Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Alyson Faye @AlysonFaye2 @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


A Reel Trail
by Alyson Faye

He always worked

the night shift –

lonely, he found her

in an alley.

For his film

he spliced her 

into a double exposure

dubbed her ‘Luna’,

for by moonlight

he had created her.

She was voiceless,

soul less,

raven-furred,

a pair of night travellers

feasting on

each other’s fantasies,

fast transformed 

into urban myths.

Some said –

he fed her on human flesh;

others said –

Luna brought them to him –

for she was a powerful, hungry

huntress.

Underground 

they hid out,

and in cellars

his and Luna’s film

flickered across 

scabby walls

watched by the dying

and the dead,

whose lips were sealed.

Fiction © Copyright Alyson Faye
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
line_separator2

More from Alyson Faye:

133090884_729346164687069_5229257982964817440_n

The Lost Girl & Spindleshanks

The Lost Girl
A nailed-up door. An inheritance which comes with a ghost. A missing girl. A fifty-year-old mystery. Parapsychologist Berkley Osgood is hired to investigate. What he uncovers reveals secrets the living want to hide and the dead will never forgive.

Spindleshanks
Adam is having nightmares about a skeletal shadow figure, who he calls Spindleshanks. Soon his whole class are sharing the same nightmare. Adam’s dad, Rob, knows that Spindleshanks can’t be real. But is he? One terrible night Rob has to face his son’s nightmare creature and fight for his son’s life. What would you sacrifice to have your child back safe?

“A decent two-for-one. Alyson Faye brings the engaging and eerie in equal measure.” CC Adams – horror / dark fiction author

Available on Amazon!

line_separator2
Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Lee Mitchell @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Fatal Reunion 
by Lee Mitchell  

We agreed that our love would endure until the end of time, our souls bound for all eternity by those two simple words, “I do.” For better or for worse. In sickness and in health. ’Til death do us part.

And ’til death do us reunite.

Our love gave me the strength and the will to seek you out from beyond the vastness of infinity, this unending plane where I was meant to rest and pause and know everlasting peace. But how could I be at peace without you by my side?

I defied all odds, transcending time and space, to find you and bring you here. I gathered my new friends, planned a party to mark the occasion, and tore you from that old, tired realm which held you from me. It took nearly all that was left of my being to finish the feat, nearly impossible, but somehow, I managed. Somehow, love prevailed over even death itself.

So now, after all I went through to get you here, why do you do nothing but scream?

.

Fiction © Copyright Lee Mitchell.
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
line_separator2

More from Author Lee Mitchell:

Alisha Brown led a mundane life until the day monsters started trying to kill her and random strangers began to shy away from her in awe.

All hell broke loose, quite literally, after Randy Thomas turned right on Main for Honey’s instead of making a left for home and then murdered his beloved wife in an unusually gruesome way. Escaping police and stopping traffic in New York City with a gas-spewing tentacle erupting from his mouth, his fears are confirmed: That one small backslide would serve as the final tipping point for all mankind, inviting in a timeless destructive force that would lead him to the frontlines of the war to end all wars.

A growing population has succumbed to their worst fears, some transforming into dreaded fictional monsters—leaving the streets flooded with vampires, werewolves, spontaneously combusting humans, and other horrors—while others have become angels and demons determined to fight in the holy war they believe is upon them.

Questions soon arise as Randy’s and Alisha’s roles in this bizarre apocalypse become uncertain. One is a professed sinner, the other an asexual virgin. Each has been touched by the hand of fate, and each believes they are humanity’s last hope. But belief can be a funny thing…

The Divine Darkness is the first installment of The Divine Darkness apocalyptic horror trilogy.

Available on Amazon!

line_separator2

Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Sheikha A. @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Moon Orchid
by Sheikha A.

