Monday, May 31, 2010

Alien Arm Syndrome


I have this condition called Alien Arm Syndrome. It sounds fake, I know. Like something out of a sci-fi horror flick. But it is a real medical condition and I was lucky enough to be cursed with it. I never cared to look into it scientifically, but basically a part of your brain doesn’t function correctly and one of your arms grows a mind of it’s own.

Sometimes it’s controllable. Usually a doctor will tell you to hold something in the affected hand and this would help keep it under control. Sometimes the condition will get better and sometimes it will get worse. It’s different for everyone who has it but with me it keeps getting worse, and worse.

When I was around nine or so, is when it all started. It was really very subtle at first. Every once in a while my arm and hand would just make small movements. Like I’d be sitting down watching T.V. and all of a sudden I’d notice my arm stuck out to my side making random movements. A few years later I was watching T.V. when suddenly the channel changed. I looked over at my hand and it was channel surfing all on it’s own.

It wasn’t too long after that I was holding a cup in my hand, to try and keep it under control, when suddenly I whipped it across the kitchen at my mom and it hit her right in the head. I felt really bad, she needed five stitches. So while we were at the hospital my mother asked the doctor if there was any better medication I could take. He prescribed me some sort of mild tranquilizer to use with the medicine I already had. It worked pretty good, at least for a few years. It still made little movements, but nothing severe.

I was 11 at that time, now I’m 20, and I can feel it starting to get bad again. Whatever medication I’m on barely works at all anymore and my doctor has me on the highest dosage possible. My arm is starting to wake me up every night now. Sometimes it’s just playing with my phone, but sometimes it scratches my wall violently to the point where my fingers are bleeding and my nails start bending back. I also started sleepwalking. Every morning when I wake up, something is out of place. That morning I found my butcher knife on the kitchen table.

This disease is driving me mad. Between the anxiety of possibly hurting myself or others, and the severe lack of sleep I can literally feel myself slipping away into insanity. I’ve been off balance, making stupid mistakes, and all together not thinking clearly.

So the other day I decided I would handcuff my alien arm to the bedpost and hopefully that would insure me at least one good nights sleep. I don’t know why I never thought of this before. But it didn’t work very well. I think I actually pissed off the arm. I woke up choking my own throat violently. Somehow it got out of the handcuffs. My fingers were pierced into the side of my neck and I couldn’t breathe. I tried to use my good hand to pull it away but my Alien arm was too strong. I passed out. When I woke up the hand was luring over me, dangling the handcuffs in front of my face, mocking me.

“Enough!” I screamed. “I’m done living with this!” Still in a sleepless daze, and probably suffering from a concussion at this point, I ran out into my kitchen crashing into every wall on the way. I went to my knife drawer and pulled out the butcher knife with my good hand. My alien arm tried to grab it away but I managed to keep it out of reach. I threw myself on the floor and was able to get my bad hand under my knee with all my weight on top of it. It squirmed and vigorously tried to free itself. But this time it wasn’t going to win.

“I should have done this a long time ago!” I hacked away at it with the butcher knife. One, two, three times. The pain was excruciating, it seemed to pulsate throughout my whole body. Four, five, and by the sixth chop it was clean off. I watched it for a second still moving around the floor involuntarily.

The next thing I knew I woke up here in this hospital bed. I guess I called 911 before I passed out but I dont remember much. The nurses told me I was lucky to be alive with all the blood I lost. But to me the luckiest thing of all was that damn arm was gone. I held up the stump that used to be my alien arm, looked at it, and smiled. From now on, I’ll be able to sleep and relax with no problem. I let this beautiful thought run through my head for a moment and just laid there, still, in peace.

A nurse walked in and came up to me,“What’s the problem dear?” She asked politely.

“No problem,” I said puzzled. “ In fact, I’m better than I’ve ever been.”

“Oh, then why are you pressing the call button?” she questioned.

“I’m not……” I started to say before looking over at my ‘good’ hand. But there it was, slamming down on the call button over, and over, and over………


Credits to: Sage, short-horror-hits.tumblr.com

Sunday, May 30, 2010

The One


I knew she was the one from the beginning. When I saw her at first, that beautiful flowing sundress, that smile. She seems to be a good person. I even got her address, Oak Grove.

There was, however a lot of people dressed in their Sunday best around her, each in line, walking past her.

It is now midnight, everyone is asleep and all of her visitors are gone for the day. I remember her smile as I begin digging.


Credits to:  http://xboxgamer098.tumblr.com/

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Poor Thomas


I feel confident yet still a bit nervous as I clutch my job resume folder. I feel like I’ve been in the waiting room for hours though it’s been minutes. I’ve worked my whole life to get up to this point. You see, I’ve always loved playing with trains.

When I was a boy, I’d build my own trains, my own tracks. I’d design whole towns. I’d spend so much time on my trains that my social life, my family life suffered.

My favorite thing to do was build it all up then smash everything together in violent collisions. I’d rig it so that the trains would catch fire. The little town guys would also become engulfed; I’d imagine and mimic their screams.

Trains flying off tracks. Devastating whole sets with hammers. Sounds of metal scraping on metal.

Glorious.

God I hope I get this job. I’m tired of playing with toys. It’s time to move up to the real thing.


Credits to: Huntfrog

Friday, May 28, 2010

Little Dead


What many people don’t realize is…. I died, in the woods, on my way to Grandma’s, I died.

No, it wasn’t the wolf. It was an accident, on my way over the river I slipped, and bumped my head on some rocks. The Wolf was framed.
-
The day began like any other, the sun was shining, the birds were singing their melodious song, and I was to take a basket of goodies to my grandmother. The day was so nice that I decided to wear my short hooded cape, the one that only covered my shoulders. After tying the ribbon around my neck, I kissed my mother goodbye, grabbed my basket and headed into the woods. I chose to take a short cut today as I was kind of in a hurry- I wanted to get Grandma out of the way early so I could spend the rest of the day with my beau.

The shortcut was as safe as any other and I had taken it many times before. It consisted of going over the river and through the woods, in opposed to taking the road and crossing the bridge which puts me at least a mile out of my way on either side if the river. I half skipped and half ran, humming along with the birds as I made my way through the woods. When I’d reached the bank of the river, I looked for the sweet spot where the rocks were the sturdiest and closest together and began to make my way across, and that’s when it happened.

I got distracted by the most vivid blue butterflies I’d ever seen. I stopped to watch them dancing on the breeze and I thought to myself- this day is going to be perfect- however my next step wasn’t. Normally I’ll tread my way carefully. However, today I was floating on a cloud, or at least had my head in it. I didn’t notice the stone had been covered in slippery moss until I was falling, and I watched my basket float downstream as I was pulled under by the rivers’ strong current.

But you see after I drowned I still made it to Grandma’s.

The next thing I remembered was standing at the edge of the clearing looking at the little cottage that belonged to her, and the most wondrous smell drifting out of it. I was pulled in by that delectable scent as I made my way to the house. I could see she had been waiting for me. She opened the door on my approach and reached out for a hug.

As I leaned in, she realized a little too late and was oblivious to the ravenous look in my eyes. I let out a loud growl as I bit into her neck, severing her carotid artery. I heard a voice call out to her from behind me. It was the woods man who was apparently in the area. He was always in the area as he lived there with my grandmother. Damn- I’d forgotten about him.

Upon hearing the growl, he ran to her aid. I still had enough wit about me to realize how I would look standing there tearing my grandmothers throat out. I dropped to my knees and pulled my hood up and let out a few moans pretending to be grieving over her and he readily assumed that the Wolf was at fault, and took off after him.

I strongly believed that the woods man was grandmas’ boy toy, although she had to be a least 40 years his senior. But who was I to complain about her twisted liaisons?

After he left, I conveniently took a few more bites out of my Grandma before cleaning myself up a little. Then, I took off in the other direction also seeking the wolf. You see, I had a sordid affair of my own going on, and I knew exactly where to find him.

Our fling had originated as an arrangement of sorts which was established around me seeing my grandmother and making it back in one piece. Our relationship had grown from our previous contract into something real, In turn he was a kinder gentler wolf, he hadn’t hurt anybody since our entanglement began, and we had started talking about a life together, settling down maybe having a pup or two.

”Red! You’re late” the Wolf saw me coming and ran out to meet me. “I was getting worried.”

“How late am I?” I thought I asked, but he looked at me like I was speaking a foreign language.

“Red, are you high or something?” he took the time to scrutinize me. “Why are your eyes so red?”

“I don’t know “ I tried to reply. It ended up sounding more like “ aahhh un nuh”

“Red, why is your speech so slurred?”

I was done talking, I grabbed him and dragged his ass back to his cabin, not unlike my Grandma’s. I tried to explain to him what was going on. I wanted us to run away together but he couldn’t grasp what I was saying. I tried to tell him about the woods man, and what happened with my grandma. I was getting frustrated trying to explain, he couldn’t comprehend as he didn’t speak zombie.

I snapped, and tore a chunk out of his shoulder but he was no old lady. He fought back, and he might have gotten the best of me, but got concerned when my arm fell off and stop fighting me.

”What the fuck?” As he leaned in for a closer look I took the opportunity to go for his throat, needless to say it worked again. I devoured him. I guess I was still hungry after my Grandma appetizer.

It sounded like the woods man had gathered himself an angry mob, and they were advancing on the cabin fast. I had to get out of there. I ran out the back door leaving my arm in the middle of the floor, what was I to do? I knew I couldn’t outrun them. I was getting slower by the minute, I guess being dead will do that to you.

I remembered the little storm shelter ol’ Wolfy had from the dark days when people went missing in the woods all the time. I knew no one knew about it because although they had their suspicions, no one could ever prove it was him. I started looking for the trap door that would lead me down to safety. All I could remember was it was being about a hundred feet from the house. I was shuffling around looking for the door when I heard the woods man yell “He got Red too, burn it to the ground!”

In a state of panic, I found the trapdoor in a nick of time. Right after I let the door fall shut behind me, I heard the mob stampeding over my head. Hypothetically I wasn’t out of the woods yet. I still had to make my way to the hidden alcove in the back, and when I got there I could relax. I made way to the back of the room and pressed the concealed button over the door frame. The wall slid open and I fell in. As the wall closed behind me, I could hear them opening the hatch.

“Is he in there?”

“What do you see?”

“No it’s empty, a room and nothing more.”

As the voices drifted away, I picked up one of Wolf’s notebooks and a pen, and slid to the floor.

Here I sit with one of Wolf’s old journals’ in my lap and write my last coherent thoughts. Soon, I will not be able to open the hatch from the outside. It is too heavy and I fear it will rip my other arm free. When I leave here, it will be for good.

I am hoping to survive off the land by eating small forest animals and the occasional passerby. But for now, I’ll eat this small child that fell out of me.

Huh. I guess we were closer to that life then we ever knew.


Credits to: http://shypassion.tumblr.com/

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Bigger and Better


It started simple with army grunts like me. Each time one of those monsters would pop-up we would send jets and tanks and try to hurt them the best we could. Didn’t do a dent most of the time, but at least I can recall a few times were we managed to steer them away from the cities. Still most of the time a couple of town would get flatten before they went back to the sea. Despite our best efforts we were considered supremely incompetent and not enough to prevent the possible extinction of mankind.

We needed better weapon, our first really big success was with the robot suit. I can remember being so happy the first time I saw one those damn critter beaten to a pulp. I think that was 30 years ago.
But of course we are not fighting mere animals here, they adapted to the big guys and eventually we had to find something new once again.

The first thing the eggheads did was to create some Frankenstein like creature. I think they piece the thing together from all the remains they had gathered over the years or mashing DNA together. Worked really well at killing them, at least until the beats decided to stay hidden for a while and the thing went berserk from the lact on action and tuned on us. Before too long we had to turn half of south America in a nuclear wasteland in order to transform the damn creature in a pile of ashes.

But then one of the guy in R&D, thought it at least proved they had an efficient fighting method against the monsters and that it should be used again once they would come back. It just needed something with a better brain, a human brain to be more precise. The brain was the only human part they needed, the rest could be altered. They started to ask for volonteers.

I remember the first time I saw one, I wondered which monsters I had to shoot. The Irony is that back in those days they actually had a human shape. They were not so bad, but in order to keep winning, they had to become more brutal, stronger and more savage. Nowaday, they easily do more damage than the monsters they are supposed to fight. It’s pretty evident that once they turn you don’t have really anything human left, you are just pure bloodthirsty rage. The worst thing is that they truly are our only good line of defence, but we always need more of them.

That’s why I am easily one of the worst officer in the army and I make sure everyone under me is just as bad as I am. If they know you can fight, you get a promotion to Area 51 and we won’t see you looking human ever again. One day the brass will probably start to just snatch us up in our sleep.
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Source:

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Lost In The Moment


I had one wish granted to me. Limitless potential. Anything I could think of. I had to be careful, but also had to make it count.

I decided time control would have the most potential. Deadlines would hold no meaning anymore, I could visit my ancestors, I could travel instantaneously, and aging was… a thing of the past. Control of space-time made me the most powerful human ever to live.

My first order of business was to pause time.

I wish I wished to control time more than once.


Credits to: joesbeforehoes

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

The Killing Floor


It should have been so simple. I thought everything had gone to plan. John had come round right on time. No one knew he was coming to see me and there were no witnesses. He never suspected a thing – never saw the blow coming until it was too late.

I swung the spade round in a wide arc and felt it connect with his neck, making a sickening crunch. He flopped to the floor and squirmed around in silent agony, before I was able to land another couple of blows and put him out of his misery. All very well I hear you say – no problems there.

What I wasn’t expecting was his wife to walk in. There was a horrible moment as she stepped in through the door (which in my haste I hadn’t locked) and we both tried to assess the situation. It was like the calm before the storm – several seconds passed in slow motion as we both stared at each other in complete shock. And then the silence was broken by a single piercing scream of pure terror, as she realized the full horror of the situation. I made a very quick decision – she had to go.

Now, this was never part of the plan. Despite the fact that I killed my best friend I would not call myself a homicidal maniac or serial killer. It was a simple act of revenge – John had taken my girlfriend, moved into my house and seemed to be in the process of forcing me out of the business that we had built up together. So I had invited him out to a remote house in the country that I was decorating for a client; knowing that we would have absolute peace and quiet and no interruptions. But why had he brought his wife along?

My first blow dropped her to her knees, the second made the crying stop and the third cracked her skull open like an over ripe fruit. I dragged her body to where his lay (making sure to shut the door this time) and lay her to rest next to him. Their blood oozed across the floorboards and started to stain the wood which I had just sanded. A stupid oversight – I would have to clean it and re-sand it before I could varnish it now. I sat down, poured myself a large shot of whiskey and looked at the bodies.

What a shame she had to die too, especially as I knew that John had treated her as badly as he had treated me. I would have to move the bodies soon and bury them, but it was still too light outside and I needed the cover of darkness to finish my grisly work. As I sat there the initial excitement of the killings wore off and I began to feel an overwhelming tiredness creep up on me. I drained the last of my glass and slumped down into the chair. My eye-lids became so heavy that I had to close them for a few moments.

I don’t know how long I slept for, but I was suddenly woken by a loud hammering at the door which made me leap up out of the chair. For a moment I watched the handle turn as someone tried it to open the door from the other side. Cursing my stupidity, I remembered that I had shut the door but not locked it. As the door slowly opened I ran across the room and threw myself into the gap, hopefully blocking the view of whoever was outside.

In front of me stood two fresh faced young men, dressed in dark suits and white shirts. Both had perfectly cut and styled hair. The younger one, who could not have been more than nineteen, had what looked like his first moustache and the older one had a neatly trimmed beard. Both of them carried brief cases. My heart skipped a beat. Where these policemen or detectives? How could they have got here so quickly and how on earth could they know what I had done?

I looked at them blankly. My mouth was dry and my tongue felt like old leather in my mouth. The moment of panic passed as I quickly rationalized; they were too young to be policemen or detectives, but who were they, and more importantly what the hell were they doing here?

‘Sir’ said the older one, in what sounded like an American accent. ‘My name is Nathan and this here is Julian. Have you opened your life to Jesus?’

I could have laughed with joy. Instead I just stared back at them trying not to let the whirling madness and chaos inside of me show.

‘I’m sorry?’ I said.

‘Sir, we wondered if you had some time to talk about God?’ he persisted.

I breathed a huge sigh of relief and almost laughed.

‘I’m afraid not. As much as I’d love to stand here and discuss the pros and cons of religion and the finer points of the Bible, I really have to be getting on with my work.’

‘We understand’, said the younger man, speaking with great sincerity. ‘But if you could just spare a little time now, then you will reap the benefits in the afterlife.’

‘Look, I’ll be honest with you. I’m not a religious man and I really don’t have time for this. Anyway I don’t think God has a place for me in the afterlife.’

They both looked up at this and Nathan spoke.

‘Sir, God has a place for everyone. We are all his sheep and…Dear Lord! Is that an arm?’ he said pointing into the room.

My heart sank as I knew what had to be done.

‘Yes, there’s been a terrible accident. I’ve called the ambulance and I’m just waiting for it to arrive. You better come in.’

And then there were four. They had walking into the room cautiously, knowing that something wasn’t right, but honor bound to help if they could. Still, I consoled myself that if there was a God they were probably with him now. Although I had a feeling that my invitation to heaven was probably revoked – I was going straight to hell.

So now I had four bodies to deal with. By the time I got them bagged up and ready to go it was dark. I looked down at the floor, most of which was now stained red. First things first I thought to myself, dispose of the bodies now and clean the floor in the morning.

It took me half an hour to load up the car with the bodies. Outside it was a cold, dark evening with little moonlight. I drove for a while looking for a deserted wood or forest.

Finally I spotted a suitably remote location. I turned off my lights and drove across a field to get to a patch of dense looking woodland. It wasn’t long before I found a suitable spot, got out and began to dig a hole by torch light. It was hard work and I soon broke into a sweat despite the cold fog that had begun to settle in. It took me over an hour to dig a hole that was large and deep to conceal all the bodies adequately. With one great last effort I dragged the bodies into the hole, one by one and sat back in the car and poured myself a small whisky, to regain my strength before I filled it in.

A faint sound caught my ear and I turned round to see a small Scotty dog sat next to the car – his little face looking up at me inquisitively. Then, seeming to catch some new scent he ambled over to the hole. I stepped out of the car and looked around, but there was no one to be seen. The fog was quite dense now and visibility was poor. I carefully picked up the spade and held it tightly in my hands. It was then I heard the call.

‘Louie, Louie, where are you? Come to Mummy. There’s a good boy.’

I went to shout back for her not come, but it was too late – the screaming began. I ran over to the hole where a woman in her fifties was now screaming hysterically, on her knees looking down at the bodies. She never even saw me coming, never even had time to register the first, fatal blow.

By the time I had finished burying all five of them I was exhausted. Tears streamed down my face as I wept for the waste of life that I had caused. I had only meant to kill one person – one useless, stinking human being that the world was better off without. How had I ended up with this massacre?

The small dog looked at me mournfully, with big accusing eyes. I picked him up and put him in the passenger seat of the car, got in the other side and gunned the engine. We drove for a few miles in silence, while I decided what to do with him. Eventually I stopped the car and looked down at him. I opened the passenger door, lifted him out and put him down. All around us was countryside. He would be fine. I got back in the car and drove away, taking one last look in the rear view mirror as I went. He was still there, his head cocked to one side, looking at me as I disappeared.

That should have been the end of this sorry tale, but fate had one more cruel twist before it was over. As I pulled up to the house I noticed that there was a light on in the front room. I was pretty sure that I hadn’t left it on when I left, but I couldn’t be certain. I took out my spade and walked up to the door. I turned the handle and slowly pushed the door open.

I stepped into the front room and paused. A noise came from the kitchen, a splash of water from the tap, followed by footsteps and a shadow that preceded the person. And there she was – a vision of loveliness; the woman who had torn out my heart – my ex-girlfriend Michelle.

‘Jesus, you scared me,’ she said in astonishment. ‘What the hell happened to you? You look like you’ve been in a fight. And what on earth has been going on in here, this floor is covered with red – it looks like an abattoir? And where is John, he said he was coming down here to see you?’

I just stood there and waited as the awful realization struck her. She looked at the floor, then back at me.
‘My God is that blood on you?’ she said. ‘Tell me it isn’t true; tell me you haven’t killed him?’

I couldn’t answer. I couldn’t even look her in the eye. She began to edge towards the back door. I made no move to stop her.

‘I’m going,’ she said, her voice shaking with fear. ‘No need to do anything hasty. I just came here to tell you that John has gone back to his wife. Now I’m just going to walk out the door..’

Her words sent my head spinning. John had gone back to his wife! Maybe Michelle had come here to try and get back together with me? Maybe we could get back together and forget what I had done and what she had seen? I looked at her as she moved towards the door. She looked back at me, her eyes full of dread and revulsion, and I knew what I had to do. There was no going back – there was no way I could let her go now.

‘I love you Michelle, but if I don’t kill you I’m going to prison for a long, long time. It’s nothing personal; it’s just something that I’ve got to do.’

Her face spasmed with fear and tears of shock spilled from her eyes, as I advanced towards her.

‘No, no, no,’ she begged. ‘You could let me go. I won’t tell anyone. Please, I’ll get out of the country; you’ll never see me again.’

‘I honestly believe you when you say that, but when you get home, when your safe and I’m far away, you will call the Police and tell them everything,’ I said.

‘I don’t have to. I’d rather live with the secret than die with it.’

‘We both know that’s not an option. Put yourself in my shoes. I’d love to let you go. Hell, I really don’t want to have to kill anybody else today. But there is just no way round it. If our situations were reversed I’d promise anything rather than be killed. But we both know that when I got home, the only sensible, logical, sane thing to do would be to call the Police?’

‘I’ll do anything, anything you say,’ she whimpered. ‘I just don’t want to die.’

‘Please believe me when I say that this is the hardest thing that I have ever had to do, and you would not believe the day I have had.’

With that I swung the spade round over my head, and closed my eyes. I felt it connect with a jarring smack, as it caught her in the side of the head and she dropped to the floor like a dead weight. It took four more blows to finish her off; each one was like a blow to myself. When I opened my eyes again she lay in the middle of the floor, blood splattered and broken.

Some time passed. I screamed, cried, and howled at the injustice of it all. Beat my fists on the floor and hugged Michelle’s still warm body. Finally, sometime in the early hours of the morning I came to my senses and started to tackle the mess I had made.

First I cleaned and bagged up Michelle’s body and put it in the boot of the car. I then used some of Michelle’s blood to cover the remaining floorboards so that the whole floor was stained red. Then I slept. In the morning, when the blood had dried I frantically sanded the floorboards down again and gave them a couple of coats of varnish. The final result was stunning – the colour had softened and the whole floor now had a beautiful, warm, earthy redness.

It was evening again when I finally left as I knew the owners would be back the next day and I still had to bury Michelle’s body and get home. I don’t remember too much about the journey home to be honest. I drove through the pouring rain, weary and red eyed through country lanes and past rolling fields.

At some point I stopped and buried Michelle in a small wood, down a dark, unlit lane – I don’t even remember where. Finally I got home, showered for as long as I could bear it and slumped into bed raw with regret and remorse.

A ringing, buzzing noise awoke me from a deep sleep. It was light now. I saw the clock and it was past midday. Instinctively I reached for my mobile and pressed answer.

‘Yeah?’ I mumbled into the handset.

‘You, okay?’ said the voice on the other end.

‘Yes,’ I replied hesitantly.

‘It’s Damien. From the house you have been working on.’

My heart stopped.

‘You don’t sound so good. Everything okay?’ he continued.

Did he know?

‘Fine, just a bit tired after the last job.’

‘That’s why I’m calling. We just wanted to say what a fantastic job you did on our house. We love it.’

I let out a long, slow breath.

‘What’s that honey? said the voice on the phone.

In the background I heard a woman voice, but I couldn’t make out the words. After a long pause Damien laughed and came back on the line.

‘It’s my wife,’ he said. ‘She loves what you’ve done with the floor. She says it’s to die for.’

I had to laugh.


Credits to: primorialdwarf

Monday, May 24, 2010

There’s No Such Thing As Ghosts


I froze in my bed, terrified by the soft moaning and crying coming from the living room in my apartment. It’s 3am. I live alone. I start saying to myself,

There’s no such thing as ghosts.

I cover my ears when I hear nails scratching on my living room floor. My eyes are shut tight, but it couldn’t keep the tears from flowing out anyway.

There’s no such thing as ghosts.

I open my eyes just a little. She’s right outside my bedroom door. Bloody. Contorted. Broken. Crawling. My heart stopped for a second.

There’s no such thing as ghosts.

30 minutes went by. The moaning and crying has gone. Her too. I sigh in relief. I start wiping the blood and sweat off me with a towel.

There’s no such thing as ghosts.

The next time I attempt to murder someone, I gotta make sure they’re actually dead. And immediately buried. Bathrooms are a terrible place to temporarily store their bodies.

I laugh at how silly I had acted earlier and sleep peacefully. There’s no such thing as ghosts!


Credits to: captainobviouslynot

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Mary Had A Little Lamb


Mary had a little lamb,
Its fleece was white as snow.
And everywhere that Mary went
The lamb was sure to go.

She brought her lamb to school one day;
The kids let out loud jeers.
The children took her lamb away
And Mary choked on tears.

Mary had a little lamb,
Its fleece was red with blood.
She took its little body home
And swore she’d hurt them good.

Mary knew that lambsblood called
Things ancient, hidden, and deep.
As Mary painted signs of old,
Never did she weep.

Mary had a little lamb;
It made her something scary.
Now I dare you, look in a mirror
And whisper “bloody Mary.”


Credits to: eightyeightkate

Saturday, May 22, 2010

I Love My Girlfriend!


I love my girlfriend! I doubt anyone will read this but I want to tell everyone. I want everyone to know that I love my girlfriend so much! She’s amazing. We’ve only been dating for two weeks but it’s been the best two weeks of my life. Her name is Alison and she’s the most beautiful girl I’ve ever met.

I first noticed her about a month ago and I immediately knew she was the one. I remember the first time I saw her. I was eating lunch by myself when she walked by. She was talking to a tall muscular guy with nicely gelled hair named Ryan. He was way too handsome and I felt insecure. I knew she’d never notice me if she’s dating a guy that looked like that.

One day he stopped coming to school, I asked around a bit to see where he went (also to find out if she’s single). Multiple people told me he must have dropped out, so I made my move and asked her out.

She was reluctant at first, probably because her and Ryan recently stopped seeing each other. I eventually kept asking her everyday until she had to say yes. We’ve been together ever since. I remember the night when we made it official.

I was waiting in her car, waiting for her to get out of dance rehearsal, when I got the courage to ask one last time. The look on her face was priceless. She looked so cute. I don’t think she suspected me to be in her car, but with tears rolling down her face, she finally said yes. When we watch movies together, I’ll sometimes look over and kiss her on the cheek, she seems to like that. I love her so much!

I remember the first time we had sex. Oh man, it was great. I was so nervous but she seemed so calm, which made me feel at ease. I got on top of her and we looked into each others eyes until I eventually finished. We then laid in bed together all night with her in my arms.

We have such a cliche romance, we share a drink with two straws and I even feed her sometimes. Here comes the airplane! She loves it. We usually order takeout, she doesn’t like going out in public, I don’t blame her. Why go out when you can stay in, watch movies, eat Chinese food, and make out?

I must have fallen asleep the last time we had sex because sadly, I forgot to put her back in the freezer where I keep her. She’s starting to thaw out. I love my girlfriend but I think I need to find a new one, I can’t take the rotting smell much longer.

She still looks as cute as the day she said yes, aside from the marks on her neck. I’ll bury her body next to Ryan so they can finally be together.

Hopefully the next girl will be single. I’ll love her just as much as the old one!


Credits to: DarkConfessions

Friday, May 21, 2010

The Fountain Of Knowledge


The three travellers crowded around the pool at the top of the mountain. A small goldfish swam inside.

“This is the fountain of knowledge?” doubted Timothy, a staunch Christian. “What nonsense. No such thing exists. How would it work?”

Rebecca said, “Ask it a yes or no question. If the answer is yes, the water bubbles. If it’s no, the fish will leap up.”

Jacques, a businessman, approached. “Will CoscoCorps make a good investment soon?”

The fish leapt up. The travellers watched, stunned.

“Coincidence”, said Timothy. “Ask something else.”

Rebecca came up. “Is my daughter still chaste?”

The water bubbled furiously. Timothy gasped. “My God, it exists!”

The water became still, and the other two travellers turned to look at Timothy as the fish landed back in with a plop.


Credits to: dev9x

Thursday, May 20, 2010

The Silence Of The North Woods


The first thing I remember of my arrival in Ahtunowhiho, the small Native American village in the northern reaches of Minnesota, was the smell. The familiar aroma of soaked dirt permeated the air and was instantly noticeable as soon as the doors of the cramped, twelve-seater plane were opened. The runway that we landed on almost looked like it could have been constructed a month ago. Not at all because it looked new, but because it looked so…basic. Like it was built for my arrival only. The dirt runway stretched about 950 meters and was accompanied only by a small, one-story concrete building.

I had come to this godforsaken no-mans land in order to do research for a book. I was an aspiring author and planned on writing a fictional story set in the wild and needed inspiration. I was also interested in the local legends of the area and the mysterious deaths that were rumored to have taken place near the town.
I was not excited about camping in the coldest regions of the country and being torn from my luxuries for 2 months, but I did it in the name of gathering useful information and becoming inspired. What I experienced though, is something I can barely bring myself to recollect.

A thick pine forest surrounded the runway entirely, with only one solitary trail leading to the main village. I could see patches of unmelted snow that punctuated the landscape and gave the entire area a perpetual moisture. I was still taking in the surroundings when my bags were stripped from my hands and loaded into a pickup truck by a thick, robust man who looked to be about 6’6. Just as my mouth opened to object, a much smaller man stepped out from the truck and came to meet me.

“Patrick MacLaren?” He said curtly.

“Y-Yes?” I was too startled by the bear of a man who had loaded my bags to give an articulate response.
“Afternoon, I’ll be helping you settle in. As soon as your possessions are taken care of we’ll take a drive to the town.”

The Bear never said a word and effortlessly tossed the rest of my luggage (which I had considered quite heavy) into the bed of the pickup. The shorter man motioned for me to get into the passenger seat of the truck and shut the door. The Bear hopped into the bed of the pickup and I swear to God the entire vehicle lurched like a boulder had been dropped in. The shorter man hopped into the driver’s side, and before I had time to say anything, hit the gas like he had no time to waste.

“Now that we’re off, I suppose we have time to give you the details. My name is Adrian, I’ll be showing you around and getting you settled in your new lodgings.” I continued scanning the forests. I could just barely make out small clearings that were spaced out every couple hundred yards.

“Alright,” I responded “Hey, how did you know my na-” I stopped. Something had just briefly flashed through my peripheral vision. As I turned to look, I was greeted with the same comforting but somehow menacing pines.

“Your name? Easy. You’re the only one who’s come here in weeks. We don’t get many tourists around these parts. There was only one name on the ledger and only one man on the plane. I put two and two together.” This left me unsettled, but it made sense. The town is secluded, and had little to offer a normal person.
We soon arrived at Ahtunowhiho and I was checked into the Inn. My room was a loft on the second floor and every item in it seemed to be cloaked in a thin layer of dust.

“Oh well,” I thought, “I’ll only be staying here for one night” I was brought down to the lobby to meet my guide. The man I’d be sharing a tent with for a month.

“Patrick,” the short man said “This is Abraham, he’ll be your guide in the wilderness and he’ll give you an insight to the more….in-depth aspects of our culture.” I extended a hand, which he firmly shook.
“Nice to meet you.” Abraham said with a nearly expressionless face. “Well then. Now that the introductions are over, I’d say you both better get a good night’s sleep. You’ll need it.”

The frigid morning air chilled me to the core. Even under 3 layers I was shivering and could barely feel my nose. Abe and I set out on a small trail and walked for about an hour before we got to our camp site. Something wasn’t right. My guide seemed tense. Overly so. Constantly whipping his head to face something that I never could see, never letting his guard down.

Our camp site was in the middle of a large clearing next to a half-frozen lake. I didn’t like being in the dead-center of the meadow; it made me feel so… vulnerable. After the tent was pitched I went on a short walk around the vicinity. I couldn’t shake this feeling of being followed. This eerie veil hung over the very atmosphere of the place. Every time I was sure something would be behind me I would turn to find absolutely nothing. Yet every time I tried focusing on the beautiful scenery, the more haunting it became.

By nightfall I was already regretting this trip. In addition to the lingering paranoia, winds had picked up. Not strong, but just enough to make the hairs on the back of your neck stand upright. We made a fire and cooked some beans in a pot, but whenever I finally felt relaxed, I’d see something that would make my blood run cold. A figure just barely visible darting into the forest, a twig snapping a few yards behind me. Just something, that would put me on edge again.

Abe and I climbed back into the tent and bundled ourselves into sleeping bags. It felt good to be out of the open, but the sobering reality that the only thing separating me from the outside was a thin piece of fabric settled in as well.

I fell asleep surprisingly soon but was woken up by the wind. It was no longer an eerie breeze, but a vehement, blustering storm. The tent was flapping and shaking wildly, and I could hear the trees and grass swaying and rustling violently. I tried to ignore it and buried myself in my sleeping bag, but several minutes later, I heard something that guaranteed me no sleep for the rest of the night. I could hear the wind calling something. The only way recognized this was because the wind had a pattern.

The whistling repeated in a way that was unmistakably a voice. After listening for several minutes I could make out what it was calling. DeFago. I had no idea what it meant, but it sounded like a name.

“De-FAAAay-go, De-FaaAAAAay-goooo.”

I could barely contain myself. I rolled onto my other side to face Abe. “Do you fucking hear tha-” When I looked over at him, he was huddled in the corner of the tent, shaking, with his head buried in his knees.
“Abraham, What the hell is this?!” He didn’t look up. “Hey, you alright? what the fuck is going on?!” Still nothing. I moved toward him and touched his shoulder, which caused him to snap his head up at me, with a look of the most genuine terror I have ever seen.

“W-We have to go, have to go now. Now. Have to go. We have to go now.” He stammered. “It’s not safe, we have to go.” As he said this he began to get up and move toward the tent flap.

“Stop, no! We are not going out there. I don’t know what the hell is happening but going out there is the last thing I am doing.” He was not fazed by this whatsoever and continued crawling over me. As he reached for the zipper, I grabbed his arm.

“Abe! You cannot leave me out here!” He continued to wrestle with the zipper and I grabbed his other shoulder and tried to keep him settled. He grew even more frantic and delivered a strong kick to my chest. I let go of him and fell back down to the tent floor. He opened the tent flap and ran off into the night.

“Are you insane?! You can’t leave me out here!” I screamed out at him. I quickly lost sight of him. When I looked out into the night, I was stunned by what I saw. The air was still. The trees and grass were motionless.

“This is impossible.” I thought. Seconds ago the entire tent was being ravaged by a windstorm. Even worse, the wind became silent. I heard screaming, and identified it as Abe. It drew off into the distance and became inaudible. I wanted to cry. I zipped the tent flap up faster than I had ever done anything in my life and huddled in the corner, listening to the intense silence that hung over the outside.

I awoke surprised. Not startled by anything, but surprised. Surprised that I somehow fell asleep, even while gripped by the most intense fear I have ever felt in my life. After making sure that there was nothing outside waiting for me, I gathered my courage and stepped outside.

The morning air was crisp and as freezing as ever. My mission was to make it back to Ahtunowhiho. I didn’t bother getting the tent. I simply did not care. All I grabbed was my knife, a jacket, and a few granola bars before heading out. I noticed that, in the patches of snow, there were foot prints. At first resembling human footsteps, but then becoming…distorted. They became longer, more stretched out. After a while I was sure that they were not foot prints coming from a human, not even an animal. The longest set of these prints I saw was roughly five feet. In fact, my own imagination couldn’t create a monster with feet of this caliber.

Then it dawned on me. They weren’t foot prints. I mean they were at first; I could see the pattern of the bottom of Abe’s boots imprinted in the snow. But the long ones? Absolutely not. No, they were drag marks.
The long tracks in the snow were evidence of Abraham’s futile resistance of being pulled and dragged by something. “Oh my God,” I whispered to myself. I sprinted out of the meadow with a pace that would rival Olympic. I turned what was once an hour long hike into a 35 minute dash. I wanted to throw my guts up by the time I reached the village. I was greeted by several caring townspeople and was escorted to the local tavern for some hot food and a drink.

An older native of the town sat down with me and listened to my account of the events. “I swear to God, my life, and every dead ancestor I have ever had, that what I am saying is true.” I expected scepticism, but received genuine concern from the man. I think this may have troubled me even more.

“I see.” He responded. “The- the name. What was the name being called?” I tried to recollect what I had heard.

“I don’t know. Defay- something? DeFayg..DeFago. DeFago! That’s it.” The look on the man’s face told a story on its own.

“Why? Does that mean something? Is it important at all?” The man remained silent for a few seconds before responding.

“DeFago…was a prominent hunter. He lived many years ago. Before I was born. One night, he never returned. The same night, a horrible storm came over the entire region.” He quickly ended the sentence and looked down at the table, looking as though he had made a mistake. I was frustrated at this horribly vague and seemingly useless information. I could tell he was hold something back. Something important.

 “And? What happened? How is that important? What the hell does this all mean?” I responded rather aggressively. The old man sat still as a statue for what seemed like ages, but finally whispered “The Wendigo…” Every head in the tavern simultaneously turned and glared at the back of the man’s head. And then turned to me.

“What the hell is the Wendigo?” The tavern patrons continued glaring at the both of us with a twisted look of suspicion and fear. Even The Bear looked worried.

Reluctantly, the old man responded “It is something we try to escape…” My look of confusion at his answer must have spurred him into elaborating, “The legend holds that it survives on the flesh of humans. It may have even been human once before, but no longer. It is a vile creature that stands taller than any man and can strip the flesh from bones. It grows stronger with the very acknowledgement of its existence, and seems to have returned from whatever darkness it has hidden in for so long.” He paused, “Before, the Wendigo only took several people a year. We simply accepted it as life.”

The man turned to face the rest of the tavern goers, “Over time, the town vowed to adopt a silence. Never to speak of or even acknowledge the Wendigo, and soon, miraculously, the abductions waned.”

I looked up from my food, trying to process what I was hearing “And DeFago?” The man nodded, “DeFago was the one man who attempted to conquer the Wendigo. Like I said, he never returned.” But there was one more thing. One thing that didn’t add up. Abraham.

Why was he so disturbed? Why was he driven insane by the wind and why did he frantically dart into the night like a madman? “What did Abraham have to do with any of this?” A somber look came over the man’s face.

“It’s time for you to go home. Adrian can arrange for your flight to be rescheduled for tomorrow morning.” I got up to leave and as I walked through the door, the bar patrons never shifted their gaze from me.

I wanted answers, but I was exhausted and already overwhelmed by this impossible information. After weighing my options, I decided that I had to spend another night out in the woods. To this day I have no idea what came over me. I can’t imagine what could have motivated me to spend a night in the belly of the beast, that not twelve hours before, had abducted and most likely killed an innocent man. Whether it was the goal of being able to write about my experiences, a need for closure, or pure delirium, something, made me go back out there.

My walk through the woods was even worse, because this time I was alone. I didn’t even try to convince someone to go with me. Something told me that I had doomed the entire town just by raising this monster from the dead. Breaking the silence. The ever-present voyeuristic and dreadful paranoia was now piled on with a load of guilt.

I finally made it to my camping grounds and noticed that not much had changed. The looming trees remained standing and the sickening drag marks on the snow still sat on the ground. I couldn’t take it. I kicked the snow over to erase the marks and footprints.

I followed the tracks, continuing to erase them, to the tree line. The edge of the meadow. I could see the kicked up dust and dirt in the woods. But there was something else. A massive wound on a tree. Like someone had taken a jack-hammer through it. And on another one just a few feet further, looked like a massive claw-mark. Almost like when a wolf marks their territory. But this looked as if something had just scraped it while walking through the forest. I felt sick. I went back to my tent and waited for nightfall.

The wind picked up again. Not nearly as bad, but still enough to shake the tent. I knew it was time. I stood up and got out of the tent. The night was illuminated by a soft but passing moonlight, as the clouds repeatedly obscured it from view. This time, the wind had a physical effect. I could see the trees swaying softly and the grass pressed over in one direction. I couldn’t tell if this was comforting or not.

I switched on my flashlight and scanned the perimeter. Nothing. After standing in the wind for a while longer I decided to go back in my tent and wait some more. I turned on my heel and nearly fainted at what I saw.
There it was… standing directly behind the tent. It towered at least a foot taller than me, and looked straight down with eyes like a hawk. Its head resembled that of a human, but had teeth like a canine. In place of a nose, there was a short, bulldog-like snout, and long, wispy, facial hair sat on its face. I could see pointy ears poking through the long, grayish-black mane that ended just before its waist, with locks of hair hanging over its shoulders. But it’s arms. Oh God it’s arms.

They were incredibly long, with its fingers ending below its knees. Its fingernails looked as though they could carve through steel. The body was lean and sinewy, with a pale gray complexion hidden under a very thin layer of hair and fur. The lower body looked as though it was covered by torn cloth wrapped around the waist, and I could see a fragment of the leather jacket worn by my former guide. I knew what it was. There was no mistaking it. It was what I was told of, WARNED of.

It was the Wendigo.

My voice was lost. I could barely breathe let alone form a coherent thought. I didn’t know what to do. I took half a step back, but before my foot even touched the ground, it suddenly crouched and leaped over the tent on all fours, knocking into me and ripping through my side with it’s massive talons. I scrambled to get away and began to frantically crawl towards the tree line. Violently snarling, it grabbed my leg and pulled me back at least five feet. My god it’s strength was incredible. I was nearly lifted off the ground by the force.

I rolled onto my back and met its gaze yet again. I could see its hot breath steaming out of its nose in the cold night air. It let out a blood curdling screech and pounced for me. I rolled, with great pain, several feet away, narrowly missing the creature’s fatal strike. On its fours, it turned to face me again. I pulled out my knife, faced it upwards, and closed my eyes. This was it. I would die, but at least get one good shot in.

It leaped for me, but was impeded by the blade. I heard the knife stick into the right side of its chest, causing the monster to release a foul screech a mere foot from my ears. Its breath stunk of rotting flesh and stale blood and nearly made me vomit.

My ears rang, but I somehow got to my feet and began a desperate, adrenalin fuelled sprint to the tree line. As my hearing returned, I listened to the monster snarling with anger behind me. I hoped against hope that it hadn’t begun to chase after me; if it did, I was done for. I made it to the edge of the forest and dodged several of the massive pines, while continuing to hold my bleeding abdomen. I could make out the trail in the dim moonlight and summed up all the strength I had to make it there.

I never slowed my pace, for fear that if I let up for even a second, I’d be back in the arms of the beast. I ran out onto the trail and was instantly assaulted by a blinding light and a force that felt as if an elephant had rammed into me. Before I knew it, I was flying, and landed with a thud onto the dirt road. I opened my eyes and saw three figures. Two of them, were natives of Ahtunowhiho, stepping out the truck they had just hit me with, the other, was the Wendigo. It was standing silhouetted against the moon at the edge of the dirt path opposite of me.

It ripped the knife out from its chest and dropped it on the ground with almost an air of arrogance. I tried to get to my feet but felt fiery, staggering pain in my left leg. One of the men helped me get to my feet and practically dragged me to the vehicle and tossed me into the truck bed like I was a sack of potatoes. The force of landing on my broken leg brought tears to my eyes, but I was just to relieved to care. The man who brought me to the truck was The Bear. I didn’t have to see his face to know who that body and personality belonged to.

The other man stood in terror in front of the monster, raising a pistol before him. Before he could pull the trigger, the Wendigo grabbed the man’s leg and dragged him off into the woods. I could hear screaming, and the sound of boots scraping against earth and snow.

I don’t remember what happened after that. I woke up in a hospital in Minneapolis, where a pretty nurse told me in a comforting voice that I was brought here by helicopter after a man found me on a trail. Apparently I was attacked by a bear on a rock climbing expedition. I knew it was completely untrue, but I just nodded my head and on the pillow.

Now I’m here, many years later, with a family of my own. I realized I could never publish what I saw in a book. If it really does grow strong with belief of its existence, I just couldn’t.

Who knows what I’ve doomed Ahtunowhiho to after going hunting for this thing. Generations of torment from the Wendigo? I don’t know. Writing this here, putting it on this site…gives me closure in a way. Just letting it out and being able to tell my story…helps. At least here no one will take it seriously.

I learned just a few years ago, after researching the small town, that DeFago, the hunter, was Abraham’s great-grandfather, and that Abraham’s own daughter was taken by the Wendigo ten years before I arrived in the town. I felt bad that he died in the way he did, but maybe now he’s with her somewhere. I like to think that.

Some people can move on from traumatic events. I guess in a way I have. I still get paranoid when the wind picks up. I can’t stand going on camping trips, and to this day, on some nights… I swear I can still hear the wind calling my name.


Credits: H.P. Hatecraft

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Ice


My roommate Ashley is ridiculously clumsy. Poor thing. She trips, stumbles, and breaks things all the time. And, bless her heart, she’s terrible at cleaning up. Socks and shoes are mandatory in the kitchen.

“Don’t worry!” She shouted down the hall towards my room. I had heard the crash in the kitchen and was getting up to investigate.

“What happened?” I hollered back.

Apparently she’d broken a glass on the shelf.

“I’m cleaning it up!” She announced. I didn’t even give it a second thought and went back to my show. When it was on commercial, I got up to get a drink. I grabbed my favorite glass, a blue tinted mason jar, out of the cabinet and poured myself a large glass of sweet tea.

Man. Northerners don’t know what they’re missing! I thought to myself, swallowing another chunk of ice. As I crunched it between my teeth, a terrible realization struck me.

I didn’t get any ice.


Credits to: krshann

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Crimson Fangs


“I’m so cold.”

This was the first thought that entered into Amber’s dazed consciousness. Her eyelids flickered open to see nothing but hazy darkness around her. Moaning softly, she struggled to raise her body from the prone position she lay in, wrapping her bare arms around herself in response to the strange chill that permeated the air. She blinked several times and brushed a wisp of dark hair from her face as her eyes began to adjust to the ethereal aura that filled the cold, empty room.

“What… Where am I? How did I get here?”

She pushed herself up on one knee and shuddered. The room was cold… so cold. She had no memory of how she had gotten here; no memory of the past few hours.

Slowly, Amber stood and looked around. “He-hello? Where am I? Is anyone here?” she called out, her tremulous voice echoing slightly in the bare room. Her normally active mind was in a blur she attempted to discern what was happening to her, and in her confusion, an icy fear began to grip her. “What’s going on?” She shuddered and wrapped her arms around herself again.

“Come on Amber, think; what’s the last thing you remember?” She rubbed her eyes. “Eric… A bookstore… No, I can’t remember!”

Amber peered around again. A strange, faintly luminescent mist writhed about her, giving off just barely enough light to see the shapes of her surroundings. It was by this cold light that she noticed the door and a chill ran down her spine, although whether for excitement or dread she did not know. Amber walked cautiously over to the door and reached out to grasp the cold doorknob. Her mind burned with a strange fear that absorbed her thoughts as she held the handle.

“What’s behind this door? What if it’s locked and I’m trapped here? Why am I even here? This room is so cold.”

Her heart pounding, Amber braced herself and gripped the doorknob tighter, slowly twisting it and pushing the door open. To her relief, it gave way; and yet, to her surprise, it made no sound. No squeaking of the hinges, no soft jingle as the doorknob turned in its socket. Just silence.

She swallowed the lump of anxiety in her throat and bit her lip as she pushed the silent door wide open and peered outside. She stepped out of the doorway and looked around. It was a hallway, stretching for many yards on both ends. It reminded her of the halls in those old Victorian mansions, except this one was totally bare. No pictures, no statues, no houseplants, not even wallpaper; just dark, cold walls and doors. Dozens of doors lined either side of the hallway, each one identical and each one as dark and silent as the one she had just stepped through.

Amber shuddered and ventured again, her voice still shaky, “Um… hello? Is… is anyone there?”

There was no answer except her voice reverberating along the dank walls. She clutched at her arms and hugged herself tighter, her heart racing. “Should I try to open one of those doors?”

Taking a cautious step further out, she reached towards the doorknob opposite her. However before she could grab hold of the handle, she froze, and a chill of pure terror rippled down her spine.

A sound had emanated from behind her in the room that she had just exited: a low, sibilant hiss.

A small whine of apprehension trickled from her throat and she turned, her eyes widening and her face turning pale. She began to shiver uncontrollably as she stared into the dark room. At first she saw nothing, nothing but the same cold blackness that had surrounded her. She continued to stare ahead, not daring to turn her eyes away as she waited.

Then it was there.

A tall, lithe form stood, almost as dark as the room it occupied, vaguely humanoid in shape, but otherwise indiscernible in the darkness. Amber slowly backed away from the door, every instinct in her body telling her to flee, and yet she could not. She stood transfixed, gazing back at the shadowy creature in the room.
The low, hissing breath wreathed out from the murky chamber… and it smiled. The darkness smiled, with two rows of long, glistening, crimson fangs.

Amber’s senses were suddenly awakened as a scream tore from her throat and she ran. Her mind became numb with fright, her body bent on survival as she raced down the hollow passageway. She could feel it behind her; it was so cold. Rows upon rows of doors flew by her as she ran, not caring or thinking about anything but flight… and the fangs. Her vision began to blur as her mind raced frantically.

“There’s got to be a way out, there has to be some way to escape…”

She could hear the serpentine hiss echo around the halls. It was following her.

The hallway ended abruptly, bending sharply to her right. With no time to slow her acceleration, Amber slammed into the wall and staggered back, not even daring to look behind her as she turned down the other passageway.

Still the hissing followed.

Sweat had begun to drip down her forehead, mingling with tears of terror as she felt the overwhelming sensation of hope and energy draining from her. Her run slowed to a stagger, her mind blazing with a strange, hazy pain. Still she continued on, driven by fear. As she rounded another corner, she saw the unexpected.
A single, desperate ounce of hope sprung up within her at the sight of the small but bright light at the end of the dark hallway; she felt as though it were the first light she had seen in ages. Amber didn’t care where it led, as long as it took her away from here; away from the cold hissing, and from those glistening crimson fangs. With renewed energy Amber began to sprint towards the light.

The hissing continued.

Before she knew it the window of light stood before her, glowing brightly and proving a stark contrast to the dank, gray walls around it. Mustering every last bit of energy within her, Amber leaped, hoping to pass through the light and into freedom… but her hands slammed into a wall of glass.

She gasped and hit the window again, but it did not budge.

The hissing drew nearer.

She pounded at the window, murmuring frantically under her breath. “What’s going on? What is this?!”

It was so cold.

Her brain cleared long enough to notice something behind the window. It was a man, and he was looking at her. Her heart leaped for joy when she recognized him.

“Eric!” she screamed. “Eric, it’s me! Please open the window! Help me!”

But there came no response. Her fiancé simply sat staring at her, his expression one of grief, his eyes slightly misted with tears.

Amber smashed her fists against the window, pleading desperately, “Please, Eric, help me! It’s coming! Please… please help me!”

Still he made no reply.

The hissing…

Amber slumped to the floor, her fingernails scraping against the glass as she slid down the window. Tears streamed down her face and her heart raced like a locomotive as she curled up and wept. “Please, Eric… Save me…”

The hissing drew nearer.
~~~
….beep……beep……beep……

Eric sat in the bright hospital room, listening to the never-ending heart monitor and staring solemnly at the still and quiet body of his fiancée Amber. She lay on the bed, her once beautiful and intelligent blue eyes glazed over in a state of comatose.

It had been nearly four hours since they had found her lying unconscious on the floor in the back room of the old Eldridge Bookshop, her eyes wide open in shock, and a small book resting in her hand. No one had any idea of what had happened to her. The shopkeeper said that she seemed perfectly all right when she had entered, and that she had been perusing through a collection of antique books that they had just received before she suddenly just dropped without a sound.

Of course, there was that book that she had been clutching; that small, strange book simply titled “Crimson Fangs”. What was so strange was that no author or publishing year was listed anywhere on it, not to mention the fact that the pages were totally blank. But then again, Amber liked those kinds of oddities. She was always collecting those rare misprints and old books that were only published for one month back in the 18th century. She was funny in that way. Eric sighed and once again grasped her hand. It was so cold.

For all of the past four hours he had sat patiently by her bedside, staring into her blank eyes and often talking to her, reminiscing about their times together or about her favorite stories; anything to wake her from her state. But nothing helped. The doctors were puzzled about the fact that, other than being in a coma, her body was healthy. Her breathing and heart-rate were normal and there were no signs of a concussion, cardiac arrest, a stroke; anything.

Eric reached out and tenderly brushed a strand of dark, silky hair from her face. She was so beautiful, even with her face frozen in a still, emotionless stare. He wanted to see her smile again.

His thoughts were interrupted when the door opened. The doctor walked over and placed a gentle hand on Eric’s shoulder. “You’ve been in here for a long time. Perhaps you would like a break?”

Eric swallowed back the dryness in his throat and stroked Amber’s cold hand. “Y-yes, of course. I just can’t stand for her to be like this, all pale and…” He closed his eyes and shuddered before standing up. “You’ll let me know if anything happens to her, right?”

The doctor smiled warmly. “Certainly; now go get some rest.”

Eric nodded and turned, with one last long gaze at the motionless form of his beloved Amber before walking out the door.
~~~
Amber sat by the window, staring up into the despondent face of her fiancé. She sobbed and reached up to weakly grasp at the sheet of glass that separated her from the one person that she loved and trusted most. So near, and yet so far.

“This has to be a dream. Wake up, Amber… Please wake up!”

Then he moved. She whipped her head up and stared with wide, desperate eyes as Eric stood and looked at her sadly before-

“No. No, it can’t be! He’s leaving me! He’s walking away!” She leaped up and screamed frantically, slamming her fists against the window, trying to get his attention, for him to finally notice her and save her. “No… No, please! Eric, don’t leave me! Please, don’t leave me!”

But he was gone. The window was empty.

Her breath heavy and her eyes hazy with tears, Amber once again slumped to the floor. Eric, her closest and dearest friend, the one person she could always count on to keep her safe, had abandoned her. Every last bit of hope had deserted her. She was alone; all alone in this cold, dark hallway. It was then that she noticed something was different about her surroundings. The hissing was gone. That horrible, chilling sound… there was nothing. Nothing but cold silence.

Amber held her breath, slowly turned her head…

And stared into the crimson-fanged grin.

~~~
A calm silence filled the bright hospital room, only broken by the steady beat of the heart monitor.

….beep……beep……beep……

Amber’s body lay, staring ahead blankly just as she had for the past four hours.

….beep……beep……beep…..

She blinked. Her eyes slowly shifted to look at the monitor.

….beep……beep……beep…………beeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

She sat up, her black silky hair draping around her head like a nest of dead snakes. With one quick, stilted motion, she pried the oxygen mask from her face before her gaze turned to the door. There were the sounds of voices and footsteps outside. The light in the room flickered as a dark, ethereal mist began to writhe up from the floor. The doorknob rattled as it opened.

A low, sibilant hiss rasped out from Amber’s throat… and she smiled, with two rows of long, glistening, crimson fangs.


Credits to: Josh

Monday, May 17, 2010

The Starved And The Damned


We ate the oxen first.

We didn’t even need them anymore. The fields have been barren dust for nearly a year now. And they fed us for weeks.

But the meat eventually ran out, as it always did. And once again, our stomachs clawed away at themselves, with nothing to eat for days, days that were churning into weeks.

We ate the family dog next.

The children cried as I butchered the poor creature, but their tears dried as our small house finally smelled like cooking meat again.

But a starved dog has only so much meat.

I could tell that my daughter wouldn’t make it. She was weak, getting weaker. And my son was stronger—he just needed some food.

My husband was long gone at that point. No guidance. No help. No forgiveness. Just my husband’s quiet bones in the dust of our yard.

I begged God to answer me, to tell me what to do. He was silent as the night sky, silent as the slowly dying world around us.

I couldn’t lose them both.

I pulled out the large cooking pot. And the cleaver. There was no use in delaying the inevitable, stretching her timeline out, letting her suffer, needlessly collecting the dead until everything was dust.

I had decided to use the threadbare pillow on her. To walk into their small room in the dark of the night, as they tried to sleep off the pain of their empty stomachs, and put it over her face, pushing down, guiding her to some kind of final sleep. Lead her to the endless dark where there was no pain.

My hands shook, one on the knob of the door to their room, the other clutching the pillow. I whispered a plea–

“God, forgive me.”

A voice from the other side of the door spoke.

“He will not have to.”

I opened the door to find the job had been done for me. My child. Dead. My eyes welled as I looked upon the horror of my bloodied daughter.

My bloodied daughter, standing over the lifeless, slaughtered husk of her brother.

via: photofreecreepypasta.tumblr.com

Ugly


I stood under the tree enjoying the blow of the wind as I waited for my little friends to arrive.

Today was a special day.

Today was the anniversary of Ugly’s death.

Ugly was our local stray kitten. He was his namesake: One side of his ear was loop-sided and half of the other ear was gone, literally. He had scars that could rival the hardest of military men and criminals alive, and a huge patch of fur on his back and one of his hind legs were gone, showing the bald, rotting skin underneath and he walked with a limp on his front left foot.

Ugly was not very popular among our community. Housewives and old men sprayed him with garden hoses to keep him off their lawn. Teenagers threw stones at him and shooed him with sticks and brooms. He got whacked, kicked and shoved off from anyone and everyone imaginable. He was probably the most unloved creature in the whole wide world.

Despite that, he still continued to approach the people he met, asking just for a little love. He particularly popular with the little kids, but of course, they were forbidden to touch him by overprotective and hypochondriac parents.

He would approach them and rubbed his head against whatever was close in proximity, be it your shoe or your hand or just the hem of your skirt and pants, and purred in that almost raspy sound, asking for just a little bit of love. A stroke on the head or a scratch under the neck, anything was fine, as long as you give it.

Still, he continued to be the bane of existence to everyone else in the community.

A week ago, when I was on my way home from school, I saw the most terrible thing.

Ugly was being surrounded by huge neighbouring stray dogs, and was totally bullied into submission before literally being pummeled to the ground. I noticed a few people seeing this but no one came forward to shoo the dogs away. I braved myself and beat the dogs away with a stick before tending to Ugly.

Ugly was in total bad shape. He was bitten, mauled, trampled and mutilated beyond repair. Blood was all over the road and his tiny body shivered from the pain and shock. I quickly cradled him in my skirt and brought him home, and even though I knew there was nothing more that I could do to save his life, I tried to wrap Ugly up in bandages to at least stop the bleeding.

His breathing grew shallower and shallower, and his body weaker and weaker. I knew he was going to die any minute.

But that wasn’t the most heartbreaking part.

At the very last moments of his life, he lifted his trembling head, leaned against my arm and started rubbing very slowly against it, purring in that familiar raspy sound.

Even in his dying breath, he was still asking for just a little bit of love.

I held him with tears in my eyes, scratching the back of his head until he went limp in my arms.

Everyone seemed to take it in stride that Ugly was no longer there to bother them, but only the little kids noticed his disappearance, and when I told what happened and where I buried Ugly, which was underneath the lone tree up in the hill, they cried just as sadly as my heart had felt on the day he died.

Now it had been a tradition for me and the kids to come and visit Ugly’s grave on the anniversary of his death, and the little kids came religiously and punctually on that day, just as they have today.

One of the kids wondered whether or not he knew we came to visit him every year.

I assured him that he did.

After all, Ugly asked for nothing more.

Just a little bit of love.

A Fish Test


I came back home shocked to find out from my mother that my brother was actually going to bring a date back home tonight.

I had never known my brother to be eligible to anyone. He had always struck me as a nerd who had his head in the books, have geeks for friends and couldn’t care less about the female species, as he put it.

Mother said my brother is still a man after all, and that I’m being mean.

When I asked, Mother said she has yet to meet him even though my brother has technically dated the girl for more than 6 months now. Being the over-zealous woman she was, she claims to know the perfect way to test and see if the girl was good enough for her little boy.

That was when I saw the fish she was cleaning.

It was quit huge, with a hint of earth colour on the skin. Looks almost like a fresh water (or was it salt water that has this colour?) fish. The only difference was that it had a slightly protruding belly, like it was female and had eggs or something.

Mother told me that this fish was one of the Chinese’s most favourite delicacies not because of the flesh, but because of the stomach within. The tender overflowing juices within the fish gut were enough to make any family member fight to the death for it, and the Chinese hawker who sold her the fish told her that this fish was the best way to test a person’s heart.

If, during dinner, my brother’s date aimed for the flesh on the first pick, she is considered a good-hearted person, whereas she would be considered selfish if she aimed for the gut first, and from there Mother can determine whether or not she was right for my brother.

I have a feeling she knew beforehand that my brother’s date was a Chinese.

Later that night, my brother came home from college to introduce his girl Suzy to us. She was quite pretty—her hair dyed a little to resemble a slight redhead and almond skin. She had all the makings of an American-born Chinese, and she almost kinda reminded me of the Chinese-version of Hermione Granger from Harry Potter, since she had that odd intelligent look on her.

A brawn with brains. No wonder my brother was into her.

Though she still had to pass Mother’s test.

The dinner was pretty alright. Suzy was quite jovial and got along well with my folks and answered everything they asked good-naturedly, even the slightly awkward ones. My brother, on the other hand, looked like he was trying to hold it together and stop himself from shitting his pants. You could tell he was nervous, especially when he knew Mother’s over-zealousness all too well and was waiting to see whether the anvil was going to fall on his head or not.

Then later I noticed Suzy seemed to have noticed the fish. I could tell from her eyes that she knew what that fish was and what to do with it.

It was the moment of truth.

Without a second thought, she reached over and forked out the rather huge and tender-looking gut from the fish. I feared the worst as my mother’s eyes seemed to have shine with eagerness at the thought finding every flaw she could on Suzy before sitting my brother down and convince him to let Suzy go.

And I know by living under the roof of this house for 15 years how convincing Mother can be if she wanted to. She should be a lawyer instead of a housewife.

Unexpectedly, instead of taking the gut for herself, she took it straight to Mother’s direction and placed it on her plate instead, and with a smile on her face, she looked up at her.

“Your cooking is wonderful, Mrs. Kingsley, but you don’t have to go all out on my expense. You can call me over next time and we can cook together. I’d be glad to help out.”

Today, she is now not only my mother’s best friend, she is also my mother’s daughter-in-law.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Monster


I’m sitting on a bench in a park. It’s morning, the air feels cool and fresh. I see a few joggers here and there, but other than them not that many people around. I’m holding the latest newspaper. War, death, poverty, same news as usual.

Patiently, I wait for my prey.

From afar, I see a small girl, about 10. Alone and unsupervised. She’s scribbling on something, like a sketchbook.

This is it. My target. I stuff away the papers in my coat, and make my move.

I approach her carefully, minimizing suspicion. I ask her what she’s doing here. Cheerfully, she explains her love for sketching things. Cats, dogs, trees, all that stuff, but especially birds. She says she wants to be an artist someday.

There’s my angle. I tell her I saw some exotic birds in a secluded section of the park earlier, and ask her if she wants to see them. Ecstatic, she says yes. Luring her is almost too easy.

We arrive at the spot. Secluded. No witnesses. The time has come. I tell her I saw a bird in the trees, and as her back turns toward me, I take out my blade and slice her throat from behind, my other hand cupping her mouth from screaming. Quick and painless. Finished, I dump her body into an undergrowth. It’ll be days before anyone finds her.

I take out the newspaper that I held earlier. The headlines have changed; now there is no war, no death, no poverty, all replaced with some other mundane news. I sigh with relief as I activate my Time Displacer Unit, heading home. Mission accomplished.


Credits to: morasyid

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Mama


When I was seven, Melanie Harper from down the road said that my Daddy probably left us because I was so ugly. I never saw Mama so angry as she was that night.

"Where does she live, baby?" she demanded.

Melanie didn't show up for school the next day, and school was cancelled the day after that. We moved away three days later.
_
Two days after my eighth birthday, a boy named Sam pulled my hair in the playground and then pushed me over, grazing my knee.

Again, Mama asked where he lived. Again, he vanished.

Again, we moved.
_
Later that year, the boy who sat next to me in Math class copied off my test, and got us both disqualified for cheating. I was furious. I'd practiced hours for that test, and I told Mama so when I got home.

I told her that it wasn't fair, that the teacher wouldn't listen when I said it wasn't my fault, that the stupid boy refused to admit that it was him and not me. I raged all night, even after Mama left around midnight, and was only beginning to calm down when she got home just before dawn.

No-one saw either of them again. I didn't mind.
_
When I was ten, my best friend Lizzie called me stupid and said that we were only friends because her mama had told her to be nice to the freak with one parent. This time, when Mama asked where she lived, I refused to tell her. She found her address in the directory instead, and though I pleaded with her not to go, she jumped in the car and left.

I didn't sleep a wink that night - and when morning came, I knew that Lizzie, too, had vanished.

I was right.
_
The police arrived to take Mama away yesterday. They'd finally found their link; on the night each child was murdered, Mama showed up on the doorstep of their house, with watery eyes and clenched fists. The bereaved parents said that she told them that they needed to keep a closer eye on their little monsters, that they should be grounded "for their own sakes". When the parents asked her to leave, she grew angry, and told them that they'd regret not teaching their kids better manners.

Well, it didn't take long after that for them to find the skeletons in her closet - and the ones in the basement, too. Five white skeletons, all lined up, moved faithfully from house to house as we fled across the country.

They took Mama away, and gave me to a lovely pair of foster parents. A real daddy, and a new mama who never asked where my bullies lived and never visited them in the middle of the night. It was ideal.

Poor Mama. Not one of those parents ever took her warnings seriously.

And how can she stop me now that she's behind bars?

Friday, May 14, 2010

Why Spiders Are Scary


Most people agree; spiders, on their own, aren’t scary. What’s scary is their size. They are small. They are easy to lose. The only thing scarier than the scary thing you see is the scary thing you don’t see. The spider could be anywhere. It could be under your covers. In your pillowcase. In your socks. Ready to strike at any time.

This is my predicament right now. Not a spider. No. A person, I suppose, would be my metaphorical spider. I live in a rural area in the Australian Outback. Not a very fancy desert town, but one surrounded by mountains. Oftentimes, at night, I’ll look outside and just think. I live alone right now, because I’m travelling for work, so I have a lot of downtime.

In any case, about a month ago, I started seeing a shadowy figure on the mountaintop. Keep in mind, this isn’t a distant, nor a tall mountain. It’s about an hour’s hike to the summit, and only about 20 minutes down the road. It’s not uncommon to see hikers or tourists on the mountain, but this one struck me as odd. It was 11 PM, far after dark. And if any of you know anything of Australia, you know snakes and spiders are common here, as part of the many things trying to kill you. This hiker, I presumed, hadn’t listened.

I’d continue to see this hiker every night for the next two weeks. Every night on a different part of the summit, but always at 11 PM exactly. He wouldn’t suddenly appear as though teleporting, but seemed to sort of fade into vision like an optical illusion. As though he’d been there the whole time and I’d just never noticed. I’d never seen him move, but he was never in the same spot. One night, however, he was somewhere else. It was hard to see but I could make out his figure on the trail that leads to the summit, barely, against the night sky. I watched him, but he never moved. Eventually, I drifted off to sleep.

For the next week, I’d progressively see him descending the mountain, as though he were moving in slow motion, descending the mountain over the past 3 weeks. But he was never there in the daytime.

On Friday, I saw him at the end of the street. This is the first time I actually became scared of this figure. I watched him. Perhaps for about an hour. I set up my GoPro camera and watched the video recording in the morning. He never moved, until my GoPro ran out of battery around 7 AM, which was also when I woke up. When I looked out, he was gone.

On Saturday, he was about a block closer. Performing the same ritual with the GoPro, he once again never moved from his spot.

On Sunday, he was in the same spot. He never moved, as expected, and I began to fear him less. As long as he isn’t moving, he won’t hurt me, right?

On Monday, he was across the road. Out here in the Outback the streetlights aren’t exactly top quality. They cast a tiny little loop of light and not much else, if they’re working at all. I never got a clear look at him, only his silhouette.

Yesterday, he was outside my window. Literally, right outside, at 11 PM. This was the night I didn’t look outside anymore. I went right to bed. I knew he wouldn’t move. He never did. And I didn’t expect him to. Like a spider, he didn’t scare me when I could see him.

But tonight, I have not seen him. It’s 11:09 PM and I don’t know where he is. He’s not on the mountain, nor on the trail or down the street or across the road or outside my window.

It’s 11:09 PM, and I don’t know where he is.


Credits to: Koog330

Thursday, May 13, 2010

The Mall Mannequins


It was my first day in a new town. Tramps don’t have it good, you know? The best place I could find to sleep was this old, run-down shopping mall.

I went deep in to avoid detection. I passed by several mannequins in tattered clothes, food stores, and finally found shelter underneath a life-sized T-rex sculpture.

It was going to be a long night.

The full moon shone on me, and I awoke to see that a few mannequins from down the lane had moved towards me. Freaked, I started shuffling to the entrance - but they inched foward every time I blinked. It was like a perverse game of “traffic lights”. There was no sound of their footsteps; no sound of their clothes moving as they stretched their arms towards me.

I ran, keeping as many of them in sight as I could, until I reached the exit. They were almost on to me. I looked forward, prepared to jump out…. when I saw that someone had pulled down the steel shutters. I made a quick left and found myself in a dead end.

They were a step before the left turn. I opened my eyes for as long as I could, but eventually I blinked. What I saw scared me more than anything.

They completely ignored me, and were all banging on the shutters, arms frozen and fearful. The mannequins weren’t chasing me. They were trying to escape.

From where I had slept, a monstrous roar boomed across the mall.


Credits to: dev9x

I Talked to God. I Never Want to Speak to Him Again

     About a year ago, I tried to kill myself six times. I lost my girlfriend, Jules, in a car accident my senior year of high school. I was...