The bend in the lane was known to every soul in the parish, though few spoke its name with ease. On the maps it was nothing more than a sharp dogleg between two hedgerows, but to locals it was Crow Corner. You could hear it before you reached it: the harsh, broken cries that filled the air, a chorus of hunger and accusation.
The trees that grew there seemed older than the land itself, oaks with limbs thick as a man’s torso, twisting low and heavy across the road. In summer, their branches knotted into a roof of green and shadow. In winter, they loomed like blackened skeletons, their boughs brittle with the weight of hundreds of birds.
The crows never left. From dawn till dusk they perched above the road, hopping across the branches, tilting their heads to stare down at passers-by with glassy, unblinking eyes. If you stopped beneath the canopy, the racket of wings and calls was deafening, as though the flock meant to drown out your thoughts. And the smell – even in the chill of January – was unmistakable: the sweet, metallic taint of rotting meat.
Few places collected death so readily. The corner was blind, its angles cruel, and the narrow road funnelled cars into its jaws without mercy. Every month or two, a fox, a badger, a deer, even the odd barn owl… all were struck, thrown into the ditch, and left for the birds. That was why they gathered, in their hundreds, always waiting.
There were stories too. Some said the crows were not natural at all, but souls trapped there, spirits of the wronged and restless. Others claimed that if you stood at midnight in the centre of the bend, you could hear whispers woven into the caws, voices of those who had died at the wheel.
Farmers spat when they passed it. Schoolchildren dared one another to cycle through, but none lingered long. Even the parish vicar once remarked that he felt watched whenever he travelled that way, as though the trees themselves had eyes.
Yet the place endured, as it always had, quiet but for its ceaseless choir of black wings.
And still, there were those who tempted fate.
Daniel’s name was known in the village, though few cared for it. He was simply “that lad with the car.” At twenty-one, he had inherited his uncle’s battered Ford Focus, and with it a sense of power far larger than the engine deserved.
Daniel had never cared much for books or steady work. He held down odd jobs here and there – labouring in summer, stacking shelves in winter – but nothing that lasted. What mattered was the road, the open stretch of tarmac where he could stamp his foot on the accelerator and feel, for a few fleeting seconds, like the master of something.
He wasn’t cruel by accident; it was part of him, stitched into his bones. When he first clipped a crow on the lane outside the village, the burst of feathers and the crack of bone had made him laugh out loud. He told his mates later, pint in hand at the Dog and Duck, how the bird had flailed, how it had bounced. Some had winced, others had chuckled nervously, but Daniel had grinned at their discomfort.
That was the beginning of his game.
Crow Corner offered endless sport. The birds gathered in their dozens, sometimes hundreds, spread across the tarmac to pick at the latest carcass. Daniel would gun the car round the bend, leaning into the wheel, teeth clenched, eyes fixed on the black mass ahead. Most times they lifted away, flapping in panic at the last second. But not always. Feathers struck glass; bodies crunched beneath tyres. Each hit gave him a thrill that no pint, no woman, no wage packet ever could.
He kept count, too. In a battered notebook shoved in the glove compartment, he tallied his kills with childish glee. Eleven in his first year. Twenty-four by the second. He took to boasting that the crows were learning his name, that they feared him now.
In the snug of the pub, the old men shook their heads and muttered. “He’ll get his comeuppance, that one,” said George Talbot, who had farmed the fields by Crow Corner since before the lad was born. But Daniel only smirked, sipping his lager. “Birds are daft, George. Plenty more where they came from.”
His mother fretted, as mothers do. She’d seen the scratches on the bonnet, the dried blood along the wheel arches. “It isn’t right, Danny,” she told him once, voice low and urgent. “Things like that… they stick to you. They come back.”
But Daniel had laughed, kissed her cheek, and slipped out to his car.
If anyone in the village had the nerve to stop him, they never showed it. The young can be frightening in their arrogance. And Daniel, with his dark eyes and careless grin, seemed untouchable.
