Story illustration
Art Borups Corners Digital Library

Psychological Thriller Short Stories

A collection of psychological thriller English short stories to read.

Get inside the heads of characters, where suspense is built on mental manipulation, unreliable narration, and unsettling character motives. These stories will play with your mind.

Explore Our Psychological Thriller Short Stories

12 Stories
Salt-Stained Scores

Salt-Stained Scores

By Eva Suluk

Lena and Sam walk along a desolate, windswept beach at dusk, their conversation revolving around the dystopian 'Collective Contribution Initiative' and its oppressive social credit system, which dictates every aspect of their lives.

Marshmallow Mountains and Quiet Words

Marshmallow Mountains and Quiet Words

By Tony Eetak

The kitchen hummed with the gentle thrum of the old fridge, a sound Patricia knew better than her own breath. Outside, the world was a blur of muted greys and whites, snow falling with a quiet insistence that muffled all other sounds. Inside, the warm, sweet smell of chocolate fought against the cold seeping in from the windows, a small, fragile barrier against the winter's chill.

The Root of the Rot

The Root of the Rot

By Eva Suluk

The air hung heavy, thick with the scent of wet earth and something sharp, almost like burning copper, that clung to the back of Ethan's throat. Below the skeletal branches of oaks, where new, sickly-bright green buds fought through the grey, the ground dissolved into a sucking mire. His boots, heavy with accumulated muck, protested with each withdrawal, making a sound like a wet kiss breaking. A cold drizzle, fine as mist, settled on his face, mingling with sweat that wasn't from exertion alone.

The Umber Unfurling

The Umber Unfurling

By Eva Suluk

The air, thick with the scent of damp earth and distant woodsmoke, hung heavy over the old community hall. Outside, autumn was dismantling the trees, leaving behind a rich carpet of amber and russet. Inside, the hushed murmur of the craft fair provided a strange counterpoint to the quiet intensity brewing between two strangers, a sense of something profound and slightly unnerving beginning to unfurl.

The Geometry of Falling

The Geometry of Falling

By Jamie F. Bell

The air conditioning in the Zenith Performance Centre had one job, and it was failing spectacularly. It was the kind of thick, recycled air that tasted of sweat and ozone, clinging to the skin like a second layer. High above the padded floor, fifteen metres of vertical space separated Franklin from everything that felt solid, the multi-coloured plastic holds a constellation of impossibilities he was supposed to solve in under six seconds.

A Circuit of Thin Air

A Circuit of Thin Air

By Jamie F. Bell

The control room hummed with a low, electrical thrum, a sound that always managed to settle deep in Lucie's bones. Outside, a late autumn snow had begun to fall, muffling the city into a soft grey, but inside, the light was harsh and unforgiving, reflecting off polished chrome and the cool sheen of holographic displays. The air smelled faintly of ozone and stale coffee, a scent as familiar as her own breath after weeks spent within these four walls. Every flicker of the monitors felt like a personal challenge, every soft whir of the cooling fans a judgement.

Kintsugi for a Fractured Playlist

Kintsugi for a Fractured Playlist

By Jamie F. Bell

The old park bench is long enough that two people can sit on it and pretend they are alone. A careful, deliberate distance separates Dan and Ryan, a silence measured not in inches, but in unspoken apologies and the painful memory of last Saturday night. A single white wire snakes between them, connecting them to the same song but not, it seems, to each other.

A Prestidigitation of Falling Leaves

A Prestidigitation of Falling Leaves

By Jamie F. Bell

The autumn air carries the scent of roasted chestnuts and damp earth. A small, shifting crowd has formed a ragged semicircle around a patch of flagstones near the grinning Cheshire Cat. At its centre, a boy no older than seventeen commands the attention of a handful of tourists and bored parents with nothing more than a deck of cards and a quick, captivating smile.

Percussion of Rain Against Bronze

Percussion of Rain Against Bronze

By Jamie F. Bell

The sky broke without warning, a sudden, violent tearing of grey fabric that sent everyone in the park scattering for cover. Now, the world has shrunk to the small circle of relative dryness beneath a large, black umbrella, held aloft by two boys who aren't speaking. The air is thick with the smell of wet earth and ozone, and the roar of the rain on the taut nylon is the only sound between them.

The Geometry of Anxious Waiting

The Geometry of Anxious Waiting

By Jamie F. Bell

The checkered blanket is perfectly square with the path. On its surface, a carefully curated ecosystem of a date: a container of slightly-crushed egg mayonnaise sandwiches, two bottles of lukewarm lemonade, and a bag of crisps, already going soft in the humid air. Everything is ready. Everything except the other person.

A Treachery of Pocket Watches

A Treachery of Pocket Watches

By Jamie F. Bell

The late afternoon sun throws long, distorted shapes across the flagstones surrounding the bronze figures of Alice and her companions. It's the awkward hour in Central Park when the tourist tide has ebbed but the after-work joggers have yet to arrive, leaving the space in a peculiar, quiet limbo. A cool breeze rustles the already-browning leaves of a nearby oak, a premature hint of autumn in the August air.