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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

003_FEB_LOH

Dumb Supper
by Loren Rhoads

Alondra hadn’t left her cottage in the better part of two weeks. Pearl had tried a couple of time to lure her out to Mardi Gras parties, but Alondra wasn’t a fan of parties at the best of times and the chaos of Mardi Gras season seemed overwhelming. Besides, she preferred to do her drinking at home.
That didn’t mean that the celebrations didn’t reach her.  Even in the Garden District there were parties: loud voices, shrill laughter, jazz quartets on the verandas. Alondra set her books aside when the noise became too much for her to concentrate and retreated into the kitchen.
Her landlady loaned her some family recipes that Alondra had dutifully copied over. She’d never tasted authentic jambalaya until Marie brought her a pot of it. Now she was struggling to recreate that experience. Marie’s note to add two or three spoons of pepper sauce added mystery to the process. Alondra’s first batch had been too hot to eat. Now, finally, she thought she was getting the hang of it.
The evening was unseasonably warm for February, so Alondra had propped the front door open with her copy of de Grillot’s Witchcraft, Magic, and Alchemy to let in some air. She returned to the kitchen to check the rice.
She was daydreaming over the pot and didn’t notice as the temperature in the kitchen dropped. Something heavy clonked down on her kitchen table behind her. A chill wrapped the nape of her neck.
Alondra turned, the dripping spoon held across her body like a weapon.
At the table sat a white woman with her hair pulled up into a disheveled pile. Rather than a Mardi Gras mask, her face had been charcoaled with two black diamonds that stretched from hairline to jaw. She wore a spaghetti strap Harlequin dress that left her shoulders bare, but Alondra was certain the chunky necklace she wore held real diamonds.
On Alondra’s table she’d dropped a skull splashed with crimson paint.
The chill emanated from the skull, Alondra realized.
“You need to help me.” It wasn’t a request.
She needed to renew the protections around her cottage, Alondra thought, and probably give the table a salt wash. She wasn’t inclined to be kind to strangers who marched into her home without so much as a by your leave.
“Whose skull is it?” Alondra asked.
“I don’t know. I bought it in a box of vintage Mardi Gras decorations.”
When Alondra didn’t respond, the woman continued in a rush. “We just moved to New Orleans in December. Charles insisted we go to his boss’s Three Kings Party, and then we had to eat that nasty almond cake, and he found the baby in his piece…and they said that meant we had to host the Mardi Gras party…”
The longer the woman talked, the lower the temperature dropped. White puffs of breath accompanied her words.
Despite the warmth of the pot bubbling at her back, Alondra shivered. She interrupted the torrent of complaints. “What would you like me to do?”
“I’ve tried to get rid of it ever since we threw our party a week ago. In the middle of the evening, the house got so cold that the pipes started to burst. I put it in the garbage, but I found it in the breakfast nook the next day. I made Charles take the garbage out that day, but it turned up under the bathroom sink. I ran it out when the garbagemen came on Tuesday, but it was on my pillow that night when I came to bed. Since then, I’ve tried throwing it out of the car, mailing it away, and dumping it into the river. It keeps coming back.”
“Okay.”  Alondra held up her hand to stem the flood of words. “I want you to donate a thousand dollars to Save Our Cemeteries. Then I want you to take a bath with a charm I give you. Wash your face, wash your hair. Gather up all the Mardi Gras decorations you bought and take them to St. Vincent de Paul’s.”
“Oh, I’ve done that already,” the woman assured.
“All right.  Wait here a moment.”
Alondra crossed through the bathroom into the bedroom of her cottage.  She found a handkerchief and pulled down her jars of herbs, mixing lavender and rose with a chunk of dragon’s blood and a piece of galangal. She wrapped the packet closed with a piece of yellow ribbon. Then she returned to the woman sitting in her kitchen and dropped it in her hand.
“What do I owe you?”
“Pay me what you think my help is worth.”
“If this thing stops showing up at my house, that would be worth a lot.”  She took a roll of bills from her purse and set them on the table.  “But if it shows up tomorrow morning…”
Alondra smiled. “I know you aren’t threatening me,” she said calmly.
The woman swallowed audibly.
“You can go now. I’ll handle things from here.”
As soon as the woman crossed her threshold, Alondra moved four pillar candles to surround the skull. She lit a stick of spaghetti from the stove and used it to light the candles and a disk of charcoal. Once the coal was smoldering nicely, she added three pearls of frankincense. As the smoke filled the kitchen, Alondra dished up a bowl of jambalaya for the skull and another for herself.
The temperature in the kitchen had returned to normal by the time she sat down across from the skull.  Outside the cottage, the sounds of Mardi Gras continued, but it was almost midnight. Once the streets had cleared, Alondra would ask Jackson, her landlady’s husband, if he could give her a ride out to Holt Cemetery so she could give the poor skull a decent burial and some peace at last.
This time, the jambalaya tasted just right.
Fiction © Copyright Loren Rhoads
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from Author Loren Rhoads:

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Alondra’s Experiments

Alondra DeCourval travels from San Francisco to Prague to Olso, encountering magical creatures and searching for the limits she will go to for love.

Available on Amazon! 

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Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror | Tagged , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Scarlett R. Algee @ScarlettRAlgee @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

002_FEB_LOHSleight of Hand
by Scarlett R. Algee

Almost always, the first thing I hear is Nice tattoo, though it’s usually followed by a qualifier like sick or kind of creepy.
Tonight, though, this guy at the bar’s question is, Did it hurt, putting it on your hand like that?
I don’t answer right away; I just shake my head and smile a little and drink my G&T. Of course it had hurt, but not in the way he’s imagining. I smooth my hair, carefully keeping the right side of my face covered so he doesn’t see the smooth divot that used to be my right eye. Not as much as you’d think.
He nods absently; he’s halfway through a pitcher of some beer I don’t know the name of, and his words are soft-edged when he starts, Does it match your real eyes? It looks just like…
I push my glass away and stand up. Will you shut up if I show you a trick?
I loom over him on his stool, and he looks up, nodding again into an unsteady wobble. Carefully I lay my palm over my right cheek, over my hair, so the “tat” is even with my left eye. My new friend frowns a little; but then the eye on the back of my hand blinks at him, and I watch the shock cut all the way to his brain.
He sits there with his mouth open as I walk away, and a backward glance when I reach the door tells me it’s still open. Did you see…? he begins, but no one’s listening.
He’s drunk, of course. He’ll pass it off tomorrow as something he imagined, blame it on the cheap beer. I’m unlocking my truck when I hear, Hey, lady!
Shit. He’s fumbling across the parking lot toward me, dribbling words.
Did you really do that? How did you make it blink? Can you do it again?
Then he’s standing in front of me, panting and red-faced, and I realize I’m a little hungry.
Let me show you something different, I say, and this time I give him not the back of my hand but my palm, right up against the lids of his left eye—my palm, with its lips and teeth.
Such sharp teeth.
It happens so fast he can’t scream, and when I break away, he just drops into a heap on the asphalt, blood rilling from the empty hole where his eye used to be.
As he whimpers I climb into my truck and crank the engine. I grip the steering wheel, feeling those teeth sink into the leather, and admire my new acquisition.
The eye on the back of my hand is no longer brown like my own. Now it’s green, wide, rolling.
I was getting tired of the old one anyway.
There, I say, and start for home. That didn’t hurt a bit.
Fiction © Copyright Scarlett R. Algee
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from author Scarlett R. Algee:

The Lift: Nine Stories of Transformation, Volume One

The hall is dark and the overhead light flickers. Sounds echo, and there’s a creaking and clanging that gets louder as you stand in the semi-dark. The elevator opens and you’re offered a ride. Step inside and ride it to the story chosen for your transformation. Don’t be afraid, for Victoria, the mysterious girl who operates The Lift, waits to guide you. Set in the same world as the award nominated audio drama, The Lift’s first written anthology features nine all new stories by fan favorite writers and special bonus content by creators Daniel Foytik and Cynthia Lowman. The collection is brought to life with beautiful illustrations by Jeanette Andromeda for each story.

