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Terror Tortellini

@terror-tortellini / terror-tortellini.tumblr.com

Short Horror
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Microfiction Contest #9

Congratulations to robotsynthesis, this week's microfiction contest winner!

This week's theme, chosen by Jacob Greene, was "Unexpected Package."

1st Place: "Daddy, you got a package today," Henry heard from his daughter's pink bedroom door. He looked over at the thick envelope resting on the dining room table, thinking hard if he had ordered anything. He peeled back the seal noticing that an address was nowhere to be found, and he quickly felt his heart stop and stomach tighten. The pictures were of a bloody mess, and the victim was unrecognizable. But as he continued nervously looking through the photographs, he found himself weakly calling out his daughter's name as he rested his eyes on a picture of a familiar pink bedroom door.

by robotsynthesis

2nd Place: "I absolutely did not order a 50 gallon drum of organic solvent, I don't care whose credit card information you have.""Yes, I would like to speak to your supervisor.""Damn right you will take it back, and who is going to pay for......I'm sorry, what....what was I saying?" "The shipping, who is going to...hold on.""Hold on, hold on....wuf...just a second, I need to sit down, that last rum and coke my wife mixed me....man, it must be hitting me pretty hard."

by Ryan Frazier/Kryptography

3rd Place: I detached myself from the mafia, and it wasn't on good terms. I moved thirty-some thousand miles away, but after a few months, they found me. I knew this because I started getting packages in the mail with no return address, each one a box a little bigger than a head---but always empty. They sent one of these every month for half a year in an attempt to scare me, and it actually hadn't worked, until now. The box I got today has some weight to it.

Congratulations to the winners and a big thank you to everyone who submitted an entry, voted, and read! You guys are great :) You can read the rest of the entries here.

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The Porch Witch

This was the winning entry for TT's Halloween contest! Congratulations Atran Raikany!

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The Porch Witch

This was an urban legend I remember as a kid. People of my generation joke about it now, but the older generations don’t find it as funny. I’ll start from the beginning.

Sometime in the early 1970’s, numerous people in Beckfield County were reporting an elderly woman sitting on the chairs in front of their homes at night. I remember being told that the woman never looked at the person when they spoke to her and asked her to leave. They said she’d only depart if they either called the cops, or if morning came, where they’d wake and she’d be gone. (Apparently people could sleep through stuff like that then.)

Later on some of those people discovered on the bottom of their porch chairs or benches were little engravings of symbols etched beneath the seat. They were of satanic connotations, and police assumed the woman implemented them in somehow, though none of the witnesses could account for seeing her do this. Nevertheless, this birthed the title, “The Porch Witch.”

A year then passed, and that’s when it occurred. Beckfield County faced thirty days of the worst, most assiduous power outages the area had ever faced. A good third of the county was affected and this led to one city-length portion to deal with constant nights of complete darkness.This is where things got really spooky. There were not only numerous reports in the affected areas of the woman returning at night, but also of deep screams and scraping noises on concrete or brick.

After that month, things returned to normal, with no more witch sightings or noises, though people never forgot. They continued to warn the citizens on nights like Halloween to look out for houses with an elderly woman sitting on the porch. After that became old news for the local news, parents still warned their children of her when trick-or-treating.I’m glad to say I’ve never seen her, and wish you the same. I’ll leave you now with a saying I grew up with;Check your chair for if the porch witch was there.

by Atran Raikany

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Microfiction Contest #8

The winner for this week's microfiction contest is Ryan Frazier (Kryptography)! Congratulations!

The theme was, "Last Dance," chosen by CheshireStray.

1st Place: "Stop calling it that," she said, her face buried in his shoulder, "It makes it sound so...final.""Sorry," he said, "but I'm getting deployed again, and so, I mean, this is our la....our, well, it's our final..." he trailed off, uncertain how to finish. She had always been too smart for him."Waiting, just, always waiting and not knowing was so hard," she said, her voice oddly distant, "I really don't think I could do that again."The blade was so thin and so sharp that at first, he didn't even feel it.

by Ryan Frazier (Kryptography)

2nd Place: The perfect image of sloven apathy, Rick sat slouched in the waiting room, the red and black flannel bunching up from all his other layers, bootlaces untied and jangling on the floor to the beat of some random, raucous punk rock song blaring past his studio headphones. He didn't notice when the strange bee landed on his shoulder and sat waiting, studying him before its insect mind came to some conclusion; he didn't notice when it began its strange little dance: three circles counter clockwise, two clockwise, then half a circle in each direction; he didn't even notice as it crawled up his neck, slipped under his earpad, and burrowed its fuzzy little body into his ear. It wasn't until he wiped his nose and pulled back a bloody hand that he turned around and saw the black, buzzing cloud and frenzied scramble of staff. Taking off his headphones, the chaos and panic before him was briefly given voice in the form of shrieks and crashes, a tumultuous choreography of death and despair, before being muffled and then cut off one last time. "You're the one," said a chittering voice of metal, "I could pick out the color of your soul from miles away," and as Rick opened his blood crusted eyes he saw the bee's face, and he screamed.

by Benjamin Dyer

3rd Place: Thirty years, thirty battles, and thirty somber celebrations. Gregor was ready to be done with it, but he knew what lay on the line. Ten more battles and his people would be spared. He donned his gear and stepped into the arena. His opponent raised his sword as the drum was hit and the two warriors began their dance of death.

by Roodi Safari

Thank you to everyone who submitted an entry, voted, and read! You can read the rest of the entries here

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A Dream

I can still remember the dream I had the night my dad skipped out on us. It's been almost twenty years but I can still recall it perfectly. I was sitting on top of a hill, it was almost cartoonishly peaceful: vibrant green grass, abnormally blue sky, bright sun, but it wasn't too hot because I was next to a tree. Well sort of. My perspective kept switching around, you know how dreams can be. So sometimes I was right under the tree leaning on it and others I was about a foot away under its shadow. Anyway, I remember my parents were with me under the tree, well, intermittently, sometimes they'd be there and sometimes I'd just be lying, staring up at the tree, but for the most part, they were there and we were having a picnic. As we were eating, the world itself seemed to get a bit more...well, a bit more trippy I guess is the only way I can put it. There were more flashy colors, the tree seemed to get bigger, bugs and birds became louder and more present, and considerably less realistic. I remember seeing a butterfly that looked like it could have been a Pokemon. Really now that I think of it, a lot of these things could have been taken from some ripoff Pokemon game. Sorry, I'm getting off-topic. So we finished eating and then things got weird. Well, weirder. At this point my perspective kept cutting to some wide angle view of the hill. My parents weren't there anymore, so I was just staring at the tree, which seemed to be undergoing a season cycle as I watched. First, flowers started blooming all over the place and the tree started turning this bright shade of pink, like those cherry blossoms you see in those pictures of Japan. Then, they turned a more vibrant red that slowly darkened and turned almost crimson. I guess this was fall because the leaves/flowers started slowly falling off till there were only these patches of crimson breaking up the dark black of the tree itself. This was about the time that I realized the sky had changed as well. The sun had started setting and cast the entire scene in a sort of uncomfortably rosy hue. The sky contained way more colors than I think it ever does in real life, which would probably have been beautiful in real life, but was for some reason incredibly alarming. I should probably explain that. You know how in dreams, sometimes you just know something is like, wrong? Or off? And even though there's no real way for you to know that, you just do? Well that's how this felt. I think also the grass was yellowing and looking more like the yard you'd imagine in front of a haunted house. Anyway, it was in this vaguely uncomfortable setting that I saw some guy. He was climbing the hill from the side furthest away from my vantage point. I couldn't make out any details on him beyond that he was a man, but I had this inherent understanding that he was a good person and wouldn't hurt me. At this point my vantage point started jumping back and forth again. This time it would intermittently cut from my wide view of the scene to a close up of the man as he walked towards the tree. Even when he was close up, it wasn't really possible to make out any details, he was sort of in this crimson shadow under the tree. I watched his hand as it reached up towards what appeared to be an apple or something similar, but as soon as it came into view, everything went black for a few seconds before I was suddenly back at a wide angle of the hill. But this time it was different. This time everything was tinted red, even the grass, which looked mostly dead and dying. The tree was completely bare. And even though the sun seemed abnormally large (and red), I felt cold when the wind blew. Once again I found myself watching a figure climb the hill from the far side, but this was no man. It had eight legs, so I guess it resembled a spider more than anything else, but it wasn't. It's legs looked like they'd been cobbled together from large stalks of bamboo, only darker. It made this awful rattling noise when it moved, and I knew it was the sound of bone on bone. Don't ask me why, I just did. My view slowly traced up the legs to look at it's body. It was this large orb-shaped thing but it was lumpy and uneven. With patches of fur or moss or something blackening various parts of its torso, which I guess looked more like a lung than anything else. And then I got to its head. I don't know how to explain its head. It sometimes appeared to be directly attached to the torso but other times seemed to be connected by some thin tendril that was always cast in shadow. Whenever I had any sort of view of it's face, the rest of my vision would blur and blacken. And it's face, it was this horrific thing that looked like someone had tried to carve a carnival mask into someone's face. Provided of course, that someone had five eyes. Because this thing did. At least most of the time. Sometimes, parts of its cheek would just open up, and start bleeding, and once that blood had stopped, there would be another eye staring at me. Because it was staring at me. When my perspective was close to the creature, it knew, and at least one eye would always be fixed on me. And even when I wasn't in a close-up, I knew it was staring at me. And I saw this creature ascend the hill and make its way to the tree. When it was under a branch, all of its legs folded upwards, as if it had somehow imploded. But it wasn't imploding, it was shrinking. It contorted in on itself and wrapped its long, spindly legs around its body over and over until it had formed a sphere. And then it stuck one last leg out and affixed itself to a tree branch. And I watched as it crusted over, and began to resemble a crusty apple. And I watched the tree go through another season cycle, as leaves grew and flowers blossomed and began to fall off. And I watched the hazy man walk up the hill again and I watched him reach up for the apple. And I watched, as the apple unfurled itself and a long, spindly leg shot out and lodged itself in the man's forehead. And I heard the man cry out this horrible scream. And I heard the scream drowned out by this unearthly, piercing screech from the creature. And I watched as the creature grew larger, and its legs grew larger, and began to consume the man's face. And I watched as the man was slowly drawn into the creature's tube, which then retracted somewhere into the shadowed crevices of it's ugly, rippling body. And I knew the man had suffered. And I heard this ungodly rasping noise and I knew the creature was laughing. And then I woke up. And my dad was gone. Sure, I know that the dream itself has nothing to do with that but there's always been this little nagging part of my brain that wonders...Well I don't know what it wonders really, but you know how subconsciouses can be, full of those little doubts and worries. It's never bothered me as much as it did that first morning. Because I woke up crying for daddy and daddy was gone, y'know? But here's the thing. Last night, I had that dream again. Except instead of my parents. I was with me and my wife. And this morning I woke up to the sound of my daughter Eve crying from the next room. And I'm too scared to go in there and comfort her. Because that's what it wants me to do.

by Glass Onion

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Just Like That

Gus was at the top of his form. "I'm serious, I'm finally, 100% there: horror just doesn't work on me anymore." He lay back against the stained and damaged couch, hands behind his head, his posture and his grin obviously inviting response. Gus "call me Augustus" Sims held himself out as an expert on horror. Like my grandmother and her hoard of hummel figures and forty year National Geographic collection, he hoarded viewings of and copies of horror films. The more bizarre, graphic and disturbing the better. He insisted on holding viewings of truly disturbing crap likeCannibal Holocaust and Flower of Flesh and Blood in the common room we all shared, I was sure more for the reaction than anything. Every time someone would come into the room to see a teenager getting torn apart by cannibals, or a little Japanese girl getting graphically dismembered, his head would swivel around, like a prop in some low budget horror film itself, and if the new visitor showed any sign of revulsion, fear, really, any reaction at all, his signature wide-eyed grin would appear, and after savoring the revulsion, he'd usually give an intentionally insincere "sorry, didn't mean to upset you" to whoever had, by that point, usually just left the room. I had been stuck with this asshole for two months, and it looked like I would be stuck with him at least until next semester. He was the kind of guy who made you like stuff you liked less because you didn't want to be associated with him. Before I had met him, I'd been a fan of the kind of stuff I'd see on the late night movie on little cable channels like USA or on our local affiliate, like Poltergeist II or Phantasm and when I had first met him, we had actually had some OK conversations about horror movies, but pretty soon things turned dark. Everything was some kind of dick measuring contest with Gus and his favorite way of having the biggest was to be able to watch absolutely anything and claim that it didn't bother him "at all dude, I've seen way worse." Today he had a new friend. She was a shortish, skinny, brown-haired girl who wore button-up shirts, and always looked like she needed to do something different with her hair, no matter how she styled it or what she put in it. I'd seen her in class or in the hall before. Seeing Gus with a girl was a weird twist, and actually kind of caught me in the gut. I had been basically striking out since I got to college, and seeing this freak with a girl who was, OK, kind of a mess, but not entirely uncute felt a lot worse than I had expected it too, and maybe that was why, but I found that I couldn't leave the room. Like I had to see if he could make something happen with her, or stop it, or something. I wasn't sure.

The brown-haired girl was also a horror film fan. She had a tendency to chew on the inside of her cheek and sat all folded up on the couch with her shoes off - knees against her body, arms wrapped around her jeans-covered legs. "It's because you know it's fake" she said. Now she was talking to him. This was getting even worse. I had gotten to a place where I wouldn't even engage him at all, but here he was, being deemed worthy of conversation by a girl. Great. "Horror is about fear. You can't be afraid of something that you know isn't real." "Everyone knows that movies aren't real," he responded, tripping over his words with the excitement of telling her she was wrong. "But most people are bothered by them anyway." "Most people have empathy" she said. "They know it's not real, but they think about how it'd feel to feel like the characters who are in danger or who are being hurt, and they get scared because they don't like it." She paused. "You don't have those feelings because you don't identify with the victims - you identify with the monsters," she said in a matter of fact manner. "That's why you find horror movies arousing. You're a psychopath." He smiled a little at this, like he was proud of it, but then a look of shame and anger took it's place. "Just because I like horror movies doesn't make me a psycho," he said. "You're right," she said, letting the words drop, and not looking away from the screen, on which a Japanese girl in a plaid skirt was running down an endless hallway. He took this as a concession, though from where I was standing it clearly wasn't, and let it go as well. I had kind of gotten into the movie - I think it was one of the Ringu knock-offs that had come out after the success of the first film, so some time passed with all 3 of us just staring at the screen, the two of them on the couch, me standing by the door to my room, my backpack still over one shoulder. "So all horror fans are psychos?" he said. "No," she said, "some of us are just curious, others just want the feeling after fear - the feeling you get when a fear isn't realized." She paused again. "Personally I'm in it for that weightless feeling, losing myself in the sensation of asking the question 'what if that were real? what if everything I thought I knew was wrong?'" The whole time she was saying this, her eyes never left the TV. My TV I thought, as if this made some kind of a difference, made me a participant in this conversation. It was like she was looking for something, searching. Hungry to catch a glimpse of something she knew was there, but just couldn't quite see.

"So say for example, you had a kid, and the kid died." At this point she wasn't really talking to him, she was just talking, quickly, chewing her lip, looking at the screen. "But the kid lived to like the age of 2 or 3, to the point where literally everything in your life, everything in your house, everything you do reminds you of him." She went on. "So because you can't get him out of your head, one day you start talking to him. You were already in the habit of talking to him all the time, because that's what you do with babies, you talk to them even though they don't talk back. So he's not around anymore but you're still thinking about him all the time, so pretty soon you just start talking to him." "A few years go by. You live by yourself, so you just keep doing this - there's nobody around to tell you to stop and it's what you're comfortable with, so why stop? Why stop ever? At some level you know he's not real, he's not there, but you've been talking to him for so long, it really is like he's still alive. You're kind of holding it together. You're really lonely, but you're keeping yourself occupied." "Then something crazy happens. One night, you get yourself pregnant again somehow. Maybe some guy you met at a bar? Maybe some online thing? Who knows - either way, nine months later there's another kid. You have a real kid to talk to now. This whole narrative you've built up about the other kid, him going to school, him being like a friendly ghost or some shit you talk to whatever it is, you can let it go if you want to, end the whole story. But, I mean, at that point you have been doing it for so long - it'd be like killing him all over again." She paused, caught her breath. Neither of us were watching the movie now, and neither was she, but she was still staring at it as she kept talking - not looking at us. She needed this, I thought to myself. This is why she was here - this story was inside her and it had to come out, like it needed to be born and she couldn't stop it. "So you don't stop," she said in a quiet voice. "You don't stop. You keep acting like you have this son who you talk to all the time but nobody can see. The crazy thing is that you can keep it under control - you still have a job, a shitty, waitress job, but a job, and you can keep your shit together, you even take OK care of your new, living baby while you spend most of your time at home talking to your dead son. You act like he's alive - maybe at some level, to you, in your mind he really is alive - maybe when you have these one sided conversations with him you really hear him answering, I don't know for sure, but your other kid, your living kid hears it. She hears it all her life." "At some point, that kid is going to find out that what's real for you, what's real in your house, isn't real in the real world, and just like that, just in that moment, everything changes for your kid. Suddenly world is so much better but at the same time so much worse. There's a weightless feeling in that moment - anything could be real. Nothing is real. The world is...so full and so empty at the same time. It's..." she trailed off. "That's the feeling I'm looking for," she finally said. She was crying a little, but she didn't acknowledge it. She waited for a long moment. I looked at her. I realized that she was looking at me. Was she waiting for me to say something? Hoping I would?  But I couldn't find the words. I just stood there, looking at her, dumbly.  Abruptly, she was up and gone, she padded out of the room on stocking-clad feet before the movie was even over. She had even left her shoes behind and never came back to get them. I looked to give them back to her, but I couldn't find her room, and after a day, the shoes disappeared. I think Gus took them and hid them in his room, but I never found out for sure. I found out later that she left school. Someone told me that she had actually ODed, and that the school had covered it up.  I never found out if that was true or not.

by Kryptography

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God's Buckeye

An antique station wagon idled in the parking lot of the Warwick Falls lookout. A patch of frost was melting from the outside in on its periwinkle roof. Mist rose from the gorge below and swirled around it, shrouding the tail lights, which looked like waspy red spirits. Its headlights beamed across the wet dirt road and painted dim yellow circles on a rock wall. Through the windshield, sluggish silhouettes ducked and swiveled their heads. The man behind the steering wheel reached under his seat and retrieved a nickel-plated .38 revolver. The woman next to him stared at it. The corners of her mouth turned down in a symphony of wrinkles. “How sure are you?” she asked. “’Bout what?” His eyes glimmered as if someone had recently added a coat of lacquer to them. “About them things in your shirt pocket.” “Well, if it was just me, I s’pose I wouldn’t be all that sure at all… but there’s you saw ‘em too.” “Yeah, I know I saw ‘em, but who’s to say I didn’t hear something different from what you heard?” “Did you?” A lone tear grew fat in the corner of her left eye and spooled down a groove in her cheek. It nestled itself in a crease in her chin. “They’re Tommy Boy’s buckeyes and you know it. Here,” he said, fishing them out of his breast pocket and displaying them on a flat, trembling hand. The buckeyes had a polished gleam from ritual handling. The beige circles on the tops of them were both tilted towards her as if they were studying her. “You see that little cross-shaped nick on the one? He used to say that it was God’s buckeye. He’d put it on the table at the last hand of every poker game and roll it towards the pot.” The woman chuckled painfully, her face twisted up like a tree knot.  “Yep. He sure did… I don’t remember him ever losing, neither. I just don’t feel right about ‘em. We were both there at the funeral. He was buried with ‘em, folded up in his hand. It doesn’t seem well that they ended up on your nightstand all suddenly.” “One of ‘em’s God’s buckeye. That’s what he always used to say. I think it was God what left ‘em with us, Carole.” “Mayhap he did.” He brought his spotted hand up to her cheek and fingered her ear ring. It swung like a pendulum for a long time. He watched it—watched her. Then he returned his palm to the weapon in his lap.  Carole leaned over herself and rummaged through her purse. The seatbelt cut into her floral dress, underlining a plump ridge of skin which drooped over the one already hanging from her waistline. Sitting back up, she brought a cell phone with her and stared at it for a minute or two. With a shaking finger, she swiped the gray band at the bottom of the screen. Nothing happened. With her second try, the lock icon twitched toward her yellowed nail and then settled back into place. “Do you know how to work this thing, darlin’?” she asked. “You gotta plant your finger directly on the lock and drag it to the right.” She nodded with a flimsy smile and, moving as precisely as a watch maker, lowered her finger once more onto the lock. This time, she managed to draw it completely to the right. A brightly colored background picture appeared behind a number of application icons. It was of Carole and her husband standing on either side of a young woman in a forest green sweater with big white letters, MSU, stamped on the chest.  “Evelyn…” she said. “I don’t know that I can do a thing like this, Nick. What do you think she would say? Lord, what might she tell her little boys?” “She can’t tell what she don’t know,” said a voice like river rocks falling into a tin bucket, coming from the console—the spot where Nick had placed the buckeyes. “No one ain’t never gonna find out. You mark me good, Carole. You’ve got some business needs attendin’, and you ought not to shrug of attendin’ it on account of it’s God’s work. The both of you ha’ been chosen.” Carole froze, blinking rapidly at Nick who was twisting the chamber of the revolver with his thumb and gazing at the rock wall across the road. “…Did you hear ‘im, hon’?” he asked without moving. Her eyes shot down to the buckeyes. They were resting on a mound of pennies, shining dully in the grey light. “I sure think I did.” “Well, I think that solves it. Let’s not be too ceremonious about all this,” he said, popping his door open and setting his foot on the gravel outside. “I’ll go’n and get the car ready—you call the tow man. Remember how Evelyn set it up for you? Just press the green phone-shaped button on the bottom-left ‘n’ press the word, ‘roadside’. Then, all you gotta do is say you and your husband done popped a tire out on route 43, you’re parked out by the falls, and ain’t any spares in the trunk. Okay?” “Okay,” she said, eyes wide. Nick nodded and pulled himself onto his feet, briskly shutting the door once he was all the way out. She heard his crunching footsteps trail around to the trunk, then a mechanical pop and a rusty squeal. A flicker down in the console caught her attention. One of the buckeyes—the one with the cross-shaped nick—had tumbled away from its brother. “Who’s in there? Is that you, Tommy Boy?” she asked. There was no answer for several minutes. Then the trunk slammed shut. She flinched and the phone slipped from her hands into the narrow space between her seat and the passenger door. “Hell!” she grunted, looking through the back window at Nick.  He was holding a bowie knife with a brown leather handle close to his chest and peering around the car at the back left tire. “Call the tow man, Carole,” said the buckeyes. There was a touch of anger in the voice. The pennies rattled. The voice made her go rigid, jowls quivering, and before she’d heard the last word, Carole had jammed her hand down past the seat cushion and scrabbled around, sweat sprouting along her burgundy hairline. At last, her plastic nails ticked against it. She yanked it out and held it up to her face. With her thumb, she brought up the home screen once more and pressed the green phone icon. “Roadside” was the third number on the list, below the words, “Ev” and “Home”. She tapped it and held the phone to her ear, looking dazedly at the buckeyes which now sat nestled in individual divots, surrounded by respective calderas of pennies. A far away ringing purred in her ears until a click sounded and a young man answered on the other end. “Plateau Towing. How can I help you?” “Hi,” she said, throat crackling as if it were made of dry leaves. “Me and my husband just popped ourselves a tire out on 43 by the falls and we don’t have any spares. Do you think you could send out a truck to help us?” “Well, sure we can, ma’am. That’s not a problem at all. I’ll come out, myself. How’s that sound?” To her rear, there was a meaty thud followed by a slow hissing sound. The car began to tilt and sag towards the place where her husband was helping himself back to his feet. “Uh… that sounds just fine. When can we expect you?” “Our shop is actually only fifteen minutes away from there. You just sit tight and I’ll be up in no time. We’ll get your car hooked up and have her back down here before nine.” “Alright, then. We’ll be waitin’ for you.” “Good deal,” he said. “I’m hopping into the truck as we speak. See you in a bit.” Carole’s throat began to close. She swallowed and cupped her palm around the drapes of skin under her neck. “Hey, son? Mind if I ask you a question real quick?” “Sure. Whatcha got? Shoot.” “What’s your name?” Outside, Nick was panting and swatting at the knees of his khakis. The overcast sky combined with the swirling cloud constantly spuming up from the falls caused deep shadows to fall over his brow, making his eye sockets look empty. “My folks dubbed me Martin. You can call me Reds, though. That’s what everyone calls me.” “And why’s that?” she said, continuing to watch her husband. He had taken a few steps away from the car toward the railing that sat just above the falls. The upstream breeze blasting out of the gorge tousled the thin band of cotton still clinging to his scalp. And the leather handle of the knife jutted through the slit in the back of his tan tweed jacket. “Oh, well I’m a little embarrassed to say…” Reds mumbled. “Go on,” Carole said, her voice jittering. “Well, it’s just a name that stuck with me. I used to have a chain-smoking habit—two packs a day; cowboy killers—and one night, I was drinking heavy at this party I wasn’t supposed to be at. My mom caught wind and came out looking for me. She had just found the house I was at and was coming in to give me a piece of her mind when I made the stupid mistake of lighting a cigarette backwards and taking a power-drag. Let’s just say that it didn’t end well for anyone involved and I had to buy my mom a new blouse afterwards.” “My word. Well, I guess we all end up bein’ infamous for somethin’ or another,” she said. Over the phone, she heard the tow truck’s engine grumble and huff as it began its trip up into the mountains. “Yeah. I don’t mind it too much, though. I kind of like the name. It seems to suit me. Anyway, I should get off the phone before I wreck this thing but, before I do, what’s your name? I don’t think I caught it.” “Oh, me?” she asked, raising her penciled-on eyebrows. “I’m Carole, sweetie.” The tow truck rattled, navigating the beaten dirt roads up the mountain. Reds, leaning over his steering wheel, struggled messily with the wiper switch so that he could rid himself of the sheet of fog that had plastered itself across the windshield. The old blades whined on their servos, doing little to improve visibility and painting streaks of dirt in a familiar arc. He rocked away into his seat, smacked his skull against the back window. “Fuck!” he growled, reaching blindly toward the console. He plucked the receiver of the CB radio out of its holster and whipped it toward his face. “You should’ve washed Josie-May when you were done yesterday, Daniel… dunno how in the hell you expected me to drive her like this, knowing the fogs were coming. By the way, remind me why you took the headrest out of here?” A slushy, Alabamian drawl crackled out of his hand. “Take ‘er eathy, Redth. I’ll make it up to yuh, bah y’ a thix-pack.” “Kiss my ass, pumpkin. If I make it back down, I’ll hold you to that.” “Alraht, mayn. Be thafe up thur. And dontchu be cawlin’ me punkin.” Reds smirked, swaying side to side as the truck rocked over damp roots and kicked-up clods of dirt. “You want me to call you Fiddlesticks, then?” “Over ‘n’ out, jackath.” There was a momentary shriek of static as the radio cut off and then the cabin was quiet. Reds leaned forward again to replace the receiver. As he leaned back, he snuck a hand into his pocket and removed a cigarillo with a blonde wooden tip and a golden foil label wrapped around it. He gripped a loose piece of its cellophane packaging between his teeth and liberated it with a careless sideways jerk. Tucked into the seat by his belt buckle was a grimy yellow lighter which he easily found and flicked alight under his new fare. His fat red lips, looking like the split back of a jumbo shrimp, levered the cigarillo as he stoked it. Squinting through roiling ribbons of smoke, he found himself coming up on a black wooden sign. Just a few meters beyond it, he saw the gravel lot and the couple’s old station wagon. The husband was tall and pale, his jacket swaying from his sharp, bony shoulders as he took a few ambling steps away from the edge of the lookout. As Reds backed up to their rear bumper, the man suddenly appeared panicked. He jerked the driver door open ducked his head down into the car. When he stood back up, he was dropping something into his shirt pocket, patting it with a gnarled hand.  “Alright, Carole. Let’s get this over with,” Reds said to himself, killing the engine with a punctuated flick of his wrist. He took a long, slow drag from the cigarillo; the glowing tip brightened to a nuclear yellow.  As he hopped out of the cabin, the sound of the falls bore down on him. Their vomitous din was amplified against the rock wall, causing the noise to wash over him from both sides. Evergreens hung forlornly above him, deep and lush green, sacrificing none of their hue to the miasma of cold spray and fog. “Hey, glad you made it,” the old man said, his face twitching a couple of times before pulling itself up into a crinkled smile. “I’m glad I made it, too.” He chuckled and held his hand out. “I’m Reds.” At first, the old man stood still, looking sullenly at his shoes, hands tucked into his pockets. Then, as if receiving a delayed transmission from a distant satellite, he jerked forward and clasped Reds’ hand just as he started pulling it back. The senior’s palm was raspy and loose as if it would shed at any moment.  “Name’s Nicholas,” he said, barking the first syllable out as if he were coughing. “Nice to meet you, Nicholas. I take it that’s Carole in the car?” Again, the Nicholas seemed not to register what he had said. He simply stood and gazed at him, eyes like glittering pits. The sun had begun to rise but the burly grey clouds all but obscured it. Where it hung in the sky, it seemed like someone had taken a giant eraser and scrubbed in a circle slightly brighter than its surroundings. “Sir?” Reds said “Huh? Oh. Yeah, that’s my wife, Carole.” The old man shambled around and bent over, signaling with his hand for her to get out of the car.  Carole stood slowly, looking somberly from Nick to Reds. Her lips were pressed so tightly against each other that they seemed to disappear into a bloodless horizontal line.  “Hello, ma’am,” Reds said.  “Hi,” she said. The word seemed to whistle out of her throat. The skirt of her dress swishing between her legs, she trudged to a spot just behind her husband and placed a lizard hand on his shoulder. Nick’s head drifted minutely in her direction and then came back to Reds. “So how’re we gonna do this?” he asked. “All I’ve gotta do is hook your wagon up to the back of my rig and then you two can ride up front with me. It’ll only take a few moments.” “Well, is there any way I c’n help you?” As Nick spoke, his skin stretched thin over his cheekbones, drawing in dark hollows below them. Fat, winding veins had popped out on the sides of his forehead. A slick sheen stood out on his skin.  “No, I can handle it. Why don’t you two stand back and enjoy the falls a bit while I string her up?” Nick nodded and smiled appreciatively. Reds rubbed the back of his neck and shot a quick glance behind him, pulling the cigarillo out of his mouth so that a delicate arc of curly smoke followed in its wake. When he looked back, he staggered, gasping. Nick had leveled the revolver at his head. “Hey, man, what’s… what are you doing with that thing?” “Beg pardon, son,” Nick said, sighing. His eyebrows bunched in a lax sort of despair. “We’ve been chosen and so’ve you, I’m afraid. It’s god’s work, what’s gettin’ done this morning. Now why don’tcha just get on down to your knees ‘n’ close your eyes. I’m gon’ hafta kill you now.” Reds gaped at him, his lips trembling like pink epileptic worms. Shadows seemed to shift like spiders over the old man’s face. He tilted his head and motioned downward with the barrel of the .38.  “Sir, why don’t we just put the gun down? You don’t need to kill me. I’m sure this is just all a misunderst--“ “On your KNEES!” the old man screamed, spraying him with specks of saliva. He cocked the hammer back with a trembling thumb. Reds dropped immediately, grimacing as a sharp piece of gravel dug into his knee cap. “Okay, okay. I’m on my knees. Let’s just slow down and talk.” “Sorry, boy. There won’t be any variety of speech gonna save you. I’m afraid it’s outta all our hands.” He reached into his shirt pocket and brought out the two buckeyes. Holding them out for Reds to see, he continued. “These here belonged to an old friend of mine. His spirit is alive in them—I’ve heard his voice comin’ directly out of ‘em. He says he’s thirsty.” Reds looked over Nick’s shoulder at Carole, his eyes round with shock. She frowned at him and looked away toward the falls.  “Carole…” he said. “You seemed like a nice woman earlier on the phone. Don’t let him do this.” “Don’t you say another word t’ my wife, hear?” Nick said evenly, rattling the buckeyes.  She turned back and looked down at Reds. Her eyes were red-rimmed and wet, but her face was slack, emotionless. Nick held the buckeyes out to her while keeping his eyes and the gun trained on Reds. “Go on and take ‘em, dear. I think Tommy-boy’s got somethin’ t’ tell you.” Carole cupped her hands under her husband’s. The latter loosened his ashy fingers and let them fall through. Eyes rolling upwards, she held them up to her ear. Occasionally, she nodded and mumbled assent. “What’s he saying?” her husband asked. The arm he held the gun with was shaking so badly that his fist began to bounce. She brought her hand away from her ear and dropped the buckeyes. They skittered across the gravel, one bouncing and skipping until it thudded into Reds’ leg. He looked down and noticed that it had a small cross-like shape carved into it. Nick twisted around, mouth hanging open. “What in th’ hell’d you do that for, Carole?!” “I was just doin’ our lord’s work,” she said raggedly, eyelids drooping. “Wha—?” Nick veered violently forward and clipped his wife, then fell to the ground with her. She writhed sluggishly under him like a drugged insect, pulling on his shoulders to see over him. The bowie knife was buried so deeply in his back that only its handle was visible. Reds dashed toward them and, planting a knee in the old man’s back, reached out for the gun which had fallen right next to Carole’s head.  With a speed that he wasn’t expecting, she snatched it and jammed it against his skull. Between them, her husband lay still, eyes half-open and unblinking. The pupils had blotted out his hazel irises entirely. “Get up ‘n’ drag him off me. By the ankles,” she said. Reds, moving as carefully as he could manage, obeyed her and crawled backwards until he was hovering on his haunches. He took one of Nick’s ankles in each hand and duck-walked backwards, tugging in short bursts. A maroon patch had begun to seep through the old man’s blazer and bloom outward from the brown, segmented handle that stood like a monument between his shoulder blades. When he had completely freed Carole of her spouse, she sat up and gazed at him. He stood straight and gazed back. “Are you going to let me live?” he said. “I think so.” “Can I have the gun, then?” She peered dreamily down at it, hefted it in her blue-crossed palm. The fog had thinned and the clouds had broken, allowing spokes of ocher sunlight to dart down through the mist wafting over and through the lookout railing behind her. Prismatic rings danced around her head.  “I can’t give it to you.” “Sure you can, Carole. I promise, I’ll just take it and put it somewhere safe. We’ll get your husband into the truck and go straight to a hospital.” “That’s not gonna work, hun. I’ve still got God’s work to do.” “You think God would want you to do anything with that gun?” he asked, taking a step toward her. She closed her eyes and cleared her throat. Reds took two steps closer. Carole’s eyes snapped open and she shoved the gun into her mouth, the barrel clicking against her molars. He froze and held his hands up, palms out. “Don’t do it, Carole. You just need he--,” he said as she pulled the trigger. A confetti of grey matter and blood spread out like a plume on the gravel behind her. The force of the bullet had laid her on her back, her dress hiked up over the red-striped mound of her stomach. Reds’ knees gave and he slumped onto his side, barely supporting himself with his left arm. He surveyed the scene numbly, letting his eyes drift over every detail, feeling almost calm somehow.  He heard something skitter across the gravel to his right.  The buckeyes lay nestled together only a few feet away. Reds stood up abruptly and knelt over them, scooped them into his palms. They were bigger than they had been moments before. There was a smear of blood on one of them. He studied it for a long time. Then he looked back at his truck, began to walk toward it.  He climbed back into the cabin and placed the buckeyes on the seat next to him. In the side mirror, he could still see Carole’s body, arms and legs splayed out to the four corners. He heard a faint crackling sound, followed by a familiar voice. “Redth, what’th taykin’ yuh tho lowng?” “Oh my god,” he said, suddenly looking wildly about him. He leaned over and pulled the receiver up to his mouth. “Something horrible has just happened. I need you to call the police right now.” “Yew thound a kahnda bad, bud. What’th goin’ own up thar?” “The people that called us are dead. One of them almost killed me. Look, I don’t think I can fucking go into it right now. Can you just get the cops?” “Thay no more, mayn. Ahm callin’ ‘em raght naow.” “Okay,” Reds said. He replaced the receiver and ran a hand through his bristly hair. Through the windshield, he saw a white rabbit scampering down the road along the rock wall. Up the way, a series of tree branches snapped, a ways into the woods. The radio crackled to life again. “Hay, Redth?” He grabbed the receiver again and depressed the white button on its side with a shivering index finger. “What, Daniel?” “Yew thould turn yer radio awn b’fore yuh thart hayvin’ converthathions wiv’ folkth awn it. But thince ya awready done did, why don'tcha thtart by hidin' them bodieth?”

by PulledTeeth

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Microfiction Contest #7

Congratulations to Jacob Greene! This week's winner of the microfiction contest!

The theme was, "Magic Doorway."

1st Place: The skipdoor had been at the center of humanity’s expansion into the galaxy ever since we discovered the alien relic on Europa, five hundred years ago. Since then, we had built thousands of the devices, letting us instantaneously travel to worlds and stations hundreds of light-years away as easily as walking from one room to the next; technologies previously undreamt of were discovered and back-engineered into human culture, and though we never fully understood just how the skipdoor worked, we learned a few things about it. It’s been known for centuries that you aren’t actually transported, that the far end of the door builds a copy of the “original” that steps through. When the original disappeared, we had always assumed it was destroyed. We were wrong.

by Jacob Greene

And there was a tie for 2nd place this week, with no 3rd.

2nd Place: Humans are particularly susceptible to something called a ‘boundary effect’—when a human passes through a doorway, they have a tendency to forget whatever they were doing in the other room. It took me a second after stepping into the dining room to remember the boundary effect, and another to realize I’d forgotten something. I looked back into the room I’d come from, and remembered immediately. Of course, the creature crouched just behind me in the doorway helped to jog my memory.

by Ren Connolly

2nd Place: Alice thought it was curious that the small door had appeared where her window should have been, but she was a peculiar girl and very clever, with just enough bravery to welcome an adventure, so she turned the little doorknob and stepped inside. A queer sensation crawled up her leg as she stepped upon the ground beyond the door- it was a velvet carpet so luxurious it hugged her feet, playfully tugging at her slippers with each step, and all around her a beautiful picket fence of pearl white lead her eyes past the carpeted path and onward to the outlandish and wonderful world beyond- it was exhilaration, she decided, a brief tingle of excitement as she took in this brand new place. With a pang of guilt, Alice looked back to the darkened room behind her where the other orphans lay dreaming of worlds such as she was about to enter; the bedroom was muted and plain as if covered in a film of mundanity from which Alice was finally escaping, flinging it aside like so many cobwebs. As she turned back she suddenly noticed a sickly smell permeating the air, and all at once the spell was shattered: small skulls littered the floor around monstrous teeth, a sickly respiration pushed and pulled at her body, and as she turned to flee the tongue tossed her into a grisly assemblage of fangs, her screams soon replaced by the grinding and crunching of bone.The creature slinked down the side of the building and clattered down the street with its eight clawlike legs, confident it would escape notice as it always had, for creatures of that sort can only be seen by children, and children should be asleep at that hour.

by Benjamin Dyer

Congratulations to everyone! This theme was a tough one! Also a big thank you to everyone who submitted, voted, and read. You can read the rest of the lovely submissions here

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Necessity

Julie and Sam only really had two things: their love for each other, and Sam's job. When they had met, Julie was looking to get out of her mom and stepdad's doublewide before his long looks and semi-intentional brushes past her in the hallway turned into something worse, and Sam had just dropped out of high school for the second and last time, right around the same time his mom finally picked up the fifth DUI which put her in jail for six years, and with nobody to pay the rent on their tiny apartment put Sam out on the street. Sam had been lucky to get a job working in what was basically the town's only real employment opportunity, the Virgil Bread Bakery. After the mill closed down, Virgil Bread (Virgil Bread, It's What Kids Love) was the only thing keeping their little town on the map. Sam had started work part time on the night shift, but soon, he was promoted to full time. Julie hadn't been able to find a job, but even with just his salary, they could afford to rent a tiny apartment, and every night he came home to her - late, but to her sparkling smile, to her kind eyes and to her smooth, perfect skin. They were careful with their money, but when Julie slipped off the curb on a rainy September night and broke her wrist, the doctors visits cleaned them out and put them into debt.  Still, she recovered quickly. Three months later, she still hadn't been able to find a job, but they were finally putting some money together. Soon they'd have enough to get a car and with a car, they could finally get out of town, get to the big city, somewhere they'd have a chance. That's when it happened. Sam had been assigned to the clean up crew for the quarterly scrub down, with the other most junior employee, a nice but a little spacey kid named Jimmy. This year, they were using a new product, something called XinClean. The box that the product came in didn't have any English writing on it at all, it was all in some Asian writing, maybe Chinese other than the product's title, which was spelled out in big, English letters. Sam's manager, Tony Virgil, the son of the owner of the plant told Sam and Jimmy to be very, very careful with this stuff, because according to him it was "toxic as hell." It was for getting rid of biological contaminants. It looked harmless enough was odorless and clear, but just one part diluted in 20 parts of water would give you a bad rash in about 20 minutes. Straight, it'd eat your flesh off clean to the bone. They were about halfway through cleaning out the industrial drains on the factory floor and Jimmy was mixing up a new batch of the stuff when Sam noticed him wiping his hand on his pants. He didn't have a glove on. "Did you get some of that stuff on you?" Sam asked Jimmy. Jimmy nodded. "Don't worry about it though," Jimmy said. "It was only on my hand for a second, and I rubbed it right off." The two young men kept working. About a hour later, while Sam was working a high-pressure hose, he thought he heard a noise over the din of the water, something like a gear under high pressure or a tire squealing. When he switched off the hose, he realized it was Jimmy. Jimmy was holding up one of his hands and screaming in agony. It looked like he was wearing a red, steaming glove. As Sam watched, a chunk of flesh fell off and onto the ground, still steaming. Then three places on Jimmy's pants started to steam too. After Jimmy's funeral, the owner of the bakery, Jacob Virgil, told Sam that Tom had told him that the XinClean was his idea. Sam got the impression that Jacob didn't really believe Tom, but he wasn't willing to go against his own son's word. He told Sam he'd give him a week, but then he'd have to let him go. It was almost Christmas. What a great present to give Julie, he thought. He had hoped to have enough saved for a ring for her this year, but the doctor's bills had wiped that out, and they were already a month behind on their rent. If he lost his job, they'd be out on the street in the dead of winter. Maybe she could go back to her mom's? Sam thought, but then he saw an image of her stepfather and his greedy eyes, and he thought about Julie's little wrists in one of his big hands and shook his head. One night after work, Sam went to Tom's office. He begged him to let him keep his job. Tom shook his head, said no. Sam threatened to expose Tom's role in Jimmy's death. Tom laughed. It was the laugh that stayed with Sam as he walked home in the light snow, the water from the sidewalk soaking through his shoes. Christmas was coming and they'd be on the street. If only Tom weren't there. His dad, Mr. Virgil would let Sam keep his job, Sam was sure of it. He'd seen it in the old man's eyes. He knew his son was a liar. It just wasn't fair. That fat bastard with his greasy hair and his smug grin. What had he ever done to deserve his life but to be born a Virgil? He was destroying Sam. Destroying Julie. Killing them both, their dreams. Sam thought hard about this. He looked for other work, but he couldn't find anything. Nobody was hiring. Finally, with only a day to go, he had to tell Julie the whole story, everything he had been keeping back. They both cried. She hadn't stopped crying when he had to leave for work. He made himself go - with his termination coming up, he couldn't afford to lose even a penny while he still had a chance to work. When Sam came to work, he looked for Tom, to beg for his job one more time. What did he have to lose? The shop steward told him that Tom was gone - that he had just left to go Le Turren, the one fancy restaurant in town to "get his knob polished" or at least that's what he had told the steward. The idea of that fat son of a bitch out for a night on the town while Sam worked to make his fat ass even richer burned at Sam's gut. After two hours, he couldn't take it any more. Without knowing exactly what he intended to do, he grabbed one of the glass bottles of XinClean from the supply cabinet (the son of a bitch hadn't even bothered to throw it away after the accident) and tucked it in his pocket. The walk to Le Turren was short. Sam slipped in the back door. He knew one of the busboys, he had actually applied here a few days ago, but they didn't have anything for him. He spotted his friend. "Is Tom Virgil here?" he asked him. His friend said that indeed he was, with some "hot piece of ass." His friend joked that it looked like she had been giving the fat bastard a handjob or getting fingered under the table, maybe both, that they were all over each other. Sam saw red. That fat bastard. That fat bastard and his whore. It wasn't right. He and Julie were losing everything, and here these two rich assholes were getting frisky over a meal which would cost him more than a month's salary. Tears welled up in his eyes. His friend pulled away. "Mister Virgil" had ordered a second bottle of wine, and he had to uncork it.  Sam didn't think at all. He waited until his friend's back was turned for a moment, then poured as much of the clear liquid as would fit into the open bottle, then rushed out the back door. As he walked home, his mind raced. Would people put it together? Maybe not. Maybe he'd get away with it. It was a half-hour walk to his place on the edge of town, but by the time he got there, he was calm. He had done the right thing, the right thing for him and Julie. Maybe he'd get away with it. When he got there, Julie was sitting at their little kitchen table. She looked sad, but proud at the same time. He knew he couldn't keep this secret from her. "I did something today," he started. "Me too," she interrupted. He saw she was wearing her best dress. The short one. "It's going to be all right," he said. "Yes," she said, nodding. "We'll be OK now." "I'm sorry," he said. "I had to do something. I thought..." he realized that she was talking, saying something. There was a roaring in his ears, like somehow his brain was trying to block out the sound of her words. He listened harder. "I called him from a pay phone after you left. I'm so sorry Sam, but you'll get to keep your job, and it was only that one time," there were tears in her eyes. "You'll forgive me, won't you?" Sam nodded. He could smell the wine on her breath. "I forgive you," he heard himself say. He took the glass bottle out of his pocket. It was still almost half full. "I love you, baby," he said, and took a long drink.

by Kryptography

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Microfiction Contest #6

Congratulations to CheshireStray (Alice Uldricks), the winner of this week's microfiction contest!

This week's microfiction theme was, "Inheritance," chosen by Jacob Green.

1st Place: It's been four days since my mother died in her sleep, three since I packed an overnight bag and caught the first flight home, the only circumstances under which I had ever planned to make my return. The lawyer carefully read the will, opened the jewelry box, and handed me her familiar pendant, a globe of silver etched with strange writing. "To my only daughter, I leave All Of Me." he read, pausing to show me the strange capitalization as well as the footnote that clarified the pendant as the intended inheritance, clearly as confused as I was. It was more than I expected from her, and I began to laugh on the spot, wondering what cruelty could be behind the gift, already standing up to leave as I fastened the clasp. Three days since, and the color of my eyes has changed entirely.

by CheshireStray

2nd Place: Six months ago, the first case of Mendel’s disease was diagnosed, and four months later it had ravaged the eastern seaboard of the United States. As a native New Yorker, of course I was worried- nearly 70% of the population had the genetic disposition to be carriers rather than victims, but for that remaining 30% or more, contraction of the disease resulted in a slow and painful death. Research was quickly funded, almost over-funded, but it wasn’t until last month that they realized that the offspring of two people who carried Mendel’s would almost invariably result in the offspring being susceptible to the disease. It was recommended that all prospective parents get tested for Mendel’s, in order to determine if they were carriers—a recommendation that came too late for my husband and I. I stand now with the fate of my unborn child in my hands, enclosed in a thin white envelope labeled ‘TEST RESULTS’.

by Ren Connolly

3rd Place: I was shocked and thrilled when I was told that I had inherited an old family estate from a distant relative. That's everyone's dream, isn't it, the mysterious rich relative who dies, leaving you basically a whole new life...I just wish...honestly I just wish I could remember how I got here, and why, no matter how far I run, no matter where I go before I fall asleep, no matter how long I manage to stay awake, I keep waking up in the mansion's ancient master bedroom.And why there are six corpses, one fairly fresh, the other five dried and desiccated here in the room with me.And how they find their way back every time, no matter how deep I bury them.

by Kryptography

Congratulations again to our winners and thank you to all who read, voted, and submitted! The other wonderful entries can be found here

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Microfiction Contest #5

This week's microfiction contest winner is Benjamin Dyer! Congratulations!

The theme for this week was: "Last Words" which proved to be a bit tough!

1st Place: Joe scratched the back of his head awkwardly and did his best to sneak up the stairs in the least assuming way possible. The flaming vortex and shrill screams of damnation were barely muffled as he closed the door of his basement. As an afterthought, he propped a chair against the doorknob, hoping it would make some small difference against the minions of hell waiting below. He knew he shouldn't have attempted that Love Incantation but Jenny's batting eyes and pouting lips were a force greater than logic. Furrowing his brow, he couldn't help but be annoyed that he messed up those last few words.

by Benjamin Dyer

2nd Place: "In conclusion, I am so certain that the rumors regarding the abandoned Benwith Asylum are untrue that I plan to spend the next cycle of the so called "Furiosus Lunam" there myself, forthwith. We shall see if I too become a "gibbering madman, unable to speak," or if perhaps you "experts" have been taken in by a tuppenny ruse, as I suspect.I cannot believe supposedly scientific minds such as your own have actually deemed to give credence to such rot. I look forward to collecting your apologies personally."

by Ryan Frazier/Kryptography

3rd Place: "Just promise me this," he said weakly, as he grabbed my hand, "you'll take care of your mother." I nodded slowly in his final moment, feeling his hand go limp within mine. I looked down to examine the small bottle of arsenic he tucked away in my palm.

by Whitney Syafoek/robotsynthesis

Congratulations to our winners and a big thank you to everyone who read, submitted, and voted! The rest of the entries can be read here

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Microfiction Contest #4

The winner for this week's Terror Tortellini microfiction contest is Jacob Greene! Congrats!

This week's theme was: "What you found in the lake"

1st Place: The damned fish didn't look too weird at first; it just felt bad, almost mushy, like it was half-rotten even though it was still jerking when I took it off the hook. When that extra eye opened near its tail, right under my thumb, I fell on my ass and threw it back hard as I could. Couldn't have washed my hands enough that night, and I kept thinking how that eye felt against my skin when it opened, and that my sister might be right about them GMOs and chemtrails that she won’t stop talking about. I tried not to think much about the line of pimples that showed up on the inside of my arm a couple days later, even when that line kept getting longer, and even though the first ones kept getting bigger. But right when they started showing up on my chest, that first one opened up, and I found out you can’t ignore those eyes—not when you can hear them speak.

by Jacob Greene

2nd Place: It was a bottle floating towards the shoreline, and he was amazed at his eyes for even spotting it in the darkness of night. It was something everyone dreams of finding at some point--a fabled message in a bottle, and here it was floating his way. He scooped it up, pulled out the cork, and dried his hands before taking the rolled up note out and holding it to the light. Beneath some unusual markings it read, "By this moment and thy symbol, chosen finder, it shall claim another." Overcome by some inner command that he could not resist, he slid the note back into the bottle, wedged the cork in, and walked with it in his hand until he disappeared under the surface.

by Atran Raikany

3rd Place: Shuffling his feet through empty beer cans and fishing gear, the man leaned over to peer at something that caught his eye. His vision blurred and blustered, protesting the very idea of focus, but eventually righted itself as usual, slowly resolving to reveal nothing save his own reflection, placid and unremarkable in the waning light of day. Somewhere in his mind he shook his head, gathered up his fishing line and bait, rowed to shore, and was halfway home with the wind whipping through the window of his pickup when a sound like dead leaves rattling around his skull snapped him back and he found he was still in that boat, eyes still wrapped around that reflection as if its tendrils had rooted themselves in his psyche, and he noticed the longer he looked the more details bloomed from his watery companion, the more life and vigor seeped into its features. He assured himself it was the shock of this fever dream that labored his breathing even as the reflection moved its arms through the water, ripples spreading and rebounding against each other but having no effect on the figure that was his reflection, its pus-yellow eyes highlighting a toothy grin. Suddenly the man felt old, rocking chair old, sitting on the porch, withered on the vine old; he shuffled his feet pitifully and then slumped over the side, arms bobbing in the water as the creature began its meal.

by Benjamin Dyer

and

"The water is so clear," Jenny said sweetly, as she placed the tips of her fingers on the surface of the lake and smiled. Her long, pale blonde hair blew in the wind and she delicately tucked it behind her ear revealing those beautiful gray eyes that became slightly bluer in the sunlight. I leaned in and kissed the small scar on her forehead--the one that she was always so self conscious about, and in a matter of seconds, she gave me a light, playful shove, causing me to tip backward into the chilly waters. I immediately panicked, not knowing how to swim, and I quickly sank to the sandy bottom, looking for something that I could pull myself up with, until I saw it--that familiar scar and long blonde hair, and behind it, fogged gray eyes surrounded by a face of rotting flesh. I screamed beneath the water until I felt a hand pull me up by my shirt, followed by that same sweet voice saying, "You're safe now."

by robotsynthesis

Thank you to everyone who participated! We had so many fantastic entries this week! You can read the rest of the submissions here.

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Alone.

When Melissa came to, the first thing she noticed was the pavement beneath her hands and legs. It was cold; it made the exposed parts of her body shiver and shake. Goosebumps rose in patches about her skin.  She opened her eyes. A dim night, with no stars in the sky-- only the clouds, and a veiled moon. She moved her fingers. Rough pavement indeed, made up of a thousand little bumps and cracks. She shifted her legs around. The freezing air enveloped them.  For a moment the darkness came to an end, and a brilliant ray of moonlight drifted over Melissa, moved on. Then, the dusk clouds returned, ensnaring the sky in a threatening whirlpool of deep grey. Somewhere, lightning flashed.  Melissa tested her nerves, shifted her fingers, her toes, her eyes, her nose, either knee. She found that her body still worked. But her mind was plagued by dread as the fog of the motionless evening filled her pores with a thin vapor, and in the distance a night train jerked and rattled along its track, passing by some place far away.  Now she cocked her head a bit, and she rotated her neck, and she looked around. Melissa was laid across a long strip of sidewalk, along an empty street, surrounded by tall buildings-- monsters that seemed to reach endlessly into the sky, made of marble, concrete, glass.  "Heh-" The first syllable of the word "hello" was all that Melissa could get out, before her voice gave way to a scratchy, wet croup. She sat up straight now, back arched, bent her head downward and coughed some more.  And it was then that Melissa's perspective began to elucidate. She looked around, and she realized that she did not know where she was. She coughed again.  "Hello?" she asked, voice clearer now, her brown hair in shambles and her body fluttering. She didn't entirely know why she was speaking, or who she was expecting to respond. Melissa rose to her feet, dusted off her arms, and then wrapped them around her chest. Although there was no breeze to be felt, an icy chill pervaded the air around her.  Everything in this dark city seemed to be paralyzed, frozen like the brisk frost that entrapped it. The walls were blank, the windows empty. Across the street, a poster hanging limply in the still air was the only detail, a dot of snow white amidst the desolate landscape. It was pressed haphazardly against one of the marble pillars that supported the entrance to a particularly nondescript building.  She crossed the street, looking, as a force of habit, to both sides. Despite its width of about fifteen feet, no traffic lines were painted along the street.  When she came to the poster, Melissa rubbed her eyes and examined it. It was complete nonsense, only a string of meaningless words along a white background. A voice whispered something in the distance.  "Help," it sighed.  She turned around. No one was there. Melissa was quiet for a moment, before asking who it was that had spoken. She announced that she didn't know where she was. That she wanted to know what street she was on. That she wanted to know the date.  There was silence for some time, maybe ten seconds, until the voice repeated itself once more.  "Help."  Melissa looked back at the poster, and saw that it had been changed. Now there was only a single word printed along its pristine background: "Help."  Rounding the corner and into the next block, Melissa saw that the same sight extended endlessly into the horizon. Vacant buildings, dead streetlights, the never-ending sidewalk. For the next hour or so, Melissa roamed the deserted alleyways, turned block after block, and each time ended up on that same, empty street.  Tears streamed from her eyes. There, among the endless concrete landscape, Melissa sobbed and fell to her knees. Where was she?  Melissa wiped her eyes along her sleeve, and she sniffled a few more times. It was then, with the silence that followed her fit, that she noticed something: a new, faint sound had risen in the air. A muted pitter-patter, just down the corner.  She got back on her feet and sprinted down the sidewalk, spun around the corner, and looked down the next street. A few buildings down, a figure skirted quickly into an alley. Melissa ran and ran.  "Who's there?" she cried, each word garbled by her panting. "Please, I just want to talk." She came to the alleyway, stopped, and gazed into its dark corridor. It was empty.  "I just want someone to talk to… please…"  Again, Melissa's eyes were clogged by tears. Then she heard it again: the pitter-patter, the light steps along the pavement.  It was coming from a small alcove that opened to the right side of the alleyway. Melissa, exhausted now, dragged her legs forward and headed for the noise. As she came closer, she heard a slight whimper squealing along with the pitter-patter.  She came to the opening and stared. Just then, a breeze started up, blowing through her hair and lifting it up in its direction. There, at the end of the little opening, a girl huddled in the corner, crying, shuffling her feet about the ground, her back turned to Melissa.  Melissa sniveled and, slowly, approached the girl.  "…Hi," said Melissa, quietly. "Who-" She cleared her throat.  "What's your name?" Melissa's voice was coarse and untrained-- it had gone a while without much use.  The girl said nothing "M-my name is Melissa," whispered Melissa. "And, I don't know where I am- or what's happening, or why everything is like this… and I just-"  She had to sniffle once more, and as she did so, heard a familiar voice: "Help," the girl said. She had stopped crying, and her feet had stopped their odd shuffle.  Melissa let out an involuntary, saddened moan, and started towards the girl.  "Of course I'll help," she sputtered out, full of confusion and fear. "I just don't want to be alone like this, not-- not right now."  She kept speaking, this time letting her nose run. "I always thought I was alone before, that I didn't need company. I always told myself that I hated people, and that I wanted it all to end. But now…" She hesitated. "Now, I know that I can't stand to be alone, and all I want is someone-" "Help," the girl said again, and turned around.  Melissa screamed and backed away, falling to the ground.  The girl's face was a mess, its skin rotted and the eyes gone, its lips pale and torn, dried blood crusted around its mouth.  "Help," the girl said again, and started to crawl toward Melissa. "Help." Melissa wailed and cried. Her throat became clogged and her breaths short. In the midst of her yells, she asked "why", over and over.  The girl came up close to Melissa and sat at her side, staring. She leaned down, her body jerking and creaking in its decayed state, and whispered in Melissa's ear: "Help me die."  Melissa let out one long, anguished howl, and the girl brought her face closer yet. It raised its hand, and pressed it against Melissa's cheek.  When she felt the girl's dried, wrinkled fingers lain across her skin, Melissa swung her fists forward, and rose to her knees, overcome by her sudden disgust. She punched and punched, until the girl's face became a pulp, until her features were indistinguishable, until Melissa's knuckles bled.  And when the girl laid across the pavement-- lifeless and static-- and Melissa could not punch anymore, the breeze came to an end, and that ray of light passed over the silent town one last time. Melissa looked up at the sky, which for a second revealed the full moon in all its brilliance, and then back down at the girl.  Disorientation clouded her mind as she beheld the girl's face, which had somehow transformed, becoming identical to Melissa's own. Before she could yell, or cry, or wipe her eyes, or ask why, Melissa collapsed to the ground, felt a deep pain surge through her head and then the rest of her body, felt her brain cave in on itself. She was alone.  The nurse hurried into the room, and saw that Melissa had flat lined. As the technicians and doctors crowded around the lifeless body, attempting to resuscitate it, the nurse thought she saw a single word spill from the girl's lips, in a dismal whisper: "Help."  But the nurse was just seeing things, she thought. Too much time on the night shift. Too many people breathing down her neck, lately. Stress. The nurse saw that she wasn't needed anymore, and she walked down the hallway and back to her desk. She wanted to be alone.

by blackmail

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Microfiction Contest #3

The winner for this week’s Terror Tortellini microfiction contest is Patricia McGregor! Congratulations!

This week’s theme was, “News style/Journalistic Style

1st Place: At exactly 12:32 AM last night, head mortician Dr. Simeon Walker claimed to have heard ear-piercing shrieks. Currently being in the crematory, he assumed that the sound was coming from another part of the morgue. Dismissing the notion, he pressed the go signal for the container to roll into the cremating machine and burn the corpse of Connor Macdonald. When he heard the sound of frantic banging and pounding against a surface, accompanied by the sound of an unknown person yelling "Help, me please! Someone get me out of here!", he realized with a start that the cadaver that had been inside the container had somehow awoken after being proclaimed dead. Walker had no control over the machine and had to endure the long minutes of Macdonald being burned alive; a warrant for his arrest is currently being processed on the charges of murder.

by Patricia McGregor

2nd Place: Glencove, PA - A four-alarm fire destroyed the historic Glencove Press building early this morning, leaving four dead, including head editor, Marcus Welby. Marcus is survived by a wife and two young children. Police suspect arson.Chief suspect...well, the chief suspect is you, isn't it, Jim, - but you already knew that when you started reading this newspaper. I'm coming to get you, and there's nothing on heaven or earth that can stop me.

by Ryan Frazier/Kryptography

3rd Place: Sources say that another man – name withheld – was also present at the scene, rocking back and forth near the disfigured body of Mr Reynolds. Reportedly, the man was found chanting that he was "the last one," and that "the prize was his."

by Cade Anslem/Klempky

A big thank you to all who participated! The other wonderful entries can be found here.

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Amabel Dufour's Letter Linked to Teen Disappearances

Ashfield, LA, Sept. 28. - Investigators believe the infamous Dufour House could be a possible link to the disappearances of four Ashfield teenagers who went missing in 2007. The four boys, aged between 13 and 16, disappeared on May 3rd and were last seen together entering Woodbrook Forest. Police received the tip when the mother of one of the boys found a thin box taped beneath a drawer containing an old, ripped piece of paper. Upon further examination, the paper was discovered to be the final piece of Amabel Dufour's letter revealing the location of her home. Cryptographers are currently trying to decipher the note. Police believe the boys were able to decode Amabel's letter and went to find the Witch of Woodbrook's home by themselves, resulting in their disappearance. The families are praying for the safe return of their children.

The legend of the Dufour House remains a mystery, but police will soon uncover whether the fabled torture chamber is merely a myth, or if its existence is real.

by robotsynthesis

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Grave Robbery Investigation Takes Unusual Turn

Ashfield, LA, Sept. 26. - In an odd turn of events, Ashfield resident Russell Sutton (44) was arrested this afternoon for digging up his 6 year old daughter's grave. The story began when police received a call from the caretaker at Ashfield Memorial Cemetery reporting that a single grave had been disturbed. Upon arriving at the scene, police discovered that the valuables were still in place, but that the actual body was missing. The story unfolded when investigators visited Sutton's house to break the news that his daughter's body had been stolen, only to find a recently used shovel and trail of dirt leading to the front door.

"He let us in like it was nothing, and there she was, just propped up on the couch like she was watching T.V.," Ashfield Parish police officer Jay Brennan told reporters.

The story takes an even more bizarre turn when police returned the body to Ashfield Memorial to find the coffin occupied by the corpse of another young girl about the same age. The identity of the body and persons involved remains unknown.

Sutton is currently undergoing several mental health examinations to see if he is competent to stand trial. His daughter was properly buried for the second, and hopefully last time.

by robotsynthesis

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Bizarre House Fire Reveals Human Remains

Ashfield, LA, Sept. 25. - A house fire was finally extinguished yesterday afternoon on the corner of Lakeside Road. The house, which has been condemned since 1987, caught fire from an unknown source early Wednesday morning and burned late into the afternoon. While searching for the origin of the fire, fire investigators called police to the scene after discovering human remains. Six partial skeletons were recovered from the debris and the remains were taken to the Ashfield Medical Examiner's Office where radiocarbon dating revealed the remnants to be over 300 years old. Forensics are currently trying to determine the identities of the bodies. Another strange detail from the house fire was that several mirrors were left standing in the rubble, completely unscathed despite their wooden frames. Firefighters and police are puzzled by this peculiar event. The fire is being investigated as arson.

The last known occupant of the house was Valeria Williams, who died in the two-story home at the age of 102.

by robotsynthesis

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Local Seamstress Arrested, Possible Occult Connection

Ashfield, LA, Sept. 24. - Local seamstress Geraldine Hull (71) is currently being detained at Ashfield Parish Prison. Hull was arrested after a customer brought a jacket to the local sheriff's department concerning a piece of skin sewn within the pocket. The customer said he only noticed the small piece of flesh after realizing his jacket pocket was damp with what resembled blood. Forensics have confirmed that the skin in question is human.

After news of Hull's arrest became public, as many as fourteen different customers have come forward revealing patches of an object resembling skin found within the pockets of their clothing.

Police have also reported that Hull has as many as 63 scars on her arms alone, along with many open lacerations. Forensics are determining if the pieces of flesh belong to the seamstress. Books concerning the occult were also found in a small box within her shop.

Hull's shop, which has been open for nearly 30 years, has been temporarily shut down pending the results of the current investigation.

by robotsynthesis

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