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Showing posts from March, 2020

The Couch Troll

The old man coughed and wheezed. His bones ached as he slowly climbed out of the flea-ridden, tattered bed. He hobbled into the living room, while holding his aching back. He moaned aloud, causing his dog, a shepherd-collie mix, to tweak his ears, but nothing more. “Ya lazy mutt.” The old man griped as he made his way to the beer and cigarette stained lazy boy. The wooden skeleton of the chair bulged through the trodden cotton, allowing the old man sturdy support as he eased down. He still couldn’t believe someone would throw out a good chair like this. Sure, it had its share of burns and a few stains, and if he wasn’t careful, he’d snag his pants or scratch himself on a few unruly wires or splinters snaking out, but other than that the chair was in great condition. “Pansy wansys wantin’ somethin’ new every time they turn around,” he grumbled to no one in particular. “That’s why everyones’ in debt up to their frigholes,” he said, while glaring at the mutt. Besides food, utility bills...

I VAMPIRE by James G. Kelly

"I feel the best way for me to get my story out is to write it down myself. I thought of hiring an interviewer, but felt the interviewer might not survive long enough to finish his assignment. You see I am a vampire, and any living human is fair game as you will soon understand. There is no sanctuary from the disease that flows through my veins. No cure can be found, and I have had the best doctors over the endless years try to heal me. Blood transfusions only make me stronger, though they do not satisfy my hunger. I have taken every medicine invented over the many hundreds of years I have existed. Nothing has worked. I would love to exist no longer, but I have not yet found a way to die. One might think that after hundreds of years I would grow cold and unfeeling to the pain and horror I have caused countless people. That is the true irony of this disease, for I do have feelings. I do not wish to kill, but I cannot resist the great hunger that compels me to feed. The only thi...

The door in the basement

That door. That dreaded door in my basement to the left of the laundry room door. My dad already tells me to never go in there, to ignore it, and he gets suspiciously nervous whenever someone brings it up. There are always sounds coming from behind it, like muffled talking, groaning, and heavy breathing, and the occasional scream. ‘You don’t want to know what’s in there’ my father would say every time me or my sister would ask what’s behind the door. We would pretend to understand, but deep down, we both knew we had to open it. And that’s just what I did. It was 12:00 at night when I decided to open it. I made sure that no one was awake, and stole the keys to the door off of dads nightstand. Thank god he is a heavy sleeper, or I would have been fucked. The basement door creaked so loud that I thought the house next door could’ve heard it, but no one woke up, so I quietly descended down the stairs and met face to face with the wooded door. I put the key in the slot and twis...

Don't you know the story of the Nightbryn?

When I was little, I often visited my grandma. She was a kind person, that always told me stories every time I came to her house which was only a few streets away from the house my family lived in. There’s one story I’ll never forget. It was a dark and stormy night. Me and my friends, all around the age of ten, decided to pull a dumb trick on our parents and sneak out in the middle of the night to play together. However, my grandmother caught us on the street and called us to come into her house. We all sat onto the floor into the living room. I remember her looking out of the window, terrified. She went to close the door as well as all windows. When she was finished, she went back into the living room. Looking at all of us, she asked: “Don’t you know the story of the Nightbryn?” Without waiting for an answer, she started to tell: “A long, long time ago, a dark force used to rule here where the village is standing. His rule ended when us humans came along and claimed this land for ...

THE CHAIR

“When my sister Betsy and I were kids, our family lived for awhile in a charming old farmhouse. We loved exploring its dusty corners and climbing the apple tree in the backyard. But our favorite thing was the ghost. We called her Mother, because she seemed so kind and nurturing. Some mornings Betsy and I would wake up, and on each of our nightstands, we’d find a cup that hadn’t been there the night before. Mother had left them there, worried that we’d get thirsty during the night. She just wanted to take care of us. Among the homes’ original furnishings was an antique wooden chair which we kept against the back wall of the living room. Whenever we were preoccupied, watching TV or playing a game, Mother would inch that chair forward, across the room, toward us. Sometimes she’d manage to move it all the way to the centre of the room. We always felt sad putting it back against the wall. Mother just wanted to be near us. Years later, long after we’d moved out, I found an old newspaper ar...