Tag Archive: fantasy


Chapter 5: Darkness of Art.

             The house went still. Only the hum of the flickering light… and Matty’s ragged breathing… filled the silence.

            Then came a sound.

            A dragging, wet, uneven shuffle… close. Too close.

            Matty’s voice quivered. “T-Trent… someone’s coming…”

            For a split second, Trent let himself hope. Logan? Chris? Someone human?

            But hope died as soon as the figure stepped through the doorway and what entered the kitchen was something far, far worse.

                                                                        *

            Earlier, upstairs, Trent’s friends Logan and Chris crept through the shadowed halls. The air was thick and musty, carrying the faint tang of iron. The walls seemed to pulse, slow, subtle, almost alive, but neither boy noticed in their hurry.

            Chris pushed open a cracked door at the end of the hall.

            Moonlight spilled across the floor… and glinted off something pale in the corner.

            At first, Chris thought it was a reflection.

            Then he realized it was a boy, he was slight, unnervingly still and dressed entirely in black, a long cape draped over his small frame like a funeral shroud.

            “Who… are you?” Chris whispered.

            The boy didn’t answer.

            He only smiled.

            And in that instant, Chris felt the air tighten in his chest, sharp and cold as a blade sliding between his ribs.

            Logan stepped forward, recognition striking him like a jolt. He knew exactly who this was—who the new kid was supposed to be. But his breath caught when he noticed something else:

            A body.

            Almost hidden beneath a long window curtain that billowed despite the still air. A limp arm lay half-exposed, fingers curled in a position that looked horribly wrong.

            “Chris—don’t!” Logan choked out.

            Chris didn’t even have time to turn.

            The boy moved too fast—blurring forward with a feral snarl. One hand shot out, and jagged claws ripped cleanly through Chris’s side. His scream tore through the hall. He crumpled to the floor, tangled in fabric and blood, the playful ruffles of his Art the Clown costume now soaked and shredded.

            “Chris!” Logan lunged, grabbing his arm, trying to drag him toward the doorway.

            The boy turned, lips peeling back in a silent, animal rage. His eyes flashed, bright, burning, inhuman.

            For a single, fatal heartbeat, Logan froze.

            Chris screamed again, a raw, piercing sound that split the hallway.

            The boy pounced again.

            He yanked Chris upward with impossible strength and sank his fangs into his throat. The bite tore viciously. Blood sprayed across the walls, across Logan’s hands, hot and shocking. Chris convulsed once, then went limp.

            But the boy didn’t stop.

            He hammered Chris’s lifeless body against the floor, again and again, each strike punctuated by the crack of snapping bone. The grotesque impacts echoed through the hall like a drumbeat, until the only sound left was a wet, choking gurgle… then nothing at all.

            Logan stumbled backward, stumbling over his own feet. Panicked stricken, he tore himself free and sprinted down the hall, heart slamming in his chest. He didn’t look back.

            Behind him, a faint, unnatural light seeped into the floorboards. The house seemed to inhale, slow, satisfied and the walls gave a long, creaking sigh.

            By the time Trent heard the screams from below, Chris’s body was no longer just dead.

            Something older… something hungry… pulsed through the floorboards, as if the house itself had claimed him.              

                                                                        *

            Now, in the kitchen, Trent saw him.
            Chris.
            Or what was left of him.

            His Art the Clown costume hung in tatters, the once-white makeup running in gray streaks down his face. The black-painted grin had cracked open, soaked through with something darker. One sleeve dangled in shreds; his forearm twisted at an angle no human joint should allow. His cloudy, filmed-over eyes still managed to find Trent.

            “Chris?” Trent whispered, voice cracking. “Oh my God…”

            Chris’s jaw slackened. A wet, strangled gurgle bubbled out of his throat. Then, through the ruin of his vocal cords—came words that didn’t sound fully human:

            “…T-Trent… it… hurts…”

            Matty whimpered and clutched Trent’s arm.

            Chris lurched forward, one jerky, unnatural step at a time. His shoes squeaked against the tile, leaving behind smears of blood and something thick, dark, and wrong. His head twitched, like his neck couldn’t remember how to hold itself up.

            “Stay back!” Trent shouted, raising the knife.

            Chris’s head snapped sharply toward the sound. His dull eyes went wide.

            Then he sprinted.

            Trent barely managed to yank Matt aside before Chris slammed into the counter, teeth snapping inches from Trent’s arm. The impact rattled the whole kitchen. Utensils clattered. A deep, wet shriek tore from Chris’s throat, and his painted grin split wider, revealing broken, jagged, blood-soaked teeth.

            Trent slashed.

            The butcher knife cut deep into Chris’s shoulder. Dark blood sprayed across the counter. Trent dragged Matt behind him, but Chris didn’t stop.

            He laughed.
            A hoarse, choking wheeze that curdled into a snarl.

            Chris seized Trent’s wrist, his grip impossibly strong, fingers digging hard enough to bruise. His breath hit Trent’s face, reeking of rot and iron.

            “Trent!” Matt screamed, trying to pull his brother free.

