Showing posts with label dark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dark. Show all posts
Friday, December 2, 2011
Monsters
monsters
"Did you fall asleep?"
"No."
"Were you waiting for the monsters to come?"
"No."
"But, did they?"
"No."
"Then, why - why, my dear, were you in the forbidden room?"
Silent. I remain silent.
"Answer me."
"Forbiddance," I say. "I performed a forbidden deed in the forbidden room."
He smiles. "So now we're being smart?"
"No. Now we are honest."
His eyes narrow, yellow slits in the dark. "How did you get in?"
"The door was open."
"You expect me to believe the door was open for you to simply waltz in?" he sneers.
"Not waltz, walk."
He pushes from his chair, his fingers around my neck.
I do not flinch.
"What did you do?"
"I stood."
The forbidden room. The room with the bed and the nightstand - the room where the monsters lived when I first walked. Fifteen years of running away from dreams threaded with darkness, and I went back.
I am no longer afraid.
Because he is the monster and they are the light.
Labels:
dark,
dialogue,
flash fiction,
Kaitlin,
monsters,
short story,
story
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Grace
The picture that inspired this story is here.
The wind rustled the ends of her hair, lifting it in a way that if the wind was stronger, she’d fly away, up over the roof tops and city people staring at her. She could fly away from anything that pained her and land in a place of happiness. Renew herself. Crack out of the shell of the girl that once was and emerge as a beautiful butterfly.
Grace. She’d rename herself Grace. The way it sounded coming from her mouth, so elegant, made her smile. She’d be elegant. She’d be kind and loved by all.
Grace tipped her head back, staring up at the blue, blue sky. Maybe if she stared at it she wouldn’t see the ground racing to meet her. Wouldn’t hear the crunch of her bones; the squish of blood pouring from her. The snap of her life gone as she hit pavement.
She sat down, dangling her legs over the edge. It felt freeing—daring—to be half over the ledge. One slip and whoosh. Goodbye.
“What are you doing out here?” A boy leaned out of the window, staring at her in utter amazement and frightfulness. His hair was blond and messy, like he rolled out of bed. His eyes blue, like the sky, and sleepiness was mixed with the other emotions.
“Reevaluating.”
He slid out of the window and sat next to her. “Why?” He smelled like cinnamon. She wanted to bury her face in his jacket. But that wouldn’t be very graceful, and she intended on acting like her new name.
She tilted her head at him. Parted her cracked, pink lips. They still looked soft. “Because life is hell.”
“Jumping will be hell, too.”
She didn’t skip a beat. “Not unless you let yourself go while falling. You won’t feel a thing.”
He stared at her for a long time; from her dyed black hair and red roots to the combat boots she wore under the plaid skirt. He guessed she was an artist struggling to make it in the big, bad world. He held up his hands, dry, but covered in paint. He smiled.
“It isn’t that bad, you know.” He leaned forward, tucking a piece of hair behind her ear. He whispered, “I hope you haven’t let yourself go,” and pressed his lips to her cheek. She gasped, turning her head toward his. Their breath mingled, then their lips and tongues. Wave after wave of emotion crashed inside her and he pressed her down on the ledge, one leg of hers still dangling; they stayed like that for a few minutes, hands tangled in hair while their mouths danced. He pulled her into the studio apartment with him.
“Toby,” he said, his lips brushing hers as he talked. She felt solid with floor under her feet. Walls under her touch as he pushed her into the corner. Ceiling overhead. Safe. The shell of the girl was broken; out came a new girl. A new butterfly.
“Grace.”
The wind rustled the ends of her hair, lifting it in a way that if the wind was stronger, she’d fly away, up over the roof tops and city people staring at her. She could fly away from anything that pained her and land in a place of happiness. Renew herself. Crack out of the shell of the girl that once was and emerge as a beautiful butterfly.
Grace. She’d rename herself Grace. The way it sounded coming from her mouth, so elegant, made her smile. She’d be elegant. She’d be kind and loved by all.
Grace tipped her head back, staring up at the blue, blue sky. Maybe if she stared at it she wouldn’t see the ground racing to meet her. Wouldn’t hear the crunch of her bones; the squish of blood pouring from her. The snap of her life gone as she hit pavement.
She sat down, dangling her legs over the edge. It felt freeing—daring—to be half over the ledge. One slip and whoosh. Goodbye.
“What are you doing out here?” A boy leaned out of the window, staring at her in utter amazement and frightfulness. His hair was blond and messy, like he rolled out of bed. His eyes blue, like the sky, and sleepiness was mixed with the other emotions.
“Reevaluating.”
He slid out of the window and sat next to her. “Why?” He smelled like cinnamon. She wanted to bury her face in his jacket. But that wouldn’t be very graceful, and she intended on acting like her new name.
She tilted her head at him. Parted her cracked, pink lips. They still looked soft. “Because life is hell.”
“Jumping will be hell, too.”
She didn’t skip a beat. “Not unless you let yourself go while falling. You won’t feel a thing.”
