Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Alex Grehy @indigodreamers @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Shadow Love  
by Alex Grehy

“See, it’s nothing” Daddy shook the coats


“See, it’s nothing” Daddy shook the coats

in the closet, the shadows dispersed, he 

laughed and ruffled my hair, “Ok, princess?” 

No daddy, it’s not ok, you destroyed

my friends, the light at the edges

gave them shape and beauty, and

you just laughed and sent them away.

“Girls don’t play in the dark” Mommy tugged

open the curtains, destroying the shade, “You need 

to get out, be less weird, make some friends”.

No Mummy, I don’t need to go out, my

friends are right here, well, they were

until you chased them away with

the horrible light.

“Loosen up!” my lover said, lighting the candle

I’d blown out a moment before, “I’m here, remember? 

Stop staring at nothing.”

No, lover, it’s not nothing, that candlelight is perfect,

can’t you see him, my demon, inviting me to dance

in the flickering flame, waiting to celebrate, to feast, 

yet again.

.

Fiction © Copyright Alex Grehy
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from author Alex Grehy:

Last Species Standing

Alex Grehy (she/her) enjoys writing quirky, thought-provoking horror and is a regular contributor to The Sirens Call and Ladies of Horror Flash Project. Her fiction and essays on being a lady of horror have featured in a range of publications, including Spread: Tales of Deadly Flora. Alex’s first poetry collection, Last Species Standing, which explores mankind’s relationship with nature and technology, is available on Amazon.

Available on Amazon!

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Nadia Corin @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Everlasting
by Nadia Corin

No one expected how the alien invasion happened. It wasn’t ships descending from the sky and armies of green men with ray guns. It was something much more subtle. It began quietly, unseen, and undiscovered until it was too late…too late for us all.

Life can evolve in strange ways, even here on Earth. So why not stranger in the infinite universe? This invader, our conqueror, was nothing more than ice. It even allowed scientists to test it. No DNA, no organic matter of any kind. It was just frozen water, pure H2O, but always in solid form. It didn’t melt with heat, unless it chose to. That was how it expanded, grew, and took our world from us without us even noticing.

It never revealed when it first came. Only that it had spread across every inch of the globe. It could have come down as rain and waited until winter to reveal itself. Or it could have come down in winter and spread slowly across the land. Either way, it was in every square inch of land and water; even the oceans had been fully claimed by it.

The winter it first spoke to us, the world was in a panic. A frost covered the entire world, it even snowed in tropical zones across the equator where it never had before. Its intentions were made clear. We could co-exist with this newfound global organism, or it could remove us from its chosen home. We were like insects it didn’t want to bother exterminating unless they caused a problem. Those who wouldn’t submit were killed with haste. For some, their blood froze within seconds, others were impaled by icicles that formed instantly. It killed in a multitude of ways, all horrible and equally terrifying to witness.

Those of us that were allowed to stay now serve its will. It likes to be worshiped—it thrives on its own ego. So now it is our Lord, our Savior, and our everlasting God.

.

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Loren Rhoads @MorbidLoren @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Set in Stone 
by Loren Rhoads

Alondra pulled the cashmere hat down over her ears, but the gemstone studs in her earlobes still burned in the cold. The wind whining through the old buildings had teeth tonight. She hadn’t expected to be out after dark, but the sun set so early on these winter days. It hadn’t even been four o’clock and the solstice was still almost a week away.

This was a part of Oxford she didn’t know well, a one of the newer colleges cobbled into the antique buildings. Reuben College focused on computer science and machine intelligence, two subjects that she knew very little about. She was supposed to meet Rhys van Ryn, a friend – or maybe rival – of her mentor’s at the nearby Natural History Museum, where he was an emeritus.

Somehow, the maze of footpaths had gotten her turned around. Streetlights seemed few and far between.

A low, eerie moan split the night. Alondra told herself that it must be the wind across the mouth of a downspout or something. She looked up toward the nearest roofline, trying to place the sound.

Something shadowy shifted amongst the grotesques standing at watch along the roof. Alondra stared, but whatever it had been now froze in place. Only blind stone stared back at her.

She didn’t like things that chose to hide when they knew they were being watched. She picked up her pace, hurrying toward the next light along the path.

Something very large soared by overhead. She heard the wind pass over it. She glanced upward, but saw only blackness below the clouds.