            Panic surged through Trent. He twisted with every ounce of desperation, ripping his arm from Chris’s grip just before those broken teeth could clamp down. The momentum sent Trent sprawling across the filthy, insect-scattered floor, taking Matty down with him.

            “Trent…” Chris growled, voice stretching into something mocking and blood-curdling.

            He lunged again, jaws snapping toward Trent’s face.

            Trent kicked with everything he had, slamming Chris backward into the cellar door. The wood groaned and splintered but held firm. Chris’s head jerked to the side—his neck twisting so far it nearly folded. His fogged eyes rolled, scanning the room in slow, twitchy jerks.

            Then he moved.

            Wrong.
            Spidery.
            Unsteady.

            His joints cracked like brittle twigs as he rose. The shredded clown costume swayed with each jerking step, his hands clawing at the air as he dragged himself forward.

            Matt sobbed, voice high and fragile. “He’s not stopping, Trent—he’s not stopping!”

            “RUN!” Trent shouted.

            He seized Matt’s arm and bolted. The hallway warped around them—the walls pulsing, the floor rippling underfoot like the house itself was breathing. Doors slammed shut as they passed, funneling them into a single dark corridor.

            Behind them, Chris screamed—half laughter, half agony—his voice bouncing through crooked hallways, the painted grin flashing between bursts of shadow.

            “One, two, three, four,” he shrieked,
            “I’m gonna eat your brains when they spill onto the floor!”

            He tore after them.

Terror on Tamarack Chapter 4

 Chapter 4: As above, so below.

            Matt’s scream cut off as he dropped into total darkness, air whipping past his ears. He hit something soft with a muted thud, dust exploding around him in a choking cloud.

            For a long moment, he lay still, dazed. Then, blinking through the gloom, he realized he wasn’t hurt. The floor beneath him was a mound of old, rotted clothes, mildewed and brittle, but enough to break his fall.

            He pushed himself upright and yanked off his mask, coughing.
            “Trent?” he called, voice cracking. “Trent! I’m okay—I think!”

            No answer. Only silence… and the faint, steady dripping of water somewhere in the dark.

            Heart hammering, Matt dug into his candy bag until he found his little flashlight. He flicked it on. The weak beam wavered in his shaking hand, slicing through the dust.

            He froze

            He wasn’t just in a basement.

            He was in a cage.

            Thick iron bars surrounded him on all sides, rusted but solid, reaching up into the shadows above. A heavy door hung open across from him, its hinges warped, the bars bent outward as if something inside had forced its way through.

            Matt’s throat went dry. “W-what is this place…?”

            He scrambled to his feet and aimed the flashlight upward. The ceiling loomed at least fifteen feet above him. The trapdoor he’d fallen through was now sealed shut, blending perfectly with the wood around it. No cracks. No seams. No way out.

            “Trent!” he shouted again, louder. His voice echoed, then died, swallowed by the dark.

            That’s when he heard it.

            A low, guttural groan.

            He whipped the flashlight toward the sound. The beam trembled over the stone… then caught movement.

            Something slumped against the far wall.

            No—someone.

            A man.

            Chains clinked as he shifted, wrists bound to the stone. His clothes were shredded, hanging off him in filthy strips. His skin looked pale beneath streaks of dirt and sweat. When the light hit his face, he flinched, raising a trembling hand to shield himself.

            But for a split second, Matt saw his eyes.

            They glinted with an unnatural amber glow.

            “You… really shouldn’t have come here, kid,” the man rasped. His voice was raw and torn, like every word scraped his throat bloody. “But for what it’s worth…” He grimaced, jaw clenching as he sucked in a shaky breath. “I’m sorry. You should really find a place to hide.”

            Matt’s mouth went dry. “Wh-why? What’s happening?”

            The man’s body seized. His chains rattled violently as his back arched, bones shifting beneath his skin with sickening, wet pops. He screamed, an awful, animal sound that echoed off the stone.

            “Run!” he choked out, just before his voice dissolved into another shriek of agony.

            Matt stumbled backward as the man’s fingers twisted, splitting and lengthening into claws. His teeth pushed forward, jagged and sharp. His eyes burned—bright molten gold.

            The flashlight jittered in Matt’s shaking hand, its beam jerking across the stone as the man, no, the thing, lunged forward against its restraints.

            The metal groaned.

            Then, with one final, shattering pull—

            SNAP.

            The chains broke.

            The crack hit Matt like a gunshot.
            Then came the growl—deep, guttural, vibrating through the floor and climbing straight into his bones.

            Matt staggered back as the creature stepped into the open, it towered over him, eight 7 or  feet in height. Fur rippled across its twisting frame, skin splitting as muscle swelled beneath it. Its face warped—part man, part wolf—slick with sweat and blood. Each breath was ragged… hungry.

            “Holy crap,” Matt whispered.

            The beast lifted its head.

            Its glowing eyes locked onto him.

             Then it lunged.

            The creature slammed into the bars of Matt’s cage, inches from the bent door hanging crooked and half-torn from its hinges.

            Matt screamed and bolted, diving through the twisted opening as the beast’s claws scraped the stone behind him, throwing sparks. He hit the ground hard. His flashlight skittered away, its beam spinning wildly across the walls.