At least, until the night when the crows decided enough was enough.
It was a damp October evening when Daniel set out. Mist clung low across the fields, softening hedgerows into shadows, and every breath on the wind smelled of rot and earth. The lane to Crow Corner was slick with fallen leaves, their colours lost to the night, pressed flat beneath the tyres of passing cars.
Daniel didn’t care for the weather, nor for caution. His music was loud, the thump of bass rattling the dashboard. He drummed his fingers on the wheel, the glow of his cigarette tip flaring in time with the beat.
He was restless, wired. It had been days since he’d caught one. Every time he tried, the crows seemed quicker, sharper, as if they knew him now. He’d missed three in a row last week and it gnawed at him. He told himself tonight would put it right. Tonight, he’d break his dry spell.
As he neared the bend, he slowed – not to be careful, but to savour it. Crow Corner was never quiet, never still. Even before he reached it, he heard them: the ragged chorus of cries, rising and falling like waves. His grin spread.
The headlights cut into the corner, the trees leaning overhead, their branches knitted into a crown of blackness. There they were, right on the tarmac, a scattering of shadows pecking at some unlucky fox. More perched in the branches above, their eyes glinting like beads in the glare.
Daniel tapped the wheel, foot twitching above the accelerator.
“Come on then,” he muttered. “Let’s see you scatter.”
He stamped his foot. The engine roared, the car lunged forward.
The crows didn’t move.
For a heartbeat, Daniel thought they hadn’t noticed him. But as the car drew closer, they lifted their heads in perfect unison. Dozens of black eyes fixed on him, not startled, not panicked – but steady. Waiting.
A shiver crawled across his skin. He pushed harder.
At the last second, they rose – but not away. They came at him.
The air was filled with wings, a furious beating, claws scraping across glass, feathers slapping the windscreen. Daniel swore, yanking at the wheel, blinded by the mass of bodies hammering against the car. The sound was deafening – not the usual scattered panic of birds, but a wall of rage, a storm of black.
The tyres skidded on wet leaves. The Ford lurched sideways, metal shrieking as it clipped the oak that marked the corner. The world exploded in glass and bark and pain.
For a moment, there was silence.
Smoke curled from the bonnet. The radio fizzled, then died. One headlight blinked against the ditch, throwing weak light across the tangle of branches.
Daniel’s body lay crumpled a few yards from the car, flung like a rag doll through the windscreen. Blood pooled beneath his temple, his chest rising faintly, raggedly. The smell of petrol mixed with the iron tang of blood, seeping into the night.
Above, the crows settled again, lining the branches as though nothing had happened. Only their eyes gleamed, catching the pale light, unblinking, endless.
And then, slowly, Daniel stirred.
Not his body. That stayed where it was, broken and limp on the ground. No, this was something else – a drifting, a pulling away, as though the breath that had left him refused to vanish.
He found himself rising, weightless, staring down at the wreckage below. The bent car. The ruined body. His ruined body.
Confusion clawed at him. He tried to scream, but no sound came. His arms – if he had arms – flailed uselessly. Still, the pull continued, higher, above the trees, into the cloud of crows that circled slowly overhead.
The murder welcomed him, wings brushing close, their voices loud and harsh in his ears. Yet beneath the caws, he thought he heard words – indistinct, but there, a whispering chorus.
Come down.
Join us.
His vision narrowed, his thoughts blurred. All he felt was the compulsion – an irresistible tug, dragging him not away, but down again. Down into blackness, down into hunger. Down into the murder.
Daniel’s thoughts were scrambled, his mind a whirlpool of panic and disbelief. He should have been dead; the windscreen, the oak, the blood… it all screamed it. And yet, he drifted, weightless, above the ruin of his body. Every instinct cried out to retreat, to flee, but no limbs obeyed. There were no limbs. Only a strange, pulling force, tugging him downward, toward the shattered remains he no longer recognised as himself.