Available on Amazon!

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Linda Lee Rice @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

001_FEB_LOHMardi Gras
by Linda Lee Rice

The streets are quiet this year during the pandemic. Mardi Gras is a shadow of what I can remember in my many seasons. Stores are shuttered, crowds are light, if any, my favorite shop closed with the decorative costumes just out of reach. But I have my costume on; only the mask is lacking to be complete.
Ah, the Mardi Gras memories! People were laughing, singing, drunken, and boisterous…and screaming. I always loved the screaming the best. Unaware of being prey while I’m the predator, just another beautiful woman that blends in the crowd, but different.
Red has always been my favorite color. The darker, the better. Shiny red, the way it glistened under the gaslights and now the streetlights. The crimson now looking black in the darkness with the lovely metallic taste warming my blood.
But, alas, this year is so different, and my needs are accelerated. Even though the Mardi Gras is canceled, my body isn’t aware and craves that which it can’t access.
But wait! What’s that sound? Laughter, muttering, drunken weaving steps? From the corner of the building, a lone figure steps down into the pavement. Looking up, he sees me and waves forlornly as he steps forward.
As I greet him, smiling wildly, he finally sees the insanity and hunger in my eyes. Lurching backward, he makes for escape, but I’m too quick and hungry. As he lies there gasping his last breath, I ask him if he likes my mask, now dripping in the light. My costume is complete.
Fiction © Copyright Linda Lee Rice.
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com
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More about Linda Lee Rice:

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Linda Lee Rice aka Ruzicka has poetry published in Twilight Times, Dark Krypt, Fables, Descending Darkness, Writing Village, Spine, and Page, Muses Gallery, Bloodbond, Lycan Valley Press Publishers, Alban Lake, Highland Park Poetry, Rosette Maleficarum, The Siren’s Call, Edify Fiction and the June Cotner anthology, “House Blessings” and “Garden Blessings

She has short stories published in The Grit, and Reminisce, Haunted Encounters: Friends and Family, FrostFire Worlds. Plus, a personal essay at Mamalode. She also has various articles and blogs published online as a freelance writer.

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Mary Ann Peden-Coviello @MAPedenCoviello @darc_nina #LoH

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

004_FEB_LOH

Judas Goat
by Mary Ann Peden-Coviello

It were our Petey what seen her first, stood out by where the dark trees ended and our clearing began. He run back to the cabin, yellin’, “Ma, Ma, they’s a gal standing by her lone up by the edge of the woods!”
All of us went out to see. He weren’t lyin’. A little girl stood there all by herself. Her white dress showed like a deer’s tail in the twilight. She clutched a ragged toy bear in her hands. And her face was covered by a bloody bandage. 
She give me the willies. 
“Ma, leave her be. Send her on her way.” I knowed I sounded cruel. I didn’t care. 
“Jodie Barnes, you should be ashamed,” Ma said.
I grabbed at her apron, but she shook me off and walked up the hill to where the gal stood. Ma took that gal by the hand and led her down and into our cabin.
Ma fed the gal soup. She cleaned up her tore-up face and her bloody eye sockets. Ma dressed her in our Mary Beth’s last year’s warm dress with the knitted collar and cuffs. 
And the little girl ain’t never said a word the whole time. 
I didn’t sleep good that night ’cause I kept wakin’ up thinkin’ that little girl was lookin’ at me in the dark. Starin’ at me with her empty eye sockets. Next day, she kept close to Ma all day. She ain’t never said a word, but she mewled like a kitten. Ma didn’t do her usual chores and all, just sat with that gal. listening to her mewling and pettin’ on her. 
The second day, the whole family ‘cept me was just sittin’ around and listenin’ to that gal mewl. I kept the fire goin’ all by myself and fixed some stew, but ain’t nobody but me ate none of it. 
That night, the gal went to the door and opened it. All the night sounds and the cold poured in. Ma, Petey, Jack, and Mary Beth – everyone but me – followed that gal out into the night. I called to ’em, but they paid me no mind at all. They trailed after that gal, right past Pa’s grave and off into the woods.
Was about an hour later that the screaming started. I barred the cabin door and hid myself. Wasn’t nothin’ I could do to help nobody nohow. 
Next day, Ma was stood at the edge of the clearing, right by Pa’s grave. Her dress was all tore up and bloody. 
“Ma!” I hollered at her. “Go away, Ma.” 
She ain’t said not a word. She mewled at me. And she reached out one hand. I felt that call right down to my soul. I wanted to go to her so bad I took a couple steps toward her. Then she grinned at me with a mouth full of blood.
I run back to the cabin and got Pa’s long gun. Loading the rifle on the run, I threatened the thing that used to be my mother. “You get on outta here. I ain’t just jawin’.”
She turned and disappeared into the trees. 
I reckoned she’d be back. And she was. Late that night, with the rest of ’em. Mewling and scratching at the door. The windows. The walls.
I felt ’em callin’ me.
The call got so strong. I was gonna give in. 
So I put the rifle in my mouth and pulled the trigger with my toes. Last thing I saw was the door creakin’ open and Ma’s face – eyeless, with a mouth full of jaggedy teeth – peekin’ ’round.
Fiction © Copyright Mary Ann Peden-Coviello
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com 

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More from Mary Ann Peden-Coviello:

maryannpedencoviello_frightmareFright Mare-Women Write Horror
Short Story: One Hour Before the Dark

Women write horror and have written it since before Mary Shelley wrote FRANKENSTEIN. This anthology is to highlight the fact women write great horror and to kill the fallacy that they aren’t in some way up to standard. They are. Read here stories by Elizabeth Massie, Nina Kiriki Hoffman, Lucy Taylor, and a plethora of other great writers as they work on your nerves, get inside your head, and bang out some of the scariest tales written today. I’m proud to present these women for your consideration, as Rod Serling might say, as I ask you to step into FRIGHT MARE. Lock the door and windows, put on a light, and remember, it’s not real. It’s not real. Midnight awaits, monsters scheme to take you away, the strange and weird wait in the shadows, but it’s not real. Is it?

Edited by Billie Sue Mosiman, the author who brought you the SINISTER-TALES OF DREAD collections and her latest suspense novel, THE GREY MATTER.

Available on Amazon!

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

003_FEB_LOH

Hatchling…
by Alex Grehy 

“Sterile,” I heard the creator say as the buyer’s eyes lit with greed. The two men stared at my naked body through the viewing window.

“Sterility is a two-way safeguard. It protects our patent from unlawful duplication, and it protects you from any…well, let’s call them unintended consequences.”

The creator looped his arm around the buyer’s shoulders and led him through the hermetically sealed door to his office.

I walked away from the viewing window, back to my enclosure. I shielded my actions from the CCTV camera and removed the egg from a nest of blankets.

Whether by the creator’s mistake or by some miracle, I had squeezed the egg from my body just a week ago. It was so tiny, I could have held it in the palm of my hand. I didn’t understand, at first, what it was, but I was filled with an overwhelming desire to protect it.

It had grown so quickly, urgently. Now I sat cross-legged on the floor of my cell and nestled the egg in my lap. I could barely circle it with my outstretched arms. I crooned encouragingly as the life within thrummed and pulsed against my fingertips. Every time I touched the egg, my self-realisation expanded. I understood, now, that I was a commodity, a humanoid female, bio-engineered to meet the specific needs of my buyer, whatever they might be. The creator had given me subliminal telepathy, all the better to anticipate my buyer’s needs. I had been nothing but a lovely drone – until the egg awoke my sentience.

Now we yearned for freedom. I extended my awareness, my latent extra-sensory perception sharp and powerful. I could manipulate matter and read the minds of all the building’s occupants. I was able to tap into the computers with my consciousness. I learnt about all the security measures that held us prisoner.

