Saturday, November 21, 2009

Scary of my mind


Fears when I was at home ...
At home alone is the most frightening thing for me that I can never escape ... Sometimes feel like there is follow the step ... There are following lies behind or even secretly peeking .. . All say things like is terrified of own self that I would fantasize about the weird things around me ... sometimes I hear strange noises that I thought the sound was not coming from ordinary people ... I'm scared .... scared. .. and scared ... but that's all I was overcome by saying Basmalah be easy to remember you ... really silly if I was aware of the things that scary mind and my thoughts ...

Because I know, all the hallucinations would only make us as human beings are weak and easily visited by the ghost god's creation ..
So ... Don't ever feel afraid of the supernatural ... All will never come to us if we hold firm to the belief in a god ...

Don't be afraid for everything...

Friday, October 30, 2009



This video at hallowen horror party 19 2009 opening night scare zone....at Orlando...

Raw Head and Bloody Bones


retold by

S. E. Schlosser

Way back in the deep woods there lived a scrawny old woman who had a reputation for being the best conjuring woman in the Ozarks. With her bedraggled black-and-gray hair, funny eyes - one yellow and one green - and her crooked nose, Old Betty was not a pretty picture, but she was the best there was at fixing what ailed a man, and that was all that counted.
Old Betty's house was full of herbs and roots and bottles filled with conjuring medicine. The walls were lined with strange books brimming with magical spells. Old Betty was the only one living in the Hollow who knew how to read; her granny, who was also a conjurer, had taught her the skill as part of her magical training.
Just about the only friend Old Betty had was a tough, mean, ugly old razorback hog that ran wild around her place. It rooted so much in her kitchen garbage that all the leftover spells started affecting it. Some folks swore up and down that the old razorback hog sometimes walked upright like man. One fellow claimed he'd seen the pig sitting in the rocker on Old Betty's porch, chattering away to her while she stewed up some potions in the kitchen, but everyone discounted that story on account of the fellow who told it was a little too fond of moonshine.
"Raw Head" was the name Old Betty gave the razorback, referring maybe to the way the ugly creature looked a bit like some of the dead pigs come butchering time down in Hog-Scald Hollow. The razorback didn't mind the funny name. Raw Head kept following Old Betty around her little cabin and rooting up the kitchen leftovers. He'd even walk to town with her when she came to the local mercantile to sell her home remedies.
Well, folks in town got so used to seeing Raw Head and Old Betty around the town that it looked mighty strange one day around hog-driving time when Old Betty came to the mercantile without him.
"Where's Raw Head?" the owner asked as he accepted her basket full of home-remedy potions. The liquid in the bottles swished in an agitate manner as Old Betty said: "I ain't seen him around today, and I'm mighty worried. You seen him here in town?"
"Nobody's seen him around today. They would've told me if they did," the mercantile owner said. "We'll keep a lookout fer you."
"That's mighty kind of you. If you see him, tell him to come home straightaway," Old Betty said. The mercantile owner nodded agreement as he handed over her weekly pay.
Old Betty fussed to herself all the way home. It wasn't like Raw Head to disappear, especially not the day they went to town. The man at the mercantile always saved the best scraps for the mean old razorback, and Raw Head never missed a visit. When the old conjuring woman got home, she mixed up a potion and poured it onto a flat plate.
"Where's that old hog got to?" she asked the liquid. It clouded over and then a series of pictures formed. First, Old Betty saw the good-for-nothing hunter that lived on the next ridge sneaking around the forest, rounding up razorback hogs that didn't belong to him. One of the hogs was Raw Head. Then she saw him taking the hogs down to Hog-Scald Hollow, where folks from the next town were slaughtering their razorbacks. Then she saw her hog, Raw Head, slaughtered with the rest of the pigs and hung up for gutting. The final picture in the liquid was the pile of bloody bones that had once been her hog, and his scraped-clean head lying with the other hogsheads in a pile.
Old Betty was infuriated by the death of her only friend. It was murder to her, plain and simple. Everyone in three counties knew that Raw Head was her friend, and that lazy, hog-stealing, good-for-nothing hunter on the ridge was going to pay for slaughtering him.
Now Old Betty tried to practice white conjuring most of the time, but she knew the dark secrets too. She pulled out an old, secret book her granny had given her and turned to the very last page. She lit several candles and put them around the plate containing the liquid picture of Raw Head and his bloody bones. Then she began to chant: "Raw Head and Bloody Bones. Raw Head and Bloody Bones."
The light from the windows disappeared as if the sun had been snuffed out like a candle. Dark clouds billowed into the clearing where Old Betty's cabin stood, and the howl of dark spirits could be heard in the wind that pummeled the treetops.
"Raw Head and Bloody Bones. Raw Head and Bloody Bones."
Betty continued the chant until a bolt of silver lightning left the plate and streaked out threw the window, heading in the direction of Hog-Scald Hollow.
When the silver light struck Raw Head's severed head, which was piled on the hunter's wagon with the other hog heads, it tumbled to the ground and rolled until it was touching the bloody bones that had once inhabited its body. As the hunter's wagon rumbled away toward the ridge where he lived, the enchanted Raw Head called out: "Bloody bones, get up and dance!"
Immediately, the bloody bones reassembled themselves into the skeleton of a razorback hog walking upright, as Raw Head had often done when he was alone with Old Betty. The head hopped on top of his skeleton and Raw Head went searching through the woods for weapons to use against the hunter. He borrowed the sharp teeth of a dying panther, the claws of a long-dead bear, and the tail from a rotting raccoon and put them over his skinned head and bloody bones.
Then Raw Head headed up the track toward the ridge, looking for the hunter who had slaughtered him. Raw Head slipped passed the thief on the road and slid into the barn where the hunter kept his horse and wagon. Raw Head climbed up into the loft and waited for the hunter to come home.
It was dusk when the hunter drove into the barn and unhitched his horse. The horse snorted in fear, sensing the presence of Raw Head in the loft. Wondering what was disturbing his usually-calm horse, the hunter looked around and saw a large pair of eyes staring down at him from the darkness in the loft.
The hunter frowned, thinking it was one of the local kids fooling around in his barn.
"Land o' Goshen, what have you got those big eyes fer?" he snapped, thinking the kids were trying to scare him with some crazy mask.
"To see your grave," Raw Head rumbled very softly. The hunter snorted irritably and put his horse into the stall.
"Very funny. Ha,ha," The hunter said. When he came out of the stall, he saw Raw Head had crept forward a bit further. Now his luminous yellow eyes and his bears claws could clearly be seen.
"Land o' Goshen, what have you got those big claws fer?" he snapped. "You look ridiculous."
"To dig your grave…" Raw Head intoned softly, his voice a deep rumble that raised the hairs on the back of the hunter's neck. He stirred uneasily, not sure how the crazy kid in his loft could have made such a scary sound. If it really was a crazy kid.
Feeling a little spooked, he hurried to the door and let himself out of the barn. Raw Head slipped out of the loft and climbed down the side of the barn behind him. With nary a rustle to reveal his presence, Raw Head raced through the trees and up the path to a large, moonlight rock. He hid in the shadow of the huge stone so that the only things showing were his gleaming yellow eyes, his bear claws, and his raccoon tail.
When the hunter came level with the rock on the side of the path, he gave a startled yelp. Staring at Raw Head, he gasped: "You nearly knocked the heart right out of me, you crazy kid! Land o' Goshen, what have you got that crazy tail fer?"
"To sweep your grave…" Raw Head boomed, his enchanted voice echoing through the woods, getting louder and louder with each echo. The hunter took to his heels and ran for his cabin. He raced passed the old well-house, passed the wood pile, over the rotting fence and into his yard. But Raw Head was faster. When the hunter reached his porch, Raw Head leapt from the shadows and loomed above him. The hunter stared in terror up at Raw Head's gleaming yellow eyes in the ugly razorback hogshead, his bloody bone skeleton with its long bear claws, sweeping raccoon's tail and his gleaming sharp panther teeth.
"Land o' Goshen, what have you got those big teeth fer?" he gasped desperately, stumbling backwards from the terrible figure before him.
"To eat you up, like you wanted to eat me!" Raw Head roared, descending upon the good-for-nothing hunter. The murdering thief gave one long scream in the moonlight. Then there was silence, and the sound of crunching.
Nothing more was ever seen or heard of the lazy hunter who lived on the ridge. His horse also disappeared that night. But sometimes folks would see Raw Head roaming through the forest in the company of his friend Old Betty. And once a month, on the night of the full moon, Raw Head would ride the hunter's horse through town, wearing the old man's blue overalls over his bloody bones with a hole cut-out for his raccoon tail. In his bloody, bear-clawed hands, he carried his raw, razorback hogshead, lifting it high against the full moon for everyone to see.

