By Video 5, the sets had decayed. The rainbow tree in the background now had splintered branches. The puppet crow, Beaky, was missing an eye. Jangle’s voice grew slower, deeper, until he sounded like a man speaking through water. At the very end of Video 5, just before the DreamStudio logo glitched to black, a single frame flashed: a child’s bedroom, messy, with a Foxy-World plush on the floor. The toy’s stitched mouth was open. Inside, instead of stuffing, there were teeth.
She should have stopped there.
Marla had watched the first five videos from DreamStudio’s Foxy-World at least a dozen times each. On the surface, they were harmless: a grinning, orange-furred fox named Jangle teaching shapes, colors, and “happy claps” to a silent puppet crow. The animation was jerky—deliberately so, she thought—and the audio had a vinyl crackle, as if broadcast from 1987. DreamStudio-s Foxy-World - Videos 1-5 31