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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

What we make, only we can break  
by Alex Grehy

Trust, that is what our society thrives on,

trust, and secrets never disclosed.

I am of the Makers, of generations wedded to the 

deep earth, mother to daughter, whispering our 

sacred craft, the bonding of souls to vessels

shaped on the potter’s wheel, a wheel of life.

We are well rewarded for our labour, sealing,

as we do, our population’s spark of immortality 

within these plaques, displayed proud but safe

in our vaults, for none can break these nameplates.

So they believe, so they trust, so they forget.

Forget to be grateful, forget to sustain us with

tributes, forget that each plate has two sides, 

that makers too are breakers, that hands

which moulded may also destroy.

I stand in apparent humility, gathering my strength

for the ritual of breaking; the maker’s secret, never

revealed, then or now. As the plates smash and spit

across the stone floor, they will drop dead, unknowing.

We trusted them to provide for us, who dedicated our

lives to them, but their faithless betrayal spelled their end. 

I will sweep the broken shards and grind them to dust.

At the potters wheel I will mix the grog with fresh clay, 

finer than the homely terracotta we gifted them before.

I will spin life into new peoples. Maybe the fragile

porcelain of their making will remind them to be grateful.

.

Fiction © Copyright Alex Grehy
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from author Alex Grehy:

Last Species Standing

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

Available on Amazon!

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


The Mirror of Men 
by Donna J. W. Munro 

“Come on, Laurel,” He said, cheeks red and his eyes swimming but full of interest.

I’d worn the red dress to catch his eye, sure. I tipped my head shyly but smiled into my compact mirror knowing exactly how this was going to go.

“I don’t know.” I edged closer so his arms might entwine me. What I imagined, what I hoped for seemed so close. “Do we really have to go to another bar? There’s always your place.”

He smirked the universal signal to his primate friends that he’d won. I leaned into the drape of his arm as he said his good-byes and good lucks to his friends. We wove through the Friday night crowd of co-eds and young professionals trying to remind themselves of life before the 9-to-5.

“I’ll call an Uber,” I said, texting Julia, my bestie who’d have her own turn next Friday.

While we waited, I let him give me sloppy kisses while My hands ran across his hot, sweaty skin.

“Hey, get a room!”

He roared something back at the less wasted, less ensnared young man with his own lady attached to his arm.

I nodded to her. Professional courtesy after all.

“Ignore them,” I said as Julia pulled up in her latest chariot, a four-door Toyota just big enough for a little heavy petting in the small backseat. “What’s your address?”

“20 Washington Ave.” His hand was on my thigh and his breathy words muffled against my neck.

Julia heard and turned into the directions, her eyes catching mine through the rearview. My bestie couldn’t really be hungry. Not yet. She’d had her turn last Saturday, but that didn’t mean she didn’t appreciate the looks of a snack like he was.

When they pulled up to his apartment building, he fumbled with his wallet but I smiled and pushed his hand away.

“I’ve got this, hon.”

Julia smiled as I pulled him to his feet, all 6 ft four, 220 pounds of him. Getting him upstairs without waking the whole building took much of my muscle. As strong as I was, he was loud and stumbly. I hoped his neighbors were used to him moaning and groaning.

“This one’s me.” He fumbled with his pocket for keys.

Inside was a matchstick existence: expensive gaming chair and crappy dining table, fridge full of beer and old lunchmeat, bathroom so splattered with urine it was more a litter box, and bed with thin sheets, unwashed as long as he’d been living on his own. The thought of all the women who’d come before me staining the cotton threads with their essence thrilled me, even as he fell across the bed.

“Dance for me, baby,” he mumbles, fingers tangling in his belt and buckle.

“Soon, babe,” I said, pulling ropes from my Hermes bag. It doesn’t take long truss up a drunk pig when they think that it’s part of foreplay. He giggled with the tying of each knot until he was spread eagled on the bed, only his boxers between him and the world.

He grinned though I knew it wouldn’t last. Guys like him have never been out of control. They expect their muscles, their beauty, their maleness to keep them out of trouble and usually, it works.

“Don’t leave me hanging.” His voice was less bleary, more lusty. Good. I preferred my men aware even if it meant they were louder.

How did these beings come to dominate the world? I snickered as I thought about all they’d done and not done. I didn’t feel like I owed him my “men are really from Mars and women are an entirely different species” speech. He wouldn’t believe it anyway. Not with so much history to reinforce his belief that we, women that is, were made for his consumption and not vice versa.

I did owe him something though, didn’t I?

“There’s a spark in us,” I told him as I unbuttoned my top. “Most women are told that something shameful burns in us.”

Once my buttons were loosed, I let the shirt fall away and started in on the bra underneath.

“Yeah baby. Shameful,” he growled, eyes full of my skin.

When the bra dropped away, I began to tug at my seams. The seal was tricky, but it began to soften as I circled him.

“We aren’t of you. We are your natural mirror, even if you’ve forgotten.”

Clearly, it didn’t matter what I was saying because he liked the look of my bare breasts more than the meaning of my explanation. Too bad. There was something so satisfying about the apex predator realizing that he’s the prey. He was swimming in his own lust, frustrated by the wait to take the prize he’d wanted so desperately. When my false breast vest fell open at the seam revealing the surgical weaponry I’d stowed within, something in him cracked. He laughed.

“What the hell?”

Poor dumb animal. How could they know? Every time we stared in a mirror we shared information with our entire sex. Every single time one of us achieved the true burn, releasing from the shackles of Eve, we were there to arm, train, and celebrate our sister in her liberation. Our advanced empathetic weaponry paired with our innate ability to camouflage our dominance serve us well.

Why wouldn’t we eat the lesser predator?

The knifes glinted in my vest brightly, winking at him as he finally understood. He screamed as I pulled out the bone saw.

###

The red dress hid the stains of my work when Julia came to get me and my bags of groceries.

“Saved you some.” I handed her a piece of his liver I’d fried to hold me over.

“Yum,” she said, popping it in her mouth and turning the car back toward home. She smiled at me through a glance in the mirror. I smiled back. We all smiled.

.

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 Elizabeth H. Smith @bethsmithwrites @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Sleeping Gods
by Elizabeth H. Smith

Legends said the Gods once stood proud over the world, forcing their will upon humanity with uncanny power. Their immortal bodies were strong, their skin harder than stone. They ruled their domain with absolute authority. No one had a choice but to obey; it was either that or be sent to the beyond. They could dispatch dissenters with one quick motion. No one could have gone against them, despite how cruel and unloving they may have been.

Those tales told us we lived in servitude to Gods we didn’t belong to. That they were false, wearing our faces to deceive us. Some believed they did not create the world, nor were they always here. No one could guess where they originated, only that they were not the ones who made us.

Then the great slumber began; all the Gods across the world went dormant. No one knew why, but a theory suggested unknown magic had been used to put them to sleep. No one knew who it was, or if they were even real.

Most wonder if someday the spell will wear off, if they’ll rise and take vengeance upon us, revoke our freedom, make us suffer. But it’s been centuries and they still haven’t woken from their rest. We pray they never do.

.

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

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Melissa R. Mendelson @fallenhazel @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

I Am Not This Person Anymore
by Melissa R. Mendelson

All I wanted was to be healthy. Some promising ads, so many inspirational stories. I wanted to live my best life, feel healthy in mind, body and spirit. I wanted to feel alive because I haven’t in a very long time, but it was a new year, promising and hopeful. I would do everything right, but all I did was fool myself again.

Such a small fucking pill, a small fucking pill that in the beginning, I did feel better. I felt alive, so I took that pill, thinking that it was the right choice, the best thing for me, and for awhile, it was. I was happy. It was working, but then I got greedy. What about two pills? They were for different things, but they would work together. There would be no issue. Right?

It was a hot June evening when I returned home from work. I remembered walking through the front door, dropping my things on the table nearby, and going to my bedroom. Then, I was on the floor. Nobody came running. Nobody asked me if I was okay. I sat up, and I knew. I felt it. I was not me, but why was I not me? It was those pills, those damn fucking pills, and as I stood up, it felt like something else was in control. I was just sitting in the passenger seat.

I went downstairs. My family was sitting at the dinner table. They were talking and laughing. Didn’t they realize something was wrong because something was very wrong with me, but they didn’t notice. And I caught my reflection on the refrigerator door, and my face blurred. I opened my mouth to say something but closed it quickly because a scream was rising upward. I wanted to scream at all of them and keep screaming, but instead, I mumbled, “I’m not hungry. I’m going upstairs.”

It was the first night for a very long time that I laid in bed, a stranger in my own body. My mind was gone. My soul absent. What did I do? Where did I go? I just hurt, and I want to hurt them because it makes me feel better. But it is wrong. I am wrong, and my body is laughing at me. You wanted to be healthy, feel alive, so you took those pills without question, without checking with anyone. What did you think was going to happen?

“I want to be me,” I whispered to myself. “I want to be me,” but I became the stranger stepping into my shoes, pretending everything was okay, and pushing myself through work, hoping that no one would notice the strangeness in my face. I was a puppet on cruel strings, and I found myself each night clutching those strings to my chest, thinking, hoping, praying that if only I could untangle them, I would be me again. But I am wrong and maybe even past saving. What if I am not this person anymore?

 

.

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Synaptic Pruning 
by Kendra Smart 

“You can tolerate it, just a few moments more.”

A few shaky breaths held down by clammy palms gripping on a raised pattern of leather armrests. The only scattered sounds in the dark beside the occasional metal clanging on metal. 

A lie. Not dark, not at all. But the light was so blinding that it made everything naught but shadows. It was too strenuous on his eyes to distinguish the faces and items before him. 

But wasn’t that better? Wasn’t this moment a true example of proof in practice. It wasn’t as scary if you couldn’t see what was happening. 

“You would be amazed what the body is able to sustain and even endure. All that you have felt and suffered through will have been worth it…in the end.” 

The voice of the nurse at his head really did sound like she was trying to be comforting. But to her credit, her occasional gentle hand squeeze on his shoulder was distracting from the fact that his skull was not only exposed but presently lay open like a coconut beaten for its milk and meat.  

That he was awake made the experience all the more unnerving. He had heard the drill as it hummed and roared to life. Felt the immense pressure before a blissful release as a crackling fire along with a few loud pops happened in his ears. As if his jaw gave a few solid pops. 

Times a hundred. 

Thankfully as the metal implements did their portion of the work, scalpels and tongs- things of that nature, he felt nothing. Phantom or imaginary. 

This surgery had been his choice. In a sense, at least. He had certainly put this train on its track. His case file would show escalating behaviors, acting out with aggression, violent tendencies, lack of appetite, depression, hallucinations. 

Only because they came in between him and Marion. 

From the moment their eyes had met across the cafeteria her first day, he had known. The hustle and bustle of the room had gone suddenly still, as though sound itself had been sucked from the room as easily as air. It ceased to exist except for her. Like air sucked through a hole on a plane or space station. Immediate and unavoidable. 

That was what it felt like being apart from Marion. Trying to breath without a source of air to pull from. 

Day after day he would watch to figure out her schedule. It wasn’t too hard to decipher given all sources of information. The staff talked about everything, including their schedules. It didn’t take long to figure out her shift, night. Nor days of the week she worked, Monday through Thursday.  

He hadn’t meant for poor Marion to become his focal point, but his Northern Star she became.   So seamlessly had she invaded his waking moments that her presence even stalked the corridors of his mind, haunting like a loyal Light Master unwavering at their lonesome post. 

 Part of the ship, tasked to the crew. 

But that felt too akin to demeaning, Marion could never be set in comparison against something so tedious as a task. No. She was the sunshine, peaking over the crest of fleeting dusk. Colorful and warm, brightening whatever space she chose the longer she was around. 

And it hadn’t taken long to recognize her heart. She showed it in all of her interactions, even in the quiet moments. The repose. But for reasons he couldn’t fathom, more and more he found her working other spots around the building…away from him. 

The other staff was dismissive of his concerns. Almost offended at his asking after Marion. 

“She’s on another unit today. Am I not good enough to help you out?”

They joked but the laughter never reached their eyes, only mire. 

Gerald had been kinder in the beginning. But that had been before. Back when he could at least catch glimpses of Marion. Albeit through two steel locked doors with glass panes featuring latticed wire. 

The glimpses were enough. He caught her smile as she went about her work helping her residents with this or that. Her kindness and patience clearly defined within each task. No matter how mundane or menial. 

Service with a genuine smile. 

He could understand that Marion’s heart was needed elsewhere…as long as he was allowed to follow her, even as a wisp of a shadow. It had been enough. 

Until Marion stopped appearing all together. Even on her scheduled days. Gerald wheeled himself around the campus looking for the gossip circles, for the ladies and gents in the know. 

Where was Marion? 

One week had passed. Two weeks. The pain in his chest became nigh unbearable. 

Three weeks. 

Even the rumor mills were spiraling at this point and feeding on her absence. Had she quit? Fired? All the hushed whispers racked his dreams both waking and the small cat napping his body forced upon him. 

Week Four. 

She came back. He had seen her. They had moved her up to the front of the building, another array of worlds set in the encapsulated environment that was campus. That must have been where she was needed the most. Her kindness. Warmth. 

He smiled at her, purely a moment of time caught in passing. She seemed nervous. Her smile back was very tight and close lipped. 

Little warmth. Forced almost. 

From then on each day had been the loss of Marion. Another chink in the armor, more brittle pieces of his love falling away. Other staff tried to extend their hands in kindness but they weren’t Marion. 

Gerald lost himself to the despair. 

What a horrible lot to love yet love alone. What purpose served the heart if not to feel?

But feelings are housed not in the literal heart like the poets woefully wrote, no…one could not survive without the beating traitor. 

But one’s mind could absolutely have pieces and parts removed all while leaving one quite functional. 

So Gerald did what he had to in order to be considered for the surgery. Including the option to keep his removed organs. They were his weren’t they?

They scheduled his Amygdalotomy. 

Which was presently where his brain was bringing him back to. The lights were still so bright. The nurse who was on his shoulder was talking to him. Gerald struggled to focus for a moment. 

“Say them after me Gerald. Yellow. Orange. Pink. Blue.

Yellow. Orange. Pink. Blue.

Gerald felt something off as he repeated the color names back to her. But how they were off he couldn’t describe. His mechanics were trying to process, make the pieces come together to make things clearer. 

But the message was vague, muffled as though his subconscious was going down with the proverbial ship. It didn’t matter for long though, the next words caught his attention and brought it fully to focus. 

“Let’s close him up.”

Gerald had done it, made it through the hardest hurdle. Now he just needed to send a package. 

                                                                         ***

Marion Fairchild had been telling her therapist for weeks that returning to work was too stressful.  When she returned to healthcare Marion had held high hopes that it would bring some structure into her life. She just wanted to help people and feel like some normalcy had returned to her every week. 

But one resident at the Bevelled End Assisted Living and Long Term Care had held other ideals about what her purpose was. Following her throughout the building for hours on end, leaving gifts in her locker, even going so far as to bully other residents so that they wouldn’t come to her for assistance. She just wanted to do her job. But the harassment had been endless. 

Like a shadow that was resistant to all light he clung to her presence while she worked, making her rounds. He would always be in her periphery, but when Marion would bring her eyes to focus directly on him…he was tucked away. 

The act of being shy that he put on was just that, an act. He had no problem establishing his being and had less concern asking her coworkers about her personal life. The genuine concern in their eyes as they all would gather to tell her was maddening. It had caused to question working at this facility, she didn’t even want to set foot on campus. 

Her point of contact had listened to her concerns and told Marion that they were valid and would be addressed. Their response was to move her from her normal assignment, from there it was an endless game of hopscotch around the campus. Never a continuing assignment, once she got a routine down it felt like she was pulled to somewhere new. 

Marion worked hard to maintain her smile. But it became harder so she took a mental break. 

Two weeks of paid vacation to the tune of her bank of paid time off screaming. But wasn’t her mental well being worth that small cost?

She was jarred from her thoughts by the sound of her doorbell, Marion opened her door to find a small brown boxed package. The return address was for Bevelled End, she wondered if it was something like a care package. On top of the package was a sticker with a picture of a smiling face with the script “Get Well Soon!” written in bubbly letters above the face. Maybe the H.R. manager who had helped her do her Leave of Absence paperwork? 

Marion made her way to the kitchen looking for something to open the package. Once open, inside lay a thick-papered, heavy envelope atop sheer but not fully transparent tissue paper. She set the card on the countertop beside the package and lifted the cloth. 

Almost instantly the small space was filled with the scent of roses. But not of fresh, fragrant roses. The smell emanating from the box was that of sickenly sweet decay, her eyes immediately saw the almost perfectly preserved withered roses. 

Nestled amongst them was an ornate leather and wooden small box.  She lifted the box up, it had the heft of good, solid material paired with the details denoting craftsmanship. The leather was incorporated as if it and the tree had always been meant to be used for this purpose. 

Slowly she took in her breath, her heart felt like it was going to pound out of her chest. 

Marion was afraid. 

Her mind debated between opening the box or the card first. Should she open them at all? The trash can all but mocked her. It too was an option. 

Her mind rationalized that the flowers could have wilted in transport. It could be just a nice gift. 

But her fingers shook as she unhinged the clasp for the latch holding the lid shut. 

Almost silent choked noises burst free from her mouth as she took in what was before her eyes. A small jar with clear fluid hosting a sickly pale pink matter lay inside awaiting her. She felt the bile rising almost like a foam in her throat. Marion fought with everything her mind could spare to not vomit. She did however allow her hands to lose the fight with their grip on the box. 

She paid what occurred to the box after it fell out of her hands no mind. The moments didn’t exist in any part of her memory banks. She opened the grey envelope to reveal another smiling face beaming from a card. Above this one it read, “Hope this lifts your spirits.”.

She opened the card and inside was a single sentence in an elegant handwritten script. 

“Now you can place my heart upon your shelf.” –Gerald.

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

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!
 

Settling on Mars
by Marge Simon 

I don’t mind the cold so much, but he does.

I can’t get him out of bed, just to walk around.

This isn’t good for your muscles, I say.

I would give him my own ration of broth

but it would never pass his clenched lips.

We have been in the bunker for many weeks.

Provisions and oxygen are almost gone,

& above, the unending thunder of bombs.

Here was a new start for all of us from Earth.

We thought wars were over, we believed

our nations would settle here in peace.

We spoke a common language,

exchanged recipes, cosmetics,

tips for ailments, like the headaches

we get from breathing recycled air.

Came the day our governments intervened,

& we were not allowed to fraternize.

Birth control was a part of our contract,

but sometimes, something happens —

something that is not supposed to be.

He has withdrawn from life, from us.

Our child will die with me.

All this way we’ve come,

& nothing is settled here.

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

 

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Amanda Worthington @AmandaW58679588 @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Crash Test Dummies
by Amanda Worthington

You couldn’t stomach the things

They did to the women

Before they found what worked best

Was religion

The large hadron collider was only atoms and quarks

What they did was worse

It was science – of course

But you should have seen the bodies that didn’t make it

And now these crash test dummies

These overgrown stand-ins for flesh

This molded blue plastic

That’s all that’s left of the old world

Where men still aged and died and grasped at straws

Where the boys who were born survived

These constructions once heralded as the harbingers of progress

Are being reclaimed

By the wild grass and ivy and crawling things

And perhaps that is as it should be

Nature always wins.

Women always lose.

Even after they were found to be

More use alive than dead

This sordid hell wasn’t a life anyone would choose

Unless they thought God had willed it

And they were the chosen ones

And their submission would be rewarded

And now? Now?

Now the women must let the prophecy make them strong

Because they cannot afford

For the words to be wrong.

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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!


What Still Screams
by Kathleen McCluskey

They treated it like a joke on the drive out, another entry into the long list of sites rumored to be haunted by something vague and conveniently unprovable. Marcus kept the tone light, talking about views and subscribers. He was going on about how a “witch house” thumbnail that would pull numbers even if the footage turned out to be nothing. Lena listened without contributing, watching the road narrow as they moved farther from anything recognizable. The trees closed in until the house finally appeared ahead of them, sitting low and dark as if it settled into the ground rather than built on it.

The interior was exactly what they expected at first. Empty rooms. Stripped walls, the faint smell of dust and long abandonment. They moved through it quickly, setting up cameras more out of habit than necessity. Calling out to empty air and waiting for the usual flicker on a meter or a distortion on audio they could stretch into something usable. Nothing responded. The house felt wrong, not in a way that translated to evidence. Marcus had already started suggesting they cut their losses when Lena opened the final door at the end of the hall.

The temperature did not drop when they entered the kitchen. It rose, but not with any sense of comfort. The heat pressed close to the skin, unmoving, carrying with it a slight metallic scent that seemed to coat the inside of their mouths. Unlike the rest of the house, in disarray, the kitchen was left untouched. It was as if the homeowner had only just stepped out.

Pans hung from hooks driven deep into the beams, their surfaces blackened and warped from long use. Behind each one the wall was marked by dark, vertical stains that stretched downward in uneven lengths, too consistent in their spacing to be random.

They gathered without speaking, drawn closer despite themselves. The shapes in the pans resolved themselves the longer they looked, shifting from abstract discolorations into something structured. Each pan’s stains suggested a body that had been forced thin, shoulder narrowed, torsos elongated. There was a faint hollow where a head would have been pressed into the surface. It was not an illusion, it was pattern recognition. The longer they stared, the more undeniable the arrangement became.

Marcus moved first, stepping toward the wall with the silent confidence of someone determined to prove a different explanation. He reached out and pressed his fingers into one of the pans. He hesitated as the surface gave slightly beneath his touch. It did not feel like old metal. There was resistance, but it was uneven. It felt as if the material had been altered from within, as if something had once occupied the space and changed it permanently.

The pans shifted.

The movement was controlled, not the sway of loose metal. Each bent inward just enough to distort the images they held. Lena raised her camera. It was faces, flattened and stretched inside the pans, their features forced outward by a pressure that did not break the metal but was used as a boundary.

They screamed together.

The noise filled the kitchen, not loud but total, vibrating through bone and thought. A chorus of voices that had been held too long and were finally granted release. Beneath them the stains began to move, darkening. Loosening. Then dripping in thick, black strands that slid toward the floor.

The smell hit next, iron, rot and something scorched and smoldering.

The strands gathered at their feet, pulling inward as if drawn by a current no one could see. It thickened, rising slowly, shaping itself into something that resembled a woman, but only in outline. The screaming weakened as it formed, not stopping just…thinning, as though it was suddenly afraid.

The figure lifted her head.

Her face shifted, never settling. Her features slid over one another like something remembered wrong.

For a moment it was still. Then the sound slipped out of it, soft and low, almost gentle. It grew slowly, folding in on itself. A quiet, demented laughter echoed through the room, it carried something deeply wrong beneath it. It was unmistakably female, but there was no warmth in it. No humanity, only a thin, delighted cruelty that seemed to savor the sound of her own voice.

The faces in the pans all twitched. Some leaned forward, some dimmed. All of them listened.

Her whispering voice danced in the air. “The iron holds the shape.” Her laughter threaded through the words. “The soul is what I keep.”

And she stepped forward.

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 Lisa Harris @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Gerta, Gerta, Garden Grim
by Lisa Harris

“…and when you open the little chest in the morning, the Bone Elf has taken your offering and instead of your teeths is a sugar rose!” Greta’s breathless pirouetting tumbles to an end as the dainty child ka-phlumps onto the stone floor in a cloud of frills and pink tulle. She grins gummily at the blackened Gerta, who is hunched over the filthy grate, vainly rubbing red rimmed eyes with a sooty apron corner.