The snow compressed beneath her boots did not make firm footing from which to take a stand. She wasn’t even sure she could run without slipping, but she leaned forward and hustled.

The moan she’d heard before drew nearer. Whatever it was had circled around, coming up behind her again: gliding with the wind, not against it. This time is passed so close overhead that the gust of its passage almost shoved her off her feet. Alondra let the momentum take her off the path. She stumbled through the deeper snow and spun beside the building, whatever it was, so she could fit her back against its wall.

This time she saw it – the creature – as it flew over the light farther up the path. It seemed human, humanoid anyway, but larger and powerfully built, held aloft by enormous wings. It banked into a turn and passed out of view for a moment, before she heard it coming back around again.

Alondra pulled off her gloves with her teeth, dropping into the snow at her feet. She sucked in the deepest breath she could, clenching her fists as she did so.  She had to time this correctly. She pushed the breath out, raising her fists over her head. Another inhale, shorter now. Exhale hard. The gargoyle was closing fast. A third sharp inhalation. She dropped her arms, breath trapped in her chest, and silence fell around her.

The wind dropped as if cut off. The snowflakes that had been swirling in the air plummeted to the ground.

The gargoyle came at her like a stone flung from a slingshot, in a race between momentum and gravity.

Gravity won.

Alondra flung both hands away, palms outward, and got a barrier up just in time to keep the broken stone monster from crushing her legs against the building. It landed in a twisted heap, one wing snapped off, its head wrenched over its shoulder at an impossible angle. Its stone eyes had gone blank again.

She shuddered, stepping over its outflung arm. Were there others overhead, she wondered.

 
Fiction © Copyright Loren Rhoads
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
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More from Author Loren Rhoads:

Unsafe Words: Stories by Loren Rhoads

In the first full-length collection of her edgy, award-winning short stories, Loren Rhoads punctures the boundaries between horror, dark fantasy, and science fiction in a maelstrom of sex, drugs, and rock-n-roll. Ghosts, succubi, naiads, vampires, the Wild Hunt, and the worst predator in the woods stalk these pages, alongside human monsters who follow their cravings past sanity or sense.

The stories have come from the pages of the magazines Cemetery Dance, City Slab, Instant City, and Space & Time, the Wily Writers podcast, and the books Sins of the Sirens, Demon Lovers, The Haunted Mansion Project: Year Two, Tales for the Camp Fire, and more.

Available on Amazon! 

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Sue Renol @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

To Begin Again
by Sue Renol

She lied dormant for eons, never showed herself to humankind. She hid for time immeasurable to preserve what she held, what she meant, what she truly was. A mask of peace and content covered her true nature, shielded all from what really lay beneath. She waited patiently for the right era to come.

When the poison in the air kissed her gentle lips and the filth finally mixed with her essence, she knew the time had come. A world that didn’t appreciate her presence was one that didn’t deserve to exist. This was always in her control, never out of her reach. Her hands held the globe firmly and she could squeeze its life away at any time.

She inhaled deep and held her breath. She let the moisture collected in her lungs to thicken and condensate, to darken and storm. She then exhaled with force, blowing gray clouds across the skies, blocking the sun from the view of all on land and sea. The air cooled until a freeze set in. She watched with some regret as millions succumbed to her wrath. But she knew this had to be done. She danced with fury and made the ground quake and split apart. Then she flooded the lands with tears of sorrow, grief for those lost and the few left that would soon be gone.

But she found solace in that life always started again. That this was not the end, only a new beginning.

.

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Donna J. W. Munro @DonnaJWMunro @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


The Singing Face 
by Donna J. W. Munro 

Once upon a different time, faces were as private as excreting holes and genitals. From birth to death, porcelain shells of many colors and expression would be fitted to faces by the family called Mask whose eldest always did the clay molds, shaped only by touch for their eyes had been burned out when they rose in age and skill to the most private profession of the time.

Master Mask, they were called.

Only they knew the beauties and deformities that might lie hidden among the shining masks tied so carefully around the head of each man, woman, or child.

Master Mask waited until the next youngest delivered the wet and bloody newborns into waiting clay smeared hands. The square mold had to be pressed before the first breath for a wailing babe would ruin the careful visage that needed capturing.

No omen was worse than a babe with a screaming mask.