It was my claws that first unfurled— rasp singing of an abraded soul— uncommon in the meadow. Fog had eaten everything; pine, moon and every whisper of reflections— whispers— for this is what remained between drifting dawn and dusk. I was both product and outcome; input of hybrid cradling; whisper of utopia; the myriad ambitions budding inside adventurous naivety. Germinated against will, the liquid substances forced my roots, and gradually, with each ending equinox, under persistent permeation— against my will— I could no longer control the spilling; all the whispers inside me forging a new being of its own 

melting flower

the frost no more 

tugging me under 

Spring arrived like an eruption. In full bloom, the hours had begun to strangely thicken. Sky seemed to have embodied water, always hung in a state of precipice; it was as if time had become stuck between seasons. Past clung to present with only just a whisper making it to the future. Much has changed now with not much having chanced. I am eternal bloom—  the moon maiden—  removed from light; my reproduction burnt. This meadow is only night. All of each bloom that once graced, now just whispers in water— salty, decomposed and immortal. Fog rolls in without truancy; nights black with a new breed of molten starlight; tonight I go uneaten yet again. My petals of claws creak like old bones. Until the next wave in this eternity of blooming, the sky shifts only just. Something is different about the whisper this round; my stem-body receives a shimmer of hope. I can hear the singing within: hoarse hymn of the one left behind, but soon I shall be taken; the fog has dealt a promise to my being, holding sway

crowing stars —

a dagger of light 

neck to torso

Fiction © Copyright Sheikha A.
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com.
line_separator2

More from author Sheikha A.:

Screen Shot 2019-12-17 at 10.57.17 AM.png

Nyctophiliac Confessions:
Poems by Sheikha A. and Suvojit Banerjee

“The night is cold enough to inspire poetry,” says Sheikha A. in her poem, “Reading My Bones.” This is the basis of Nyctophiliac Confessions – poems that are introspective and luminal, poems that require a certain amount of silence and space to be fully formed and appreciated. Reading these poems, I imagined that they were the kind of poems that assert themselves unbidden during a bout of insomnia. (A nyctophiliac being someone who loves the night or loves darkness).

Nyctophiliac Confessions is the 17th installment of Praxis’ chapbook series and contains twenty-six poems written by two poets, Sheikha A. and Suvojit Banerjee, interspersed with abstract paintings by Robert Rhodes.

Available Here!

line_separator2

Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Shame
by Elizabeth H. Smith

I haven’t seen her face in so long I can’t remember what she looks like. The mask is all my memory knows. Somewhere behind that fog lies the truth, something raw and unfiltered, visceral and cruel. But I dare not look.

She must forever hide, wearing the mask like a death shroud for her former self. She must remain in the dark, alone, unable to be witnessed. I can’t recall why, what makes her so dangerous… That was buried with the past. But I know there’s something evil behind that plastic face. Some horrific thing that should have been burned to ash long ago.

So she keeps it where it belongs, hidden from the world, covered from sight. She protects the outside from her inside, the wickedness waiting to be released. No one should suffer the agony of viewing the monster within, no one deserves the indignity of her shame. She knows she must endure it in the confines of solitude, never to be known, never to be heard, and never to be seen.

line_separator2

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.

line_separator2

Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Kathleen McCluskey @KathleenMcClus4 @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


Life Eight Watches Life Nine
by Kathleen McCluskey

   I noticed it first in the reflection of the microwave door, that cheap, warped mirror that bends everything just enough to make you question your own eyes. It was well past midnight, the house reduced to a low electrical hum and my cat sat on the counter where she knew she didn’t belong. She was too still, her body in a kind of quiet attention that made the air feel heavier. Her eyes reflected the dim light, glowing faintly in the glass. At first nothing seemed to be wrong, until I realized there were too many of the glowing orbs looking back at me.

   I leaned closer, my breath fogging the glass, waiting for the image to correct itself. But it didn’t. Two faces pressed into one body stared back at me, fused seamlessly. I might have dismissed it if one hadn’t lagged behind the other. One set of eyes blinked. The second followed a moment later, slower, reluctant, like it was remembering how. A cold weight settled in my chest as I stared, trying to force sense into something that refused it.

   When I turned around, there was only one cat on the counter.

   She flicked her tail, annoyed and left out a chirp as if I interrupted her. No distortion. No second face. Just her, small and solid. More importantly, singular. I told myself it was the glass, the hour, my own exhaustion playing tricks. 

   A few nights later, she jumped onto my bed, circling twice before settling in against my legs. The room was dim, lit only by the dull glow of my phone. For a while I barely noticed her. Then her weight shifted, and something about it felt wrong. It wasn’t the natural adjustment of a cat getting comfortable. It was uneven, like two separate pressures trying to occupy the same space.

   One side pressed firmly into me, real and warm, while the other lagged behind. Slightly delayed, as though it had to catch up. When I looked down, the shape of her head seemed broader than it should have been, stretched in a way that didn’t align with reality. For one brief, sickening moment, I saw two muzzles sharing the same spine, overlapping like a double exposure. One set of whiskers trembled with breath and the other remained perfectly still.

