fiction
Horror fiction that delivers on its promise to scare, startle, frighten and unsettle. These stories are fake, but the shivers down your spine won't be.
The Secret of the Port Master
The Little Black Book (Found among the papers of the late William Charles Burton, of Superior) “Wearied with the commonplaces of a prosaic world, where even the joys of romance and adventure soon grow stale. . . [We] followed enthusiastically every aesthetic and intellectual movement which promised respite from our devastating ennui. The enigmas of the Symbolists and the ecstasies of the Pre-Raphaelites all were ours in their time, but each new mood was drained too soon of its diverting novelty and appeal. Only the sombre philosophy of the Decadents could hold us, and this we found potent only by increasing gradually the depth and diabolism of our penetrations.”
By Jonathan Caleb5 years ago in Horror
Typeface
I need to tell you a story. It starts, like many a dark mystery, with a peculiar phone call, pronouncing the death of my Great Aunt Aurelia. I say ‘peculiar’ not because of the circumstances under which she died—a regular old heart attack apparently—but for two reasons, which still elude explanation.
By Chris McEntee5 years ago in Horror
PORK BELLY
When The Old Lady walked into the shop, the screen door slapped shut before Stacy could spin around to see who it was. The Old Lady moved up the counter, more swiftly than a woman her age should move. Such an odd combination of haggard and terrifying energy thought Stacy. “Babychild, I want that hog processed before you leave today. Yer dumbass butcher man just hung it up yesterday. Already bled out. Don’t let him touch it, I want you to.” Her jaw chewed on itself, the gumming action pointing out the fact that she hadn’t bothered to put in her dentures. She stood at the counter waiting for Stacy to make eye contact.
By Jonnah Perkins5 years ago in Horror
The Transformation
“What are you gonna do with all your winnings?” If I heard the question once, I heard it a million times since I won the smallish $20,000 lottery prize. I was getting tired of the question even though I understood people’s curiosity. Since it was my best friend, I decided to try extra hard to hide my irritation.
By Erica Lynn Anderson5 years ago in Horror
The Sabbath
We walk in straight lines, unbroken and focused, into the forest, into my eternal fate. The trees dance in the moonlight taunting me, rejoicing in my misery. The wind nips at my exposed feet and slips between the opening of my cloak leaving frozen kisses on my arms and down my legs. As we walk deeper into the forest, my body steadily grows weak and numb. My feet are covered in cuts from the exposed branches and fallen twigs. The dirt clings to my skin, refusing to let me go further. Our leader, my mother, walks in front of me oblivious to my dread and I so desperately wish that she would turn around and tell me I don’t have to go through with this, but I know that is not who she is. It is not who we are.
By Jalyn Nwogu5 years ago in Horror
Little Black Book
Black manicured nails click against the white marble, the grey curling like smoke through the stone. Handcrafted bookshelves line the walls, resin coating the natural wood. The light from the golden chandelier bounces off the gloss, almost in mockery of the man that sits beneath it. He’s too thin, dressed in an old grey suit that hangs from him like a child playing dress up. Wrinkles cut through the white shirt and the third button down is missing entirely.
By Tash Broom5 years ago in Horror
The Book Speaks
The book speaks in tongues and within the babble I hear what it is I am meant to do. The book sings it’s broken song until all I hear is the soft sandy slide of brittle paper rubbing, rubbing against itself. It is the sound I hear in everything now. In the movement of doors, the slide of drawers and feet on pavement and my own lungs against the walls of my body. It keeps me from sleep, but perhaps always dreaming. And despite myself I know what it is it says, and where I am to go, and what I am meant to do, but not why I am meant to do it. I suppose I am meant to do it because the book wants me to do it.
By Elizabeth Hannifin5 years ago in Horror
The Starving Shadows
As usual, a wave of silence washed over Rindsburg. The lifeless streets bathed in the pale streetlight. It seemed as if there would finally be a night of peace for our tragic little town, its patrons plagued with empty hearts and empty stomachs.
By Gabriel Jackson5 years ago in Horror
#LLHENRY
It couldn’t end this way. Water lapped against the side of the overturned canoe. It was the only sound in the otherwise still lake. Henry dragged himself up onto the boat and attempted to rock it upright to no avail. Again he rocked the boat, clutching the little black book close to his chest. The pages were already waterlogged and the words were an illegible smear. A shout ripped from Henry’s throat as he hefted himself onto the top of the boat, but the momentum sent him over the other side and back down into the depths.
By SharonSharpe5 years ago in Horror







