CHRISTMAS TAKEOVER 2022: Micah Castle

Meant to Be

Outside, the waves crash against the bank. The seagulls caw.

I take a deep breath, the smell of pine fills my nose, and sit up. I scratch the dry marks on my neck, and stare idly at the evergreen tree standing in the corner. The dark green bulbs distort the reflection of the living room. Strings of pine cones, holly, yew, and mistletoe are dimly illuminated by the yellow-white lights.

Underneath sits a present, wrapped in green, bound in red. A tag protrudes from the top. To My Love

I laugh and snatch the card from the table by my side. Read it again.

I canโ€™t do this anymore, Rebeccaโ€ฆ

The words blur. I wipe my eyes. Skip ahead.

I wonโ€™t be coming on break, or everโ€ฆ

…My parents found outโ€ฆ 

โ€ฆIโ€™m sorry.

I fling the card away, sit back and run my hands over my face. The waves crashing on the bank are louder now. Calling. The seagulls, if they still remain, are quiet.

I stand and pick up the present, quickly undo its wrappings. The box is opened and inside, sitting on a green silk cushion, is a snorkel and a rolled wet-suit.

Removing the wet-suit, I drop the box to the floor. Running a thumb over the slick surface it feels almost life-like, but not quite. Wouldโ€™ve been good enough for her. 

I move from the tree, through the living room, into the kitchen to the backdoor. A faint, frigid breeze leaks through the cracks. The scent of salt and brine replace pine. I shiver. Goosebumps stand on pale skin. Not from the cold. From anticipation, excitement.

The door is opened and I step down from the house onto the craggy rise. Take the icy, worn path down to the bank. Seagulls watch from white splattered, dark boulders. 

Gray-blue water laps over my bare feet, soaking the bottom of my jeans. The cold bites at first, but soon is welcome.

I let the wetsuit fall where it may, push the thought of her into the recesses of my mind. I tear off my clothes until Iโ€™m nude. I walk into the tide and my body sings. It yearns for more. The marks on my neck are now damp, slick, and open, shut, open. Winter air fills my lungs, and I dive into the Sea. Pale flesh tears like wrapping paper from oily cerulean muscle. Once brown eyes now onyx. Transparent membrane webs in-between fingers and toes. Chitin seals my sex and breasts, becoming nothing more than slick bare mounds. 

I am meant to be with the one I love during the holiday.

And now I am.

Boo-graphy: Micah Castle is a weird fiction and horror writer. His stories have appeared in various magazines, websites, and anthologies. Currently, he has a novelette out through D&T Publishing, and three collections.

While away from the keyboard, he enjoys spending time with his wife, spending hours in the woods, playing with his animals, and can typically be found reading a book somewhere in his Pennsylvania home.

CHRISTMAS TAKEOVER 2023: David Quantick

Driving Home for Christmas

I can hear her.

 โ€œCan we have the radio on?โ€ my daughter said. 18 years old, Sandi with an โ€œIโ€, coming home from college for the first time and she likes rock music โ€“ real rock music like Deep Purple and Biffy Clyro and Black Sabbath. I didnโ€™t think kids liked rock music any more, but it seems they do. They also like covering their arms with tattoos and colouring their hair weird shades of urgh. (I can cope with the tattoos and the dye โ€“ Iโ€™ve been there too and at least itโ€™s not drugs โ€“ but why is the dye always such a horrible colour? Whatโ€™s wrong with bright colours? These kids colour their hair in pastel shades and itโ€™s just wrong).

I shook my head.

โ€œItโ€™s broken,โ€ I lied.

It wasnโ€™t broken. I just couldnโ€™t take it anymore. The voices, howling in the static. The voices of the dead.

I can hear her voice.

The dead, it turns out, have their own stories to tell, and no-one to tell them to. Elvis, his voice echoing in the dark. John Lennon, telling me how he feels for ever and ever. Kurt Cobain, Freddie Mercury, Ian Curtis, all wanting me to hear their stories. They donโ€™t know that Iโ€™ve already heard them โ€“ how can they, where they are thereโ€™s no rock press, no ultimate guides to the music of โ€“ and they probably donโ€™t care. They just want to talk. And I drive, and I listen, and sometimes I tune out.

โ€œ โ€“ I still love her, even after what she did โ€“ โ€

Elvis was the first, I think. I had the radio on, some gooey oldies station playing Misty or something like that, and I was about to press the button, put on another station, when I heard the voice. It sounded like a drowning man, but who drowns on the radio? The voice was familiar too, the deep Southern drawl, and at first I thought it was the idiot DJ, trying to sound like Elvis. But what he was saying was wrong.

โ€œ โ€“ if you see her, tell her how I feel. There never was anyone else, she needs to know that โ€“ โ€

That sort of thing, over and over. I pictured him, tumbling into a well, lost in a tunnel, wondering what the darkness all around was, kept going only by the need to talk to someone, to tell his story.

โ€œItโ€™s broken,โ€ I told Sandi.

โ€œNo itโ€™s not,โ€ she replied, with the directness of youth, and turned the radio on. Immediately the car filled with the sound of stadium metal.

โ€œYeah!โ€ Sandi shouted. โ€œOzzie!โ€ And she made a devil sign.

โ€œDonโ€™t do that,โ€ I said.

โ€œWhy not?โ€ she asked, giving it full-on devil sign jazz hands, and I didnโ€™t say anything, because I couldnโ€™t think of a reply. Or rather I could, and it was โ€˜because youโ€™re four years old and itโ€™s weirdโ€™, but she wasnโ€™t four, she was eighteen and she was coming home from college for Christmas.

Elvis was the first, but he wasnโ€™t alone for long. The next voice came soon after, though it was hardly a voice at all, more of a shiver in the dark.

The stereo was playing an oldies playlist Iโ€™d made, soul and doowop and rโ€™nโ€™b, and the song playing at that moment was Why Must I Be A Teenager In Love?, a goofy gallop of a song that Iโ€™d always loved. The singer was Frankie Lymon, a real teen idol whoโ€™d lost his life to heroin, and now Frankie was fighting against his own voice on the stereo. As his 13 year old self whooped and soared and bemoaned the trials of love, another Frankie โ€“ older, emptied of all excitement โ€“ tried to fight his way in.

โ€œ โ€“ itโ€™s cold, why is it so cold, why am I here, they said theyโ€™d come for me, they said it would be OK, itโ€™s cold, they should be here by now, why am I so cold โ€“ โ€

Frankieโ€™s voices mingled and twisted together like a whirlpool until it was hard to tell who was singing and who was crying out. Even before the song ended, I had to turn the iPod off, and drove the rest of the way in silence.

The song Ozzie was singing was called Crazy Train, and it wasnโ€™t bad if you like that sort of thing, which I donโ€™t but Sandi definitely did. She was doing air guitar to the solo now, and head-banging, which was quite an achievement in the passenger seat of a small family car.

โ€œ โ€“ no โ€“ weโ€™re out of control โ€“ help us โ€“ โ€

Ozzie wasnโ€™t dead, but โ€“ I suddenly remembered โ€“ his guitarist was. Randy Rhoads, died in a plane crash. As Sandi rocked out, Rhoadsโ€™ thin, panicked voice began to scream.

โ€œ โ€“ no โ€“ shit – weโ€™re going to โ€“ โ€

I changed stations.

โ€œI was listening to that,โ€ Sandi said, slumping into her seat for a sulk.

The next day I went to the Christmas tree farm outside town, and it was not a good drive. The radio had started playing itself, as though the backlog of voices wanted to be heard had burst a dam inside the transmitter, and there was a constant stream of songs overlaid with voices.

Buddy Holly, killed in a plane crash with Richie Valens and the Big Bopper.

Otis Redding, killed when the plane he was on crashed into a lake.

Sam Cooke, killed by a jealous lover.

Bobby Fuller, famous for one song โ€“ I Fought The Law โ€“ murdered by gangsters.

Eddie Cochran, killed in a car crash.

They kept on coming. Sometimes I didnโ€™t know who they were โ€“ they might be a drummer or a bass player, or even a backing singer, it didnโ€™t matter, if they were dead, they wanted to be heard.

The Christmas before, weโ€™d bought Sandi a home studio. Not a literal studio, but a plug-in or something for her laptop which apparently was just as good as a real studio. She even looked pleased, so maybe it actually was a home studio.

I used to look in on Sandi, working out how to multi-track guitars or add drums. One day she caught me standing outside.

โ€œDonโ€™t listen!โ€ she shouted.

โ€œI wasnโ€™t,โ€ I lied. โ€œI just wanted to see how it works.โ€

 She sighed.

โ€œOK,โ€ she said, and for the next ten minutes showed me how to move faders and add tracks. It all seemed a bit difficult and she must have seen my confused look, because she reached under her desk โ€“ her childhood desk, which Iโ€™d bought from Argos and assembled myself โ€“ and brought out, of all things, a tambourine.

I tried to pull the radio out of its housing, but it was welded or glued in. I tried to pull the wires out, but nothing happened. And then while I was hitting the stereo, perhaps, or rummaging through the glove compartment for a manual  – when I was distracted, anyway โ€“ I looked up to see the front of a truck hurtling towards me.

Sandi pressed a letter on the keyboard, and a click track began to play.

โ€œHit this in time,โ€ she said.

 โ€œIn time to what?โ€ I asked.

โ€œTo the clicky noise, Dad,โ€ she said, almost as sarcastically as possible.

 I donโ€™t know if it was my fault or the truckโ€™s fault, but it really doesnโ€™t matter anymore.

 For the next four minutes, I hit the tambourine as close to the beat as I could.

 โ€œNow what?โ€ I asked.

 She gave me a look.

 โ€œDo not say anything,โ€ she said. โ€œDo not laugh, or say itโ€™s not as good as the Beatles, or anything.โ€

 She pressed a key and suddenly my tambourine was one of ten other instruments โ€“ drums, guitar, bass, piano, synthesiser, and vocals. Her vocals. Sandi, singing a song Iโ€™d never heard before.

She sang beautifully, and the song was good too.

โ€œDid you โ€“ โ€

โ€œI said be quiet.โ€

She stopped the track, saved it to her hard drive and looked at me defiantly.

I mimed zipping my lips together.

She gave me the finger, but she was smiling.

I am in air.  All around me is movement, and light.

There are voices. Some of them Iโ€™ve heard before, and some are new.

I can hear her voice.

She is singing.

Sandi has her own car now. She likes to play metal stations but sometimes, when sheโ€™s coming back from a gig, she takes out her mp3 player and she puts on her demos, the songs she made with the home studio plug in. She sings along to her songs, with her own guitar and her own keyboards. She listens for improvements that she could make, better basslines or melodies or drums.

 I think that when she plays one of the songs, she listens out for the tambourine. Itโ€™s not exactly session musician quality, but itโ€™s there. And I think that one day, sheโ€™ll hear me.

I donโ€™t know what sheโ€™ll say when she does.

