder than it should.

He moved closer.

Arman’s eyes were open.

But they did not move.

Did not blink.

Did not focus.

They stared straight ahead.

Empty.

Pak Surya sighed quietly.

Not surprised.

Just tired.

He reached forward and placed a hand on Arman’s shoulder.

Cold.

Not like skin.

Like something that had already let go.

He closed his eyes for a moment.

Then opened them again.

“Another one,” he said softly.

There was no fear in his voice.

Only acceptance.

He stepped back and looked around the room.

Everything was in place.

Nothing disturbed.

Just like the others.

His gaze drifted to the desk.

A photograph lay there.

He picked it up.

A hospital room.

A woman in a bed.

And behind her, a shadow.

Pak Surya stared at it for a moment, then placed it back down exactly where it had been.

He turned toward the door.

Paused.

Then spoke quietly, not to Arman, but to the room itself.

“It’s enough.”

The silence did not respond.

It never did.

He stepped outside and closed the door behind him.

The morning light grew stronger, pushing the darkness back into the trees, into the spaces it belonged.

Or seemed to.

By midday, the property looked normal again.

Quiet.

Empty.

Safe.

A new man arrived in the afternoon.

Younger.

Nervous.

Holding a small bag and a phone he kept checking.

Pak Surya met him at the gate.

“You’re here for the night shift?” he asked.

The young man nodded.

“Yes, Pak.”

Pak Surya handed him the keys.

Same keys.

Same weight.

Same quiet exchange.

“Lock the gate at ten,” he said.

“Do your rounds every hour.”

The young man nodded again.

“Anything I should know?” he asked.

Pak Surya looked at him for a moment.

Longer than necessary.

Then he shook his head slightly.

“Just do your job.”

The young man smiled faintly, trying to hide his nerves.

He stepped through the gate.

The metal creaked as it closed behind him.

The sound echoed.

Familiar.

Unchanged.

As he walked the path, the trees leaned slightly inward, just as they always had.

The air grew heavier the deeper he went.

The security post waited.

Still.

Silent.

Inside, the chair faced the door.

The flashlight rested on the desk.

The room looked untouched.

But something lingered.

Not seen.

Not heard.

Felt.

Waiting.

The young man stepped inside and placed his bag down.

He sat in the chair.

Exhaled.

Checked his phone again.

No signal.

He frowned.

Looked up.

The light flickered once.

Then steadied.

Outside, somewhere along the path, something shifted.

Soft.

Slow.

Familiar.

Inside the room, the air changed.

Just slightly.

Just enough.

The young man looked toward the door.

Listening.

Waiting.

And from somewhere deep within the property, beyond the trees, beyond the walls, beyond the space itself…

A voice formed.

Quiet.

Patient.

Ready.

#baliHorror #darkFiction #hauntedProperty #horrorSeriesFinale #IndonesianGhostStory #nightGuardHorror #paranormalEntity #psychologicalHorrorEnding #satpamHorrorStory #ZsoltZsemba

Satpam: Episode 6 – The Truth It Shows You

Episode 6: The Truth It Shows You

The darkness did not move closer anymore.

It did not need to.

Arman stood where the path had disappeared, the storage building behind him, the gate somewhere that no longer existed the way it should. The air felt still, but not empty.

It was waiting.

Not hunting.

Waiting.

That was worse.

He turned slowly, scanning the space around him. The flashlight beam felt weaker again, its reach shrinking, the edges dissolving into shadow before they should.

“This ends now,” he said.

The words felt different this time.

Not defiant.

Resigned.

No answer came.

No voice.

No movement.

For the first time since the night began, the presence did not react.

Arman swallowed and took a step forward.

The ground shifted beneath him.

Not physically.

Something deeper.

Like stepping into a place that had been prepared.

The darkness ahead thinned.

Not with light.

With shape.

A room formed around him.

Not the security post.

Not the storage building.

A hospital room.

Clean.

White.

Silent.

Arman stopped.

“No,” he whispered.

The smell hit him next.

Antiseptic.

Cold air.

The steady hum of machines.

He knew this place.

Every detail.

Every sound.

His mother lay in the bed.

Still.

Exactly as he had left her.

The machines beside her blinked softly, their rhythm steady, controlled.

Too controlled.

Arman’s chest tightened as he stepped closer.

“This isn’t real,” he said.

But his voice broke.

Because it felt real.

Too real.

He reached the side of the bed and looked down at her.

Her face was pale.

Still.

Her chest barely moved.

He had seen this before.

Lived this moment.

But something was different.