The Skeleton


by


At the end of a long corridor under a forgotten Philadelphia basement, Jeremiah opened his eyes and sat up. For the first time since the Middle Ages, he awoke without precise knowledge of why he had been roused. He knew he had to open The Shop--that went without saying. The question was: Which of the many items above wanted to go out into the world?
Jeremiah got out of bed and went through his usual routine. He shaved, dressed with care, then climbed the long set of stairs leading to The Shop.
Sometimes he lay underground for decades without being called, then a suddenly flurry of activity would commence, keeping him awake for weeks. He never knew which piece of merchandise would reach out to bring in a buyer.
Which brought Jeremiah back to his present dilemma. He toured the floor, trying to pinpoint the cause of his awakening. It had to be a piece that didn't get out much, otherwise the ability to call would be sharper, more developed.
He found the article that awakened him buried in a cobweb-shrouded corner.
"At last, old friend," he said, regarding the brittle bones before him. "It’s been two millennia since we last spoke. You’ve found someone, and the fact that you’ve waited so long is proof that the time is right."
Jeremiah almost skipped with pleasure. The opportunity to send something different into the world always made him happy. In anticipation of Mr. Todd's arrival, Jeremiah carried the skeleton out of the corner and gave it a position of honor in the middle of the sales floor.
When everything was ready, Jeremiah smiled his brown, uneven smile and tried to curb his rising excitement. By the time today was over, Mr. Todd would have a tool he could use to help him reach his goal.
How the tool would use him was another matter.
Bruce roamed the back neighborhoods of Philadelphia, his Army surplus coat hugged close to keep out the cold. Flakes of snow battered his exposed face and hands. The neighborhood, thick with litter and smelling of sour urine, was the last place anyone would think to look for him, especially on a foul day like this.
He was cutting class again. Why bother going when you were about to be kicked out anyway, he reasoned. He hated sick people; he only enrolled in medical school to please his mother. The way things were going, though, the cancer would take her before he graduated. The prestige was a small factor in the decision, but the money he’d make once he got out was the carrot that got him to sign the papers.
After two weeks of classes, he knew he’d never get the chance to make her proud. The reason was simple: Gross Anatomy. He didn't have enough imagination to picture where everything went, and what was connected to what. It was stupid to learn all that stuff anyway, when he planned to go into Psychiatry. All you had to do was sit around and listen to a bunch of people tell you their stories, then count the bucks at the end of the day. No need to learn what a metatarsal was for that.
Bruce glanced up the street. One of his professors came out of a restaurant in the next block. He knew it would be all over for him if the Prof spotted him. He was already on probation for skipping yesterday’s lecture. If he got thrown out his mother would cry and he’d feel like a failure again. He hated that.
The professor turned in his direction, taking the short-cut back to Temple Medical School. Bruce saw a set of stairs going under the street and dived down, letting his hand skim the top of the ice-encrusted railing. At the bottom of the stairs was a door. He hesitated, but the sound of footsteps grew closer. The Prof stopped on the street to continue his conversation with some guy in a suit.
Bruce swore under his breath. He’d trapped himself like a rat in a cage. Left with nowhere else to go, he opened the door and slipped inside.
Unfortunately, it wasn't the basement of some abandoned rowhouse. At first glance it looked like his grandmother’s attic. He soon realized it must be some sort of store. Narrow aisles overflowed with cast-off junk. He spotted a suit of armor, looking dented and rusty in the meager light. Next to it, a three-legged table, so old it had a depression worn in its scratched top, leaned against the pealing paint of the wall. Elsewhere, more rickety tables groaned under the weight of chipped china figurines and tarnished silver. Dust rose up from the floor when he moved, tickling his nose. The place smelled moldy and stale, like it hadn’t been opened in about a hundred years.
Bruce blinked for a minute, waiting for his eyes to adjust to the gloom. And then he saw the skeleton.
It stood to the right of the door. He knew it was a complete specimen before he went to examine it. It was real, too; not those plastic pieces of shit the other students had. The bones were almost black with age and strung together with something that looked like fishing line.
For a minute, Bruce saw his future. If he had a real, honest to god skeleton like this to study, he’d pass anatomy without a problem. Then he remembered the contents of his wallet. He’d bet a real rack of bones would cost more than twenty bucks.
"You may touch it," a voice said.
Bruce started. He’d forgotten there’d be a salesman. Instead of taking the man up on his offer, Bruce shoved his hands in his pockets and turned toward the shadowy corner where the voice originated.
"No thanks. I was just looking."
His shifting gaze located the source of the voice. An old man with thinning gray hair stood behind the counter, polishing some silver. Despite the clouds of dirt that hovered in the air, he didn’t appear to have so much as a speck on his crisp tweed suit.
Bruce glanced again at the skeleton, then took another, closer look around the shop. They were alone.
Piercing, watery eyes locked with his. Bruce felt as though the man could see into his head. He fought the urge to run.
"Medical student?" the geezer asked in a shaky, cracking voice.
Bruce nodded.
"It's quite reasonable, you know," he said. "I’ve been looking for a way to unload it. It had a tendency to scare the women. I could let you have it for a fraction of its value."
"How much?"
"Twenty dollars and it’s yours."
Bruce almost laughed. It was as if the man knew how much money he had. He tried to appear disinterested as he considered. "You gotta be nuts. The bones are in poor condition. They’re old and stained. I’ll give you ten."
The old man’s eyes flashed. "Fifteen."
Bruce tried to control his excitement. "I’m doing you a favor, taking it off your hands. How about twelve?"
"Very well. Twelve it is. I’ll put it in a box for you."
"Great. I’d look pretty weird carrying that thing through the street."
Bruce handed over the money and accepted his change. While the old man wrapped his purchase, he glanced toward the street. The wind howled, scattering trash and dirt along the sidewalk. Except for a few strung-out bums sleeping in boarded-up doorways, the street was deserted. The Prof was nowhere in sight.
He toured the shop, wishing the geezer would hurry it up. He stopped beside an easel, thinking the frame might make a nice present for his mother, if he could get it cheap. "How much for the picture?"
The old man winced. "That’s a portrait, and I'm afraid it's not for sale."
Whatever you wanted to call it, it was awful, Bruce thought. The woman looked like she was about to throw up, and the man wore an awful Austin Powers get-up -- ruffles and velvet everywhere.
"When you get the skeleton home, lift it by this piece of fishing line and hang it on the stand," the old man said, demonstrating. "I’ve packed it so it will come up in one piece. Just be sure to carry the box with care."