Memories are long and no matter how many new masks the Master made after a screaming one, the child and then adult would be remembered as unlucky, ugly, and exposed. It was better to abandon such a child to the troops of wanderers who wore the graveyard discard masks they could gather and stop to their own unmatched faces often so ill-fitting that chins and cheeks and foreheads peeked through with scandalous flashes of flesh if the wanderer wasn’t careful.

The Master Mask makers did their best to not allow such things to happen, waiting even at the hip of a to be mother as she pushed the child from her body to press the mold to the still veiled face of a new babe to save them such a reviled life.

Unless they deserved it.

The Mask families were kept in splendor second only to the priests in how they were cared for. The mothers made the clay and fired the masks while the eldest children painted and honed the shapes into beauty. Young ones cleaned and watched, absorbing the wisdom of the making so they would be the next great maskers. Because it was a lifetime of work, the families of other skills supported them. Fed and clothed them. Built for them. Offered the best marriage stock.

No one dared insult the Mask family or short them what they were due.

Sometimes it couldn’t be helped. Accidents happened.

Once, a girl child named Grendy fell and cracked her mask. No one saw her beneath the mask because she wrapped herself up so well, but the shards cut her face to ribbons beneath. She cried out to all that would listen, “This is the Masker’s fault!”

Only a child would say such a thing and expect people to side with her. She was a willful girl, prone to stories and sass.

The Masker used weak clay. It burns me!”

She pressed her hands against the seam her mother had bound with strips of cloth.

The others grumbled. “Quiet your girl,” they told her mother

But the Mask family had already heard. No one came to touch the girl’s face and make a new mold. No one asked what colors she wanted. Even when the girl’s mother bowed before their porcelain gates begging, none of the Maskers answered.

Grendy was too young to understand what she’d done. She let her mother fill the cracks in her mask with mud and build out the edges with burned dough, still complaining loudly that the Master Masker should be making her a better mask. That she was owed something better.

When her mother struck her, Grendy finally fell silent.

You’ve done this to yourself, Grendy. You’ve made them mad and now no one will apprentice you. No one will marry you.”

The girl sniffed, finally understanding a bit of what she’d lost.

How can that be?”

The knock at the door saved her mother from having to explain. The hollow sound metronomed and echoed through their little house and before the sound died, the mother turned away from Grendy, silently weeping.

Come in,” she said before Grendy could say anything else.

The handle clicked and the door swung with a fetid breath. Pressed there in the opening were masks crowded in the space, old masks Grendy didn’t recognize, chipped masks like hers repaired poorly and strapped with willow braids.

She knew them. They’d come for her.

Wanderers?”

She snuggled back, clutching at her mother. “I didn’t mean it. I… I could tell them…”

Her mother didn’t react to her voice, wouldn’t turn her way. Her mother’s white clay face gazed away, as it did when she thought of things far or lost.

The whole world seemed to freeze while Grendy plead for sanctuary, but finally she understood. She sniffled and went to her bed and using the quilt she’d made she gathered up her shifts and spoons, odds and ends. All the things she thought she’d need and some she just wanted. She even took her baby masks. Then she tied them up and dragged them to the door where the others waited for her.

They led her out and back through town where masks pressed in windows and doorways watching her be led from them. Silently they passed. Shadows leading dreams to the edges of town. Broken things that couldn’t be fixed by clay or cloth.

Grendy had broken more than a mask. At the center of town, next to the Mask family’s grand home, the wanderers circled around her. They whispered to her about evil and stank of bad teeth. Their shabby shrouds and chipped masks barely hid the madness perched in their overly wide eyes or the neediness written in gaunt skin over pronounced bones.

They plucked at her bag, ripping strips of cloth away, stealing spoons, taking her into them a piece at a time. In the great windows of the Masker house, Grendy saw them watching, saw they’d all switched to their smiling masks, saw that this was what they wanted for her.

Young Grendy was doomed. She knew that now. She’d skulk through the graveyard, eat leavings from the slops for the pigs, and never know the feel of a mask made for her again.

Something shattered inside her.

No,” she told the wanderers as they pressed in take her hands in their own.

She broke from them and climbed up the Masker’s gate, the highest point in the town, straddling the porcelain frame so the Maskers and the townspeople might see her.

She’d never been quiet. She wouldn’t be a whisper now. She remembered how she’d seen a screaming mask when she was younger and how her mother had made the sign of protection against the poor baby. She remembered how her mother said screaming, loud voices twisted us and made our masks into ugly things.