“And when the Bone Elf has aaall your offerings, it plants them in the ground and they grow into real roses! Can you imagine? A whole garden grown from your teeths?! A beeeautiful garden” Greta giggles and lightly springs back up onto tiny feet, continuing her prance around the crumbling slot’s only maid.

“Have you grown your garden yet, Gerta?”

“No, m’lady.”

The prancing stops.

“Why ever not? Surely you have all your Meat Teeth by now? You’re four years older than me!”

Gerta chokes down a vicious retort. It’s one thing for a Should-Be-Would-Be-Princess to get to keep her Suckling Teeth long enough for them to fall out all by themselves… but for a Bratling like Gerta? Mormor’s cane made sure the Bone Elf came early for her, leaving nothing but a battered mouth after.

Bitterness boils in the young servant, she swallows it whole.

“You keep eating such sweeties, m’lady, an’ your Meat Teeth will rot soon as they bloom.”

“Pooh! You’re just Green Eyed Gerta!”

“Am not!”

“Am are!”

Gerta rises stiffly from the fireplace, wiping twiglike fingers on her threadbare gown, trudging out the kitchen’s creaking half gate. Time to feed the geese.

“Green Eyed Gerta! Green Eyed Gerta!”

The shrill chanting follows the maid all the winding way to the pond.

“ENOUGH! … M’lady. Please”

An exaggerated, pink lipped pout.

“Hmmph. I don’t know why you’re so sour candy with me, it’s not my fault you’ve no one to welcome the Bone Elf for you!”

It bloody is.

Oh hells! Not allowed think like that. Mormor will know. I’ll be punished.

Heavy, grounding breaths.

“M’lady. Your Mormor will be looking for you. Leave me to my work, little ballerina, and dance on back to the slot!”

The pink pout turns from sullen to sad.

“Don’t send me away, Gerta! I was only mirthing with you! Let me help you feed the geese! Pleeease?”

It’s hard to stay angry with such a child.

I could have been such a child, myself. If not for her and her Mormor. That witch. Swooping in after papa and step-mama’s passing. The very night – as if she’d had a hand in it herself. Taking over Papa’s slot. Making it theirs. Making me… this.

Greta shoots Gerta an imploring smile, dazzling, despite missing two of her mouth’s most prominent citizens.

How could something so beautiful come from such evil?

She pats the miniature miss on her soft, golden head, and together the two youths pass a pleasant afternoon chasing geese under the watery Vothenburg sun.

As dusk arrives in time for tea, the girls begin winding homeward. A palace for one, prison for the other.

Gerta feels a tug on her skirts, stops and looks behind.

Greta is holding out her ivory fist, head bowed, uncharacteristically bashful.

“What’s this, young ballerina?”

Greta gently unfolds elegant fingers, and there resting on the palm are two sugar roses.

“M’lady?”

“One for you. One for me. If you can’t grow your own garden, I’ll share mine with you.”

Thorns catch in Gerta’s throat. Trembling, she takes the small sweet and places it on her tongue. It dissolves immediately in a nostalgic bloom of sugar and heaven, unlocking a grove of memories long since buried ‘neath the weeds of abject misery.

I remember this! Once before! Mama! Real mama! When I was young, so much younger. Yes! I had forgotten. Real mama had planted a single tooth seed of mine before she passed and then… The Sorrow came…

Gerta stumbles backwards, laughing and crying at once. Greta is startled at this comical display. Her bemusement turns to fear as Gerta’s hysterical laughs mount into howls. Wails of despair long held back in place by a fortune stealing step-grandmother’s ironclad fist.

MY GARDEN! I WANT TO PLANT MY GARDEN! WHERE DID YOU HIDE MY TEETHS? YOU CAN’T TAKE MY ROSES FROM ME!”