"Right," Bruce said, accepting his purchase. He opened the door to admit a gust of frigid wind. The wind caught a sign handing against the glass. He read the old-fashioned letters.
"No Sale Is Final Until The Merchandise Is Satisfied."
Cute. He smiled, hefted his box, and exited the shop.
Back in the dorm, Bruce spent most of the night cutting out shapes representing the human anatomy and taping them inside the skeleton. When he finished, he stared at his creation for a long time, memorizing the location of each organ.
The next day Bruce went to class and answered his anatomy professor’s questions with the right answers. He knew they watched him, thinking he’d found an inventive way to cheat. That didn't bother him.
That night, Bruce worked late again. Using a ball of string he found in his closet, he looped it around the bones to imitate the muscular system. The skeleton attracted a lot of dust. Short, wispy trails of the stuff hung from the fingers and surrounded the bones of the toes, but he was too busy with his project to worry about it. Instead, he wound the string over the dust and went on with his work.
When the alarm went off the next morning Bruce had a hard time getting out of bed. The long hours of study were beginning to tire him. He felt he was moving in slow motion. It was an effort to get his hands to do what he wanted them to do. Simple tasks, like buttoning his shirt and tying his Nikes, took forever. He managed and, grabbing his books, dashed out of the dorm.
Getting through the day was an ordeal. Bruce was glad it was Friday. He felt more uncoordinated as the hours passed. When the last class ended he concentrated on getting out of the chair and putting one foot in front of the other. Walking across campus took more than an hour; he stopped every few steps to rest. He decided he needed a night away from the books.
When he reached the dorm, Bruce showered and changed his shirt. On the way out, he took a look in the corner to make sure no one had filched his skeleton.
He stopped to take a second look. In the gloomy winter evening, it almost looked like the thing had moved. His hand shaking, Bruce reached for the light and switched it on. He swore.
The string he’d spent so many hours attaching lay on the floor in a heap. In its place, some asshole had sprayed the skeleton with what looked like a dozen cans of pink Silly String.
Bruce laughed. It was a good prank. Someone missed a whole day’s lectures to work on it. He took it as a flattering indication the other students were beginning to accept him. Prior to this, he’d felt a little left out of things. The others were so dedicated, so positive this was where they needed to be. There were times when he wished he could feel that commitment.
He didn’t waste a lot of time wondering who was behind the joke. No doubt the perpetrator would confess sooner or later. His smile broadened when he decided he’d drag the asshole back and make him clean up the mess. That’d teach him.
Keeping to his plan, Bruce headed for a local watering hole. Business was good because of the weekend. The place was packed with med students, but no one came forward to rib him about the skeleton. After downing one beer, Bruce reached for a second. His hand wouldn’t close around the lass. He knew it was time to leave. He was so tired he had to drag his body back to the dorm.
As he undressed for the night, Bruce caught a glimpse of his reflection in the mirror. He’d never been a big person, but he looked even thinner than normal. Too thin. Holding his hands in front of him, he could make out every bone, every piece of cartilage, every stringy tendon. Under the thin layer of skin, he saw veins and arteries bulge in response to the beat of his heart.
I look like a poster for Feed the Children, he thought. And no wonder. He’d been studying so hard he couldn't remember his last decent meal.
Turning away from the mirror, he walked to the skeleton. His mood lightened. The pranksters had been at it again.
Someone had gone through a lot of trouble to run red tubing through the bones. The Silly String muscles were thicker, more grainy. Life-sized reproductions replaced his flimsy paper organs. They looked real, although shriveled. Bruce suspected someone broke into the autopsy lab to steal organs from a cadaver.
He chuckled in appreciation of the joke, but he was too tired to return the parts to the lab. He'd take care of it in the morning. He turned out the lights and collapsed on the bed, exhausted.
When he found he couldn't get out of bed the next morning, Bruce became alarmed. He was so weak he couldn’t roll onto his back. Sitting up was an exercise beyond his capabilities. Nevertheless, he tried. He realized he was close to succumbing to whatever ailment had him in its grasp. The closest phone was located at the end of the hall, and he knew if he didn’t summon an ambulance soon, he’d die.
Using the last of his dwindling strength, Bruce turned his body and rolled off the bed. Then he rose to his elbows to crawl toward the door.
"It's no use, you know."
Bruce barely heard the thick, rusty voice when it broke the silence of the tiny room.
"Thank God," he said in relief. His own voice sounded weak, faded. "Call 9-1-1. Hurry."
He looked around, unable to distinguish the source of the raspy voice. His vision was cloudy, his other senses dull.
"I'm afraid they can't help you, and I won’t."
The voice laughed. Bruce stiffened, convinced his mind had begun to wander. He shook his head and resumed his efforts to summon assistance.
"Help," he shouted. "Help me, someone." He paused to listen. No one answered, no one came.
He raised his head, determined to get to the door. He tried to raise his elbow, but found it wouldn't move. Then, for the first time that morning, he looked down at his arm. There was practically nothing left. A few patches of skin covered gray, brittle bones. He dropped his head to the floor and used one of those thin, dying hands to feel his face. His cheekbones were exposed. His fingers moved a little, causing the remaining skin to peel away. It fell unfettered to the ground.
Bruce screamed, but no sound came out. His flaking skin floated through the air, toward the corner.
The source of the voice moved.
Reaching up, the skeleton unhooked itself from the stand that supported it. It walked over to Bruce.
No. No longer a skeleton. A complete man.
Bruce lay on the floor, looking up at the apparition. He was convinced he was in the final stages of delirium. He felt his heart weaken, his breathing grow more shallow.
He was the skeleton, and the skeleton was . . . him.
"No, my friend," the voice said, "not you. Never you."
Bruce's mouth fell open. The last of his cartilage moved to its new owner. He had no control over his diminishing body.
"Not diminishing," the voice said. "Transferring. I can’t allow you to take an oath you have no intention of keeping. My oath."
Bruce felt the last of brain tissue weaken. Before it was gone, he used his last ounce of strength to form a mental question.
"Who am I?" The voice laughed. "I’m Hippocrates. For breaking my oath, I relegate you to the same hell I have endured for 2000 years."
The new Bruce Todd lifted the skeleton and carried it to the stand. He hung it on the hook using an indentation in the clavicle, then stepped back to admire the effect.
"Hippocrates, you’ve defied death and come back in this great, modern age," he said with a mocking laugh. "What will you do now?"
He walked to the door, pausing on the threshold to regard the books on the desk.
"Why, I’m going to medical school, of course.