Grendy wondered what it would feel like to scream.

There, above the whole town with the weight of a hundred eyes watching, she threw back her hood, shucked off her shift and her unders until she was all skin and light, then pulled away the silken bindings of her patched mask letting the pieces fall away from her face.

Before they could look away, hide from her shame and cover children’s eyes, she raised her face to the sun, opened her mouth and let her unfettered, unblocked voice spill from her mouth. Not a scream, but a song. As beautiful as the most delicate mask painting, as bright as the yellow paint mixed on a summer day she sang out.

Maskless, undressed, singing… free.

The first porcelain mask struck her cheek, edge sharp as a knife cutting into the already scarred flesh with a snick. The wanderers pelted her with all the extra mask pieces they’d stored up in their ragged mantles.

As the hailing mask pieces struck her head and shoulders, peppering her with stinging wounds, Grendy slipped, falling off the gate and hard onto the clay brick path with a crunch of bone.

Townsfolk came next with tools and knives, muttering inside their masks and making the sign of protection as they pierced her body and beat her exposed skin blue.

Finally, the priests came with the Masks, pushing through the crowd, praying to the gods that her blasphemy would be forgiven. The prayers, muffled by thick masks, went on as the Mask Makers encased her whole body in clay and rolled her to the furnace, thumping and screaming through the mouth hole they’d left her.

As she baked, her screams softened. As she hardened, the wind in her became song. As she glazed, her grimace drew up into a smile.

.

Fiction © Copyright Donna J. W. Munro
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
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More from author Donna J. W. Munro:

Revelation: Poppet Cycle Book One

In a dark future, people with money live in doomed cities and use the recently deceased as
repurposed servants and workers called poppets. Ellie DesLoge is the teen heiress of the
company that makes and distributes poppets–your basic reprogrammed flesh robot complete
with training chips and kill switches. If Ellie does everything her Aunt Cordelia says, she’ll have a
life of wealth and power. If she chooses to be what is planned for her, life will be perfect.
Everything she ever dreamed. But something about her sweet poppet Thom goes against what
Aunt Cordelia and tradition have taught her. Will she choose to believe what everyone knows is
true or will she follow what her heart tells her about Thom? Her choice will change the world.

Available on Amazon!

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Tawny McCarty @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

What the Snow Meant To Bury
by Tawny McCarty

The frost climbed the dead grass like a slow, deliberate handwriting, spelling her name along every brittle spine.

As she carefully examined the frozen seed, every summer it had survived shattered down her wrist in clear, stinging beads. 

Winter pinned the dead meadow to the earth like evidence, each seed frozen in time like glistening confessions. 

The field had burned months ago but in the cold every blackened stem bloomed with glass pretending it had survived. 

By the time the thaw came, the last stalk had heard every secret the snow meant to bury about the one it could never forget.

 
Fiction © Copyright Tawny McCarty
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Kathleen McCluskey @KathleenMcClus4 @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

he Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


The Borrowed Body   
by Kathleen McCluskey

Evelyn entered the cathedral with the cautious silence of somebody intruding on a place that remembered pain. The air was thick with the scent of damp stone and burned out incense, carrying a heaviness that settled in her lungs as she moved between the collapsed pews. Her lantern cast a trembling amber glow that failed to warm the chill pressed into the walls. The gargoyle above the altar caught the light like something caught mid-resurrection. Its wings were warped into a shape that suggested torment rather than flight. It crouched as if bracing for a blow, its massive form straining in a posture too tight. Too intimate to have been carved by an indifferent hand.

She approached with a restorer’s fascination but fascination felt too light for the weight that gathered in her chest. The creature appeared to be male beneath its monstrous veneer, the muscles captured with an unsettling fidelity. Its ribs seemed to be carved from a study of a person whose body once heaved with breath. Its face, oh God its face, was frozen in an expression of grief so personal it felt intrusive to look at it. As if she had stumbled upon a confession carved into marble.

Her fingers twitched at her side before lifting them. She was drawn to this statue despite her own instincts screaming warnings. When she laid her palm against the pedestal, the cold beneath her skin swallowed thought. Darkness surged through her as if the cathedral exhaled. She found herself inside of a tunnel that pulsed like a throat swallowing her whole. A man crawled ahead, his body gaunt and shaking, his hands were raw from scraping on the stone floor. His panic bled into her, a tide she could not fend off, leaving her breathless with a terror she did not understand.

