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Writing Prompt Wednesdays: Rumor Has It…

Writing Prompt Wednesdays: Rumor Has It…

Welcome to “Writing Prompt Wednesdays,” a haven where your imagination can roam free in the realms of speculative fiction. As we embark on this weekly journey, it’s thrilling to think about the untold stories waiting to be penned in the domains of horror, science fiction, and fantasy. Whether you’re a seasoned author or a budding wordsmith, these prompts are your gateway to unexplored worlds and untapped potentials.

Every Wednesday, we’ll serve up a fresh, thought-provoking prompt designed to ignite your creative spark and challenge your storytelling prowess. Think of these prompts as a key, unlocking the doors to uncharted territories where your creativity is the only limit. From eerie, shadow-laden corridors of Gothic horror to the farthest reaches of interstellar space, and the mystical depths of high fantasy, our prompts are a kaleidoscope of possibilities.

Remember, there’s no right or wrong way to approach these prompts. They are mere stepping stones, guiding you towards the vast landscapes of your imagination. Use them to break free from writer’s block, to experiment with new ideas, or simply as a fun exercise to keep your writing skills sharp.

This week’s writing prompt:

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James Fox and his expanding universe

James Fox and his expanding universe

REVELATION

By Angelique Fawns

 

James Fox is on a mission to make the world a better place and brings his visions to life through writing and film. The founder of the media company Dawnrunner Inc, this native Californian released the third novel in his Sol Saga trilogy this spring. Revelation features the stunning conclusion of the sci-fi drama which began with Revolution and continued with Retaliation.

I met James Fox at the Superstars 2024 Writing Seminar and was blown away by his passion and talent. I’m also thrilled to chat with him about his latest book and future projects.   

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September 2024 Horrorscopes: Which Magical Academy Should You Attend?

Courtesy of my recent move, I have gotten to experience the magic (the good and the bad) of living in a college town. I won’t regale you with my tales of both wonder and disenchantment; instead, read on to discover which literary magical academy you’ll be lucky enough to attend!

(And, during the course of my research, I have now discovered 101 books about magical academies I am dying to read!)

Disclaimer: These are mock horoscopes and are meant for entertainment purposes only, and are not specifically representative of any particular person or people.

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Epeolatry Book Review: A Reviewer’s Guide to Writing Book Reviews by Rick Hipson

Disclosure:

Our reviews may contain affiliate links. If you purchase something through the links in this article we may receive a small commission or referral fee. This happens without any additional cost to you.

Title: A Reviewers Guide to Writing Book Reviews
Author: Rick Hipson
Genre: Nonfiction; Horror Reference
Publisher: Crystal Lake
Publication Date: 26th July, 2024

Synopsis: Dive into the world of book reviewing with this essential guide, perfect for anyone passionate about sharing their literary discoveries. Whether you’re an avid reader eager to promote your next favorite book and author, or intrigued by the prospect of receiving free books and earning from your reviews, this comprehensive guide is tailored for you.

Rick Hipson, with over two decades of experience as a seasoned genre reviewer and interviewer, offers a treasure trove of insights in this guidebook. From his early challenges to achieving recognition for his work in leading publications like Rue Morgue magazine and Cemetery Dance, Hipson shares his journey and the lessons learned along the way. This guidebook is packed with practical advice, real-world examples, and actionable tips designed to elevate your review writing skills to a professional level.

Whether your aim is to monetize your reviews, contribute to prestigious publications, or simply enhance your support for beloved authors, this guidebook, infused with Hipson’s expert knowledge, is an invaluable resource. It’s crafted to assist both budding and experienced reviewers in honing their craft, ensuring your reviews capture attention and make an impact.

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Trembling With Fear 9-8-24

Greetings, children of the dark. I got a bit of a shock earlier—always a good way to introduce some dark fiction, right? Someone had asked me how long I’d been editing TWF and I honestly couldn’t remember, so I looked back at my files to see… that this edition marks my 112th in the editor seat! I can’t believe it’s been that long. More than two years! It feels like yesterday the great Stephanie Ellis sat me down in Scarborough to see if I’d be interested in stepping into her shoes, and now, here we are, more than two years later, introducing a new and expanded team for TWF.

Yep, we’ve given each section of TWF a dedicated editor, and I’m so grateful to these wonderful people for putting their hands up to move into TWF Towers and help the bossman and I with this mega-thing we try to lovingly caress into existence every week. You’ll find out more about our new Assistant Editors over in this article, but please join me in welcoming:

  • Assistant Editor – Specials: Lynn Huggins-Cooper
  • Assistant Editor – Serials: Vicky Brewster
  • Assistant Editor – Unholy Trinities: Sarah Elliott

You may recognise Sarah as our new Interviews Coordinator, too—she’s taking over! (Look out, Stuart…)

We also welcome Annette Livingstone to the team as our Editorial Assistant. She’ll be helping Stuart and I keep on top of the always-overflowing inbox and general administrative bits and pieces to keep us ticking over. An absolute godsend, if you ask me!

And that just leaves me to remind you we’re currently open to submissions for our Halloween special—and Lynn looks forward to reading them!—and we’d love to see more Serials coming in, too. (I think Sarah’s got a healthy dose of Unholy Trinities, but could always do with more!)

Oh: and please feed the drabble beast! It’s looking at me far too closely, like I’m just right for its next meal… 

So to this week’s darkly speculative menu. We kick off this week with Andy Martin showing why you need to be careful dancing around a stone circle. That’s followed by the short, sharp speculations of:

  • Rich Duncan’s eldritch stirring,
  • F.M. Scott’s CCTV antics, and
  • Richard Meldrum’s grumpy survivors.

Now, over to you, boss.

Lauren McMenemy

Editor, Trembling With Fear

Join me in thanking our upcoming site sponsor for the next month! Please check out Scott Harper’s ‘Anton The Undying: The Complete Collection’!

“This Ultimate collection is a treasure trove containing revised and expanded editions of The Name of Fear and A Cleansing of the Blood, two all-new Anton novellas, and twelve original short stories. Follow Anton from the blood-stained sands of Rome to ancient battles with unstoppable beasts in the deepest depths of tenebrous jungles and into a dystopian future where even vampires fear to tread. Each story is a unique journey, offering a different perspective on Anton’s world.”

Support our sponsor and pick up Anton The Undying: The Complete Collection today on Amazon!

 

Be sure to order a copy today!

_____________________________________________

Hi all!

What a crazy week! First, a huge thanks to Corinne, as this is her second week at the helm of our newsletter, and she penned it while suffering a massive migraine! Also, Belinda is out, so a HUGE thanks to our interview coordinator, the super versatile and talented Sarah Elliott, for recording this week’s outing! 

  • For actual Horror Tree updates, I did push forward some progress in a couple of areas in the past week, both on the theme and our next anthology release. Not much to report on yet, but progress is being made! 
  • Thank you so much to everyone who has become a Patreon for Horror Tree. We honestly couldn’t make it without you all!
  • The paperback is now live! Please be sure to order a copy of Shadowed Realms on Amazon, we’d love for you to check it out!

Offhand, if you’ve ordered Trembling With Fear Volume 6, we’d appreciate a review! 🙂

 
 

Stuart Conover

Editor, Horror Tree

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Your guide to Trembling With Fear, Horror Tree’s free fiction zine

It’s been more than seven years since Horror Tree launched its own section dedicated to the dark and speculative stories—seven whole years! And interest has just kept growing and writhing and building into this massive beast we see today. There’s the annual anthology, of course, and the weekly publication of a short story and three drabbles, but there’s also our four special themed editions each year, the unholy trinities of connected drabbles, and the serialised stories of up to 15,000 words. That’s an awful lot of work for one person.

Thankfully, it hasn’t been one person for a while. Stuart brought in Stephanie Ellis to helm TWF, who then added Amanda Headlee to the team to help with things not-the-weekly-edition. When Steph retired from TWF Towers in 2022, Lauren McMenemy moved in. Amanda moved on, and Shalini Bethala moved into the same space. But now Shalini’s had to retire, too, which left us with a choice: stay the same, or take some growth hormones in the hope that a bigger Tower will mean less lateness and burnout for Lauren and Stuart.

And so it goes that TWF Towers added four new levels.

We thought it was about time we introduced you to not only the newbies, but also the two of us who talk to you every week from the Tower courtyard. So here we go, a chance to meet the expanded full TWF team—yep, even Stuart and Lauren—and hear more about what they’re looking for. This is important reading, dear children of the dark…

PS at the bottom of this page, you’ll find a wrap-up of what we’re looking for. Consider this your all-singing, all-dancing guide to Horror Tree’s free fiction. Bookmark this page; it might come in handy.

(Photo by Julia Kadel on Unsplash)


The familiar crew is still here!

Stuart Conover, Publisher
Based in: Chicago, USA

Stuart Conover is a father, husband, published author, blogger, geek, entrepreneur, horror fanatic, and runs a few websites including Horror Tree. He says:

“First off, I’d love to share another warm welcome to our expanded Trembling With Fear editorial staff! I’ve had a few ideas on ways to expand where TWF is going and it sounds like some of that may finally be on the horizon. Everyone so far has seemed lovely for the few chats we’ve had and I can’t wait to get to know everyone better!”

What are you looking for in terms of submissions to your section?
Obviously, when starting Horror Tree, I did so with being a huge fan of horror. That being said, I’ve really been enjoying the darker science fiction and darker fantasy submissions from the past few years. They’ve mixed things up, and as I love all forms of speculative fiction, the blending of genres has been a huge win for both my personal reading and giving us newer outlooks of fiction on the site!

Any tips on submitting to you / working with you?
I love quirky characters, bold ideas, and fresh takes on existing ones. As mentioned above, I’ve become a massive fan of mixed-genre work. We’ve truly had some amazing stories sent into Horror Tree, and I thank each and every one of you for sharing your work with us!

Trigger/content warnings – what won’t get past you in a submission?
The main thing that turns me off is anything where we see pain coming to kids. I’m not a fan of it happening to animals either, but ever since I became a father, it has been an area of horror that I can’t stomach.

 

Lauren McMenemy, TWF Editor-in-Chief
Based in: London, UK

Lauren McMenemy wears many hats: Editor-in-Chief at Trembling With Fear for horrortree.com; PR and marketing for the British Fantasy Society; founder of the Society of Ink Slingers; curator of the Writing the Occult virtual events. With 25+ years as a professional writer across journalism, marketing, and communications, Lauren also works as a coach and mentor to writers looking to achieve goals, get accountability, or get support with their marketing efforts. She writes gothic and folk horror stories for her own amusement, and is currently working on a novel set in the world of the Victorian occult. You’ll find Lauren haunting south London, where she lives with her Doctor Who-obsessed husband, the ghost of their aged black house rabbit, and the entity that lives in the walls.

What are you looking for in terms of submissions to your section?
I’ve been told I’ve “really made” TWF my “own”, but I think that happens naturally as new editors come in and inevitably bring their personal style and biases to the table. I agree with the bossman: I’m loving the darker fantasy and dark scifi that’s been trickling in, and would love to see more of it, too. Last year we had a stack of mythology and fairytale-style pieces and I’m missing those as the stream has dried. Folk horror and occult stories will always get me, and supernatural beasts and paranormal themes tickle my fancy. But basically I’m looking to reflect the wide range of dark speculative fiction that’s out there right now, so if it’s dark and has something a little (or a lot!) unreal about it, if it’s a bit skewed from normal reality, then send it in! (I know humans are monsters; I don’t really care for human-on-human horror.)

Any tips on submitting to you / working with you?
Just be patient, please! This new and expanded team is fabulous, but it’ll take us a while to get into a good flow. In the meantime, it will still take us a while to get back to you when you submit because we are all volunteers with lives and day jobs and chronic illnesses and all sorts. We do this for the love of the genre and because we genuinely enjoy helping new writers get published, so just bear that in mind before you slide into my DMs to chase me. We do get back to every single person who submits; drabbles are obviously quicker to get through, and if you submit to one of our short story windows you will definitely hear before the next one opens, but probably towards the end of that period. Also, please make sure you read and stick to our submission guidelines!

Trigger/content warnings – what won’t get past you in a submission?
Beyond what you see in the submission guidelines as definite no-nos, I’m pretty open-minded. I will, though, be unlikely to take anything that reads as thinly-veiled misogyny (and, yes, misandry), and especially poorly-written women characters that live in their underwear. I’ve seen some doozies come through TWF Towers that made me want to throw something at the wall… Oh, and sexual violence is not a plot device, and your character exhibiting any of our no-nos as part of the “hey! they get their comeuppance!” also won’t get through. It’s still airing those themes regardless of noble intent.


And meet the new residents of TWF Towers!

Lynn Huggins-Cooper, Assistant Editor: Seasonal issues
Based in: Cornwall, UK

I’m Lynn, the new editor of TWF’s seasonal issues. Speculative fiction, in all of its tentacled, time-travelling, terrifying glory is my passion and permeates my life. I grew up on horror comics and Ray Bradbury stories, and that love of the weird, strange and gothic never left me. For my ‘day job’, apart from writing all things creepy (from children’s and YA such as the Too Ghoul for School series to Adult Folk Horror and academic writing such as Fear and loathing: Mental illness and the othering of the zombie in Zombie Futures in Literature, Media and Culture) I lecture on the (BA Hons) Creative Writing at Falmouth University—and my favourite module to teach is Genres and Disruptive Fictions, because I get to introduce my students to many fantastic authors and the techniques they use to create their strange and uncanny worlds.

Why did you want to join the TWF team?
I love Horror Tree and the opportunities it brings to authors like us. When the chance came to join the TWF team I was keen to get involved in this creepiest of clubs because the Horror Community are my people. I knew Lauren, the Editor-in-Chief, from her amazing work with the British Fantasy Society and via her Writing the Occult courses (check them out if you haven’t already)—and I knew I would be in the safest and friendliest of hands.

Add to that the dimension of encouraging fellow writers and helping them to grow their careers, and I’m in. When I’m not writing or reading horror, I’m immersed in the world of Horror Studies, or teaching students to write speculative fiction. If I could slide through a time-slip and tell little me (no doubt curled up with a Creepy Worlds comic, eating sherbet) that one day I would make a living from writing horror and talking about it, I think I’d explode into a cloud of bats! Nothing excites me more than discovering new talent and giving people a hand up into the glorious world of publishing, so the TWF team is the ideal place for me!

What are you looking for in terms of submissions to your section?
In this role, I am looking for submissions that are oozing with seasonal atmosphere. For Halloween, our next issue, I want stories redolent with pumpkin pie and skittering leaves. I want parties with eerie guests, October tours of catacombs lit with lanterns, and graveyards full of revellers (alive and undead). I want midnight seances and windows decorated with kitsch ghostly figures; I want mirrors reflecting flickering candles to see the future but revealing hidden pasts. I want your stories to make me sniff the air and smell Halloween! It will be the same for each issue. I want stories that exude the essence of each season—Valentine’s Day, the sultry weight of Summer, and the lights (and darkness) of midwinter for Christmas.

Any tips on submitting to you / working with you? What won’t get past you in a submission?
If you are submitting to me, be aware that seasonal issues won’t accept stories that fall foul of any of the standard ‘don’t be a dick’ rules—no racism, homophobia, misogyny, transphobia, etc. In addition to this, I’m not interested in any stories containing graphic sexual violence, animal abuse, child abuse or tired tropes about mental illness (see ‘don’t be a dick’ rules). If in doubt, run an idea by me before submitting.

At the beginning of each submission period, I’ll be creaking open the doors of the seasonal Open House, platters of festive treats at the ready, to hold a live Q&A session for interested potential authors for each issue. Look out for details on Horror Tree for these sessions, as well as occasional writing challenges and mini-masterclass sessions. I can’t wait to read your work!

Sarah Elliott, Assistant Editor: Unholy Trinities
Based in: Nottingham, UK

Sarah has also recently stepped into the role of Interviews Coordinator for the wider Horror Tree site!

Sarah Elliott is a writer, spoken word artist, poet and self-published author (Warrior Wisdom Sun 2022, United Under One Sun 2023). She regularly hosts writing hours and monthly flash fiction workshops with the London Writers’ Salon. Her articles, stories, and author interviews can be found on the Horror Tree website and her work has been published in Red Rose Thorns magazine, Writing in Community anthology and Hope is a Group Project. Sarah is currently writing a tarot-inspired collection of flash fiction, short prose and poetry. She documents her writing journey in her Substack newsletter, A Writer’s Life. Sarah serves as a social media officer for the writing organisation 26 and is a member of the British Fantasy Society. Based in Nottingham, England, Sarah lives with her cat, Bella. A speculative fiction enthusiast, she enjoys books, films and TV series in the genre. More from Sarah here.

Why did you want to join the TWF team?
I was already contributing in terms of articles and author interviews and I’m grateful for those opportunities, so I wanted to support in other ways. It was also a great way to gain more experience in the writing world and learn new skills, which is always fun!

What are you looking for in terms of submissions to your section?

  • Twists on tropes are always interesting
  • Different POVs that are thought-provoking
  • If dialogue is used, make sure it’s engaging
  • Good pace
  • The unusual!

Any tips on submitting to you/working with you?

  • Please read the submission guidelines and follow them!
  • I appreciate clear communication
  • Please bear with me if I need to ask questions or gain clarification…

Trigger/content warnings – what won’t get past you in a submission?

  • Harm to animals
  • Harm to children
  • ⁠Misogynistic themes

 

Vicky Brewster, Assistant Editor: Serials
Based in: Wales

Vicky is an academic and editor from South Wales. Their research focuses on 21st-century horror fiction, and they have presented at Romancing the Gothic, the UK Ghost Story Festival, and at numerous academic conferences. They have edited speculative fiction for seven years, and count among their clients prize nominees, Amazon bestsellers, and traditionally published titles. They also produce the podcast, Words Have Power. When not reading, writing, or editing, Vicky enjoys LARP and tabletop roleplay, indoor climbing, and hanging out with their cats.

Why did you want to join the TWF team?
Aside from the fact Lauren McMenemy and I seem to be in some strange congruent timeline where our fates are irreversibly entangled, I’ve been an active supporter of independent speculative and horror publication for years now. I love my indie author clients, and I’m excited to start working with authors of shorter fiction. I think publications like TWF are so awesome for new writers to find a platform and gain experience of the industry, and I’m very excited and privileged to be a part of that.

What are you looking for in terms of submissions for your section?
We live in the age of the reboot, so I’d love to see old tropes done in new ways. I’m excited to find #OwnVoices authors, and to see these dusty old horror tropes through queer, non-white, trans, disabled, feminist lenses. I’m also always delighted to be surprised by something new—and if you can surprise me, I’ll be very impressed! I’m looking for tight stories with intriguing (not necessarily likeable) characters and high stakes.

Any tips on submitting to me?
I don’t really want to impress my own tastes on anyone. I read and enjoy a great variety of texts, and I want to see your authentic authorial voice. Write about what you love and you’re passionate about, and that’ll make me love it too.

Trigger warnings: What won’t make it past your desk?
Needless violence against animals, child sexual assault, fatphobia. I would like to be warned in advance of violence against animals, sexual violence/assault, transphobia, and domestic abuse.

 

Annette Livingstone, Editorial Assistant
Based in: Derby, UK

Annette’s joining us to keep our admin and inbox under control!

Annette is a novice writer with a lifetime’s experience in reading. By day she works in accounts, but at night she will often be found with a book, a mug of coffee and a cat curled up on her lap, or attending another online writing course. She loves all things horror and paranormal—books, films, ghost hunting, and, of course, Halloween (it is her birthday after all). Annette is currently working on her first novel, a paranormal story about a possessed artifact that is inspired by real events from a location she has investigated several times. She started a book review journal this year, which combines her love of reading with her love of stationery and is one of the reasons why she wanted to join the TWF team: to gain more experience and knowledge in writing professional reviews and articles for publications.