The crows had settled in the trees again, their eyes catching the pale light from the moon, reflecting it like shards of glass. At first, he thought it was his imagination, that the shadows were flickering, but then he saw it clearly: they weren’t merely watching. They were judging. The rhythm of their calls was harsh, deliberate, a language older than any book, older than the lane itself.
Fear clawed at him. He tried to scream, to warn himself, to claw free of the force dragging him down… but there was no voice. Only thought, a thin thread of consciousness that trembled with horror. And yet, with that terror came a strange, inexorable compulsion, a beckoning that he could not refuse. He fell, not with gravity, but with the pull of something older, something that had waited a long time for him.
As he neared the ground, he saw it all at once: the broken body, the bent car, the spreading pool of blood. And there, at the edge, a single crow, picking with methodical patience at one pale eye. Daniel’s stomach lurched, his heart—or what he felt in its place—twisted with a terror he had never known. The creature raised its head, black beak glinting, and for a fleeting instant, he felt the world bend; a whisper of thought passed through him, not his own, but belonging to the murder above.
You will feed. You will serve. You will become part of what you once mocked.
The air seemed to thrum with centuries of memory, of life and death repeating itself at Crow Corner. Daniel understood, in that moment, that it was not mere chance that he had come here, nor mere misfortune. The corner had waited. The trees, the birds, the land itself — all of it had conspired, patient as stone, to collect what was owed. And now he owed.
Panic and revulsion warred within him as he fell closer, a ghostly extension of himself merging with the black-feathered shape above the corpse. He tried to resist, tried to pull back, but the will of the corner was stronger, older than his defiance, and the cawing around him became a chorus that echoed inside his skull. He felt himself change, feel the hunger, the cold precision of beak and claw. He could sense the body below, the brittle bones, the soft flesh, and the iron scent of blood that called to him.
The first contact was surreal — alien and horrifying. His consciousness recoiled as the beak pierced what was once his eye. Yet even in terror, a twisted understanding crept over him. This was the reckoning, the cycle of the place, the price for arrogance and cruelty. He was both himself and not, observer and participant, condemned to the flock, to Crow Corner, to the unending rhythm of life and death it commanded.
Daniel’s new consciousness shivered through feathers and bones not his own. He was no longer the boy who had laughed at flapping wings, nor the reckless driver who had treated life as a game. Every sense was sharpened, attuned to the world of black eyes and ragged calls, to the scent of carrion and the taste of iron in the wind.
Below, the broken body lay sprawled, pale and lifeless. The first beak dipped, precise, pulling at the flesh that had once been his own. Terror surged in what remained of his human mind, but it was no longer enough. Compulsion and instinct ruled. He joined the motion, swooping down, feeling the sharp thrill of each tear and tug, the strange sick satisfaction of survival within the murder.
Around him, the flock stirred, wings rustling like dry leaves, eyes glinting in silent approval. The corner had claimed its own, as it always did. Daniel’s laughter, once cruel and careless, had been replaced by a darker knowledge: this was no accident, no random misfortune. Crow Corner endured, patient and eternal, balancing life and death with an impartial, feathered hand.
And as the moon rose over the trees, silvering the slick lane, the crows fed, watching, waiting. The young man’s spirit was gone, subsumed into the flock, a single pulse within the rhythm of Crow Corner. The wind whispered through the branches, carrying the caws across the lane, a warning and a promise to all who dared the blind bend.
By morning, the lane would be quiet again. But the trees, the blood, and the endless eyes above would remember.
Crow Corner was eternal.
Crow Corner
The bend in the lane had always unsettled Daniel, long before he ever thought to challenge it. Locals called it Crow Corner in hushed tones, with a sort of grudging respect, and he understood why. Even on a bright morning, when the sun slanted through the trees, it felt wrong — the hedgerows crowded close, their shadows thick and tangled across the tarmac, as if the corner waited, and always would, the air heavy with something he could not name. The scent of wet leaves and rotting carrion hung faintly, metallic and sweet, curling into the corners of his mind like smoke.
From the very first moment he’d driven past, he had sensed the watching. Not just the branches swaying in the wind, not just the occasional rabbit scuttling through the undergrowth, but something more deliberate, eyes following, waiting. He told himself it was imagination, that the countryside played tricks on the mind, but a cold shiver down his spine argued otherwise.
By twenty-one, Daniel had grown reckless. The inherited Ford Focus was barely more than clattering metal and stubborn gears, yet it gave him a power he had never known elsewhere. The corner, he decided, was his stage. The first crow he struck, flailing beneath the tyres, had made him laugh — an abrupt, hollow sound that had startled even himself. That shock had curdled into thrill, and the game had begun.
He kept a tally in a battered notebook tucked into the glove compartment. Eleven first year. Twenty-four by the second. Each number felt like mastery, proof he was untouchable. Yet beneath the bravado, unease had begun to grow — a dark seed lodged behind his ribs. At night, he dreamed of black shapes, of eyes too bright, of caws threading through his pulse, whispering warnings he could not quite decipher.
Crow Corner itself was oppressive. The oaks leaned close, their bark jagged like stone, branches twisting overhead, casting shadows that seemed to slither with intent. Fallen leaves carpeted the tarmac, slick and brown, the smell of decay sweet and cloying. Even in daylight, the lane seemed to bend unnaturally, forcing him toward the trees. At dusk, the mist rolled low, ghostly white, blurring the line between road and hedgerow, until the corner felt less like a road and more like a waiting presence.
Despite it all, Daniel pressed on. The thrill called, irresistible. When the first birds stirred at the headlights, their wings flapping, their black eyes gleaming, he felt both triumph and unease. They rose, not scattered, not afraid, but organized, flapping in a wall that seemed to pulse with his own heartbeat.
Shortly after, the collision.
Metal screamed. Glass shattered. Daniel was hurled through the windscreen, a ragdoll in a nightmare. Pain, sharp and immediate, blossomed across him. The world spun. Silence followed. Then the mist.
And he drifted, weightless, beyond his body, watching the ruin of what had once been him.
Above, the crows resettled, wings folding, eyes glinting like polished stones. They waited, patient, eternal. Daniel’s mind reeled. Panic tore through him, disbelief and nausea. He tried to scream, but no sound emerged. His body on the ground lay broken and still, but he… he was somewhere else, hovering, drawn downward by an irresistible pull.
Join us, whispered the rhythm of wings, threaded with voices older than the trees. You will feed. You will serve. You will become part of what you mocked.
The pull consumed him. He swooped, instinct and compulsion overriding every human thought. The first beak met the pale, lifeless flesh. Terror and nausea collided with a shock of exhilarating power. Daniel’s mind twisted, struggling to hold onto the memory of what he had been, what he had done. It was futile. The corner had claimed him.
The trees leaned closer. Mist swirled in the silver light of the moon. The lane seemed narrower, alive with movement, the black shapes above circling in deliberate rhythm. Daniel’s panic gave way to understanding — grotesque, incomprehensible, and absolute. The corner was no mere place. It was patient, sentient, eternal. And it had waited for him.
His arrogance, his laughter, his cruelty dissolved into the rhythm of the murder. He became part of the flock, his consciousness threaded into the pulse of the crows. One of them tilted its head, black eye glinting in moonlight, the first act of judgment complete. Daniel understood, with a sickening clarity, that this was not punishment in the petty sense. This was balance. Life, death, predator, prey, arrogance, humility — all exacted with the inexorable patience of the corner.
By morning, the lane would appear empty, peaceful even, as if nothing had happened. But Crow Corner remembered. The trees, the mist, the blood, the endless black eyes above — all held memory. And one more soul, once human, now forever part of the cycle, fed the legacy of the place.
The bend waited.
Crow Corner waited, and would always wait.
An original short story by Andrew Scaife
© Andrew Scaife, 2026. All rights reserved.
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