At Tarantula's Lil's

by Richard Logsdon
I. Worn around the edges, yet dreaming of vampire strippers, Professor Michael Haddux drove his dilapidated black ‘85 Buick Le Sabre into the parking lot of Tarantula Lil’s. It was getting late, approaching midnight, and a full moon shone brilliantly overhead like a fluorescent clock. His heart racing with nervous excitement, Michael had decided to risk his good reputation in the academic community for one night at the club that Time magazine had described as the wildest and dirtiest strip club in America.
"This could be a delightfully enjoyable, even bloody night," murmured Professor Haddux to himself as he parked out back of the club, turned off the ignition and climbed out of his car. Because of recurring nightmares and severe episodes of depression, he hadn’t slept well for days. He thought that he vaguely remembered having taken his medication that morning.
Adjusting his bright red tie, he walked toward Tarantula ‘Lil’s, the new topless-bottomless nightclub on the corner of Oakey and Western Avenue in industrial Las Vegas. Though not difficult to find, this club--a hangout for dealers, prostitutes, gang bangers, and real estate salesman--was one most people avoided like the plague. It was said that packs of hungry dogs roamed the streets adjacent to the club. Seeking extreme measures, Michael was hoping that this titillating environment would bring him out of his depression.
Tonight, the professor noted that the blood-red moon hung seemingly suspended a few feet from the furiously blazing neon sign that for miles around served as the club’s landmark. As he walked toward the music pounding helter-skelter through the club walls, the professor imagined that he could reach up and touch the moon.
An English professor with a special interest in Pynchon and Nabakov, Michael was mesmerized by the flashing green and black neon sign that extended 100 feet in the air from the club roof; at the top of the sign, a few feet from the moon, a metallic spider clung to its symmetrical web. From the web, red neon droplets flowed, cascading like a bloody waterfall onto the top of the club and to the street below. For Michael, it was like something out of a delicious nightmare, the symbol of a universe collapsing upon itself and creating a progressive degeneration toward evil.
As he approached the dark entrance, he was bathed in the moons crimson glow. As tired, possibly even delirious as he was, the thought thrilled Michael, and he raised his arms in praise to the full-moon, imagining a river of blood winding its way through the dark labyrinth of history and into his heart. He felt strangely energized, temporarily redeemed from the exhaustion that had consumed him for days. The club’s reputation for evil didn’t faze the professor. In fact, the rumors of demonic activity—a wonderful fiction, he thought, sort of like the law of entropy--pulled on his dark soul like a magnet, fascinating him. Going to the club was like being literally drawn into a novel by Anne Rice. It was a stimulant. He remembered that two months ago a local high school principle had been beaten to a black and blue pulp in the unlit parking lot behind Lil’s. The principle’s nude body had been found one morning in a green and black dumpster just beyond the rear door; the man’s body had been mutilated, the face an unrecognizable puzzle of slashes, double-puncture marks extending from head to foot. The object possibly of some occult sacrifice, the body had been nearly drained of blood.
And, as he lit a Camel filter cigarette, put it between his lips and continued his walk, Haddux excitedly recalled that it was here, two years ago, that one of the most memorable out-door executions in the recent history had been carried out as the decapitated body of a local under world kingpin--an Asian-American who had cornered the drug and pornography business revolving around Tarantula Lil’s-- had been found dangling at the end of a long black cable tied to the metallic spider. The man’s body, a grappling hook through the back, had been fried a crispy black. Perhaps, thought the rummy Haddux, I am half in love with easeful death.
Particularly intriguing to the professor were rumors that Tarantula Lil’s was a rendezvous for vampires. No academic in his right mind believed in vampires, but Haddux had never considered himself sane. Certainly, recently, he had been right on the edge. On many occasions in the past three or so years, during a full-moon—in fact for the past week--he had sensed himself undergoing an inexplicable transformation.
During these periods, he experienced bloody hallucinations, found himself incredibly thirsty, desired bloodied steak, had visions of himself having sex with some horned female creature from the deep. During the past week, knowing he was swirling into a psychotic vortex, he felt he could see and talk to the dead alone at night, a realization that brought him back to his psychiatrist’s office. Indeed, Haddux revealed during the most recent therapy that on top of a serious chemical imbalance he had a severe vampire fixation, likely the product of a cultural psychosis fed by vampires movies and vampire literature.
II. As he opened the heavy black glass entrance door, Haddux was overcome by the hypnotic music, the rhythm and beat of something clearly Satanic pounding intrusively into his soul, and he tingled with manic excitement as he stood in the darkness just inside the entryway, allowing darkness to fill him.
Two topless gorgeous but deathly pale redheads, obviously twins, stood in front of him. As one, the girls smiled and said, "Good evening, sir, and welcome to Tarantula Lil’s." Paying the required ten dollar entry fee, Haddux strode into the room of exotic dancers, the atmosphere a mixture of alcohol, cigarettes, and rock, and slowly, but with great ease, glided to a table just below center stage.
Smoke hung in thick blue clouds in the darkly reddish air of the club, swirling with a life of its own, and he hungrily watched the three black dancers on the stage before him. One girl had a huge live green python wrapped around her neck. Looking around, he saw that there was one stage in each of the four corners of the room, each occupied by a single nude dancer surrounded by men of all ages, some sitting and staring at tits and pussy, some standing in an effort to get closer and maybe grab a little touch.