Tips for working with Annette:
Have a good sense of humour, understand her almost obsessive need for organising everything and everyone, and the patience to listen to her constantly talking about her ghost hunting adventures.

 


This is TWF

Trembling With Fear is Horror Tree’s free fiction arm, published right here on this site every week. We publish stories of various lengths in our regular column, our themed calls, and our special editions. And, everything we publish goes into an annual print and digital anthology, sales of which help to fund the site and keep it going.

Weekly edition, published every Sunday

  • One short story of up to 1500 words
  • Three drabbles of exactly 100 words each

Drabble submissions are welcome year-round (and our Drabble beast has an insatiable appetite), but short stories must only be submitted within the four 2-week open windows: the first two weeks of January, April, July, and October. Any short stories submitted outside of those dates, or over our maximum word count, will be returned unread.

Unholy Trinities, published Fridays

Three drabbles which serve as standalone stories, but are also connected to tell a larger story, idea, or theme.

Serials, published Saturdays

Expanded stories of up to 15,000 words, but which can be broken into distinct chapters and published over consecutive Saturdays. Think of it as the old-style serialised works that made Dickens and Sherlock Holmes household names. As for the theme of these stories? Just make it darkly speculative, please—it doesn’t have to be about serial killers!

Themed calls, published seasonally

  • Valentine’s: submissions open between 1 December and 31 January
  • Summer holiday: submissions open between 1 April and 31 July
  • Halloween: submissions open between 1 August and 13 October
  • Christmas: submissions open between 1 November and 7 December

Stories submitted to these seasonal specials can be up to 2500 words, but must be clearly set to the theme in question. That means jilted lovers and ghostly sweethearts for Valentines; campfire stories and backpacking horrors for summer; evil Santas and decorations that are out to kill you for Christmas. As for Halloween? This is quite open, but we get an awful lot of pumpkin-based stories at this time so maybe try to avoid that? Think about the wider idea behind Halloween, the thinning of the veil between worlds, the monsters on the rampage, the lost souls a-wandering…

Take note!

Our submission guidelines are here; they include the topics that will not make it past our censors, so make sure you read them. We’ll always email to confirm we’ve received your submission, but be aware this is a manual process—it might take us up to a week to acknowledge receipt. Nothing automated and fancy at TWF Towers!

Make sure you use the submission form on the submissions page and/or our contact page. Choose the right section from the drop-down menu, and if you’re submitting to a themed call then make sure you tell us which one in the body of the email.

Do not copy and paste your story into the message box. Please upload it as a document (not a PDF!). Make sure you include a short bio with your submission, too.

Every submission is read by multiple members of the team to make sure we reach a consensus.

What are you waiting for? Get submitting!

Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Seven

  1. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little
  2. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Two
  3. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Three
  4. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Four
  5. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Five
  6. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Six
  7. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Seven
  8. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Eight
  9. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Nine
  10. Serial Saturday: Don’t Look at Me by Tom Little, Chapter Ten

Chapter Seven

                                                          

Marshall shut the door behind him and laid his old folder on Ferrill’s bed. “Don’t open that.” He turned to the door and looked out the peephole. He thought a long moment before he began. “Your friend wasn’t the first to die that way.” 

“His name was Grant,” Helms corrected. He glanced to Ferrill. The boy was indifferent.  

“Over the last two years, we’ve found five other bodies, each with the same wounds. They were all recovered around South Street. The most recent was just this week.”

“I uh, found a homeless man in the alley,” Helms added. 

Ferrill turned to the officer. “We were in the alley the other night. That’s where Grant saw that thing. I thought he had lost his mind.” 

“Erratic behavior seems to follow the encounters,” Marshall said. “Witnesses say the victims would start to unravel in the days before their deaths. They would often see figures in the corner of their eye, or hallucinate threatening faces in the mirror.”

“I think Grant was seeing things, too.” Ferrill chose not to mention the face he saw in the window earlier. “How long did the hallucinations last before they…” he thumbed at his eyes, “ended?”   

Marshall tapped at his folder. “We spoke with friends of the victims. Four of them lived the apartments on South Street. One only lasted a night after claiming to see a ghost in the basement. Another suffered hallucinations for a week. That one started a big fire.” 

Helms sat quietly, recalling the smoke-covered night and the row of bodies carried out in red dancing light, one with a face cut to hell. 

“What about the other two?” Ferrill asked. 

“Drifters,” Marshall answered. “One is still cooling in the morgue, yet to be identified. The other was our first case of facial mutilation on South Street.”  

“He was a part of that big vagrant camp that used to fill up the alley,” Helms added. 

“Yeah, but he wasn’t a fulltime squatter,” said Marshall. “He’d only come to the camp when he needed a fix. Otherwise, he’d take up shelter in the abandoned homes on the edge of the neighborhood.” The detective stopped to ponder a moment, rolling his tongue behind his teeth. “The night he died, they say he showed up spooked.”

The detective’s eyes were aimed into space. He didn’t see Ferrill reaching for his folder. When he opened it, the dead face didn’t scare him. It was like starting up a home movie somewhere in his mind. The hospital bed fell away into a void. Helms and the detective were gone. Through a rolling fog, he could see the first victim, the drifter, alive and terrified, looking up from a dusty wooden floor. He heard a pained scream all around him, and he felt as if he were being pulled down a drain. The fog grew thick until there was nothing but a soft, distant sobbing.

Then a wash of light cleared the fog and there was Helms over his bed. The detective was watching behind him. “Ferrill! Can you hear me?” the officer shouted. His grip on Ferrill’s shoulders was shaky. The boy looked around, now back in the hospital, no sign of the drifter.

“Yeah I’m fine,” Ferrill answered, his mind slow to return. 

Marshall slid his folder from the bed. “You left us for a minute, son. It looks like you may have found a bad trigger in there.” 

Ferrill strained to understand what he saw, but hoped he wouldn’t see it again. Thinking about it made it seem near, like he could fall back into the void if he lingered too long on the edge.  

“Try to get some rest,” Marshall said. “I’ll be downstairs if you need me. Helms here will be by your side all night,” he turned to the officer, “so don’t worry.”  

As Ferrill watched the detective leave, he couldn’t ignore the faint, mournful sobbing that lingered in his mind.

***

The night refused to end, and Helms struggled to stay awake. Sometime after midnight, the boy rolled over and said Helms could turn out the light. The officer complied, but opened the curtains to allow streetlight. He didn’t want to sit quiet in pitch dark.   

The same thoughts had been running a circuit in his head for hours. Grant’s next of kin. The horrible legal mess that will follow. His career was doomed. And then shame would set in, shame for worrying about himself when the boy had a monster in his mind. Helms had caught only a shade of the killer, but he understood the fear that followed. The poor kid was just in the wrong place at the wrong time, tagging along with a bad apple. 

Fatigue took hold and Helms found himself nodding off. The bounce of his head would jolt him awake long enough to start the circuit again. To distract himself, he would tap his foot to a mental beat. Tap tap tap tap like a metronome. It became an absent-minded motion as his thoughts ran together, growing weaker until the rhythm was lost. 

***

Lying awake, Ferrill wondered if Grant was below him, down in the morgue. Silently screaming in a cold coffer. He imagined that he would be taken down there too before long. Following blindly to the very end. It shouldn’t be a surprise, he figured, that Grant would be the death of him.  

He pictured his parents, standing over his body, with his eyes and mouth stitched shut. I told you that boy was dangerous! He hoped they wouldn’t see the awful thing too, freed from his corpse to lurk in the morgue. The thought made his eyes water. He was a threat to everyone around him, a time bomb ready to release something evil into the world. He didn’t want to unleash the devil on some hapless bystander, not even the cop. 

Ferrill sat up in bed. He strained through the dark to see Helms, asleep and slumped in his chair. You did what you could, he thought. He was surprised—if not embarrassed—that Helms had bothered to stay. The officer had been tapping his foot for what seemed like hours, but now the room was uncomfortably silent. The yellow light from the lamp outside cast black shadows on Helm’s face, like deep dark sockets. Ferrill would rather see nothing at all, and reached to close the curtains.

