Goodnight is a harrowing descent into the mind of Arthur, a man tormented by a menagerie of vivid and terrifying hallucinations. What begins as a seemingly normal therapy session with the enigmatic Dr. Thorne quickly spirals into a fight for his sanity-and his soul. Arthur's nightmares are not just bad dreams; they are living, breathing horrors: a humorless clown, a man in the mirror that never blinks, walls that writhe with skeletal figures, and the reedy whispers of antique dolls.
As Arthur confesses his private hell, Dr. Thorne, less a healer than a meticulous collector, reveals a chilling truth: each horror represents a part of Arthur's guilt and trauma. With every confession, the line between therapist and tormentor blurs, and the nightmares begin to materialize, pulling Arthur into a twisted reality. The story culminates in the discovery of a final, unspeakable horror-a leaking sack containing the literal, fragmented pieces of his broken mind.
Goodnight is a masterful work of psychological horror that explores the deepest fears of the human psyche. It is a relentless journey into a mind that has become its own prison, and a terrifying look at what happens when the very things meant to bring us comfort turn against us. It asks the chilling question: when your own mind becomes the source of your deepest fears, who is the real monster?