It was just as he had ordered his fourth Bloody Bill from the gorgeous, scantily clad cocktail waitress that a tall girl with dark blue eyes, blood-red lips, flowing black hair, a white transparent top, and a short green and white plaid dress approached him. She had a flower tattooed on one arm. She smiled and, gently, sweetly, sadly asked, "Mind if I sit down?" The girl’s eyes were dancing pools of dark blue that made Michael quiver with uneasiness.
"My name’s Charlie," the girl began, offering her hand to shake and sitting in the chair right next to Haddux.
Professor Haddux finally took the girl’s warm, soft hand in his own damp hand, nervously brought it to his lips to kiss, and replied, "And my name’s Michael." Relatively new to the striptease scene, Michael wondered how to strike up a conversation with the girl and considered asking her if she had ever read Conrad' Heart of Darkness.
He was saved the effort when the girl casually pulled up her blouse to expose the darkest nipples he had ever seen. Then, like a brick against the head, it struck Haddux that he had seen the girl before, possibly in the pages of one of his favorite novels. His feeling of unease grew, and he wondered if he should leave.
"So, whaddya do for a living?" the girl asked, getting up from her chair and plopping herself down onto Haddux’ lap. She put an arm around his shoulders and drew his head near to her. She rested the other hand between his legs. Wide-eyed, he examined her gorgeous nipples.
"I’m an English professor at the local college," he stated, increasingly apprehensive. For some reason, he knew she knew his profession. He wondered if she were a former student.
"Really?" the girl asked, her face seeming to glow in the dark place. "Oh, my, how interesting!" At that moment, smiling, curious, she made Michael think of medieval paintings of angels, and Michael didn’t believe in angels.
The two of them said nothing for the next five minutes. Fighting extreme nervousness, the result no doubt of fatigue and failure to stay on top of his medications, he stroked her hair and occasionally touched a nipple with his tongue, attempting to generate euphoria within himself. She giggled in turn and gently massaged him. "Relax," she whispered.
"So where have I seen you before?" Haddux stuttered, breaking the silence. Her presence was still unsettling, and he was now starting to sweat. "You look familiar."
"Where do you think you’ve seen me before, stud?" Charlie responded, playfully, almost knowingly.
"How about at church?" he tried to joke, his heart racing. "That old Pentecostal thing on the corner of Bruce and Lamb."
"Well," began Charlie, laughing, "I may go to church from time to time, but I ain’t Pentecostal."
"How about in a Saturday evening bowling league?" Michael teased again, hoping to make himself relax.
"You kidding? " came the amused response. "Only morons bowl."
"True," said Haddux, intrigued by the girl’s quickness. "How about the bookstore? Did you work in a bookstore? Maybe an adult book store."
"No books for this chick," said Charlie.
Smiling, Michael played his trump card: "Uh, how about in my dreams...or would it be your dreams? Did I see you in last-night’s dream?"
Obsessed with nightmares as with vampires, Michael was sure of the answer.
The long stunned silence, the widening shock in the girl’s eyes, suggested to the professor that he had struck pay-dirt. And, sure enough, he knew that he had seen this woman in his dreams last night, the night before that, and the night before that. His blood froze as he finally recognized her by her gentle dark eyes, her long raven hair, her flower tattoo, and her dark nipples.
Ill. In this dream, the world was ending, the night sky a frightening display of exploding stars, run-away meteors, and an enormous black hole that hung just above the planet. The overriding fear was that the sun was going to explode.
In the dream, Michael had seen himself suspended by a cable from the tower on top of Tarantula Lil’s, a grappling hook through his back. Swaying in the steady desert breeze, he realized that he was dead as a door nail, a burnt-to-a-crisp person.
He remembered that it was midnight as he hung suspended, dead but quite conscious, and the metallic spider at the top of the tower had extricated herself from her web and was slowly making its way toward him. In the dream, terrified, he had forced his eyes shut, and when he had opened them again, he had seen dozens of spiders, all climbing down the tower and headed in his direction.
The nightmare didn’t end there. Like a thief in the night, trailing a blue and golden cloud, an explosion of light, Charlie--or someone who looked like her--had come flying out of the night sky, her yellow cloak billowing about her, huge wings clearly visible. Completely nude, she had come in response to his screams.
In the dream, as he had looked up at Charlie and behind her, he could see the black hole widening and drawing near, threatening to swallow them. In the midst of the high howling winds, his eyes fixed on Charlie, he had heard the singing of angels, had begged her to help him, and had wept uncontrollably. She did nothing. Absolutely nothing. He wondered, in the dream, if she were going to eat him. It was at this point that he always awoke, sobbing.
lV. Boundaries between the fantastic and the real having disintegrated, Michael recalled looking in the dream into the girl’s darkly penetrating eyes, the same eyes that now looked into his at Tarantula Lil’s.
"I saw you in my dreams," he muttered, unsure of what to say beyond this. He knew his therapist would have reminded him that this was no way to start a conversation. He suddenly felt his tiredness catching up to him.
"That’s right," she assured him.
"You’re an angel?" Stunned silence prevailed.
Then, "Maybe," she said.
"Or a devil?" he asked.
"What do you think?" she responded, almost offended.
Perhaps, he thought, I am hallucinating, a probably reaction to mixing alcohol with anti-psychotic drugs. "But angels and devils don’t exist," he asserted, trying to maintain control. "Vampires don’t exist.
The devil doesn’t exist."
She stared at him knowingly. "You’re sure of that, baby?" was all she said.
"And what are you here for, to save me...?" Michael knew that if this woman considered herself an angel, the answer would likely be yes.
"Of course?" she stated, simply.
He gazed into her eyes and took a long sip on his drink. Maybe, he thought, she just wanted to play him for the sucker and take his money. He didn’t know what he thought. Suddenly, he wanted rest from the anxiety this woman seemed to bring.
"Look around you, study the dancers, watch the main stage," she said, kissing the tip of his nose, "and maybe you’ll see it."
See what? he wondered. He hated conversations like this, those that pushed him to the boundary between sanity and insanity. Suddenly, he could feel the black ice of panic rising to the surface of his conscious mind as he considered her words. It was the panic he had fought every night for the last week. He took a deep breath and tried closing his eyes. In his mind, he caught an image of himself drinking this girl’s blood.
He rambled as if under a spell. "Sometimes," he said in a barely audible voice, words tumbling from his mouth, "I think I’m a vampire. I see a shrink about this, what, delusion." Why the hell am I saying this?
he wondered. He was now shaking.
"I know. You’re seeing Dr. Leonora Russell right now. Try to relax, honey. Please, please, relax, Michael."
He paused, fighting panic, wondering if there were any other way she could have gotten this information. He knew there had to be.
"I go to Russell--actually, I’ve been to several therapists in the past several years--and she treats me as if I’m mildly, harmlessly insane."
"You’re no vampire, Michael," Charlie assured him, addressing his worst fear and putting her arm around his neck and kissing him on the forehead. He lips were warm. She also continued to caress him. "That thought is--what can I call it—an ‘unhealthy manifestation from the dark side.’" Her dark eyes blazed furiously at him when she said this.
He thought he could see a red glow coming from somewhere within the darkness of her eyes.
"What?" mumbled Michael, unsure of what he had just heard, disturbed by what he thought he had seen in her eyes. Good and evil did not exist as actual dichotomies, as far as he was concerned. They were no more that literary fictions, useful for discussing novels and short stories, fabrications of the nightmare world he was nightly drawn into. "Some people call them evil spirits. They want to kill you."
"What? Why?" Michael asked, his heart pounding wildly, wondering if he were going to die, his nightmares rushing to the surface of his consciousness. He had had a morbid fear of his own extinction since childhood.
"Evil needs no reason for destroying the good. Evil always seeks to destroy the good simply because it’s good." It suddenly occurred to Michael that this woman could have extracted this definition of evil from just about anywhere.
The conversation seemed disconnected, moving forward by fragments that suggested an entirely other level of conversation was going on between him and the dancer. However, this girl, he thought to himself, couldn’t possibly be an angel. She couldn’t be. The claim she made about herself was preposterous. Suddenly, in a burst of shrewd awareness, he knew she had been putting him on.
Michael could feel his panic subsiding as he felt himself regaining control. Breathing easier, Charlie still sitting on his lap, her gorgeous tits exposed, he wondered if he were out of his mind. He had just bought into a paranoid delusion, affirmed by someone who likely made her life turning tricks for horny men. This girl, this Charlie, was a stripper who was playing him for a fool.
"Go away, honey," he coldly and abruptly stated, glaring at the woman on his lap. He was tense as a board.
"Michael," she responded, in tone somber, "you are on the verge of a terrible mistake. You want me with you. Right here, honey. They can’t hurt you as long as I’m with you. But if you refuse me, if you invite me away, I gotta go. You sure you want me gone?" She smiled. He wondered if she were laughing at him.
He was certain that she was. "Off my lap, babe," barked Michael, confidence returning. He partially stood up and nearly dumped Charlie on the floor.
"All right, Michael!" shouted Charlie, smarting from the fall, aware that others were watching. People from adjacent tables watched; the hugely muscled bouncers from over by the door started their intimidating walk though the room and toward Michael.
"It’s all right, fellas!" Charlie yelled to the bouncers, pulling her top over her breasts and then holding up a right hand. "It’s okay. I’m all right. This guy will leave soon enough."
As the bouncers stood their ground ten feet away, Charlie approached Michael, took both of his hands in hers, asking him not to send her away. "If you send me away, I gotta go, can’t return," she whispered.
"You won’t be able to call me back." Her eyes were whirlpools of blue darkness; Michael felt he was in danger of falling in.
Convinced more than ever that he was dealing with a lunatic, Michael, silently said, "Please, leave. Now. I want someone else."
For an instant, stunned, Charlie stared at him, her deep dark eyes touching him, and for a second Michael got the distinct impression that he was making a mistake. But he persisted, backing away from Charlie.
With that, Charlie gave one glance back at Michael, who was smiling and cock-sure that he had seen through this woman’s ploy. She said "Get out, now, Michael," and gracefully walked away. As she did so, the bouncers shrugged their shoulders, looked at him, one wagging his finger at Michael, and slowly walked back toward the entrance.
V. Now, thought Michael to himself, it’s time to relax. Letting the music of Aerosmith fill him, he ordered another drink and looked around the room for an available dancer. He didn’t have to wait long.
"Hi," came a soft, almost lilting voice from behind him. He looked around and saw one of the Oriental dancers looking down at him "Would you like some company, big boy?"
"Sure," responded Michael, moving the empty chair away from the table so the new dancer could be seated. This dancer, though incredibly beautiful, had harsh gray eyes that seemed to look into him, making him uneasy again. He decided to force himself to relax.
She had long crinkly blonde hair (obviously dyed), a gorgeously thin body, small breasts, and killer legs. Michael approximated her height at 5’9". She should have been a dancer with one of Las Vegas big stage shows, he thought. She was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen.
"My name is Lucy," said the girl in broken English, easing herself into the chair, looking directly into Michael’s eyes, and putting her hand between his legs. "You wanna dance, horny son-of-a-bitch?" the woman asked, moving closer to Michael and lightly kissing him on the mouth.
