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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Nice Costume
by Nadia Corin

I thought it was odd to have a costume party in the middle of summer, but I figured what the hell, why not go? I’d been invited on a whim. I didn’t really know the kids who invited me. I mean, I knew who they were, everyone in that school did. But I didn’t know them. Either way, for whatever reason, I was deemed worthy of attending.

I was a few beers in, watching a bonfire dance against the darkness of night. I didn’t socialize much. I’d always been an observer—I watched, I listened, but rarely engaged. And for the most part, no one really noticed me. I was just as invisible there as I was in school. But honestly, I was fine with that. I didn’t really like a lot of attention anyway.

By the time I finished my fourth bottle, I had to pee. We were in a field skimming the woods at the edge of town. No bathroom anywhere nearby. So I walked to the tree line to find a nice private place. I hated to go outside, but it couldn’t wait.

As I undid my jeans, I heard a twig snap not too far behind me. Oh shit, I thought, I’m not alone out here. How embarrassing.

I turned around to see an unfamiliar girl in full costume makeup. Around her eyes had been painted a strange color blue, and her mouth resembled that of a sugar skull.

“Hi,” I squeaked awkwardly. “I’m Abby. Guess you had to go too, huh?”

She didn’t answer, didn’t blink, only tilted her neck unnaturally. It looked as though her neck had been broken.

I tried to ease the tension in the air. “Nice costume. Did you do it yourself?”

She remained silent, and just stared at me with a curious expression, as if she were studying me. It more than creeped me out. Real fear rose from deep in my stomach. My heart was pounding. My mind and body instinctually told me to flee.

I turned to go back to the party. For once, I didn’t want to be alone. For once, I didn’t want to be invisible.

An insectile clicking assaulted my ears, the high-pitched tone hurt. As I went to cover them with my hands, I felt a strange sensation, pressure in my abdomen. I looked down to see a sharp claw protruding from my stomach. First, confusion took over my mind. How did that get there? Agonizing pain soon followed. The shock I experienced faded away and left me fully aware in that moment. The claw tore up my middle, ripping through my flesh like butter. I heard the splat of my insides hitting the ground.

I fell to my knees as the claw was removed from my body, blood soaked the torn clothes still clinging to me. I slumped forward, face down in the grass. The cool earth felt good against my skin. My heartbeat slowed, and time with it, as death began to crawl over me. I could feel flesh being torn from by back, but it no longer hurt. My eyelids closed and I let the darkness take me wherever it led.

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author J.C. Jance @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


Sealed by Her Fate
by J.C. Jance

Raked across the skin,

needles true and thin.

Marks left behind

mark the passage of time.

Runes to tell the tale

of a land destined to fail.

Her ancestors scream of

All that was unseen.

Waters rise

Mountains crumble

Mud, rock, and detritus

Sheer from her face

This place now scared,

no life shall breed.

Where once there was

my fallen seed.

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


When the Eye Closed
by Kathleen McCluskey

   The artifact was discovered beneath the ruins of a forgotten temple buried deep beneath the Anatolian desert. Archeologists originally believed it was a ceremonial wheel, a decorative relic left behind by some lost civilization. The object measured nearly twelve feet across and stood upright inside of a circular chamber whose smooth black walls bore no entrances. No exits and no sign of how it was constructed.  It was as though the chamber had grown around the wheel rather than built.

   At the center of the artifact sat a single eye. It appeared to be human but of monstrous proportions. Behind it, obscured by the latticework of the wheel, lingered the faint image of a woman’s face.

   Dr. Mara Voss became obsessed with it the moment she saw it.

   Most of the team assumed the face was an illusion created by shadows and overlapping shapes. Mara disagreed. Every photograph seemed to capture slightly different features. In one image, the woman’s mouth appeared to be open. In another, her head seemed tilted. The changes were subtle enough to dismiss individually, yet impossible to ignore when viewed together.

   The eye blinked twenty-three days after excavation.

   No one believed Mara at first. She replayed the security footage repeatedly until the evidence became undeniable. The eyelid lowered. The eyelid lifted. The eye resumed its silent observation as though nothing had happened.

   After that, the atmosphere around the dig changed. 

   Researchers spent less time joking on breaks. Conversations became quieter. Sleep became difficult. Several members of the team reported similar recurring dreams involving a large dark space behind the wheel. They described hearing distant impacts echoing through the darkness like something vast striking a barrier again and again.