Boo-graphy: “David Quantick is one of the best kept secrets in the world of writing. He’s smart, funny and unique. You should let yourself in on the secret.” ~Neil Gaiman

David Quantick is an Emmy-winning writer who has written for Veep, The Thick of It, Avenue 5 and many other shows. Night Train is his second novel for Titan.

Links to his work, including free downloadable short stories, can be found on his website.

CHRISTMAS TAKEOVER 2022: Armand Rosamilia


Cookies & Brownies

Todd Minor had done it again. Screwed Al Binder out of a promotion at work, likely ate his yogurt and definitely stole his future ex-wife.

The guy had been a thorn in Alโ€™s side for years. He always got the better jobs, the most attention and the bigger awards at work.

Al knew it was all based on looks, too. Todd was half Alโ€™s age, a good-looking guy with long dark hair pulled into a ponytail, even though the handbook clearly stated men could not have long hair. He had a great smile, too, which the ladies in the office swooned over.

Todd also had a nice car, the latest, fanciest model out there. Heโ€™d brag about having to order his next car. Custom-made this and that. If electric cars were the new thing, Todd had the next generation of them already. Total douche-bag.

Todd always frowned at Al when they were alone but never said anything, as if he was disgusted with him.

On Monday morning, Todd would bring in two dozen donuts from Dunkin for everyone on the floor. Knowing Alโ€™s responsibility was to get there first and unlock the doors.

It meant Al got to eat the first donut. Usually the first three.

Todd did this on purpose, as he knew Al was struggling with his weight.

The pretty bastard just didnโ€™t seem to care, wrapped up in his own perfect world.

He was in the break room with half of the women on the floor, showing pictures of his recent vacation to Italy. Al shook his head when Todd showed a picture of himself without a shirt on, and the women all smiled and moved around like the frigginโ€™ Beatles were in concert back in the 60โ€™s.

Al needed to get rid of this guy, and heโ€™d started devising a plan. The Christmas party was coming up in three days, so he needed to put this all into action. Get rid of Todd once and for all. Make sure he looked like the fool he really was, and all these fawning women would feel stupid for thinking he was such a great catch.

Even Joselin, the woman Al had been trying to woo for months, would see what a waste of time Todd was. The two of them had lunch together most days, giggling like high school kids in the cafeteria.

It made Al sick. Heโ€™d tried to sit at their table once, a few weeks back, but Todd asked Al to sit somewhere else because they were having a private conversation and normally he wouldnโ€™t mind, butโ€ฆ they were talking about things not meant for other people.

Not meant for Al.

Todd was strutting around the office the morning of the Christmas party, wearing a stupid Santa hat and handing out candy canes to the women. Not to the men.

Al wondered if he could get Todd in trouble with H.R. or just wait until tonight and get his plan into action.

Stick with the plan.

The biggest part of the plan would be the Santa suit. Al had spent a fortune on the rental this time of year. If heโ€™d been better prepared, he wouldโ€™ve thought up this plan weeks or months ago and gotten it then. Heck, for the rental price he couldโ€™ve purchased one last January or February.

Al hid the suit in the janitorโ€™s closet upstairs and acted like nothing weird was going to happen. As if this was just another office party, where the same people were going to get drunk, the same people were going to be mad about the others getting drunk, and Al would eat way too much food and have some of the people stare at him.

Not that he cared. This was the meal he waited for each and every year. Heโ€™d make sure to swipe as many cookies and brownies into napkins and then head to his desk, where he had his drawers filled with Tupperware containers. Heโ€™d be feasting for the rest of the week.

Todd arrived fashionably late to the party, wearing what looked like a tacky tracksuit. Red and green and festive.

He still had on the dumb Santa hat and was all smiles as he went around and shook hands with the men (but not Al, who he casually ignored) and made sure to hug and/or kiss all the ladies.

Al was pissed. Almost mad enough to not eat the bacon-wrapped shrimp or the delicious meatballs coming around on trays. Almost.

He drank a few shots of bourbon to loosen him up and get him in the mood to do what needed to be done. Al kept watching the clock. Heโ€™d set his plan into motion right at eight oโ€™clock, when everyone was in the building but before the real Santa, or the person playing him tonight, was going to show up.

Al watched as Todd kept making the rounds, never staying in one place for more than a minute. Smiling and slapping backs, as if he was everyoneโ€™s friend. As if he was important.

A quarter to eight, Al went upstairs and got dressed in the Santa outfit, which was hard to do in the confined space of the janitorโ€™s closet.

He went back downstairs and when he exited the elevator, he made sure to smile. โ€œHo Ho Ho,โ€ he yelled.

Everyone stopped talking and stared at Al. Only the music still played, which happened to be a Rick Astley song. You know the one that they always play.

โ€œWhy is Al dressed like Santa? He looks ridiculous,โ€ Todd said loudly.

More than half the people laughed.

Al was furious. He wasnโ€™t going to let Todd get the best of him yet again. He needed to remain calm.

Instead, he pulled the .357 tucked in the suit and pointed it at Todd.

Men and women gasped, everyone fell back, and gave Al room.

Everyone but Todd, who smiled and shook his head. โ€œSeriously, Al?โ€

โ€œSerious as a heart attack,โ€ Al said and hated what he’d said. That was corny and typical. Heโ€™d think of a better comeback later, when all of this was done.

โ€œYou wonโ€™t get away with this,โ€ Todd said, waving his hand. โ€œWhatever this is, actually. Is there a point to you dressing as Santa and pointing a weapon at me? Have I wronged you, Al?โ€

Al laughed. โ€œHave you wronged me? Of course, dammit, youโ€™ve wronged me. So many times Iโ€™ve lost count.โ€

Todd shrugged. โ€œThen Iโ€™m sorry. Can we get back to the party? Iโ€™m looking forward to the seafood entree option this year.โ€

Al was also looking forward to it, but he wasnโ€™t going to walk away now. Not with all of these witnesses.

Now he was scared. If he shot Todd in front of everyone, heโ€™d likely need to kill all of them, too, or heโ€™d go to prison.

Al hadnโ€™t brought enough ammo with him, though. No way heโ€™d be fast enough to shoot everyone before they escaped, either.

โ€œYouโ€™re coming with me, Todd. Get on the elevator,โ€ Al said. He needed to get back in control. Already a few people were looking around for the waitstaff to get a fresh drink. The food would be out soon, too.

โ€œIโ€™d rather stay here with all of my friends and have a good time,โ€ Todd said.

Al was furious. โ€œNo. I wasnโ€™t asking if you wanted to go onto the elevator. I was demanding it.โ€

Todd shook his head. โ€œNot interested.โ€

Al shot into the air and a large piece of the ceiling tile fell, nearly hitting him.

Everyone stopped moving. No more looking for the next drink, no more eyes on the door where the food was going to come out of.

โ€œThe next one will be a warning shot through your chest,โ€ Al said to Todd.

Todd shrugged again, as if none of this affected him. โ€œFine. Everyone, enjoy the party. Donโ€™t worry about me and Al. Weโ€™ll talk this out like gentlemen. Like adults. Figure out why Al thinks Iโ€™m so against him and everything about him, all the things I donโ€™t like and talk about.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re talking about me?โ€ Al motioned for Todd to get on the elevator.

Todd got on like they were simply heading upstairs for another mindless day of work.

Al stepped in, still aiming the gun at Todd.

โ€œWhere are we going, Al?โ€

โ€œThe roof.โ€

Todd smiled. โ€œCan we stop at my desk and get a sweater first? It might be cold.โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ The doors to the elevator closed and Al saw everyone else was rushing forward. If he was smart he wouldโ€™ve sent the other elevator up first.

They rode in silence. Al was surprised and also a little frustrated that Todd seemed so calm.

โ€œYou go first but go slow,โ€ Al said when the doors opened and they were on the top floor. To the left was a doorway that led to the roof itself, exposing them to the elements.

It was December but it wasn’t as cold as it usually was. No snow, no strong winds.

โ€œNow what? Are you going to push me off of the roof, shoot me and push me off of the roof, or shoot me and leave me on the roof?โ€ Todd asked. He still looked calm.

Al saw there was no locking the door to the roof from this side. He wished heโ€™d figured that out sooner, because he would have devised a way to keep the door locked. Blocked wouldโ€™ve been good.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry. Is that what you want to hear, Al? I apologize for being mean to you. Did I know I was being mean? Yes.โ€ Todd shrugged again. Al hated when he shrugged. โ€œI guess, if I had to do it all over, knowing weโ€™d get to this point, I would still do it. I gotta be honest. Iโ€™m sorry I got you this mad. Obviously I didnโ€™t realize you had a few screws loose. I knew I was getting under your skin, and that was the fun of it. Iโ€™m a bully. I pick out the weakest in the herd and make their life miserable. It makes my life better.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re even worse than I thought,โ€ Al said. โ€œWhat a horrible person.โ€

โ€œGuilty as charged.โ€ Todd smiled and started to walk toward the door. โ€œIโ€™m going back to the party. By now the police have been called and are en route. Youโ€™ll be arrested for brandishing a gun. Making pretend youโ€™re Santa, too. That has to at least be a fine.โ€

Al had the weapon inches from Toddโ€™s head as he walked past. โ€œStop or I will shoot you.โ€

โ€œNo, you wonโ€™t. Because youโ€™re spineless, Al. if I thought for a second youโ€™d actually shoot me, I would actually be listening to your direction,โ€ Todd said.

Al shot him in the back of the head.

Todd fell to the ground and Al emptied the gun into his back.

The door to the roof opened and his coworkers rushed out.

They saw Todd, bloody and dead on the roof. Al holding the gun.

โ€œPolice are on the way, Al. Put down the gun,โ€ someone said.

Al didnโ€™t want to go to jail.

He ran to the side of the roof, looked down at the busy street. Saw red lights in the distance and knew the police would be here within the minute.

โ€œDonโ€™t do it, Al.โ€

โ€œLet him do it. Itโ€™s my tax money thatโ€™s going to have to front the bill for his time in prison. Let him jump.โ€

โ€œHave some compassion. Al is disturbed. We all knew it. Is this all really a surprise?โ€

โ€œNo, but stillโ€ฆ we need to be the better person. Two wrongs donโ€™t make a right.โ€

Al walked around the roof until he could see the parking lot below.

Every day, Todd parked in the first spot closest to the upper management parking area, as if he was one small step from being a boss.

Al began to strip out of the Santa suit. โ€œHey, can someone return this for me? The receipt is in the pocket. Thanks.โ€

โ€œNo. Do it yourself.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll do it if you promise not to jump.โ€

โ€œHe still has the gun.โ€

Al moved a few inches to his left, trying to gauge the wind up here. No use in doing this if heโ€™d miss his target down below.

He unzipped his fly and began to pee over the side, hoping the urine would hit Toddโ€™s car far below.

It maybe did, a few sprinkles, but most of it was taken on the breeze.