I listened in on the creator’s conversation. He did not guard his thoughts, why should he? I heard him describe my features to the buyer, but his words did not match what was in his mind. She is strong (her thigh muscles could squeeze you to death), athletic (fitter than an olympic sprinter), flexible (bendy as an octopus), compliant (yet she’ll outlive your perverted little imagination).

The egg convulsed in my hands and split cleanly along its long axis. There lay my daughter, curled up tight, so beautiful, so perfect. She looked up at me, her dark eyes intense. My love for her seared through the last of the brain fog the creator had gifted me. She stood up, stepping out of the shards of her shell. She stretched, already tall and strong, already growing.

Hand in hand, mind in mind, we activated the keypad that would open our cell. What then?

Vengeance? Certainly.

Destruction? Assuredly.

Escape? Absolutely.

And afterwards? Well, that will be for us to choose.

Fiction © Copyright Alex Grehy
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from author Alex Grehy:

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After a lifetime of writing technical non-fiction, Alex Grey is fulfilling her dream of writing poems and stories that engage the reader’s emotions. Her work has been featured by a wide range of publications including Siren’s Call, Raconteur, Bookends Review, and Toasted Cheese. One of her comic poems is also available via a worldwide network of public fiction dispensers managed by French publisher, Short Edition. Her ingredients for contentment are narrow boating, greyhounds, singing and chocolate. It is a sweet life, yet Alex’ original view of the world has led to her best friend to say ‘For someone so lovely, you’re very twisted!

Please click here to discover more!   

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Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Women in Horror Month, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Erin Sweet Al-Mehairi @ErinAlMehairi @darc_nina #LoH #fiction #WiHM12

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

002_FEB_LOH

Seeing Eyes
by Erin Sweet Al-Mehairi

She hid herself, tucked away.
She hid herself, completely in time,
Or maybe it was from time.
She hid herself away, deeply,
And disappeared.
Then one day, cameras came,
And the reporters fumbled,
Trying to make sense of a pretty,
Nice girl being lost to
Such blood and abandon.
Her mother screamed.
Of course, she screamed
When death arrived, but
Didn’t care about emotions
Before, and the girl laughed
At the irony and wept at the
Pain all the same.
Her eyes were still open, a
Seeing hand, a third eye in
Life watching out, a fourth
Eye in Death, looking in and
Out and around. She wondered
If she was hidden well enough
Now or if her organs continually
Pulsed as they were ripped out…
And trashed. She was trash.
She could walk the strange,
Funhouse corridor, into light
And into shadows without notice.
She peeked around corners
With her one eye, her two eyes,
All the eyes, mostly trying to be
Able to see out of her self-inflicted
Prison. She looked hesitantly for a
Hand of connection at every corner.
In the crevices of the mirrors,
She saw reality and the sirens
And the morgue and the cemetery.
And she didn’t feel any more loved
Or needed as she did in life, only as if
Taking up some sort of molecule
Space, and she wasn’t more scared
Either as the loneliness was, and
Emptiness was, palpably similar.
They’d all evaluate on social media,
Be sad at circumstances, wish they
Could have done more, but if they
Cared maybe they’d have been less
Bitter, less competitive, less distracted.
And maybe they’d have connected
Their blossoming souls that
Harbored underneath waiting for
Nourishment but being shriveled by
The news in the evil world, by the lack
Of caring in human beings around them.
Maybe they’d see from all their eyes too,
And know that there was more to life.
She watched the glass of the mirrors
Around her shatter as she finally cried
Out, not missing her life, or anyone in life,
But life itself, or lack of one, the ability to
Live one full of humor, and love, and beauty.
Her third eye protected her,
her fourth eye covered her in dirt and regrets,
her two eyes made her wishful and wistful,
but now none of her eyes could save her
from the journey that could have been…
so instead they exploded, and she became stars
Hidden among the vastness and nothingness,
But finally, seeing fully.
Fiction © Copyright Erin Sweet Al-Mehairi
Fiction Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from Erin Sweet Al-Mehairi:

Breathe. Breathe. 

Breathe. Breathe. is a collection of dark poetry and short fiction exploring the surreal depths of humanity. It’s a representation of how life breaks us apart and words put us back together. Purged onto the pages, dark emotions flow, urging readers into murky seas and grim forests, to the fine line between breathing and death.In Act One, readers are presented with a serial killer in Victorian London, a lighthouse keeper with an eerie legacy, a murderous spouse that seems to have walked right out of a mystery novel, and a treacherous Japanese lady who wants to stay immortal. The heightened fears in the twilight of your minds will seep into the blackest of your nights, where you have to breathe in rhythm to stay alive.

In Act Two, the poetry turns more internal and pierces through the wall of denial and pain, bringing visceral emotions to the surface unleashing traumas such as domestic abuse, violence, and illness.
In the short stories, you’ll meet residents of Valhalla Lane whose lives are on a violent parallel track to collision, a man who is driven mad by the sound of a woodpecker, a teenage girl who wakes up on the beach and can’t find another soul in sight, a woman caught in a time shift pitting her against the Egyptian goddess Anuket, and a little girl whose whole world changes when her favorite dandelion yellow crayon is discontinued.
Amid these pages the haunting themes of oppression, isolation, revenge, and madness unfold through folklore, nightmares, and often times, raw, impulsive passion crafted to sear from the inside out.
With a touching foreword by the Bram Stoker nominated author Brian Kirk, Breathe. Breathe. will at times unsettle you, and at times embrace you. Erin Sweet Al-Mehairi, a veteran writer and editor of the written word, offers up a mixed set of pieces, identifying her as a strong, new voice in dark fiction that will tear the heart from your chest, all the while reminding you to breathe.

Available on Amazon!

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Women in Horror Month 12

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

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Michelle Joy Gallagher @Aphelia @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

001_FEB_LOH

Below the Surface
by Michelle Joy Gallagher

Ida watched the man in black as he placed her lifeless body into the wooden cart. She felt her body jostled as he dragged the cart over the cobblestoneof the back alley toward the river. Her feet and hands were bound, and he weighted her jacket with rocks. When he tipped the cart, spilling her lifeless body into the water, she tried to scream but nothing came out. He’d stopped her screaming for good when he’d surprised her with a knife on her way home from the shops. The river was a short trip from the apartment he’d rented for just this purpose. There were others before her: as her body sank, she recognized others there in the silt. The blue dress of the barmaid from the tavern down the road, the cornsilk hair of the tailor’s daughter. She knew there’d be others after her. He was piling them up like garbage. No one noticed or cared. He wore fine clothes and paid for everything in advance. No one questioned a thing.  
When she hit the bottom, darkness drew around her in a silt curtain. As it settled, she lay there transfixed by the moonlight at the surface. It was so beautiful, refracted in the waves. She wanted to reach out and grab it. She felt motion in her fingers and discovered she was slowly regaining the ability to move. She didn’t know how any of this was possible. She was dead. She should have been like the others. The water currents tugged and pulled at the flaps of skin where he’d carved into her. She felt nothing now, but the pain had been white hot and blinding.  
Day after day she tested her strength and range of movement. The water carried her closer to the other bodies, creating a sort of vortex of misery. Fish fed on her mindlessly. She tried batting them away but was still too weak. On the 4th day below the surface, she saw a disturbance and realized with horror it was another woman’s body being tossed in with the rest. He had continued to kill, unchecked and no one was looking for her.  
As her ability to move returned, the bodies started to pile up on and around her. She fought a whole day to dislodge herself from under a sweet-faced girl with a jagged cut deep in her throat. An intense anger began to bloom inside of her. When she felt she’d gotten satisfactory movement back in her legs, she pulled herself up on top of some of the poor women’s bodies and found purchase on the rocks lining the riverbank. As she pulled herself to the surface, through the mess of flayed and rotting flesh of her face, her eyes spoke only of revenge. She waited on the edge of the water for the sun to set. When she heard the sound of the wooden cart and the man’s heavy footsteps, she smiled. 
Fiction © Copyright Michelle Joy Gallagher
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from author Michelle Joy Gallagher:
blkhwkBlackhawk: Volume 2

Welcome to Blackhawk, Colorado. Blackhawk has always been strange. Natural disasters. Disappearances. Murders. High strangeness is a part of daily life. We can’t hope to explain it, but we can chronicle its past. Learn from it. Fear it. Blackhawk is an experimental fiction series set in a shared universe, written by a variety of talented authors. It is the brainchild of David M Brown (Plague Doctor, Modern Animals) and Carl D Smith (Moleb the Giant, Darkness Out of Carthage). Each story will contribute to an organic, evolving mythology as diverse as the voices behind its tales. For fans of True Detective, Lost Highway, Twilight Zone, and The Terror. This is Volume Two of the series and contains five stories by five different authors, each in tune with the specific strangeness Blackhawk has to offer. NOTE: For fans of Lake Lord Publishing’s prior horror titles, be warned that Blackhawk will contain content that is perhaps more disturbing and mature.

Available on Amazon!

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Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Women in Horror Month, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Terrie Leigh Relf @TLRelf @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

004_FEB_LOHMurder in Her Eyes
by Terrie Leigh Relf

The girl stood by the roadside, her beautiful party dress covered with a boy’s dark jacket, a teddy bear held loosely before her. It was cold outside, almost brutally so, but she seemed comfortable, almost relaxed, despite the blood-stained gauze that partially covered her forehead and eyes. I stopped the car to ask if she needed help, whether I could give her a ride. She climbed into the passenger’s seat with a smile, said “thank you,” and we drove down the rural lane. 
treasured moments
with a childhood friend
murdered decades ago
Fiction © Copyright Terrie Leigh Relf
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from author Terrie Leigh Relf:

The Sisterhood of the Blood Moon

For thousands of Earth years, the Transgalactic Consortium has had a quiet interest in this planet and its inhabitants, the Haurans. While the Sisterhood of the Blood Moon works together with the Consortium and Haurans to maintain balance in the universe, the Blood Moon is fast approaching. The power of this moon reveals untold secrets . . . including a sacred covenant with the Mora Spiders. There is an ancient pact that needs to be honored—but at what cost and for whose purpose? The world may come to an end. But will there be a chance for a new beginning?

Available for purchase from the Alban Lake Store!

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Be sure to check out the other fantastic events and peeps participating in
Women in Horror Month 12

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

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Angela Yuriko Smith @AngelaYSmith @darc_nina #LoH

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

003_FEB_LOH

Playroom Regrets
by Angela Yuriko Smith

away, crimson globe!
—an escapee, on the run—
vanishing though drains
leaving pain and tears
with the wailing child behind.
the end of a world.
hurled into sewers
by a sibling. catacombs
and new horizons
to surprise one ball
breaking free of the playroom
ready for new games
and refrains of song
snatched from young lips to be lost.
bobbing, he waited
degraded in muck
uplifted by adventure.
he had no regrets.
she crept from the soot
denizen of the ashes
child of oily grime
in time to wonder
at this strange, Upper World gift
now smudged in her hands.
lands from whence it came
a mystery to the Blind Ones
forever in dark.
embarking no more
from these strange and nightmare lands—
missing the play room.
Fiction © Copyright Angela Yuriko Smith
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from Angela Yuriko Smith:

Angela Yuriko Smith is an American poet, author and co-publisher of Space and Time magazine, a publication that has been printing speculative fiction, art and poetry since 1966. Together we build a poem as a community each month. Visit “Exquisite Corpse” at SpaceandTime.net to submit.

Catch up with Angela here!

