Posts tagged ‘revenge’

FICTION SEEKING TRUTH: A SHORT STORY CONTAINING A TOUCH OF REALITY

Accepted for publication by Bewildering Stories in July 2008.

For those fans of horror, you may recognize multiple incidents described in this story which are not fiction.

                                   FICTION SEEKING TRUTH

Stewart Kingman was a very successful writer of horror stories.  What made his fiction popular was that the stories contained a glimmer of truth.  He always included an element of nonfiction in his fiction, just enough to add a macabre reality.  His mind would wrap around events and give bizarre possibilities to a mundane world.

Kingman would tell his wife Talia, “I feel there is some truth behind all the stories I write.  Perhaps some of the unworldly situations I create could be true.  Or maybe all this horror shit is just getting to me.  People read my books to escape to a world that scares the hell out of them, and they enjoy that world because they can always close the book to escape the horror.  What if some of the horror actually existed outside the book?  That’s the reason JAWS was so popular – the book was frightening but possible.  You could close the book and jump in the ocean and fiction could suddenly become reality and your ass is shark bait.”

“Sure, Dracula had his roots in Vlad the Impaler, but old Vlad was just a weird dude, nothing supernatural.  Why does all this shit get published, and some of it is real shit.  I think I’m going to take a lesson from my old friend Houdini and look for the truth behind the horror.”

Kingman was fascinated by the life of Harry Houdini, living a public life spent creating illusions and a private life seeking the truth behind the illusion, performing as an escape artist and at the same time a debunker of charlatans claiming to be able to communicate with the dead.  Houdini constantly tried to communicate with his dead mother and his efforts only resulted in exposing one fake after another.  As he was dying, he told his wife he would beckon to her from the grave but as far as anyone knows, he never succeeded.

Stewart did not discuss his theory of the truth behind fiction any further with Talia, but she knew that he was doing research on the topic.  He had a vast library of folklore he used to give him ideas for his stories.  He was now spending a great deal of time rereading some of his favorite volumes.

Along with this work, he was doing something new.  He had begun getting involved with his fan mail.  He had a publicist with a staff of five who handled the vast quantity of mail he received.   Letters arrived requesting a copy of his picture and relating how Stewart Kingman was their favorite author.

He decided to take a closer look at his fan mail himself to see if anyone mentioned a true occurrence, something that defied known reality.

Kingman rapidly discovered why he did not get involved with his fan mail.  He received letters from fans who were mating with monsters, having their minds controlled by alien forces or by your run-of-the-mill witch, which might also led to mating.  He corresponded with them all, seeking out the faintest glimmer of fact the wacko stories might contain, but there was none. 

The letter Kingman was searching for arrived late that spring.

Dear Mr. Kingman,

I can’t say I’ve read all your books, but the ones I’ve read I’ve enjoyed.

I was wondering if you ever thought of writing a story about someone who had something happen to him and wound up being able to control the future.

                                          Yours truly,

                                           Frank Talbot

 Kingman wrote to Talbot requesting more detail.  A few weeks later another letter arrived from Talbot, a longer letter containing much more detail.

Dear Mr. Kingman,

It took me a long time to sit down and write this letter.  On one hand, I can’t believe I’m corresponding with you, on the other hand, you’ll think I’m nuts.

I’m a lineman in Massachusetts and last winter we had an ice storm from hell.  I was up on a pole, after working I don’t know how many hours, when I wasn’t careful and touched a live wire.  My work crew told me the rest of the details.  They lowered me from the pole and I wasn’t breathing.  They took turns doing CPR and got me going again.  The ambulance came, and on the way to the hospital I tried to leave this world again.  The ambulance driver gave me a jolt with the defibrillator, and I returned to the living once more.

Now comes the weird part that you might not believe but I swear its true.

I was off from work for a couple of weeks, and it’s during this time that strange things began to happen.  I was sitting in the living room when the TV suddenly came on.  On the TV was a news special and the guy reading the news looked like living death, definitely a strange looking dude.  Just before the set came on I was thinking about my kid brother who’s in the army stationed in Iraq and how great it would be to see him.  Then this guy on the TV, looking like an extra from Dawn of the Living Dead says the 85th armor division is coming home – my brother’s outfit.  The screen then went blank.

Here’s the really creepy part; the TV wasn’t plugged in.  So now you’re sure I’m nuts, but I swear it’s the truth.  It’s happened a few times since.  My mind wanders as I’m sitting in front of the TV when Mr. Death Warmed Over comes on the air and makes an announcement.  I don’t know where the broadcasts come from and I don’t know how the TV got unplugged.  Maybe I had some sort of seizure and unplugged it before the broadcast began.  I don’t know. 

Anyway, I’ve included my telephone number if you want to call me.

                                                        Yours truly,

                                                                      Frank Talbot

Kingman read the letter over and over.  The guy sounded like the genuine article.  He gave Talbot a call and arranged to pay him a visit.  The drive from Kingman’s home in Maine to Talbot’s in Massachusetts would not take long and might be a nice getaway.  Kingman loved long drives and who knew, some of this might actually be true.

On a pleasant May morning, Kingman set out for Frank Talbot’s house.  He drove onto I-95 planning to take the interstate into Massachusetts.  The traffic was unusually light, and as he approached the Massachusetts boarder, Kingman found that the only vehicle other than his was a tractor-trailer hauling a sailboat, shrink – wrapped in blue plastic down the highway in front of him. 

Kingman had the cruise control set on his SUV and the tunes playing. He was slightly daydreaming when the daydream became a nightmare.  The sailboat somehow fell off the trailer and was pin wheeling down the highway heading straight for him.  The weight of the rudder caused the boat to spin faster and faster.   What followed was pure luck.  He swerved to the far left lane of the three-lane highway with the spinning boat rapidly approaching him.  When he was sure he was going to die, the mast swept over his SUV inches above the roof.  If the boat had been a little smaller and the mast closer to the ground as the boat lay on its side, he would have become a giant Kingman kabob.  He pulled onto the shoulder and sat there until his shaking hands could again grip the steering wheel.  The rest of the trip was uneventful.

He found Talbot’s house without much trouble and pulled into the driveway of a modest ranch.  He was about to knock on the door when it opened and there stood Frank Talbot, an average looking guy about thirty years of age.  Before Kingman could say hello, Talbot said, “Glad the sailboat missed you.”  This caught Kingman totally by surprise.

“How in the hell did you know about the boat?” but Kingman instantly knew the answer to his own question.  “You saw it on TV.”

Talbot replied, “I had to find a way to convince you that what I was experiencing was real.  I must have invented the accident in my subconscious, something that would cause you no harm but get your attention.  I caught Mr. Death’s broadcast just before you pulled into my driveway.”

“You definitely got my attention,” Kingman said.  The two men then sat and talked for hours, and when Kingman left he already had the outline for a book.  Deciding it would be fiction but with an introduction dealing with the facts behind the fiction, Kingman began writing the book.

It was late summer, and the writing was progressing well.  Kingman loved walking the country roads near his property.  On an August evening, he set out walking and thinking of the day’s writing and what he would put down on paper next.  He never heard the approaching van.

Kingman awoke in the hospital with more pain than he had ever experienced in his life.  A young doctor told him of his multiple fractures but reassured him that he would walk again.  The doctor also told him that his heart had stopped twice in the ambulance due to the trauma his body had endured.  “They defibrillated you,” the doctor said.

Kingman’s recovery took a long time and rehabilitation was painful.  Shortly after the accident he learned that the driver of the van, already cited twice for reckless driving, blamed Kingman for the accident.  He said that Kingman shouldn’t have been walking on the road.  Kingman felt a rage he had never felt before.  His pain was excruciating.  The painkillers destroyed his writing.  He spent hours just dwelling on the accident, the insane accusations of the van driver and how the whole thing had changed his life.

Fall arrived, the changing leaves brightened the countryside, and Kingman took his first steps with the use of two canes.  Every step delivered agony, but now he knew he would walk again.  He still hated the driver that struck him but suppressed it as he tried to overcome the pain and hoped he would be able to write soon.

The trees were now bare; fall was setting the landscape for winter.  Kingman still could not write.  He would spend hours thinking of plots and characters, but when he sat down to put words to paper, nothing would come.

Late one afternoon, as the shadows lengthened, Kingman sat alone in his family room.  A short walk had left him exhausted and his legs were screaming with pain.  Suddenly, the TV lit the room.  On the screen, an announcer looking near death related the news of a suicide and produced a picture.  It was a picture of the driver that struck him.  Kingman glanced at the TV’s plug and a slight smile crossed his lips.

                                                             THE END   

November 19, 2025 at 4:31 pm Leave a comment

THE INHERITANCE: NOT A STORY FOR MOTHER’S DAY

This story was published in Black Petals in 2006. I recently submitted the story to another publisher saying that I am sending it now, because if published, I did not want it published anywhere near Mother’s Day.

                                          THE INHERITANCE                                      

May lay deathly still, listening, as her two daughters, Joan and Heidi, searched through her belongings looking for treasure.  Joan was the first to speak, “I hope the old bat dies before the end of the month.  That would save us a month’s rent.’

Heidi answered, “Quiet Joan, she’ll hear you.”

Joan replied, “Are you kidding?  She’s toast.  Even her doctor can’t explain what keeps her going.”

May Connors, age 62; lay dying in her bed in the small bedroom of her apartment in the assisted living wing of The Towers Nursing Home.  She appeared as a corpse ready for burial, her face ashen and her jaw slack.  Only the rare rise and fall of her chest brought home the fact that her withered body still harbored life.  Cancer had ravaged her physically just as cruel circumstances had ravaged her existence.  At one time her life was full of promise.  Now she had nothing, nothing but the cruel words of her daughters that seared into her brain.

                                                 * * *

May’s mind wandered back to when her daughters were young.  Five-year old Joan would say, “I love you mom, you’re the bestest mother in the whole world.”

Three-year-old Heidi would add, “I love mom.”

Those moments made the sacrifices she made for her daughters worthwhile.  Now her daughters’ cruel words blotted out the love she once held so close.

May clung to life with the hope that her two daughters, distant for so long, would show a measure of love for her before she died.  With her daughters’ words she knew that would not be.  The love she had sheltered in her heart became a cold hate.  A desire for revenge replaced her will to live.  Locked in the prison of her body, May’s mind and soul were tormented with the desire to somehow confront the shallowness, the evil her daughters exhibited.

As May’s determination for revenge grew, she heard Joan say, “I always liked this knife set from Switzerland.  It would look nice in my kitchen.”

Heidi snickered, “As if you’d ever use them to cook.”

Joan moaned, “I didn’t say I’d use them.  I said they would look nice.”

Heidi said, “You can have the knives if I can have the antique mirror.  I’ve always admired the frame and it would look good in my bedroom.”

Before she could help herself Joan commented, “On the ceiling of course!”  Both women laughed hysterically while May’s brain did a slow burn.

Joan said, “Since that’s settled, let’s go through the rest of this junk and see what we want.  What’s left can go straight to the dumpster out back.”

Then Heidi said, “Especially the crap she’s made over the years.  What about her clothes?

Joan replied, “Try to find a dress without food stains that she can be buried in and bag the rest for Goodwill.”

As her daughters mocked all that she held dear, May remembered a life of disappointment and tragedy.

                                                * * *

May recalled five months ago when she visited Dr. Stevens.

“I came for a checkup doctor.  I’ve felt rundown lately and have been losing weight.”

Dr. Stevens said, “We’ll run some tests and give you a physical.  That should tell us what’s going on.”

Two weeks later May sat in Dr. Stevens’ office.  The look on his face told May that the news was not good. 

“May, we have discovered your problem.  You have pancreatic cancer.  It has spread to your liver and stomach.  I’m so sorry”

May was in shock.  The rest of Dr. Stevens’ words tumbled into a blur.  He went on to talk about options and a realistic assessment of the time May had left, but the words seemed unreal.

The deadly cells had been spreading their evil throughout her body even as she planned her future.  May had thoughts of growing old and seeing her daughter’s lives blossom.  Now these alien cells did more than plan; they determined her future.

Life had dealt her many blows in the past, but May had always persevered.  It seemed distant now, but her life was once a dream, a dream that slowly crumbled.  May married late in life yet still managed to have two healthy daughters.  She quit her job as an interior decorator and devoted her life to raising her children.  Her husband Charlie’s salary as vice president at a local bank provided more than enough to enable the family to live comfortably.  Then the life she planned began to fall apart.

One day, as he did every day, Charlie kissed May and said, “I love you, see you tonight.”  She never took that kiss for granted for she knew how much he loved her.  But she never saw her Charlie again that night, or any other night.

Later that day, the phone rang and May answered.  She recognized the hysterical voice on the line.  It was Charlie’s secretary.  “Charlie had a heart attack.  They’re taking him to Glen Grove Hospital.  I can’t believe it, oh May.”

