Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Leah McNaughton Lederman @leahlederman @Sotet_Angyal #LoH #fiction #WiHM10

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


The Bone Bringer
by Leah McNaughton Lederman

He was called the Bone Bringer, by some, others had heard of the Rock Crusher. Still others knew him only as the nervous way they felt when a forest breeze fell on their neck, though the woods were still.
All those people were gone, now.
He was No One incarnate, mere emptiness. Nothing.
And he was lonely.
The traveling never ceased. The movement, at once chaotic and smooth, was endless. He lumbered across the vast environs of earth, searching.
The things he touched, when he thought they might be worthy, they crumbled to nothing, descended from life into decay.
There was nothing left. He was lonely and he was hungry.
The crow was clever, he knew. Untrustworthy, to be certain, but keen enough to save its own feathered neck at any cost, even if that cost was the last family.
They thought they’d be safe there, holed up at the end of the world. But now nothing stood between them and Nothing.
He’d start with the crow.
Fiction © Copyright Leah McNaughton Lederman
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More about Leah McNaughton Lederman:

Leah Lederman has been working as an editor of indie horror comics and short stories since 2011. This year she’s taking the reins and releasing Café Macabre: A Collection of Horror Stories and Art by Women. Be sure to follow her on Facebook (www.facebook.com/ledermanediting) and Twitter (@leahlederman) to learn more about this terrifying and awesome anthology!

Please visit Leah on Facebook for more info.

 

 

 

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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

The Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Naching T. Kassa @NachingKassa @Sotet_Angyal #LoH #fiction #WiHM10

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

TD
by Naching T. Kassa

TD dangled from the makeshift wash line above the kitchen table, his paw pinned to the cord, fur matted with moisture. The muffled wails of a little girl sounded from the hall and his ears pricked up. It was his girl, Mary Elizabeth. He strained to make out the words.
“Mama, I can’t sleep without him!” the girl cried.
“TD is soaking wet. You can’t sleep with him now,” Alice replied.
“I want him. I want TD!”
“If you’d listened to me, you’d have him right now. Why on earth did you drop him in the water?”
“He told me to.”
“Bears don’t talk.”
TD sighed. He had told Mary Elizabeth to toss him in the water. Why didn’t Alice believe anymore? As a little girl, she’d heard every word he’d said. He had been her protector first, long before she had given him to her daughter.
He looked up at the lifeless paw clipped to the line and studied the stitches which had reattached it to his arm. Did Alice remember what had happened? He doubted it. In all probability, her adult mind had reduced the memories to nightmare state and nothing more.
A soft rapping on the backdoor turned his thoughts to the present. He listened to the sentry’s code, nodding as his mind deciphered each word. It repeated and the night fell still once more.
The Evil One had returned.
With his free paw, TD reached up and unclipped himself from the rope. He hung there for a second like a circus acrobat before dropping to the table with a wet thud.
Alice’s muffled voice drifted up the hall and through the kitchen. It carried words from a storybook, one he knew well.
A small scuffle sounded outside and the pet door, long unused, lifted. The head of a stuffed rabbit tumbled through it.
TD’s breath caught in his throat as blood oozed onto the snow-white linoleum.
His sentry was no more.
The pet door remained open. Something slipped inside and it thumped back into place.
Before the kitchen light went out, TD caught sight of a pale face with lips the color of blood and eyes of amber. It skittered into the room on an arachnid’s body and melted into the shadows.
A strange clicking filled the air.
TD shimmied down the table leg, his water-logged body dragging him to the floor. He slogged toward the hallway entrance and stopped.
The clicking ceased.
Moonlight streamed through the window above the sink, illuminating the floor before him. TD surveyed the area, his button eyes searching for movement. They scanned the letters arranged in a jumble on the fridge and found a message in the chaos.
“I WILL FINISH WHAT I STARTED.”
The demon stepped into the moonlight and revealed its horrific glory. It had grown since last he’d seen it and the shiny black body contrasted with the white of the kitchen. Flashes filled TD’s mind and like a movie, played back before his eyes. He saw the thing on Alice’s chest, saw its spider-like arms holding her mouth wide as it pushed its way inside. In desperation, he’d grasped hold of the only weapon he could find, the crucifix on her bedroom wall. He’d stabbed the thing with it and lost his paw in the process.
A giggle sounded from the hallway, breaking TD’s reverie. The demon’s eyes took on a hungry gleam. It took a step forward and TD did the same.
“I saw you skulking about yesterday,” the bear said. “I’m ready for you this time.”
A smile spread across the human face and it rushed him.
TD stood his ground and welcomed it, arms wide. It hit him hard, knocking him backward to the floor.
Human teeth sank into TD’s neck. The bear wrapped his arms about the creature and squeezed.
It tore out his throat.
Steam rose from the demon’s mouth. It spat fur and stuffing into TD’s face and screamed. TD tightened his grip and the glistening body burned.
As blood flowed from TD’s wound, his arms grew weak. The demon’s face swam before his eyes and he felt it slip from his grasp. He reached for it.
The thing crept away on unsteady legs, headed for the hall. It glanced back in triumph.
And, then, she appeared.
Her foot came down hard, crushing the chitinous body. She lifted her shoe once more and bone crunched as she ground the face beneath her heel.
Alice came to TD’s side. She picked him up and cradled him in her arms.
“I should’ve known,” she said. “Mary Elizabeth is a good girl in church. She would never throw you in the font. Never throw you in the holy water. Not unless you told her. Not unless it was back.” She held him close. “I’m so sorry, TD. Sorry, I forgot.”
TD smiled.
Alice was his girl again.
She would always be his girl.
Fiction © Copyright Naching T. Kassa
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com 