But he stopped. His eyes were fixed on Helms, and he was afraid to move a muscle. He knew, without a doubt, what he would see in the window. It would be there, waiting for him to look. As it had been there in the rearview mirror of the squad car, and the TV screen. Now as he sat up in his bed, arm out and frozen still, it must be watching, aware of his fear. 

Like driving past a car crash, he caved to temptation and looked. The face stared back from the window, deathly white, with bitten, grimacing lips. It couldn’t be, though. Ferrill’s room was on the fourth floor. 

In the room, Ferrill heard a sound, tic tic. He looked to Helms. Fast asleep, his foot was still. Tic tic, just behind him. Ferrill whipped his head around and found the misshapen body standing by his bed. In the lamplight, its skin was like leather wrapped around long bony limbs. 

Its deep red lips quivered like it wanted to speak. Not breaking eye contact, it reached an overstretched arm across itself. Over its shoulder, the creature pointed a switchblade finger to the door. “H-h-home…” it struggled to vocalize, raspy and weak.    

Ferrill felt his fear give to fascination as he fought to understand. He watched as the creature crossed the room, its movement like bare tree limbs in a winter wind. Its face appeared over Helms. Ferrill felt the urge to shout as glints of streetlight danced across slithering claws, down Helms’ torso. His voice had given up, though. He couldn’t wake the officer as the wicked blades played across his belt like a spider. Tic tic as they walked across his body. Until they found what they were after.

The thing slipped its claw through the loop of Helms’ keyring, and raised the shining pieces into the air. The creature shook the keys with a jingle, then tossed them onto Ferrill’s bed. “H-huh-home,” it pleaded. 

Ferrill took the keys in hand and studied their emblem. They were keys to Helms’ squad car. He looked back to the creature. Still watching, it covered its face with switchblade hands, disappearing in the dark. 

Ferrill sat stiff upright for as long as he could. He moved only his eyes from Helms to the window until he could no longer keep them open.  

The Spooky Six with Dan Hanks and Willow Croft

Much as I was tempting to go on an archaeological dig with Dan Hanks (well, if I could garner an invite, that is), I had to keep focus long enough to wrap up our chat. Read on to live vicariously through all of Dan Hanks’ adventures!

Dan Hanks (he/him) is the author of Captain Moxley and the Embers of the Empire, Swashbucklers, and the upcoming SFF/Horror adventure The Way Up Is Death (all from Angry Robot Books).

He’s a published freelance writer, having written for Publishers Weekly, The Sydney Morning Herald, and even had a brief stint writing for Tomb Raider’s Lara Croft(!) on the Fox Studios lot in Sydney, Australia.

When he’s not writing books, Dan works as a freelance fiction editor. Over the last five years he’s worked with some wonderful Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Horror, Crime and Thriller publishers, as well as directly with many brilliant self-publishing authors, and querying writers. He’s also an over-qualified archaeologist and still works part-time in the heritage industry (although usually indoors where it’s warm and not as muddy). Plus, he’s one of the co-founders of the OcTBR Challenge – an annual event run on social media that’s dedicated to encouraging people to read through their towering TBR piles every October. (This is mainly an excuse to let himself read books during the best month of the year.)

A lot of Dan’s creative spirit comes from a love of film and TV pop culture, which is why whenever you read one of his books you’ll find a lot of that brilliant ridiculousness being channeled. If you’re a fan of Indiana Jones or The Mummy, Captain Moxley and the Embers of the Empire is for you. Want a Ghostbusters / Goonies mash-up? Swashbucklers is the book you need. And the upcoming The Way Up Is Death is a heady combination of Squid Game, Lost, The Poseidon Adventure and, um, the Usborne ghost books.

Dan has moved around a lot over the years, from London to Manchester to Sydney, but is currently content in the rolling green hills of the Peak District, England, with his two kids and fluffy sidekicks Indy and Maverick (and sometimes Poppy).

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