Seattle, Washington. 2010. Tessa Gray is found hanging in her Capitol Hill apartment with her phone still glowing in her hand and a final social-media post timestamped 3:47 a.m. They're all listening now. Police rule the death a suicide. The case closes quietly. But Tessa's feed never stops posting. Likes continue appearing long after her death. Comments flood old photos from accounts that should not exist.
Search her name late at night and a grainy webcam video loads automatically:Tessa hanging from the ceiling. Then sitting upright. Then calmly speaking your username directly into the camera. The rope tightens. The video loops. The comments begin:We see you. Log off. As strangers across Seattle become trapped in the endless cycle of Tessa's online presence, her brother Elias realizes the horrifying truth hidden beneath the uploads, mirrors, notifications, and midnight pings:Tessa did not become a ghost.
She became a feed. The Last Post is a slow-burning dread novella about surveillance, grief, online identity, parasocial obsession, and the terrifying permanence of digital existence once it escapes the control of the person who created it. Filled with flickering screens, late-night notifications, endless comment threads, and rain-soaked Seattle isolation, it blends supernatural horror with internet-age existential dread.
Some accounts go inactive. Others keep watching.
Seattle, Washington. 2010. Tessa Gray is found hanging in her Capitol Hill apartment with her phone still glowing in her hand and a final social-media post timestamped 3:47 a.m. They're all listening now. Police rule the death a suicide. The case closes quietly. But Tessa's feed never stops posting. Likes continue appearing long after her death. Comments flood old photos from accounts that should not exist.
Search her name late at night and a grainy webcam video loads automatically:Tessa hanging from the ceiling. Then sitting upright. Then calmly speaking your username directly into the camera. The rope tightens. The video loops. The comments begin:We see you. Log off. As strangers across Seattle become trapped in the endless cycle of Tessa's online presence, her brother Elias realizes the horrifying truth hidden beneath the uploads, mirrors, notifications, and midnight pings:Tessa did not become a ghost.
She became a feed. The Last Post is a slow-burning dread novella about surveillance, grief, online identity, parasocial obsession, and the terrifying permanence of digital existence once it escapes the control of the person who created it. Filled with flickering screens, late-night notifications, endless comment threads, and rain-soaked Seattle isolation, it blends supernatural horror with internet-age existential dread.
Some accounts go inactive. Others keep watching.