The Vourdalak May 2026

At dawn, the marquis flees the house. Looking back, he sees Gorcha, George, Zdenka, and Pierre standing like gray statues outside the door, motionless. Sdenka is among them now — her face pale, her eyes empty, a vourdalak too.

The family knows what this means: Gorcha is a vourdalak, and now George will rise as one too. The marquis, initially skeptical, witnesses the horror firsthand. Over the next few nights, the vourdalak Gorcha returns again and again, calling to each family member by name. One by one, in a trance-like state, they go to him. The old woman Zdenka disappears. The strong, brave son, Pierre, resists for a while but eventually succumbs to the pitiful, irresistible voice calling, “Pierre, my son… open the door… I am cold…” The Vourdalak

The marquis watches in helpless terror as Sdenka’s will breaks. She unbolts the door and walks out into the moonlight, arms outstretched, weeping with joy to see her “family” again. The marquis hears a wet, tearing sound, then silence. At dawn, the marquis flees the house

The marquis rides away, haunted. He ends his tale by saying he no longer laughs at the superstitions of peasants. He has seen the family of the vourdalak standing together in the dawn light, the dead smiling a welcome that he will never forget. The family knows what this means: Gorcha is

Sebastian Fitzek is simply amazing. I truly hope that one day I will be able to create suspense and plot twists in the way only Sebastian can. A true Master of his craft.

Chris Carter, Screenwriter & author