            He scrambled on all fours, snatched the light up, and sprinted down a narrow tunnel lined with pipes and packed dirt. His sneakers slipped on the wet floor as he ran, breath ragged.

            Behind him came the sound of pursuit—thundering footsteps, claws shredding concrete.

            He turned a corner too sharply and clipped his shoulder against a jagged beam, pain flaring white-hot down his arm. He kept running anyway, ignoring the warmth of blood soaking through his sleeve.

            The tunnel opened into a wide chamber littered with broken crates and rusted tools. Matt darted behind a toppled shelf just as the beast crashed through the wall, scattering debris in every direction.

            He bit his tongue to keep from crying out. His flashlight flickered… sputtered… then died.

            “Come on, come on…” he whispered, smacking it uselessly.

            The only light now came from the creature’s burning eyes as it sniffed the air, head slowly turning toward him.

            Matt’s pulse pounded in his ears. He ducked lower, inching backward.

            His hand pressed down on a patch of loose, rotted boards—

            —and they gave way with a soft crack.

            The sound was enough.

            The beast roared; a sound so violent it felt like the air itself tore apart. It charged, smashing through crates as Matt scrambled away, splinters biting into his palms and knees.

            He dove beneath a set of rusted stairs, curling tight, breath held. The beast’s claws raked across the steps above him, sending showers of rust and dust down over his head.

            Then—silence.

            Matt clamped a trembling hand over his mouth.
The creature sniffed… growled low… then slowly turned, padding back into the dark. Its breathing faded into nothing.

            Matt didn’t move.

            His whole body trembled. His arm throbbed where he’d been cut. His knees burned from the fall. Dust stuck to the sweat on his skin.

            He took one shuddering breath.
            Then another

            “Trent…” Matt whispered, barely audible. “Please find me.”

                                                            *

            Trent froze by the candy table the moment he heard it, a deep, unearthly roar ripping through the house, so loud it rattled the windows. A second later came a scream.

            Matt’s scream.

            Trent’s heart seized. “Matt?! Matty!”

            He lunged forward without thinking, mimicking what Matt had done, grabbing handfuls of candy from the bowl—hoping the trapdoor would open again.

            Nothing happened.

            Panic surged through him. Trent cursed, flipped the entire table over, sending candy skidding across the floor.

            “LOGAN! CHRIS!” he shouted, voice cracking. “MATT’S IN TROUBLE!”

            He didn’t wait to hear if they answered.

            Trent spun and sprinted down the hallway, desperate to find stairs, any stairs—that led to a basement. Chairs toppled as he barreled through the dark, nearly tripping over a loose rug. His heart hammered in his ears, echoing the last sound he’d heard from his brother.

            Ahead, the hallway opened into a dimly lit kitchen. Cabinets hung crooked. Dust coated the counters. Something smelled sour, old.

            Trent skidded to a stop, scanning frantically and then he saw it.

            Almost hidden behind a stack of old boxes near the pantry was a narrow door set into the floor. Its edges were worn and splintered. A faint breath of cold, damp earth seeped through the crack beneath it.

            “Matty…” he whispered.

            He lunged for the door handle, fumbling as sweat stung his eyes. With a loud creak, the door opened, revealing a steep spine of narrow wooden stairs descending into darkness.

            “Matty!” Trent shouted, voice raw and breaking. “I’m coming! Hold on!”

            A chill wafted up from the stairs, carrying the faint metallic scent of blood… and something else. Something wild. Animalistic. The deep growls Trent had heard earlier had stopped, replaced now by low, guttural snarls echoing off unseen walls.

            He swallowed hard, gripping his flashlight so tightly his knuckles ached, adrenaline flooding his veins. He stepped toward the opening, then froze, hand gripping the railing.

            The stale, earthy smell rising from below made his stomach twist, but it wasn’t what stopped him.

            Screams erupted somewhere upstairs.

            Not Matt’s this time.

            Logan and Chris.

            Shouts, crashing, panic—and then, abruptly, silence.
            Silence broken only by a low, echoing growl from the basement that vibrated through Trent’s ribs and turned his blood to ice.

            “Logan? Chris?” Trent called out, voice trembling. No answer. No footsteps. No movement at all.

            Just that growl… waiting.

            For a long, agonizing second, Trent hesitated. Panic clawed up his throat. Every instinct begged him to run, to get help, to get out.

            But then he saw Matty’s terrified face in his mind—those last seconds before the floor swallowed him whole.

            He couldn’t abandon him.
            He wouldn’t.

            Trent closed his eyes and drew one deep, shaking breath.

            “I’ve got you, Matty,” he whispered.

            Then he stepped onto the first step and began his descent into the darkness below.

                                                               *

            Matty crept through the basement, heart hammering, trying to put as much distance as possible between himself and the werewolf. Every cut and scratch burned, but fear pushed him forward. He slipped out from beneath the sagging stairs, quietly weaving between broken furniture, darting from shadow to shadow. His flashlight shook in his hand.

            Then he heard it—footsteps above.

            Not the padded thud of the beast.

            A human voice.

            “Matty!”

            “Trent…” Matty whispered, breath catching.

            Relief surged through him. He bolted for the stairs and sprinted upward without looking back—

            —and collided with Trent mid-step.

            Before either could react, a roar exploded from behind him, shaking the basement walls. The werewolf had found them. Its massive claws shredded the floor as it charged the stairs.

            “Matty!” Trent yelled, grabbing him and yanking him upward.

            Wood splintered behind them as the creature reached the bottom steps, tearing them apart with raw, monstrous strength.

            Then Matty screamed, a sharp, piercing cry that cut straight through Trent.

            Trent looked down.

            The werewolf had bitten into Matty’s right leg, teeth sinking deep into his calf. Blood streamed down Matt’s shin in dark rivulets.

            “Hold on!” Trent shouted, gripping Matt’s arm as the wooden steps groaned, threatening to collapse beneath them.

            Thinking fast, Trent dug into his pocket—leftover candy from earlier. He grabbed a fistful and hurled it down the stairs. The bright wrappers spun through the air, flashing in the dim light.

            For a split second, the werewolf hesitated eyes tracking the movement. It released Matt with a guttural snarl and swiped wildly at the falling wrappers.

            “GO! GO!” Trent hissed, hauling Matt up the remaining steps toward the kitchen.

            The stairs creaked violently under their weight. Trent reached the landing and whirled around; Matt clutched tight against him.

            The werewolf barreled upward.

            Trent’s eyes locked onto a rotted support beam jutting out beneath the steps.
With a desperate shout, he swung his leg and kicked the post sideways. The weakened wood snapped—a sharp, cracking report and the staircase gave way just as the creature lunged.

            With a furious roar, the werewolf leapt and dropped straight through the collapsing stairs, crashing into the darkness below.

            Trent didn’t wait to see if it hit the ground.

            He dragged Matt into the kitchen and slammed the basement door shut. Both boys collapsed against it, panting hard, sweat and dust streaking their faces.

            Matt sagged against Trent, trembling.

            Trent pressed a hand to the bite, feeling hot blood seep between his fingers as adrenaline roared in his ears.

            “I know, Matty. I know—but we’re okay. We made it out.”

            Below them, the werewolf snarled and slammed into the broken stairwell. The impact rattled the kitchen cabinets, dust drifting from the ceiling with every hit. But for now, the creature couldn’t reach them.

            Trent yanked off his sweater and wrapped it tightly around Matt’s leg. Then he slipped free his belt and cinched it just above the wound, pulling until the bloodflow slowed.

            “It’s gonna be okay,” he whispered, voice cracking as he held his trembling brother close. “We’re gonna be okay.”

            Another thunderous slam erupted beneath their feet, shaking the floor.

            Matty whimpered and clutched Trent’s sleeve. “It’s still down there…”

            “I know,” Trent whispered. “That’s why we need something to fight with.”

            He eased Matt up, guiding him to lean against the counter. Then Trent rose, crossing the kitchen with long, desperate strides, stepping over shattered boards and the debris littering the floor.

            His flashlight flickered weakly across the cabinets, peeling paint, rusted hinges, warped wood—each crooked door hanging like a watching eye.

            Trent yanked open the first drawer.

            Nothing but warped silverware and a rat’s nest of broken utensils.

            He slammed it shut and tore open the next.

            Dust. Old letters. A rusted can opener.

            “Come on,” he muttered, breath trembling.

            Behind him, Matty pushed himself upright, jaw clenched despite the pain. He limped to the lower cabinets, hands shaking as he opened one after another—pots, pans, useless junk.

            Then he saw it.

            A long black handle sticking out of a wooden knife block shoved deep into the corner.

            Matty reached for it.

            His fingers closed around the handle of a butcher knife—long, heavy, wickedly sharp despite the rust along its edges. He exhaled shakily, half relief, half fear.

            “Trent,” he said, voice wavering but determined.

            Trent spun just as Matty held the knife out to him.

            But something else caught Trent’s eye—a smaller blade wedged between the block and the wall. A thick-bodied steak knife, narrow and pointed like a fang.

            “Matty,” Trent said, shaking his head. “You need something too.”

            He reached past his brother, grabbed the steak knife, and pressed it into Matty’s hands.

            Matty stared at it, throat bobbing as he swallowed hard. His fingers curled tight around the grip.

            “I don’t… I don’t know if I can…”

            “You can,” Trent said softly but with absolute certainty. “You already survived that thing once. You can do this.”

            From deep beneath the floorboards came a roar—louder, angrier, vibrating through the house. The walls shuddered with it, and the sound rolled through the kitchen like something alive.

            Both brothers flinched.

            Trent lifted the butcher knife, blade trembling only slightly in his grip. Beside him, Matty raised the steak knife—his arm shaking, but steadying as he pulled in one long, determined breath.

            The banging below grew sharper, and what sounded like metal scraping stone. The wet, horrible sound of something massive forcing its way upward. Then—

            Silence.

            A suffocating, heavy silence that settled over the kitchen like a held breath.

            Trent stepped closer to his brother, never taking his eyes off the basement door.

            “From now on,” he whispered, “we move together. We don’t split up again. Ever.”