She ripped her hand back with a cry that seemed too loud in the cavernous hall. Her lantern sputtered violently then steadied into a meek flicker.

She tried to compose herself, studying the gargoyle even closer. She could see the carvings along its ribcage more clearly. They were not decorative carvings. They resembled fractures that had been mended, broken again, reforging themselves in a cycle of suffering. The stone looked as if it had tried to recoil from the sculptress’s hand.

Evelyn reached out before she could reconsider, her fingertips grazing one of the fractures. The surface was warm, wrongly warm, like flesh trying to cool after a strenuous exertion. Something inside the stone throbbed under her touch, a sluggish, laboring heartbeat. The gargoyle’s chest hitched beneath her fingers, its exhale dampening her wrist with fevered breath.

She stumbled back, but the statue’s shadow clung to her boots as if to anchor her in place. A fissure along its ribs split wider with a brutal snap, shedding a ribbon of stone that floated on the air. Dust swarmed her eyes and mouth. She coughed, clawing at her face but the particles burrowed into the corners of her vision, dimming the world into a gritty smear.

The gargoyle’s lips peeled apart with a wet, cracking sound. Inside was no hollow carved mouth but rows of warped, human-like teeth stretched into a demented sneer. A rasping voice seeped out, scraping at the air as it formed her name. The sound lashed across her chest in a way that felt like possession.

She tried to run but the dust had hardened around her ankles like wet cement. The gargoyle’s eyes dragged open, lids tearing like rancid scabs. Human eyes stared out. Recognizing. Wanting. Starving.

Its wings tore free from the wall in a shower of mortar. It stepped off the pedestal with a heavy thud that shook the cathedral. Its hands, stone no longer, closed around her arms like a lover’s tender embrace turned to cruelty.

Its breath crawled across her face as it whispered that the sculptress had not carved him from stone at all.

She had buried him alive in it.

And he needed someone to take his place.

Fiction © Copyright Kathleen McCluskey
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com 
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More from Kathleen McCluskey:

The Long Fall: Book 1: The Inception of Horror

Lucifer always cunning and intelligent challenges father to a battle of wits. Being the angel of light he casts a judgemental eye upon mankind. He begins a war with his fellow archangels and God. Michael, along with his siblings defend their home and mankind from their deranged brother. Broad swords and hand to hand combat drench heaven in blood. The four apocalyptic steeds are released, each having their own destructive power. Betrayal and lust are at biblical levels. Understand the very creation of evil and the consequenses that transpire in the first of THE LONG FALL series.

Available on Amazon!

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The Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Naching T. Kassa @NachingKassa @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

The Reclamation of Jacob Marley
by Naching T. Kassa

Jacob Marley stood at river’s edge, staring into the icy, rushing water. Since his death in 1836, he’d learned the meaning of the word patience.

Ebeneezer had been the first soul he’d saved. His old friend had repented and changed his ways. Countless others followed. He envied their salvation and the mistake he’d made so long ago.

The night his own ghost had visited had been bitterly cold. His uncle, twenty years dead, had tried to warn him of the fate which awaited. Of the chains he would one day bear. But he had been of stronger stuff than even Scrooge and refused his salvation. He received no visit from the ghosts of Past, Present and Future.

When he awoke from his death, he discovered the true meaning of hell. It was not a fiery inferno of pain and punishment. No, it was something far worse. Too late, he had learned what he had lost.

Like Scrooge, Marley had once loved. Her name had been Gwendolyn, a sweet girl but frail. He still remembered the morning of their wedding day, how he had paused on the steps of the Church of St. Anthony, and then fled. It was not gold which kept him away, but cowardice. Gwendolyn suffered from consumption, and he feared her death. He did not know what had become of her.

Not until his own death.

Like a magnet, his ghost had been drawn to her side. She lay upon her deathbed, an old woman, but just as beautiful as she’d been so long ago.

A young woman sat in a chair beside the bed. She held Gwendolyn’s hand in her own.

“My dear daughter. My Elizabeth,” the old woman said. “I cannot die with a secret.”

The woman leaned forward. “What is it, mother?”

Gwendolyn’s voice dropped to a whisper. “Alfred Micklewhite, though a dear man, was not your father.”