   Mara experienced the dreams as well. However, in hers the woman stood behind the wheel with both hands pressed on something hidden from view. Her face was pale with exhaustion. Blood trickled from her ears and nose. Cracks spread through the golden structure surrounding her and each impact widened them a little further.

   The dreams always ended the same way.

   The woman would look directly at Mara and mouth one word.

   Help

   The symbols along the wheel were of no known language, but certain patterns repeated frequently. Mara worked sixteen hour days comparing inscriptions, searching for structure in the chaos. Gradually, fragments emerged.

   The wheel was repeatedly referred to as some kind of seal.

   The symbols began referring to the eye as “The Watcher,” the thing behind her possessed no name.

   Ancient cultures named their fears. They named storms, plagues, demons and gods. Yet throughout all of the thousands of images, the entity behind The Watcher was deliberately unwritten as if the language was considered too dangerous.

   The final translation appeared unexpectedly.

   One morning Mara entered the chamber and discovered an entirely new band of symbols encircling the eye. The carvings had not existed the night before. Security footage showed nothing unusual. The wheel had simply changed.

   For weeks the team had thought that the woman was trapped behind the wheel. The inscription revealed the opposite. The Watcher was not a prisoner. The Watcher was the warden.

   As she approached, the woman’s face became clearer than it had ever been. The exhaustion was unmistakable now. Dark shadows pooled under her eyes. Fine cracks spread through the golden structure surrounding her. When her gaze met Mara’s she smiled. It was not a cruel  smile or triumphant. It was relief.

   Then the eye closed.

   The chamber fell silent. Mara stared at the wheel, her mind racing through dozens of unfinished translations. One line surfaced from her notes with sudden, horrifying clarity.

   The Watcher’s eye shall close, do not look upon thee.

   Around her, cameras kept rolling. Researchers continued staring. Nobody moved. No one looked away. Human beings are curious creatures. Faced with a mystery they want to find answers.

   A deep breath echoed through the chamber.

   The sound did not come from anybody standing near the wheel. It came from somewhere behind them. Mara turned instinctively, but saw nothing except the dark, stone walls and the harsh glare of excavation lights. The breathing continued. Slow. Patient. Even. The air around them sickened with a stench that made it difficult to breathe. Something immense occupied the room without needing a body.

   When she looked back at the wheel the woman and the eye were gone.

   A terrible certainty filled Mara’s stomach.

   Whatever The Watcher had been holding back for thousands of years no longer stood behind the wheel. It was standing in front of it.

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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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author J.C. Jance @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


Gentler Tones
by J.C. Jance

“Mother?”

“Daughter.”

“I hurt.”

“I understand, my child, I hurt too.”

“Why do we have to hurt, Mother? Where is the beauty songs sing of, the joy that makes others smile, the gifts life holds?”

“All those things exist, my child, but they are not for us.”

“Why? Why can’t we have those things? Why are they only for others?”

“Ah, my sweet. Our lot in life is not to revel, not to find happiness. We aren’t like them.”

“What are we like, Mother?”

“We’re cruel, unkind. We were created to steal the light from life, snuff the brightness, collect their souls.”

“To what purpose?”

“To bring them home, my child. Their kingdom awaits, though not the one they expect. Their rapturous voices sing of a place far kinder than they will ever see. Do not envy them, Daughter.”

“More lies, Mother?”

“Yes, my child, more lies.”

Fiction © Copyright J.C. Jance
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Lynn Ruzzo @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Separated at Birth
by Lynn Ruzzo

Sara knew her sister still existed somewhere. She could feel it in her bones. It had been decades since they’d been separated. She imagined what she might look like. Did they look the same? Had they been twins maybe? Sara wondered if her sister thought about her too, maybe they were thinking of one another at the same time.

Mother told her the separation had been necessary. She had regretted it, but they both would have died otherwise. Mother said losing one daughter was better than two.

Sara searched for years, trying to find her, to reconnect with the only family she had left. The agony of loneliness kept her going. But all that time led to nothing but dead ends. She needed to try something else, another method.

She took a book from the top of the shelf in her study, a very special book. This particular volume had been left untouched since her mother had passed. She knew it was only to be used in dire circumstances, that it wasn’t a typical book.

She wiped a thick layer of dust off the cover and opened it to the first page. The paper had yellowed, but the ink was still as dark as the blood it had been scrawled with. In fact, it still looked fresh. It didn’t have that rust color of old, dried blood. She was afraid that if she touched it, it would smear.

She flipped through the sections until she found the one she needed. She remembered Mother’s words, “Use this with caution, if you ever do. It’s very dangerous.”

Sara followed the text with her eyes, read aloud the strange words not in her native language. A strong gust blew through the house, the sky howled. She continued reading. With each syllable she felt a vibration travel through her body. With each line she spoke, the sensation grew stronger. The house began to shake, windows shattered, trinkets flung themselves across the room. Still, Sara kept going. She wasn’t going to stop. She wouldn’t allow fear to deter her.

A sudden, sharp pain shot up her neck. As she cried out, her flesh tore open. It split apart and unpeeled itself from her face. From the opening a growth rapidly expanded and stretched its way out of her. The formless mass traveled up above her and began to take shape. Eye sockets appeared; below them, the fleshless shape of a nose, then a mouth.

When the pain subsided and all went calm, she felt weight resting on her shoulder. “Hello, Sara.”

Sara’s heart raced. Excitement replaced the fear and pain she felt before. “Sister?”

She felt a warmth wash over her, as if she were being hugged. “Yes, it’s me.”

“It’s been so many years…” Sara sighed.

“I’ve always been here.”

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Nina D’Arcangela @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Birdie
by Nina D’Arcangela

They said I was a misfit, but weren’t we all?

I wasn’t born into this life like some, I found it, or rather it found me. Too young to remember, I was told my parents left me by the side of the road with a note that said they couldn’t feed another mouth and they hoped God would send a kind soul to find me.

They were kind, just which kind. In truth, they were many kinds; a caravan troupe that performed for cash, booze, or food. When they rolled into a village or town, if they couldn’t con the locals, they simply stole what they wanted. So yeah, they were kind to me, but I wouldn’t call them kind.

I was placed in the care of a three-armed woman named Nell. She raised me until I was old enough to learn a skill and start earning like everyone else. I was small and hoped to be a sidekick. You know, the pretty girl who helped Tim Thumb with his props, or Galloping Glenda parade by on her trick pony. I think my favorite chore was helping the Bearded Lady comb out her hair. It’s not just on her face, it’s everywhere!

But that wasn’t to be. The Flying Gardonos, our high-wire act, needed another body for a new trick they were working on, so that’s where I ended up. My terror of heights not a factor for Mr. Baddy McFat Pockets who ran the show.

The Gardonos were nice people but they drilled sixteen hours a day. They would take turns running their individual routines, then the full routine with the whole ‘family’. It was tough at first, but their encouragement and kindness eventually got me through. I was bounding along that tensioned wire with ease, if not grace, by the time we reached London Town – that’s where Pockets said we’d bank the most.

Opening night inside the ratty canvas big-top was shaping up to be the real deal. Fancy ribbons were hung along with glittering balls reserved for big-money nights. They even pulled out the red carpets and laid them over the mud at each entrance so the finer people didn’t dirty their shoes.

I was caught dawdling near the back curtain—the performers’ entrance—and sent to help ready things for the others. That meant no dinner as punishment. But I was buzzing so much from excitement, I didn’t even care.

The sun began its decline just as Tim Thumb tossed me an apple to tide me over. He put his thick finger to his lips and made an exaggerated shhh motion with his entire body. I giggled all the way back to the trapeze troupe to finally gear up.

The show was going great. Plenty of ooos and ahhhs from the crowd, but everyone knew the Flying Gardonos were the real draw and we were the closers. Just a few more minutes and we’d be on.

The ringmaster cleared the jesters from the circle and introduced us with an enormous amount of flair. We all cartwheeled, flipped, and pranced our way to the center of the ring under the highwire net. Once we took our bows, the young men flipped into the net and reached down to help the ladies up. We all separated and headed to the poles we needed to climb. My new brother, Francisco, helped me up to the first rung and our part of the show began. We were magnificent. My new family and I flicking and flipping through the air. The shabby costumes dazzled from a distance; the crowd had no idea just how cheap Pockets was.

Being the smallest, I helped with catching lines and props when they were no longer needed. Then it was my turn to walk the highwire.

I climbed to the top platform of the support pole, pasted a huge smile on my face, and leaned as far over the expanse as my reach would allow. Listening to the crowd cheer, I slid one foot onto the wire. With balance bar in hand, I drew the other leg out and placed my second foot on the line. Just before I was about to begin crossing, the ringmaster reappeared far below.

The crowd had hushed, sensing the difficulty of my act, and Pockets was feeling greedy.

As the ringmaster began speaking, I could feel the tension build.

“Having a great time, folks? Oh, don’t worry about our little dove so high above, she was born to defy the pull of the ground. Exciting, isn’t it? Please take note of the gentlemen moving among you with their hats in hand. If you’d like to show our tiny bird a bit of appreciation, why not drop a coin in, eh?”

The other wireworkers kept their grins plastered, happy faces bring in more money.

“Why the hush, why so concerned? Our sparrow is as light as a feather and just as deft on the breeze. Watch as she crosses the wire high above. And because you fine folks have been such a delight to perform for, we’re going to make it more interesting.”

At this point, my muscles were beginning to shake from the strain, but showmanship was showmanship and this had happened before. They were milking the crowd for extra money.

“Tonight, just for you, our little lovely will perform her death-defying walk with no net. Drop it boys!”

I could hear gasps from the crowd, see the worried look of those on the platform opposite me. My nerves started to jangle, and my muscles began to shiver.

“Drumroll, please!”

I was terrified, or so it seemed. We’d pulled this grift countless times, and my job was to look scared – it got the crowd riled up. The rest of the family was in on it, too.

I began to slide my soft sole forward, followed by a wide sweep of my back foot, landing it in front of the other with perfect precision. Halfway across the length, I stopped to readjust and wobble just a little. I could hear more than one woman scream from below.

I continued my eternal shuffle, dropping the balance bar and feigning a near fall.

Men were hollering from below to stop this insanity, a matronly looking woman swooned.

“Hush now, let us not break her concentration.” He almost sounded sincere.

I began my slide and swing motion again. You could cut the tension with a knife it was so thick.

After an eternity and one more unsteady wobble, I made it to the other side. The crowd rose to their feet hollering and cheering. I stepped one foot back onto the wire for a dramatic bow, that’s when I heard a slight ping. The crowd was so riotous, I don’t think anyone else heard it.

Within a blink, the rope tore loose from its pinning point, taking its rusted fastener with it. My back to the platform, my balance leaning on the rope, all I could do was follow it to the packed ground waiting below.

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More from Nina D’Arcangela:

Bent Metal

Where does reality end and dreamscape begin?

Woken each night by the sounds of screams and twisting metal, Lauren must relive the panic and fear of discovering her brother’s broken body on the asphalt. But each morning, she finds it’s only a dream… One she doesn’t want to keep having.

At what point does a dream become a nightmare, and a nightmare more than a figment of her subconscious?

Available on Amazon!

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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!


Signed with a Rose’s Thorn 
by Donna J. W. Munro 

Nora bent over the contract, eyes passing over each line with the keen eye of a legal maestro. She ought to be after so many thousands of years in the employ of the Prince of Darkness.

“Flawless,” she said, having just found the last of the ensorcelled conditions that wrapped around the lettering of the obvious rewards and costs of the whole world.

Human eyes are nearly as weak as Human hearts.

Why did this pissant demon duke think she needed to be a part of this next wave of hell unleashed? By now, humans practically lined up to sell their souls in the name of flashy men selling hate and the machines they made to enforce their will.

“Am I free to duplicate it?”

Nora nodded and flicked her fingers, an assent as much as a dismissal. The demon scribes would bleed themselves dry making enough soul contracts for this current madman and his retinue.

It never mattered that it had happened before or how it had turned out.

It never mattered that people suffered, unless it was suffering close to their own skin. Friends. Family.

And it always came down to that didn’t it? Enough suffering for the whole world when the demons opened their veins and poured out promises of greatness, of being better than, “them,” of owning the other in the modern parlance.

She watched the duke demon gathering the drying contracts and assigning them to groups of demon bureaucrats who would create the cascading chain of domination. This group for the wealthy shady figures funding the coup. This pile to the religious figures more interested in influence than piety. This pile to the faithful of one ideology serving in government. And then came the followers. Masses of them. Too many even for the dukes and bureaucrats to distribute, but when the master took human form in a skin they’d love, when he shouted out the words of hate and promises of in group vengeance, the humans would cheerfully flock to stand at his side. There would be no need for individual distribution. The foolish living would line up to sign on the dotted line for their beloved leader.

It had happened so many times before.

Nora sighed and pulled out the prickly chair behind her burning desk, sinking into the comfort her own punishment. She’s hurt so many in her own life serving beings of power and wealth. She’d hidden the crimes of others in pretty words, falsified numbers, and legal jargon. As her skin boiled off, she knew she deserved every second of pain her office furniture meted out.

There’s always a loophole for eyes that know how to see it.

She’d used loopholes so many times in her life to get the monsters of the world out of trouble, to keep them in power, to bend justice to her master’s will.

Her ability for find such an out was a gift that the powerful paid buckets of gold for.

Gold had done her little good when she’d shivered naked before the Master’s soulless, black gaze. She’d paid for her cleverness, gladly, because she’d spotted the loophole right away.

The Other, not Master, worked against what the dukes and the other demons did. Blind to the nasty bindings and sub-clauses of each demonic coup, the Others sent courageous fighters, inspired souls to suffer, and weapons as fragile as the breath of butterflies that puffed out through the gaps in burnt flesh and shattered bone. Fragile but as strong as the insistent wind that pushes a ship from port to port.

She found her loophole in the introduction of the breath between the iron clad words the Master made her write in each contract. A salvation clause hidden in the promise of eternal torture for temporary power. A way for the other to loosen a soul here and there from the grip of the perverters.

She’d take the thorns she’d plucked from the backs of victims of the last incursion, the roses that crested from each pore of the architects of the crematoriums that ripped through the stripped back muscles of the propagandists and the Commandants, that pressed into the eye orbs of the New Order followers and the profiteers who served as a guards to the monster they’d followed, powerful voice ragged from screaming in his eternal burning, bleeding, tearing punishment.

The thorns that grew held a drop of justice in them. A tear from the Creator over the beauty and cruelty wrapped up in the world they’d made now perverted by the Master’s exploitation of human greed and hatred.

Once stolen, Nora presses the thorns into her burning skin, rupturing her veins to write a screed for the Other. In the indents of horror, she outlines with hope. The weakness of the one who comes written in each of the contracts. The direction to blow the wind of salvation to catch those raising their sails.

Hope is the rose that tops the ripping thorns.

She bleeds out each day, making two-sided contracts. She sends them off knowing the loophole expands. It burns inside with a cooling flame. It soothes as her blood refills and her muscles reform only to burn again and again. Hope is a loophole and someday, hope will be big enough to blow her away from her Master along with all the others she’d saved.

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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 Melissa R. Mendelson @fallenhazel @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

You Can Keep Your Brain Chips
by Melissa R. Mendelson

 I lived a simple life, raised no complaints, set off no alarms.  I just wanted to live, be left alone, and try to be alive, and I did everything they told me to do.  Do not read that book.  Burn it instead.  Do not listen to Mr. SonSo.  Discredit them, mock them, cancel them out, even if they remain alive.  Do not eat the things that are not listed on the mandatory list.  They will kill you, and even if they don’t, no doctor will touch you.  Enjoy the sickness, and enjoy the misinformation, the lies that are constantly spilled.  Believe who is dictated to be believed.  Everything else should be ignored.  Anyone on the other side should be removed, eliminated.

I lived a simple life.  When the Sovereignty predicted greatness, I believed it despite the price of living and those suffering on the streets.  I held my head up high and smiled because greatness was coming, and I allowed myself to be an open book.  This way, no discrimination would be brought down upon me, and I lived my life.  I lived as best as I could.

I wanted to live a simple life, but the last prediction left me rattled.  I carried the necessary technology, allowed my movements to be tracked, my conversations recorded, but this last prediction…  How could they predict such a thing?  We already lived in harmony with technology despite the glitches and hacks and spam.  The spam was ridiculous, but society has moved far ahead.  A head.  They want to put a brain chip inside your head, make you better, more conformed to the rules already tightening around my neck.

“No,” I said as my family lined up with the others for the procedure.  “The prediction is wrong,” and their looks, if they could kill, would’ve killed me.  “This is too much.  We have the phones, the watches, the glasses, the headsets, the ports, but brain chips?”

I was the last hold out in town, and I was only asked four times.  Then, they came, breaking down my door.  Brute force pulling me out of a deep sleep and dragging me half undressed across the floor and out the door and into the grass and dirt that they didn’t stomp on.