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More from Naching T. Kassa:


Final Masquerade

It’s the Final Masquerade and it’s your turn to dance.

The evening is ending and the guests are ready to leave, but the final event of the evening is just beginning — the unmasking.

Welcome to Final Masquerade where no one is who they seem.

Stories written by Daniel I. Russell * Ken MacGregor * J.C. Delisle * Joshua Chaplinsky * Lori Safranek * D.S. Ullery * Samantha Lienhard * Thomas Kleaton * Josh Strnad * Naching T. Kassa * Roy C. Booth & Axel Kohagen * Sheldon Woodbury * Craig Steven * Gregory L. Norris * Jay Eales * Dale W. Glaser * R.K. Kombrinck * Jonathan Cromack * Brian C. Baer * Adrian Chamberlin

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 Kathleen McCluskey @KathleenMcClus4 @Sotet_Angyal #LoH #fiction #WiHM10

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


A Crack in Time
by Kathleen McCluskey

Amy was intrigued by the prospect of being a land owner. When her grandfather passed away she was left with the family homestead. She remembered from her youth that the south end of the property was always off limits. Her grandfather had told her that it was a forest refuge for the animals.
The land was beautiful. It was loaded with apple, cherry and peach trees. No respectable Georgian would own land without peach trees. Hopping on the four wheeler she wanted to see the extent of the fortune she was about to come into. Her curiosity made her head straight for the southern end of the property.
Amy jumped off of the quad and landed in tall unkempt grass. She began to hike into the bramble. Her excursion into the mottled sunlight was brief when she stumbled upon an old farm house. The weather worn porch was crumbling and she thought she heard voices within. She pulled her gun from her belt and went to investigate. Peering through the fragmented lumber she could see soldiers in blue uniforms on the floor with blood splashed onto the walls. They wailed in pain and some even looked like they were being tented to by a man in a white blood spattered coat. Amy put her hand to her mouth to mute a scream. When she did the specter in the coat turned and looked at her. He spoke in a thick Boston accent, “I see you never heeded the warning. General Sherman will be pleased. His march to Atlanta is almost complete. You will never go back to your time.” He walked towards her, she tried to scream but no sound came. Looking down at herself she was now clad in a long, dirty dress with petticoats. He opened the door and said, “Lookie here boys, we have ourselves a southern belle. One thing about those rebs, they sure know how to dress their women.” He grabbed her and tossed her into the house.
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 Sonora Taylor @sonorawrites @Sotet_Angyal #LoH #fiction #WiHM10

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Where We Used to Play
by Sonora Taylor

Do you remember where we used to play? I do. I think about it every day, that abandoned building that we never quite knew what to call. I said it was a hospital. You said it was a fort. We both agreed it was the perfect place to play.
I still see its walls, smell the earth and mold that I imagined was the smell of bones. I see the gaps that once were windows, light spilling in and turning to shadows the minute it entered the room. I remember seeing you in the light, surrounded by dust that danced in the air as you sketched in your notebook. I looked over your shoulder and saw a creepy, crazy scene of a spaceship, two aliens, and a girl who was all tied up. The aliens had laser guns pointed at her. You pointed at her and said, “That’s you.”
You were my best friend. You were sometimes mean, but only when you were mad. When you were happy, you were the best. We’d run through the woods playing tag, sit side-by-side in my yard reading books, run to the abandoned building and pretend we were monsters hunting for people.
You were only pretending to be a monster. You didn’t mean to roar so loud, to scare me so much that I stumbled back and fell down a pit we didn’t see. You didn’t mean to laugh at how frightened I was, at how I screamed as I fell. I’m sure you stopped laughing when I disappeared. I’m sure you would’ve stopped if you heard the way my neck snapped with a crunch as I hit the bottom.
I don’t know what you did next, because when I came to, you were gone. I knew that you would come back, even as days and weeks went by and no one came for me. Perhaps you were afraid to fall. Perhaps you thought you’d get in trouble for your mistake.
It’s okay. I forgive you.
I know that you’ll come back. One day, you’ll think of the sun in the windows, the mud on the floors, and the hole through the door. You’ll have no choice but to return, because I’m here. And like you never stopped being my friend even when you were mean, I’ll never stop being your friend even though I’m here, trapped forever in the place where we used to play.
Fiction © Copyright Sonora Taylor
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com 

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More from Sonora Taylor:

Without Condition

Cara Vineyard lives a quiet life in rural North Carolina. She works for an emerging brewery, drives her truck late at night, and lives with her mother on a former pumpkin farm. Her mother is proud of her and keeps a wall displaying all of Cara’s accomplishments.

Cara isn’t so much proud as she is bored. She’s revitalized when she meets Jackson Price, a pharmacist in Raleigh. Every day they spend together, she falls for him a little more — which in turn makes her life more complicated. When Cara goes on her late-night drives, she often picks up men. Those men tend to die. And when Cara comes back to the farm, she brings a memento for her mother to add to her wall of accomplishments.

Cara’s mother loves her no matter what. But she doesn’t know if Jackson will feel the same — and she doesn’t want to find out.

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 Lori R. Lopez @LoriRLopez @Sotet_Angyal #LoH #fiction #WiHM10 #poem

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


Queen of the Night
by Lori R. Lopez

A castle rises out of mist,
guarded by the ravenous Moon.
These fools within its prison walls,
their suffering will be ended soon,
afraid to venture from its gate
as creatures prowl an arcane fog.
The sentinel perched with burning gaze,
alert for scraps, a grim watchdog:
its feathers black upon the wind;
its cries so sharp they slice the air
and scare away a brood of Bats.
The Moon a gravid open stare
with silver sheen and cool desire,
abysmal craters that demand
a sacrifice from tower and stone
to float inside her clouded land.
A bloody tithe of human sheep,
a morsel for the goddess high,
suspended on a regal throne
of pewter-gray in sullen sky.
The queen of Night will have her feast,
and none may join her at the table.
Those who vainly sought to reign
were captured by a lurid fable . . .
Such riches hoped for in this palace —
gold and jewels, the power it brings —
cannot be found when a Full Moon shines,
for that is when she gobbles kings!
Fiction © Copyright Lori R. Lopez
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com 

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More from Lori R. Lopez:

The Witchhunt

This tale begins with a modern setting, on the creepy Ninth Floor of a hotel, where an old woman just wishes to be left in peace. But that isn’t possible. It never is in this world.

A novelette by Lori R. Lopez, THE WITCHHUNT unfolds in several parts, with four casts of characters connected by one . . . and she is not one to be messed with!

Someone should tell that to the construction crew daring to disturb her, threatening her territory. The cop and the property manager showing up to evict her. A pair of detectives sent to investigate deaths on the floor. Those who persecuted her through the ages. Tell them all to leave her alone, or suffer the consequences. But it would be too late. By the end you may wonder who was hunting whom?

The author of LEERY LANE, CORNSTALKER, MONSTROSITIES, and SAMHAIN among other tales, Lori has created a speculative horror story brimming with emotion and flashes of dark humor. The novelette introduces elements of Alternate History and Ancient History, while addressing a number of present-day issues and concerns. THE WITCHHUNT leads to the Past, yet tackles serious and timeless themes that remain eerily relevant.

Available on Amazon!

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Posted in Authors, Dark Fiction, flash fiction, FREE, Horror, Ladies of Horror, Poetry, Women in Horror Month, Writing Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Christina Sng @christinasng @Sotet_Angyal #LoH #fiction #poetry #WiHM10

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


Winter’s Gift

by Christina Sng

On the coldest night
You die in your bed,
With me curled snugly
Around your neck.
The chill in me stays.
It will not dissipate.
I see snowflakes
Coalesce around your head.
I stumble to the kitchen
To find food from the fridge
But it is impossible to claw open—
My paws have no grip.
The blizzard outside
Slams against the roof,
Screaming for us to die.
Why?
I don’t know why.
I’ll never understand
The cruelty of nature.
The cruelty of life.
I return to you,
Statue-stiff and blue,
Curling back
Around your neck,
I don’t hear
The windows crack
Nor see the snow
Flood in,
Nor the monsters
Attack.
When spring comes back
After an eternity of frost,
And the avalanche on us
Eventually dissolves,
You wake me up,
Holding me close
As we walk outside,
Light as ghosts.
Fiction © Copyright Christina Sng
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from Christina Sng:

A Collection of Nightmares

Hold your screams and enter a world of seasonal creatures, dreams of bones, and confessions modeled from open eyes and endless insomnia. Christina Sng’s A Collection of Nightmares is a poetic feast of sleeplessness and shadows, an exquisite exhibition of fear and things better left unsaid. Here are ramblings at the end of the world and a path that leads to a thousand paper cuts at the hands of a skin carver. There are crawlspace whispers, and fresh sheets gently washed with sacrifice and poison, and if you’re careful in this ghost month, these poems will call upon the succubus to tend to your flesh wounds and scars.
These nightmares are sweeping fantasies that electrocute the senses as much as they dull the ache of loneliness by showing you what’s hiding under your bed, in the back of your closet, and inside your head. Sng’s poems dissect and flower, her autopsies are delicate blooms dressed with blood and syntax. Her words are charcoal and cotton, safe yet dressed in an executioner’s garb.
Dream carefully.
You’ve already made your bed.
The nightmares you have now will not be kind.
And you have no one to blame but yourself.

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 , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Ashley Davis @Sotet_Angyal #LoH #fiction #WiHM10

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!



They Call Us Mary

by Ashley Davis

Inside the old, filigreed silver hand mirror, voices call out.

“They called me Mary, because it was easy. They called us all Mary because our skin wasn’t white enough.”

The woman has deep, mesmerizing eyes of gold, hair darker than night, her skin like glowing bronze, and her smile broad and full of secrets she’s anxious to tell.

“My grandfather was a captain in the British Navy, but ‘Grandmother Marie’ was a Spanish violinist and sculptor, and her name was really Isabella Catrione. He said her hair was too dark for her to have that name, so he called her Mary Elizabeth. But that was never who she was.”

A woman with black curls and large blue eyes works on something next to a lantern that lights her impassioned face up like the sun. Whatever she’s doing, she’s pouring her heart and soul into it with joy.

“Their son sailed to Barbados, where he met my mother, a native Taino and Carib dancer named Karayati. She was a tribal woman, related to local caciques, and was to become a priestess, a shaman, before she married. He called her Mary Alice. He said her dances were too strange for her to have a name of her own—people wouldn’t understand.”

A woman’s face appears, skin like burnished copper and cheekbones that could cut glass. Her eyes burn with dark fire. She dances, red-beaded dress and golden headband, hand-woven by her own mother, marking the rhythm of drums, ebony hair to her waist.

“They had me, and to my mother I was Catalina, but my father called me Mary Patience. My eyes were too deep, like the sea, for me to be my own person, my father would say, only half in jest. Bermuda was my home, and I loved it. The sea always called me, even more than my mariner father.”

There is longing in her eyes.

“I married a Frenchman and had two daughters. A small girl of bouncing curls who loved horses—Gabriela. She was always called Mary Margaret, seen as a spinster. She was so much more than the blank, cobwebbed shadows they made her into. Then there was Mary Juliet, and Juliet was a name I could live with, so she did not need another. But still they called her Mary.”

Her face shows anger now.

“Juliet was an artist, gifted with her watercolors and acrylics and charcoal. She moved with her husband, Rene, to a place called Bohemia Manor in the Carolinas. Her eldest, a dark-skinned girl, was Anahi, a writer and a dancer, but they called her Mary Anna. Otherwise she was too different to fit in. The boys were George and Isaac, and their white skin gave them legitimacy somehow.”

A young girl with olive skin, thick braids, golden-hazel eyes, and long eyelashes appears on her left with her green-eyed mother, both with waves of ebony hair and the same face.

“We are a mix of native Arawak, Spanish, Carib, and a few other things. All Marys to their world, but not on the inside.” Behind them is a tall, imposing matriarch with a gaze like a condor’s. Isabella Catrione.

Catalina gestured to her. “Isabella was a silver worker and musician in Spain, and it was she who made the mirror in its first rough form by the light of sparse candles in old, rusty lanterns as she sat in her workshop above cobblestoned streets. Her raw talent with her hands, from the wood of her violin to the silver of her craft, made the mirror come alive.

“Karayati was a dancer who could see beyond, and she polished the mirror until it shone like she did, and she used it to find the beauty in others, as is her way. Her tender care and spiritual power among her people helped its magic grow.

“As for myself, I am a lover of my ocean, and I etched the waves into the handle and put into it the spirits of the sea and sky.

“Juliet was an artist, and she carved the intricate designs into the backing, led only by instincts and visions in her head. She was a lonely Bermudan girl, alone in a magnificent mansion day after day. The mirror was her only friend here before her children were born, and she worked until it was perfect. The beauty she created made the magic begin to become real, somehow.

“Anahi was a ballerina and a writer, a weaver of ideas through both words and movement, and it was she who coordinated the right words in her mind with the right steps from our cultural dances to make the mirror’s true magic emerge.

“We have always used it to speak to the ones before and the ones yet to come. It was eventually gifted to descendants of fair hair and skin and the hearts of warriors, and now it comes to you, as it has always been meant to. Hasn’t it, Mary?”

There is silence. My name is something else, but only a handful of people know that I was called Mary as a child. Even I had forgotten, absently, until reminded.

“Were the others called Mary, too? Is the name itself magic?”

Karayati laughs, a glittering sound. “No, child. Some things are merely coincidence, even in a universe filled with magic. We will show you. And we will not call you Mary, because that is not who you are.”

The world alters; I’m in an old house. Juliet’s manor. A colonial-style mansion and plantation, white-painted wood accented by the vines and flowers climbing up the pillars and lining the halls. Most of the interior furniture looks to have exotic origins. Treasures from a traveler of worlds. I’m in an upstairs hallway. Open double doors lead into a magnificent bedroom, all white gauze and lace with bamboo and a dark, heavy wood. French doors lead to a balcony, shaded and private among the willows and dogwoods. Wisteria winds around the eaves. It’s peaceful here, breeze cutting through the Southern humidity.

There’s a noise behind me. A young woman in a long, white Edwardian dressing gown walks past the doors and down the hallway, shining black waves tumbling down her back, contrasting with the white lace ribbon that ties it half back from her face. Juliet. She’s barefoot. I yell for her to wait, but I have no voice. She carries a ceramic pitcher of water.

I enter a room behind her, this one all lace and satin. A little girl plays with teacups and dolls on the floor in a dress of white eyelet.

“Here’s your water, Anahi. Be careful not to spill it.”

The golden-eyed child nods. “Of course, Mummy.” She has an accent that’s almost British and almost French, and something else I can’t place. The girl asks me, “Miss, we’re having afternoon tea, and it’s ever so hot outside. Won’t you have a drink?” It startles me, but I can’t reply. Her mother playfully asks whom she is talking to, and the girl says, “It’s just the mirror lady, Mummy.”

“Ah, yes,” Juliet says, smiling, leaving the room. I’m expected to follow, though I don’t know how I know that. Juliet descends a staircase lined with embroidered blue carpeting. I glimpse a foyer below, but she turns left, then goes into a light-filled study and library and sits down at a writing desk. A rough letter on parchment sits by her, but she writes a new one with fine ink and expensive paper. I read over her shoulder.