The room felt… wrong.

Too quiet.

The machines too perfect.

The air too still.

He reached out slowly, his hand trembling, and touched hers.

Cold.

Colder than it should be.

His breath caught.

“No,” he said again.

Behind him, something shifted.

Not a sound.

A presence.

He turned slightly, not fully, just enough to feel it.

Watching.

Always watching.

“You left,” the voice said.

Soft.

Calm.

Not accusing.

Certain.

Arman shook his head.

“I came back,” he said.

“I’m here.”

The machine beside the bed gave a soft beep.

Steady.

Unchanging.

“You left,” the voice repeated.

Arman’s grip tightened around his mother’s hand.

“I had to work,” he said.

“I had to get money.”

Silence followed.

Then, quieter.

“You left before she was gone.”

The words landed heavy.

Arman closed his eyes.

“That’s not true,” he said.

But the doubt was immediate.

Sharp.

Unavoidable.

The room flickered.

Just once.

The light above dimmed slightly.

When it returned, something had changed.

His mother’s chest no longer moved.

The machine beside her gave a long, flat tone.

Arman’s eyes snapped open.

“No,” he said.

He looked at her.

Still.

Completely still.

“No, no, no…”

He shook her gently.

Nothing.

The flat tone continued.

Unbroken.

The room felt colder.

Smaller.

The presence behind him moved closer.

He could feel it now.

Right behind him.

“You were not there,” it said.

Arman turned.

This time fully.

The figure stood at the foot of the bed.

Tall.

Thin.

Still not fully visible.

But closer than ever before.

Its shape bent slightly, not in a natural way, but as if it was adjusting to him.

Trying to match him.

“You chose to leave,” it said.

Arman shook his head violently.

“I came back,” he said.

“I would have come back.”

The figure tilted.

A slow, unnatural motion.

“No,” it said.

“You chose not to see.”

The room flickered again.

The hospital walls cracked.

The white paint peeling into darkness.

The machines rusted.

The bed decayed.

His mother’s body remained.

But it looked… older.

Wrong.

Too still.

Arman stepped back, his breath breaking.

“This isn’t real,” he said.

“This isn’t real.”

The figure took a step.

Or something like a step.

The distance between them shrank again without movement.

“You cannot leave,” it said.

“Because this is where you belong.”

Arman’s back hit something solid.

He turned.

The hospital room was gone.

The storage building stood behind him.

The door open.

Darkness inside.

Waiting.

He turned back.

The figure stood directly in front of him now.

Close enough that the air between them felt gone.

For the first time, he saw something of its face.

Not features.

An absence.

A space where something should be.

“You are already here,” it said.

The words echoed inside him more than around him.

The flashlight in his hand flickered violently.

The beam collapsed inward.

Shrinking.

Fading.

Arman’s breathing slowed.

Not by choice.

Something inside him was giving in.

The weight.

The guilt.

The truth.

It pressed down on him, harder than the fear ever had.

The figure leaned closer.

And for the first time, it whispered.

Not to his ears.

Inside his head.

“You never left.”

The light went out.

Complete darkness.

And in that darkness, Arman realized something that broke whatever resistance he had left.

He could no longer remember walking into the property.

#baliHorror #darkSuspense #guiltHorror #hauntedProperty #IndonesianGhostStory #paranormalTruth #psychologicalHorror #satpamHorrorStory #ZsoltZsemba

Satpam: Episode 5 – It Chose Him

Episode 5: It Chose Him

Arman did not run.

Not at first.

His body felt too heavy, too slow to react as his mind tried to catch up with what he had just seen. The figure inside the room had not stepped forward, had not reached for him, had not made a sound.

And yet it had closed the distance.

That was what stayed with him.

It did not move.

It simply became closer.

That was wrong.

Everything about this place was wrong.

He turned away from the building and started down the path, his steps uneven but controlled. The flashlight beam shook slightly, cutting across the ground, the trees, the empty space ahead.

“I’m leaving,” he said again, louder now.

The words felt more real this time.

Action gave them weight.

He moved faster.

The trees on either side seemed taller than before, their branches reaching further inward. The path stretched ahead, but something about it felt longer, as if the distance had quietly shifted.

He ignored it.

Kept walking.

The gate was straight ahead.

It had to be.

He had walked this route already.

He knew the way.

The beam of his flashlight finally caught the metal bars.

Relief hit him in a sharp wave.

He reached the gate and grabbed it.

Cold.

Solid.

Real.

He pulled.

It did not move.

He frowned and reached for the lock.

His fingers found it.

But the shape felt wrong.

He raised the flashlight.

The lock was different.

Older.

Rust thicker.

The keyhole narrower than before.

Arman’s chest tightened.

“No,” he said under his breath.

He stepped back, sweeping the light across the gate.

It was the same gate.

And not the same at all.

The pattern in the metal had changed.

Subtle.

But wrong.

He turned quickly, shining the light back down the path he had just walked.

The security post should have been visible.

The small building.

The light.

Something.

There was nothing.

Just trees.

Endless.

Still.

The path behind him stretched further than it should.

His breathing became shallow.

“This isn’t real,” he said.

“You’re messing with me.”

The silence gave nothing back.

He forced himself to focus.

Think.

He still had the keys.

He pulled them from his pocket.

They felt the same.

Looked the same.

He pushed one into the lock.

It did not fit.

He tried another.

Nothing.

His hands began to shake.

He stepped back from the gate.

The air felt heavier here.

Closer.

Like the space around him had shrunk.

A sound came from behind him.

Not close.

Not far.

Somewhere along the path.

A soft dragging.

Slow.

Familiar.

Arman turned.

The beam of his flashlight cut through the darkness.

Nothing.

The sound continued.

Closer.

Always just outside the light.

He stepped away from the gate.

Then turned and began walking back the way he came.

Faster this time.

The path shifted again.

He felt it.

Not with his eyes.

With his body.

The ground seemed uneven in places it had not been before.

The trees leaned differently.

The air pressed harder against him.

Then, ahead, he saw it.

The storage building.

Closer than it should have been.

He stopped.

“No,” he said.

“I walked away from this.”

But there it was.

Waiting.

The door closed.

Still.

Silent.

The dragging sound stopped.

Complete silence returned.

Arman stood there, his chest rising and falling, his mind racing.

Then the voice came.

Not from the building.

Not from behind him.

From everywhere.

Soft.

Calm.

“You came here for money.”

Arman clenched his jaw.

“Shut up,” he said.

“You left her there.”

The words hit harder than before.

He shook his head.

“I had no choice.”

The trees remained still.

The darkness did not move.

But the presence was there.

Everywhere.

“You chose this,” the voice continued.

“You chose to leave.”

Arman’s grip tightened around the flashlight.

“I’m doing this for her,” he said.

“For her treatment.”

Silence followed.

Then, quieter.

More certain.

“No.”

A pause.

“You came because you were already losing her.”

The words cut deep.

Clean.

Precise.

Arman felt his chest tighten again, sharper this time.

“That’s not true,” he said.

But the doubt was there.

It had always been there.

The voice did not press harder.

It did not need to.

“You think you can fix it,” it said.

“You think money changes what is already happening.”

Arman took a step back.

“Stop,” he said.

The building behind him creaked softly.

Not from wind.

From within.

“You cannot leave,” the voice continued.

“Because this is where you chose to be.”

The ground beneath him felt unsteady.

Not physically.

Something deeper.

As if the place itself had settled around him.

Closed in.

Arman turned toward the path again.

Then stopped.

The path was gone.

Where it should have been was only darkness.

Dense.

Unbroken.

He turned back.

The storage building stood behind him.

Closer now.

The door slightly open.

Just enough to see the black space inside.

Waiting.

The voice spoke one last time.

Calm.

Final.

“You belong here now.”

Arman stared at the doorway.

His breathing slowed.

Not from calm.

From something else.

Something heavier.

The flashlight flickered.

The beam dimmed.

Then steadied.

And in that moment, he realized something that made his stomach drop.

The light was not reaching as far as before.

The darkness was getting closer.

#baliHorror #ceritaPendek #darkSuspense #hauntedProperty #horror #IndonesianGhostStory #nightGuardStory #paranormalHorror #psychologicalHorror #satpamHorrorStory #trappedHorror #ZsoltZsemba

Satpam: Episode 3 – It Knows His Name

Satpam: Episode 3 – It Knows His Name

The handle stopped moving.

Arman did not breathe.

He stared at the door, his eyes fixed on the metal lever, waiting for it to turn again. His body felt locked in place, as if any movement might invite whatever stood outside to try again.

Silence settled.

Not the same silence from earlier.

This one felt closer.

He could feel it in the room with him.

The shadow beneath the door remained.

Long. Still. Unnatural.

It did not move away.

It stayed.

As if it knew he was watching.

Seconds passed.

Then minutes.

Arman’s chest began to ache from holding his breath. Slowly, carefully, he let the air out, forcing himself to stay quiet.

He reached for his flashlight.

His hand trembled slightly as he lifted it, the beam cutting across the room before settling back on the door.

Nothing changed.

The handle did not move.

The shadow did not shift.

He told himself it was a person.

Someone who had entered the property.

Someone trying to scare him.

That made sense.

It had to make sense.

But the shadow was wrong.

Too narrow.

Too still.

And whoever stood outside had not knocked.

Had not spoken.

Had not tried to force the door.

They had simply waited.

The thought made his stomach tighten.

Arman stood slowly from the chair, his legs unsteady beneath him. He took one step forward, then another, until he stood just a few feet from the door.

He could hear something now.

Faint.

Breathing.

Not his own.

Slow.

Measured.

Right on the other side.

His grip tightened on the flashlight.

“Who’s there?” he asked.

His voice came out lower than he expected.

No answer.

The breathing continued.

Steady.

Unbothered.

Arman swallowed.

“You’re not supposed to be here,” he said.

The words sounded empty the moment they left his mouth.

For a long moment, nothing happened.

Then the breathing stopped.

The silence that followed felt heavier than anything before it.

Arman leaned slightly closer to the door.

And that was when he heard it.

A voice.

Soft.

Dry.

Right against the wood.

“Arman.”

His entire body went cold.

He stepped back immediately, the flashlight shaking in his hand.

“No,” he whispered.

The voice had been clear.

Not distorted.

Not distant.

It had said his name the way someone familiar would.

The way his mother used to.

His mind rejected it instantly.

There was no way.

No one here should know him.

No one here should be able to speak like that.

The voice came again.

Softer this time.

Closer.

“Arman… open the door.”

His chest tightened painfully.

The tone was wrong.

It tried to sound gentle.

But there was something underneath it.

Something hollow.

Something that did not understand how a real voice should feel.

Arman shook his head.

“No,” he said, louder now.

The shadow beneath the door shifted slightly.

Just enough to break its stillness.

The voice followed.

“You left me.”

His breath caught.

Images forced their way into his mind.

The hospital room.

The machines.

His mother lying still, her hand cold in his.

“I’m still here,” the voice said.

“Why did you leave me?”

Arman pressed his back against the wall, putting distance between himself and the door.

“This isn’t real,” he said.

“You’re not real.”

The words felt weak.

The voice did not argue.

It did not raise its tone.

It simply changed.

The softness faded.

What remained was something flatter.

More direct.

“You need the money,” it said.

The statement landed harder than anything else.

Arman’s stomach dropped.

“How do you know that?” he asked.

There was no response.

Not immediately.

Then, slowly, the handle began to move again.

This time, it turned further.

The lock held.

But the pressure against the door increased.

A quiet strain in the wood.

A test.

Arman grabbed the chair and dragged it across the floor, slamming it against the door handle.

The noise broke through the silence, loud and desperate.

“Stop,” he said.

The pressure on the door paused.

For a moment, everything went still again.

Then the voice spoke one last time.

No softness.

No imitation.

Just something raw.

“If you don’t open it…”

A pause.

Then, quieter.

“I will come in anyway.”

The shadow beneath the door stretched.

Longer than before.

Reaching.

Arman stepped back again, his eyes locked on the floor.

The fluorescent light above him flickered violently.

Once.

Twice.

Then went out.

Darkness filled the room.

Complete.

Total.

The kind that erased edges and distance.

Arman raised his flashlight and switched it on.

The beam cut through the black.

Straight to the door.

The chair was still in place.

The handle was still.

The shadow was gone.

Arman stood there, frozen, his breath shallow.

For a brief moment, he felt relief.

Then he heard it.

Not from outside.

Not from the door.

From behind him.

A slow inhale.

Close enough to touch.

#baliHorror #ceritaPendek #darkSuspense #hauntedProperty #horrorSeries #IndonesianGhostStory #nightGuardStory #paranormalVoice #psychologicalHorror #satpamHorrorStory #ZsoltZsemba

Satpam: Episode 1 – The Job He Couldn’t Refuse

Episode 1: The Job He Couldn’t Refuse

Arman did not take the job because he wanted it.

He took it because there were no other options left.

The hospital smell still clung to his clothes when he arrived at the small security office that afternoon. Antiseptic, stale air, and something heavier underneath it. The kind of smell that stays with you even after you leave.

His mother had not opened her eyes that morning.

The doctor spoke in careful words. Words that sounded calm but meant something else. Treatment costs. Time. Uncertainty. He nodded through all of it, but the only number that stayed with him was the one he could not afford.

So when the call came, he said yes before asking questions.

