"Graveyard Shift" | |
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Author | Stephen King |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Horror short story |
Published in | Night Shift |
Publisher | Doubleday |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Publication date | 1978 |
"Graveyard Shift" is a short story by Stephen King, first published in the October 1970 issue of Cavalier magazine, and later collected in King's 1978 collection Night Shift. It was adapted into a 1990 film of the same name.
Graveyard Shift is set in a small town in Maine, and the action largely takes place in a textile mill.
A young drifter named Hall has been working at a decrepit textile mill in a small town in Maine when his boss, a cruel taskmaster, recruits him and others to assist with a massive cleaning effort. The basement of the old mill has been abandoned for decades, and over the years, a monumental infestation of rats has taken hold. This rat empire, cut off from the rest of nature, has allowed the animals to evolve into a strange and varied combination of creatures; complete with its own bizarre, self-sustaining ecosystem. There are large, armoured rats, albino, weasel-like rats that can climb up walls or burrow through the ground; and bat-like rats that have evolved to pterodactyl-like sizes. The men eventually come across a sub-basement, locked from the inside, that harbors something more terrifying and hideous than any of them could have dreamed—a cow-sized queen rat with no eyes or legs, whose only purpose is to endlessly breed more rats. The workers, all too late, realize the horrible danger they are in and are devoured by the hordes of mutated rats.
Meanwhile, the other team of workers on the surface wonders what has happened to them and, with no idea what awaits them, prepares to descend into the basement.
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