The girl stared at the old woman, eyes wide.

“Alfred allowed me to take his name before he went to sea,” Gwendolyn continued. “He knew I did not—could not—love him. But he loved me, and he supported the two of us until he died. Your true father…he died last week.”

“But…who?” the woman asked.

“His name was Jacob Marley.”

“Marley? Of Scrooge and Marley?”

“The same. I loved him long ago. I still do.”

Her daughter asked questions, how could she not, but Gwendolyn had begun to fade and would say no more. Marley hoped to hear those answers. He waited as the life ebbed from her body. When Gwendolyn rose from her mortal flesh, and his daughter wept below, Marley rushed forward.

He never reached her. Something rose between them, cleaving him from her, and she departed in a blinding flash of white light. He was thrust into the gloom of a dark street in London.

For seven years, he searched, first for Gwendolyn and then for his daughter. He never found either, but he did find his uncle. And Michael told him how he might atone, how he might find them again. He had gone to Scrooge after that. Now, he stood upon the riverbank, waiting for the arrival of the next soul he would save.

The woman arrived a few moments later. Had the world not aged beneath Marley’s watchful eye, he might have thought her strangely dressed. Clad in denim trousers and tennis shoes, earbuds tucked into her ears, she trudged down the path, her eyes upon the snowy trail. She would not notice him until it was too late.

Marley loosened the kerchief which held his jaw. He didn’t know her name, nor what she had done. The knowledge would come once he tasted her fear.

Usually, Marley would appear to his victim several times before making his appearance, but things had changed over the years. This new generation seemed oblivious to the world. They stared at their screens and little else. Marley, unlike the ghosts of later years, still possessed the ability to clutch a living being. He found appearing suddenly and grasping hold of his target garnered the most attention.

The woman drew nearer, stepping along the riverbank, approaching the spot where he stood. He prepared to leap out at her and would have if she hadn’t tripped. She screamed.

Marley reached out and grasped hold of her arm before she could tumble into the water. He pulled her back.

“Oh! Thank you, good sir!” the woman gasped. She clutched hold of his arm. If she had seen his terrifying visage, she gave no sign.

“Think nothing of it,” Marley replied. He didn’t know what else to say.

“You deserve a reward for your kindness,” the woman replied.

Marley frowned. The woman spoke rather strangely for one of this age. Her speech seemed much like his own, a trifle archaic.

“No, there is no need to reward me,” he said. “I am not here on my own behalf.”

“Then…you are in the habit of saving others?”

“I am accustomed to saving souls. I must admit, this is the first time I’ve saved a life in such a way.”

“And I must admit, I wondered if you’d do it.”

“You saw me?”

“No. You were quite invisible.”

“Then how did…”

“I know? I have come for the sake of your salvation, Jacob Marley.”

His eyes grew wide. “My salvation?”

The woman smiled. Her face changed before his eyes, becoming that of the one he still loved best.

“It’s time to go home, Jacob. Home for good and all.”

Marley glanced down and saw that his bony, ghostly fingers had gained flesh. Gwendolyn took him by his newly formed hand, and in the next instant, he stood in an apartment overlooking Hyde Park. A little boy lay sleeping at the foot of a Christmas tree.

“Who is he?” Jacob asked.

“He is ours,” Gwendolyn said. “A child of a child of a child. Our only remaining footprint on this earth.”

“Oh, Gwendolyn,” Marley said. “I am sorry. Bitterly sorry. I could have…should have shared that life with you.”

“You still can,” she replied.

The world swirled about him and, quite suddenly, he found himself outside the church of St. Anthony, once again a young man. A chill nipped his cheeks.

When he pulled the door open, he received a wooden sliver for his trouble. He stared at the small drop of blood and then glanced up the aisle, where Gwendolyn waited. He had never seen her on their wedding day. Her smile was radiant.

Jacob Marley did not hesitate. He rushed inside, and the church door slammed behind him.

Fiction © Copyright Naching T. Kassa
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
 
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More from Naching T. Kassa:

NachingTKassa_SherlockHolmesAndTheArcanaOfMadness

Sherlock Holmes and The Arcana of Madness: A Horror Mystery

Discover the untold mysteries of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson in Sherlock Holmes and the Arcana of Madness, a trilogy that unveils three captivating cases intertwined with the mystical allure of tarot cards, designed by the renowned, yet infamous artist, Richard Dadd.