Chapter 2: Eyes on Taramack Drive

Chapter 2: Eyes on Taramack Drive

            Trent didn’t even get the chance to change before his phone buzzed. Fishing it out of his pocket, he put it on speaker as his mom’s voice came through one of those quick check-ins she managed to squeeze in from work.

            “Hey, honey. How was school today?”

            Trent sighed, dabbing gray makeup across his cheek in the bathroom mirror. “Pretty awful. My new mask got ruined.”

            “Aww, honey, I’m sorry. What happened?”

            “Nothing. Just some kid at school got a little rough. It’s fine or whatever.”

            “Well, it’s too late to get a replacement,” she said. “Your dad told you to be careful. You shouldn’t have taken it to school in the first place.”

            “I know, Mom, I’m sorry.” Trent muttered.

            “What are you going to do for tonight?”

            “I’m going as a zombie again,” he said, leaning close to the mirror as he pressed on a bit of latex to make his face look rotted and peeling.

            “Good. Just make sure you take Matty trick-or-treating.”

            “Do I have to? I kind of already have plans with Chris and Logan.”

            “You promised, Trent,” she reminded him. “It’ll just be for an hour or two around the neighborhood. I’ll be home by nine. I need you to keep an eye on your brother.”

            “Mom, he’s old enough to go by himself,” Trent started, but she cut him off.

            “You promised when we got you that werewolf costume that you’d take lil Matty out trick-or-treating. I expect you to keep your promise. Your dad and I won’t be home until later, and someone needs to be there with him.”

            He mumbled something that sounded like “yeah” and hung up before she could lecture him about responsibility again.

            By the time the sun dipped behind the trees, Matt was bouncing around in a wrinkled skeleton costume, his old, hooded mask splattered with too much fake blood and a pillowcase clutched in one hand.

            “C’mon, Trent! You’re not even dressed!”

            Trent grunted, pulling on a hooded sweatshirt and grabbing the tattered remains of his werewolf mask. “This is my costume. I’m the sad werewolf who got mauled by a jerk in homeroom so now I’m a zombie. I’ll be done in a minute.”

            Matt snorted. “Ten outta ten. Real scary.”

            “Get outta here,” Trent said, shooing him toward the hallway. He gave himself one last look in the mirror, adjusted a flap of fake rotting skin, then flipped off the light and headed to his room to finish changing.

            Trent was still brushing fake blood off his fingers when he heard the slam of car doors and the low murmur of familiar voices coming from the front walk, followed by quick, impatient knocking.

            He opened the door to find Logan and Chris standing on the porch Logan dressed as Jeff the Killer, the hood of his sweatshirt pulled low, and Chris as Art the Clown from Terrifier, but his costume was cheap, making him look more like the bargain bin, temu version of the horror icon, clutching a garbage bag that clinked suspiciously in his hands.

            “Took you long enough,” Logan said. “You ready or what?”

            Trent sighed. “Can’t. Mom’s making me take my brother trick-or-treating.”

            Chris gave a mock pout. “Aww, big brother duty. Tragic.”

            From behind Trent, Matt’s voice piped up. “Who’s tragic?”

            “Your brother,” Logan said with a smirk. “We were gonna do something way more fun than candy-hunting, little man.”

            Trent shot him a warning look, but Matt was already interested. “Like what?”

            Chris grinned. “You know that creepy old Winchester place on Taramack Drive?”

            Matt’s eyes widened. “Where the vampire kid lives now?”

            Logan laughed. “See? Even your brother knows.”

            Trent crossed his arms. “You two are idiots. He’s just a kid. And I’ve thought about it we’re not going over there tonight.”

            “Oh, come on,” Chris said. “We’re not doing anything bad. Maybe just a few rolls of toilet paper. Classic Halloween tradition to welcome the new neighbors.”

            Trent groaned. “Yeah, I’m sure your ‘tradition’ doesn’t include a dozen or so eggs.”

            Matt perked up, clearly enjoying this. “I want to go.”

            Trent snapped, “No. You’re going home after trick-or-treating.”

            Matt’s grin turned sly. “Then I’ll tell Mom what you’re really doing tonight.”

            Logan raised his eyebrows. “Damn, kid’s got leverage.”

            Trent glared at Matt. “You get scared just walking past there, what makes you think you can actually go and not chicken out?”

            “I’m not scared,” Matt said, puffing out his chest. “You’re just saying that because you are.”

            Chris chuckled. “He’s got you pegged, man.”

            Trent rubbed the bridge of his nose. “Fine. You can come but you don’t wander off, and you do exactly what I say. Got it?”

            Matt grinned triumphantly. “Got it.”

            “But we still get to go trick-or-treating first, right?” Matt asked.

            “Well, I wouldn’t say no to a little candy,” Logan said.

            “Yeah,” Trent agreed. “We probably should. It’d look suspicious if we came home empty-handed.”

            They set off down the cracked sidewalk, the night already thick with laughter and the rustle of candy bags. Porch lights glowed like little beacons in the dark, but beyond them, the streets thinned out fewer kids, fewer lights. The kind of stretch where shadows moved differently.