May rushed to the hospital. A doctor, Dr. Perkins, slowly approached her, and then said, “I’m the doctor that first saw Mr. Connors.  I’m sorry Mrs. Connors. We did everything we could.  Your husband passed away.”  Her Charlie, at the age of fifty and fit, died of a massive heart attack.

When her daughters graduated from high school, they also exited May’s life.  Joan and Heidi two years apart in age went off to college and never returned.  They both chose careers in business and both rose rapidly on their respective corporate ladders.  Joan became a manager at a major pharmaceutical company.  Heidi worked her way up to chief buyer for a major department store.  Neither woman had any thoughts of marriage and would not even think of sharing their lives with children.  They wanted their lives to be their own.  They lived well and traveled extensively.  There was no room in their existence for anyone else.  May’s hopes for grandchildren and family gatherings were dashed. 

May’s lifestyle went downhill rapidly.  In the ten years that followed, May found menial work and seldom saw her daughters.  When her children did visit they would suggest she start selling some of the possessions she and Charlie had accumulated over the years.  They never offered to help their mom financially.

Shortly after a course of chemotherapy, May suffered a stroke leaving the left side of her body paralyzed and her unable to communicate.  Her daughters arranged for a placement in an assisted living residence.  May’s home and possessions were mostly sold.  The rest were kept to furnish her small room.

  Now May was dying while her daughters scurried through her tiny apartment like vultures waiting for the end so they could pick May’s life clean.  Their mistake was that their greed would not allow them to wait until their mother was gone.

Two days later May died.  Her daughters got their wish and split the money they would have paid on another month’s rent.  But May also left them much more than money, she left revenge.

                                              * * *

It had been months since May’s death.  Joan and her sister had picked over their mother’s possessions and wound up disposing of almost everything the old women owned.   Joan found counter space for her mother’s knife set in her immaculate kitchen, a kitchen seldom used.

One day Joan’s friend Phyllis dropped by with the makings of a salad and a bottle of wine.  Phyllis drew one of the fine Swiss knives from its wooden holder and noticed a flaw.  It was a large knife and there appeared to be a cloudy area on one side of the blade.  Phyllis asked her friend, “What is this mark?”  Joan took the knife to the sink and tried to clean it without success.

“I’ve never noticed that mark before,” Joan said.

Phyllis asked, “Have you ever used the knife before?”  She then replaced the knife in its holder, chose another and prepared the salad.

The next day Joan dragged herself into the kitchen to clean up Phyllis’ salad mess when she noticed the flawed knife on the counter.  “Now how did that get there?” she said to herself.  As Joan studied the flaw it changed, became more defined.  Minutes passed as Joan began to recognize something taking shape.  She suddenly screamed, as the imperfection on the knife blade slowly became the smiling face of her mother.  The image sharpened and the blade began to move.  Joan backed away.  The blade followed.  Finally, she was cornered in the kitchen.  She closed her eyes.  On the front of her slacks she could feel a pressure followed closely by a searing pain in her abdomen.  Something warm and wet fell onto her feet.  She looked down to see the purple-tinged ropes of her intestines on the floor.  She looked up to see the knife back away, then come rapidly toward the middle of her chest.

* * *

Heidi had hung her mother’s mirror in the bedroom where she often enjoyed admiring her trim figure in its reflection.  It hung on the wall near the bathroom and she would smile as she glanced at her naked body fresh from the shower.

One day, while applying her makeup, Heidi noticed a cloudy area on the mirror.  She tried to clean it but it only became larger.  She hoped she wouldn’t need to have the glass replaced. 

Heidi awoke early a few days later to catch a flight to France.  She was now the chief buyer at the store and had been looking forward to this trip for some time.  After her shower, she entered the darkened bedroom.  As the mirror caught the image of her naked body, the cloudiness in the mirror began to glow.  She stepped closer to examine it.  An image began to take shape.  Looking at her was the smiling face of her mother.  Heidi screamed as the glass exploded.  Shards penetrated her eyes.  She could feel the vitreous humor and thicker blood flow down her face.  With gentle pressure the twin shards were pushed further into her brain.

                                                    * * *

Six feet beneath her blanket of earth, in the dank blackness of her coffin, a visage of peace crept across May Connor’s decaying face.  One might even say the ravaged face smiled.

                                                 THE END

August 30, 2025 at 3:31 pm Leave a comment


Calendar

December 2025
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

Posts by Month

Posts by Category