โ€œFeeze,โ€ a police officer yelled from the doorway.

Al turned and all of the fellow employees got a good look at his small package. He didnโ€™t bother to zip back up.

As the police officer started to approach slowly, Al saw two more cops ushering the people back inside.

โ€œThis was some party,โ€ Al yelled with a smile and a wave. โ€œSave me some cookies and brownies.โ€

Al stepped backward, into space, and waved once more before he plunged down to certain death, willing his body to hit Toddโ€™s car.

Boo-graphy: Armand Rosamilia is a New Jersey boy currently living in sunny Florida, where he writes when he’s not sleeping. He’s happily married to a woman who helps his career and is supportive, which is all he ever wanted in life…

He’s written over 150 stories that are currently available, including horror, zombies, contemporary fiction, thrillers and more. His goal is to write a good story and not worry about genre labels.

He not only runs two successful podcasts…

Arm Cast: Dead Sexy Horror Podcast – interviewing fellow authors as well as filmmakers, musicians, etc.

The Mando Method Podcast with co-host Chuck Buda – talking about writing and publishing

But he owns the network they’re on, too!

He also loves to talk in third person… because he’s really that cool.

You can find him on his website for not only his latest releases but interviews and guest posts with other authors he likes! and e-mail him to talk about zombies, baseball and Metal.

CHRISTMAS TAKEOVER 2022: Christina Bergling

Elves Watching

โ€œTheyโ€™re watching me. I can feel it,โ€ I said, picking at the corded edge of the sofa cushion.

The cloudy sky dribbled dim light through the windowpane. Thin white grills carved the glass into a grid. The gentle patter of the rain should have soothed me, yet my anxiety clenched around my heart like a fist.

โ€œWho is watching you, Noel?โ€ My therapist did not look up from his pad as he spoke.

Dr. Morris squeezed his bulk into a wingback chair, the deep crimson of the back encapsulating him, wrapping around him like a mouth. Cropped, wiry white curls spiraled up from his dark scalp and square jaw. I told myself that he could not look like Santa because he was not white like the infamous figure on Coke ads and wrapping paper and figurines, yet when his eyes crinkled at the corner, my chest still seized.

I told myself Santa wasnโ€™t real as I inhaled and again as I exhaled.

โ€œYou know who.โ€ My voice pulled taut as I tugged at the edge of the cushion. โ€œWe have talked about it a thousand times.โ€

Dr. Morris took a measured, patient breath. The same he always did before he repeated himself. โ€œYes, but you need to name them. When you name something, you encapsulate the thing, take some of its power.โ€ Leaning forward, he peered through me with wide pupils like chunks of coal.

I wilted under his gentle scrutiny. The name swelled in my throat, near suffocating me.

โ€œElves. Always the elves.โ€ I forced the name past my teeth, closing my eyes yet seeing the small, glowing eyes as I spoke.

โ€œThe elves your mother told you about when you were growing up. The ones who watched you.โ€

โ€œThe ones I saw. The ones who have been watching me. All the time.โ€ I spoke softly, so they couldnโ€™t hear me.

Glancing to the window, I scanned the bottom of the pane. Not breathing until I made sure I did not see their small glowing eyes. Only rain streaking slow down the glass.

Red. The eyes would be glowing red.

โ€œBut we have discussed this.โ€ Clutching his yellow pad in front of his chest, he glanced down at his notes and back at me.

My gaze lingered on the window. โ€œElves are not real,โ€ I murmured, reciting the empty words. โ€œElves are not real,โ€ I lied.

Saying it, naming them did not encapsulate anything. It did not calm me. My pulse throbbed hard enough for sweat to prickle along my hair. The fear climbed over my skin then cinched to bind me. It compressed my lungs as I tried to smile thin and keep still.

โ€œI can see this conversation makes you veryโ€ฆ uncomfortable.โ€ He wedged himself back into his chair.

Shit.

โ€œNo, itโ€™s fine. I know.โ€

โ€œDo you know?โ€ His hand found his chin to briefly twirl through the white hair. โ€œThen why are we back here again, discussing being watched?โ€

I am being watched. Taking a deep breath, I pressed my sweaty palms along my pant legs. โ€œEven though I know that, the feelings remain.โ€

He exhaled hard. โ€œOh, thatโ€™s perfectly natural.โ€ He flicked his hand toward me at the wrist, a flippant gesture. โ€œConsidering your history with your mother and the holiday, I know Christmas is challenging for you. Our cognitive thoughts are often different from our emotions. The two do not operate in parallel. You may know something in your mind, but that doesnโ€™t convince your heart.โ€

I nodded, because what he said about Christmas was true. However, my mind and heart were in alignment on this. No one else believed me. No one had ever believed me.


When my mother told me about the elves, I was seven years old. As we sat at the table with Thanksgiving leftovers for breakfast, I shoveled cranberries into my mouth and regaled her with my long Christmas list. Grimacing a smile, my mother tapped her fork on her untouched plate.

In a flat voice, she told me that Santa would only bring me all those things if I was good and that he had little elves watching me all year to report back. I laughed at first, but then the idea burrowed into my brain, sprouting roots and branching through me. When she looked at me with wide and dead eyes, I knew she was telling me the truth.

But I didnโ€™t see them until the next year. By the time I glimpsed their tiny, glowing red eyes, I had nearly forgotten about the elves. I was doubting Santa himself by that point.

โ€œHave you seen the elves this year?โ€ My mother slurred, the ice cubes in her glass clinking in a familiar song.

โ€œThereโ€™s no such things as elves.โ€ I baited her, examining her reaction from the corner of my eye for confirmation that I was right.

My motherโ€™s scoff tumbled into a chuckle as her fingers fumbled over the figurines she was attempting to set up. They tipped and rolled under her intoxicated touch. A fat Santa with a round belly and huge grin. Identical reindeer in different inflight poses, one with a red nose. Then the stout, jovial elves looking like trolls.

Attempting to encircle Santa with the elves, her haphazard placement instead made the North Pole look like a battlefield. As I watched her, I knew all her sloppy decorations and preparations would be wasted. Like every year.

Her face suddenly sharpened, came into focus as she leveled her eyes through me. โ€œOh, there are elves, Noel.โ€ The curling edges vanished from her voice, making her almost sound like a stranger.

Her eyes burrowed into me, their severity making my skin itch. Then she flicked her gaze at the elven figures. All six stood upright and at attention. All six faced me. Gasping, I recoiled and bumped into the wall behind me. Simultaneously, with a soft porcelain crack, all the elves snapped their faces up to me, and their eyes glowed red.

The scream billowed out of my throat as I tried to press through the wall. My motherโ€™s laughter chased my scrabble up the stairs.

โ€œI told you they were real!โ€ She shouted before I could slam my door shut.

Panting and shaking, I pinned myself into the door and slid down into a crouch. My heaving diaphragm assaulted my thighs as I clutched myself. There was no Santa. All the kids at school had said it; it was unanimous. And if there was no Santa, there were no elves. Yet each time I blinked, I saw those tiny red eyes.

The tears stung my face when I planted my head on my knees, listening to my own brewing sobs accumulate in my lap. Even then, I knew the tears were not for the elves. They were for my mother, the stumbling version and whatever sharpness had just seized her. Her elves just uncorked them from my eyes.

The wave crashed over me and receded. Breathing slow, I lifted my face. When my eyes met the window, six sets of tiny glowing eyes fixed on me through the glass. I screamed again, but my mother never came.

The next morning, the elven eyes greeted me when I woke myself up to get ready for school. They followed me to the windowpanes of my classrooms. They appeared between tree trunks on my walk home.

For the first few months, I told my mother, even begged for her help. She only said, โ€œI told you.โ€ Eventually, I stopped telling her, then stopped even talking to her at all.

Somehow, even then, I knew I couldnโ€™t tell anyone else, that while my mother believed too much, the rest would not believe me at all. I saw the elves so often that I nearly went blind to them, like saying a word so much the syllables fall apart in your mouth. Yet, each time, my chest still contracted in fear to remind me of their menace.

In college, I made the mistake of getting too drunk and telling the entire party about my life-long stalkers. I was rewarded with elf gifts from each of my roommates that year, wrapped in their mocking laughter. My first long-term partner said I mumbled about elves in my sleep before I woke up screaming.

At my motherโ€™s burial, I saw all the eyes peeking from behind distant tombstones. For once, in that moment, they were almost a comfort.

When I had stumbled onto a night road fleeing their reflection in every storefront window, a black SUV blared its horn and slammed into me. I woke up in a narcotic haze, tugging against the soft restraints around my wrists. The nurse said I had flown into a violent rage, shrieking about the elves that were out to get me. I had broken one orderlyโ€™s nose in the process.

Even there, the red glowing eyes glared at me through the high hospital window.

And there, I met Dr. Morris.


โ€œNoel, we have talked about this.โ€ Dr. Morrisโ€™s voice snapped me back to the present on his stiff green couch. I jolted and immediately glared at the window. Still a vacant pane. โ€œYou do not have to celebrate Christmas. You do not have to decorate or participate in any way. You can change your name if you truly want to separate yourself from you motherโ€™s fixation.โ€

I rubbed my hands over my face, pressing my fingers into my eyes until I saw stars. Stars that appeared red and glowing.

I snapped my eyelids open. I could feel them before I could see them. The touch of their stare was tactile, penetrating. The elves were at the window, lined up along the bottom of the pane, their noses flattened against the glass. I could see the miniature plumes of steam from their greedy pants. Stifling the gasp in my throat, my body went rigid, nearly rising off the cushion.

Pretend you donโ€™t see them. Pretend they are not there.

โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong?โ€ Dr. Morris straightened and followed my gaze, turning in his chair toward the window.

The elves ducked down before he could glimpse them. As they always did.

The tears returned to my eyes, leaving me swimming in that overwhelming helpless feeling. He was going to have me committed if I did not wrangle myself back under control. Then I would be trapped in one room, where they could always see me, where they could creep ever closer.

โ€œNothing,โ€ I snapped. Every muscle remained clenched. I could barely breathe.

โ€œNoel,โ€ he scolded. โ€œWhat do you see?โ€

Pinching my face closed, I shook my head. As if I could will it untrue. As if that had ever worked in all these years.

โ€œNoel, tell me what you see. You are safe here.โ€

I wanted to laugh at how wrong he was. My lip quivered uncontrollably, and I could feel the wag tremble up into my cheeks. It was shaking the tears loose.

If I squeezed hard enough, maybe I could keep my eyes closed. That had never worked before. I was always too scared of what the elves would be doing on the other side of my eyelids.

โ€œNoel.โ€ Dr. Morrisโ€™s tone tightened. โ€œNoeโ€”โ€ A wet sound sliced through my name, turning the syllables into gargles. A strange, liquid gasp replaced his words.

My heart hammered, igniting every inch of my skin. As I pried my eyes open, I could feel the air around me. I clasped my hands over my mouth to contain the scream.

The elves crawled over Dr. Morrisโ€™s body, scurrying and teaming like insects. They were not the porcelain figures my mother had clumsily loved and eventually shattered in her drunken hazes. Yet those red eyes were the same. The same from that first night and every day that followed.

Their pale, grey skin tugged into harsh wrinkles to carve gruesome visages. Prickly black eyebrows turned down over the glowing eyes, yet wide grins of pointed teeth contradicted their frowns, contorted their faces into something horrifying. Each sported soiled red and green clothes with lopsided and wilted pointy hats. Coarse hairs sprouted long and angry from edges of their shirts and pants.

Even in my deepest nightmares, I had never imagined them this ghastly.

All six of them stared at me, as Dr. Morrisโ€™s blood spurted and rained down on them. Their faces were frozen in silent laughter. I did not move. I had no idea what to do. They had never been this close. I had never been without the glass barrier between us.

One elf tore sheets from Dr. Morrisโ€™s pad, tossing them to flutter around his twitching feet. Another stuffed small fingers through the wound parting Dr. Morrisโ€™s throat. Another joined to help tear and rip the skin, exposing the limp cords and tendons within.

The elf on his chest threw its head back and released a piercing scream. Something between a shriek and laughter. I gripped my ears to muffle it, but it seemed to be blaring directly into my brain. When it stopped, the elf looked at me, almost smiled, and wiggled into Dr. Morrisโ€™s mouth.

Dr. Morrisโ€™s body settled, slumping heavy in the chair, dripping over the armrests, but his head jerked and cracked from side to side. Squishing and tearing sounds spilled from his hanging lips. As his head jostled, his dead eyes found me, stared into me like the elves always did. My hands clutched the couch cushion, sweating through it, yet I could not move. I was frozen in petrified wonderment.

Dr. Morrisโ€™s head stilled, and the sounds changed. The wriggling shifted to more of a tugging. My head tilted as my brain reeled to identify the sounds. The head jerked forward and back, causing the body to convulse in the chair. Then with one hard and sickening pop, Dr. Morrisโ€™s right eye disappeared into his skull.

I gaped into the vacancy. The impulse to draw closer and peer into the void tingled on my skin, but I clung to the cushion against it. Time seemed to stop and grow as dark as his bloody eye socket.

In the hideous hole, behind the dangling eyelids and fringe of limp lashes, two red, glowing points replaced his eyeball.

โ€œI told you,โ€ I whispered to Dr. Morris as those burning eyes remained fixed on me.

Boo-graphy: Christina Bergling has been writing since childhood. She has written a variety of styles. A blog from Iraq, software user guides, articles for a numismatist magazine. More than anything, she is a horror author.

Crystal Lake released her latest novel, Followers. Limitless Publishing published her novel The Rest Will Come. HellBound Books published her two novellas, Savages and The Waning. She co-wrote Screechers with Kevin J. Kennedy. She is also featured in numerous anthologies, including Collected Christmas Horror Shorts
(1 and 2), Demonic Wildlife, Coloradoโ€™s Emerging Authors, and Graveyard Girls.

Bergling lives with her family in Colorado and spends her non-writing time working in IT, hiking mountains, dancing, and sucking all the marrow out of life.

AUTHOR INTERVIEW: Michaelbrent Collings

Meghan: Hey, Michaelbrent. Welcome to this year’s Halloween Extravaganza… extended edition. It’s always a pleasure to have you here. What is your favorite part of Halloween?

Michaelbrent: Iโ€™m a dad, so my favorite part is definitely stealing candy from my kids after we trick-r-treat, then scratching my head and positing on the possibility of candy-stealing gremlins when my kids notice all their Reeseโ€™s Peanut Butter Cups have disappeared.

Meghan: Do you get scared easily?

Michaelbrent: Absolutely. Iโ€™ll scream (loudly) during horror movies, because I love to let myself go and just enjoy the terror. And my kids love watching me when I play a scary video game. Itโ€™s like watching someone tapdancing during a seizure. And Iโ€™m okay with that: at least my cowardice is entertaining.

Meghan: What is the scariest movie youโ€™ve ever seen and why?

Michaelbrent: Hmmmโ€ฆscariest movie would be a toss-up. There are just so many good ones out there! But if you define โ€œscariestโ€ as โ€œbiggest effect on ME,โ€ it would probably be either The Shining or Watcher in the Woods, both of which I saw when I was around eight years old, and both of which sent me (literally) screaming down the hall when it was time for bed. Iโ€™ve rewatched both since then, and no longer scream about it (at least, not as much), so I feel very brave as a human. Conquering fears for the win!

As an adult, I do scream and shriek with the best of โ€˜em in the theaters, but I rarely STAY scared long after credits. Though there was a film called Aterrados (in English, Terrified) that just hit me in the right spot: I not only screamed during the movie, and that night I woke up FREAKED because someone was looming over my bed. Turned out it was just a hat on the bedpost, but sleep had pretty much gone bye-bye at that point.

Meghan: Which horror movie murder did you find the most disturbing?

Michaelbrent: Probably the one with the four colorful children with bizarrely stretched bodies and faces. Teletubbies is a nightmare in the waking world.

Meghan: Is there a horror movie you refused to watch because the commercials scared you too much?

Michaelbrent: Nah. Though there are definitely plenty that Iโ€™ve said, โ€œLooks like thatโ€™s not for me.โ€ I love horror, but there are still images and ideas that I think are not great for me, so I avoid those things. Not a judgment on others who might think differently, just there are definitely โ€œno-goโ€ areas in media that I choose to avoid for personal reasons.

