Be scared, very scared. It's here! All Hallow's Eve! Hoping everyone is having a spooky day.
Monday, October 31, 2016
Sunday, October 30, 2016
Part 2 of My Ghosts Column in Progress-Index Live Today
Part 2 of my column on the ghosts of Petersburg and the Tri-Cities, "The Civil War Still Haunts the Region," continues today in Petersburg, Virginia's Progress-Index newspaper. http://bit.ly/2f5z9hU
My Appearance at Author Night at Red Vein Haunted House Tonight
I'll be selling and signing my books and Paranormal World Seekers DVDs 7-10 p.m. tonight at Author Night at Red Vein Haunted House at the Hanover Vegetable Farm 13580 Ashland Road, Ashland, Virginia 23005.
For directions, price for the haunt if you want to do that, or anything else: http://redveinhaunt.com/
For directions, price for the haunt if you want to do that, or anything else: http://redveinhaunt.com/
Friday, October 28, 2016
Supernatural Friday: The Scarecrow Waits for You in the Cornfield-Scarecrow Myths
Scarecrows are a sign of autumn.
They maybe in the farmer’s fields all summer, but most people think of them
connected with corn stalks and pumpkins, with Halloween to Thanksgiving.
Scarecrows link to the planting and protection of crops and the changing of the
seasons. In agrarian societies, Spring was celebrated as a time of resurrection
– of life reborn after the dark winter. Sacrifice is bound up in this cycle.
Winter kills that which grows, and breeds, until it is reborn in Spring. A
description for a scarecrow: that which frightens or is intended to frighten
without doing physical harm. Literally that which - scares away crows, hence
the name scarecrow.
Scarecrows fascinate us. Daniel
Defoe is generally thought of as the first English novelist to use the term
"scarecrow", in his 1719 novel "Robinson Crusoe." Nathaniel
Hawthorne's short story "Feathertop" is about a scarecrow created and
brought to life in seventeenth century Salem, Massachusetts by a witch in
league with the devil. He is intended to be used for sinister purposes and at
first believes himself to be human, but develops human feelings and
deliberately cuts his own life short when he realizes what he really is. The
basic framework of the story was used by American dramatist Percy MacKaye in his
1908 play The Scarecrow. After all, in the Batman comics one of his
villainous adversaries is the Scarecrow! A scary scarecrow was the
center monster in Supernatural Season 1, Episode 11, entitled
“Scarecrow.” Sam and Dean Winchester travel to a small town in Indiana where
couples have gone missing the same day each year, only to discover the local
farmers are sacrificing the innocent victims in order to end a geographic
blight long cursing the region, to a Pagan God who takes the form of a
scarecrow.
The
Scarecrow is the alter ego of the Reverend Doctor Christopher Syn, the
smuggler-Robin-Hood hero in a series of novels written by Russell Thorndike.
The first book, Doctor Syn: A Tale of the Romney Marsh, was
published in 1915. The story was made into a movie (1937) and later taken up by
Disney in 1963 and dramatized for its Sunday night audience as Dr. Syn:
The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh starring Patrick McGoohan.
There are other scarecrows in film and TV shows. ‘The Wizard
of Oz’: not a horror film, but more fantasy. This film features a talking
scarecrow who sings "If I Only had a Brain".
‘The
Wickerman is a chilling 1973 horror movie in which a policeman travels to a
Hebridean island to investigate the disappearance of a young girl. Instead he
finds a neo-pagan cult who demand a sacrifice each year – someone they burn
inside a giant wicker figure. There’s a remake to this cult classic.
‘Children
of the Corn’ is another. A young couple stumble onto a town of creepy children
and “He Who Walks Behind the Rows”.
Doctor
Who has an episode “Family of Blood,” where formless aliens control an animate
army of scarecrows. When the Doctor finally defeats them, he traps one of them
inside the form of a scarecrow.
Back
in ancient Greece, wooden statues were placed in the fields, carved to
represent Priapus. Although he was the son of Aphrodite, Priapus was hideously
ugly. His most prominent feature was his constant and huge erection. Birds
tended to avoid fields where Priapus resided, so as Greek influence spread into
Roman territory, Roman farmers adopted the practice.
Different
kinds of scarecrows were used in pre-feudal Japanese rice fields. The most
popular one was the kakashi. Farmers used old dirty rags and noisemakers like
bells and sticks mounted on a pole in the field and lit it all on fire. The
flames—and no doubt, the smell—kept birds and other animals away from the rice
fields. Of course, the word kakashi meant "something
stinky." Over time, Japanese farmers began making scarecrows
that looked like people in raincoats and hats. These scarecrows were equipped
with weaponry to make them look even more frightening. In Kojiki,
the oldest surviving book in Japan (compiled in the year 712), a scarecrow
known as Kuebiko appears as a deity who cannot walk, yet knows everything about
the world.
The Middle Ages in Britain and Europe had small
children to scare of the crows. They would run around in the fields, clapping
blocks of wood together to frighten away birds that might eat the grain. As the
medieval period wound down and populations decreased due to plague, farmers
discovered there was a shortage of spare children to shoo birds away. In medieval
England, farmers secured animal skulls to posts in order to frighten away birds
and other animals from the crops. But before long, those in Britain and
Europe took to stuffing old clothes with straw, placed a turnip or gourd up on
top, and mounted the figure in the fields. They soon realized these lifelike
guardians did a pretty good job of keeping crows away.
The scarecrow took care of the crops. His
size corresponded to the height of the cornfield and it was coated with
wax from nine beehives. A witch doctor placed the eyes, which are two
beans; the teeth are maize and nails made of white beans; he is dressed in
“holoch” (corn husks). Each time the witch places one of these elements on
the scarecrow, he calls to the four winds to protect the corn.
Scarecrows came to North America
with European emigrants. German settlers in Pennsylvania brought with them
the bootzamon—bogeyman—which stood guard over the fields. A female
counterpart would be added to the opposite end of the field or orchard
sometimes. In the southern Appalachians, another common method of scaring off
crows was use of a dead crow hung upside down from a pole.
Mayan Scarecrow Myth:
The scarecrow is presented to the Sun God and given as an offering to the Rain God. Fragrant herbs and anise are burned, and the sacred fire is kept burning for about an hour. Meanwhile, the witch doctor distributes “balché” to the witnesses, which is a very intoxicating liquor, so that the humans won’t be aware when the gods come down to earth. The ceremony should take place when the sun is in the middle of the sky. At that hour, the witch doctor makes a wound on the little finger of the owner of the cornfield, then squeezes out nine drops of blood into a hole in the right hand of the scarecrow; this hole reaches to the elbow.
The witch doctor closes the hole in the scarecrow's hand and in a peremptory voice commands: "Today your life begins. This man (pointing to the owner) is your lord and master. Obedience, scarecrow, obedience ... may the gods punish you if you fail. The cornfield is yours. You must punish the intruder and the thief. Here's your weapon." At this moment he places a rock in the right hand of the scarecrow.
The scarecrow is presented to the Sun God and given as an offering to the Rain God. Fragrant herbs and anise are burned, and the sacred fire is kept burning for about an hour. Meanwhile, the witch doctor distributes “balché” to the witnesses, which is a very intoxicating liquor, so that the humans won’t be aware when the gods come down to earth. The ceremony should take place when the sun is in the middle of the sky. At that hour, the witch doctor makes a wound on the little finger of the owner of the cornfield, then squeezes out nine drops of blood into a hole in the right hand of the scarecrow; this hole reaches to the elbow.
The witch doctor closes the hole in the scarecrow's hand and in a peremptory voice commands: "Today your life begins. This man (pointing to the owner) is your lord and master. Obedience, scarecrow, obedience ... may the gods punish you if you fail. The cornfield is yours. You must punish the intruder and the thief. Here's your weapon." At this moment he places a rock in the right hand of the scarecrow.
During the burning and the growth of the cornfield, the scarecrow is covered with guano palm, but when the fruit starts to emerge, he is uncovered.
The people say that if a
thief or mischief-maker tries to steal the crops, he is stoned to death.
Therefore, in the cornfields where scarecrows stand guard, nothing is ever
stolen. After the harvest, a
“hanincol” (meal in the cornfield) is served in honor of the scarecrow. After
the ceremony, wax scarecrow is melted and the wax is used to make candles,
which are burned in the pagan and Christian altars.
Next time, you drive past
a field and see a scarecrow, think. Are they truly scary, or is it all bad
press?
Sunday, October 23, 2016
Part One of My Column, Many Haunts of Petersburg in Newspaper Today
My column on the many haunts of Petersburg is in Petersburg, Virginia's Progress-Index today! This is Part One. Part Two will be in the paper and at their online website next Sunday, October 30th. The Many Haunts of Petersburg
Friday, October 21, 2016
Supernatural Friday: All Hallows Eve
Eleven days till All Hallows Eve, or
Halloween.
What is it about? How did it get
started? There must be more about it than just a reason for candy, scary movies
and scary books. After all, my ghost books and horror fiction sell all year
long.
It all started with a Celtic
festival called Samhain (pronounced sow in or sow an), and even a
Christian one called All Soul's Day (November 1st). Though some folklorists
claim that it goes farther back to a Roman feast of Pomona, goddess of seeds
and fruits, or even to a festival of the dead, Parentalia. The Celts on Samhain
built bonfires on All Hallows Eve, where they burned animals and crops as
sacrifices to Celtic deities.
The Celts believed that the veil
between the mortal world and the spirit world was thinnest on this one day of
the year. That spirits, demons, monsters, and other frightful beings, could
enter more easily. Harmless ghosts of ancestors were made welcome by family,
while those who meant harm to mortals were warded off.
No doubt this was how the wearing of
masks and costumes came about. Someone wanted to get home, or go to a friend's
or relative's. They would wear a costume and mask looking like a dark spirit,
so that they would be left alone. Over time this changed to people wearing
costumes going from door to door in medieval times, this called souling. And
centuries later, it became children going from door-to-door, trick-or-treating
for candy.
Trick-Or-Treat did not come about
officially until possibly the late 20s through 40s. Before that there was
vandalism done by kids. Adults wanted a way to stop this, so they thought up an
idea of children being allowed to trick or treat, earning candy for their bags
at each home. To the joy of retailers who sell candy, this has become a
tradition since the 50s. Americans spend 6.9 million on candy each Halloween,
making it the second largest commercial holiday.
Today, it is more than just a kids'
day of fun, even adults have joined in. Why not?
Just beware of when you go out that
night. After all, the worlds of the living and the dead are blurred this very
day. And that partner you're
dancing with just might not be human.... or alive!
And now a chapter from my collection
of spooky short stories, Spectre Nightmares
and Visitations. This a story set on Halloween. The story is copyrighted,
and if you want to read the rest of the stories in the book, you can buy the
paperback and the eBook at GenreConnections.com.
The House on Green Street
By
Pamela K. Kinney
It was a very cool, breezy night, the crescent moon hovering
high in the black sky like some malefic spirit ready to do mischief. Children
dressed in costumes of assorted themes ran up to doors, pausing to ring
doorbells, and yelling, “Trick or treat!” in high-pitched, demanding voices.
Jack-o-lanterns, flickering with bright light, sat on door steps or in windows,
lending a cheerful context to the night of Halloween.
But my cousin, Jim and I only paused for a moment to savor
these special sights and sounds of Samhain. We trudged up to a small apartment
complex on Green Street where our friends, the Collinfines, lived. Next door to
the complex was an old house, empty for years and reputedly haunted. Normally a
scabby sore on the upscale street, tonight, it added to the Halloween
atmosphere.
Inside the apartment, we found a loud boisterous party, with
people dressed in grownup versions of the costumes of the children outside in
the night. In one corner some bobbed for apples in a tub of water, while others
were lodged firmly in front of a large 53-inch television, watching the movie
“Halloween”. Others just sat around, munching on party food and
gossiping.
Jim, dressed as Count Dracula, tried to put the bite on a
pretty red-headed that was my function for the party, fortune telling, along
with telling ghostly tales. Spying an empty spot, I set up shop at the coffee
table in front of the big blue couch and sat down.
Someone turned off the TV set and the place grew quiet as
people began to gather around me. I spent the next hour telling fortunes. When
everyone who wanted had their fortunes told, I began to relate some scary ghost
stories. It was after I had just finished the story of a haunted room in an inn
where that no one could ever spend an entire night in and live that a tall
dark-haired man in the back of the room spoke up.
“Do you believe in ghosts?”
Someone turned off the TV set and the place grew quiet as
people began to gather around me. I spent the next hour telling fortunes. When
everyone who wanted had their fortunes told, I began to relate some scary ghost
stories. It was after I had just finished the story of a haunted room in an inn
where that no one could ever spend an entire night in and live that a tall
dark-haired man in the back of the room spoke up.
“Do you believe in ghosts?”
I eyed him, weighing the question carefully, and then
answered him. “No. I believe that all things like ghosts can be explained
scientifically, if given time to figure out what is causing the phenomenon.”
Then with a shock I noticed his eyes for the first time.
They gleamed blood-red in the black light, which made the Halloween decorations
glow in the room. He smiled, but it looked more like a grimace, and I saw
sharp, razor-like fangs gleaming between his parted lips. Then I remembered
that it was a Halloween party and that what he was wearing was only a costume,
frighteningly lifelike. A very effective costume, nevertheless. He walked
toward me like a wolf or large panther stalking their prey. A few chills ran up
my spine. Others must have felt the same, for they parted like the Red Sea,
letting him through and not allowing even the ends of his black cloak to touch
them.
He stood in front of the coffee table and stared down at me.
Feelings of uneasiness swirled inside me. Something about him bothered me. I
wanted to jump up and run away from him, but I forced myself to stay put.
Bending down, he placed one large hairy hand, with fingers
tipped with sharp fingernails, down flat upon the shiny surface of the coffee
table.
“Well, I have just the bet for you,” he said.
His voice raised the hairs on the back of my neck.
“What’s that?” I asked, staring unflinchingly into his
bizarre eyes, determined not to show any fear.
His smile grew more feral. “Why, there’s a supposedly
haunted house next door. I say that if you stay the whole night there and
returned here in the morning—unharmed—you will have proven to me that your
theory about ghosts not really existing is true. Do you accept, Miss Jenner?”
I paused, wondering how he knew my name and reflecting on
his strange request. “What’s wrong with the place next door? Do people go into
it at night and disappear or something?”
His eyes lit up. “Why don’t you stay there and find out?”
Indecision filled me, until I heard the whispered murmurs
reaching my ears, whispers that I was a coward. Throwing caution to the winds I
stood up and said, “Oh, all right. But who’s going with me?” I heard the edge
of false courage lining my voice.
Jim, a glass of wine in hand, spoke up. “I will, Leslie.”
He looked like he had been drinking pretty good for
some time now, and I didn’t think that he would make the perfect companion for
ghost hunting, but as no one else volunteered, I accepted his help. He turned
and gave a sloppy grin to the redhead he had been fawning over since we
arrived. No doubt he was doing this not because he wanted to back me up, but
more to impress her. It seemed to work, as she simpered up at him, a silly look
on her face.
Jim, a lurch of drunkenness in his step, and I left the
party and headed over to the house next door. An old dilapidated place, it
looked like it once had been a lovely shade of blue, but had faded to a dirty
gray, flaking in places. Armed with only a couple of flashlights and blankets
to keep out the cold, we stood before it and stared up at a broken brown porch
covered in shadows of the night.
I aimed my flashlight and in the light, discovered the door,
ajar.
Apparently kids or someone had broken in before, making it
easy for us to get inside.
We picked our way through the debris on the porch (Jim
actually blundered through the mess) and entered the house through the
black-as-pitch doorway.
We found ourselves in a large room, empty of furniture and
life, filled with debris, and there was a curious mold on the fading wallpaper
covering the walls. Jim, not too steady on his feet, fell down onto his rump
with an oath and slipped into a loud snoring as he went into a drunken
sleep.
I covered him with his blanket and left him there as I
decided to go ahead and explore the place. I peered closely at the mold, but
decided it was better left alone, and passed through an open doorway into what
once had to have been the kitchen.
I rifled through the cabinets while watching out for brown
recluse spiders and rats when I heard a racket coming from back where I had
left Jim. It had to be him, and I heard him stumble up the stairs to the second
floor above. His clumsy feet banged around up there, and then suddenly, grew
silent.
I raced back to the living room and called up the stairs.
“Jim! Are you okay?”
Total silence. Worried that he had hurt himself, I ascended
the stairs. I searched all the rooms on the second floor, but couldn’t find
him, injured or otherwise. I worried, knowing he was too drunk to slip away and
hide, playing a joke on me. I kept calling his name but didn’t get a response.
The silence felt creepy to me.
A loud bang came from the ceiling above me.
“Jim!” I called out.
Loud footsteps erupted. Following the sounds to the end of
the dark hall, I discovered steps that lead upwards, to the attic, I supposed.
Slowly I climbed them, angry. Here I thought Jim was hurt when all the time he
was up in the attic, fumbling around, safe and unharmed.
Just you wait, Jim Conners.
I halted at a closed door and pushed it open, entering. The
room was pitch black and freezing cold. The door slammed shut with a loud bang,
locking me in.
I cussed Jim out for making me even come in here when, with
a swish of air, something slapped the flashlight out of my hand and sent it
clattering into some far, dark corner. Even though I couldn’t see who, or what,
did that, I figured it had been Jim, who wasn’t as drunk as I thought.
“Jim, that’s not funny. When we get out of here, I promise
you’re going to be sorry.” But he didn’t answer me, and I forged more deeply
into the attic, slapping at unseen cobwebs. I kept calling, receiving nothing
but silence and I grew angrier by the minute. I now felt that Jim, some people
at the party, and that horrible man had conspired to pull a stupid prank on me.
This joke had gone on long enough.
“Okay, Jim, you guys have had your little joke. Now please,
unlock the attic door and let’s get back to the party,” I said, trying to cool
down. “You want to know something? I’m still not even the tiniest bit
frightened. Angry, yes, scared, no.”
“Not frightened, Miss Jenner, but oh, you soon will be.”
The whisper breathed like a slight breeze into my ear. I
turned my head to the right and saw the dark-haired man with the reddish eyes
standing by my side, a green glow surrounding him. He had a nasty, feral smile
plastered on his face.
“How did you get in here? We left you at the party.” I
shivered, but not due to the increasing drop in the temperature, which had
grown worse since he had appeared.
He snickered like some demented child.
“Did you, my dear? I decided to help you really celebrate
Halloween, in a very special way.”
“Where’s Jim?” I asked, my voice squeaking higher in pitch.
“Why, he’s here with us . . . forever. As soon you will be,
of course.”
He pointed to a corner in the room. Jim lay there on his
back on the floor, encased in a greenish glow. At first I thought he was just
unconscious, but then I saw the slit under his chin, a red liquid trickling
down from it.
My God, the creep had murdered Jim.
Frightened, I backed away, groping behind me for the locked
attic door as I kept my eyes on the crazy person in the place with me. My
fingertips touched the splintered wood of the door and with one hand; I grasped
the door knob and tried to open it. But it stayed locked, steadfast. The man
and his strange light vanished just then, leaving me alone in the dark. My
heart thudding painfully and with the metallic taste of fear in my mouth, I
whirled around and began pounding and kicking at the door.
I broke off when I heard a familiar ghastly whisper in my
ear. “Now you will be part of the house on Green Street. Forever—”
I screamed.
****
Excuse
me, but I have to go. However, I do have final proof that ghosts really do
exist, because, now, I’m one of them, a part of the house on Green Street.
Forever.
Friday, October 14, 2016
Supernatural Friday: Ten Scary Reads for October
You can read good, scary dark
fantasy and horror fiction all year long. There are no set rules that you should read it only during autumn. But with pumpkins stocked in piles at the grocery stores and Halloween
decorations and candy fighting for space on shelves, there’s something about
reading a few spooky novels, nonfiction ghost books, and terrifying short stories this time of the year. Though there is plenty of good reads out there, here's ten to get you
started.
The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson: This is the only book I read in my
life that one scene out of it scared the bejesus out of me, while I was in a
classroom full of students in 8th grade.
Blurb: It is the story of four seekers who arrive at a notoriously
unfriendly pile called Hill House: Dr. Montague, an occult scholar looking for
solid evidence of a "haunting"; Theodora, his lighthearted assistant;
Eleanor, a friendless, fragile young woman well acquainted with poltergeists;
and Luke, the future heir of Hill House. At first, their stay seems destined to
be merely a spooky encounter with inexplicable phenomena. But Hill House is
gathering its powers—and soon it will choose one of them to make its own.
It by
Stephen King: This and his other book, Salem’s Lot, scared me while
reading alone at night. Blurb: They were just kids when they stumbled upon the
horror within their hometown. Now, as adults, none of them can withstand the
force that has drawn them all back to Derry, Maine, to face the nightmare
without end, and the evil without a name.
Ask the Bones: Scary Stories from
Around the World, edited by Arielle
North Olson and Howard Schwartz: There’s something about folklore. Blurb: What
is real and what is imaginary? Do evil creatures lurk in the shadows? Do demons
attack the helpless? Are there such things as invisible men? For generations,
storytellers have given substance to our worst fears. In Ask the Bones, master
storytellers Arielle North Olson and Howard Schwartz retell a varied selection
of the world's most frightening folktales. Be warned-these stories could scare
you to death!
Seed by Ania Ahlborn: Blurb: With nothing but the clothes on his
back—and something horrific snapping at his heels—Jack Winter fled his rural
Georgia home when he was still just a boy. Watching the world he knew vanish in
a trucker’s rearview mirror, he thought he was leaving an unspeakable nightmare
behind forever. But years later, the bright new future he’s built suddenly
turns pitch black, as something fiendishly familiar looms dead ahead. When
Jack, his wife Aimee, and their two small children survive a violent car crash,
it seems like a miracle. But Jack knows what he saw on the road that night, and
it wasn’t divine intervention. The profound evil from his past won’t let them
die…at least not quickly. It’s back, and it’s hungry; ready to make Jack pay
for running, to work its malignant magic on his angelic youngest daughter, and
to whisper a chilling promise: I’ve always been here, and I’ll never
leave.Country comfort is no match for spine-tingling Southern gothic
suspense in Ania Ahlborn’s tale of an ordinary man with a demon on his back. Seed plants
its page-turning terror deep in your soul, and lets it grow wild.
The
Haunted by Bentley Little: Blurb: The
Perry family's new house is perfect-except for the weird behavior of the
neighbors, and that odd smell coming from a dark corner in the basement. Pity
no one warned the family about the house. Now it's too late. Because the darkness
at the bottom of the basement stairs is rising.
Hell House by Richard Matheson: Blurb: Rolf
Rudolph Deutsch is going die. But when
Deutsch, a wealthy magazine and newspaper publisher, starts thinking seriously about his impending death,
he offers to pay a physicist and two mediums, one physical and one mental,
$100,000 each to establish the facts of life after death.
Dr.
Lionel Barrett, the physicist, accompanied by the mediums, travel to the
Belasco House in Maine, which has been abandoned and sealed since 1949 after a
decade of drug addiction, alcoholism, and debauchery. For one night, Barrett
and his colleagues investigate the Belasco House and learn exactly why the townsfolks refer to it as the Hell House.
The
Manor by Scott Nicholson: Blurb:
Ephram Korban was an admirer of the human creative spirit, dedicated to
collecting art in its many forms--literature, photography, painting, and
sculpture--before he took his own life. Nestled in the heart of the Appalachian
Mountains stands the home he built as a retreat for artists to hone their
craft, perfect their skills...perhaps even produce a masterpiece. Isolated from
the outside world in the electricity-free mansion, artists gather to court
their muses for six weeks, undisturbed. Anna Galloway has no interest in art
and even less in the people who produce it. Her sensibilities are more in tune
with the realm beyond the physical, where the souls of the deceased reside and
visions reveal secrets. She has included herself among the elite artistes in
residence at Korban's retreat because she has seen the manor in her dreams--and
believes Korban's ghost may be wandering its halls. Now, a blue
moon is on the rise in October, opening magical pathways to conjure up
something unimaginable. Something feeding off the energies of those in the
house. Something seeking everlasting life--at any cost.
Complete
Stories and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe by
Edgar Allan Poe: You can’t go through October without reading Poe.
H.
P. Lovecraft: Complete Fiction by
H. P. Lovecraft: While Poe writes about terrors of the mind, Lovecraft brings
us the physical monsters.
Something Wicked This Way Comes by
Ray Bradbury: Only Bradbury can write tales of the October Country so well, and
this novel is one of his best dark fantasies. Read the book, then rent the
movie based on it—it will get you in the Halloween mood. Blurb: A
carnival rolls in sometime after the midnight hour on a chill Midwestern
October eve, ushering in Halloween a week before its time. A calliope's shrill
siren song beckons to all with a seductive promise of dreams and youth
regained. In this season of dying, Cooger & Dark's Pandemonium Shadow Show
has come to Green Town, Illinois, to destroy every life touched by its strange
and sinister mystery. And two inquisitive boys standing precariously on the
brink of adulthood will soon discover the secret of the satanic rare-show's
smoke, mazes, and mirrors, as they learn all too well the heavy cost of wishes
-- and the stuff of nightmare.
Want more scary reads? Check out my collection
of short dark fantasy and horror stories, Spectre Nightmares and
Visitations, published by Under the Moon. It is available both in print and
as an eBook at Under the Moon estore and in print only at Amazon. And a couple of weeks ago, I left a couple of signed copies at Books, Beads and More in Mechanicsville, Virginia. For their address and phone number go to their website/. Call before going to make sure the copies are still there.
Book Blurb:
Many things scare
us. But the most fearful things are those that infect our nightmares and
visitations. Monsters from the closet or from another planet. Ghosts that haunt
more than a house. Werewolves are not the only shapeshifters to beware of. Children
can be taken from more than the human kind of monsters. Even normal things can
be the start of a heart-pounding terror. Prepare to step beyond the pages of
Spectre Nightmares and Visitations.
Just tell yourself that they're only stories.
Just tell yourself that they're only stories.
The "House on Green
Street" chapter from Spectre
Nightmares and Visitations.
It was a very cool, breezy night, the
crescent moon hovering high in the black sky like some malefic spirit ready to
do mischief. Children dressed in costumes of assorted themes ran up to doors,
pausing to ring doorbells, and yelling, “Trick or treat!” in high-pitched,
demanding voices. Jack-o-lanterns, flickering with bright light, sat on door
steps or in windows, lending a cheerful context to the night of Halloween.
But my cousin, Jim and I only paused for a
moment to savor these special sights and sounds of Samhain. We trudged up to a
small apartment complex on Green Street where our friends, the Collinfines,
lived. Next door to the complex was an old house, empty for years and reputedly
haunted. Normally a scabby sore on the upscale street, tonight, it added to the
Halloween atmosphere.
Inside the apartment, we found a loud
boisterous party, with people dressed in grownup versions of the costumes of
the children outside in the night. In one corner some bobbed for apples in a
tub of water, while others were lodged firmly in front of a large 53-inch
television, watching the movie “Halloween”. Others just sat around, munching on
party food and gossiping.
Jim, dressed as
Count Dracula, tried to put the bite on a pretty red-headed woman dressed as an
angel. As for me, I came dressed as a gypsy fortuneteller and that was my
function for the party, fortune telling, along with telling ghostly tales.
Spying an empty spot, I set up shop at the coffee table in front of the big
blue couch and sat down.
Someone turned off the TV set and the
place grew quiet as people began to gather around me. I spent the next hour
telling fortunes. When everyone who wanted had their fortunes told, I began to
relate some scary ghost stories. It was after I had just finished the story of
a haunted room in an inn where that no one could ever spend an entire night in
and live that a tall dark-haired man in the back of the room spoke up.
“Do you believe in ghosts?”
I eyed him, weighing the question
carefully, and then answered him. “No. I believe that all things like ghosts
can be explained scientifically, if given time to figure out what is causing
the phenomenon.”
Then with a shock I noticed his eyes for
the first time. They gleamed blood-red in the black light, which made the
Halloween decorations glow in the room. He smiled, but it looked more like a
grimace, and I saw sharp, razor-like fangs gleaming between his parted lips.
Then I remembered that it was a Halloween party and that what he was wearing
was only a costume, frighteningly lifelike. A very effective costume,
nevertheless. He walked toward me like a wolf or large panther stalking their
prey. A few chills ran up my spine. Others must have felt the same, for they
parted like the Red Sea, letting him through and not allowing even the ends of
his black cloak to touch them.
He stood in front
of the coffee table and stared down at me. Feelings of uneasiness swirled
inside me. Something about him bothered me. I wanted to jump up and run away
from him, but I forced myself to stay put.
Bending down, he placed one large hairy
hand, with fingers tipped with sharp fingernails, down flat upon the shiny
surface of the coffee table.
“Well, I have just the bet for you,” he
said.
His voice raised the hairs on the back of
my neck.
“What’s that?” I asked, staring
unflinchingly into his bizarre eyes, determined not to show any fear.
His smile grew more feral. “Why, there’s a
supposedly haunted house next door. I say that if you stay the whole night
there and returned here in the morning—unharmed—you will have proven to me that
your theory about ghosts not really existing is true. Do you accept, Miss
Jenner?”
I paused, wondering how he knew my name
and reflecting on his strange request. “What’s wrong with the place next door?
Do people go into it at night and disappear or something?”
His eyes lit up. “Why don’t you stay there
and find out?”
Indecision filled me, until I heard the
whispered murmurs reaching my ears, whispers that I was a coward. Throwing
caution to the winds I stood up and said, “Oh, all right. But who’s going with
me?” I heard the edge of false courage lining my voice.
Jim, a glass of wine in hand, spoke up. “I
will, Leslie.”
He looked like he
had been drinking pretty good for some time now, and I didn’t think that he
would make the perfect companion for ghost hunting, but as no one else
volunteered, I accepted his help. He turned and gave a sloppy grin to the
redhead he had been fawning over since we arrived. No doubt he was doing this
not because he wanted to back me up, but more to impress her. It seemed to
work, as she simpered up at him, a silly look on her face.
Jim, a lurch of drunkenness in his step,
and I left the party and headed over to the house next door. An old dilapidated
place, it looked like it once had been a lovely shade of blue, but had faded to
a dirty gray, flaking in places. Armed with only a couple of flashlights and
blankets to keep out the cold, we stood before it and stared up at a broken
brown porch covered in shadows of the night.
I aimed my flashlight and in the light,
discovered the door, ajar.
Apparently kids or someone had broken in
before, making it easy for us to get inside.
We picked our way through the debris on
the porch (Jim actually blundered through the mess) and entered the house
through the black-as-pitch doorway.
We found ourselves in a large room, empty
of furniture and life, filled with debris, and there was a curious mold on the
fading wallpaper covering the walls. Jim, not too steady on his feet, fell down
onto his rump with an oath and slipped into a loud snoring as he went into a
drunken sleep. 70
I covered him with
his blanket and left him there as I decided to go ahead and explore the place.
I peered closely at the mold, but decided it was better left alone, and passed
through an open doorway into what once had to have been the kitchen.
I rifled through the cabinets while
watching out for brown recluse spiders and rats when I heard a racket coming
from back where I had left Jim. It had to be him, and I heard him stumble up
the stairs to the second floor above. His clumsy feet banged around up there,
and then suddenly, grew silent.
I raced back to the living room and called
up the stairs. “Jim! Are you okay?”
Total silence. Worried that he had hurt
himself, I ascended the stairs. I searched all the rooms on the second floor,
but couldn’t find him, injured or otherwise. I worried, knowing he was too
drunk to slip away and hide, playing a joke on me. I kept calling his name but
didn’t get a response. The silence felt creepy to me.
A loud bang came from the ceiling above
me.
“Jim!” I called out.
Loud footsteps erupted. Following the
sounds to the end of the dark hall, I discovered steps that lead upwards, to
the attic, I supposed. Slowly I climbed them, angry. Here I thought Jim was
hurt when all the time he was up in the attic, fumbling around, safe and
unharmed.
Just you wait, Jim Conners.
I halted at a closed door and pushed it
open, entering. The room was pitch black and freezing cold. The door slammed
shut with a loud bang, locking me in. 71
I cussed Jim out
for making me even come in here when, with a swish of air, something slapped
the flashlight out of my hand and sent it clattering into some far, dark
corner. Even though I couldn’t see who, or what, did that, I figured it had
been Jim, who wasn’t as drunk as I thought.
“Jim, that’s not funny. When we get out of
here, I promise you’re going to be sorry.” But he didn’t answer me, and I forged
more deeply into the attic, slapping at unseen cobwebs. I kept calling,
receiving nothing but silence and I grew angrier by the minute. I now felt that
Jim, some people at the party, and that horrible man had conspired to pull a
stupid prank on me. This joke had gone on long enough.
“Okay, Jim, you guys have had your little
joke. Now please, unlock the attic door and let’s get back to the party,” I
said, trying to cool down. “You want to know something? I’m still not even the
tiniest bit frightened. Angry, yes, scared, no.”
“Not frightened, Miss Jenner, but oh, you
soon will be.”
The whisper breathed like a slight breeze
into my ear. I turned my head to the right and saw the dark-haired man with the
reddish eyes standing by my side, a green glow surrounding him. He had a nasty,
feral smile plastered on his face.
“How did you get in here? We left you at
the party.” I shivered, but not due to the increasing drop in the temperature,
which had grown worse since he had appeared. 72
He snickered like
some demented child.
“Did you, my dear? I decided to help you
really celebrate Halloween, in a very special way.”
“Where’s Jim?” I asked, my voice squeaking
higher in pitch.
“Why, he’s here with us . . . forever. As
soon you will be, of course.”
He pointed to a corner in the room. Jim
lay there on his back on the floor, encased in a greenish glow. At first I
thought he was just unconscious, but then I saw the slit under his chin, a red
liquid trickling down from it.
My God, the creep had murdered Jim.
Frightened, I backed away, groping behind
me for the locked attic door as I kept my eyes on the crazy person in the place
with me. My fingertips touched the splintered wood of the door and with one
hand; I grasped the door knob and tried to open it. But it stayed locked,
steadfast. The man and his strange light vanished just then, leaving me alone
in the dark. My heart thudding painfully and with the metallic taste of fear in
my mouth, I whirled around and began pounding and kicking at the door.
I broke off when I heard a familiar
ghastly whisper in my ear. “Now you will be part of the house on Green Street.
Forever—”
I screamed.
****
Excuse
me, but I have to go. However, I do have final proof that ghosts really do
exist, because, now, I’m one of them, a part of the house on Green Street.
Forever.