A collection of manuscripts, meticulously penned by John H. Watson M.D., is unearthed in 2019 amidst the restoration of Broadmoor Hospital, found inexplicably in the grave of Richard Dadd. The manuscripts’ concealed journey and their remaining unpublished raise a myriad of questions, enveloping them in a veil of mystery.

Available on Amazon!

 

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Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Elizabeth H. Smith @bethsmithwrites @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Cursed Savior
by Elizabeth H. Smith

She discovered me frigid and pale as the gray sky. The cold had taken my strength, the bite of winter gnawed away my will until I no longer knew hope. I’d accepted death and the forever it gifted. I looked up at her, a wounded animal begging for its end, wishing away the suffering with the cure of finality.

As she looked down at my frail body, her gaze bled darkness, a void that swallowed my entire being. Nothing else existed when I was embraced by her eyes, as if the world faded away and was no more—only her and I remained.

She spoke not a word, only nodded in what I deemed understanding. I was unsure whether she was going to grant my morbid wish of desperation, or offer her hand to save me. She seemed capable of either. And at that moment, either would have been fine.

What I could not see was that she offered both.

I was not gone from this world, but my body had long since decayed. My thoughts were still free, but I could only roam where she tread. At least I wasn’t alone, like I’d been that day in the forest. There were many others in that place, the vast space behind her eyes. She collected our poor souls, both freeing us of our earthly bodies, and imprisoning us within her mind. We all existed there, we could all see the theater of acts she committed, as if we were attendees at a picture show. We could feel the world, but never control our way. We were only watchers behind her dark sight, unwilling participants in acts of combined mercy and cruelty. And that’s where we’d remain as long as she walked the earth.

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More About Elizabeth H. Smith:
Elizabeth H. Smith is a storyteller who writes while trying to keep her cat, Luna off the keyboard. The musical group, Rasputina is her muse. She was born in the state of New York and would never feel at home anywhere else.

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Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Christina Sng @ChristinaSng @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


Storm Child 
by Christina Sng 

Icicles formed on the foliage.
In days, the blizzard arrived.


She was now safe.
Even monsters feared the storm.


But she did not.
She was the storm.


Shrouded in white,
She vanished into the night


Hunting the monsters
Who desecrated her last spring.


Their houses were not hard to find.
She had the addresses memorized.


While they snored in their beds,
She injected them with a paralytic


And watched as they watched her,
In absolute terror this time.


She cut off their appendages
And stuffed them into their mouths.


Sliced open their necks
Before she tore off their heads


Kicking them down the stairs
And out into the snow.


Afterwards, she stood in the storm,
Arms outstretched to the skies.


She let the snow wash away
The blood and the grief


And the crushing loss
Of her babies from what they did.


Finally, she felt cleansed,
Her revenge cathartic.


This was the only justice
She could ever have, so she took it.


Then, the storm ended.
Snowflakes drifted onto her face


Gently caressing it
Like her children once did.


She smiled and looked up
Into the night sky.


There, she saw their sweet faces
Through the parting clouds.


Soon, she told her babies.
Soon, Mama will be with you again.

 
Fiction © Copyright Christina Sng
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com.
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More from Christina Sng:

A Collection of Nightmares

Hold your screams and enter a world of seasonal creatures, dreams of bones, and confessions modeled from open eyes and endless insomnia. Christina Sng’s A Collection of Nightmares is a poetic feast of sleeplessness and shadows, an exquisite exhibition of fear and things better left unsaid. Here are ramblings at the end of the world and a path that leads to a thousand paper cuts at the hands of a skin carver. There are crawlspace whispers, and fresh sheets gently washed with sacrifice and poison, and if you’re careful in this ghost month, these poems will call upon the succubus to tend to your flesh wounds and scars.
These nightmares are sweeping fantasies that electrocute the senses as much as they dull the ache of loneliness by showing you what’s hiding under your bed, in the back of your closet, and inside your head. Sng’s poems dissect and flower, her autopsies are delicate blooms dressed with blood and syntax. Her words are charcoal and cotton, safe yet dressed in an executioner’s garb.
Dream carefully.
You’ve already made your bed.
The nightmares you have now will not be kind.
And you have no one to blame but yourself.

Available on Amazon!

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Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments