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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

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The Gathering 
by Rie Sheridan Rose 

“Is he here yet?” someone whispered, glancing around the shadowed clearing.

It was just past twilight, and the light had faded to almost nothing above the treetops. A sense of anxious anticipation filled the grove as they began assembling. Some had brought their young with them to hear his wisdom. Others stood back around the edges, not sure if they would stay.

“He’s late,” murmured an onlooker. “We shouldn’t have come.”

“Give him time. It’s difficult finding a path to this place in the gloaming. And he is the most senior among us.”

“What do you think he wants to tell us?” asked another.

“Does it matter? He called, and we must come.”

A rustling sounded in the undergrowth, and the whispered conversations ceased as a figure moved toward the gathered crowd. What little light remained above seemed to shine upon his cap. A further susurration of whispers filled the silence as he approached the center of the clearing.

He towered over the others as he lifted his chin and scowled around him. “Is this all? Where is everyone else?”

“We spread the word…I’m sorry there’s not a bigger turnout.”

“It doesn’t matter. What I have to say will spread, I am sure.”

“No doubt. No doubt.” The organizer hated the fawning tone in her voice, but seemed powerless to avoid it. He had that much presence. And he led them all, regardless of whether they liked it.

He stopped in the exact center of the glade, where a shaft of light showed him off to perfection, his cap glowing in the gloom. “Citizens,” he bellowed, “I have come to announce a new edict. Listen to me well.”

 Murmurs swelled as they turned to friends and family, wondering what he could mean.

“This is a sad day for our community. Yes, it has drifted to night, but that’s not the point. The point I am making is that we have grown too large for the clearing. We must make sacrifices for the good of the whole. Too many of us vie for the same resources. We can no longer survive as before. We must cull the herd. I require that one in three of you volunteer to remain in plain sight tomorrow when the humans come—and you know they will—looking for our kind to grace their tables. Only if we do this can the rest survive. No, it won’t be easy. It won’t seem fair to those we choose. But those chosen will be the saviors of our tribe. Look around you. Who can we spare? Who is infirm, or less fertile than their neighbor? Do you have a button who seems slow to grow? Do you have an elder who seems woody? Those would be fine choices. After all, we don’t need to give the humans our best and brightest. We just need to thin the tribe. I, myself, offer my youngest female. Surely, you will join me in my sacrifice.”

Gasps of horror and outrage ran through the clearing. This was not what he had promised when he became their leader.

“Fie!” cried a voice from the perimeter. “We don’t have to listen to this. We can split into smaller tribes—move further into the forest. Find other resources. We will not sacrifice our young or infirm to your behest!”

As quickly as they had gathered, they fled into the shadows, leaving a leader with no one to lead.

“They’ll be back,” he grumbled to the empty clearing. “They always come back.”

But morning found only a solitary mushroom for the pickers to harvest.

.

Fiction © Copyright Rie Sheridan Rose
Image courtesy of
Pixabay.com

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519RiHK+1wL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_

Overheard in Hell:
Dark Poetry

Poems exploring hell and damnation. Tales of sorrow, vengeance, betrayal, and redemption. Ghosts, ghouls, and demons stalk these pages. Don’t read in a lonely house…in a darkened room by a single candle…

…unless you like the touch of an icy finger up your spine.

Available on Amazon!

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Ladies of Horror Flash Project – #Horror #author A.F. Stewart @scribe77 @darc_nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

In The Time of Winter
by A.F. Stewart

This is our season of winter,
as the frigid snowfall reigns
against the howl of wolves

Come cry with us,
Come weep our sorrow,
bleeding in the bane of hope

We roar her name,
Oh, Death, oh Death
and she manifests from storm
beyond the surge of icy dismay.

Pale and cruel, but our salvation;
eternal breath of glacial fragments,
born in the haze of haunted days

She is the wraith of totality
last judgement of the infernal,
unending lies of our wicked
She has come…

In this age of winter,
as the frigid snowfall reigns

.

 
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More from A.F. Stewart:

vn

Visions and Nightmares

Tragedy spares no one… and takes no prisoners.
In the twilight shadows, secrets are revealed past the whispers of madness.

Wander into the realm of the old gods with Elenora, where humanity and marriage are a prison.
Step through a looking glass of dark horrors with an Alice you never knew.
Join with Zenna to seek the truth as her death by magic grows closer.
Journey with Olivia as she crosses paths with a monster of the forest and runs for her life.
Watch Isobel summon the faerie to solve her problem of an unwanted husband.
Shiver as Doctor Killbride experiments with corpses to create life from death.
All that and more await within the pages.

Ten stories. Ten women.
Who will survive? Who will fall? And who will succumb to their inner evil?
Find out in Visions and Nightmares.

Warning: This book contains disturbing scenes that may be upsetting to some readers.

Available on Amazon!

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

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Come On In 
by Loren Rhoads 

The beat picked up just as Meg felt the mushrooms beginning to creep
up on her. The shadowy figures of the dancers around her seemed just a
shiver darker than they had before. The strobes overhead burned a
little brighter. She told herself the tremulous sensation in her torso
was just excitement as the psilocybin kicked in and not nausea.
Mushrooms are natural, she reminded herself. Clean. Not made in a lab.
She was going to be fine.

The music crashed in over the drums, assaultively loud. Meg felt as if
her eardrums flexed with each new wave of sound. She ducked her head,
trying to find a position where the speaker wasn’t projecting directly
at her.

Chris put his cheek against hers and shouted directly into her ear:
“Did you forget how to dance?”

His breath smelled like the garlic pizza they’d had before coming to
the warehouse. Meg’s stomach twisted and she swallowed hard. “I need
to drink,” she shouted back at him.

He grabbed her hand and hauled her through the other dancers back
toward the black light over the bar. What did she want to drink, she
wondered. Nothing sounded good. She wasn’t really sure she wanted to
put anything into her mouth, let alone try to swallow. Her stomach
cramped and fidgeted.

“Beer?” Chris shouted at her.

“Water,” Meg decided. As Chris acquired the drinks, she watched the
dancers throb to the music. They didn’t appear to be enjoying
themselves as they grimly flailed and bounced beneath the spinning
lights.

Did she want to stay? Did she want to go? Did she want to deal with
getting her coat from the check and waiting outside in the cold for an
Uber? Wouldn’t it be better to just stay here, like they planned, and
leave at dawn to get breakfast before going home to crash?

Chris nudged her with a water bottle. She unscrewed its cap and
sipped. She could practically feel the moisture soaking into the
tissues inside her mouth. She felt like a sponge that had been wrung
dry. She sipped some more, swished it around in her mouth, swallowed
cautiously. It felt good.

Meg offered the water to Chris, but he raised a beer bottle as a
toast, swung it against her plastic bottle. She fumbled the bottle,
dropped it. It went spinning out of sight into the darkness beneath
everybody’s feet. “I’m cutting you off,” Chris teased, but he held the
beer out to her all the same. “Be careful,” he cautioned when she took
it.

Before long, the beer was gone and Chris was pulling her back out to
the dancefloor. Meg felt better now. The drug had settled in her head,
not her body. She loved the way light streamed from the gel lights
overhead. It felt good to dance, like she could feel the music
sloshing around her skin, but in a comfortable way, like being in a
hot tub and paddling your arms back and forth under the water. She
felt herself smiling. It seemed like a long time since she had been so
happy.

Across the dancefloor, one by one, then in a wave, people cracked the
glowsticks that hung on lanyards around their necks. It looked like
fireflies flickering on across the room. Meg realized that the
overhead lights had gone off, although the music hadn’t decreased in
volume. The only light now came from the fluorescent chemicals glowing
on everyone’s chests, pulsing to the rhythm.

“This is when it gets good,” Chris promised. He lifted his pale blue
glowstick to the crown of his head. He drew a line from his scalp,
down the center of his nose, under his chin, down his throat. Then he
let the glowstick drop onto its lanyard, reached up, and wrenched his
skin apart. He peeled his face in two halves, goggling at her with
parboiled eyes.

Meg spun and staggered into the couple behind her. “Hey!” one of the
women protested. She had peeled her skin down to her shoulders, where
it gathered like a mink stole. Her date had wriggled her skin down
around her waist.

Everyone around her was writhing and shimmying and casting off their
skin just as casually as peeling off their clothes. Meg caromed off
one person then the next, recoiling from the hot slick wetness of
their bodies. She thought she must be screaming, but she couldn’t hear
it over the music.

.
Fiction © Copyright Loren Rhoads
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from Author Loren Rhoads:

LorenRhoads_UnsafeWordsUnsafe Words

In the first full-length collection of her edgy, award-winning short stories, Loren Rhoads punctures the boundaries between horror, dark fantasy, and science fiction in a maelstrom of sex, drugs, and rock-n-roll. Ghosts, succubi, naiads, vampires, the Wild Hunt, and the worst predator in the woods stalk these pages, alongside human monsters who follow their cravings past sanity or sense. The stories are drawn from the pages of the magazines Cemetery Dance, City Slab, Instant City, and Space & Time, the Wily Writers podcast, and the books Sins of the Sirens, Demon Lovers, The Haunted Mansion Project: Year Two, Tales for the Camp Fire, and more.

Available on Amazon! 

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Cabbage Head 
by Alex Grehy

“Even this head of cabbage is more

beautiful than my wife!” you shout 

from our market stall.

“These luscious strawberries are

almost as sweet as my lover’s lips.” 

You think I don’t hear you.

But I’m always listening

***

“It’s only a joke, love, just banter,

a trader’s patois, traditional!!” you

whine when we get home.

Let’s see how you like it

***

“See this cucumber? I haven’t seen

anything so firm since I got married” 

I yelled as I worked on the market.

“Juicy plums, won’t get many to 

the pound, not like the shriveled 

prunes I see at home.” I shout.

I laugh when I see your scowl

***

“You rotten cow, bitch face, whore,

You don’t get to disrespect me in 

front of my mates, like I’m some fool!”

I knew you’d get angry

***

“Make yourself useful! I’m starving” 

you say when you’re finished. I peel 

myself up off the floor.

“I’m sorry, my lovely, I’ll cook you…

something delicious, like you deserve.”

I know how to roll with your punches.

You don’t notice the glint in my eye.

***

“Darling, are you enjoying your dinner?

Your bloody head nods, as if in agreement,

then falls off the table, rolls under your chair.

“Oh good!” I say brightly, “cabbage heads

work so well with ground beef, though I

think you taste bland, more like chicken.”

I clink my glass against yours and keep eating.

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 R.A. Clarke @RAClarkeWrites @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

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Whispers 
by R.A. Clarke 

I shouldn’t have done it—veered off the main hiking path. But I came here with a camera for a reason. One doesn’t get gorgeous photos by playing it safe.

So, when this indescribable urge tugged at me to search deeper into the forest, like a tiny inner voice whispering to me, I didn’t ignore it. I accepted it as my own intuition—or perhaps fate—sharing a tip.

I crunched over twigs and sunk into pockets of spongy moss as I explored the trees, careful to mark my way via GPS so I wouldn’t get lost. I may be impulsive, but I’m not stupid.

The whispers came again, stronger this time. Looking around, I searched for the source, then quickly stopped, chiding myself for such a silly action. Why was I actively seeking something that clearly originated in my own mind?

A flash of orange caught my eye. Turning toward it, I squinted. A bright glow lit up a mossy mound at the base of a bulbous tree, maybe fifty feet away. 

“What is that?” Like a magnet to metal, my legs moved of their own accord, drawing me closer. The whispers grew chaotic in my head, then stopped the minute I laid eyes on the source of that mysterious light. I froze, staring, as the quiet of the forest enveloped me. 

There, nestled below, rested a dozen colorful mushrooms. No, not just colourful. Brilliant. Vibrant. Beautiful. Hues of gold, orange, fuschia, and violet blended into each other and radiated outward. Quite impressive, really. I’d never seen such a fungus in all my nature photography adventures.

The sun had lowered in the sky and a dusky haze rolled in. It was supposed to be a full moon. Though I’d have more available light come night time, it was still unwise to stay out alone past sunset. I needed to return to the path, then head to my vehicle, which was parked about a kilometer away. But there was enough time to sneak a few photos. I took a knee in front of the wee mushroom patch. No way was I not documenting this find.

A thrill coursed through me as I pointed my camera, focused the lens, and clicked. “Have I just discovered a new species?” A child-like giggle of joy escaped me.

I wondered if they were edible. Unlike many exotic reptiles and insects, colourful mushrooms didn’t instantly spell danger. 

Switching positions, I lay on my side, getting in close for a bug’s-eye-view. Licking my lips, an insatiable need to taste one swelled. But I dispelled it just as quick. Um, nope, you will not be trying a strange mushroom while in the middle of nowhere today.

And yet, the desire persisted.

No! I all but shouted at myself, setting my jaw. But if I couldn’t—shouldn’t—eat it, surely, I could at least touch it and feel its rubbery-looking texture. I dropped my backpack, digging through the pockets until I found a plastic bag inside my travel medkit. Even better, I’ll take a sample home as proof. Maybe submit it for study somewhere. Someone will want to learn about this mushroom if it’s a new species.

I reached for the largest mushroom in the centre, first running my fingers over its smooth, colourful cap, before grasping the meaty stem at its base. A tingling sensation erupted on my skin where it made contact. The tingle singed into a sharp burn and I nearly let the stem go, then yanked instead, determined to get my sample. 

Dropping it into my makeshift collection bag, I noticed how its torn base wept, a glowing neon yellow fluid dripping out. 

Sniffing, I nearly gagged. Putrid smell.

Tying the bag closed, I tucked it safely inside my backpack, then snapped a few more photos for good measure. 

Flexing my fingers, I noticed the burn there had ebbed, replaced by numbness. I frowned, pulling out my water bottle and dousing my hand—rubbing it to remove whatever substance the mushroom had transferred to my skin. A note of concern entered my mind then, thinking of toxins. But I brushed the thoughts aside. Such a brief touch couldn’t cause any real harm. 

I swigged my water, mouth pasty dry.

Thank goodness I didn’t eat one.

Wiping sweat from my brow, I slung my backpack over my shoulders once more and stood, wobbling at the apex. Stepping carefully across uneven ground, I headed toward the well-worn path I’d abandoned earlier.

I wobbled again, then again, my arms whipping out to steady my balance. What the… My equilibrium was way off, and my head felt light, too, my vision swimming at the edges. The whispers from before returned, only they shouted now, telling me to remain calm and crying out with delight in an almost orgasmic way.

Goosebumps rose on my skin, fear curdling in my gut. The numbness still claiming my fingers spread to infect my entire hand, then moved up my arm.

“Shit, shit, shit! What is going on?” I spun in circles, losing track of where I was. Suddenly everything looked the same and I couldn’t make sense of what I should do. My voice cracked. “Did you poison me?”

The whispers moaned with joy as the numbness took hold of my torso and made its way down toward my hips.

A strange sound reached my ears—like friction—and when I looked down at my bare limbs, coarse fur grew from every follicle in my skin at a terrifying speed. The hair continued thickening, the dark strands doubling and tripling, punching holes in my epithelial, the violence of it coating my arms with blood. I screamed, waving while jumping into a frantic run.

But my legs didn’t want to cooperate. The icy claws of numbness had grasped them. Not fully, but enough to keep me from having any semblance of coordination.

I face planted in the dirt and moss.

A sharp pop rang out. Another followed, accompanied by a symphony of similar sounds that echoed as they bounced off the trees. Despite the numbness, acute pains stabbed my back and shoulders, and I knew all those pops were bones cracking—mine.

Blood dripped from my face onto the spongy green flora beneath me. Several sharp things protruded from my gums, pushing against the flesh of my lips.

That burning sensation returned, searing my fingers again. Rolling onto my back, crying and moaning, I ran my hands over my features—the rapidly elongating jaw, widening mouth, and disfigured nose. Hair matted my whole face, and those sharp things… were teeth. Big ones.

No, no, no! Make it stop! No!

Oh yes… the whispers trilled back.

Trembling as my body finished cracking, stretching, and twisting into its terrifying new canine-like form, my mind somehow separated from my body, simultaneously disconnecting from the pain—a blissful relief. My consciousness now floated above the abomination I had become.

The creature snarled below, pushing itself up from the forest floor, now marred by blood and shredded clothing, and shaking its grungy fur out like a dog exiting water.

Is that thing me—or am I dead?

The whispers sighed blissfully. Not dead.

The beast snapped its teeth and sniffed the air, then took off at a run, weaving deftly between trees and over uneven terrain. Abruptly, I jerked into motion, my ethereal self floating after it, tethered. 

We were headed in the direction of town.

Up ahead, a hiker appeared, his steps clearly rushed because of the now dark sky. I wished I was him right now—so close to the parking area. If only I hadn’t been lured in by those damn mushrooms. That’s exactly what they’d done, wasn’t it? Lured me? The whispers, the urges, the glowing. It should be impossible, all of it. Maybe it’s all just a horrible nightmare.

Below me the monster born from my own flesh pounced on the hikers back without hesitation, sinking its teeth into the poor guy’s neck and thrashing side-to-side. A piercing scream ripped through the air before it was sharply silenced.

No, I didn’t wish to be that hiker now.

I cringed, looked away from the gore of tearing flesh and spilled intestines below. Having no solid form or voice, my mind screamed this is all just a nightmare!

The beast looked up, its molten irises finding me with unsettling ease. Not a dream. We’re one now.

Amidst the chilling symphony of a beast’s brutal carnage, I released tearless sobs, weeping beneath the rising full moon.

.

Fiction © Copyright R.A. Clarke
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com 

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More from author R.A. Clarke:

RAClarke_DontLookJustRunDon’t Look, Just Run

Consider this book a cautionary tale. The short stories, flash fiction, micro fiction, and poems contained within this collection are the stuff of nightmares—things you should’ve run from when you had the chance.

You’ll read a rhyming tale about a crafty northern witch with a deathly holiday fetish, the journal of a troubled woman who’s been offered revitalization in the form of experimental skin therapy, and two flirty college students who learn exactly why taking strange drugs is bad. Lock your doors and pull your blanket up a little higher while you navigate a feud between neighbours that spirals out of control, operate a camera with a thirst for blood, and even chuckle while a family of vacationing demons let their hungry lil’ guy trick-or-treat, human-style.

If you take away anything from this book, besides a cramp from turning pages too fast or a case of spine tingles that won’t quit—it should be this… Don’t look, just run!

Available on Amazon!

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

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The Body Keeps the Score 
by Elaine Pascale 

“Stop,” Matt said, choking around the deep drag he had taken off the joint he and Justin shared.

“Wha?” Justin turned his head away from the road to shoot his passenger a quizzical look. “You gotta piss or something?”

Matt stared straight ahead, his eyes wide. “It’s her, the woman in white.”

Justin leaned over the steering wheel, staring intently into the falling snow. “I don’t see anything.”

“That’s cause you aren’t from around here.”

“Well I’m not stopping for any invisible woman.”

Matt cupped the joint protectively. “You have to. I’m serious. I’m not giving this back if you don’t.”

Justin laughed. “What is this man? We still have hours on the road ahead of us.”

“I’m serious,” Matt repeated. “And it won’t be me that gets cursed, I’m not the driver.”

“Cursed?”

“For real. If you stop, she’ll think you are offering her a ride and she’ll leave you alone. If you don’t stop, she’ll think you left her. Worse, that you forgot her.” Matt remembered his grandmother telling him the story that had been passed down for generations. The woman in white had been in love with a married man. He promised to leave his wife for her. They had planned to run away together and he told her to wait by the road for him. She wore the dress she had kept in her hope chest. It was the gown meant for her wedding night, meant for her to experience true love.

She stood by the road and waited. The night grew dark and cold and snow began to fall. Still she waited. She ignored her hunger, her thirst, and her fear. She waited as the snow piled up but his carriage never arrived. She waited as the sun rose and set again, until she convinced herself that he had forgotten her, forgotten all about her. That was how little she mattered to him.

In the deepening snow, she convinced herself she mattered to no one, as someone would have looked for her if anyone cared. She waited longer, until the deepening snow made movement difficult, until she no longer mattered to herself.

She laid on the snow, cursing herself for being so stupid, cursing the man for leading her on, cursing the world for caring so little. The snow fell, hiding any evidence of her body. She was not discovered until months later, when spring arrived, but by then, her spirit no longer cared about her body.

“If you don’t see her, if you don’t take notice of her, she’ll curse you,” Matt said urgently.

“She’ll kill me?”

“Worse.”

Justin laughed. He couldn’t believe they were having this conversation, that Matt was asking him to stop when they were on their way to spring break. They had been roommates for two years so he was accustomed to Matt’s weirdness, but this superstitious nonsense was new.

“I’m serious. She’ll curse you so that no one remembers you.”

Justin smirked. First, he had never believed in the supernatural. Second, he was far too charming to be forgotten. The girls from Delta Zeta who pined for him could attest to that. “We’ll be fine, little man, no worries. Now pass that over if you know what’s good for you.”

You don’t know what’s good for you,” Matt admonished as he reluctantly passed the blunt.

They drove for a short distance, the snow fall picking up and making the world around them white.

“See.” Justin turned to Matt, directing an exhalation of smoke onto his nervous passenger. “Nothing to worry about.”

Matt did not respond. He was pale and his hands were shaking.

“You gonna take this or what?” Justin nudged the weed toward Matt.

“She’s here,” Matt whispered.

“Wha?” Justin’s face grew serious. He was now concerned about Matt.

“She’s here.” Matt pointed over his shoulder to the back seat. “She’s here and she’s mad.”

Justin swerved the car onto the snowy shoulder. He got out and instructed Matt to do the same. “Dude, take a deep breath. Let this cold air knock you back into your senses.”

Matt stared at Justin blankly.

Justin followed his own instructions, taking a deep breath and stretching his legs a bit before saying, “Let’s get back in the car.”

Matt looked from Justin to the car, the bewilderment on his face never fading.

“Matt, c’mon.”

Matt shook his head slowly, saying, “Who are you? How do you know my name?”

.

Fiction © Copyright Elaine Pascale
Image courtesy of Pixaby.com

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More from Elaine Pascale:

ElainePascale_TheBloodLights_coverThe Blood Lights

The Blood Lights are the last thing you’ll see…

Jezzie Mitchell is in anguish; the violent outbursts among the girls in the residential treatment center where she works mimics her brother’s murder. Is there a connection between the contagion on Cape Cod and the deadly Bahamas vacation that changed her life?

Jezzie reaches out to former lover Lou Collins, a scholar who has chased proof of the lights for decades. Will he be able to solve the mystery of the lights in time?

Intensely competitive, reporter Bridgette Collins knows the lights are a way to secure fame. Because it will put the final nail into the coffin of her ex-husband’s career, she vows to know the secrets of the lights.

Even if it means unleashing a world-wide epidemic…

Available on Amazon!

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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!

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Visitors In The Night 
by Kathleen McCluskey 

Under a blanket of stars, Tommy and Luna sat cross legged around a flickering campfire. They were deep in the woods and far from the city, a place of solace. The hum of cicadas surrounded them, a natural soundtrack for their escapade. Luna, with her tie-dyed headband and silver rings tossed another log onto the fire, sending sparks into the air. Tommy, his long hair tucked under a faded bandana passed her the small, brightly colored tab of LSD.

“Here’s to new dimensions,” he said, grinning as they placed each tab on their tongues. The bitterness dissolving as they settled back to watch the cosmos. The stars above seemed to dance and swirl as the drug began to seep into their senses, blurring the lines between reality and imagination.

It started subtly, a slight shimmer in the air, a soft hum that seemed to vibrate beneath their skin The trees around them pulsed, their bark shifting in patterns, alive with color. Shadows took on shapes, stretching, bending, dancing in harmony with the flickering flames.

“Tommy…look,” Luna whispered. Her voice was barely audible over the pounding of her heart. She reached out and clutched his arm, her fingers digging in.

Two figures emerged from the darkness. They glided over with an eerie, silent grace. Their bodies shimmered, an intricate network of glowing veins pulsing beneath translucent skin that gleamed in hues of blue and green. They had elongated heads with smooth bulbous foreheads. Their faces were dominated by large, black unblinking eyes, the fire reflected in them like mirrors. The creatures stood side by side, as if they were partners, or even lovers, connected by something ancient and profound.

Tommy stared. His mind raced to make sense of what he was seeing. The creatures seemed almost human, yet entirely otherworldly, as if they stepped out from some distant galaxy. “They’re beautiful…” he muttered, unable to look away. He felt a strange warmth emanate from them.

The beings tilted their heads, studying them with an intensity that was both chilling and comforting. It was as if they were reading every thought, every memory, every fear hidden. Luna shivered, feeling exposed. She felt like the creatures were looking straight through her. She wanted to speak, to ask them who they were, but her voice caught in her throat. She was entranced, locked in their gaze.

Then, the creatures began to hum. It was a deep, resonant sound that reverberated in the air, vibrating their bones. The melody was hauntingly beautiful, a sound that felt ancient, like the heartbeat of the universe. Luna’s vision blurred and she reached out blindly for Tommy’s hand, holding on as the world around them melted into waves of sound and color.

The night seemed to stretch on forever as they sat with the beings, time slipping into an endless flow of stars and cosmic whispers. Tommy felt as if he had crossed into another plane, where everything he had known had been stripped away, leaving only pure, raw consciousness. He felt the creature’s presence seeping into him, filling him with knowledge and mysteries that he could hardly comprehend.

When Luna closed her eyes, she saw visions of planets orbiting distant stars, of vast galaxies swirling in the darkness. She saw flashes of civilizations, strange and magnificent, rising and falling across the cosmos. At the center of it all were the creatures that stood in front of them. They were silent watchers, guardians of the mysteries that bound each of us together.

But just as suddenly as they had arrived, the creatures began to fade. Their forms dissolved into the night, leaving only a trace of their glow. Tommy and Luna were left in silence, the only sound was the crackling of their dying fire. They sat there, dazed and overwhelmed, as the LSD began to wear off. The vibrant colors of the world dulled back to their usual shades.

“Was that…real?” Luna finally whispered, breaking the silence. Her voice shook, barely able to contain the emotions churning inside of her. Tommy shrugged.

“Just the acid, babe.” He said, even though he didn’t believe his own words. The creatures had felt so real, so vivid, so tangible, unlike anything they’d ever experienced.

With the morning came reality. The fire had died, the sky was a hazy gray, and a cold mist clung to the ground as they gathered their belongings. Luna tried to laugh off the visions, but something lingered in her mind. It was a nagging feeling that wouldn’t let her shake it, this was more than a drug trip. She felt watched, haunted by the memory of those unblinking eyes.

As they hiked down the narrow trail toward their car, the early morning sun cast long shadows through the trees filtering the mist on the forest floor. The night felt distant now, its mysteries softened by the sunlight. Tommy was already talking about breakfast, about the diner they would stop at on the way back. But Luna’s  steps slowed until she came to a complete stop. Her breath caught in her throat.

There, just beyond the line of trees, she saw them. Two figures, tall and silent, their skin shimmering with the same intricate, glowing patterns as the creatures the night before. They stood motionless. Their huge, unblinking eyes locked onto her. Every detail was unmistakable, their elongated heads, the delicate webbing of veins beneath their translucent skin, the intensity of their gaze. Luna felt an icy wave of terror roll over her as one tilted its head slightly, as if recognizing her. This time, there was no warmth of the campfire, no haze of LSD to cloud her mind. She knew, with a clarity that turned her blood to ice, that the visitors from last night had been real.

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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 Alyson Faye @AlysonFaye2 @Darc_Nina #LoH #fiction

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!


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Miranda
by Alyson Faye 

‘Miranda? Where are you? Are you hiding from me? You know there’s nowhere for the likes of you to go. You’re a freak.’

The lights around the lodge, with its wooden decking and hot tub, splayed outwards into the forest, eating into the shadows. A man, bulky, tall, carrying a harpoon gun, stepped out of the doorway. ‘I’ll count to three and you better let me see you.’ He grinned.

There was a rustling to his right, and he headed in that direction. Nothing stirred, then there were faint scrabbling noises, followed by a splash from the hot tub, water sprayed over the sides. A head bobbed up. A blue and gold-veined face stared around, eyes huge and fearful, head tilted on one side, listening. ‘Miranda’ as she’d been named, could hear the animals hunting, the death cry of one, the heartbeats of many, and the apex predator out there, her prison warder, the man, who called himself Malloy.

‘Mal-loy,’she hissed through lips, bleeding blue. Her eyes widened, the protective double lids flickered, so momentarily she appeared blind. She ducked her head beneath the hot tub’s waters, allowing the liquid to re-vitalize her skin, drinking it, feeling her flesh become buoyant. She needed this, every few hours, to live.

She turned, and sniffed the air, smelt the man’s sweat. He was returning. She hissed again, her tongue flickering out like a snake’s. She climbed out of the tub, and swift as a deer, she melded into the forest.

Malloy returning, was sweating and furious. ‘Sea-cow’s the right word for you. I’ve got another – bitch! I’m gonna find you. You can’t leave here.’

Buried in the leaves, amongst the tree’s sturdy roots, Miranda knew her captor spoke true. She had to bathe every two hours, or else the drying process would sweep over her, take her breath, her mind and finally mummify her body.

‘Mal-loy…’ her mind filled with sensations – his rough hands, the pain he inflicted, the salt of his skin, his hate and desire – entwined. The spines on her back lifted, in rage. She would not be his victim. She would not be his wife either. As others of her kind had agreed to in the tales of old. She crept out of her den, stood upright, and let the moon dress her. She knew her allure and her powers. He was, in the end, only a man.

‘Mal- loy!’ her voice sang out, high and pure. ‘I am here. I want you.’

The moon revealed the golden skin, the turquoise scales and eyes, of deep sapphire. She stood naked, whilst Malloy gazed rapt. His prize. His prisoner. She was beyond beautiful, she was unique and would make him rich.

‘Put down the harpoon,’ she crooned, her voice like molasses. ‘You do not want to hurt me.’ She stroked her body’s curves, watching Malloy’s eyes follow her finned fingers. She glowed with the power of the life-giving water, her skin sending out golden pulses of energy glittering in the darkness.

Malloy, as though hypnotized, stepped towards her, unbuttoning his shirt, then his belt. ‘Miranda… you’re so…’ he whispered, laying the harpoon gun down upon the earth.

‘Come to me,’ she sang, ‘be mine. We can be wed. Become one.’

Her eyes held his, her hands stroked his bare chest. Her skin was soft, moist. Malloy bent to kiss her. He couldn’t remember now why he had ever hated this creature or wanted to hurt her. She smelled of salt, and orchids, and something else, something more feral. Deep in her eyes, flickers of gold and blue danced.

As they kissed, a row of black-tipped spines sprouted from Miranda’s backbone, talons of coral erupted from her nails, and her teeth grew sharper as she bit down on Malloy’s lips, tasting blood and flesh. She tore at his chest, his face, his back, stripping off the warm flesh, whilst wrapping her legs around his waist, squeezing the breath from him.

Malloy screamed, through a lipless mouth, and blinded, he tried to fight free of the mer-creature, but to no avail. 

‘I said we would become one,’ she whispered.

 But only the trees heard her.

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Fiction © Copyright Alyson Faye
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

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More from Alyson Faye:

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The Lost Girl & Spindleshanks

The Lost Girl
A nailed-up door. An inheritance which comes with a ghost. A missing girl. A fifty-year-old mystery. Parapsychologist Berkley Osgood is hired to investigate. What he uncovers reveals secrets the living want to hide and the dead will never forgive.

Spindleshanks
Adam is having nightmares about a skeletal shadow figure, who he calls Spindleshanks. Soon his whole class are sharing the same nightmare. Adam’s dad, Rob, knows that Spindleshanks can’t be real. But is he? One terrible night Rob has to face his son’s nightmare creature and fight for his son’s life. What would you sacrifice to have your child back safe?

“A decent two-for-one. Alyson Faye brings the engaging and eerie in equal measure.” CC Adams – horror / dark fiction author

Available on Amazon!

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

The Ladies of Horror

Gus
by Nina D’Arcangela

Muttering to himself as he always does, ole Gus shuffled to the basement door, pulled it open, and carefully descended the barely lit stairs. Once in the subterranean cavern – as he liked to imagine it – he began searching the dusty shelves for boxes marked Halloween in Ester’s neat, tidy handwriting. God rest her soul. Given what a pain in the ass his wife had been in life, he’d never thought he would miss her nagging so much now that she was gone. Oh well, done is done, can’t dwell on the past. That’s the way he’d always lived his life, no reason to go changing things now. If he could just get that damned Priest from their church to stop dropping in, he could finally catch up on his shows. That old coot would do just about anything to get a little extra change on the Sunday plate. Gus couldn’t see any other reason why the man kept coming by to console him; always bringing casseroles, and baked this or homemade that from strange women he’d never even met. Yup, it had to be that Sunday Salvation savings account he kept making deposits into. No other reason for it. She’d been dead for, Christ – what was it, three, four weeks now; it was time to stop treating him like a lost mute-child found wandering the streets. These people just didn’t know how to keep to themselves and quit meddling in his affairs! Well, at least he was eating well. Ester, God rest her soul, was a fair looking woman with many fine qualities, but cooking wasn’t one of them. Nope. She must have been looking the other way when that train went whistling by. Oh well, done is done.

Rooting around the musty shelves in the dim light, Gus finally came across what looked like the right boxes. ‘Course, they were behind the X-Mass boxes; now he’d have to move those first. Speaking of X-Mass, that was something he’d always wondered… why spell it with two S’s on the end? Christmas was spelled with one S, and he couldn’t see the Arch Diocese endorsing X-Priests, like X-Men, so X-Masses were probably out of the question. Now that would be a service he wouldn’t mind donating to – hell, they could charge admission. Those money grubbing, wafer toting, alcohol peddling Men of the Cloth zipping around with special powers. Now thatwould be a show! What, no change for the plate? Father Laser Eye, incinerate that cheap son-of-a-bitch. Zap! Ha! Ahhh, well, it would probably be more like Father Lazy Eye with those clowns. Anyway, speaking of clowns, if he didn’t stop imagining The Flying Priest-capades in his head, he’d never get the lawn set up for tomorrow night. And Ester, God rest her soul, wouldn’t have that at her home. Nope. Better get to gettin’ to it if he was finally gonna get back at those little shits for the years of fucking with her lawn.

A few hours later, he’d managed to drag all the boxes and loose pieces of seasonal ornamentation up from the basement and out onto the porch. Looking around at the leaves cluttering the front yard, Gus figured there was no sense in raking them; they added to the ambiance. Plus, his back was way too sore for that kind of manual labor, especially considering what was still to come. Yup. Ester, God rest her soul, was going to be proud of his efforts this year; and whether she was too kind-hearted or lady-like to admit it, she’d enjoy the vengeance he had planned for those crap-faced teenagers. Ha! Well, time to break out the cob-webbing, and get the decorating over with.

Gus worked long into the night, waving to passers-by as they called out a hello, taking a break only to sit and eat the latest dish of whatever-you-call-that-stuff the Priest brought by. To any and all watching, it seemed the kindly old widower was going about making his home as inviting as he could for the pip-squeaks who would come mooching for candy tomorrow night. Sometime around 10:30 pm, he placed the final prop in its honored and very conspicuous place. It was the most realistic, most expensive severed head he and Ester, God rest her soul, had collected. It was really a bit too pricey for them, but from the moment she saw it, there was no talking sense to her – she simply wouldn’t leave the store without it. He’d spent the last several years sitting up awake on All Hallows’ Eve just to protect that one piece from the neighborhood vandals. They’re just kids having fun, Ester, God rest her soul, would always say. Kids, my ass, he always thought. Lighting his last cigarette before heading inside to wash up and sleep for a few hours, Gus wondered just how much fun they’d be having this year. After a few drags, he flicked the butt onto his neighbor’s lawn, picked up the prized latex head, and trudged inside to catch a little shut-eye.

At 2:00 am, his alarm clock sounded. After splashing cold water on his face and shaking off the sandman, Gus got down to the real business of this year’s decorating.  Collecting his shovel and pickax from the shed out back, he shambled his way around to the front lawn. He might be an old geezer, but years of working in the mill had hardened him into something much different than most people thought. He was a smart man, one who knew how to foster good will and empathy, but one who also knew when it was time to use his strengths to his advantage. Making his way to the spot where the prized head would sit later that evening, he tossed down the shovel and began breaking up the dirt on his front lawn.

Back inside, he made his way to the shower, cleaned himself up again, then cooked a hearty breakfast of poached eggs, instant grits, bacon, maple sausage links, and six slices of toast. Just like Ester, God rest her soul, used to make… well, maybe a little better, but don’t tell her that.

Sitting on his front porch that afternoon and evening, Gus dutifully rewarded all the little children with their hands held out begging for candy. As the night wore on, he was sure to keep an eye on that ghoulish head, and all the little bastards who had their eye on it, too. He knew that one of them would come back and make a play for it well after everyone was asleep. With all the wee ones home by 8:00 pm, it was just a matter of waiting the right amount of time. By 11:30, Gus had been alone on his porch for an hour and a half without seeing another soul. Giggling to himself and saying a silent prayer that Ester, God rest her soul, was watching, he began his own Halloween fun! Tucking the latex head inside the house, he slid the board covering the hole he’d made in the early hours of the morning out of the way and tossed it under the porch, hiding the evidence of his deceit among the other debris stored there. Sitting down on the lawn, Gus dangled his legs over the opening for just a moment before he shimmied his way into the ground. Having left one arm free, he scooped the loose dirt and leaves that had concealed the board onto his broad shoulders, then worked his arm into the hole as well. Buried up to his neck, Gus stood in the tight confines of the vertical grave he’d dug earlier and waited. It didn’t take long.

Judging it to be about half past midnight, he heard a rustling sound, and the drunken whispers of the aforementioned idiots approaching. Holding dead still, eyes closed, he waited and listened.

“Damn man, it looks so real!”

“Of course it looks real, dick-head, that’s why it’s such a great grab for this year’s scavenger hunt. Plus, that pain-in-the-ass isn’t sitting on the porch guarding it like he usually is.”

“Show some respect, man. The dude just lost his wife. My dad comes by here with food and shit from the church cronies like every night.”

“Yeah, I’m sure he does it out of respect. He’s just hoping the old fuck leaves his money to the parish.”

“Whatever, asshole. Just grab it so we can get the hell out of here before someone sees us.”

The sound of footsteps grew closer as the leaves crunched in his ears. Gus felt the warmth of the little bastard’s hands nearly touching him.

“You sure the coast is clear?”

“Yeah, man. Just hurry the fuck up and grab it!”

Sensing the impending hands about to close around his head, Gus’s eyes shot open as quickly as his jaw. He’d taken the time to file his teeth to razor sharp points while he’d waited inside. In one fluid motion, he turned and snapped his mouth closed on the arm of the fuck-wad trying to steal his head. His teeth sliced clean through the connective muscle and sinew at the boys elbow; as soon as the kid yanked backward, his forearm detached with a sickening squelch. They all started to scream like the little piss-ants they were. Blood spurted everywhere, making Gus’s head really look like the latex gem. As the teens ran screaming for their lives, Gus spit the arm out toward the bushes. Cackling with maniacal laughter, shreds of fabric and gristle still clinging to his teeth, Gus shouted, “See Ester, God rest your ever lovin’ soul, I found the perfect prop to finish our Halloween display!”

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More from Nina D’Arcangela:

Bent Metal

Where does reality end and dreamscape begin?

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

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

Available on Amazon!

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

The Ladies of Horror
Picture-Prompt Writing Challenge!

Blood Type
by Amanda Worthington

The attic is strewn with the remnants of Chemnitz

Its horrors buried beneath tinsel and wreaths and old coats

Articles of celebration and resistance to letting go

Of the past that’s worth keeping

Mom’s death hit me in unexpected ways

I’d finished clearing away the things

That belonged to her generation

And had moved on to the next

I knew Grandma had been in the war,

There were no documents. No correspondence.

The typewriter resurrects the unanswered questions

And what are unanswered questions but ghosts

Haunting the corridors of our modern minds

With their mysteries?

There is a whispering

I come nearer, stoop to hear

Soak my ribbon in your blood

And write your desires into being

I start. Am I going crazy? Is it the grief? Why am I not screaming?

I should find a hammer and bash the thing’s keys

And get my head examined

But there is another part of me that thinks to investigate the dead

And if it is in the typewriter’s power to grant me peace…

I can spare a little blood for resolution, I reason

I should have used the hammer.

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