   Then she yawned. Only one mouth opened. The shape collapsed instantly, snapping back to normal. Something safe. But my pulse didn’t follow. My heart raced in my chest. I lay there longer than I should have in the dark staring. Waiting for it to happen again.

   After that, I started watching her. Not casually. Not the way you watch a pet. But with a quiet growing fixation. Most of the time she was herself. Quiet. Indifferent. Lazy and draped across furniture like spilled ink. But there were moments where she would freeze, her eyes widening as she stared off into space. When she moved again, there was always a delay, subtle enough to miss if you weren’t looking for it.

   I tested it once.

   I clapped my hands sharply in the quiet. She flinched immediately, her body reacting in a quick, instinctive jerk. Then a fraction of a second later, she flinched again. The same moment repeated, weaker the second time, like an echo.

   The vet told me she was perfectly healthy. He ran his hands along her spine, checked her eyes, and listened to her chest. “Strong heartbeat,” he said, offering a small, practiced smile. But I watched his fingers linger a little too long over her ribs, a pause so slight it could have been nothing. But something in his expression tightened when he pulled away. I chose not to ask. Frankly, I was too scared to hear the answer.

   It got worse after that. I began to see the second image clearly when she moved too quickly followed by a blur of something almost identical. Then not. The difference was always the eyes.

   One set was alive, tracking every movement. The other was duller, fixed, watching without reacting. Sometimes they blinked out of sync. Sometimes only one set blinked. Once, in the dead stillness of the early morning, I watched one set of eyes closed in sleep and the other wide open, unblinking.

   That was when the understanding settled in. Cats don’t live nine lives one right after another, the way we like to say. They overlap. Near the end of one life and the beginning of another, there is a span where they both exist at once, sharing the same body. One fades while the other takes hold.

   Most people never notice because the transition is quick.

   This one wasn’t.

   Tonight, she sits at the foot of my bed, her body outlined by the dim light seeping in through the window.

   There is no echo anymore.

   The lives have finally caught up.

Fiction © Copyright Kathleen McCluskey
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com 
line_separator2

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!

line_separator2

Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Marge Simon @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!
 

The Dark Lord’s Bride
by Marge Simon 

Daughter of the earth, she chose springtime,

formed her gown from dogwood ivory blooms,

with shining pearls of honeysuckle dew,

bound her loamshade tresses with breath of babes unborn.

Then came the guests who craved her more

than ever I’d imagined.

To the movement of her voice they came,

as I, the Dark Lord’s host, remained

by choice a shadow in her glow,

drinking with the wedding crowd a toast

to what she was and what she shall become:

the perfect slave, bowing to his ways.

Fiction © Copyright Marge Simon
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com 
line_separator2

More from Marge Simon:

MargeSimon_CastFromDarkness

Cast from Darkness
by Marge Simon and‎ Mary Turzillo

Cast from Darkness is another triumphant collaboration between award-winning Speculative poets, Marge Simon and Mary Turzillo.

The poetry includes themes running the spectrum of the speculative genres and forms ranging from the haiku through many nuances of vere libre to the prose poem.

Available on Amazon!

 

line_separator2

Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Kathryn Ptacek @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Green Thumb
by Kathryn Ptacek
.

    I have gardened most of my life, and I just noticed for the first time that many flowers and plants bear some resemblance to humans. Not the entire person. What I am thinking about is body parts.

    Yeah. Body parts.

    I might have suspected this for a long time, but never sat down to truly think about it. Except now that I have the broken foot and few visitors, I have more “inside” time, more hours to sit and stare at things or ponder this or that.

    Like the purple orchid in the plain ceramic pot on the windowsill.

    At least, I think it’s an orchid. I’ve had it for several years … a friend was downsizing her indoor plant collection and dropped the pot off on my porch one summer’s eve. I had never grown an orchid or anything remotely exotic, so I saw it as a botanical challenge. And for whatever reason, I kept forgetting to look the flower up on my phone. One of these days, right?

    And so far I seemed to be doing the right thing. At least, until recently. A few days ago I noticed some of thin yellow streaks marred the dark green leaves. Too little water?  Too much water? The light from the window was the same as always, so that wasn’t the problem, I decided.

    Maybe I should take a photo of the plant and text it to a friend. She might know what was wrong. Or not. Not all gardeners know everything, I realized.