            Somewhere beyond the trees, at the far edge of Taramack Drive, the Winchester house waited—windows dark, roof sagging, and not a single pumpkin on the porch.

Terror on Tamarack



Chapter 1. Masks and Shadows.

            October wind scraped across the cul-de-sac, stirring up brittle leaves and the smell of burning pumpkins. By the time Trent Keller trudged up the driveway, his bookbag hung off one shoulder like a half-shed skin, and his werewolf mask dangled in shreds from his hand.

            From the porch, ten year old Matty peered over a candy bowl already half-raided. “Jeez, Trent, what happened? Did a truck run over your face?”

            Trent shot him a look sharp enough to cut. “Drop it.”

            Matty grinned. “You cryin’? You look like you’re cryin’.”

            “I said drop it, Matty.”

            Their mom wasn’t home yet, which meant Trent didn’t have to fake being fine. He tossed the ruined mask on the counter where its plastic muzzle curled like something melting. He stared at it at the clawed slashes across the snout and felt his stomach twist again.

            “It was that new kid,” he muttered finally. “The one dressed like a vampire.”

            Matt’s eyes widened. “Vampire kid? You mean the new kid?”

            “Yeah.” Trent slumped into a chair. “I was just messing around, okay? Said his fake teeth looked like he got them from the dollar store. He didn’t say anything just looked at me. Then when I turned around, he—” Trent hesitated. “He scratched the mask. Fast. Like…too fast.”

            Matty laughed. “Maybe he’s actually a vampire.”

            Trent rolled his eyes, but something about the way the kid’s nails had gleamed under the fluorescent light thin and sharp like glass had stayed with him all afternoon. “He’s just a freak. Moved into that wreck of a place on Taramack Drive.”

            Matt perked up. “The Winchester house?”

            “Yeah. Me, Logan, and Chris were gonna get him back tonight though.”

            Matty frowned. “But Mom said you gotta take me trick-or-treating.”

            Trent groaned. “Seriously?”

            “She said you’re responsible this year ” Matt made air quotes, before adding, “Mom and dad have plans tonight and won’t be home. So you gotta take me Trick r treating.

            Trent rubbed his face, torn between annoyance and unease. The old Winchester place had been empty for years boarded windows, no lights, and the kind of silence that made dogs bark at nothing. Now it had a new resident, the new family had moved in fast, faster than Trent had expected to be possible, but he wanted to teach that little pale kid with dark eyes a lesson and to even the score.

            Outside, the sun was already slipping behind the trees, and the streetlights were flickering to life one by one.

            Halloween night had just begun.

Chapter 12: Purple Skies and Quiet Questions

                As the days passed, I had to keep reminding myself to pull back. Not to rush things.
Because every time I looked at Connie, I missed us.

                Not this version of us—the fourth-grade awkwardness, the math worksheets, the unspoken familiarity. No, I missed us: adults, in love. The years we spent together. The quiet mornings and late-night drives. The inside jokes. The way she looked at me when she thought I wasn’t watching.

                And now, I was a kid again. And she didn’t remember. I couldn’t tell anyone what I was going through except Grandma. Even though she believed me, I knew it was still hard to wrap your mind around. I was living it, and I struggled with it every single day.

                Some days I wondered if I was dying. In a coma. Or if the life I remembered even still existed. Was that life a dream? Or was this one? I didn’t know. And I wasn’t sure which answer would hurt more.

                But in the meantime, I had a mission: not just to better my life, but the lives of those around me. I wasn’t trying to remake the world in my image—God knows, I wasn’t perfect the first time. But I could offer something most people never got the first time around: grace. Kindness without condition. A voice in the dark reminding them they could still choose light.

                I  thought a lot about this quote I once heard in an interview with Squid Game actor Lee Jung-Jae. He said he wished someone had stopped him when he was younger, when he was about to make bad decisions. That if someone had looked him in the eye and said, “Stop, this isn’t you. You have a good heart,” things might’ve turned out differently.

                That stayed with me.

                So now, that’s what I did. A choice. A moment of kindness. A warning dressed like a joke. A hug when someone looked like they were barely holding it together. I couldn’t erase all the trauma. Some paths had too much momentum. But I could slow it down. Light a detour. Interrupt the spiral and pray it would be enough.

                 At school, there was a girl named Ellie. She used to sit near the back, always quiet, always drawing strange, beautiful little doodles in the margins of her notebook. In the original timeline, her parents crushed that part of her. Said art was “for losers.” Forced her into academics and prep courses.

                By high school, she had stopped drawing completely. But now? Things were already changing. I caught her sketching one day in class, and instead of pretending not to notice, I smiled and told her, “Hey, you’re really good.”
                She looked at me like I’d spoken another language. The next day, I asked her to draw me something beautiful. She came in with a sketch of her dog—a goofy-looking pit bull dressed like Indiana Jones.
                She grinned when she handed it to me. “I heard you like adventure movies.”

                I was floored. “This is amazing,” I said. “You should draw a whole series.”

                I slid her a new sketchbook a few days later for her birthday. Told her she could be the next Lisa Frank. When she squinted at the name, I just smirked and said, “You’ll know who that is in about five years.”