“Dearest Mami and Gabriela: It is deep into summer and I have received your letter. Rene is on business in New York, so I am with the children. Anahi is a joy, and she adores your doll. She named it Karayati, after your mother, Mami. George is more trouble every day, and yet Rene is asking for another! Perhaps when he returns I will reveal my secret. I dream of animals and sunshine, like with George, not lakes and rivers under moonlight like with Anahi, so it must be another boy. The sickness has passed, and the midwife says I will have the baby in December. What a lovely Christmas present! I like the name Isaac. What do you think? If I’m wrong, I know Rene likes Abigail for a girl, though I’d like Gabriela, for my sister.”

I can barely tell that the girl is pregnant, so small she is. I continue reading.

“The staff have come to accept me more, especially since George is so fair. The cook will not speak to me in English, but the maids converse openly now. The midwife has always been my friend, and she says it will take time. The male houseworkers are cordial. Rene says I am too friendly with the slaves, but how am I expected to denigrate my own people? I will not, and I will see that the children do not, either. The governess is a problem still, so I will replace her with one of the maids—a mixed girl called Susannah. Rene has approved. Yesterday I checked on your flowers in the garden…”

I explore while she writes. The home and land are beautiful, like a castle in a lush jungle. There is enchantment here. When Juliet is done, she puts down her pen and calls for a maid, writing down instructions. The maid takes it and I follow Juliet out of the library. This time, we descend the grand staircase into the multi-story foyer.

She walks to her right, into a small parlor at the front of the house—a music room. She pauses in front of two items encased in glass on the wall. “Oh, how I miss you, Grandmother.” She kisses a painting of Karayati, which hangs next to a very old violin that surely belonged to Isabella Catrione. Juliet sits down at a piano and begins to play something soft, like a lullaby, and I drift.

Six women stand before me. Isabella Catrione, Spanish metalworker and violinist. Not Mary Elizabeth. Karayati, Taino dancer and priestess. Not Mary Alice. Catalina, Barbados ocean woman. Not Mary Patience. Gabriela, islander who spoke to horses. Not Mary Margaret. Juliet, Bermudan artist. Not Mary, either. Anahi, dancer from the wild manor. Not Mary Anna.

“We vanished, one by one,” says Isabella. “My death was swift, when my husband tired of me. A blade to the throat, another to the gut. My bones lay in a forgotten stone crypt in England, my murder never investigated. Not even my false name marks my resting place.”

“My death was painful,” Karayati says. “The settlers brought diseases to our islands. My remains were thrown into an unmarked hole, but at least it was near the land of my people.”

“My death looked natural, but it was not, and my grave has gone unvisited,” says Catalina. “After I succumbed to the poison in the tea his mistress made, I was buried near the ocean; at least I was given that. My tombstone says Mary Patience, and is worn with time and sea-salt winds.”

“My death was unnoticed. I died young, but no records of it exist, and my body lies in a mass grave in an overgrown churchyard,” Gabriela says.

Juliet continues, “Anahi and I were the end. My husband grew frustrated with us, and you will find no records past Anahi’s childhood. We disappeared, along with all the other Marys. Not just the women in our family, or the women with that name, but every woman who has ever played that part in life. The part of a Mary whom she is not.”

Anahi speaks. “Juliet is not in the grave marked Marie de St. Julian. She was burned long ago, after he killed her, the remnants thrown into the sea. My father never spoke my name after I disappeared. My bones were buried below what was once a dirt-floor basement in the manor, long since covered over.”

Anahi grasps my hand through the mirror.

“Never let them call you Mary when you are not. Be the woman you see—the woman inside your skin. If they refuse, remember that mirrors are made of metal and glass. If others refuse to see truth reflected, rain it down upon them with the heavy silver and sharp glass shards in your hands, and let the truth see them instead.”

Fiction © Copyright Ashley Davis
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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Poetry by Ashley Davis can be found featured in the fall 2017 issue of
The Horror Zine

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Be sure to check out the other fantastic events and peeps participating in
Women in Horror Month 10

WomenInHorrorMonth.com

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Kitten on a Fatberg, a comic novel by Alex Woolf, Dan Brotzel and Martin Jenkins. @RealAlexWoolf

Kitten on a Fatberg

ABOUT THE BOOK
In early 2016, Julia Greengage, aspiring writer and devoted housewife, put up a poster in her local library with an idea to start a writers’ group. This group would read each other’s work, exchange constructive feedback and generally share the pains and pleasures of this excruciating yet exhilarating endeavour we call Literature.

Seven people answered. What happened next is frankly ludicrous.

MEET THE CRAWLEY WRITERS’ GROUP
There’s Keith, a mercenary sci-fi geek who can bang out 5000 words before breakfast, and has to read to the group at double-speed because he’s so prolific. Tom, a suburban lothario with an embarrassing secret. And Alice, who identifies as a writer of fiction, even though she’s been stuck on her first sentence for over two years.

Peter sees himself as a conceptual literary artist, but is only ever really happy when he’s made everyone else feel completely uncomfortable. Jon is a faded muso with a UFO complex who writes deceptively simple animal fables with powerful hidden messages about the deep state and, you know, the way things really are.

Blue works in a charity shop and is a big fan of gloomy music and dark verse. Her own poems include Electrocuted Angel In The Headlights of My Dead Lover’s Eye Sockets, and the notorious Kitten on a Fatberg.

Led by Julia, a glamorous housewife with steely ambitions of her own, these budding writers meet every month to read out their work and encourage each other in their dreams of getting published. But it’s not long before the group’s idiosyncrasies and insecurities start to emerge.

Expect feuds, scandal and humiliation — not to mention an exploding sheep’s head, a cosplay stalker, and an alien mothership invasion. They’re all on a journey, and God help the rest of us.

KITTEN ON A FATBERG is a comic novel about a writer’s group, written by Alex Woolf, Dan Brotzel and Martin Jenkins. In association with an innovative publisher called Unbound, the authors are looking for pledges to help fund the production of the book, in return for which patrons can unlock different levels of reward.

WHAT YOU GET

In return for supporting this book you’ll get one of a range of rewards including:

· a signed hardback and your name in the back of the book
· a unique dark and raw poem by Blue (Crawley’s answer to Sylvia Plath) on a topic of your choosing
· a personalised (and devastatingly hostile) critique of a piece of your writing from conceptual artist Peter
· exclusive early-bird access to the first episode of the Kitten on a Fatberg podcast, produced by BAFTA-winning producer Richard Webb (Stewart Lee’s and Bridget Christie’s producer!)

 

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Asena Lourenco @ElaLourenco @Sotet_Angyal #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


Trapped in Time
by Asena Lourenco

The past is past and never was now,

Present is here, forever somehow,

The future is trapped and will never come.

A prisoner of time, it has become.

In the mind we are enslaved by time

Until the stars will realign.

Fiction © Copyright Asena Lourenco
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More about Asena Lourenco:

Asena Lourenco is 11 years old. She loves reading, playing Scottish traditional fiddle music on her violin, dancing, and martial arts as well as writing her own stories.

She would like to be a teacher and writer when she grows up. She also loves cats and babies!

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The Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author Naching T. Kassa @NachingKassa @Sotet_Angyal #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Time in the Grave
by Naching T. Kassa