    Now, though, I grabbed my crutches and hobbled closer and snapped a few shots of the plant from several angles. I thought with the first click of the cell’s camera, I detected a slight movement. Well, the window was open, although there was no breeze. It was like, I thought with a silly grin plastered on my face, the plant had stood a little taller … had preened.

    I chuckled aloud. I needed to get out of the house soon, I thought. I have been in the house since the accident, and I must be getting a little stir crazy if I thought the plant moved.

    Still.

    I touched the lower petal … light purple with dark stripes. It had a velvety feel, like some roses I had grown over the years. I brought my fingers down along the full petal, almost a stroke, and the plant shivered. This time I wasn’t mistaken. I did it again, and the plant vibrated. Again and again. I thought the plant was almost shivering with pleasure, and my chuckle grew louder.

    Maybe the plant was in the Venus fly trap family and reacted, in some ways, to touch.

    I rested my finger on the petal and noticed the green stems above the flower … almost like a verdant collar. I had never really studied them. I really needed to pay more attention to my plants, I told myself sternly. I guess I always assumed that these would unfurl into more leaves. Except they never did.

    As I stroked the flower again, and one of the stems–folded leaves? whatever!–swayed, and one at the other end seemed to bend down close to my finger.

    It was then that I realized there were five of these green things … five like fingers, And I spread my hand and placed a finger against each of the stems, and within minutes they stems had curled around my fingers in a soft embrace.

    I wasn’t surprised or afraid. I just stared, not sure I could really believe my eyes. And yet there were the twinning stems, wrapping my fingers until I could barely see my skin. I smiled and caressed each one with my other hand and felt a responding shiver.

    My hand grew more green as the minutes passed, and the stems inched toward my wrist.

    “No,” I said aloud with a shake of my head. “Just the hand.”

    The stems’ movement stopped, and they went no further. And I watched as my hand became softer and more green, and the fingers were thick heavy stems.

    And I realized now this was what my plant needed: Me.

    It wasn’t hurting my hand. There was no wounds, no blood. It was just absorbing, for lack of a better word, my hand, and I didn’t mind at all.

    I flexed my hand–our hand–and smiled.

    It took most of the night for my hand to become the plant. And at some point as I sat back in my chair, I fell asleep. When I woke up in the morning, the change was complete. I touched my new hand, flexed my stems, and smiled.

    It didn’t bother me, and I was glad, but I knew others–my friends, for instance–wouldn’t understand. Someone might want to cut my transformed hand off. “No,” I said aloud, clutching that hand to my chest. “No.”

    Most days I sit in the sun and make sure my fingers receive enough light. I slip a glove on before someone comes to visit, and no one blinks. I always have a handy excuse, as it were.

    My new fingers do all that my old ones did, and that pleases me. And I have noticed the little slits in the plant where the five stems once grew. Tiny buds are emerging … soon to be more stems. Wonderful. And maybe just maybe, it was time to pass the plant onto the next friend to see what happens.

    I smiled.

Fiction © Copyright Kathryn Ptacek
Image courtesy of
Pixabay.com
line_separator2

Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Rie Sheridan Rose @RieSheridanRose @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

I’ll Leave This Here… 
by Rie Sheridan Rose

.I’ll leave this here for someone new to find.

To see the face upon the grass and wonder.

To contemplate the party it might have featured at…

To surmise the play that might have used it.

And I will laugh at their confusion,

Knowing the truth.

I have shed my skin today—

Been reborn anew.

I leave behind the wrinkled visage of

A hundred years

And step forth once more the

Beauty of another age.

Immortality is a funny thing.

Fiction © Copyright Rie Sheridan Rose
Image courtesy of
Pixabay.com
line_separator2

More from Author Rie Sheridan Rose:

519RiHK+1wL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_

Overheard in Hell:
Dark Poetry

Poems exploring hell and damnation. Tales of sorrow, vengeance, betrayal, and redemption. Ghosts, ghouls, and demons stalk these pages. Don’t read in a lonely house…in a darkened room by a single candle…

…unless you like the touch of an icy finger up your spine.

Available on Amazon!

line_separator2

Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Elaine Pascale @DocLaney @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Best in Show 
by Elaine Pascale

“Note how his ears are perfectly equidistant. His eyes are large and round. He’s able to hear and see past, present, and future. His fur texture is course yet soft, such a pelt does not happen overnight. This is a well-cared for familiar. Best conjuring companion and sixth place best in show is Chechnya the rabbit.”

Siggy applauded half-heartedly. She wanted the judges to move faster. Her two-headed cat, Periwinkle Louise de Waffles, had come in second ten years in a row. This was a direct snub to the de Waffles dynasty, a clan that was known for producing superior familiars for centuries. Siggy had been preparing Louise for months and was sure she would take best in show.

Siggy scanned the remaining contestants. There was a new entrant, an orange cat, Bartholomew Curtis de Costa who was still in the running. He was an ordinary single-headed feline.

“The tail is a formidable thirteen inches, providing superior stability. The teeth are sharp and clean and the tongue is an admirable length…and strong, too! Best potions protector and fifth place overall is Nicoletta the bearded dragon.”

Siggy glanced over at Bartholomew and his wizard. They were strategically placed beside the judge’s table. Siggy swore she saw the wizard muttering spells. Bartholomew appeared to move his feline lips in unison.

“Best emotional support and fourth overall, Skybird Meer the dog.”

“Don’t worry, Louise…there is no way you can come in second. You’re the most regal, the most beautiful, the most talented, and the most powerful.” Siggy stroked one black ear followed by another and another and another.

She looked again at Bartholomew. The cat’s mouth was definitely moving. Siggy believed the wizard had bewitched him along with the judges.

“Best in flight and third overall  is Chandy Lancer the owl.”

“Here it is Louise. Time to give the newbie his award and then we take all.” Siggy couldn’t imagine what that simple orange cat had over the other contestants.

“This creature moves with a regality rarely seen amongst familiars; in this case, it’s almost as if the familiar is primed to be the new supreme. Immaculate incarnation and number 2 overall is…”

Siggy knew what was coming next; yet she refused to accept it.

“Periwinkle Louise de Waffle, the two-headed cat.”

Siggy could barely breathe. She was outraged. The only way this snub was possible was trickery. She grimaced as she took the ribbon which seemed shabby and cheap in comparison to the first place that remained on the judge’s table.

How quickly they move on. Siggy thought as the announcer sprang right into the description for the best in show. “The opposable thumbs are a great advantage…”

What? Siggy looked at the feline who had regular paws.

“And the beard is trimmed into exact corners; this is exquisite grooming.”

Beard?

“Best familiar meaning best in show goes to Modesto, the human.”

Siggy swore that Bartholomew winked at her as he allowed the judges to place the winning ribbon at his feet.

Fiction © Copyright Elaine Pascale
Image courtesy of Pixaby.com
line_separator2

More from Elaine Pascale:

TheKitchenWitches_ElainePascale

The Kitchen Witches

The women of Cape Cod have a story that is dying to be told. If only they could live long enough to tell it.

When Fiona Walker is contracted to write about a party attended by her social circle, her friends begin dying. She captures the competition and misery of the women around her through three different stories.

In Wishes, Melanie Voss discovers a Time Between Time where nothing that happens counts. Initially, Time Between Time is a welcome escape from a life spent watching the clock while doing chores for her family. But something sinister is in the Time Between Time and it is headed straight for Melanie.

Death and Taxes tells the story of Nashville DeCota, the Cape Capo. Nash swears that she is not the Island Impaler, nor the Tooth Snatcher, but she has just as many skeletons in her closet. When her husband, Derrick, is kidnapped, she has to come clean about her crimes if she ever wants to see him again.

Fiona tells her own story in Hazing, where she finds that the real source of evil behind the deaths of her friends is worse than she could have ever imagined.

Available on Amazon!

line_separator2

Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Lisa Harris @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

To Haunt and to Hold
by Lisa Harris

The haunting of Rebecca continued right up to the night before the wedding. Her nerves, already frayed from the weight of seating plans, floral arrangements, and her soon-to-be mother-in-law, were now like shredded skin around gnawed fingers. 

The disembodied voices crying her name, desperately seeking her out, she could dismiss as just the pressures of pre-wedding social demands. A natural introvert, Rebecca had never spoken to so manypeople in her life. No wonder she was hearing her own name in her sleep! And the creeping chill circling her temples slippity-sliding down her chest and settling around her heart like a glacial vice was just bridal jitters. Probably.

But the knocking! Thorns! The knocking! How many times this last week alone had she startled her groom-to-be, Michaelis, (and rankled their Housekeeper, Elzberta) with the crash of a shattered tea cup because she’d been caught unaware by a sudden booming knock heard only by her, as if some monstrous fist demanded entry into the very core of her sanity.