Something about the girl unnerved Michael, who nonetheless found himself hugely aroused. Recently, Michael assured himself, most everything unnerved him.
"You like Lucy, yes?" the girl asked, patting the bulge between Michael’s legs. "Big prick??"
"Very much," whispered Michael in a hoarse voice. As he felt himself drawn to this woman, he glimpsed an image in his mind of a bat entering a very dark cave.
"Then let’s you ‘n’ me go to the back room," Lucy said, standing and taking Michael by the hand. Michael noticed Lucy’s long fingers, her blood-red fingernails. "You gonna be my bitch," she said.
Michael allowed himself to be led, as if he had no will of his own. He simply wanted to try to enjoy the evening. Though something about the girl urged caution, Michael couldn’t wait to get to the back room where both of them could become extremely intimate. In a fleeting moment of panic, his mind filled with the image of this woman sucking his manhood and his life right out of him. Michael fought within himself, feeling himself moving to the edge of psychosis.
The back room was so dark that Michael couldn’t see the hand in front of his face at first. Yet he heard people whispering, like ghosts in the attic. Unable to find his own way, he therefore allowed Lucy to guide him to a couch at the far end of the room. By the time he sat down, he was beginning to make out images of couples seated in couches scattered about the room. Lucy was next to him, one arm around his shoulders. She put her free hand between his legs and easily massaged him into hardness.
"The next songs, sweet willy," Lucy said, softly, "we dance."
"Sounds fine to me," Michael responded, feeling breathless to be in the presence of someone so beautiful. He thought of sleeping as she danced.
In a minute, the present song over, Lucy rose to her feet, removed her panties and, with the beginning of a piece by Boston, began to dance, gliding up and down his body like a snake, sitting on his lap, placing the crack of her ass over his bone and rocking back and forth. Michael relaxed, certain he had entered the gates of heaven when Lucy turned around, put both arms around him and began kissing him on the forehead, the cheek, and the neck.
As he let her make love to him, Michael put his hand between her legs and brushed her pubic hairs. Images of paradise flooded his mind when he felt a sharp prick on his neck followed by the slow flow of warm liquid.
Quickly reacting, remembering instantly Charlie’s injunction to leave, Michael sat up and ran his hand over his neck. He held his hand before him. In the dark light, Michael could make out enough of his hand to see, barely, that it was stained by something dark. Surely, it was his own blood.
"What the hell?" he asked, frightened, glancing at Lucy, who had been looking away from him. When Lucy turned slowly around to face him, terror coursed through him like electricity, and he saw that she was grinning grotesquely, her mouth filling her whole face. Then he noticed the long sharp teeth, touched at the ends with a dark stain. He knew now he had been pulled right into a vampiric nightmare.
For a minute, he stared at the face, his brain spinning from the realization that the vampire stories about Tarantula Lil’s were true.
Maybe, just maybe all things were true. If not, this woman was wearing fangs and had just bitten him on the neck, drawing his own blood. Michael didn’t really know what to think.
With a sudden effort, Michael tried to push the Oriental girl off his lap and onto the couch, but he could not match her iron-like strength or grip. Easily, she kept her arm locked around Michael’s neck and used her other arm to move Michael’s left arm down to his side. He couldn’t budge her.
Too frightened to speak, a piece by the Blue Oyster Cult climaxing in the background, he stared at the ghoulishly grinning face before him and knew he had reached the moment of his own dying. Then, glancing behind Lucy, he noticed three or four other strippers approaching him, all with the same ghastly, ghoulish grins, all bearing their teeth, all bearing long sharp teeth. He thought he could hear them snarling. They were like spiders crawling though the black hole of his recently recurring nightmare. He noticed that no one else was seated in the room.
Giving a second effort, Michael sprang up from the couch and, determined to live to see another sunrise, bolted for the door to the dark room. Passing through the entrance to the room, he continued to run to the main glass doors, where he was abruptly stopped by the largest, most muscular bouncer he had ever seen. The guy had a ring in his nose, one in his ear, and on his left arm a tattoo of a pentagram.
Solid muscle, the man before him stood at least 6’5".
"Gotta leave," whined Michael, anxious to get around the man and out to his car and away from Tarantula Lil’s.
"Gotta stay," came the big man’s raspy retort. "Gotta stay for the girls’ dinner," he said.
Not wanting to stick around for an explanation of the remark, Michael quickly dodged around the big man and burst through the doors into the cold autumn night. He heard howling all around him and, looking across the parking lot, saw huge mangy growling dogs moving between the cars lot toward him.
Turing away to sprint to the unoccupied street, Michael heard a loud hissing noise and realized that someone or something was near him and almost on him. Sure enough, with his next stride, he felt the huge hissing thing land on his back, bringing him crashing to the ground in a cloud of dust. Barely turning, thinking of the web overhead, he could see that it was one of the black strippers, the one that had performed with the python. Now, transformed, she was a beast, a predator, who had obviously found her prey.
As his body came crashing to the pavement, he heard the shuffling of feet through gravel and knew that more were following. Looking up, he noticed six young women, scuttling like spiders to gather around him, grotesquely grinning, their fangs visible. These were the vampire strippers of his dreams, and dream had become reality at Tarantula Lil’s.
Attempting to rise, he found he couldn’t move and, putting his hand to the side of his face and taking it away again, realized that he was bleeding profusely from a serious head wound. Panicked, he struggled to rise again as the girls moved over closer, put their mouths down to kiss him and then attacked him collectively with all of their strength, biting him again and again, everywhere: his head, his arms, his hands, his stomach.