Nalin Kratides stood at the edge of the shallow grave, her eyes on the skull which peeked above the sand. Moonlight glowed over the sun-bleached bone.
A breeze tousled her dark hair and whispered across the desert. She held a silver compact in her left hand and traced the cold, raised surface with her right. Then, she turned to the man behind her.
Detective Warren leaned against his Dodge Charger, arms crossed. Green eyes peered at her through square-framed glasses.
“Are you ready, John,” Nalin said.
The detective nodded and said, “Do you think he’ll tell you?”
“Only if I ask.” She turned back to the grave, “If anything happens…will you…”
“I’ll catch you if you fall,” came the reply.
She shut her eyes and the desert came alive. In the distance, a coyote cried and the fragrant scent of Brittlebush filled the air. Night closed around her. She took a deep breath before allowing it inside.
The vision swirled up from darkness and spilled out before her eyes. It began with the flame of a single candle and the reflection of mirror glass.
Nalin held the candle before her. The reflection in the glass was not her own. The black and empty eye sockets of a skull stared back.
“Marjorie?” the skeletal figure said, in a high voice. Then, before she could answer. “No, you are not she. Who are you?”
“Nalin.”
“Why are you here?”
“To discover your identity and, perhaps, the name of the one who murdered you.”
She held up the compact. It gleamed in the soft light.
“Where did you get that?” it whispered.
“The detective found it buried beside your bones.”
The skeleton lowered its head.
“I thought he took it when he killed me. It belonged to Marjorie. I’ve had it…ever since she was…was…”
“Murdered?”
It nodded.
“Who are you?” Nalin asked.
“Bruce Harper.”
Nalin’s eyes widened.
“You’ve heard of me. I can see it in your eyes. Women have such expressive eyes. So many truths lie within those depths. That compact is the only thing I have left of her. The only reminder of our love.”
“You loved her?”
 “I adored her. And, she loved me. How long has it been…since she died?”
“Thirty years. How long have you been here?”
Harper chuckled, a mawkish laugh. The sound chilled Nalin’s blood.
“Twenty. It’s a long time to lie in a grave,” he said. “Who is that standing behind you?”
Nalin glanced over her shoulder. A long tunnel stretched behind her and, at the end, John still leaned against the car.
“He’s a detective.”
“He looks familiar.”
“He found your body.”
“Oh…I thought…his eyes. They look like—“
“Why didn’t you move on to the next world?”
The skeleton clenched its bony hands. “Vengeance.”
“Against who?”
“The one who snuffed my life as though it were a candle. The one who took Marjorie away and caused her death.”
Nalin’s heart pounded in her chest. “Who?”
“I came to her that night. She wanted to leave him, to be with me. I saw it in her eyes the moment she opened the door. She loved me. Had always loved me.”
“Did she?”
“Of course she did. But, he must’ve found out about us because he changed her. When I stepped over the threshold, she tried to push me out. She told me to go. She didn’t know who I was. She wasn’t…she wasn’t my Marjorie anymore.”
“Harper,” Nalin said, her tone gentle. “Did you kill Marjorie?”
“No! No…he made me do it. He put the hate in her eyes. He made me use the knife on her. And, in the throes of death, she called his name. His name! Not mine!”
“Who?”
“The one who posed on television pretending to mourn her. The one who pleaded for information leading to the capture of her murderer. The one who put me in this grave. Captain James Warren.”
Nalin covered her mouth with one hand.
“I swore I would see him punished. See him arrested and humiliated. If he still lives, it will be so. If he is dead, I will defile his memory. Can you imagine what the world will think? He was a great policeman. Now, he’ll be nothing but a common murderer.”
Bruce reached out toward the glass. It stretched around his fingers before bursting like a bubble. He grasped hold of Nalin’s wrist.
“The day has come at last. You are my salvation. Let me in.”
“No!” Nalin cried. She struggled as the skeleton pushed its way through the mirror.
“Through you, I will reveal the truth to all. The truth of Marjorie’s death. The truth about mine.”
“John!” Nalin screamed.
The detective rushed forward. He entered the tunnel.
As John drew nearer, the skeleton’s grip loosened. He stared into the detective’s face.
“Her eyes!” Harper cried. “He has her eyes!”
Nalin wrenched herself from Harper’s grip. She fell backward.
Arms caught her and pulled her away from the shallow grave. She turned and clutched at John’s shirt.
“You alright?”
She nodded. He pulled her to her feet. Trembling, she wrapped her arms around his neck. He enfolded her in his embrace.
“It was Bruce Harper,” she said.
“The serial killer?”
“He killed your mother.”
“Then, my father—”
She glanced at the grave. In the moonlight, the skull still grinned.
“James Warren is innocent,” she said.
“Did Harper tell you who buried him here?”
Nalin paused. She stared into those green eyes, then, lowered her own. The compact still filled her hand. She slipped it into her pocket.
“No. He doesn’t know who killed him.”
A scream came from the grave. A wail only she could hear.
She ignored it.
Fiction © Copyright Naching T. Kassa
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com 

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More from Naching T. Kassa:


Final Masquerade

It’s the Final Masquerade and it’s your turn to dance.

The evening is ending and the guests are ready to leave, but the final event of the evening is just beginning — the unmasking.

Welcome to Final Masquerade where no one is who they seem.

Stories written by Daniel I. Russell * Ken MacGregor * J.C. Delisle * Joshua Chaplinsky * Lori Safranek * D.S. Ullery * Samantha Lienhard * Thomas Kleaton * Josh Strnad * Naching T. Kassa * Roy C. Booth & Axel Kohagen * Sheldon Woodbury * Craig Steven * Gregory L. Norris * Jay Eales * Dale W. Glaser * R.K. Kombrinck * Jonathan Cromack * Brian C. Baer * Adrian Chamberlin

Available on Amazon!

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