There was no arrest.  No lawyer.  Just a taser, and when I awoke, I was being dragged to a cell.  I saw pale faces try to peer out, but they flinched at the glass window, withdrawing quickly back into their cells.  One face was familiar.  A teacher that I had years ago.  I always wondered what happened to him, and now I know.

I wanted a simple life.  Now, I live in darkness.  The trays pushed under the door are rotten and insect-filled, the water bitter and dirty.  No clothing except for what I wore the night that they took me, and my feet are black and bruised and bloody, one toe might even be broken. When I do stand and approach the door to peer out looking for some kind of sign of hope, the glass window makes me dizzy, makes me sick, and I’ve vomited many times.  If I want to look out, I have to look through the eye, and the eye is unforgiving.  The eye shows me nothing but a version of myself that I don’t and will never recognize.  A drone with a brain chip inside my head.

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Fiction © Copyright Melissa R. Mendelson
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com.
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About Author Melissa R. Mendelson:

Melissa R. Mendelson is a horror, science-fiction and dystopian author and poet.  She has two publications with Wild Ink Publishing.  One is a prose poetry collection, This Will Remain With Us, and the other is a short story collection, Stories Written On Covid Walls.  She also self-published a sci-fi novella, Waken and a small short story collection, Name’s Keeper.

If you’d like to learn more about Melissa, you can visit her accounts here: www.MelissaMendelson.com

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

When I Finally Gave Up 
by Lee Mitchell  

Trigger warning: suicide

I thought I’d known what true grief felt like. Unbearable. Crushing. Relentless. I thought I had known. How spoiled I’d been. The world had felt so gray for so long, I had no idea it could actually get any worse. So, so much worse. I’d merely sought relief, rest, respite. I was so tired, all I wanted to do was go to sleep and stay there forever. I just wanted my pain to end. Had I known that there’s no sleep here, no rest, no relief, I would have pushed myself to continue ever further along that lonely, desperate path, painful as it was. At least I had a chance at hope back then.

There is no hope here. There is nothing but my thoughts… of who I once was and what I might have redeemed had I chosen differently.

Forever… such an obscure term when you really don’t understand what it means. I thought I’d found my escape. I thought I could force my suffering to end, finally, on my own terms. It seemed like the only solution at the time. But a lifetime of human suffering is just that, a lifetime. So finite. So fleeting. What I would give for what I had, gone in the blink of an eye. Life was gray, but what is gray compared to pure, unyielding darkness?

This… this endless cycle of rot and torment and regret… this is infinitely worse.

.

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

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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 Alex Grehy @indigodreamers @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

The story as written  
by Alex Grehy

In utero, a daughter’s story is written, 

tattooed on her face, her body. 

Long needles penetrating the womb, 

leaking ink turning birth water black, 

sign of a job well done. Enough survive

the violation to perpetuate the species. 

But the boys are born unsullied – they

write their own futures.

Girls must follow the script. 

As she dutifully touches each milestone 

a line will vanish, leaving her face clear and 

lovely for her wedding day; the birth of her

children is etched on her belly, the last to fade.

After that? Can she then write her own story? 

Will she have enough strength?

But what of this daughter? 

Destined for marriage, husband named at 

her birth, waiting, hungry and lustful for his 

rightful bride. Do you think she is the first to 

claw at her face, to tear her fate from her skin? 

Do you think she can win? 

Their ink has sunk into the bone, her nails will 

have to dig deep, create gnarly scars. 

Will they scribe a new fortune? 

If she escapes, who will save her?

Will she be pitied, reviled by her saviours? 

What if she’s caught? 

What if she’s sent to be bride to a beast, who craves a woman,

doesn’t care for her face, tears her to pieces?

This daughter, her future before her, is she asking these questions? 

No. 

Her desire for freedom overwhelms all reason, not knowing 

her long nails are a test not an ornament. 

All her stories are written, 

which one will she live?

.

Fiction © Copyright Alex Grehy
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from author Alex Grehy:

Thoughts, Prayers and Other Curses

Alex Grehy (she/her) enjoys writing quirky, thought-provoking horror. Widely published, her latest collection of short stories, Thoughts, Prayers and Other Curses is disturbing, clever and darkly entertaining – a wickedly imaginative journey through ten stories where time and technology have given humankind the chance to be kind, but why bother when there’s always an option to be beastly?

Available on Amazon!

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