After what must have been only several minutes, he could feel himself drifting out of this world as he turned his mind to Charlie. He realized that, as unlikely as it had seemed, Charlie was obviously an angel.
Bleeding profusely, his mouth foaming red, Michael sputtered, "Charlie!! Charlie!!" but it was too late as Michael looked overhead at the full moon. Once again, it reminded him of a clock; indeed, time had run out for Dr. Michael Haddux as the biggest of the girls shrieked and brought an iron-pipe crashing upon his shoulder blade and then his head.
Knowing that Charlie had left the planet, Michael sank back to the earth, watching (suddenly as if from above) the girls go to work on him, kicking him, biting him, clawing his flesh to get at his blood.
Floating in an explosion of transcendent light, Michael looked down at the dark patch where one of the girls kicked his corpse again and again to the side of the head. Floating, he wondered where and who he was.
~~~~~~~~~~
When they had all finished drinking the corpse’s blood, two of the vampire strippers picked up his legs and dragged the body to the huge green and black dumpster that sat thirty feet away from them. Then, with an effort, they lifted the bloodless soul-less corpse off the ground and over their heads and tossed it in the huge garbage container.
Surely a symbol that the end of the age had arrived, the huge green and black landmark sign continued to blaze over head, the droplets of blood cascading downward from the metallic spider and, at that particular instant, into the dumpster and onto the body. The garbage inside the dumpster was bathed in a bloody glow.
The body would be discovered two weeks later, by a cocktail waitress, mutilated and decomposing and covered by a thick web-gauze.

Read more at http://www.halloweenghoststories.com/

Blackbeard's Ghost


retold by
S. E. Schlosser


The nefarious pirate Blackbeard (who's real name was Edward Teach) was a tall man with a very long black beard that covered most of his face and extended down to his waist. He tied his beard up in pigtails adorned with black ribbons. He wore a bandolier over his shoulders with three braces of pistols and sometimes he would hang two slow-burning cannon fuses from his fur cap that wreathed his head in black smoke. Occasionally, he would set fire to his rum using gunpowder, and he would drink it, flames and all. Many people thought he was the Devil incarnate.


For twenty-seven months, Blackbeard terrorized the sailors of the Atlantic and the Caribbean, ambushing ships and stealing their cargo, killing those who opposed him, often attacking in the dim light of dawn or dusk when his pirate ship was most difficult to see. He would sail under the flag of a country friendly to the nationality of the ship he was attacking, and then hoist his pirate flag at the last moment. When prisoners surrendered willingly, he spared them. When they did not, his magnanimity failed. One man refused to give up a diamond ring he was wearing and the pirate cut the ring off, finger and all. Once Blackbeard blockaded Charleston, South Carolina with his ships, taking many wealthy citizens hostage until the townspeople met his ransom. Later, Blackbeard ran one of his ships - the Queen Anne's Revenge - aground. Some say he did it on purpose because he wanted to break up the pirate fleet and steal the booty for himself.

In November of 1718, Blackbeard retreated to his favorite hideaway -- called Teach's Hole -- off Ocracoke Island. There, he hosted a wild pirate party with drinking, dancing and large bonfires. The party lasted for days, and several North Carolina citizens sent word to Governor Alexander Spotswood of Virginia. Governor Spotswood immediately ordered two sloops, commanded by Lieutenant Robert Maynard of the Royal Navy, to go to Ocracoke and capture the pirate.

On November 21, 1718, Maynard engaged Blackbeard in a terrible battle. One of Maynard's ships were between Blackbeard and freedom. Blackbeard sailed his ship - the Adventure - in towards shore. It looked like the pirate was going to crash his ship, but at the last second the ship eased through a narrow channel. One of the pursuing Navy ships went aground on a sand bar when they tried to pursue the Adventure. Blackbeard fired his cannons at the remaining ship and many of Maynard's men were killed. The rest he ordered below the deck under cover of the gun smoke, hoping to fool the pirates into thinking they had won. When the pirates boarded the ship, Maynard and his men attacked the pirates.

Outnumbered, the pirates put up a bloody fight. Blackbeard and Maynard came face to face. They both shot at each other. Blackbeard's shot missed Maynard, but Maynard's bullet hit the pirate. Blackbeard swung his cutlass and managed to snap off Maynard's sword blade near the hilt. As Blackbeard prepared to deliver the death-blow, one of Maynard's men cut Blackbeard's throat from behind. Blackbeard's blow missed its mark, barely skinning Maynard's knuckles. Infuriated, Blackbeard fought on as the blood spouted from his neck. Maynard and his men rushed the pirate. It took a total of five gunshots and about twenty cuts before Blackbeard fell down dead.

Maynard seemed to think that the only way to ensure that Blackbeard was dead was to remove his head. They hung the head from the bowsprit and threw the pirate's body overboard. As the body hit the water, the head hanging from the bowsprit shouted: "Come on Edward" and the headless body swam three times around the ship before sinking to the bottom.

From that day to this, Blackbeard's ghost has haunted Teach's Hole, forever searching for his missing head. Sometimes, the headless ghost floats on the surface of the water, or swims around and around and around Teach's Hole, glowing just underneath the water. Sometimes, folks see a strange light coming from the shore on the Pamlico Sound side of Ocracoke Island and know that it is "Teach's light". On night's that the ghost light appears, if the wind is blowing inland, you can still hear Blackbeard's ghost tramping up and down and roaring: 'Where's my head?'

Read more at http://www.americanfolklore.net/


This scary video weird ... a goat using a mask to frighten - discourage other goats in order to group ... hahhaa ... that's so funny ...