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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


The Black Queen of Briar End
by Kathleen McCluskey

   Wonderland had two horizons.

   At the eastern edge where the sun burned itself into exhaustion, the Red Queen kept her garden in hysterical bloom. Roses split open too wide. Tulips arched like throats about to scream. The air was thick with honey and applause and nothing was permitted to wilt. Even the hedgehog trembled in bright, obedient terror.

   At the western edge, where the light thinned into violet and the trees grew thorns instead of leaves, the Black Queen kept her court.

   Her castle was grown, not built. Spires of briar twisted upward like ribs. The moat was a mirror of ink. No one painted her roses. They bled naturally.

   The Red Queen ruled what was seen in Wonderland.

   Her sister ruled what was avoided.

   Travelers who wandered too far from the croquet court found the laughter fading behind them. The path narrowed. The chessboard stones cracked and gave way to damp soil. There were bones there, small delicate things picked clean and polished by careful teeth.

   The Jabberwocky slept at the Black Queen’s gates, its vast body coiled around thorned pillars like a living drawbridge. Its eyes rolled under translucent lids, dreaming of necks and soft armor. When it breathed, the trees leaned away.

   He belonged to her.

   All the creatures that slithered out of nightmares belonged to her. Bandersnatches with wet fur and backward knees. Things that grinned too wide and hummed before they fed.

   The Red Queen and her Heart generals called them monsters.

   The Black Queen called them subjects.

   Once each year, when the roses are at their most vibrant, the sisters meet at the center of Wonderland where the light failed to choose a side. The ground there was part ash and part grass. 

   “You let your… subjects stray,” the Red Queen said. Her silk skirt snapped like banners in a relentless wind. “Three children missing from the tea fields.”

   “They crossed into my realm,” said the Black Queen. Her voice was as calm as the falling ash. Her gown moved like slow smoke, stitched with the shimmer of beetle wings. A crown of blackened gold sat upon her head, delicate skulls woven into its arches so finely they looked like lace. “You should fence your borders.”

   “You could send them back.”

   “Sometimes I do.”

   The Red Queen smiled, sharp and white. “In pieces.”

   The Black Queen regarded her sister with a quiet patience that had always unsettled the court at Briar End. The Red Queen burned with color and temper, she seemed carved from something colder, like the deep roots of the forest that bordered the land.

   “You mistake hunger for cruelty.” She finally said.

   Behind her the Jabberwocky stirred.

   The creature’s enormous body shifted against the briar towers, scales grinding together with a deep, rasping sound. One vast eyelid opened. Gold and ancient, focused on the Red Queen that was neither loyalty nor malice. Thorned barnacles snapped softly beneath its weight as it uncoiled another length of its body. The air filled with the sound of restless wings that were deciding to stretch.

   For the first time the Red Queen’s smile faltered.

   At that same moment, the soldiers along the Black Queen’s walls moved.

   They did not shuffle or look to one another for direction, The change came all at once, like a single thought passing through a hundred minds. Grey banners stitched with black spades and clubs snapped in the wind as the ranks straightened.

   Every helmet turned toward the border.

   Across the field of endless daylight lay the Red Queen’s Heart army. She watched the formation gather itself with mechanical precision.

   “You bring your pet to frighten me?”

   “They wake when the balance tilts, they always have.” The Jabberwocky, now fully awake, centered its eyes on the far, sun filled horizon.

   The Red Queen laughed, high and brittle. “You wouldn’t dare.”

   The Black Queen regarded her, the wind moving slowly between the folds of her gown while her banners stirred above the quiet ranks behind her. Then she stepped forward, crossing the unseen line between their domains.

   The grass beneath her boot instantly withered and turned to ash. It did not burn or smoke. The life in it simply ended, the green collapsing into a soft grey powder that lifted and floated in the breeze.

   Behind her the Jabberwocky rose higher, stretching its great span of wings, while along the walls the soldiers lowered their weapons in unison.

   “You forget yourself, sister.” The Red Queen said.

   The Black Queen’s voice remained calm. “You have had your endless afternoon,” she said softly. “But every garden must know the evening.”

   And she took another step.

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 , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!
 

The Massacre
by Marge Simon 

After the slaughter of women and children, the screaming horses, the gibbering

of the maimed dies down, he’s drunk on weary and numb, but he sees her

among the raped and dismembered.

She rises from the newly slain to slip away to the prairie, dark hair afire with the light of dying souls, to where shadows rise and fall into the tumbleweed and brush,

where the faintest rustle of scorpions can drive a man mad, if he’s not yet there.

The wind shifts within the hour; yucca flowers move and small bats arrive to suckle them. Higher blows the wind and dust staunches his wounds. He gets to his feet and stumbles after that beautiful vision, to where the water holes are graced by ashen bones, wondering if she will be waiting for him –that sister, mother, wet dream wraith, with arms stretched wide to take him in.

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 , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


Once a Queen  
by Donna J. W. Munro 

Estella woke up wearing Lamb Chop jammies and clutching her favorite stuffed animal tight under her matched pink bedding. The bright sun streamed in through her second story window and the Estella part of her understood she needed to get up, put on her school clothes, brush her hair, and head down for breakfast as she did every morning.

“Estella, breakfast!” Mom called from the kitchen.

Estella didn’t move. She stared up at the bright white ceiling as the second part of her shifted and slid against the puzzle of her awakened consciousness. Usually, it slotted into place and faded even before Estella had a chance to slide her feet into her kitten shaped slippers for the morning trek to the bathroom.

Not today.

Her mind echoed with her knights’ black armor clanking as they mounted their wraith steeds and the bone horn’s plaintive summons for all the ensouled dead to rise and join the fight against King Richard and his bright army marching on her holdings, spreading their damnable ideas of purity and justice as they cut down all her creatures and freed the thrall humans working in the bone farrows. Her heartbeat still raced as her tiny pink lips released the grimace she’d worn in that other place.

She’d have to get up, but the thought of living her second-grade life, eating peanut butter and going to gymnastics before chicken nuggets and a bubble bath seemed a little silly. Her creatures had unleashed the bog bats to spy on the incoming army and she needed to go back to interpret the incoming images only she could see with her mind’s eye. Even as she lay under a poster of Super Girl and Krypto the Dog, she could still hear the whisperings of the undead crown, made from the bones of her mother in the other place. A mother Estella had killed with her own poison recipe.

Her six-panel door swung open and Daddy came in, still tying his tie, dots of tissue paper over spots he’d cut raw on his face. “Come on, princess. Up and at ‘em now.”

He was every inch a fool. If he’d been born in the other place, she’d either have used his skin as part of the shade sail that blocked out the sun over her castle or he’d have been eaten as part of the stew she gave the dungeon dwelling beasties that tormented her sisters locked in cells made of dragon bones.

“No Daddy, my tummy doesn’t feel so good. I want to stay home today. Please?” She made her voice as sweet and plaintive as a thousand-year-old witch queen dreaming a suburban second grader could manage.

“Aw, precious girl.” He put his wrist against her forehead and cheeks as Estella fluttered her eyelashes at him. “I’ll tell mom you need some rest. Maybe later she’ll bring you some crackers and Sprite, huh?”

Estella nodded and said, “After lunchtime, Daddy, please? I just want to sleep awhile.”

He nodded and pulled her comforter up around her shoulders and kissed her gently on her forehead. “Get well, baby.”

She murmured something like assent and began her slide back into the war zone of her kingdom where her hoards awaited her pleasure with instruments and nightmare creatures that would prove quite impure and unjust for King Richard’s army. In the place between sweet little Estella and Demon Queen Estella, dream or nightmare didn’t matter. Estella always won, no matter where her soul dwelled.

.

Fiction © Copyright Donna J. W. Munro
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
line_separator2

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!

line_separator2

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

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Princes Spicebag
by Lisa Harris

*Disclaimer: The opinions and views expressed by characters in this story IN NO WAY reflect the real-world views of the author.

**Disclaimer: You think the National Dish of Ireland is the Potato? WRONG. It’s the humble “Spicebag.” Gifted to us by the good people of China. Picture shredded chicken in batter with chips, saturated with a mysterious “Five Spice” flavouring. Google it. You’re welcome.

***

     “Ah dere she is, me Chinese Empress!” 

     “Disney’s reject: Princess Spicebag!”

     Sophie looked up from her phone in pure disgust as Poxer and his scummy cronies barged through the door, the stink of hash invading the tiny Chinese takeaway. Arthur’s Palace was her da’s business, but Arthur and her ma Shirley were away in Liverpool visiting relatives, so Sophie, nineteen, and her brother Seán, twenty-two, were currently holding the fort. Taking orders, slinging spring rolls, and, despite being second generation Irish-born Chinese, dealing with the occasional, local, ignorant twat. Or three.

     “T’ree spicebags with chicken meat – not cat meat, prease!” Poxer dumped a grubby pile of notes and coins onto the counter. No doubt earnings from the night’s drug dealings.

     “Yiz can order properly or yiz can fuck off.” Sophie returned to her scrolling, long nails tapping at the screen. She wasn’t taking shit from these scrotebags. She’d grown up in the same flats as them, been to school with their sisters. She was as Dublin as they were.

     Mongo and Fitzy, their jiggling hands shoved down the front of their grey tracksuit bottoms, erupted into laughter as their leader Poxer started bowing and crying “Aaaah! Me-so solly! Me-so solly!” 

     Disbelief burst from Sophie. “ARE YOUS FOR FECKIN’ REAL?!” 

     “D’fuck is goin’ on?!” Seán stormed from the kitchen, slamming up the counter top. 

     “Oooooh, look out! Here’s Jackie Chan!”

     “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Spicebag!” 

     “Ha-fuckin’-HA.” snarled Seán, taking a fighting stance. Poxer’s face lit up. These racist cunts loved a scrap, but Sophie didn’t fancy their chances in a proper fight. Not against Seán who was a boxing coach at the local gym. But still. 

     “Seán, leave it! They’re not worth it!” Sophie was panicking. Seán’s unpredictable temper mixed with Poxer’s notoriously unhinged behaviour was a dangerous mix. This had already escalated wildly. “Just give them the spicebags and they’ll go!”

     “OUTSIDE!” roared Seán, pointing to the narrow doorway, cluttered with promotional flyers and menus.

     But they didn’t leave. With a nod from Poxer, Fitzy turned the old heavy door lock and drew down the shabby red blinds. Sophie saw a flash of steel as the head scumbag whipped out a knife from inside his North Face jacket.

     Seán visibly wavered as the gang advanced, his fists loosening to open palms. Sophie’s mind raced. No point calling the Guards. They rarely, if ever, turned up to call-outs for the crime riddled area. She hastily ducked and dived behind the till, knocking trays of plastic cutlery and napkins, searching for something heavy to defend them with. Anything, anything – oh! She’d found something, it was stupid, but… She picked up the half-full canister and turned back to the nightmarish scene. Her brother was on his knees, upraised palms now slashed and bloody, a manic look in Poxer’s eyes.

     “Here lads! D’yiz want yer spicebags?!” Sophie bellowed, ripping the lid off the tube of Arthur’s Homemade Secret Extra-Spicy Five Spice Spicebag Powder, and flung its contents straight into Poxer’s face. It met their target: beady, druggy eyes. Poxer HOWLED, staggered back, one stubby hand pawing at his eyes. Knife still raised, he flailed wildly around the constricted foyer, slashing blindly at the trapped Mongo and Fitzy, who fled for the door and out onto the dark street. Seán launched himself onto Poxer’s back, scrabbling for the waving knife. They fall to the floor, both gripping the weapon. Each man crimson-faced and heaving, Poxer rolled on top of Seán. Murderous, he turned to Sophie, rabidly drooling. “You’re fuckin’ next, ya Chinky bitch!” And gripping a wheezing Seán’s neck with one hand he finally succeeded in retrieving the knife.

     Something in Sophie snapped. She let out a prolonged high-pitched scream, and ran back behind the counter and ripped down the Irish flag – hung proudly on the wall by her Grandad Lee in 1996 when Arthur’s Palace first opened. Twisting it as she continued screaming, she swiftly, deftly wound it around Poxer’s neck and strangled, strangled, strangled. The element of surprise worked strongly in her favour, as did the adrenaline supported boost of strength. She strangled until Poxer’s lifeless body collapsed onto a greatly weakened Seán, and she screamed into his dead, flabby face:

     “I’M NOT A CHINKY BITCH – I’M A FECKIN’ IRISH BITCH! YA FAT SKANGER!”

     Seán shoved the body off him and stared tremulously at Sophie.

     “Soph, Jesus Christ. What are we gonna – “

     Sophie stormed back to her high stool behind the counter and resumed angrily scrolling her phone, as she had been only twenty minutes before.

     “Just stick him in the freezer with the other racist pricks I’ve had to take care of this week and get back in the kitchen. Dat football match will be endin’ soon an’ we’re gonna be hoppin’.” A wicked smirk. “But it’s not like we’ll be short on meat.”

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

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

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

To Build a Wife 
by Elaine Pascale

As young girls they had been taught to sing and dance.

They had been raised to cook and clean.

They had been trained to defend their homes.

They had been given pills, copious pills, to make them forget.

Each day they would wake and the forefront of their minds would be to please. To cook, clean, make love, sing, dance, and smile (always smile). They had no idea where these instincts came from but they were all encompassing.

Alivia, always curious, wondered what would happen if she didn’t swallow the pills, if she hid them instead. In another world, she would have been a great researcher or scientist and not someone whose value was measured in a clean home and a husband whose belly was full and whose sexual needs were satisfied.

After a few days of stuffing the pills in her pillowcase, she began to understand that she had desires of her own. After a few pill-free weeks, she no longer cared if the house was clean or if her husband was hungry. After a few months, she realized that she and the other women had been horribly manipulated.

It’s abuse, she thought, and it can’t continue.

She had sent secret messages to her friends, imploring them to stop taking the pills. A few did; the others were afraid. The pill-free women let the dishes pile in the sink. They let the clothes remain in the hamper unwashed. They let their husbands wait in their beds while they read or wrote or considered the constellations through telescopes.

Their disobedience was met with punishment.

Alivia saw the bruises and wounds on her friends’ flesh and felt the sting of the penance she had received. Some wanted to start taking the pills again. “It would be easier,” they explained. But Alivia liked the taste of freedom more than that of any pill and she vowed to unlearn all they had taught her.

Except for how to start a fire. She was glad they had taught her how to start a fire.

.

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 , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


Borrowed Air
by Kathleen McCluskey

   They called me lucky for years after the fire, as if survival was a trophy handed out to the most deserving. Neighbors brought casseroles and hugged my shoulders with careful hands. Reporters used words like miracle and blessing while the house behind them unveiled its blackened ribcage to the winter sky. My sister’s name was spoken softly, reverently and mine was spoken with relief. I was the spared thing. The proof that tragedy has limits.

   I learned to carry that word like an heirloom. Lucky. I polished it. I repeated it until it was true.

   The first time I saw her was in a dim apartment hallway years later, when the building’s ancient radiator hissed and filled the air with a metallic vapor. The mist did not disperse. It thickened. It drew inward, folding over itself with deliberate grace, until it suggested the curve of a shoulder. The fall of something like hair. Pale ribbons drifted outward from her body as if she was woven from breath made visible. She was neither solid nor transparent.

   The sound reached me a moment later. It was breathing, but not the breathing of a single chest. It layered upon itself, dozens of soft inhalations overlapping , rising and fraying into shallow exhalations. Beneath it threaded a fragile rasp, the raw drag of air forced through heat and ash.

   I did not scream. I did not move.

   She did not approach. She simply occupied the space, as though the air had decided to remember a shape it once held.

   I moved cities. I changed apartments. I kept the lights on and the windows cracked, convinced that circulation would prevent her from forming. It did not matter. She gathered wherever the air lingered long enough to grow heavy. Hotel rooms. Office stairwells. The dark reflection of a mirror at night. Always at a distance. Always patient. When she lifted her arms, the drifting strands extended and recoiled, testing the space between us without crossing it.

   Therapists told me that trauma imprints itself onto the senses. They said my mind was recreating the conditions of the fire in order to process why I survived. They said the mind prefers ghosts instead of guilt because ghosts are easier to fight.

   They did not know about the door.

   When the smoke alarm split the night air, I was awake. I had smelled it first, that bitter sweetness that did not belong in a sleeping house. The hallway beyond my room churned with black heat, the ceiling groaned as if something large shifted above. My sister’s room was only three steps away. I remember the carpet scorching my bare feet as I crossed the distance. I remember wrapping my hand around her doorknob.

   It was hot enough to burn but not yet unbearable. There was still time. I could feel the house straining to breathe, a fragile pause.

   I called her name. I heard something inside. A cough? Or perhaps only the roar gathering beneath us. The sound from the first floor came then, a violent concussion of splintering beams and shattering glass. The heat surged up the stairwell in one single, monstrous exhale. In that moment I understood two futures with clarity that has never left me. In one, I opened the door and stepped into the furnace, in the other, I ran.

   The body is an honest creature. It chooses survival without consulting the soul.

   I chose the back stairs. I chose cold air. I chose lungs that would still work.

   The officials said that the fire spread too quickly for anyone to have saved her. They said the smoke would have taken her before any flame. They said I was a child and couldn’t have altered the inevitable. I let them hand me those conclusions like a blanket.

   She grows denser whenever I remember the heat of that brass knob. The breathing within her thickens. Her layered inhales sharpen into desperate pulls that never quite fill. Tonight she stands at the foot of my bed, vast enough to dim the lamp beside me. The air has become viscous, each breath a measured effort. The drifting strands extend from her and hover inches from my face, cool against my overheated skin.

   I understand now that she is not my sister’s spirit, nor is she a hallucination stitched together from grief. She is the accumulation of unfinished breaths, from hospital rooms, highways and burning houses. She forms wherever survival cleaves cleanly through love and leaves someone standing in the ashes with functioning lungs.

   The strands press softly against my mouth, waiting for invitation rather than forcing entry. The room thins around me as the first thread of borrowed smoke slips past my teeth. Now I finally understand that luck was never what spared me.

   It was vacancy.

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 , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Mirror, Mirror 
by Rie Sheridan Rose

The queen stood before the full-length mirror her guardian had given her for a wedding present. She was trembling with excitement, because she knew it was magical, and that it always told the truth. She couldn’t wait to hear its portents and had hurried to her private chambers without even bothering to change out of her wedding gown. Now, she stood before it and lifted aside the cloth covering it.

“Mirror, Mirror, on the wall—

Who’s the fairest of them all?”

The image in the mirror shifted from a beautiful girl in a snow-white gown to a strangely dressed man with…were those the tips of horns peeking out of the curls on his forehead?

“Well, well, well. Aren’t you the pretty young thing?” The mirror replied with a sharp-toothed smile. “I’d say you fill that bill hands down…”

The queen glowed with excitement. Just as she had thought!

“…Of course,” the man behind the glass continued, glancing down at an odd device on his wrist, “that’s only going to be true for about…sixteen years or so, until that adorable little stepdaughter of yours grows up. Talk about a looker. Snow White will be a beauty for the ages.”

The queen stepped back in shock. That mewling infant would one day eclipse her? No! It was inconceivable.

“But…like I say, sweetie. You’ll be the It Girl for almost two decades. Could be worse.”

She twitched the cover back over the mirror and flung herself down on the bed. This would take planning…

***

…But in the end, she couldn’t do it. Snow White was an angel. She always did as she was told. She was helpful to all and sundry. The queen resigned herself to losing her cherished place as fairest in the land to the budding beauty. She began to dress in unrelieved black, and to adorn herself with symbols of death—because she felt that she was dying inside.

On the eve of Snow White’s sixteenth birthday ball, she stood once more before the mirror and lifted away the cover.

“Mirror, Mirror on the wall—

Who’s the fairest of them all?”

Her voice was a mere whisper as she repeated the rhyme from so long ago. She hadn’t spoken to the mirror since that night.

The man materialized before her, looking not a day older. “You have tonight still, sweetie. You will be the fairest until midnight.”

She laughed ruefully. “All because I couldn’t relieve myself of that child. How pathetic you must think me.”

“No, sweetie. I’ve been playing this game for a long time, and you are the first queen I’ve respected—and for just that reason. I always knew you’d come along someday.” He reached out a hand, and the fingers extended to her side of the mirror. “Come to me. Here, in my world, you will always be the fairest of them all.”

With a tremulous smile, she took the proffered hand, and stepped through the mirror.

.

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 , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Kendra Smart @DevourAllWords @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Preserved  
by Kendra Smart 
 

Scritch.  Scrritch. Scritch. 

The same noise. 

He had heard it for months now, that same noise, always accompanied by the night. 

There, behind the deteriorating but life left in them wooden hinged doors. Somewhere down there in the lower part of the ship, was something yearning for freedom the way he longed for land. 

He knew the other sailors aboard were as aware as he, they whispered about it in small groups. 

But even being aware and possibly even as curious as he, they followed the Captain’s order with an iron fist. 

No one was to go below decks. Not for any reason. The doors were to remain barred and locked for the whole of the voyage.

The voyage had seemed simple. Transport of market goods across the sea from one port to another. A half to three quarters of a year in exchange for more than fair wage. 

Enough for him to prove to his love that he was in fact worth her time, her hand. That he could provide, if her heart could wait. 

And he had been sincere. He genuinely had not expected the trip to tear away at his sanity in such ferocity. 

But every night of this voyage, something odd occurred. Never the same but always a feat that raised the hairs on his arms and made his flesh crawl while his senses became hyper aware. 

One night, not even two weeks after The Clarity of Dawn had set her sails and left port, a young boy had a grievous accident. Known for his ability to climb and maneuver on the many ropes and pulleys, suddenly lost his balance and his life. 

It was the first of many odd deaths and yet he could only remember being present for a few of the sea burials. 

Looking over the misshapen burlap bag that stripped any bit of humanity that was left to the person inside. The heaving had taken five men just to lift the dead weight, and it had not felt like any body he had ever laid his hands on. 

The rocks were for drag, so the bodies didn’t float on the surface but were quickened in their journey down to the locker. But he had felt only rocks in his hands. 

Night after night, it became incessant. 

Scritch.  Scrritch. Scritch. 

How long would they have before whatever was down there broke through? 

A knife through the eye from pure unfortunate bad luck. Drowning because you were caught in the ropes by an ankle and under the boat wasn’t willing to let you go. That man had come back shredded from sea life. 

Each time his hand had met with worn burlap and the weight and jagged sharpness of the wrapped rocks. Each time he mused on the weight he bore. 

Because the weight just didn’t feel heavy enough. 

But he stayed silent, not wanting to become one of those who faced the odd and unusual. He had something to go home to. And that thought had held him to the mast, had kept him steady in the drift.  

Especially when the voyage just kept going and land was something remembered in dreams and walking flights of fantasy. Three months had been the promise to get to their port but days had turned to weeks, and then those weeks became a month. 

The men had started to slowly outcry as excuses of storms and poor navigating began to falter. These were strong hearty men yes, but these were not necessarily sea faring men. There was no dedication to the wheel, no staying of the course. They, like he, were here to provide for their families. 

He would day in and day out do the tasks required of him, and night by night he would hear the growing resentment and discord. Attempts at slumber were always met with the same end. 

Scritch.  Scrritch. Scritch. 

Over the months he had almost become numb to the sounds, able to grasp longer and longer moments of sleep where he was not disturbed. But whatever made the sounds seemed to grasp his tolerance and grew closer. The sounds growing louder. 

One night he could take it no more. It was as though the scratching and scrapping were in his ear canals and the warm blood seeping from his ears made him wonder for more than a moment if he had been wrong. 

He had to know, and had to stop the sound. He ran to the hinged door and pulled at the chains with all his might. The doors groaned in their denial of his strength. Even with the wear and tear of time they held fast in their endeavor to not open. 

The doors may have been solid but he heard the metal holding the hinges giving with each hard pull of his full weight. The chains clanked and he could hear the men yelling at him to stop but a few more pulls revealed what had been hidden in the darkness. The candlelight gave illumination as his stomach rolled. 

Hanging in neat rows were his crewmates, and with each glance between retches and gasps for breath he saw the bones…clean of meat. 

The turn around to face the Captain and crew was far worse though, they looked not horrified as one would expect but hungry and their next meal was laid before them. 

Fiction © Copyright Kendra Smart
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
line_separator2

More from author Kendra Smart:

je

Just Emotions:
A Gothic Bite Magazine Anthology

A collection of poetry.

Just Emotions‘ is exactly as it states, a group of writers who had feelings they wanted to express in poem form. Inside, there are a range of emotions to explore. Each writer has given a bit of themselves to you, each in their own way.

We hope that you enjoy these writings and that among the poems you may find some thing you can identify with or relate to. Thank you for giving us this chance to open the catacombs and share with you.

Available on Amazon!  

line_separator2

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

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Kim Richards @Kim_Richards @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Shadowpede
by Kim Richards

 Amongt the cold, damp darkness, Shadowpede emerged, skittering across the dirt in search of blood. It didn’t take long to find the hand. It’s tiny mind had no notion it was severed from a larger body. It only knew the blooded flesh before it.

This was something it could feed on for days. Ever so slowly it circled its discovery. Pausing to lick here and there, it searched for the best spot to feast. Upon finding one, it began devouring juicy mouthfuls.

So engrossed in its delightful morsels, it didn’t notice the approach of a Big. The huge being stopped before Shadowpede and its hand meal, towering overhead a moment.

In a swift movement, the Big lifted its booted leg and stomped hard on Shadowpede. Instant pain filled the insect’s body before death took its place.

“There you are.”

The Big reached down and picked up the hand. He turned and stomped on down the sewer tunnel, disappearing into the darkness.

Fiction © Copyright Kim Richards
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
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 Amanda Worthington @AmandaW58679588 @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Sylvan Transition
by Amanda Worthington

Beauty is only skin deep

But the grub’s appetite surpasses the flesh before it

And it doesn’t mind eating the ugly parts too

Delving into the hidden recesses

Filling itself on this creature’s fat deposits

Testing its limits.

It is assessing entry points

When the ring implores it to stop

Gather itself and gaze deep

The onyx surface shimmers like a pool in the starlight

And the insect crawls forward

With infantile expectation barely concealed

Eagerly expecting a meal

To be conjured from its depths

The grub vanishes

And with a shaky breath

The woman awakes

There is not much life in the creeping things

But perhaps it is enough to sustain her to the forest’s edge

Where the wizard waits

With his crows and complaint

And answers?

She kisses the ring and proceeds

With more dread than certainty

But no – her journey will not end here

No one can escape their fate

And hers lies elsewhere

.

.

line_separator2

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