He stared at her for a long time; from her dyed black hair and red roots to the combat boots she wore under the plaid skirt. He guessed she was an artist struggling to make it in the big, bad world. He held up his hands, dry, but covered in paint. He smiled.
“It isn’t that bad, you know.” He leaned forward, tucking a piece of hair behind her ear. He whispered, “I hope you haven’t let yourself go,” and pressed his lips to her cheek. She gasped, turning her head toward his. Their breath mingled, then their lips and tongues. Wave after wave of emotion crashed inside her and he pressed her down on the ledge, one leg of hers still dangling; they stayed like that for a few minutes, hands tangled in hair while their mouths danced. He pulled her into the studio apartment with him.
“Toby,” he said, his lips brushing hers as he talked. She felt solid with floor under her feet. Walls under her touch as he pushed her into the corner. Ceiling overhead. Safe. The shell of the girl was broken; out came a new girl. A new butterfly.
“Grace.”
Labels:
Ashelynn,
dark,
depressing,
Kiss,
picture prompt,
short story,
story,
writing contest
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Guest Story: Orange Tulips by Laina
Today's short story is from Laina, one of our other critique partners who doesn't normally write short stories. It's a gorgeous story--very short--and very depressing. Enjoy!
“I miss you.”
I know.
“I still don’t understand why you left with him.”
I know that, too.
“Were you cheating on me?”
No.
“Were you going to?”
Maybe. I don’t know. I’d like to think I wouldn’t have, but we’ll never know now, will we? And that’s probably a good thing.
“I never even saw you drink before.”
I know. It wasn’t the first time, but it wasn’t a regular occurrence either. And I was angry that you blew me off to go out with your friends, so I went out with mine and I was angry that I thought you were pulling away and I was… I was angry about a lot of things. Most, if not all, of them were my fault.
“You know I would have come gotten you if you called me, right?”
Yeah, of course I do, but I didn’t want to see you. You were pretty much the last person I wanted to see.
“If you didn’t want to see me, you should have gotten a cab.”
I know. Getting into a car with someone who’d been drinking was the stupidest thing I ever did.
“I’m sorry I haven’t come and seen you before.”
It’s okay. I don’t hang around here a lot either. If you haven’t noticed, there’s not a whole lot going on.
“It’s not that I don’t miss you. I miss you more than you know. But…”
Babe, I know. I really do. It makes you sad. Trust me, I don’t want you to be sad.
“I still love you.”
Me too.
Kneeling down, he sets the flowers gently on my grave. Tulips, my favourites, and orange, the colour I wore on the day I died. The last time he saw me. I hop off the headstone and bend down to kiss his cheek, even though neither of us can feel it anymore.
“Goodbye.”
Goodbye.
about the author:
Laina can be found at her book review blog, Twitter, and Facebook. She has a short story, Zombie Girl, published in the Zombie Survival Crew anthology Undead Is Not an Option.
Labels:
dark,
depressing,
Ghost,
guest story,
short story,
story,
supernatural
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
Wicked Blood
This story includes blood and gruesome events. I (the author) advise people with weak stomachs to not read this unless they desperately want to. Thanks!
music: In The End -- Linkin Park
The fairy lifted its head, its mouth covered in blood. It blinked and cocked its head before placing one of its long claw-like fingers in its mouth and sucked at it. It smiled, showing pointy teeth, and dug into the deer’s carcass. It took out the heart and made a bloody mess as it ate it.
The girl had frozen when she stumbled upon the eating site. Everybody knew a fairy attacked when it was disturbed while eating. It was why she stopped, rocks digging into her bare feet, the wind whipping her nightgown around, her tears clinging to her cheeks.
From weheartit.com |
Maybe she wanted to die when she took a step and another one until she was standing in front of the carcass and the fairy.
Her life was hard at home. Ever since her sister died from a fairy attack, her parents can’t stand to look at her, or talk to her. The silence made her insane. Her only companion the ticking of the clock and the silence. Always the silence.
She crouched in the dead leaves coated in the deer’s blood and stared into the fairy’s black eyes. They continued to stare at each other as she reached into the body and pulled out an organ; she didn’t know what it was, but she still took a bite out of it. Blood and other liquids ran down her chin and neck, staining her nightie.
She ate the whole thing, never blinking, always staring into the empty abyss of the fairy’s eyes.
She wiped a hand across her mouth. The fairy opened its mouth. “You shouldn’t have done that.” The fairy’s voice was low and gravely, not what she expected. She didn’t think the fairy could talk and not so well. Its lips pulled away from its teeth when it talked, the teeth gleaming in the moonlight.
It attacked her. It flew across the deer, its claws sinking into her shoulders and its teeth into her throat. Her mouth was opened, but no sound came out. The fairy had already ripped out her throat. Her eyes stared upwards, into the moon.
More fairies came and they dug their nails into her skin, pulling away layer and layer while they ate it like chips. Blood ran and they licked at it. A few giggled. A few traced their nails around her remaining skin before plunging in.
Her life didn’t end until the main fairy yanked out her heart and ate it.
She didn’t scream, not even once, but she had a smile plastered on her face when she died.
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