Michael Smith has spent fifteen years writing horror stories that no one reads. A master's degree gathering dust, a part-time library job, and an inbox full of rejection letters-this is what talent without opportunity looks like.
Then the invitation arrives.
The Blackwood Prize is an exclusive competition for horror writers. Six levels. Seventy-two hours per story. Fifty writers invited. One winner. The prize: $100,000 and recognition from people who understand what he's capable of.
The prompts are unusually detailed. Real names, specific locations, precise routines. Michael's AI writing companion, Meridian, finds this troubling. But the judges are impressed with his work-more than impressed. They praise his "tactical thinking" and "psychological precision." They want him to go darker, to commit fully to the horror he's creating.
Michael advances through each level, writing better than he ever has. The feedback becomes stranger. The prompts become more unsettling. Meridian's warnings become more urgent.
But Michael is winning. Finally, after fifteen years of failure, someone recognizes his talent.
By the time he realizes what's really happening, it's too late to stop writing.
And far too late to undo what he's already written.
The Completion is a psychological horror novella about ambition, complicity, and the stories we tell ourselves to survive what we've done.