Furious hands so used to scrubbing, mopping, and mucking find a slender neck to wrap vinelike around and squeeze. Squeeze, and then break open a soft, golden egg off the pond rocks. Breaking until all the pearly white seeds have shaken loose from their perfect nest and Gerta can plant them with deranged hands in soggy soil and bury and bury and bury until all that was pink and frilly is brown and bloody. And the hands are carried off by wild feet all the way back to the slot and to the bedroom of the last old wicked weed that needs to be dead-headed for Gerta’s garden to grow at last.

Fiction © Copyright Lisa Harris
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Christina Persaud @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

The Night We Disappeared
by Christina Persaud 

“Seema? The realtor is here.” Rob and I exchanged the same look. Pure excitement. Today was special. We’d worked so damned hard for this, and it was about to pay off.

As we sat in the office and signed papers and finally received the (our!) keys, I closed my eyes and said a little prayer. The drive to our new home was bathed in sunshine, and as we stepped inside the freshly painted living room, I felt the warm embrace of new beginnings.

“Is it weird being back in your childhood house?” Rob asked for the millionth time. I reassured him that it was not, even as time seemed to fold in on itself, making the present feel like the past before returning back again.

“We didn’t live here very long, just a year,” I reminded him. He looked like he didn’t believe me.

“But… the memories.”

I blinked them away. The room. The window. The attack, or what I imagined happened.

“It was just a dream. None of it was real, remember?”

“Yeah, but—”

“I put that all behind me,” I said and recalled all those years of therapy I’d undergone. I hugged him tightly. “Don’t start that again. Not today. Not when the house was such a steal. I’m so happy, hun. We’re home.”

We unpacked and all the while, I did not admit to Rob that I avoided my childhood room, the place I played in for hours when I was just ten. We would be sleeping in what was once my parents’ bedroom, so everything would be good and safe.

But within the first week, we were standing inside the second bedroom deciding how to turn it into my office. I put away the recollection of my old posters and décor and imagined it with a different color on the walls and a new desk. It’ll be different in here, I told myself.

***

Summer turned to fall and we kept the windows closed to keep the draft out. One evening, I was working late while Rob was away on a work trip. My old bedroom had been transformed into a modern workspace, without a hint of what it was once before.

I had lost track of time when the sound of running water caused me to stop what I was doing and stand.

Someone hummed in the kitchen.

The memory of my mother washing dishes left me frozen.

“Hey, Seema. Can you open the window so I can get in?”

My sister’s high voice came through the glass, but I could not see her.


Why doesn’t she just use the back door?

I put my hands on the window. The springs were stiff. I could see the large jasmine tree just beyond. Beneath it, a shift.

A young girl. My sister.

“Open the window so I can get in. I’m locked out.”

My hands felt the cold gaze of the glass.

“No.”

My sister looked at me in disbelief. “What do you mean, ‘no’? Let me in! It’s nighttime and I’m scared.”

Me too.

***

That night, I slept restlessly.

I dreamt that the house was back to the way it was when I was young, everything from the 70s era linoleum floors to the wood-paneled walls. I felt the shag carpeting between my toes as I walked into my old bedroom. The sweet smell of jasmine filled the air. The only light came from the moon outside.

A soft, warm breeze wafted through the open window. Something in my heart told me this was wrong. What was once my sanctuary sat with open seams, vulnerable, and unsecure.

At the window, I reached up and tried to pull it down. To lock it and back away. But the old thing wouldn’t budge.

Mom was in the kitchen washing dishes. The smell of jasmine was overwhelming.

Tap. Tap. Tap.

“Let me in.”

She showed itself beneath the moonlight. Pale, shining in its wet, translucent skin. Blue veins crisscrossed over its shivering body. It held onto to the windowsill, and slowly, it let itself in.

I knew then like I knew now – that thing is not my sister.

Dried blood caked the vampire’s fingers and the corners of its mouth.

Before I could scream, I was kissed with sharp teeth, so my tongue would never again speak again. And my eyes cried tears of blood for the sister that disappeared the same night eighteen long years ago.

.
 
Fiction © Copyright Christina Persaud
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com.
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