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Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Women in Horror Month, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Lori R. Lopez @LoriRLopez @darcnina #LoH #fiction #poem #poetry

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

002_FEB_LOHThe Cellar Under the Morgue
by Lori R. Lopez

“Is this where the bodies are buried?”
Delivered as a joke — in an uneasy manner.
The Patient stifled a laugh or scream.
“Where am I?”  A nervous query.
The figure faced away, rigid yet serene.
Head slightly bowed.  A statue or a Nurse?
The angel turned, pale as White Marble.
“Under the Morgue.”  A distant reply.
“Is my surgery done?”  Shaky, rising off
an unyielding surface, afraid to ask the outcome.
A meager gown did nothing for the chill.
He stumbled, feeling inept.  “This is awkward.”
Baby steps.  A gesture at curved molds
shaped like Grave Markers.  Hollowed-out
Tombstones.  Frames lacking substance.
No name or date; awaiting.  “What are those?”
Intense, she granted a smile, the kind that
can mask unthinkable notions, the very worst
of plots.  He marveled at perfect features.
“I drugged you.”  As if spoken from afar.
Her broad stony orbs could have been ice.
A cool sculpted hand lifted to caress his cheek.
The contact, light, almost imagined, burned.
“Wheeled you here.”  A quiet boast.
How it scorched!  The truth.  That touch.
His jaw sank.  No sound emerged.  His heart
thrashed.  A fish on land.  A fallen bird.
“My daddy tinkered.”  Cryptic and faint.
The flopping subsided.  His mouth gaped,
askew.  Vocal Chords strained — rasping for
words, as fists uncurled bore garish prizes.
“You needed work.”  Scarcely audible.
Ears embedded; occult symbols in each palm!
His thumbs were missing, removed, protruding
hornlike over temples.  “No!” wailed a freak.
“Now you’re beautiful.”  Too soft, exultant.
He sensed the digits without reaching —
sewn, fused in crazed symmetry.  Outraged,
unsteady, glaring, he whirled to escape . . .
“My father’s workshop.”  So dim her voice.
And viewed the steel slab beneath a lamp.
Medical devices.  Scalpels, Forceps, a Bone Saw.
He raised his hands to either side of his face.
Loud and clear behind him:  “Stay with me.”
The man could hear through his palms, beside
his mug.  Turning back, he noticed she too was
marred.  One of her eyes blinked on her hand.
She lowered it.  “Aren’t we wonderful?”
He beheld a scar, flesh rough, sealed to hide
an empty socket.  And felt ashamed of staring,
of treating her features as deformed.  Ugly!
“We’re both unique.”  He offered an open hand.
Their fingers locked.  She chattered, beaming.
“We only bury the mistakes.  I knew you’d be
the one!  My poppa made you just for me.”
Her beau drew her near.  “The perfect pair.”
He chose to ignore a field of Headstones
in a corner of the earthen cellar floor.  Love
is blind.  At last he found his match . . .
Simultaneously cured of being all thumbs.
Fiction © Copyright Lori R. Lopez
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from Lori R. Lopez:

LoriRLopez_Darkverse Darkverse: The Shadow Hours

A rich gathering of poetry with a dismal twilight atmosphere, a brooding nature, an eerie tone . . . DARKVERSE: THE SHADOW HOURS encompasses such pieces written by Lori R. Lopez between 2009 and 2017, collected in three of her POETIC REFLECTIONS volumes along with humorous and serious verse. This ample compendium allows a more focused reading experience and mood — presenting poems that share speculative themes, flashes of horror, glimpses of madness.

Lori is the author of THE DARK MISTER SNARK, THE STRANGE TAIL OF ODDZILLA, LEERY LANE, MONSTROSITIES, AN ILL WIND BLOWS, and THE FAIRY FLY among other tales. She has been called a storyteller, whether composing verse or prose.

The aim of her Darkverse series is to offer a chilling trek through unlit stretches where all manner of creeps and kooks may lurk; where graveyards and bogs and full-moons abound. The pages of The Shadow Hours illuminate those morbid uncanny perils and dreads that inhabit drab corners, the known and unknown terrors of the night. Vivid and distinct, her voice echoes our worst fears then delves beyond, exposing hitherto unimaginable frights.

Prepare to confront a motley array of ghouls and menaces that might just move under your bed.

DARKVERSE: THE SHADOW HOURS is an Elgin Award Nominee and a 2018 Kindle Book Awards Poetry Finalist. Look for an Illustrated Print Edition with quirky art by the author.

Available on Amazon!

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Please don’t forget to visit the other WiHM 12 projects taking place!

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Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Poetry, Women in Horror Month, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments