%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{ AYBraham} {\em artwork by Discount_Bees} As referred to in the epic Horrors by Ben Biddick thread, this thread is to serve as a Creative Writing contest for all goons. Your goal: Write a short story in the theme of Horrors, the collection of short stories written by Mr. Ben Beddick when he was 13 years old. Each story is encouraged to feature the tragic protagonist Luke Bavarius, and must be more than 500 words each. Each story must show that ``kids need to be respected and listened to.'' Your Judge: Mr. Ben Biddick himself. He's currently serving overseas in the Military, so the entries will be judged at his convenience. Prizes: First Place: Full account upgrades (Platinum, No Ads, Archives, and an Avatar Upgrade), a coupon to change any other user's avatar, {\bf and an autographed copy of Horrors.} Second Place: Full account upgrades (Platinum, No Ads, Archives, and an Avatar Upgrade). Third Place: One account upgrade of the winner's choice (Plat, No Ads, Archives, or an Avatar Upgrade). In addition, if Ben so chooses, the worst entry will subjected to a very, very malicious account name change & avatar change that can never be changed so as long as you are on the forums, unless I so deem it acceptable. Contest ends July 6th, 2009. Take your time with the entries. Commence with the brutality! %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Mr. Bad Guy} Gonna deliver some pain at 55mph up in this bitch. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Batmanuel} {\bf The Stranger. Bavarious.} {\bf FOR MATURE READERS ONLY} ``Whiskey.'' The stranger sat hunched over in the dark corner of the bar. I would have missed him if it weren't for my curiosity and his harsh cigarette tinged voice. I sat the glass down, opened the bottle and poured. ``Leave the bottle.'' ``What's troubling you, Mack?'' I asked as I pulled my hand away from the bottle. He didn't look up. I tended to pry, but I got the feeling that this guy wasn't someone to fuck with. Minutes passed and I forgot all about this stranger. Smoke hung aimlessly in the air as someone busted out a trick shot in the billiards game on the other side of the dark tavern. Maybe a fight would break out. The regulars hate it when new people come in with that slick shit. Almost right on cue, Jimmy Dean, a hulk of a man, grabbed the trick shot artist around the neck and slammed his face on to the table. This collision proved hard enough to send the balls rolling in every direction. In practically the same breath, the guy was thrown out onto the pavement. I let this shit happen. No cops. Justice prevails and everything returns to a despairing level of normality. I turn my attention back to the stranger only to find him gone and a fifty dollar gold coin on the bar. Under the coin was a business card with one word on it: Bavarious. How I missed a man dressed in all black, wearing a knee length black leather trench coat duster, walk right out the door is beyond me. He had to have crossed right in front of my field of vision, but I must have been too distracted by the fight to notice him leave. Whatever. I couldn't sleep that night. A feeling of uneasiness stuck with me after my brief encounter with the stranger. He just wanted a drink, right, lots of people do that, nothing weird about them. All I could think of was his name. Bavarious. What did it mean? The next day, I enter the shit hole and take over for the night. I expect much of the same. The regulars were already there and most likely drunk. The stale air welcomed me as I pushed through the wooden doors of the tavern. I felt a chill rush down my spine as I looked towards the end of the bar. I didn't even make it behind the bar before I heard a familiar voice that would remind me of exactly why I could not sleep. ``Whiskey.'' Fuck. The stranger sat in the exact same spot. `Same shit, different night' I thought to myself. As if he didn't remember the minute details from the night before, his grizzled voice said, ``Leave the bottle.'' ``So, are you drowning your sorrows away?'' I tended to pry. He didn't look up, so I turned back to cleaning a yellow beer stained mug. My mind wandered and I began to picture a lost love. For some reason, I came to the conclusion that he fit the motif of a heartbroken pathetic being taking everything he did wrong out on himself. After this, he's probably going to the nearest bridge and tease ending it all by dangling one foot over the railing. Pathetic bitches never actually jump since they're always back the next day drinking the same drink. If not the bridge, he'll probably stare down the cold steel barrel of a Beretta. Visions of my ideal womanly being played in my head and I wanted to join him in downing the fuel of the unwanted. The poor bastard losing the dark haired, tan skinned, beauty running through a meadow on a sunny day, must be hell. I snapped back to reality, shook my head and spun around towards this guy with another bottle of whiskey. Almost exactly like the night before, I fail to see him leave and I'm left to wonder why he leaves the coin. One fucking tip. ``Hey Marv, did you see that cowboy looking son of a bitch leave?'' Marv, the rat-faced bug-eyed shrew of a motherfucker, shook his head with a look of confusion. I didn't look too much into it, as the smoke hovering in the air tends to get to my head. Unlike the night before, I was able to thwart any thoughts on the guy. I mean, I was never the obsessive little bitch type. I tended to pry, but that was part of the job title. I had to talk to these characters while they drank the night away. These nights always seem to run together. The same rituals repeat themselves. The same poor saps gather in this shit hole. The same rain falls outside. Jimmy and his gang exchange the same stories. The same game of pool is played. The same fight breaks out. The same song plays on the jukebox in the corner. The same `out of service' sign hangs on the bathroom door. The same tourist loses a wheel on the same pothole and drags his scared wife who'd much rather stay in the car inside to use our phone. The same poor fools come and go like fucking clockwork. I can't complain. Every night for the past week, the Stranger sat in the same stool under the same shadow, said the same four words, drank the same whiskey, left the same goddamn coin and vanished the same way. If it weren't for the same bad vibes that surrounded him, I would not have even noticed him. I still have trouble sleeping at night. It's not that I don't want to sleep; it's just that I can't. I stopped trying. Techniques that bobble heads preach up and down to levels of total effectiveness fail. Pills don't work, lying in bed passively watching infomercial after infomercial have the effects of making me wonder what exactly will blend. When I am able to close my eyes, my mind begins to play a constant slide show of the worst things imaginable. Decapitations. Bodies buried in shallow graves. Houses burning. Screams fill my ears and I awake in a cold sweat. I can't breathe. These problems began the first night the stranger came into my dive. I find myself feeling nothing but disdain when I gaze upon my tattered reflection in the mirror. The unshaven man staring back is not me. Bloodshot eyes sunken deep into hollow cheeks. I lift my hand up and it shakes as if my blood created vibrations as it moved through my protruding veins. The mirror not only shows a vacant waste of a man, but also serves as a vessel for vengeful shadows that dance around in the dimness created by the talking heads on their soapboxes of lies. I look again at my shaking hand to find it in a tightly clenched fist flying towards the primitive zombie in the glass imprisonment. The glass shatters into a sea of red. ``Whiskey.'' He's there. Right fucking there. No one knows where he comes from. No one even bothers to notice this motherfucker. ``Leave the bottle.'' ``You know, you've been coming in here for a while now and it's the same four fucking words.'' I tended to pry, but it has gotten to the point where this dude needs a crowbar upside the head! I wanted answers or just a simple response. ``And man, you don't need to leave a fucking gold coin lying there. That's too much goddamn money.'' As always, he finished off the bottle and left. As always, a dirtied gold coin was on the counter. It was right then that I came up with the worst idea of my life. Worse than moving out to this fucking desolate place. This dumbass decision is probably my only regret. Given the circumstances, this was a pretty sound idea and very simple in execution. I called on Jimmy Dean and his gang to rough the stranger up a bit. Easy as that. Not to really hurt him, but to serve as an initiation of sorts. Jimmy Dean was the type of brute that would fit in prison, professional wrestling or driving a truck for a repossession company. The brute, with his shoulder length hair, beard, sharply clad in leather and denim, carried himself with a high enough level of untapped fury that assured me that a show was just on the horizon. His gang lacked the size, and I'd say intelligence, but Jimmy aint exactly a member of Mensa. It was clear that the 6'6'' tall Jimmy was the leader of the group. These hours of darkness were going to be something to remember. ``Whiskey.'' Like clockwork. I couldn't help but crack a smile knowing that this dude was about to get fucked up. ``Leave the bottle.'' The jukebox in the corner began playing ``Here Comes the Sun.'' Jimmy Dean and his cronies approached the stranger. Unpromisingly, the green pained lights shuttered as the air became stale. Marv sat in the stool to the left of the stranger, the other guy behind him and Jimmy stood to his right. ``Who the fuck are you?'' Jimmy asked in a slow but forceful tone as he reached for the bottle. He picked it up, unscrewed the cap and took a swig. He set the bottle down in a violent enough motion to cause the liquid to splash on the bar. The stranger didn't flinch. Hands still clasped around the glass, eyes still looking down. ``This isn't the a film noir. Hey asshole, I'm talking to you!'' Jimmy reached out for the strangers collar. The temperature in the room rose, but I felt cold enough to see my breath. My spine felt severed as I fell back towards the wall behind me. Jimmy now had a fistful of shirt and was close to unleashing a mallet of a fist on this guy, when, in the blink of an eye, it was all over. The stranger threw a swift enough boot to Jimmy's kneecap that created a sound comparable to a thunderclap. As Jimmy doubled over in immense pain, the stranger swung his hand around grabbing the side of Jimmy's head, and, in a fluid motion, flung it down towards the bar. The hard wood surface of the bar gave way to the man's fucking head! The wood splintered around the hole that was now host to a man's head. A second later, the man standing behind the stranger took flight towards the pool tables, slammed into the wall and became one with a pool cue. Marv, the third man, suffered a brutal shot to the throat that sent blood flying out of his mouth. He collapsed to the floor clutching his sunken windpipe and gasping for air. I couldn't move. The stranger turned his gaze to me. His eyes created black holes amongst the leathery, sandblasted, sun damaged face. His black hair dangled in strands from under his black hat. He reached up, stroked the stubble on his chin and sighed. After surveying the destruction, he nonchalantly picked up his glass, downed it, reached into his pocket and pulled out a coin. His eyes never moved from mine, and then a moment of clarity came upon me. The uneasiness. I froze. I could see flames in the blackness. He stared a hole directly through my soul. The carnage still existed among an eerie peacefulness. He flipped the coin in the air, caught it with his right hand, smiled and placed it on the counter. He then tipped his hat and left. I remember seeing lights. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Torgo!} {\bf Brian} Brian hated the new house. Ever since his family moved in he could tell there was something not right about it. He especially hated his room. It was an old dusty old room that smelled like death. Their were cobwebs in his closet and the room smelled like many years gone by. The first few nights in the house came and went without any events. On the eighth night though Brian was awoken by a noise eminating from the closet. It sounded like a big dog was trapped inside. All Brian could hear was clawing and low grunts and what sounded like a big dog walking in circles in the closet. Brian cowered under the sheets afraid to peer out. After ten minutes or so the sounds went away. Brian lay awake the entire night. In the morning Brian told his parents about what had happened. They just told him that it's normal. That old houses have a way of making sounds like that. Brian didn't believe them though. He knew what he heard wasn't just a house. It was something else. Something unnartural. The next night Brian was awoken to the sounds again. As Brian lay under his sheets he heard what sounded like sniffing and pawing coming from the closet. He also heard something else this time. What sounded like the sharpest fangs tearing apart meat. He also heard chewing. As Brian peered out from under his sheets he saw a pool of blood forming under the door. He quickly leaped out of bed and down the hall to his parent's room. ``You've got to come quick to my room and look!'' His parents slowly lumbered to his room. ``Their, in my closet!'' His Dad looked in the room but didn't see anything. He even went to the closet and looked in the door but didn't see anything. For the next few weeks nothing happened{\ldots} Today was Brian's Dad's birthday. Brian and his mom went to the local mall and picked out some nice presents to give to him. His mom bought him a toolset that had wrenches and screwdrivers and Brian got his dad a nice necklace. While Brian's dad was at work they made him his favorite meal and made a nice cake. Brian's dad really enjoyed his meal and wore the necklace all the time after that. Brian was a lot happier these days because he hadn't heard anything from the closet for a while. Another thing that happened is that Brian and his family decided to start raising rabbits. They had started with 5 five rabbits but now they had 9. One day Brian went outside to feed them and was shocked because there only 3 left. The fence had been broken into and their were large tracks. Soon after this Brian started hearing noises from his closet again. It was the same as before. All Brian could do was cower under the sheets until the morning light returned. One dark and wintery night Brian was hiding under the blankets while he heard the rustling from his closet. As Brian shook and shivered the noises were growing louder and more violent. Suddenly he heard the creature burst forth! It shattered through the closet and crashed into the opposing wall. Brian was now paralyzed with fear. He dared not look out from his sheets. He could hear the creature walking towards him, its claws clacking on the floor. He could hear the beast sniff his sheets. Suddenly he felt the creature leap onto his bed. Through the weaving of his sheets he could see glowing red eyes and a large grimacing mouth full of fangs. But the most shocking thing of all is that he could just make out the glimmering of something hanging from the creatures neck in the moonlight. It was the necklace he bought his father! ``You were always my child'', the creature snarled to him. ``And now I will give you the Dark Gift!'' ``After all like Father like son!'' The creature then bit Brian on the face and the transformation began. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Mincher} This thread is too hot to handle! Good luck to all you goons going hard at it. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Dr. Mulholland} {\bf The Horrid Assignment} Luke Bavarious walked through the front doors of the police station. He pushed the doors open. Inside was his boss, Johnny Zepeder. ``Bavarious!'' ``What do you want Johnny.'' Bavarious said. ``I have a new assignement for you! I hope you will take this new assignment!'' Luke Bavarious took the new assignment and opened the manilla envellope like a kid ripping apart a Christmas present that the kid had been waiting for. Inside the manilla envellope was a new assignment: Kill the local mafia boss. Bavarious looked up from his new assignment at his boss. ``Johnny.'' ``What is it, Bavarious?'' ``This doesn't sound like-{\ldots}'' Bavarious keeled over and from his mouth cascaded a river of vomit. His eyes vomited tears too. The tears and vomit he was vomiting pooled on the floor in a horrible cocktail of tears and vomit. ``Bavarious!'' Bavarious could say nothing. The cocktail kept pouring out of his mouth. ``Dear God, I'll get a doc-'' Johnny's neck exploded with blood vomiting out of the veins. Bavarious screamed. He turned around and screamed again. He raised his Baretta (all New York detectives have one.). Bavarious turned around and looked at his boss. ``I'm quite sorry,'' Bavarious said. Johnny said 'you'd b-better b-be`` and belched out one last spray of blood stained vomit. Bavarious turned and walked out the doors, pushing the doors aside to get through. Bavarious looked at his new assignment that he just got. Kill the mob boss. But why? Bavarious was not a killer. He was a good man, a good Christian man. But he has a Baretta. Barettas are for killing. He must kill the boss. He grabbed his Baretta and loaded it and got in his car and hit the gas. Bavarious arrived at the mob boss's house. He got out of his car and shut the door behind him and then locked it. He walked to the front door and knocked on it three times. Then he realized. The house had been abandoned since the horrid tragedy that had happened there 50 years ago. He saw it in his mind{\ldots} ''Hi, Daddy`` said the kid. The kid smiled. Kids are so wonderful and carefree in this terrible world. ''Hi there kiddo`` said the dad. The dad looked to be about 35 and had a beer gut. The dad turned around and walked out of the house, pushing the door, opening it, and then pulling it, closing it. The kid turned around and turned on the TV to get out of the horrors of this wretched life. It was 1959. The kid just got the TV as a birthday present. His birthday was yesterday. The kid heard horrid noises from outside. He got up and opened the door. His dad was lying on the ground with a silhouette on him. He looked up at the man who was casting the silhouette. He had a can of beer in his right hand and a Baretta in the other. Suddenly a semi drove across their front lawn at the speed of fifty five miles an hour, running the man and his dad over at the same time. Blood vomited all over the front of the semi and all over the nice clean green cut grass. Bavarious woke up. He had fallen asleep. He had dreamed of what happened in the mob bosses house 50 years ago. Then he realized. He was the kid of his dreams. Bavarious let out a scream and turned and ran and went out the front door. He tried to open the door on his Ford Contour but it wouldn't open. Suddenly, a headless corpse with a can of Coors walked across the lawn towards him. Getting closer and closer. Bavarious screamed. He got out his Baretta and fired. And fired again. The bullets punched bulletholes through his rotting stinky flesh but they didn't hurt him. Bavarious screamed and vomited again. The remainders of his lunch floated around in a blood tinged mess all over his Ford Contour. The Coors holding headless man kept getting closer. Bavarious could only do one thing. This was the only option. His father would have wanted it this way. He stuck the Baretta into his mouth and pulled the trigger. But he had used all of his bullets. He vomited again, pouring vomit down the barrel of his gun. He screamed. Finally the Coors man was two feet away from him{\ldots} ''Luke Bavarious, why did you hate me?`` ''Who, who are you?`` ''I am an artist. I am the man who killed your father in a semi." He screamed. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{The Iron Fury} This entry picks up immediately after The Horrid Reflection ends and I fully intend to keep it going into a Luke Bavarious mini-series. If anyone likes it, I will post more. If not, I will accept all the ridicule humbly. The Horrid Refraction: Suddenly, I was sobbing. Once the tears ceased leaping from my blood-drenched sockets, I took a moment to recollect myself. My muscles tensed. I looked down at the dark, mangled body next to me. What the fuck, I thought. I still had glass in my face. My head throbbed. I rolled the corpse onto its back. And vomited. I vomited so hard, so long, that a vessel burst in my eye, coloring it red as Satan's ass. Its body had dissolved into phlegmy puss. The alley stunk of fear and sweat and blood. And now vomit. The glow of some unspeakable evil hung heavy, looming over the dark corridor. It pulsated. I had to get out of there. I had to think about what just happened. I got to my lodgings and cleaned up. As I was picking glass out of my shattered skull, a knock sounded. Heavy- angry almost- on the thick wooden door. Inching to the corner of the room, I determined to wait them out. I had darker matters to attend to. What was that thing I had glimpsed in that dim alley? Why did it wear my badge? Why was it-- ``Bavarious! I know you're there!'' a feminine voice bellowed. I could sense there would be no introspective pondering for me this evening. I edged to the door. Skin standing at attention, hairs all prickle, I passed my hairy appendage over the door knob. Slowly, I creaked it open. Standing before me was a person I had thought, hell, hoped I would never see again. Nora Fury. A halo of fiery red curls cascaded about her, wild and unrestrained. Just like she was. A single cigarette smouldered in her claw-like grasp. As soon as she was in the dank room, a slap encircled my raw face. Blazed like the fury for which she was aptly named. ``How dare you leave me in Mexico,'' she sneered. I sneered back at her sneer. ``How dare you shack up with that drug lord,'' I returned with equal disdain. ``Can't we just move on? You're a tough dame. I knew you would come out on top. Here, lemme pour you a drink.'' I knew that when Nora was mad, she was a hellcat under the covers. Maybe a nice distraction would ease my beleaguered mind. I turned to the crimson cabinet behind my desk and my hands found their way to two glasses and a bottle of whiskey. ``So what d'ya need from me, Sugar?'' I smarmed, holding out the stiff libation. It dropped to the floor, shattering at my feet. There was no one in the room. Edit, whoops, I thought it said ``Entries must be NO more than 500 words.'' So, can I add more? Or am I now disqualified? %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{bagrada} {\bf The Earache} (edited from previous post to meet the theme) The night was dark and muggy, the heat weighing down on me like a heavy winter jacket in the spring. The ringing in my dull aching ear was the only sound. I stuck in my pinky and wiggled it, then frowned at the sticky piss-yellow wax left on my finger. Not for the first time, I thought about seeing a doctor. I shook my head. My ear has never been right since that day in the pond, so long ago. Time enough for doctors in the morning. Tonight, I had a girl to save. ``You have to help our friend, Mr. Bavarious!'' the kids had said. ``She's been kidnapped by some freaky cult!'' The cops didn't believe them. Neither did their parents. But I did. I knew the dangers of not listening to kids. My sister{\ldots} if I'd listened to her she'd still be alive today. I'd told her she was just a kid too, that I didn't have to listen to her, that I could swim where ever I want. I almost died that day. Instead she died, died much too young, died saving me. I loaded my beretta and nodded to them. ``Don't worry; I'll bring your sis{\ldots} I mean your friend back to you.'' The boy shook his head sadly and looked at me as I left. As I approached the abandoned warehouse where they said their friend was taken, I glanced to the stars and felt a shiver run down my spine as they seemed to blink in the night sky. A coppery rusty scent floated on the stale breeze. I was close. I walked up to the old wooden door, with my finger on the trigger, and kicked it open. LIGHT. Bright searing light. Red rusty light. Purple smoky light. Spirally yellow light. Grey and black and white colorless light. I didn't hear the broken door clatter to the ground in front of me or the vomit that suddenly projected from my throat, just the constant droning ringing in my ear, louder now. The lights faded as I tried to blink through the afterimages to look around the room. All around an old stone altar were the cultists, theirs eyes bleeding, their robes coated in glistening puke, their mouths slack in death. On the altar floated the girl{\ldots} or parts of her. She was split in two; her eyes still smoking, her hands still raised to the sky in prayer. The left side of her mouth opened in a bright smile, while a few feet away the right side gaped wider as if she were screaming. She was pinned in the air like a butterfly to an insect spreading board. In between her two halves, something moved, then the world ended around me. The air became thick, muddy and gritty, like I was back beneath the pond again that awful day. The lights returned{\ldots} rusty red, black and white, vomit green. The horrible spiraling yellow. The girl melted away, her long blonde hair splashing to the floor, and I felt the air shift as something floated towards me. The ringing in my ears was now the tolling of great bells, driving me to my knees as my gut heaved and tried in vain to find something else, anything more, to throw up. I felt something bitingly cold and scalding hot brush my arm as the colors floated past me, and then my arm wasn't there anymore. It floated off into the lights which were now many bright balloons, all painted with crying faces I could almost recognize. I blinked and the balloons popped revealing a swarm of fireflies, each with a uniquely colored light. So beautiful and horrible as they flew by me towards the door, their lights blinking in a pattern my mind fought not to understand. The tolling of the bells was now a tinkling song that made me want to float along with it, if only I could recognize the tune. The fireflies were floating spiders, then darting fish, then the drowning faces of my dead sister. I staggered to my feet and turned towards the door as the colors wafted through and became dark. I took a few stumbling steps after them but stopped when my foot kicked something metal and heavy{\ldots} the beretta I'd dropped. Whispers suddenly, in my ear. My little sister. ``Breathe, Luke.'' I gasped for air, realizing I hadn't taken a breath since kicking the door, and fought my way to the center of the room, kicking the bodies of the cultists aside, and then gathering the messy blonde hair and other unrecognizable bits into a clump in the crook of my remaining arm. ``It's okay.'' I said. ``I've got you.'' With the smell of rusty blood in my nose, the taste of bile and vomit in my mouth, the ghost of my left arm screaming that it's still with me, the afterimages of the wondrous lights seared into the back of my eyes, and the constant and steady ringing in my ears keeping me company, I staggered out into the now starless night. ``Don't worry sis. I'll get you home.'' %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Unununium} This is revised from the other thread The Scarecrow Luke parked his car at the side of the road. He walked over to the massive corn field and squinted. Somewhere out there was his big break. If the legend held true, he knew he'd have it set. Trying to be silent, Luke pulled apart rows of corn and began to make his way to the center of the field. Looking out, he knew he had a long way to go. His revolver sat snuggly in his jean pockets. He wasn't afraid to use it if he was heard. Luke's sneakers sunk into the moist soil, as he crept through the corn field. He knew something was up. The full moon shined brightly into the center of the corn field. In the center of the field stood a mounted scarecrow. Its eyes beamed like an illuminating light, and the straw covering its bare body poked out through seams on its clothing. Luke was here for a purpose. As an FBI investigator, it was his job to trot through this corn field to investigate the claim that underneath the rugged clothing of this lifeless scarecrow lays a corpse. He barged through a petite opening in the corn field, and reached the scarecrow. The scarecrow was a morbid mass of lifeless straw. A knife was tied into the scarecrows hand with a piece of string. Luke unfastened the rope holding the scarecrow unto the cross. The scarecrow then toppled over, landing on Luke. It was heavier then he imagined. Luke rolled over, getting out from underneath the scarecrow. Luke looked out into the corn field. It was an infinite abyss of yellow and green plants. From his viewpoint, he couldn't see out of the corn field. Luke turned back, and noticed in shock that the scarecrow was now standing. Luke took a step back, but the scarecrow moved in closer. With one luxurious swipe, the monument of hay and straw sliced through Luke's neck with its knife. Luke vomited wildly through his neck while disturbing and tremendously rust colored blood came out through the same orifice. A stream of strawberry-red blood dripped from the scarecrows metallic and majestic knife, that soon entered into Luke's head. Luke dropped to his knees. He gurgled like a drowning infant as he struggled to breathe. Luke vomited blood through the hole in his head as bubble-gum colored brain matter and blood exited Luke's head with the scarecrows knife. Luke wasn't quite dead yet, he slowly crawled away from the deadly straw body, but it was too late. A gust of wind and magic picked Luke's body up into the air. Like quills, the scarecrows straw exited his body and pierced into Luke's flesh. Luke let out one final scream, before he died. Luke's lifeless body floated magically to the brown wooden cross. As the lifeless scarecrow soon faded into the ground, Luke's body strapped onto the cross. The scarecrow was now gone, but a new scarecrow has come to take its place. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{THE WORST DOCTOR} {\bf The Snake Lady} There was a kid who came up to me one evening after I had left my precinct, sniffling and tugging on the left leg of my pants. He had snot all over his face and I was pretty disgusted. But my job is to help people, not to pass judgment, so I decided to give him the benefit of the doubt. Maybe he had cash on him. ``What's wrong, kid?'' I asked. An ominous breeze blew from the south. It was going to rain. I didn't ask him why he was by the bar at such an age. A kid's gotta do what a kid's gotta do. ``Some lady stole my candy,'' he told me, wiping the snot from his nose and the tears in his eyes in an upward motion. Both bodily fluids ended up on his forehead. ``Well,'' I said, popping the collar of my Armani jacket. ``I can handle that. Stay here, sport.'' I gave him a pat on the head, not unlike the pats my father used to give me when I hadn't completely screwed everything up, and went into the building. There was nothing in there that was particularly special, save for a few local drunks hanging out in the corner. The bartender gave me a nod, a knowing one; he could tell from my hat and flashy badge that I meant business. That's what it is to be a private detective, after all. I sidled up to the bar and took a seat on a rickety barstool, ordering my usual: an appletini. A girl at the bar eyed me. She looked like a bitch. I knew I had found my target. ``Hi,'' she said once I got my drink. The light leaked from the neon signs that said ``PARADISE''. I chuckled as I sipped my cocktail gingerly. How ironic. ``What can I do you for,'' I asked. I didn't mean it the way I made it sound. ``It's not often a man like you comes to town,'' She said, giggling. I noticed she was wearing a rusty necklace. ``Yes,'' I said simply. I don't like to waste words. She put her hand on my arm and looked at me with glimmering eyes. I said nothing. Suddenly she was grabbing onto my arm and digging her horrid nails into my flesh. I cried out. My skin was on fire. She drew blood and laughed like my grandmother used to. At that moment I knew I hated her. ``You're a thief and a liar!'' I yelled, kicking my barstool into her lower half. She fell down and brought my appletini with her as she tried in vain to grab the bar for support. The people around us piled out of the bar while screaming and running. I was glad they knew enough to leave at this moment. It was going to get ugly. ``Bavarioussssss,'' she quipped, her tongue long and thin like a snake. Her rusty necklace was rusted. Even more rusted than before. She had no legs now. She was like a snake on the bottom. Cruel and unforgiving. She was going to squeeze me. I knew it. I felt like vomiting. A thin stream spluttered from my mouth. It got all over my new boots. I was blind with seething rage as I dove toward her, knocking over bottles of Jack Daniels. I began to punch and punch and punch. I was screaming though I didn't know why. She fought back feebly. She tried to kick me but she had no legs anymore. I laughed. How unfortunate. She was bleeding a lot. It got all over me. Luckily I had tucked my tie into my belt. It wouldn't get in my way. She scratched at me again and called me mean things. There was blood, awful blood, leaking from her eyes. It was red. Dark red. The color of a heart after it's been taken out of a body. I was going to take her heart out of her body. Then I thought against it. Too messy. Finally I drove the rusty necklace into her. She died of rust poisoning. She giggled one last time at me before slumping onto the floor. Then she disappeared in a cloud of smoke. ``Should've gotten your tetanus shot,'' I commented. I gathered up the kid's candy, colorful wrappers that may as well have contained pure cane sugar, and went outside. The kid was there, snot dried in his hair. He was wringing his shirt with his grubby little hands when he saw me, fearing the worst. I dropped the candy on the ground in front of him, and lit a cigarette for myself. ``Don't let it happen again, champ,'' I said. He nodded and understood. As he walked away, munching on his dental problem candy, I was reminded a little bit of myself. Life before I became a detective. A simple, idle life with no worries. But that was all behind me now. I'm Luke Bavarious, detective extraordinaire. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Tufty} {\bf Dames, they're all the Same - a Luke Bavarious detective story inspired by the works of Ben Biddick.} I'm a private detective. Luke Bavarious is my name. Bavarious by name, Bavarious by nature. I own this city. The feds think they've got this place locked up tight, but the criminal scum of the underworld run rampant through the darkened streets committing crimes and vandalism. This is where I come in. My name is Luke Bavarious, and I'm a private detective. I'm a man with nothing to live for and nothing to lose, and there's only two things in my life that I wouldn't want to lose, and they're both Berettas. One is a gun, and I keep it locked and loaded in my desk drawer, and the other is my sexy secretary, Gina Beretta. An Italian seductress packing a big chest, tiny waist, and a loaded gun. There's nothing sexier than a woman with a gun. The phone on my desk rings, I pick it up. It's Gina. ``There's someone here to see you.'' says Gina. ``Send them in.'' I reply. Into my room walks the most gorgeous dame I've ever seen in my life. I'm talking beautiful - tall, brunette, and an ass like a couple of melons. Says she has a job for me - the big one, my ticket out of this hell hole they call a city. She tells me that a couple of big time crooks are planning a heist on the New York City Bank, and she wants me to stop them. ``But how do you know this, and why are you telling me?'' I ask. ``One of those jerks is my ex-boyfriend, and the idiot left the bank's blueprints and a copy of their plan at my place before he dumped me.'' ``Hmmm{\ldots} that does sound stupid. I'll take the job.'' Fast forward to a week later and I'm waiting outside the New York City Bank. According to the plans, the crooks should be here any minute. I lean against a street light and light up a smoke, the wispy trail of smoke rises into the cool night air. I hear a click like the sound of a cockroach being squashed, and I feel a cold, hard object poke against my back. ``Don't move, Bavarious'' says a rough voice filled with pure and utter hatred. The dame set me up! I knew I never should have trusted her, dames are all the same. With the lightning-quick speed of a cobra I kick my leg backwards and send the gun flying out of my assailant's hand. It lands on the road before skidding down a drain into the sewers. Before my attacker could even react I've drawn my gun and spun around. Suddenly, with shock and disbelief I see that the face of my attacker is actually that of the dame who hired me for this job! She must have been changing her voice to fool me. She looks different this time, her eyes are as red as freshly spilt blood and her skin has a greyish twinge, like a freshly embalmed corpse. ``Why did you try to set me up?'' I ask her, pressing the gun into her chest. ``Because{\ldots}'' I press the gun harder into her chest, impatient for an answer. ``Because, Luke{\ldots} I am your sister.'' My head reels as my world comes crashing down around me. My sister? I have a sister? I think back to my childhood and don't remember having a sister. Thinking of his troubled past and childhood caused Bavarious to vomit. He did not like to think about his past. As the vomit pooled on the floor, he could see the reflection of the dame, his supposed sister, in the slick surface of the pool of vomit. The sight of her like that brought it all back to me, but in my distracted state, the dame gives me her best right hook right in my jaw, and the world turns black{\ldots} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{leb388} {\bf The Girl} The night was cool and dark, unusual for summer. But then again, it was a night for unusual things. Slashes of rain whipped at my face as I navigated the alley. Fireworks vomited sparks of blue and red into the sky. The booms sounded more like gunshots from Berettas. I should know; I have one. I am a private detective. My name is Bavarious. Luke Bavarious. I'd been at the bar, kicking back a few martinis, when I got a call about a noise complaint. I work every night if I have to, even the Fourth of July. The job sounded easy enough, and after all, the people need me. I am their protector. I am Luke Bavarious. But on this night, I wasn't as alone as I thought. As I walked along, I heard the sound of footsteps. I stopped. ``Who's there?'' I yelled, raising my Beretta. No response. I tensed. ``Come out where I can see you,'' I ordered. ``Now.'' A child stepped out of the shadows and into the trashy street. I say that because the street was littered with trash. The people there were usually nice. Most of the time. I holstered the Beretta, at ease. The girl looked young. Maybe six, could even be seven. Who knows, in this town. Probably lost. She clutched a doll and wore a dark raincoat. Not like that was any help, in this torrential weather. ``Are you okay?'' I asked her. ``Do you need help?'' ``I need to find my mommy,'' she whimpered. She was crying. A girl that young shouldn't be alone in an alley off 42nd St. in New York. Especially on a night like tonight. I pulled out my phone to call to see if anyone reported her missing, but something was wrong. I looked up at the sky. Fireworks still going at it like crazy missiles exploding in the air. That's what they were. Missiles. And that's when I saw it. The creature. The item the girl was holding wasn't a doll after all--it was a monster. It had buttons for eyes. There was no mouth, just stitches. The hair was yarn. ``Get out of here, fiend of hell!'' I screamed. I grabbed it. If you can call it an it. The hands were soft. At least until I flung it into the puddle. Then they were wet. I screamed, shooting at it with my Beretta. I felt a fear no one should ever have to experience, a fear of the worst possible things, a fear of death and everything around it. It was taking hold of me, drowning me, and I kept spinning and spinning in the abyss of its grip. I felt like vomiting. Maybe that was just from the martinis. I shot it again and again, and so on. And then I stopped. A flash of light made me see its face. Kind. Adorable. Just a doll after all. Why do I always investigate noise complaints when I'm drunk? Suddenly, the girl was sobbing. And I felt like an asshole. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{scarycactusjunior} Okay, I'm game. The Runaway. Jimbo hawked a giant ball of phlegm between his dangling feet off the boat dock and stared into the murky water as he watched his creation sink to the murky inky depths of the lake. Watching it, he thought long and hard about his current situation with his Pa. Pa was starting to frighten him with his publicly known alcoholism. Every horrible night Pa would sit on the porch of the rustic swamp cabin in the wicker rocking chair by the front door and drink his Coors repeatedly for hours. And then, with his eyes horridly bloodshot he would come stomping back into the cabin and find Jimbo for the nightly beating. Sometimes the beatings were so bad they would leave Jimbo in a sobbing heap, his blood and tears mixing together on his lips. Pa wasn't always like this, Jimbo had vague memories of happier times; the sunshine days of his early childhood when his mother was still alive and Pa hadn't drank so much. Jimbo heard the front door of the cabin slam, followed by Pa's heavy, booted footfalls. The wicker rocker began to creak. Jimbo noticed that the sun was rapidly sinking, the drinking would begin soon, followed by the almost ritualistic beating. Jimbo thought to himself. He thought that he didn't have to return to the cabin. He could make Pa come looking for him in the swamp, at night, while drunk. Decided, Jimbo arose and proceeded to make his way deep into the swamp, trying to get as far away from the cabin before full dark made it impossible to find his way through the swamp. He tried not to think of how the cypress trees looked like forlorn entities locked forever in their torment because of the way the fading daylight lit them, or of the stories his friend Benny used to tell about the Swamp Creature. The Swamp Creature was said to be a being of such hideous countenance that it would drive any who were unfortunate to see its horrible face completely and totally insane. Privately Jimbo thought it was the thing that had made the crocodile eat his mother all those years ago. Jimbo remembered the sight of all that blood on the water; red blood on black water that boiled and roiled like a vicious tempest. Jimbo shuddered and tried to push those thoughts out of his mind. Distracted as he was, Jimbo slipped on a patch of slimy mud and slid on his buttocks a little way into the swamp-water. He jumped up quickly and stared wild-eyed around him, looking out for crocs. His heart was pounding; he could feel the blood pounding in his ears. Suddenly, he was very afraid. He fought the sob welling up within him and went on his way. It was too late to turn back. He saw something then, a glint of gold in the reeds. Bending down to get a closer look, he noticed it was a badge of some sort. Jimbo picked it up and felt a feeling dread wash over him; it was a slightly tarnished police badge. Jimbo read the name on it aloud. ``Bavarius{\ldots}'' There was a squelching sound behind him, and Jimbo turned around to come face-to-face with a creature straight out of nightmares. It looked like it had been a man once, but now it had no eyes and only one shriveled ear remained. It looked almost half-melted and inhuman. Jimbo vomited great jets of putrid vomit into the swamp. Some of it landed on the Creature and made it even more horrendous to look at. Jimbo vomited again until he could vomit no more. Tears sprang into his eyes and he sobbed loudly, vainly. The Swamp Creature moved its stumpy arm to catch the paralyzed Jimbo and crush him into the once-chest. It breathed its foul swampy breath into Jimbo's face as it spoke. ``I am Luke Bavarius.'' At only thirteen years old, young Jimbo went instantly insane. Two days later, there was an article in the newspaper about a bizarre murder that had happened out at Old Man James's cabin. Old Man James had been found dead in his wicker rocking chair, a brass police badge shoved into his jugular. He had not even dropped the beer he had been holding. On the cabin walls behind him, written in blood and vomit was a single cryptic word scrawled over and over: ``Bavarius''. Police searched the cabin and found James's son rocking on his heels in the back room, wearing only urine-stained briefs and giggling softly to himself. He was taken into custody and placed in the State mental hospital, where he remains to this day singing softly to himself over and over. ``Bavarius.'' %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{mboger} {\bf Luke From Payroll} I sat down at my desk. The sound had come again. It was my phone ringing. My hand shook slightly with the heavy receiver in my hand. The sleek receiver was transmitting and receiving, ready to take the call. I work in the payroll department. My name is Luke Bavarious. I hate my fucking job. People had been complaining about discrepancies in their paychecks for about a year now, so I finally decided to execute the plan I had been working on for as long as I can remember. I was assigned to raise the Demon Lord Gol'Sothog from the fiery pits of hell. I spoke into the phone, ``Payroll, this is Bavarious. Luke Bavarious.'' On the other end of the line, ``Hey, Lou, this is Bill Taylor over in{\ldots}'' ``Luke,'' I interrupted. ``The name is Luke Bavarious.'' ``Ok, sorry. Whatever. The reason I'm calling is{\ldots}'' ``Say it,'' I interrupted again. ``What?'' I was starting to lose my cool. ``Luke. Bavarious. LUKE! FUCKING! BAVARIOUS!'' ``Jesus, Luke! Sorry! Luke Bavarious, Luke Bavarious, Luke Bavarious,'' Bill sniveled into the phone. He doesn't deserve to live and it was then I made up my mind. ``Man, you need to switch to decaf. Listen, -Luke-. I have a problem on my last paycheck. I had 3 hours of overtime last week that I wasn't paid for and Debbie over in HR told me to take it up with you.'' Over the last year or so, I, Luke Bavarious, have been slowly syphoning money out of employee paychecks to fund my Demon Lord Gol'Sothog sacrificial altar. Twenty bucks here, fifty bucks there. It adds up. ``Not a problem, Bob,'' intentionally mistaking his name and then pausing for him to respond. He doesn't. He's so pathetic, he makes me vomit in my mouth a little bit and then I have to force myself to swallow it down. He's barely worthy of sacrificing to Gol'Thogthog, but he'll do. And because he made me swallow my own vomit, his sacrifice will be slow and painful. ``I see the missing hours here. Why don't you come up to my office and I'll square you away.'' ``Sounds good. I'll be right up!'' The phone disconnects. He's fallen for my ruse. Hook. Line. And Sinker. And Luke Bavarious. I have about two minutes to prepare, but that's two more minutes than I need. I'm Luke Bavarious, always prepared. I'm hiding behind the door with a syringe full of knock-out serum when Bill enters my office. He doesn't even put up a struggle as I slide the syringe into his neck, the needle vomiting forth sweet slumber into his veins. Bill doesn't wake up until just after midnight. I had waited until everyone had left the office for the night before loading Bill into the back of my Dodge SRT-4. A lot of people think the SRT-4 is just a Dodge Neon with a turbo, but fuck those guys, I love this car. I drove my totally sweet SRT-4 to the secret location of the Demon Lord Gol'Sahblah sacrificial altar and waited. Bill's eyes open and he tries to speak, but he can't. Did I mention that my knock-out serum was also a paralyzing toxin? Bavarious! Bill is laying on a solid gold altar, surrounded by dark, fiendish incense burners. Expensive incense. I had to import it from Thailand and everything. This is why I was skimming money from paychecks. Have you ever priced a solid gold sacrificial altar? I mean, it's not like you can just walk into Bed Bath and Beyond and pick one out. This shit is expensive. I raise the jewel encrusted ceremonial sacrificial dagger over Bill's body. His eyes widen in terror. It's the only movement he's capable of making, thanks to the knock-out/paralyzing toxic serum, which also wasn't cheap, by the way. I can't stress enough how much money this whole thing has set me back. I began chanting. With each long forgotten word uttered, I can feel the power in the room increasing. A dark mist begins to swirl and in that mist I see another dimension. Closer, closer, two worlds are becoming one. There is only one last thing left to do. I plunge the dagger into Bill's heart and the ever so slowly twist the blade. I lean over and whisper into Bill's hear, ``Bavarious.'' I'm then instantly thrown to the ground as an interdimensional rift opens, unleashing the Demon Lord Gol'Sobeys from his hellish prison. The Demon Lord smiles at me and I smile back. ``YOU HAVE DONE WELL, LUKE BAVARIOUS. NOW THAT I AM FREE, THERE WILL BE NO STOPPING ME. I WILL RULE THIS WORLD AND EVERYONE WHO INHABITS IT.'' ``All glory be to Gol'Bladder!,'' I shout. ``YOU HAVE SHOWN YOURSELF TO BE A FAITHFUL SERVANT. AS SUCH, YOU SHALL BE REWARDED. YOU WILL BE MY RIGHT HAND WHEN I ENSLAVE THIS PUNY WORLD. YOU WILL HOLD THE HIGHEST RANK IN MY ARMY. THE RANK OF PAYROLL ADMINISTRATOR.'' I staggered backwards and fell onto a desk that had materialized behind me. A nameplate sparkled on the side of the desk. Bavarious. I picked up the phone and heard a horrible ring tone. Suddenly, I was sobbing. The moral of the story: Kids should be respected and listened to. Edit: Shit! I wrote this earlier before the whole ``kids need to be respected'' rule. Sorry, AYB! %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Smokey} {\bf Thursday} {\bf Chapter 1} Luke Bavarious sat on the sidelines feeling completely helpless as he watched his team lose yet another game to their cross town rivals, the Anencephaly High Babies. ``That Dan thinks he's soooo good at basketball, but one day I'll show him!'' he silently mouthed to a passerby who made the unfortunate mistake of making eye contact with him. He decided he had seen enough and couldn't watch anymore, mainly due to the fact that the game was over. Suddenly, he had to poop. Luke made his way to the dumpster behind the gymnasium. As he pulled his overalls down to relieve himself, he noticed a pair of girls walking along a path about 25 feet to the right of him . ``I must have sex to those girls!'' Luke yelled at the birds flying over head. He quickly finished his business and tossed his diaper into a nearby tree. ``Oh, you like those girls do you?'' a deep voice boomed from above. Luke looked up and saw a large, muscular black man sitting in a tree branch directly above him. The man hopped down and immediately began dribbling a basketball with both hands, or ``double dribbling'' as it's referred to in the NBA. ``Sure, I like those girls and I want to lose my virginity by carefully placing me boner inside of their girl boners, what do you think about that!'' answered Luke. ''You know what you'd like better than losing your virginity?'' the man coyly asked. ``Never having sex, that's what!`` ``Wow I never thought about it like that! Heeeey{\ldots}what's your name anyhow mister?'' asked Luke. ``My name is AC Green, and i'm a virgin.'' {\bf Chapter 2} The next morning, AC picked Luke up in his light blue 2003 Dodge Caravan. They whistled the theme song to ``The Adams Family'' in perfect unison as they headed to the karate dojo to learn some much needed self defense. ``You're going to eventually find that women will try and make you do things you don't want to do Luke, and that sometimes the word ``NO'' just isn't enough to stop them from hassling you.'' AC said, his eyes searching for a parking spot the entire time. ``That's why we're going to learn some self defense moves today''. They spent the next 4 hours rolling around the matt and throwing nasty elbows and flying jump kicks at invisible female assailants, the rest of the class watching in awe and slight confusion as AC and Luke kept yelling ``No means no lady!'' and ``That's my penis! You leave him be woman!'' An hour later, as Luke was exiting the police car, he turned and asked the officer, ``What's gonna happen to him? What will you do with AC?'' ``He's a dangerous man and we've been after him for a long time. You should thank your lucky stars we caught him before he did anything to you kid!'' shouted the policeman back at Luke. ``Well at least he'll stay abstinent in prison!'' Luke said. Their laughter echoed throughout the otherwise quiet neighborhood. e: kids need to be respected too! (Didn't see that part, sorry!) {\bf The End} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Barometer} My contribution; L.B;V.H.E. (the extended directors cut, with deleted scenes) Luke sat in the dimly lighted corner of an underused and over-bright bar. ``Almost noon'' he thought to himself ``they should be fast asleep by now.'' Shifting his considerable bulk, he managed to stand on his one good leg, supporting himself with a hand on the table while his other hand reached for his cane; an old waking cane bought form a dealer in Soho many years past. ``God I've really let myself go since the accident'' he whispered to no-one ``maybe I'll look into that Pilates shit{\ldots}or something.'' He rolled his one good eye towards the pretty barmaid, a buxom blonde who was eyeing him suspiciously. His meaty paw fished out a couple of bills and dropped them unceremoniously onto the wet tabletop, next to his three empty glasses. ``Hurr'' he spewed ``That'll teach her not to return my flirtations{\ldots}uppity bitch.'' He gave her a smile that would wither a rose, showing his rotten teeth that were green and yellow as vomit. Lurching forward like some hellish zombie, he headed for the door. Once outside, on the street, he shielded his eyes from the bright sunshine ``Jesus I hate Kansas!'' he shouted, and a couple of elderly people strolling by averted their gaze. He snarled at them, like some wild animal that had been too long held in a cage and was only now getting it's first taste of sweet freedom. ``fuckers'' he mumbled. Luke was an old man now, even though he was only forty. He had seen so much; things that would make your skin crawl right off your body. Things that could curdle milk by just being discussed. Luke was a Vampire hunter, in the classical sense. Luke was very, very good at his job.Checking the swordcane with a swift motion, and satisfying himself that it was still good and sharp and made of the finest ebony, he trundled down the street towards the old Biddick Mansion looking like some undead pimp, rolling towards his best girl. ``Those goddamn Vampires'll be vomiting blood from their throats, ere this day is finished'' he vowed to heaven above ``Or my name's not; Luke Bavarious, Vampire Hunter Extraordinaire!'' A boy of about 12 happened to be standing nearby, and when he heard this his eyes sparkled with a devilish glee. ``Hey, mister{\ldots}you goin' up to the ol Biddick place?'' ``So what if I am, you little shit?'' Luke gnashed his rotten teeth ``Better not, I hear them folks is crazy{\ldots}and they got some kinda dawg that wanders the grounds during the daytime. Never see 'em lessen it's nighttime.'' Bavarious gave the tyke a once-over, and answered ``Izzat right{\ldots}well, guess it's a good thing I have this Beretta then, huh?'' as he spoke, Luke eased his brown courdory overcoat aside, showing off a holstered Beretta 9mm, worn gunslinger style, with the butt facing forward. ``I imagine THIS will take care of that old DAWG'' he imitated the boys thick accent. He swooned a bit form the heat, and sweating copiusly, continued his roll down the street. Following at a short distance, the boy followed, shoeless and dressed only in blue coveralls, worn form use and neglect. His bare feet were covered in sores and wounds garnered from his time playing in the dirt and rocks surrounding the little no-name town they were in. His eyes were wide, and full of anticipation. He had never before seen a man this grossly overweight, and was intrigued. After a few minutes, Luke felt as if the eyes of Satan himself were upon him, so he swung around fiercely, whipping out his sidearm ``WHO DAT?!'' he cried his good eye searching and looking crazily around until it alighted on the small figure in front of him. The boy jumped from fright, and for a moment he felt as if his his heart was going to burst from his chest, spewing crimson blood across the dusty sidewalk ``IT'S JUST ME MISTER'' he shouted, thinking the geezer must be hard of hearing if he had not noticed him following by then ``I WANNA HELP, MISTER!'' ``HELP?'' Shouted Luke, unconsciously imitating the boy and shouting back;``I DON'T--'' he suddenly realised he was shouting, and dropped his voice seeing that another couple across the street were watching, intently`` I Don't need your help, kid{\ldots}now, buzz off{\ldots}get lost{\ldots}scram. Comprende?'' The nameless waif wondered what the hell ``Comprende'' meant, but the rest of the message was clear enough. ``Fine, you ol' bastard{\ldots}go on, get yourself killed, see if I care!'' and with that, he ran off. It took Luke another ten minutes of lurching to gain the front gate of the fenced in yard surrounding the mansion. ``Hmmmm, I don't SEE any big dog'' He continued to roll his single, jaundiced eye back and forth, looking in vain for any sign of a guard dog. Satisfied that there was no sign of such a beast, he opened the gate and hobbled up the front path to the stairs leading onto the porch. He unintentionally farted. Once in front of the massive oak double-doors, he swung his eye around for another look. Again, there was nothing to challenge him, and as he considered knocking, the doors parted of their own accord, affording him access to the darkened foyer of the seemingly uninhabited mansion. ``CREEEEEEEEEAK'' went the doors, and when they were fully apart, L.B. (As his one and only friend called him) took stock of the room revealed before his eye. It was a small room, comfortable and sparsly decorated. There were a couple cameos on the wall, and a small desk, covered in what looked to be unopened mail. L.B. knew there were Vampires in this place, he could smell the stink of hell itself in this place and he figured that like all of their ilk, they would be holed up in the basement, sleeping their undead sleep in coffins filled with the dirt of their original resting places. He shifted his weight ``God-DAMN it I gotta lose some poundage'' he cursed. After a cursory search of the downstairs, he found what appeared to be a locked door to the basement, and he put his left ear up to it and listened. ``Hmmmmm, sounds like a heart beating{\ldots}that's odd'' He tried the door, but as he had surmised; it was locked! Suddenly the door came crashing in on him, and the portal vomited forth a huge, black dog{\ldots}some kind of mutant Great Dane he thought fleetingly, as it quickly bit into his neck, tearing out his windpipe and causing Luke to make the most horrid sounds even he, in his long career of monster slaying, had ever heard. Somehow, his fat right hand had reacted instinctively and the Beretta was alive in his hand! Bullets tore through the monstrous dogs body, knocking it backwards and slamming it against the wall. As it writhed in its death throes, Luke attempted to staunch his wound, but he knew it was too late his plump hands could find no purchase, and the wound was surely a mortal one. His vision was blurring to the point that he could barely make out the small shape coming up from the basement. ``You shoulda listened to me, mister'' Said the boy in a quiet tone ``I woulda showed you the cellar door, and then ol Blackwood there woulda never bit ya!'' ``Gurgle..cough, spit'' was all Luke could get out, and as the life ebbed from him, laying on that dirty linoleum kitchen floor, all he could think was; ``Shit, why didn't I listen to that kid?'' The boy crouched down in front of him, and just as his eye glazed over he caught sight of a family portrait on the wall{\ldots}some cheesy mall photobooth picture, enlarged, of the boy{\ldots}with the name ``Ben'' in faux spraypaint letters and some other bling he couldn't quite make out, before the Angel of Death took him. ``Ma and Pa are gonna be SO PISSED that you killed Blackwood{\ldots}'' said the boy to the corpse, glancing over to the lifeless dog ``Maybe ma will raise ya, so they can punish ya!'' again his eyes filled with an evil gleam. With that, he gave a shrill laugh, and ran as fast as he could back down the stairs, anticipation bubbling forth like boiling coffee. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Hamelin} {\bf The Painter} The boy who wanted to be a painter stared at his canvas. His canvas was blank and it stared back at him. He had many other blank canvasses and they also stared at him. All the big squares of white were empty like his mind. He could think of nothing to paint onto the canvas. It drove him crazy. He would never be popular if he had nothing but blank canvasses! All of his friends told him that he would never be a painter. He knew he would show them. Since there were no ideas in his head the wannabe painter put on his jacket and went to the art museum. There were a lot of paintings at the art museum. The difference between these paintings and his were that these paintings existed and his didn't. ``I wish I could paint paintings like these!'' The boy said out loud to no one. ``Paintings like these huh?'' A tall shadow suddenly appeared over the boy's head. ``Would you like to have paintings like these in this museum?'' The shadow continued. The boy spun around and standing there blocking light was a tall gentleman. He was wearing a black overcoat over a black suit. The gentleman smiled. ``Yes! Yes I would! Can you help?'' The desperate wanna be painter clapped his hands together with joy. From the gentleman's overcoat the gentleman grabbed a small wooden box and handed it over. The box was made of dark wood and was very smooth. ``Take this box home, what is in it will help you put everything onto your canvas.'' ``Really? Thank you sir!'' The boy jumped up and down with joy. The tall gentleman walked away without another word. Before he knew it the boy was home again. He locked the door and excitedly opened the box. Inside the box was a paintbrush. The boy took the paintbrush into his hand and it gave him an idea. He started to paint. He painted and painted. The sun went down while he painted, the sun came up and he was still painting. He painted on every single canvas in his home until he could paint no more. Days passed and no one heard anything from the painter. He didn't show up to school. No one saw him at the park. After a week a group of his friends broke into his house. They wanted to know if the boy was ok. What they saw when they broke down the door were hundreds of canvasses in an empty house. Paintings of furniture, paintings of household objects, paintings of carpets, paintings of his parents. Paintings of everything that would be in a house but none of those things. As they dug through house they found the painter's last painting sitting on his easel. It was a painting of the painter himself. Most of the paintings were put in the art museum. Everyone in the town was impressed by the paintings. Everyone wanted to meet the boy who painted all the amazing paintings. They would ask the museum employees about him. They would only say that no one knew where he was. They only found his paintings in his house. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{gigz} I'm game, what up? {\bf What Went Wrong} There is blood everywhere. My clothes are drenched with it, my hands slippery. I look down at the dead body of Mrs. Trencher, her throat still gurgling as she gasps for a final breath. The pencil in my hand is a dark crimson. Slowly beads of her blood fall to the already massive pool of blood on the floor. I look up and see that everyone is staring in horror. It then occurs to me that I am laughing harder than I ever have in my life. Flash. I wake up with a start, scared out of my mind. I am gripping my pencil so hard I can hear the cheap wood start to splinter. It was a dream. That's all it was. Hell of a dream though. My name is Luke Bavarious. I am seventeen years old, and a senior in high school. I am not shut-in, I am not excluded by my peers, and I am not ridiculed and mocked. Frankly, people just like me and I get along with everybody. I think something has happened to me. I just have no idea what. Mrs. Trencher is my English Literature professor. I have never harbored any sort of ill-will towards her. Her tests can be a bitch, but she is not a disagreeable person. Her classroom habits don't evoke the anger of any student. She is all-around well liked and respected. She gives us candy when we study for tests as a class. She gives us candy when we aren't studying. There is no reason that dream should have happened. I got plenty of sleep last night. I wasn't up late, and I fell asleep right away. I woke up on time, I had a bowl of cereal and a glass of orange juice, and I made it to school without being rushed. It's 11:32. Class is continuing as normal, and Mrs. Trencher didn't notice me sleeping. Then again, she is the type of professor that continues on with her lesson with, or without, your participation. If you miss the material, it is your own fault. I shake my head and continue copying her lecture notes into my notebook. At this point, I have zoned out and am copying the notes without paying any attention to what they are. I'll read them over lunch, so I at least know what she is talking about. ``The elements of gothic fiction are easy to identify. In almost all of them, a woman is trapped in a circumstance she cannot escape from. This is usually a house. She has little time before she suffers `a fate worse than death.' There is something or someone keeping her in the house, by means of force or obligation. Somewhere in the text, her savior will enter the house, learn of the situation and save her from that Hellish fate.'' Flash. I look up from my notebook, and see the blonde pony-tail of the classmate in front of me. With my face torn in a bloodthirsty rage, I reach forward and grab a hold of it. I yank it back towards me, her face now staring at the ceiling in pain and confusion. Without a word, I lunge forward and plunge my pencil deep into her left eye. She screams. I scream. She is screaming from the pain, I am screaming because I am delighted. I twist the pencil deeper into her eye-socket. She convulses, and I hold fast. I stand up, leaving Jenny to writhe in her chair. I look at my hand. I slowly drag my tongue across my middle finger, savoring the taste of her blood. I laugh harder than I have ever laughed in my life. Flash. I wake up on the floor next to my desk, tears stinging my eyes. Everyone is crowded around me; Mrs. Trencher has sent Jenny off for the nurse. Her eye is fine. I look up at the concerned faces hovering over me. ``I'm fine; really{\ldots}I've just been feeling a little ill. That's all.'' The words have to be choked out through the tears. I try to stand, only to find a hand on my shoulder, keeping me at my position on the ground. ``Francis, are you sure you're okay? You shouldn't try to move. Jenny went to get the nurse, just sit tight.'' Mrs. Trencher's voice is thick with worry. She was one of the few who cared about her students. For a split second, at the mention of Jenny's name, I had the image of my pencil twisted deep into her cornea. I almost throw-up. ``N-no, I'm okay, really{\ldots}''I pull myself to my feet, using my desk as a crutch. I'm not really okay as I say I am. I am unsure on my feet, and my vision is blurry. Everything is swimming, but at least there isn't any blood. I look around at my classmates; every one of them is staring at me horrified. I'm not the first person to faint in class. Melissa did two weeks ago in Biology. We were dissecting frogs, and she is squeamish. As it turns out, I had screamed in absolute terror, fallen out of my desk, and laid on the floor convulsing in tears. Jenny walks through the classroom door, a very scared looking Ms. Surough, the school nurse, in tow. I look up at Jenny, tears still fresh in my eyes. Ms. Surough sets an arm around my shoulders and leads me out of the room. I numbly follow her direction towards the nurse's office. Something is wrong with me, and I don't know what. Ms. Surough tells me to lie down on the couch in her office. I happily oblige. ``So, what happened, Francis? Are you okay?'' Her voice stays level, but you can tell she is concerned. You can see it in her eyes. The only thing I can think of when I look at her is the image of my brutally attacking Jenny. What the fuck is happening? ``I'm fine, really. I just think I'm overtired{\ldots}I didn't eat this morning. I think that's it. Just overtired and a little stressed from work. Really, I'm okay.'' I'm trying to convince myself more so than Ms. Surough. That's it, really. I'm just stressed from work. I guess I did go to bed too late, and didn't eat enough for breakfast. I'm okay. Really, I'm O.K. I am O.K. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{KryonikMessiah} The Ninjas Luke Bavarious was walking through a busy street, the landscape riddled with urban decay. A building here, windows shattered, foul smoke emitting from it's fetid chimney. A rusted out car there, looking as if it had been sitting there for a good decade or five. And all around was the constant buzz of midday traffic. Bavarious, however, had other plans on his mind, as he walked into a building. The building was tall{\ldots}{\ldots}.too tall. `This building is tall{\ldots}.TOO tall', Bavarious thought to himself, one hand clutched to a Smith and Wesson .44 in his pants and the other holding a beer. Suddenly, out of the corner of his eyes, Bavarious saw a flash! As he turned around to investigate, a ninja appeared! ``Come on, you commie scum!'' said Bavarious, as he fired at the ninja. But the ninja cut the bullet in half! Bavarious jumped back and stared the ninja straight in the face as they began circling each other in this old, decrepit factory. Bavarious narrowed his eyes. These ninjas were a tricky sort. Just as he narrowed his eyes, a board broke over the back of his head. Turning around, Luke Bavarious glared at another ninja in anger, who was shivering with fear, a wet spot covering the crotch of his costume as he held the piece of a broken board. Bavarious snatched the pants right off the ninja, and turned around just in time as the other ninja was leaping at him with a karate kick. Bavarious wrapped the pants around his face, and he fell to the ground choking, but then the other ninja made his move! Bavarious found a knife in his shoulder, which began spraying green vomit and blood all over the Ninja, and he pulled it out and turned around, only to duck the broken board. He stabbed the knife into the ninja's hand, nailing it to the ground, and picked up the broken piece of board, driving it through the Ninja's head in one fell swoop, and it exploded into a spray of brains and blood! Luke Bavarious was on the lookout for more ninjas, when suddenly he saw two children, a little boy and a little girl, standing maybe ten feet away from him. A dead ninja was on the ground, and the two kids were happily tearing his eyeballs out of his skull. Luke Bavarious grimaced at this, when suddenly, he realized his gun was missing just as another ninja burst through the wall. That, however, was fine. The little girl picked up a pistol off the ground, which went un-noticed by the ninja, who sworded out his katana at great attack. Taking a chop at the little boy, he was stopped in his tracks as Luke Bavarious tossed a vomit covered pillow at him, which struck him in the face, and the little girl accidentally pulled the trigger, shooting the ninja square between his legs. The next day, all ninjas fled the city. Their three brothers in arms had fallen, and no ninja was mighty enough to stand up to Luke Bavarious. Children the world over rejoiced. The End. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{IShallRiseAgain} {\bf The School} John Jones was your average every-day student at Livingston Middle School. He was also very late. He hurried into his classroom for the gifted students of which he was the smartest and coolest. He hated his teacher, Miss Diabloclous, she was always giving them homework and pop quizzes. ``Your late, John Jones! You get a detention!'' shrieked Miss Diabloclous. ``Third one this week'' thought John as he sat down with a smirk. When school was over he headed over to Miss Diablocluos's room. Another student, George Smith, was already there. ``You boys have been behaving badly, and we can't have that can we?'' proclaimed Miss Diabloclous. Suddenly her face started stretching and contorting, and she grew ghastly fangs. George was screaming and vomiting at the same time. Her jaws stretched, and she bit off the head of George. His arteries started spewing copious amounts of blood all over the place. Licking the blood off her face, Miss Diablocluos shouted ``Your next!'' John was ready though and pulled out his berretta. ``Pop Quiz time, what happens when I shoot a bullet through your brain?'', he exclaimed and then unleashed a hail of bullets into her head. A police officer rushed in to see what was going on. Upon seeing the grotesque body of Miss Diablocluos, he turned to John. Expecting praise for killing the abomination of nature, he was surprised when the officer unloaded a full clip into him with his own berretta. Sighing the officer stated, ``Damn public schools!''. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Paracetamol Boy} {\bf The Smile} Narrated by Luke Bavarius I woke to a darkened room. The streetlights outside my window cast eerie shadows onto the floor. My mouth tasted carpet. My entire body was immobilised with searing pain. I managed, with great difficulty, to turn my swollen face toward my left. The living area was littered with broken furniture. So it had come to this. My wife had taken the kids and left me for dead in what was once our family apartment in the central hub of New York City. Blood seeped out the open wounds of my trunk and saturated my dark blue clothing with an even darker sheen. There the knife lay still, blade digging into the carpet in front of my face. My own knife, that my own wife had turned on me. I could hear the soft wails of the police sirens from the streets below. That was the least of my worries. Despite my dizzied state, my thoughts drifted to my lovely kids, Johnny and Sasha. I wondered if I would see them again, if they were safe. The steadily loudening sirens registered faintly in the back of my mind{\ldots} Suddenly, I had a flash of mental clarity. It was the insight of a dying man. I could not fight to live. I had lost too much blood, the evidence of this mixing with the contents of my voided bladder and slowly pooling around me like a seeping fountain of death. I was a broken man. There was the chance an arterial bypass would keep me alive, but even if I lived there was nothing to live for. I didn't want to let anyone else think otherwise for me. The knife was only inches from my face. My good arm, my left arm, could move but only with mind-numbing pain. Slowly, agonizingly, I brought the arm closer and closer toward the knife. I grasped its handle and lifted it from the carpet. Each action was excruciating. But pain is only temporary, for in death there is the ultimate release. My thoughts drifted again to Johnny and Sasha, as I used every ounce of my remaining strength to roll onto my back. I positioned the knife in front of my chest and closed my eyes{\ldots} ``Daddy.'' I recognised the voice and opened my eyes. In the dark, I could see two small silhouettes sitting cross-legged beside me. ``Johnny?'' The silhouette on the left nodded at me and smiled. The smile had no lips, only teeth. I shook. ``Daddy, what are you doing?'' the shadow on the right enquired meekly. Sasha? ``Daddy{\ldots}daddy's going away for a while,'' I whispered. The knife was still in my hand, in front of my chest, frozen in place. ``Look{\ldots}daddy can't be with you guys for very long anymore. I won't be alive for long{\ldots}I must go.'' ``But you can't go, Daddy.'' The silhouette on the left was still smiling, the white of his teeth glowing eerily in the darkness. ``If you go{\ldots}I'll eat Sasha.'' The teeth spread to a grin. ``Johnny{\ldots}'' I gasped. As I looked on, Johnny's grin seemed to grow wider and wider. The rows of teeth separated to form a hole between them, and the hole widened to a yawning chasm of unfathomable darkness. A different voice emanated from the hole. ``Daddy,'' it drawled. ``If you go{\ldots}I'll eat Sasha.'' Still in immense pain, I balked, speechless, at the two shadows in front of me, one sitting silently, the other leering at me, teeth as far apart as a basketball, face torn apart by a chasm. My vision blurred and it became increasingly difficult to breathe. The knife dropped from my hand. Between ragged breaths, I gasped weakly. ``Johnny{\ldots}you have your mother's smile.'' Then, as suddenly as they had appeared, the silhouettes were gone, leaving only the space they had occupied. I wept bitterly. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{ack!} {\bf The Dock} This lake seemed ordinary enough. The drive to this lake seemed also ordinary enough, though the road was windy and tedious. The unfortunate youngest child of the Bavarius family, Luke, endured riding in the very back seat of the Buick station wagon. With each twist on the windy road to the lake, Luke suppressed his twisting stomachs urge to purge and vomit due to the car sickness his seat on this ride caused him. ``I hate this drive and I told them we shouldn't go this year. I hate being the youngest. I always have to sit back here and get car sick, but that doesn't matter to anyone, especially my dad who never listens to me'', Luke thought while feeling the bile raise to his throat. ``This ride better end soon'' he wished, but the ride was really just beginning. Upon reaching the cabin at the lake they drove to, Luke's family unpacked for a week's vacation during the summer break from school. Luke ran to catch up to his older siblings who were faster than him as they each ran to claim their bunks in the cabin. The ride left him more nauseas than ever and he had no hope of getting a bunk in the main room. As usual, his bunk would be the one in the back room at the back of the house. Once again he found himself at the back of it all in the most uncomfortable place and anything he said about it would go unnoticed and uncared about. Needing fresh air to clear his head and most importantly, his churning stomach of suppressed oral violence which was nearing critical mass, Luke ventured outside, alone. He knew this trip would be bad and the start was proving it. Behind the cabin was a trail. Dreary and barren, this trail had seen no visitors all year. Vines grew across its misshapen cobblestones. He tried to skip as children do, but the uneven stones reached up to trip him. Even the ground he walked on tried to make his life miserable. Luke pressed on. At the end of the trail, which led from the house to the lake, a dock that rivaled an elderly woman's wrinkled and cracked skin wound its way above the lake's depths. No one knew the origins of the dock, but it had endured every frigid winter and every scorching summer since its birth. Neglected and uncared without a repairman's hands to repair it, the dock barely held together with each board twisting and splintering. Creeping like a silent cat on the hunt for its prey, Luke crept onto the dock. Engulfed in the mist of the lake which surrounded him like a funeral curtain, he made his way to the end where he sat on the end of the dock and put his feet into the water. The coolness felt good to him and made his stomach settle and no more churn like a vile popcorn machine ready to spew forth a vomit of undigested cheese and crackers that was his only meal for the day. Peering into the waters, Luke was surprised at the stillness and the clearness of the lake. As the cruel world spun around him, he could see through the very depths to the bottom which shimmered. He could see his reflection coming in and out of shape. As he stared, it seems time froze and the world stopped turning. His face became without a shape and disappeared entirely. The faces of his siblings floated by instead, pushing him out of the way. Then after that, the faces of his parents, who never listened or cared for their youngest child mocked him in his place. Feeling colder than ever before, Luke felt a fiery fury explode in his blood boiling heart. His mind spun deeper and darker than the largest tornados in Kansas. His eyes bulged, each vain throbbing and pumping their purple liquid to increase his vision. The real picture began to form. This lake was a mirror, a portal, a crystal ball to show his life, show his future. The water's blue gave way to rust as each body flowed by while blood drained from within. ``This is my life'', Luke realized, ``this is my work. Whoever won't listen, whoever won't get out of the way, this is where I must put them, this is where they will pay''. Snapping awake, Luke glared at his aged reflection in the window lighted by the moonlight in the night sky. His thoughts settled as his memory cleared and the pain rose burning and bright like the devouring flares of the Sun. ``No!! This was not me!!`` ''You did this, Horace Manslasher. You took my family that day while I was at the dock and no one would join me. Now I'm coming for you.'' %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{rinski} {\bf The Mansion of Horror} Luke Bavarius stood before the haunted mansion of GhostRaven Mansion. Black bats circled above, haloing the yellow moon. Luke reached into his pocket. The cold steel of his Baretta reassured him. Legend had it the mansion contained untold riches. Luke liked the sound of that. Earlier that day a local kid had tried to stop Luke. ``Don't go to the haunted mansion. It's too dangerous. It kills people. It never loses.'' ``I think I can handle myself, kid.'' Luke said, smirking. THUD! Luke kicked the mansion's heavy wooden doors open. He was in a large living room, 50 feet wide. All the furniture was covered with ghostly white sheets and a chandelier hung ominously overhead. There were lit torches on the walls. Suddenly, all of the furniture exploded. Luke shielded his face with his arms. Splinters tore at his leather jacket. The splinters reformed into a giant wood golem. The golem surged to life. It's eyes glowed with arcane evil. Luke smirked. He grabbed a torch from the wall. He threw it. The wooden giant burst into blue flames. It burned as though it were made of tinder and lighter fluid. The giant fell to its knees in wooden agony and then unexploded back into furniture. The haunted white sheets flew back to again cover the furniture. ``Getting the treasure from this haunted mansion will be a breeze.'' Luke asserted, smirking. The next room was a gigantic ball room with chandeliers and a wooden floor. One wall was covered in old oil paintings. The other wall was a gigantic window with giant red curtains. He could see the garden. The hedges looked ominous. ``Probably plant monsters.'' Luke murmured. He took a step into the room. Suddenly, zombies were clawing their way out of the wooden floor. Their empty eye sockets were slick with green rot. It glinted sickly in the moon light. Luke's nostrils were attacked by the zombie's horrid stench. Then Luke was attacked by the zombies themselves. Luke pulled out his Baretta. He emptied a few bullets into the mushy heads of the advancing undead army. The bullet wounds oozed blood and pus but the zombies just kept coming. ``They just keep coming!'' Luke joked, smirking. He had to act fast. He ran around the zombies and their zombie holes so he wouldn't trip. Zombies dove at him. Luke dodged the deft attacks. Zombies dove left and right. Barely, Luke made it to the other side of the room. As soon as he stepped out of the room there was a flash. All the zombies disappeared and the floor grew back. The room looked exactly as it did initially. Luke was astonished. He stepped back into the room. Zombies poured from the floor like oozing pus. Luke stepped back. The zombies disappeared. Luke chuckled. He did this for one minute then moved to the next room. The next room was the kitchen. Immediately, all of the knives flew out of the drawers. The knives hovered lazily in the air. Then the knives flew at him. They cut through the air. Literally. Blood droplets condensed out of the air. Luke dodged out of the way of the knives attack. The knives flew past him into the meat locker, killing the monster that was hiding inside. The knives made quick work of the monster, then turned to attack Luke once again. Luke simply shut the meat locker's door. The knives clattered against the solid iron door. Luke smirked. Luke entered the hallway out of the kitchen and was immediately attacked by a giant spider monster. ``What the!'' Luke uttered. But before he'd even finished uttering, the spider lurched forward. It's poison jaws opened. They tried to clamp closed on Luke's arm. Luke dodged backwards as the jaws clamped shut. The jaws etched a wound in Luke's arm, but were unable to deliver their venomous payload. In one fluid motion Luke drew his Baretta. He shot two bullets into the spider's bulging bug eyes. Two bullet casings clattered on the floor. The wound belched forth a thick green blood. The blood hissed as it hit the floor, dissolving it. The spider recoiled. Its insectoid brain was riddled with pain and fear and two bullets. But it was too late. Luke grabbed a sword from the wall. He brought it down on the spider monster's neck. The head was cleanly sliced off of the twitching body. The spider collapsed in a heap of bloody legs. The wounds vomited their acidic syrup and the floor kept dissolving. ``I'd better get out of here.'' Luke intoned, smirking. As Luke was escaping down the hall, he saw a room filled to the brim with treasure. He stood there, mouth agape. He was going to be rich. He ran into the room. Suddenly, the room shimmered and disappeared. Luke fell into a void. He screamed. At the bottom of the void, as far as the eye could see in every direction, was an unspeakably horrid beast. It was made of mouths and eyestalks and tentacles. It covered the entire floor in every direction. Luke retched a scream. He tumbled towards the gaping maw of the horrible creature. There was no escape. As Luke fell, a figure appeared in front of him. It was the boy from before. ``The mansion never loses.'' The boy said, watching Luke fall. Luke choked on a sob. It was the last sound he ever made. As Luke fell into the giant open mouth, the monster started biting him lightning fast. The bites were so fast that the teeth broke the sound barrier. Luke was dead before he knew it. He exploded into bloody slices that fell down into the beast's stomach acid. ``The mansion never loses.'' The boy repeated. He smirked. Then he disappeared. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Syphilicious!} WHAT LURKS BEHIND OUR EYES/THE HORRID REFLECTION REVISITED Thursday night, and everything is quiet. Unusual for me, but in my current settings it should be expected; instead of walking my beat in the thug-infested alleys of our dear city, I am far out in the country, at Old Woman McCannshire's place, engaged in a staring contest with the termites that crawl in and out of the floor of her porch as I wait for her to answer the door. The middle of nowhere does not properly describe my location; I'd been driving so long that I'm probably already halfway out. My name is Luke Bavarius, and I'm a detective, but tonight I appear to be the guy that drives around checking under old biddies' beds for monsters. Even the pranks get men sent out these days. A prank is what I would have thought this would be, if I didn't know the old woman calling was too addled to even have a teenager's sense of humor. McCannshire thinks her house is haunted by spirits, and wants one of us ``wonderful young men you have working down there'' to come check it out. I'm almost glad I forgot to bring my spare ammunition for my Beretta out here; I've used that thing enough today considering my nerves are just about as shot as those three bank robbers, and if this goose chase got any more boring I'd probably put it in my mouth and make brain gumbo. The unlatching of bolts awakens me from my reverie, and my head snaps back up into the proper position. ``You win this time, termites,'' I mutter, wiping a thin string of drool from my chin. Slowly, the door creaks open, and I am treated to the sight of Mrs. McCannshire in a wispy white nightgown. Perhaps in the prime of her youth this might have been something I could have tolerated or even enjoyed, but the broad has long been in her more tender years of age, her face has more wrinkles than the wandering Jew's underwear, and her nightgown is greasy with the mysterious secretions of the elderly. I try to focus on the mangy grey poodle she cradles in one arm, a dirty little mutt that she probably pampers like nobody's business. She really fits the picture of an old bag of bones, and as soon as she opens her mouth I can tell how far gone she really she is. ``Are you the detective Officer Dent sent over to help with the spirits in my house?'' She speaks slowly and clearly, her eyes twin moons of gawkish innocence. I don't know which kind of dementia would be worse: the flavor Mrs. McCannshire possesses where one is magically returned to the age of nine or the other one where you think the walls are talking to you. Although, considering why I was here, it's possible she suffered from the latter too. ``Uh{\ldots}yes. Yes, ma'am. Officer Dent is my, uh, superior.'' I stepped past her and walked inside, trying to ignore the subdued growl the mutt in her hands had started up upon sight of me. The place was clean to a point; there were numerous tables and shelves bedecked with pictures and family heirlooms, all meticulously dusted, but the carpet was smeared with dirty pawprints and general dust and filth, it's frayed and ragged material likely not blessed by the gentle touch of a vaccuum cleaner for years. The carpet and walls were an ugly matching beige and all the miscellaneous objects, despite constant care, had lost their luster. The only sign of real color came from the bathroom behind the door opposite the one I had come in, wherein an even more hideous bright lime green covered the small amount of wall I could see around the door. I turned to face her, reaching into the folds of my trenchcoat and drawing out a pack of cigarettes and my lighter. ``Now, what seems to be the problem here?'' A lazy puff of smoke floated serenely past my raised eyebrow from my now lit cigarette. ``Well,'' she said, setting the dog down onto the carpet where it did an annoying little dance around our legs, barking and whining, ``I've been noticing things for several days now, but only this morning did it get really bad. You see, every time I use the bathroom I feel someone is watching me.'' ``How can you tell?'' ``Well, at first it was just an uneasy feeling. But then I started hearing voices that would say things that I couldn't make out. Then I started seeing faces out of the corner of my eye or in a reflection. And this is happening quite often, mind you. It's happened every time I go in there, and these days I tend to{\ldots}oh, how should I say it{\ldots}do my business more often, mostly because my--'' ``I understand, I understand,'' I said hurriedly. ``Please, continue.'' ``Well, uh, this morning, I saw a face in the mirror behind me. And I didn't just see it, either; it was directly behind me, an entire person, and he didn't go away until I turned round.'' My eyebrow, which had just started to head home for the day, turned right back around and marched up my forehead. This sounded legitimately interesting. Whatever had actually happened, seeing a person plain as day was a lot better than imaginary sounds or tricks of light that even happened to people who weren't sitting outside Death's doorstep in motorized wheelchairs. There was really only one thing to do. ``Well, I guess you'll have to show me the bathroom then, Mrs. McCannshire.'' ``Right you are, dear.'' She seems to notice that my gaze had strayed to the pictures on the small table next to the front door, and as she hobbles past me towards the bathroom she begins to talk about her dead husband. Half listening to her talk about the dangers of late term prostate cancer and wincing at the intimate descriptions she gives of the times she went with him for his checkups, I search for an ashtray and find one nestled in between boxes of tissue and stack of gardening books. I rub the flame out and leave the stub, resolving not to smoke any more until I leave the house. The old woman doesn't need all that smoke. As I join her in the bathroom, I see that her poodle has the same idea. It flies past me and sits whining at her feet until she relents and picks it up again. I stand next to her and look around the room. The mirror is old but clean, and the porcelain throne in the corner is the same. I look into the sink, and from the short, curly gray hairs lining the rim I deduce that she washes the dog in it; either that or she's more up on the trends of women of today than you'd think of a gal her age. The horror of the thought further distracts me, and I begin to develop that thousand yard stare as she tells me about the various scary encounters she has experienced while voiding her bowels, unnecessarily clueing me in on the second part in her stories too. Technically I am looking at the hot water handle, but I am miles away, back on a real cop's beat or in the arms of a good woman, whichever one does a better job of distracting me from her current tale of a mysterious voice whispering in what she thinks is Latin and the effects of the creamed corn she had with lunch two days ago. Suddenly I spy in the reflection from the mirror that the dog has the same idea. The yappy little thing now sits silent and unmoving in her arms, staring intently into the eyes of its reflection. At first I am grateful for the relative silence that its new object of interest has provided, but after a minute it begins to make my skin go all goosey. I've never seen a dog sit that still for anything. I slowly move my hand in front of its face, nodding to show Mrs. McCannshire I am listening at a pause in her latest story involving the cupboard swinging open and almost hitting her in the head and how the fright really helped ``loosen things, down there''. I pass my hand back in forth in front of the dog's vision to no effect. In a moment of clarity I drudge up the dog's name out of its owner's ramblings. ``Jasper! Hey, Jasper!'' At once the dog is a flurry of motion, leaping out of her hands and latching onto the watch around my wrist with its teeth. I stumble backwards into the main room and fall to the floor, frantically batting at the hideous ball of fur as it growls like a recently castrated bear. Instinct takes over; my mind recognizes when I am in a fight for my life even when the opponent is a 15-pound owl pellet. Without thinking I wrap the palm of the hand it grips around its head and bash it repeatedly against the edge of a bookshelf next to me, then stagger to my feet and swing it around the room, screaming to match its rabid cries. All of a sudden it flies free with a high pitched yelp and collides with the table on which the ashtray rested and the table and its contents tumble to the ground. I approach cautiously, waiting for my opponent to make some sign of life. At once the small pile of picture frames and knicknacks erupts as Jasper flies straight towards my face. I have anticipated it; it passes fruitlessly over my head as I lean backwards almost parallel to the floor, and I hear its frenzied growling suddenly muffled. I push my spine back into place with one hand and spin around only to see Jasper hanging from the ledge of a desk, his jaw wrapped around it and his teeth grinding into it as if he imagined it to be my arm. I act quickly, sparing no mercy. With several steps I come upon the helpless creature and I lift a booted foot to hover a foot away from the back of its skull. ``Chew on this, pooch.'' There is a loud, wet crack as its skull explodes like a balloon filled with bones and blood. It's corpse falls silently to the floor, followed by the lower half of his jaw and head. The top half rests on top of the desk, firmly embedded into the wood. I curse silently to myself and wipe my foot off on the carpet, leaving behind a red smear flecked with hair and bits of bone. All at once I come to my senses, and I turn to see Mrs. McCannshire standing at the bathroom door. For a second we both stand staring wordlessly at each other, then she utters a soft cry and flees back into the bathroom. I hear a soft click as she locks the door behind her. I sigh and walk over, knocking on the door. ``Mrs. McCannshire, I'm sorry about Jasper, okay? I shouldn't have{\ldots}done that, but he was, I mean he was attacking me. There was nothing else I could do.'' I continued to apologize while I listened to her sobs, trying to look anywhere but back at that head, or that part of it, those sightless eyes silently judging me. I've killed people before in my line of work, and I see their faces when I close my eyes, but now this mutt was getting to me more than any of them ever did. It was an irritable little thing, but why did it up and attack me like that? What did it see in that mirror? I notice that the crying on the other side of the door has stopped, and for a moment I feel relief. ``Mrs. McCannshire, if you can just come out here we can talk about this. Again, I'm sorry about your dog, but--'' I am interrupted by the click of the lock, and as the door slowly comes ajar I help her open it. She stands there, head down, and she looks so depressed that I can't help but resume my apologies. ``If there's anything I can do to pay you back for what I did, you name it. I really can't tell you how sorry I am, I'll get you a new dog, whatever you want. I'm sure I{\ldots}could{\ldots}uh{\ldots}'' The look in her eyes when she raises her head is different than what you'd think a hysterical old woman would have. They're more intelligent than they were before, those eyes, and they seem to possess more menace than I assume an old lady like that would be able to muster. One bony hand wraps around my throat with otherworldy strength, choking off the rest of the sentence. She lifts me off my feet, pulls back, and for a brief moment everything is serene. Then I hit the wall. I slide down next to the open front door, and after my eyes uncross and the black in front of my eyes goes away I use the knob to pull myself up. I check for broken bones and don't find good news in the ribs area, but other than that I am fine, if bruised. ``Well, you've got a good arm, I have to give you that.'' I think over my options, running my tongue over my teeth. I can't hurt her; she's obviously just possessed by whateve possessed that dog in the mirror. I have to get the spirit out of her, or incapacitate her, but I don't know how to perform exorcisms and at her age a gust of wind could kill her. Although if she's able to throw like that maybe she's a lot stronger in other ways too. What if I tied her up? Something makes my train of thought come to a screeching halt. It hasn't reached the station, it's gone straight off the tracks. There were no survivors. My brain is recieving messages my tongue shouldn't be sending. It's not finding something that should be there. I grab a polished silver cup off a table and flash my teeth at my reflection. There's a black square where there should be a nice little white one. I've lost a tooth. This bitch is going to die. I toss the cup and pull my piece, my finger already on the trigger. Worse men talk about how their guns sing songs that only ever have a few notes; that's played out, and anyway my Beretta never saw the appeal in singing. It yells, and it only ever needs to raise its voice once to win an argument with someone. As I aim down the sights at the old girl now barrelling towards me from accross the room with a horrifying screech, I recall something about not having ammunition, and I anticipate the empty little click. Cursing wildly, I hurl the gun at her, and it bounces off her forehead ineffectively. I reach for the knife strapped to my leg down at my ankle, but it is too late; she knocks it out of my hand with one swift strike just as I am bringing it up and it clatters against the wall. She slams me up against the same patch of wall that I'd said hello to twenty seconds ago and holds me at arm's length against the wall, my head more than two feet higher than hers and my feet off the ground clattering against the wall. Both hands are wrapped around my neck and I am rapidly losing oxygen. You need to do something now, I think. Or you're done, Luke. You're done. Frantically my hands search for something, anything, to fight her off with, finding nothing. I'm simply too far off the ground to reach anything. I turn my head as much as her steel fingers allow, and through my darkening vision I can barely see an umbrella stand with one large black umbrella in it. In vain I stretch my left hand towards the handle, my fingers finding air and then brushing the handle. I strain as hard as I can as the pain advances and my sight blackens, and suddenly I have a grip, I grasp it with the very tips of my fingers, bring it up to my hand. She is laughing now, piercing and mocking, delighting in her triumph. She doesn't keep it up for long. I raise the umbrella high above my head then stab it down into her open mouth and throat, pushing it into her esophagus as she spits and gurgles, her hands clutching even tighter at my neck. The handle is just past her teeth, my hand gripping it firmly even as she bites into my wrist. I use my thumb to find the release and push it up. The umbrella is spring operated, the fabric edged with sharp metal. Her neck evaporates in a cloud of blood and her head shoots up into the hair, twirling in the air like a basketball and falling to the ground with I and the rest of her body. After a while, coughing and wheezing, I push her corpse off of me and use the blood-soaked umbrella to stand up. As soon as I try to walk towards the nearest chair, I stumble and trip over her head. Standing up again, I look back down at the bloody mess on the carpet and on me. I feel bile rising in my throat, and I turn to run to the bathroom. I push past the door and stagger to the sink, where I vomit noisily and stand for a while, staring into this puddle of my own sick. After what seems like forever I look up and into my reflection in the mirror. I am hunched over the sink, my hands still grasping the sides, my mouth hanging open and a thin trail of vomit hanging from my lower lip. My eyes are wet with tears from the choking and the vomiting. Truly I am a pitiful sight. I give myself a weak smile, as if it will cheer me up. I can't help but notice that something is off in my reflection, but I can't think what. Then I tongue the gap where my tooth used to be. My reflection does not. It still has the full set. The reflection straightens its back and wipes the vomit away, dries its eyes with the sleeve of its shirt, and all I can do is stare in dumb incomprehension. It is the same short black hair, the same baby blue eyes, the same trenchcoat, the same man, yet it moves of its own free will. It is me and yet it is not me. It has an almost condecending look in its eyes as it reaches down below the sink, to its ankle. It comes back up, my knife in its hands, its knife, and I cannot move a muscle. There is a flash of metal. He cuts through my throat like cheesecake. The arterial spray gives a good portion of the shitty green paint job a new coat from the opposite side of the color wheel. There is a brief sense of motion, and I taste ceramic, my body thudding to the bathroom floor. I move my mouth wordlessly as red begins to creep along the grout in between the white tiles. I hear a shuffle of fabic as my other self steps through the mirror and lowers himself from the sink to the floor. He steps over my body, taking care to not step in the advancing pool of blood. My vision begins to cloud for the last time as he casts the knife absentmindedly down in front me. It slides to a halt next to my forehead. He begins to walk towards the front door, then stops, turns around. He walks cooly back to me, crouches in front of me, grimacing at the blood that is in danger of soiling the knee of his pants. He looks me in the eyes, and begins to say something, then thinks better of it. He does nothing for a second, simply watches me dying, then reaches over, placing an index and middle finger on my eyelids, and then he slides them shut. ``Good night, Luke.'' %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Rummanging} {\bf Nebulous Cupboard} This city is my mistress; it is my wife; it is my secretary. All that one can feel about a city, I feel it about this one, and more. My best friend. I watch the public stream past my window, like a river flowing past rocks, the rocks being my small 1 bedroom apartment, which was by now dirty and neglected. When I leave for my patrol, I do not check for my gun. It is as much a part of me as my toenails are of me. I am forced to bring as well, my cellular phone. In an ideal world, I could never talk to anybody, and all would be good, but it is not so I must. As the rickety door rickets behind me as I leave, I cycle though my address book. {\em ABE CYNTHIA MOM PIZZA HUT >DIRECTORIES >INFO HOTLINE} I ring for ``Abe'', as I am accustomed to doing. A gruff New York accent shrieks in my ear. ``Bavarious! Thank Christ you rang, something's not right, need your help immediately! It's coming for me Luke, it's COMIII --- ``. I interrupt him. ``Abe, what is this? Where are You?''. I can tell from the tone of his voice something isn't right. ``Why didn't you phone ME if something's wrong!'' I said. ``Dammit Bavarious, I ran out of credit, now get your ass over here!''. I slapped the phone shut like the jaws of an overprotective crocodile, and sprinted for Abe's hut. It would be a long run from here, but I can tell he needed me. His wooden hut was hidden deep in the forest, the outside seemed normal, well as normal as it could seem, Abe being an unconventional character to say the least. In one slick simultaneuous motion, I kicked the door forcefully, sending the thing flying inwards, and swept my Beretta up from my ankle holster, a task made significantly more difficult from the kick. The lights were all not on, leaving the place shrouded in darkness. I heard a noise from a closet, and rushed to meet the source. The thin door was locked, so I shot 6 holes in it, allowing me to see inside. There was nothing inside but my bullets. I carried on with my sweep. The lounge: empty. The kitchen: empty. The bathroom: empty, save for one poo in the bowl. The Stench was fresh, and strong. Whatever left this vile gift was still here. I turn my head to check my countenance in the mirror. I am entranced, until I hear a scream from upstairs, distinctly Abe. I dart out of the room, and it lumbers after me, slowly and scarily. I find Abe's shrouded figure huddled in the corner of a blackened room. ``Abe, is that you, have you been drinking again? You said you'd quit{\ldots}'' I enquired. He looked me in the eye, and raised his other hand. The light was so poor, I could not tell what was in it. Until he flicked the lighter on. The small light illuminated his tear soaked face, running down his cheeks, carving streams through the dirt caked on his face. The dirty rag of material hanging from the bottle neck became visible. ``I'm sorry Bavarious'' he whimpered, and before I had the time to react, to light the rag and tossed the bottle high in the air, shattering on the ceiling above him. Shards of glass and licks of flame fell down like hell fire onto his crumpled body. The house was wooden, and the fire spread like wildfire. ``AAAAABBBBEEEEEEE'' I cried, crying for the loss of a friend. I was forced to vacate the house as fast as I could, the flames consuming the hut like the mouth of Lucifer. Just as I was maybe 20 feet from the hut, it exploded, sending shrapnel every which way. Something rock hard struck my head, I hit the floor like a rock, out cold. Some unknown time later, the black mist tentatively receded from my vision, allowing me to see. It took moments before I recalled where I was, and I quickly looked back behind me. Nought but a single cupboard stood. I crawled to it, my legs too burned to work. Scrambling through the debris, I reached the un-charred doors, pock-marked by 6 familiar bullet holes. I tried the doors, now inexplicably unlocked. As the doors swung open, the bloodied corpse of a small child fell outwards onto me, still clutching his teddy-bear. I held the child as he held the bear, desperate for solace in our final moments. I jerked my head back and screamed to the heavens, and the skies opened. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{antiloquax} {\bf The Unexpected Shocking Surprise} Luke Bavarious didn't know why he was called to an abandoned church. But he had been called. By the man who had killed his father. And it was the church where his father was murdered. As he approached the crumbling iron gates of the church, a pale white boy with black eyes from out of nowhere tugged at his tan rain jacket. ``Do not go in there, mister,'' said the young boy. ``Nonsense!'' laughed Luke Bavarious haughtily. ``What is in there will destroy you!'' said the young boy. Luke Bavarious pulled out his Colt Python and pointed it at the boys pale white head that was now sweaty with perspiration and fear. ``I said nonsense,'' said Luke Bavarious. But fear and bile clung to Luke's throat as he entered the church. He plunged through the rusty wooden oak doors and reached for his gun. Then he remembered he was already holding his gun. Then he crept along the church. As he tiptoed quietly through the rotting, crumbling church, he saw that everything was black except for places that were illuminated by the pale blue light of the moon. It was a full moon. A full moon just like the night his father died. At the altar of the church there was a shadow. Luke Bavarious cocked his pistol and pointed it at the figure. The figure was tall and intimidating and terrifying. But Luke Bavarious had seen worse in his time. ``Stop! Show yourself!'' said Luke Bavarious. But the shadowy figure did not show itself. It was still a shadow. Blam. That was the sound of Luke Bavarious' gun as he shot the shadow and killed it. Even in the moonlight, he could see the glistening red blood shimmer in the moonlight as it spewed upward and outward and everywhere else and covered the old and rotting crucifix with gore and rust colored blood. Luke Bavarious wanted to vomit, but not because of the head that had exploded and the brains that were on his clothes, but because he had finally killed the man who had killed his father. The man who had killed his father had never been caught. Until that night. But suddenly the echoing sound of the gunshot was interrupted by clapping. Clapping hands. Clapping hands of the man who had really killed Luke Bavarious' father. Luke Bavarius had shot the wrong man. ``Well done,'' said a voice that belonged to the rough clapping hands. ``You have passed the test, Luke Bavarious. I have been waiting for you.'' As Luke Bavarious began to feel the enormity of what he had just done, the walls begin to spin. Madness and insanity tried to clasp their hands on Luke's soul and he fell to his knees and vomited sickly sweet bile and whiskey. His eyes blurred with rage and tears. And the tears of rage too. And he didn't know what he could do. ``Luke Bavarious, I killed your father!'' said a mocking voice. Blam. This was not Luke Bavarious' gun. It was the gun of the man he had just killed. ``What!?'' screamed the voice in the dark. The man Luke Bavarious thought he had killed was still alive and had been waiting to shoot the third man who was the man in the dark. ``No!'' cried the voice in the dark. Luke could see now and saw that it was the body of his old friend from school who had grown up with him. Now he was dead. The man who had killed his father was dead. And so was the other man, who had succumbed to his injuries. ``Well,'' said Luke Bavarius to no one in particular, ``I should go home.'' As he left, Luke Bavarious again met the pale white boy. But now the pale white boy was covered in urine and feces because he was terrified. But what was this? He was also smiling. Smiling the smiling smile of a child who had lost a battle but won a different battle. ``Such nonsense you little children believe,'' laughed Luke Bavarious mockingly. And Luke left the church forever. But as he left he could feel someone watching him. It was the eyes of a third man. The man who had really killed his father. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{benitocereno} {\bf THE BEGINNING} (V2, revised for contest rules!) Minutes later, to the sound of gunshots, Rogue Davix awoke from his horrible dream. The lumps, all of the lumps, were nothing more than a satanic vision. The dreams were always the same. Aliens, darkness, another world. If he didn't have amnesia maybe he would have had some clue as to why he was haunted every night. But it was a dark and dangerous secret, only willing to unlock itself when he proved himself worthy. He brushed it off because he was not sleeping well. There were strange noises outside of his apartment at night. Evil noises. Noises so black they could snuff out the light of decency in the strongest of men. He complained several times but no one would take care of it. That is why he decided to hire Luke Bavarious, PI. Rogue jumped out of bed and ran to his window. Luke Bavarious had unloaded his Beretta into a stumbling ghoul, but the ghoul would not stop. Luke struggled but was not able to stop the monsters advances. They were coming towards Rogue's window! {\em Crash!} The window splintered into a thousand fragments and flew everywhere. The muscular fighters traded blows. Blood and vile fluid splattered everywhere. After minutes of fighting it finally seemed that Luke was the winner- the ghoul fell to the ground and cocked his head to the side, his bile vomited across the floor. Luke collapsed to the floor and began to sob, his face disfigured by the shattered glass and powerful blows delivered by the now fallen ghoul, the evil merchant of pain. Rogue ran over to help him up. ``Luke, it's okay, you won.'' Rogue said, trying to comfort him. ``No, it's just{\ldots} no, I'm one of them!'' Luke screamed as he looked into a mirrored fragment. ``No you're not, it's not what you have on the outside that matters Luke; it's what's on the inside. And we both know what you are. You're Luke Bavarious.'' ``You{\ldots} you're right. But we can't stay here.'' He pulled himself together and stood up, triumphantly, defying the gods trying to keep him down. Luke was right, outside more sounds began to stir. The ghouls could smell the evil cocktail of blood and vomit through the broken window, and they were hungry. Luke handed Rogue his spare Beretta. ``I hope you know how to use this thing,'' he snarled through his clenched teeth. Rogue popped the safety off. The ghouls poured in through the window. Luke kicked open the apartment door and they both ran to the fire escape. ``We're gonna have to go up!'' Rogue said as he saw the advancing horde of darkness. ``What's causing this!? Why is this happening?'' Rogue panicked as he fired into the ghouls while climbing the stairs. His bullets landed in their limbs, barely slowing them down. ``I don't know, but some people say it's the Ozone! Without it, people are transforming into these{\ldots} things! More and more lately! Either that or you just {\em really} pissed someone off!'' Luke unloaded a clip into the closest ghoul's skull; brains flew out of the back of its head like a playdoh press. Images of the horrible dream flashed through Rogue's head. They circled the top of the fire escape and stepped onto the rooftop. Once there Luke turned his trusted Beretta onto the fire escape itself. {\em Bam, bam, bam,} he shot the retaining bolts loose. With one swift kick he dislodged the staircase, sending it and its undead inhabitants to the ground stories below. It was then that they observed their situation. The rooftops across the horizon, hundreds of them, were covered in ghouls. It wouldn't be long until they found a way onto their roof. The blood red sun rose in the distance, casting the shadows of the ghouls across the rooftops, giving them an intangible bridge to their goal. The flesh of Luke Bavarious and Rogue Davix. Rogue admired his gun with a thousand yard stare. ``Two bullets left{\ldots} I guess we're lucky,'' Rogue sighed. ``That's two more than we're going to need,'' Luke smirked. ``What do you mean?'' ``You saved my life back there when I was ready to throw in the towel. Now it's time I save yours. You don't remember a thing, do you?`` Luke paused{\ldots} ''we're getting off of this planet.'' Luke shot his Beretta into the air, but the bullet stopped inches from where it left the barrel and resonated with a metallic thud. Luke's ship appeared from the naked air, the bullet held in place by its force field, an impressive blue craft from the stars. ``Is this{\ldots} the end of Earth?'' Rogue asked. ``No, no son. This is only the beginning.'' Basking in the clarity of the moment, the fog lifted, Rogue grabbed onto his father's hand as he pulled him into the ship. Luke hit the burners just as the monsters made their way onto the roof, turning them into clouds of flying pink mist, their screams silent against the engines' roar. They had a lot of zombies to kill, it was time to get to work. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{A Child's Letter} Crap! My previous story had nothing to do with children! So here's this other one instead: {\bf Yellow Eyes} ``I'm not lying, Daddy!'' whimpered Kaitilin Axelplax, a six-year old girl with an admittedly active imagination. ``I promise you---{\em promise} you---that I saw it again! Saw {\em them} again!'' Hubert Axelplax smiled his sick and twisted smile while nonchalantly wiping the rust-colored tobacco drippings oozing down his chin. Delicately, he set his Coors on ane Igloo cooler doubling as an end table. ``Kai, what've I told you 'bout {\em lyin',} you little {\em bitch!''} Without warning---though she knew it was coming---Hubert, with speed belying his significantly overweight frame, backhanded Kaitilin, sending her flying into the wall. She collapsed in a heap, knocking over a floor lamp in the process. She stood, fought to find her balance, then, reeling from the blow, vomited profusely all over the threadbare couch. Rust-colored blood seeped wistfully from her gashed eyebrow. ``I {\em swear,} Daddy! I saw the thing with yellow eyes! It was in the mirror!'' Again, she threw up. Hubert took three long strides towards his daughter's trembling form and unbuckled his belt in one fluid motion. ``You're {\em just} like her, you know that? Just like that {\em whore} of a mother of yours!'' He raised the heavy leather strap above his wickedly grinning head and--- * * * Luke Bavarious' radio cackled to life: {\em All units, we've got a 10-34 near Forty-second and somewhere near Dyer. Possible 10-45; 10-52.} Distractedly, Bavarious holstered his Beretta, taking a moment to admire its clean lines, its intoxicating heaviness. Suicide would have to wait. He took one last, long drag on his cigarette, then tossed the remainder out the window of his car. Baravious picked up his radio and responded, ``Dispatch, this is Bavarious. I'm in the vinicity; 10-76. I'll check it out. Over.'' {\em 10-4, Bavarious. Out.} For the first time in a long time, Bavarious smiled. Nothing like an old fashioned assault with possibly fatalities to enliven the night. He had to admit it: he liked this work. Within minutes, Bavarious arrived at his destination. He parked in an alley and realized he must be the first officer on the scene. Everything seemed eerily quiet---especially for New York. Like liquid, with practiced movement, he unholstered his sidearm and kicked in the door. The apartment building's lobby was empty. Bavarious involuntarily shivered, then made his way up the first flight of stairs. As he walked gingerly through the halls, when he was just outside of apartment 209, he thought he heard muffled giggling. He realized it was the only sound he'd heard since entering the structure. Adopting a professional demeanor, he knocked. No one answered. He knocked again and followed with: ``Police! Open up!'' He thought he could faintly make out the sounds of a children's program, probably coming from a television. The giggling subsided, replaced with whispered commands. Something ponderous within the apartment dragged---or was dragged---across the floor. Then, silence. Bavarious was about to knock again when, suddenly, the door opened, and a little girl---no more than six or seven, answered. ``Hello, Officer!'' she giggled. Bavarious surveyed her quizzically, noted the poorly bandaged laceration above her eye, then looked past her into the depths of the apartment's foyer. He thought he glimpsed something twist subtly in the shadows. He blinked. ``Uh, good evening, Miss. Are your parents home?'' ``I don't h---I mean, no, officer, they're not. My mama died when I was little, and my daddy, he's{\ldots}um{\ldots}he's---'' She seemed to cock her head, as though hearing an inaudible voice. ``---he's out buying more beer.'' She suppressed a laugh. ``Is he?'' mused Bavarious. ``Miss, what happened to your forehead?'' Suddenly, the girl's demeanor changed, plunging from sunny to downright icy. ``Officer, it's past my bedtime. I need to---you need to leave.'' ``Mi---'' ``{\em Right} now.'' Though he couldn't explain it, Bavarious sensed an impossible authority in her voice. An authority that hadn't been there moments ago. He glanced at her again and thought for a moment her eyes were glowing, yellow, bending his will to hers. He shook his head and looked back into the apartment---anything to get away from that jaundiced gaze! That's when he noticed what appeared to be a rust-colored trail leading from an overturned Igloo cooler toward another room in the apartment. ``I'm afraid I can't do that, Miss,'' he intoned as he brushed past her, intently avoiding her piercing eyes. Curiously, she said nothing. His Beretta held out before him, a talisman against the darkness, he followed the trail into a bathroom. There, in the tub and amid the stink of beer and feces, lay the body of what Bavarious assumed was the little girl's father. The man's belt was still clutched in his hand. The man's hand was resting on the countertop, a good seven or eight feet away from the rest of him. Unable to control his emotions, Bavarious puked all over the fetid corpse, displacing several flies. As the chunks rolled slowly down the disemboweled form, giggling erupted from behind him. He jumped. ``I told you you needed to leave,'' breathed the little girl, whose eyes had ceased glowing and now positively {\em surged} with wicked yellow light. He noticed for the first time that her hands were the color of rust. Bewitched, Bavarious could do nothing as her arms shimmered and became a writhing mass of tentacles. He told his brain to send an impulse to his trigger finger, but it wouldn't obey him. It had a new master now. {\em Good night, Officer Bavarious.} projected the little gi--- {\em Her name is Kaitilin. How do I know that? How d---} {\em I---yes, good night, Kaitilin. I'll{\ldots}be{\ldots}going{\ldots}now. If{\ldots}if that's all right{\ldots}} * * * Luke Bavarious awoke outside of an apartment building somewhere near Forty-second Street and Dyer Avenue, sprawled across the hood of his car. The sun had just begun to rise above the tangled mass of skyscrapers all around him. His mouth tasted like vinegar, and he smelled like a slaughterhouse. ``What am I doing here,'' he wondered aloud. The sun thrust a glinting beam of radiance through a break in the buildings; it fell with purpose on a second-story window of the apartments in front him. Following its path, he thought for a moment he saw two points of yellow light blink, then vanish. ``Weird,'' he muttered. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Decatur Fist} The Last Night of Luke Bavarious Check the machine. No missed calls. No word from Davix. Nothing. With a sigh that poured from his mouth with a torrent of non-amused frustration Luke Bavarious pulled a small slip of paper from his pocket and wadded it up and tossed it into the waste receptacle with the precision of a black man that shoots basketball in a Lakers jersey. As a fan of black culture Bavarious was known for his hoop skills. They had even saved his life once and then again on another separate occasion. Davix was dead, and that was that. There was no sugar coating any longer. It must have been brutal. When you're surrounded by a cacophony of death you think about death a lot. Davix had even said during a haunting and stormy night that he hoped that he would go in his sleep. It didn't happen like that. Luke Bavarious could envision in his head a vision of Davix dying by the hands of that beast. Bavarious could see the hand of the beast smashing into Davix' face terribly powerful. It was a bodacious site. One to be remembered for an eternity of doomsdays. You need a drink. Clear your mind. Stay on guard. Something strange had happened earlier today, it was why Luke Bavarious now had the small piece of paper that he had just wadded up and thrown away just moments ago before the ticking sounds of the clock hauntingly swept its hand across the face of the clock bringing time forward to this moment. The boy had told him that Davix would die, and Bavarious too if he didn't listen. Bavarious had laughed a laugh and chortled a chuckle at the thought of him and Davix going out on the same day. However, it looked like the boy was batting half of a perfect batting average now. He had shown up on Market Street and followed him all the way down Pine, up West, and finally had the courage to talk to him once stopping on Center. He was wearing a grey hoodie and seemed to be no more than 13. He had dark stormy and haunting eyes, and you could tell he wanted to be taken seriously. He had a pension for horror and a knack for stories. He claimed to be the creator and destructor. His name was Biddick. He was to be taken seriously by all accounts. Bavarious had told the boy that he didn't have time for him, and that he needed to leave, but there was a thirst that needed to be quenched that longed for the answer of why the boy would show up after following him and then having the balls that were big enough to make him say such nonsense to him. The boy told Bavarious he would be sorry. Bavarious ignored him and ordered a tuna on wheat. Alone. The sounds came slowly at first, but then with a quickening of rapid speed. Claws clawing razor sharp against banana peel soft skin. There was a sound of terrible nursing. Like wounds being cauterized by the flame of a thousand dying invalids. They were here for Bavarious. He laughed a strange giggling laugh that sounded like a maniac pumping gas into a Ford Fairlane. He opened the window and let them vomit into the window and take him. They took him with a great brutality. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Brolita} {\bf Mac} This morning, I woke up to find myself dead. I don't know how it happened, or why. That's why I'm here. Easy G's, a dive on the bad side of town. Mac, the guy who runs the place, is a good friend of mine. Always around to lend an ear. Tonight, I hope he has two. My name is Luke. Luke ``Lucky'' Bavarious. I'm a private dick. At least, I was, before I died. My dad was a cop. A cop that didn't play by the rules. That's how he died. He broke the rules. Then the rules broke him. My dad died when I was 13. He didn't listen to me. I knew the streets. He thought, because he was old, because he was experienced, that he knew more about the dark realities of the city than I did. I tried to warn him. He didn't listen to me. It was a night just like tonight. Except both of us were still alive. At least, for now. My dad was called in to investigate a shooting. Prescott Avenue. The worst street in the worst neighborhood in the worst city. I remember him drinking when he got the call. He didn't always drink. Only when he {\em knew}. When he knew something was going down. When he knew he would be cheating Death. When he knew that one drink may be his last. He {\em knew}. And {\em I knew}. I've blamed myself for my father's death. I've blamed him. I've blamed the alcohol. I've blamed it all. But the one thing I can't blame is the person who killed him. I can't do that, because I don't know who it is. I've spent my life searching for him. I became a cop, because I thought I could find him. I couldn't. I was fired for using excessive force on a drunk one day. Served him right, the swine. Tonight, maybe, I'll find who I'm looking for. I breeze into the bar like a shadow. That's pretty much all I am now. A shadow. A shadow to my father, who is now a shadow himself. The world is full of shadows, shadows that we don't see until it's too late. I've been through a lot of crap in my time, seen a lot of things a sane man would be better off without seeing. Luckily for me, I'm not a sane man. I guess that's why they call me Lucky. Mac's behind the bar. I slam some money down. ``I'll need a strong one tonight, Mac. Gimme a Screwdriver.'' I wince at the sound of the word. I killed a man once. Stabbed him through the head with a screwdriver. Phillips head. Poor Phillip. Mac pours me a stiff one. ``Rough day?'' He asks. ``I'm just getting started,'' I say, lighting up a cigarette. Red Apples. Menthol. It stings like fibreglass, and I almost want to vomit. I take a drink to cool down my throat. ``Mac,'' I say, my hands shaking, ``I'm dead.'' Mac looks up at me. To my astonishment, he's not surprised. He knows. ``I know,'' he says. ``I'm the one that killed you.'' My shaking hands curl into shaking fists. Mac. My friend. My brother. My killer. I lunge across the bar. ``You ROTTEN MURDERER!'' I scream at him. I can't think. I can't breathe. My cigarette falls out of my mouth. I grab his neck. From my holster, I pull my baretta. I don't even hear him laughing as I pull the trigger. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{nmg} {\bf The Horrid in the Arcade} Bavarius woke with a startle. He had a hangover from the 3 Coors beers he drank last night to help him relax and his head was horrific with vomit and pain. Suddenly he remembered what happened yesterday. It was his worse case yet ever. It all started yesterday when he got a telephone call from the Chief. ``Bavarius I need you to go down to the arcade to investigate a noise complaint'' he said. ``OK'' said Bavarius. His head and heart pounding like a drill, Bavarius loaded a clip into his Barretta and fingered the safety. Nervously he went to his Chevy Camero and hit the ignition. He punched the gas then realized his car needed more gas. ``That's fine'' he thought. I have enough gas to make it to the arcade. He peeled out of his driveway and sped down the street doing 55 miles per hour. Suddenly he arrived at the arcade. He opened the door and went inside expecting what he did not find. Instead he found what he did not expect to find. What he found was a horrific site. Blood and vomit and tears streaked the walls and the Space Invaders. There were kids bodies laying everywhere, torn apart and still bleeding blood. ``Who could do this.'' thought Bavarius. ``I am going to catch who did this and find out how he could do this.'' So he looked around. Suddenly he heard a movement. It sounded like wet vomit scraping on sand paper. In a flash he drew his Baratta and loaded a clip. Then he spun around to face the noise. ``Whoever you are, I have a Bereta and know how to use it, scum.'' he said. Suddenly he saw movement. A man or what was once a man or woman came dashing out from behind Missile Command. ``OUT.. OF.. CREDITS..!!!'' it screeched in a slow southern drawl. ``No monster, you're out of life'' said Bavarius as he squeezed the trigger rapidly and deliberately. One shot to the head, two in each hand, and one in the heart for good measure. Also he shot the thing in the legs and nose. The woman howled and fell back then started licking up blood and vomit. It seemed to give him strength. So Bavarius emptied the rest of his clip into the thing's head then reloaded. He blew out her brains so bad that it exploded in a cloud of vomit and regret. She's not coming back from that, he thought to himself. Frozen with guilt, the man slowly began to run. Then he called the Chief and said ``cased closed.'' as he walked out to his Camarro. He tried to start it but it was out of gas so he walked to the gas station and bought some gas and put it in a gas can then walked back and filled up his car with gas. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{Ghost Hat} EDIT: Shit, I didn't see the note on using Luke Bavarious. Gonna write another one. {\bf Invisible Monsters} Nobody could see! Nobody could see! It was a nightmare. Abby ran for her life, as hard as she possibly could. What else was there to do when a monster was chasing you? Her lungs gasped for air already and her limps burned with exhaustion, but that thing didn't even breath hard. It wasn't the monster chasing her that frightened her the most though. It was the fact that she was the only one who could see it. Lurking about the corners. Hiding in the shadows. She thought it was her imagination. She thought she had been going insane. They said you showed the first signs of schizophrenia when you became a teenager. But then, it must have slipped up, for she had seen it squarely, with both eyes. What's more, it knew. And then it gave chase. Down the sidewalks, across the streets despite the busy roads. She must have been nearly killed five times by squealing cars. She barely kept herself from tripping several times down the steep hills. And still it chased her, it seemed to like watching her run. Enjoying itself perhaps. It loped in plain sight. But only she saw! Only Abby saw the monster. Everybody else saw a crazed girl running through the streets, no thought for her own or others' safety. How did Abby know this? Nobody had believed her when she said she was seeing things. Nobody screamed and ran despite the fact a monster ran loose upon the same streets. Maybe she {\em was} crazy, but she wasn't going to stop long enough to find out. How she had wished she had paid better attention! Though even if she had spotted the creature earlier she would not have known how to defend herself against it. It had been following her for weeks though. Weeks in which some shadowy thing had been watching her, plotting against her{\ldots} No time! Abby ran. ``You stupid kid!'' some guy screamed as Abby swerved past him. The streets were full of people, making it hard for Abby to run at full speed. She had to slow to dive and jump between and around them. And there were carts everywhere. The beast! The beast was catching up! Run! Run! An alleyway. Not a place she would normally go. That's wear drug addicts and homeless people hung out, but it meant there would be no people. No people meant no obstacles. Abby ra! She ran down the alleyway. It took a moment for Abby to realize her mistakes. People might have noticed if the monster had jumped her in front of them. Even if they couldn't see it, they would see that something wrong with her. With no people around, it could kill her in privacy. That was her first mistake. The other was that this alley ended with a brick wall. 10 feet high. {\em Oh no,} Abby thought, gasping for breath so hard she couldn't speak. She had enough to scream however. She felt the wind rushing by as the monster swooped in on wings of black. So close now that she could see purple in those leathery wings. So close she could see its gleaming yellow eyes. No pupils. Just shimmering metallic yellow. It swooped in and landed with a great gust of wind on the cement ground. It stood on two legs, like a man. But it was no man. Abby was suddenly trapped between the brick wall and it. And then it opened its mouth wide and inside it were hundreds of sharp, silver teeth. It hissed and Abby screamed as it bent forth to devour her. Another rush of air, but from behind the creature. A sudden blur and then the creature was on the ground, wings spread flat. It screamed a terrible scream and Abby covered her ears in terror. Animal instincts took over and she hid behind a dumpster, eyes squeezed shut, hands clamped over ears. She would never leave this place. She would stay, stay and hide forever. She did not see what had overcome the creature. All a blur. She did not see the man who had saved her until he tapped her on the shoulder, and then pulled her out much to her horror. It had to be that creature! That awful creature! ``Agggh!'' she screamed as loudly as she could. Abby writhed and tried to break free, still blind. Still crazy. Still insane with fear. ``Stop crying. You've been saved,'' said a voice. Abby looked up, blinking heavy tears from her eyes, and found a man. An ordinary man. Abby was silent, just staring in disbelief. Just a man. And behind him. Nothing. The creature was suddenly gone. As if it had never been there in the first place. She panted, sweating, hair a mess, skin as white as snow. Just a man. And yet. ''You saw it? You saw it?" she hissed, horrified for what the answer could be. ``Of course I did,'' the man said in a voice as soothing as butter. ``And it's gone now. It will never bother you again.'' Abby gave a choke of laughter and could not help but hug the man, her entire body trembling. The ordinary man reciprocated with one arm, his other sliding towards his back pocket. He thought, in a distant sort of way, that the child in his arms was warm. But the blood from her throat would be warmer. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{SummerGlaucoma} {\em my entry}: [AUTHOR'S NOTE: It will rapidly become clear that I do not know anything about the Army, except that the food is bad and the soldiers are awesome and protect my worthless ass and my right to write goony stuff like the forgoing.] {\bf {\em BAVARIOUS REASONS}} I am stuck here, in this place of must and yellowed paper. The place holds over my face a page, a urine-stained billow. My mouth, a tool of evil and destruction, vomits bile, blood and giggles. {\em Who am I?} I thought, trying to hug the thought as hard as humanly possible. {\em Who am I? Who amI? whoami?whoamiwhoam--} My name is Luke Bavarious. I'm a cop. I like the work. I have a barrette. I keep it with me in case I've got to put up my 1990s supercop hockey mullet and think real hard. I'm thinking now. What kind of name is Bavarious? It is the steam, the steam from the Fatherland's best beer region? And why Luke? Cool hands, warm heart? Or do I walk in the sky, over to GRAN-ND-PA's arms, my left leg caught, with my seven-league boots, in The Barn? I know we all in this book live in a library basement. Our book is next to some new kind of backwards comic book from Japan. When it rains, The Artists' ink runs and lets us visit, and let me tell you, it's nice to get a furlough -- Okay, fine, that kid who made us didn't specify breaks. I'm AWOL most of the time. So sue me! -- in the more -- ahem! -- adult, of those comics. That kid didn't make any single dames. Bavarious. Hmf. I don't even know what continent my people live on. Maybe it's a cover name. Bavarious. Bavarious. Bavarious. An idea sneaks into my head, slashing its way in through my waxy ear canal. I am emitting an evil smirk. I need to borrow something from Ken-wa over there in Samurai Land. {\bf NEXT WEEK, IRAQ, BEN'S P.O.V.} My name is Ben Biddick. I'm a soldier. Do I like my work? Well, that depends. I don't like gritty food. I don't like being away from my parents (they're great -- I'll have to tell you some time when we get a weekend pass about the time I wrote a book of crappy, embarrassing stories, and they got it published with this vanity press! Nope. No shit. None here, anyway). But I am proud of what I'm doing here, for the Iraqi people, and for the freedoms I love. Besides, you guys are the tightest buds I could ever wish for. Shut up, Johnston! Yeah, well, you too! Oh, rad! Mail call! It's a package from that Internet forum that told me about how they loved my stories. Yeah! I'll show you guys later. It's rad. Weird. Oh, well. I guess the only copy that Abe dude could find was this soggy thing. I guess it'll dry out pretty fast here once I take off the bubble wrap. Why do I feel so -- uneasy? What was that flicker -- did Abe put some confetti in with this? Awesome! {\em But confetti doesn't wear its hair in a blond, barretted ponytail. Good Christ--} (he thought) No, Johnston! Only {\em your} mom sends nudes. My mom is a saint. {\em Yeah? Well, you'd look worried, too. If--} [a small figure darts towards me, swinging the hundred-times-folded Kyoto steel with maniacal glee] Luke Bavarious? ``Why yes{\ldots}! '' But, Luke: How-- Why do you even {\em own} a katana? ``For Bavarious Reasons!'' Look there! {\em I am pointing to the page. A -- How did a he-she from Japan get there? A he-she with a Samurai House's medallion--?!} Luke says some magic words in some prehistoric Asian language, pointing the sword at me. I started to shrink and grow more illustrationlike. I am drawn to the page, as much as I was when I was a kid. But for not the same reasons. The child walks towards the page. I am little. I am dressed in the same faux-b-baller shit I dressed in as a little kid. I am a G.I. Joe-sized High-Topped Son of a Bitch. Bavarious is full size now and god is he ugly as a real human. ``I'm Luke Bavarious,'' he says to my buddies, ``and I'm a cop. Now, let's see about this noise disturbance -- Where's this horrid Al Q. Aida?'' Amid the predictable laughter, I hear the Simoom begin to blow. The book slams shut. My name is Ben Biddick. I'm a cop. I like my work. Suddenly, I was sobbing. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{LesterGroans} {\bf Dream Hyena: A Bavarius Tale} Luke Bavarius checked his watch and rolled his eyes as the radio vomited some Stones track that the kids listened to these days. He tapped his foot mindlessly on the gas pedal and honked his horn again. ``Dammit, woman,'' he mumbled to himself. His ex-wife had promised to have their kid waiting for them when he got there. It would be the first time he'd see the little brat in weeks. It was hard being a cop, even harder having a home life when you were one. Bavarius grunted like an ape and got out of his Camaro, rounding it to the suburban sidewalk and up the stone walkway to Carrie Bavarius's bungalow. He knocked on the door. ``Let's go, champ. Kids who are late don't get ice cream,'' Bavarius called through the door. Still no answer. A thick, meaty thumping came from inside, like a pudding-stuffed side of beef was being smacked against a milk bag. Bavarius furrowed his expansive brow and rubbed his chin, stubbled and gritty like the streets he swore to protect. He kicked the door in, it splintered against the far wall. His Baretta was out faster than a synapse as he lunged into the foyer. There were smears of body ketchup leading down the hall. Bavarius's eyes narrowed, he started to sweat. ``Carrie?! Lukie Junior?!'' He called out, steadying his firing hand as he moved down the hall. The walls were streaked with scratch marks. There were gouges in the wall up to an inch deep -- two inches in some places. Three inches in others. As he passed a four inch deep scratch mark he rounded the corner and there, at the end of the hall, was a thing that could only be described as a dream hyena. It was on two legs, a scorpion tail jutting from its distended, mangy belly, wiggling towards Bavarius. Its jaw hung loose, almost broken, vomiting sickly metal smelling saliva onto the floor, ruining the hardwood. Its eyes were gone, in their place were throbbing boils of pus, what looked like a cockroach had been stuck in the festering eye-wound, its leg twitching out the side of it. The sharp scorpion tail had made fast work of Carrie, dicing her body into so many pieces. Her entrails hung from sconces, the dream hyena was wearing her hands on the top of its heads like the horns of Pan. Bavarius gulped, his adam's apple bobbing. He took a stance and made sure his voice was steady before calling out, ``You're under arrest!'' The dream hyena didn't respond. It lurched forward, its legs moving awkwardly, its clawed hands dicking gouges into the wall, the pads of its feet squeaking on the glugging, bubbling blood bile that spewed from Carrie's severed throat. It was already scabbing in gobs around her neck{\ldots} not the kind of necklace she used to pester Luke for, that's for sure. ``Where's Lukie?'' Bavarius asked, holding his ground as the thing lurched again, the umbilical scorpion tail wiggling hypnotically. Bavarius smirked, ``You don't scare me{\ldots} bringing in punks like you is my Baretta and butta!'' He opened fire, ripping apart the dream hyena's belly. It hissed as it vomited disgusting, rotten entrails and a thick gaseous smell like someone had run over a dead raccoon in a lawnmower. The dream hyena fell to the floor and darkness flooded over Bavarius. He blinked, stepping back, dropping his gun. What was going on? When he opened his eyes he looked at the floor in front of him. Little Lukie Bavarius lay holding in his guts as they tried to snake out of his grasp like loose Swedish sausages. Bavarius's neck was thick with corded veins, his eyes so wide they almost blew out of their sockets. He dropped down beside Lukie, cradling him in his arms, hearing the plopping splash of more guts tumbling from Lukie's belly. ``Daddy?'' Lukie looked up, his pale face round and innocent. He looked so wise now. ``I just wanted to see you more, daddy? Y-You always said you were too busy finding the bad men{\ldots} I-I thought maybe you'd come if you had one to find here{\ldots}'' Lukie's lower half tore off like wet tissue as Bavarius tried to pick him up. He held his son's top half like a broken pinata and sobbed into his son's collar. This was a helluva thing. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{murdered by owls} Think turgid Ben Biddick fan fiction written by Franz Kafka. {\bf The One Act Remaining To Me In This World} I'm not sure how it is possible for me to sit here, outwardly so calm, while a tornado is whipping around inside my brain, flinging emotions about like bits of debris left over from an explosion in a sex shop. The definition of surreal: digging dildo shards out of your ears{\ldots} if only metaphorically. I glance out the window of the break room of the factory where I work, and notice that the moon is full, gravid with cold purple-white light. Why does it seem to be calling me? I want to understand what it is trying to tell me. I know it's telling me something, if only I could hear it through the endless, soundless muttering of a million dying souls. They're everywhere. Their sighs fill my head like a swarm of crocheted bees. My coffee is very hot, and tastes of metal, or perhaps the tears of molested children. I'm not sure why that comes to mind. How would I know what molested child tears taste like? A trivial mystery to which I am unlikely ever to find an answer{\ldots} There is a part of me, deep inside, that is like a tiger with foot-long blades for claws, and it wants to attack and rip and destroy this violent feeling of whirligig that raves and rages and rapes the rest of my brain like a lunatic conquistador. But the tiger cannot fight an opponent so vague and ephemeral. It's like trying to grapple with a fart, or wage war against a cloud of gnats armed only with a Beretta or a bag of tulips. A solemn fog has grown out of the river just to the north of us, and it is as though someone has thrown a gray blanket across the fields surrounding the factory. The moon looks down on all this, benign, but also wild and terrible, the face of a pagan goddess with a cold and clear eye. This is somehow comforting. Two of my fellow night shift machine operators walk in the room, get their coffee and candy bars, and sit down at the other side of the room, not speaking a word. We ignore each other testily. The silence between us is a sacred bond, unrelenting, immutable. It is more than just mute testimony to our deep and abiding wariness, it is a black and shapeless ocean, seeming to drown the words we do not speak. It is all right; I have grown indifferent. As I pick up the sports page from the table, I feel a sudden surge of terror, coming from nowhere and everywhere, as if I had been shaving in front of the bathroom mirror and seen a reflection of the tiger streaking towards the back of my neck with deadly, fluid speed, claws outstretched to rend and destroy. Outside, I show nothing. I sip my coffee. My cock is hard as steel. Ten minutes later, I am once again at the controls of my machine. It vomits polyurethane airmail envelopes in an endless stream. The stink of burning hot melt has settled into my clothing, and can be sensed faintly anywhere I go, like the ghost of cheap aftershave on a shirt the day after a date. Here, in the factory, the odor is strong and almost palpable, with a kind of chewy, yellow resonance. My bagger stands at the far end of the monolithic, hissing metal apparition and collects the envelopes as they are expectorated by the machine onto a small table. He executes a kind of dance, the steps repeating every thirty seconds or so. He watches the counter over the cutter bar, and when it reaches 100, he snatches the pile out from under the next envelope with greedy, clutching fingers and slams it into the cardboard flat he has prepared. He folds the top over, slaps a strip of tape over the seam, and stamps the side with the date and shift, all in one long, fluid movement. He bends and twirls, deftly slipping the flat into a bigger box on a pallet. Then he returns to the table at the end of the machine and prepares another flat with economical, practiced motions, and places it before him, ready to enshroud the next stack of the machine's ejecta. Waiting the next few seconds for the next stack to be ready, he waits completely motionless, head down, his hands spread out before him on the table. I watch him carefully out of the corner of my eye as I run my machine, and I wonder if he knows he is dancing. Could his insensate eyes, half-closed and empty, simply be looking within, seeing himself on some shadowy stage upon which he turns and leaps? Actually, I think he's dead, and like a freshly decapitated chicken, he just hasn't noticed it yet. He's dancing, all right, but it's the same kind of dance a fresh corpse executes at the end of a rope after dropping through the trap door. The ballet of the damned. When the sun comes up outside, near the end of the shift, it always seems to me like the whole factory and the buildings and fields that surround it have been cruising all night through another dimension, like a spaceship that goes through some kind of time warp and then reemerges, unharmed and unchanged, at the exact moment from which it departed. Nothing has changed in the world of our origin, nothing has changed in our isolated pocket of reality, but we have gone somewhere and come back nonetheless. I know that when I leave the factory and drive home in my car, I will feel like an unknown astronaut quietly and without fanfare returning home after spending years alone in my ship. I will listen to the sound of no crowds cheering and watch as no tickertape falls to celebrate my arrival as I drive through still-slumbering streets. I am home, but I am still isolated and alone. When I walk out the front door, the fog is still there. It writhes its way down the length of the river, enclosing and concealing it entirely. I idly speculate that there could be some strange things going on in there, and nobody would ever know. Anything could be hiding down there. There's nothing there, of course. It's just idle speculation. I throw a rock down there as I walk past, just to be sure. Nothing happens. I stand for a moment, listening, and then laugh nervously and walk on. I can feel the moon up there, smiling at me, even though it has disappeared behind the trees. That's one thing about the moon; you can count on it being there, even if you can't see it. If you saw me now, a nondescript man calmly walking to his nondescript car at the end of another day at his nondescript job, you would never guess that I'm going insane. The impending death of my rationality is overtaking me like the approach of a black hole, and within days, hours{\ldots} minutes, maybe, I'm going to cross the event horizon and succumb to the raging storm of gravitation spinning like a top within that infinite silken darkness. But before the dissonance of that crazy awakening reaches its crescendo, I'm going to perform the one act remaining for me in this world. I'm going to wear a pair of Jessica Alba's panties. Then I can finally die. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{fishguzzler} Son of a bitch, there's a storm on --- no lightning, so I do this little dance between the light switch and the bed, partly because my room is just too dark, no light leaking in through the levelors, and partly because I can't let my mom see the light on when she trundles past for another batch of rainbow cookies --- six neat little rows by five in the box, and four at a time carefully arranged on a little white saucer-plate, and about a box and a half gone by the end of the night, which means at least eleven trips down the hall past my room to the kitchen on a night when she's watching HBO in bed, pretty much every night --- but mostly because there's a mad badger in my closet, an evil monster with beady little eyes glowing faintly green. Actually, I don't really know what `beady' means. But I know what a monster is, even if, come to think of it, I actually don't know what a badger looks like. But I imagine it looks just like this little bastard in the closet. Maybe not so mean. I can hear the television from the next room, though the walls are ancient and incredibly thick --- I once put my fist into one, broke through the new plaster, and then through something brittle and white, until I sliced my whole hand open on a rough mixture of sand and antique horse-hair that exploded into powder even as it broke my left pinky and the knuckle of my pointer finger. I can hear the television because of the heating vent on the wall between the closet and my bureau, which conducts the voices from the television with perfect clarity into my room and provides me with fair warning every time there's a commercial break. That's when I make my move. I'm fifteen, and I may be a little pudgy, or maybe a little more than a little, but I'm extremely light-footed, so I leap down from the bed and tip-toe sprint to the door as my mother's clomping footsteps reverberate back and forth in my little acoustic capsule --- it's not because she's monstrously overweight, though she must have gained over two-hundred pounds in the last three years, it's just that she's such a hard stepper. I fly barefoot across mathematically smooth and cold wood flooring that, I know, I wouldn't feel if I could really fly. I keep my eyes trained on the door of the closet and flick off the light, crouching with my left hand poised on the light switch and my right hand gripping the doorknob, white-knuckled, the scar where I split the shit open standing out whitest, crisp even in the near-blackness as I glare past it into that shadowed crevice with the mad chittering sounds coming from inside. But it always quiets as she passes my door, as though it doesn't want to be heard; I still don't know how she doesn't hear it through the walls when she's in her room. Stupid old cow. But tonight she's doing alright, I think, because she's only made three trips down the hall to the kitchen, three trips lasting three to five minutes each over the course of three hours, which is a real record-low for her since things got bad, like maybe now she's finally getting over it --- or maybe she's just gotten too fat to walk and decided to start bringing the box with her from now on. Either way, I've still had to squat here three times so far in the dark, smelling that musty yellow odor like rotten tomatoes mixed with, I don't know, curry or something, listening to that thing cackle and scratch at the back of the closet door, swinging it open millimeter by millimeter, because I never dare to leave it closed --- I'm too scared not to try and hear what he's doing in there, plus I know perfectly well that he knows we both know that he can open the fucking door if he wants to. I've seen him do it, not in minute, scratching increments, but fast. Tonight the door has stayed put, and I haven't heard a sound from the little monster. Even his stink, the one everyone else can't smell, seems to be receding. Normally it hits me at odd points during the day because it's burned into my fucking skin, but tonight it seems to be clearing away, the dissipating pestilential fog. I hear my mother put down her dish in the kitchen, but the cupboard does not creak open. The sink splashes on instead, a sound I hear more through the pipes in the walls than through the air. Is she washing the dish already, packing it in, with so much less than a box consumed? Maybe she is getting over it, at least realizing that a box and a half of delicious rainbow cookies per evening won't help --- but more likely, she's probably just got a stomach virus or something. I hear her stomp into the bathroom, even whistling the tune we all used to sing, ``Your Face is All over the Place'', which is sung to the tune of ``Your Kiss is what I Miss''. I smile in the dark, no fear now, thinking it's gone, and maybe this will be the time it doesn't come back. There is a muffled thud from the bathroom, and a short, sharp cry from mom. It brings to mind an image of my mother, beached, prone in her fuzzy white robe on the bathroom floor, writhing in pain and as-yet half-realized fear, the muscles in her neck bulging, showing clearly for the first time in almost two years, as that little fucker chews through cotton and into her chest. Blood spattering. Chimp-like, upright badger-monster body, head like a nasty little dog, Chihuahua or something, only with a cerrated nose like an alligator, or one of those colorful baboon-things. Snarling bubbles into the blood welling through the shorn muscle and cracked bone of her left breast like a child with his chocolate milk{\ldots} Chittering. Laughing at us. Oh my god her heart. Instead of flinging the door open and running to the bathroom, I smack the light on and sprint to the closet door, throw it open and freeze, staring right into those unforgiving dog-black but compassionless spheres. So it rears before me, wipes it's dripping chin with a bony little wrist. Cackles. Now you're mother is dead too. First him, now her. First him, now her. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{TheElectronicOne} {\bf {\em In the Mirror}} Out of the darkness came Rothard Mavalero. Grunting and thumping, he was the city undertaker. It was not a job many would like but he had kept it for fifty years. Some people thought that was unnatural but they did not know the half of it. And if they knew the whole of it they would have run in terror. Bodies interested him. He liked the way they looked. He liked the way they felt. But most of all he liked the way they tasted. Today it was Mavalero's favorite kind of body. A floater from the river. It was still fresh, like a recently caught fish. The coroner wasn't at work yet. Nobody would know what he was doing. He dragged the bloated corpse and looked into its eyes. Suddenly, he began to pry the eyeball from its socket. A sweet ``snap'' sound happened as the elastic snapped. He licked the slimy eyeball, savoring the salty taste. Then, as the deceased's other eye seemed to watch him, he bit into the juicy retina. It tasted chewy and meaty, just like he had expected. Mavalero looked down at the body tauntingly. Blood was oozing from the empty socket. He liked that it was helpless. He stabbed at the face to make more blood come out, then dipped his finger into the blood-filled socket and tested the quality of the victim. When he was done with the little game, he started to pry at the other eye. This one did not come out so easily. It felt like it was glued into the socket, and he had to tug and tug. But finally, with the help of his pocket knife, it came loose. The eye stared Mavalero in the face. He did not care. Rothard Mavalero was a very bad man. He downed the second eye with pride, smacking his lips as he smiled in his conquest. But as he began to ponder what he would eat next he saw something in the corner of his eye. He didn't know what it was. His heart raced like a galloping horse. He turned slowly towards what he had seen. Then he sighed with relief, because it was just the mirror. He had seen his own reflection. {\em {\ldots}or did he?} He looked at the reflection, but his face looked unfamiliar. He turned his head, and his mirror self seemed to delay a little bit before copying him. With a piercing, inhuman scream, Rothard Mavalero realized what he was seeing. It was not a mirror, but a window into a room that had been cleverly copied to resemble his evil laboratory in every respect. The man was not his reflection, but the young but hardened detective Luke Bavarius in disguise. Bavarius had seen everything: the body, the eye eating, the blood. He felt a nervousness arise in his throat. He struggled to hold his posture as he waited for his certain death at the hands of the private eye. Vomitus dribbled out the mouth of Rothard Mavalero. Then, as he watched, Bavarius reached through the glass and strangled him alive. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{WhereTheFishLives} {\bf The Horrid Lighter} This is a long story about Luke Bavarius when he saw the shadows in the world when he was younger in 7th grade. Bavarius is me. I saw the them, the shadows. And it has turned my brain into darkness. I was walking with my best friend Victor and Praeton when we found the terrible thing. A sickly sparkle flashed the corner of my eye and caused me to turn instinctively towards it. It was a silver lighter, but not any silver lighter you've ever seen. It has a skull on it with a eye made of ruby pressed into it. ``Cool'' said Victor as he brushed the dust and soil from the lighter that was buried centuries ago. It had a certain look that cut to my soul and made my stomach tighten on its contents. Victor shifted it open and his expression changed to one of evil. My teeth clenched as I could feel scaredness take me over. Praeton began to tremor in delerium as sickly vomit shot from his mouth like a giant waterfall. Once the vomit was spent, a terrible white cloud came from the eyes and from his face. The cloud had Praeton's face. Praeton's face had a certain shocked and unhappy expression. It would be soon be too late for Praeton. The soul was sucked into the lighter like an evil waterfall. And the lighter's fire was switched out for a red indescribable flame as the soul went in into it. ``Praeton, No!'' I shouted from fear. It was too late, though. I could tell. He was already changed in a certain way. So I ran away from the evil duo. My fearful brain didn't know what else to do. It told my rubbery legs to run and they did run. The shock of the pounding of my feet on the ground went up through me. Up through my knees and then my legs. Then my chest and my soul and then into my brain with a terrible power. The power shot through me like an jackhammer. My adreniline squeezed my jaw tighter and yet tighter to fight back my morning breakfast. Which was prevented from being vomited out by my teeth. The wind felt strongly against my face. Blinding me. But I didn't have time to notice. I only had time to run. All of a sudden I was already at the door of my house when i burst through it. ``Grand-nd dad? Help!'' I shouted! As I shot slowly like a bullet from a gun through a sea of adrenaline. But there was no Grandad, only Praeton who was already there. The silence was deafening. The only sound was the horrid lighter clicking deafeningly. I was in an abundance of shock. ``Where's my grandad fiend?!'' ``He's in here with us'' Praton made a grand gesture to the lighter in his hand. ``N-N-No,'' I stammered as I went to the closet and got out the Baretta. The black gun metal was cool against the palm of my hand. The blackness of the gun matched my heart's darkness as I aimed at Praeton. ``I'm gonna take you out!'' ``Ha Ha Ha Ha ha'' he laughed. ``Bullets can't hurt me!'' he said smirkingly. I knew I only had one clip with which to dispatch this wretched thing. To back to wherever it came from. I fired and a bullet went directly between his eyes but didn't stop him. Again I fired, and again, and again I fired a total of 14 times. ``Looks like someone's out of bullets!'' He cackled devilishly. Now it was my turn to laugh ``Hahahaha! Looks like someone doesn't know anything about the Beretta M9!'' I triumphantly shouted. With my last bullet I fired. The 9mm bullet slickly exploded from the barrel and into the demonic lighter which was still in his hand. While the bullet struck, metal on metal, the souls were vomited all out of the it. ``Nooooo!'' cried the thing as he turned to rust. ``It's all over now.'' While the Beretta fell to the ground in slow motion I was instantly {\em insane}. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{on time for once} {\bf The Playground} When I awoke I was tied up in a dark basement and the little boy was standing over me. The first time I saw him I had laughed at him because he was constantly vomiting, the putrid liquid pouring out of his mouth and nose as if he were a water fountain of vomit. It didn't seem so funny now. Now that I was tied up, he seemed much more threatening. He stepped closer. His warm vomit was now hitting me in the crotch. Where was it all coming from, anyway? There was so much of it I couldn't believe it could possibly have all been inside this small child. Was his face a portal to a parallel dimension? A parallel dimension of vomit? As he pistol whipped me with my own Beretta I choked and giggled and thought about how I, Luke Bavarious, private detective, had ended up in this situation. It had started because the children's playground was always covered in blood and vomit. Every day it would be cleaned, but every morning it would be covered in blood and vomit again. This had been going on for several years now and we had finally decided to see what was going on. I was assigned to stop the blood and vomit. I went to the playground one evening and hid under a slide with my Beretta and my night vision goggles. It wasn't quite dark yet and there were a few children still playing. One of them was the vomiting boy, which explained the vomit. Oh, how I laughed. Hopefully there would be an equally mundane explanation for the blood. Perhaps the boy had a beautiful blood-vomiting mother. I would have to talk to her and ask them to clean the playground themselves after they were finished using it so the city would not have to pay so many cleaners. I would offer to help her clean the playground, and maybe we would end up doing sex on a swing. I like swings. I was distracted by my fantasy and forgot to watch the playground for a few minutes. When I looked up again the blood was there and the children were gone. I got out from under the slide and glanced around. What had happened? Where was the beautiful woman? Suddenly something hit me in the back and vomit sprayed over my head. The boy! The vomiting boy! He must have been on the slide I was hiding under, and now he had jumped off it onto my back! I tried to get him off me but he held a urine stained pillow over my face until I passed out. And now here I was, in this basement. I could see now that under the vomit the boy's face and clothes were covered in blood. And so were his teeth, his sharp horrible teeth. I knew then that he had eaten the other children. Now he was going to eat me. Suddenly, I was sobbing. A man in a lab coat ran in. He was also vomiting. ``Daddy!'' vomited the boy excitedly. ``Son!'' the man vomited, running over to his son, ``Stop! This one is not like the others!'' He injected me with something. Suddenly, I was vomiting. The man collected some of my vomit in a beaker then poured it into a machine. Writing in a language I couldn't read appeared on the machine's screen. ``See, son?'' vomited the man, pointing at the screen, ``This one is not like the others. It will not grow up to be evil. The strange results you got were not because it will be even worse than the others but because it is already too old for your tests to be accurate!'' ``You're right, daddy!'' the boy vomited, ``Let's put it back!'' He injected me with something else and I passed out. As I lost consciousness I heard him vomit ``We should try another playground, they seem to have noticed what we are doing here.'' The next morning I woke up under the slide in a puddle of vomit, with a bad headache and no memory of what had happened. For some reason, though, I felt certain that this playground would remain clean from now on. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \by{overnightmike} May I humbly submit a gritty work of horror: The Exploding Curse A dark night filled with trial and unrestiness was ahead. The bar tender said unimportant things which I heard. A vague feeling was consuming me like I was consuming alcoholic beverages. When? When will the signs come again and would they let me live? Being a gritty person himself the bartender did not question my long drinking mainly because I am a very mature person. I could not shake the vague feeling. It was everywhere. I felt like vomiting but did not. Instead I was glad I had a large-caliber handgun. The door to the tavern burst open, but the bartender never saw who walked into the door because he had died of fright. I saw his rusty blood. He was the lucky one of the two of us, who were the only two people in the bar. Besides the signs, which had arrived. At least I didn't have to wonder anymore. My legs burst open in a liquid explosion. My whole being was pain. Excruciating on the floor of a bad bar in a skid-row section of town. The signs had left but their work was completed. For now. I passed out from the pain of having exploded legs. But I woke up sometime later and poured some booze on them to make the pain stop, I could not walk, so I wrapped them in dirty, booze soaked bar towels, which were plentiful behind the bar. I was left to lay in the bar with the dead bartender who was putrid with corpse-stink. That was My Fate. My Punishment. My Own Prison. Everything was quiet. The dead bartender said, ``What's your name, cursed one?'' ``Burke Dreadnought,'' I said, quivering in fear at the talking abomination from hell. ``Do you know why you are here at this time, do you know what pain really is?'' the corpse hissed at me, spraying me and everything with green putrid goo while the words garbled out. ``My legs exploded so I think I can talk about pain,'' I wiped the blood off of my gratuitous chin stubble while saying. ``Oh yeah, not yet you can't!'' The corpse began levitating and suddenly I remembered. Bavarious! The curse all of a sudden made sense! Summer 1967. I'm a rookie cop, green and not jaded at all and Luke Bavarious is showing me the ropes of the hard, rain-slicked streets of Miami. The Haunted House Murder Case. Fourteen people dead in the span of one night. Bavarious wasn't assigned to the case but he was the first one to the scene with me in tow. He growled out instructions, brazenly brandishing his large-caliber handgun like he always did. We found a kid. Left at the scene. Not murdered thankfully. ``The Haunting will follow you unless you put an end to the cure,'' the kid said while shaking because he had vomited so much. ``The curse must be lifted by giving the bones in the basement a proper burial. There were ritual murders here back in prohibition times by an evil bootlegger. Now he haunts the house by killing everyone in it all the time!'' Bavarious growled, ``You make me want to puke! I'm here to get to the bottom of this!'' After we left the scene I said meekly to the scowling Bavarious, ``I think we should give those bones a proper burial bacause kids should be listened to.'' ``Ha! Let's go catch some scumbags!'' Bavarious put on his sunglasses and went back to his squad car. Six years later I quit the force and started drinking. That was when the signs came to the bar to remind me of the curse and the kid I should have listened to. My legs were spewing gore trails all over and I finally remember that I always carry a large-caliber handgun. I shot the curse-zombie bartender right between his red devilish eyes. His last words were, ``Soon, soon you will know the horrible depths of hell as I know them, Burke Dreadnought!'' I am in the bar still. I will die here but if I could walk I would go into a basement in Miami, and dig up the remains of the mad bootlegger's victims and give them a proper burial. I would dig them out of the same basement they found Luke Bavarious in last year, raving about curses to this day in a mental asylum. The End? Ben Biddick you are a worthy fellow, thanks for this contest.