                She kept that sketchbook. And the one after it. By fourteen, she was entering art contests.
By sixteen, she was selling prints online. All I did was remind her she was allowed to want more.

                Things were better with Jordan too. He was staying with his aunt and uncle now, but he still came over after school a few days a week. We’d sit on the porch and eat popsicles and talk about random stuff—video games, school, what flavor of Doritos was superior (we agreed to disagree).

                One afternoon he told me, “I started writing stuff down. Like when I’m mad or scared. Just writing it.” Then, a little softer: “I got the idea from you.”

                He didn’t know how much that meant to me. He didn’t know how many nights I stayed up wondering if I was helping or just fooling myself. But that made it worth it. Every bit.

                 Connie and I started talking more after that first exchange about the purple sky. It was slow at first—small comments during art class, quick glances across the cafeteria. But there was a rhythm to it, like our friendship was a song I almost remembered from another life. She laughed with this kind of softness I’d forgotten I missed. She told me about her favorite cartoons, her sisters, how she always felt more comfortable with her dad even though she couldn’t explain why.

                I listened more than I spoke. Partly because I was afraid of saying too much, but mostly because I just wanted to hear her voice again. It grounded me. Made this strange miracle of a life feel less like a fluke and more like a second chance I hadn’t totally screwed up yet.

                Sometimes, when our hands brushed while grabbing crayons or reaching for the same book, I’d catch her studying me—like she was trying to remember a dream she wasn’t sure she’d had. She never said anything. Just gave me this look. One I recognized, recognition without context. And God, did that mess me up in the best way.

                Then there was Patrick, like me had undiagnosed ADHD, but was also clever. In the previous life he was always a lot smarter than he had let on. I’m not sure why, the same seemed to ring true now, as I began to suspect he picked up on some of my slipups, where I revealed more than I should have.

                He hadn’t asked me anything directly. But I could feel it. He’d walk into the room and watch me a little longer than usual. He’d pause outside the door when I was journaling. Once, I caught him flipping through one of the books I’d been hiding in my backpack—an old library copy of How to Influence and Inspire Others. Not exactly fourth-grade reading.

                He didn’t bring it up. Just raised an eyebrow and handed it back.

                “Self-help already?” he said with a smirk. “Midlife crisis hitting early?”

                I laughed it off, but inside, I felt a little cold. Not because he was catching on—but because he wasn’t pushing. He was filing it away. Like he was building a case, one quiet observation at a time.

                “I’m going to start getting you some comicbooks or something, so that you can be a little closer to normal.” He said before leaving the room, this part had been strangely similar to the first time. Back then though, he wanted to make me more interested in reading, because I was a terrible reader in the previous timeline, I eventually grew out of it and fell in love with reading. This was his attempt to help me.

                “The more things change, the more they stay the same.” I whispered to myself after had left. I was curious if he’d pick me up some Spider-man comics, like he did before. Only difference now, was Patrick seemed to actually like being around me and we were actually bonding. Maybe that scared him more than any suspicion ever could.

                One evening, we sat on the floor in the living room—him sketching, me sorting through my journal pages—and he nudged me with his elbow.

                “You ever think some people are just… old?” he asked. “Like, inside?”

                I looked up. “Old how?”

                “Like they’ve seen stuff. More than they’re supposed to. Even if no one else notices.”

                He didn’t look at me when he said it. Just kept drawing. I didn’t answer. Didn’t need to. We sat in silence, the TV low in the background, his pencil scratching steadily across the page.

                                                                                *

                At school, Connie and I were paired up for a science project. We sat side by side at the library table, cutting pictures out of old magazines and talking about ecosystems and weather cycles like we were seasoned lab partners. Her red bracelet glinted in the light.

                “Do you ever get that feeling,” she said suddenly, “like something really big is going to happen, but you don’t know what yet?”

                I froze. “Yeah. All the time.”

                She nodded, twisting the bracelet around her wrist. “I don’t know. Sometimes I feel like I’m waiting for something, but I don’t know what it is. Like something already happened, and I forgot about it.”

                Her eyes flicked to mine. “I sound crazy, don’t I?”

                “No,” I said softly. “You don’t.”

                We didn’t say much after that. Just kept cutting and gluing in quiet companionship. But that moment stayed with me—like a flare in the dark, reminding me that the past wasn’t lost. It was just… rewritten.

                That night, I added a new line to my plan:

                5. Don’t rush what’s already trying to find its way back.

                Because some things, I was starting to believe, were meant to return. Not because I forced them—but because love, when it’s real, has a way of echoing across time, I just hoped I was right.

                  Chapter 13: The Hardest Lesson

                It wasn’t all wins.       

                The first time I really tried to prevent something—like, really stepped in—was with Jamie Carter in fifth grade. In the original timeline, Jamie was one of the good ones. Loud, funny, smart when he cared to be. We were friends for a while—until we weren’t. He spiraled hard in his teens. Drugs. Drinking. A suicide attempt at nineteen. He survived, barely, but lost everything in the fallout. He died of an accidental overdose at twenty-six.