Poor Michaelis! He was baffled and alarmed at the nervous whims of his future bride, but secretly blamed himself for them. He thought it only natural that Rebecca’s subconscious was trying to save her; save her from the vampiric curse of his family name and the mausoleum that was Roseblood Manor. But his love for her was as possessive and selfish as it was (initially) forbidden. He couldn’t live without her, nor she without him. Michaelis couldn’t tell if Rebecca’s haunting was paranormal, or just the terrible burden of their infernal love. Love that was costing them both dearly: Michaelis, his immortal soul’s honour, and his wife-to-be, her once wilfully strong mind – a mind he loved as much as her mortal beauty.

Rebecca was weeping in the rose garden, her form ethereally lit under the moon, frail ivory hands clawing at her raven black curls. 

“Make it stop… Go away… Leave me be…” she moaned to the eerie voices tangling in her ears. Michaelis found her just after midnight, technically the day of their wedding, and swept her up into a shivering bundle, striding back into the manor, and settling her onto her four-poster bed. He made to leave but she grabbed his arm.

“Micahelis, I’m sorry…”

“Rebecca, you are my soul, it pains me to see you so. If severing ties with me is the only way to cure this spectral affliction – “

“NO! I love you – “

“I love you too, but -”

“I want to be with you forever. Please. We can ask the priestess if she knows how to banish whatever is… pulling me away from you. I just want to be with you.”

Michaelis’s face softens.

“Forever?”

Rebecca giggled through her tears.

“Forever.”

Michaelis held her slim face in his broad hands and pressed his lips to hers. Rebecca had chosen her fate; she would stay with him forever. The distant knocking thundered to a deafening crescendo – 

***

“Not anudder feckin’ one, wha’?” moans Paddy, spinning the dusty gaming chair, revealing the desiccated corpse of Rebecca Moore. His Dublin City Council colleague, Paudie, finishes kicking his way through the front door, setting down his sledgehammer. 

“Ah Jaysus! How long’s this one been plugged in fer?” 

Paddy tugs Rebecca’s head to the side and unceremoniously yanks out the hot-pink wires fusing her temples to the strange gaming console before her. 

“Judging by the state o’ dese cables, I’d say she’s been stuck “in dere” a few months. See, dey’re all fritzed at d’end. Water damage. Starved t’death without even knowin’. Stupeh’ bitch.” Paddy tosses the wires to the ground and switches off the monitor, blinking out the loading screen for “Immersi-Verse F(ai)ntasy L(ai)fe: Romantasy Expansion.”

     Paudie kicks aside festering rubbish and settles himself on the couch, taking out his cigarettes and gazing in disgust around the mouldy little flat.

“Time was, when people stopped payin’ rent it was cos dey were on d’bag of sniff, or d’rock. Now it’s all dis hookin’ yer brain up to a computer bollix. Dangerous stuff. Bigger killer dan cancer.” He takes a hearty drag of his cigarette. “An’ who’s gonna tell d’sister? Wasn’t she d’one who called it in dat herself wasn’t answerin’ d’door? Bangin’ away in a mad panic fer weeks.” 

Paddy snorts.

“Not our department! We’ll call d’piggies, sure, let dem handle it.”

He quickly checks the other rooms: a kitchenette, and a tiny bathroom hidden behind a re-purposed Twilight shower curtain. No one else here, only Rebecca’s body.

Jaysus knows where her soul is… In d’feckin’ Matrix or somethin’.” Paddy thinks cruelly. He snaps a photo of the dead girl, evidence for his rent collection report, then nods at Paudie. Time to go – lunchtime pints are calling. Just as well, a bride must not be disturbed on her wedding night. 

Fiction © Copyright Lisa Harris
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
line_separator2

More from Lisa Harris:

To the Devil, a Daddy
by Lisa Harris

Satanchu, I Choose You! Unbridled noughties nostalgia runs rampage in this dark and deranged debut novella. Devilish daddies, mysterious murders, and raising Hell with Pokémon cards; nothing and no-one is sacred in this story – especially one child in particular. A surprisingly atmospheric tale of friendship, fecked up families, and the horrors of adulting as a millennial. Read if you dare…! This version also contains the bonus story “O’ Holy Fright!” – a festive feast of fear, in bloody tribute to all the brave soldiers of Christmas retail out there.

Available on Amazon!

 

line_separator2

Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment