“People who live in small towns get to know each other too well. They may not speak of what they know, but they know it.”
Chapters 1 to 3 immerse us into the pulse of ‘Salem’s Lot—not through action, but through people. And each introduction feels like peeling back the skin of something once alive… something still twitching.
There’s an eerie quiet to it all. The laundry hanging, the sheriff sipping coffee, the schoolkids whispering—King paints an ordinary town, but the way he writes it makes every corner feel loaded with secrets. You sense that beneath the normality, something is festering. Or waiting.
And then, there’s the Marsten House.
That looming relic on the hill isn’t just a house—it’s an infection. The way Ben remembers it, the way the townsfolk avoid it, even the way the realtor hesitates when Ben expresses interest... it all screams: this place should not be disturbed.
But he does. He asks questions. He pokes the past. And with that, I can almost feel the first tremors. Not yet a quake, but a rumble. The Lot is beginning to wake up.
There’s a moment when Mark Petrie is introduced—a smart, creative boy who builds horror models—and I couldn’t help but feel: he knows something. Not in the literal sense, but he seems emotionally tuned to the strange undercurrent humming through the town.
Reading these chapters, I didn’t feel fear exactly. I felt anticipation, like watching clouds gather before a storm. You know the rain will come. But what will it wash away?
Prompt used: An oil painting in the realism style depicts a weathered dirt road in a fading town at dusk. A man with dark, tousled hair and a contemplative expression stands off-center, his gaze directed toward the imposing Marston House, a decaying Victorian mansion atop a hill, framed by overcast skies and abandoned buildings along the road. The emotional scene is further accentuated by a contrast of warm sky hues and the cool, shadow-filled town, conveyed through expressive brushwork and a hauntingly atmospheric color palette.
What small-town secret do you think is the hardest to keep? Have you ever sensed darkness in what looked like a peaceful place? I'd love to hear your thoughts below.
📖 Next entry: Ralphie Glick vanishes, and darkness begins to stretch its limbs.