                Back then, I went to his funeral. I remember sitting in the back row, staring at the coffin like it wasn’t real. Like any second, Jamie would pop up and crack some dumb joke and the whole thing would turn out to be a prank. But he never did.

                This time around, I thought: Not again. I’d save him. Early and stop the slide before it started. I did everything right this time, at least, I thought I did.

                I befriended him early. Sat next to him in class. Laughed at his jokes. Stood up for him when kids teased him for being too loud, too much, too everything. I invited him to sit with me and Jordan at lunch. I even tried gently nudging him toward the counselor when I caught him crying behind the portables one day. He played it off, of course. Jamie always played it off.

                But something strange happened. The closer I got, the more closed off he became. Like he could sense I was holding something back. Which… I was. I couldn’t be honest. I couldn’t tell him how badly I wanted him to make it. How much I already knew about where his life could lead. And even though I tried to love him from a safe, guiding distance, I kept pushing too hard—too fast.

                By November, Jamie was avoiding me. He drifted back toward a rougher crowd. Said I was “acting weird,” always asking too many deep questions. Said I was “trying too hard.”

                He wasn’t wrong, I was trying too hard. Because I didn’t want to lose him again. But I did and this time, it happened sooner. I realized I was too desperate, and that desperation pushed him away and that crushed me.

                For days, I couldn’t focus. Grandma caught me staring into space again, that quiet storm behind my eyes, and she just sighed and sat beside me. “You remember what I told you about timing?” she asked.

                “Yeah,” I muttered. “It sucks.”

                She gave a soft chuckle. “Sugar, some flowers bloom early, and some don’t bloom ‘til the frost clears. Ain’t no use yelling at the seed to hurry up.”

                Weeks passed. I pulled back from trying to save people and focused instead on being present for them. Connie and I had grown closer—slowly, naturally. We passed notes in class, made each other laugh during spelling drills, and teamed up on art projects where she insisted skies could still be purple if you wanted them to be.

                She’d sometimes just sit near me during recess without saying much, like we were magnets slowly being pulled toward each other without quite understanding why. I didn’t push. I didn’t need to.

                One day, I brought up the idea of dreams. “Do you ever feel like there’s something you’re supposed to remember, but it’s right outside your reach?”

                Connie stared at me for a long moment. “Yeah,” she whispered. “Sometimes when I look at you.”

                I didn’t say anything back. But my heart stayed full for the rest of the day.

Then came the moment.

                There was this girl, Maddy Grant, who got humiliated in gym class during dodgeball. In my original timeline, that day wrecked her confidence for years. She dropped out of sports, got bullied relentlessly, started hiding in bathrooms at lunch. I remembered that pain. I remembered watching and doing nothing, because I was afraid I’d become a target myself.

                Now, standing in the same gym, holding the same red dodgeball, I saw the setup happening again. Same cruel grin on the boy’s face. Same stumble. Same blush crawling up her cheeks. Everything in me screamed to jump in—to catch the ball before it hit her, to snap at the boy, to stop it before it happened again.

                But I froze, not out of fear but out of choice.

                Because for the first time, I understood that some moments don’t need a savior. They need a witness. Someone to see you. To offer kindness after, not prevention before. The trauma wasn’t in the throw. It was in the silence that followed.

                So, I waited.

                And when she left the gym, red-faced and blinking fast, I followed.

                “Hey,” I said gently. “That sucked. I’m sorry.”

                She didn’t say anything.

                So, I added, “You know, you’re really fast. I saw you outrun Jason during warmups. You should think about trying out for track next year.”

                She blinked. “What?”

                “You’re quick,” I said, shrugging. “Like superhero fast.” And then I walked away.

                The next day, she sat with me and Ellie at lunch. The week after that, she joined us in playing tag. By spring, she’d signed up for track.

                                                                                                *

                That was the lesson. The one I needed more than any other. I couldn’t control everything. Couldn’t play God. But I could show up. I could plant the seed and trust the people I loved to grow in their own time.

                Patrick had been watching me closer lately. He hadn’t said much, but his eyes lingered longer now. Like he was taking mental notes.

                One night, he walked into my room and leaned against the doorframe.

                “You’re not just smart,” he said. “You’re… weird smart. Like you know stuff you’re not supposed to.”

                I didn’t reply and he didn’t press.

                But as he walked off, he muttered, “I’m not dumb, y’know.”

                And I whispered, after he left, “I never thought you were.”

                A part of me wanted to tell him the truth—but I’d already risked enough by telling Grandma. I didn’t feel right using my knowledge of the timeline for personal gain, not even for my family. It wasn’t about getting rich. Even back in my forties, all I ever wanted was to be comfortable—to not stress about bills or be stuck in a job I hated. I’ve seen what happens to the ultra-wealthy. No matter how good your intentions are, most people who come into money forget where they came from. They lose touch with what really matters. I never wanted that.

                Grandma was quietly building a little nest egg for us using some of my stock market tips. She asked me once if I could just give her a few winning lottery numbers. I shook my head. That would draw too much attention. But small moves? Careful steps? Just enough to make sure we could live comfortably, maybe retire early? That felt right. That felt fair.