Night shift. Private property. Good pay.

Too good.

He should have asked why.

Pak Surya waited for him outside the gate when he arrived. The man stood still, arms folded, eyes fixed on something beyond Arman as if measuring him against something invisible.

“You start tonight,” he said, handing over a ring of keys.

Arman nodded. “Anything unusual I should know?”

Pak Surya looked at him then. Really looked at him.

“You do your rounds. Every hour. Lock the gate at ten. Do not open it for anyone.”

“No one?” Arman asked.

“No one.”

There was a pause.

“And if you hear something,” Pak Surya added quietly, “you check it.”

Arman frowned slightly. “Hear what?”

But Pak Surya had already stepped back.

“You’ll understand.”

That was all he said.

By the time Arman turned toward the property, the man was already walking away.

The gate loomed in front of him, taller than he expected. Iron bars, heavy hinges, paint chipped in places where rust had begun to show through. It felt less like an entrance and more like a barrier.

He pushed it open.

The sound dragged across the quiet, long and hollow.

Inside, the property stretched wider than it looked from the outside. Trees lined both sides, their branches leaning inward, cutting off the fading light of the afternoon. The deeper he walked, the more the outside world seemed to fall away.

By the time he reached the small security post, the sky had already begun to dim.

He sat down and placed the keys on the desk.

For a moment, he closed his eyes.

His mother’s face came back to him. Pale. Still. Smaller than he remembered.

He opened his eyes quickly.

“This is temporary,” he said under his breath.

The fluorescent light above him flickered once, then steadied.

Evening passed without incident.

At ten, he locked the gate.

The sound of metal hitting metal echoed across the compound, then disappeared into the trees. He stood there for a second longer than needed, listening to the silence that followed.

It felt heavier now.

He began his first full patrol.

The flashlight beam cut through the dark in a narrow line, revealing only what was directly in front of him. The rest remained hidden, untouched by light. The path beneath his feet crunched softly, the sound too loud in the stillness.

The side path ran close to the trees. Too close.

Branches hung low, brushing against each other in slow, uneven movements. He kept his eyes forward, ignoring the shapes that formed in the corners of his vision.

At the end of the path stood a low concrete building.

Storage, he assumed.

No windows. Just a single metal door.

He checked the lock. Secure.

As he turned to leave, he felt it.

A shift.

Not in the air.

In the silence.

He stopped.

Listened.

Nothing.

Not even the trees.

For a brief second, he had the strange feeling that he was no longer alone in that part of the property.

He exhaled slowly and walked on.

The back wall felt colder.

That was the only way he could describe it.

The air there seemed thinner, quieter. Even his breathing sounded distant, as if it did not belong to him. He swept his flashlight across the wall and beyond it, but the darkness on the other side gave nothing back.

No lights. No movement.

Just absence.

He returned to the post without looking back.

Midnight came slowly.

Arman sat in the chair, his eyes drifting toward the door, then back to the desk, then to the empty space in front of him. Time felt uneven, stretching and folding in ways that made it hard to tell how long he had been sitting there.

He thought about the hospital.

About the machines.

About the cost of another week.

A sound broke through his thoughts.

A knock.

Soft.

Distant.

He looked up.

The gate was still locked.

He stood slowly.

Another knock.

Clearer this time.

From inside the property.

Arman stepped outside, the night air wrapping around him, colder than before.

He turned his flashlight toward the path.

The beam felt weaker now.

As if the darkness had thickened.

The third knock came, steady and deliberate.

From the direction of the storage building.

He did not hesitate this time.

He moved forward, his steps slower, more controlled. The path seemed longer than before. The trees stood completely still, their branches frozen in place.

When he reached the building, he stopped.

The door was closed.

Locked.

Exactly as he had left it.

He raised the flashlight.

Waited.

Silence.

Then, from the other side of the door, something tapped back.

Not loud.

Not aggressive.

Careful.

As if it knew he was there.

Arman felt his chest tighten.

“Who’s there?” he called.

No answer.

Only the quiet pressing in around him.

Then came a second sound.

Not a knock.

A slow, dragging movement across the floor inside.

He stared at the door.

The lock.

His hand moved toward it.

Then stopped.

Something inside him resisted.

Not fear.

Something older.

Something that told him opening that door would change everything.

Behind the metal, the dragging sound came again.

Closer.

#baliHorror #ceritaPendek #darkFiction #hauntedProperty #horor #IndonesianGhostStory #nightShiftHorror #psychologicalHorror #satpamHorrorStory #securityGuardStory #suspenseSeries