Meghan: If you got trapped in one scary movie, which would you choose?

Michaelbrent: Probably Prom Night or one of those ilk: something where pretty much everyone who gets killed is a super-good-looking teen. Iโ€™d be safe on every level.

Meghan: If you were stuck as the protagonist in any horror movie, which would you choose?

Michaelbrent: Final Girls. I wouldnโ€™t make it through to the end, but at least Iโ€™d have fun deconstructing the movie before I died!

Meghan: What is your all-time favorite scary monster or creature of the night?

Michaelbrent: Hmmmโ€ฆ I donโ€™t think I have one. There are SO MANY GOOD ONES!

Meghan: What is your favorite Halloween tradition?

Michaelbrent: Definitely that โ€œstealing candy from my childrenโ€ thing.

Meghan: What is your favorite horror or Halloween-themed song?

Michaelbrent: I love the Halloween main title song. Awesome, and so iconic!

MeghanL Which horror novel unsettled you the most?

Michaelbrent: Probably The Shining by Stephen King. Not so much for the story, but because I remember reading it as a kid in the one room in my house where I wasnโ€™t going to be disturbed by parents or siblings: the bathroom. So there I am, sitting on โ€œmy thinking spot,โ€ and I turned the page to the part where the topiary animals come aliveโ€ฆand right then an earthquake hit. The unsettling part was trying to decide if I should play it safe and run for cover (but sacrifice my dignity as my pants were still around my ankles), or just sit tight, as it were, and hope for the best.

Meghan: What is the creepiest thing thatโ€™s ever happened while you were alone?

Michaelbrent: Iโ€™m no longer allowed to discuss this due to the terms of the settlement. But it does have to do with six rubber bands, a rabid penguin, and a single phone call made to the Bolivian Embassy in Uruguay.

Meghan: Which unsolved mystery fascinates you the most?

Michaelbrent: Probably the Jack the Ripper one. Not about who he is (I know that, but am prohibited from revealing it due to the terms of the above-named settlement), but how he got so many of the bloodstains out of his clothes!

Meghan: What is the spookiest ghost story that you have ever heard?

Michaelbrent: The Haunting of Hill House, hands down. Shirley Jacksonโ€™s book is one of the greatest pieces of horror literature ever written, and still sends shivers down my spine every time I read it.

Meghan: In a zombie apocalypse, what is your weapon of choice?

Michaelbrent: Iโ€™d like to say โ€œcrowbarโ€ or โ€œM16โ€ or โ€œgrenades,โ€ but honesty compels me to ask if โ€œwhimperingโ€ can be considered a weapon. Because thatโ€™s probably what my go-to would be.

Meghan: Okay, Michaelbrent… let’s have some fun —

Would you rather get bitten by a vampire or a werewolf? Werewolf. Iโ€™d have hair again!

Would you rather fight a zombie apocalypse or an alien invasion? Z-poc, definitely. Stay out of crowds, aim for the head. Seems simpler.

Would you rather drink zombie juice or eat dead bodies from the graveyard? Probably zombie juice. Which Iโ€™m assuming is some kind of smoothie made of old fruit.

Would you rather stay at the Poltergeist house or the Amityville house for a week? Amityville.

Would you rather chew on a bitter melon with chilies or maggot-infested cheese? I have no answer for this one.

Would you rather drink from a witchโ€™s cauldron or lick cotton candy made of spider webs? Definitely the cotton candy. Cauldrons are SO last-year.

Boo-graphy: Michaelbrent Collings is an internationally bestselling novelist, produced screenwriter, and speaker. Best known for horror (and voted one of the top 20 All-Time Greatest Horror Writers in a Ranker vote of nearly 20,000 readers), Collings has written bestselling thrillers, mysteries, sci-fi and fantasy titles, and even humor and non-fiction.

In addition to popular success, Michaelbrent has also received critical acclaim: he is the only person who has ever been a finalist for a Bram Stoker Award (twice), a Dragon Award (twice), and a RONE Award, and he and his work have been reviewed and/or featured on everything from Publishers Weekly to Scream Magazine to NPR. An engaging and entertaining speaker, he is also a frequent guest at comic cons and on writing podcasts like Six Figure Authors, The Creative Penn, Writing Excuses, and others; and is a mental health advocate and TEDx speaker.

Website

I Am Legion 1: Strangers — You wake up in the morning to discover that you have been sealed into your home. The doors are locked, the windows are barred. THERE’S NO WAY OUT.

A madman is playing a deadly game with you and your family. A game with no rules, only consequences. So what do you do? Do you run? Do you hide?

OR DO YOU DIE?

I Am Legion 2: Stranger Still — Your sins are Legionโ€ฆ and now you belong to him.

Legion is a teacher. An avenging angel. A murderer. A madman. Born in the blood of a dying mother, raised in the underground lair of an insane father, he travels the world looking for those who keep secrets and sins. He finds those who have fallen short, and teaches them the lessons they need to leave their mistakes behind. Even if he has to kill them to do it. Because sometimes murder is the only way to teach a proper lesson.

So when he sees a man kidnap two people on the side of the road, Legion knows it is time to teach again. Soon he finds himself caught in the crossfire of a coup in a Russian crime syndicate. He is captured, beaten, bleeding, in chains; cut off and alone.

Itโ€™s just the way he likes it. Legion has found his students. And for them, life is about to become frightening and so much…ย stranger.

I Am Legion 3: Stranger Danger — He will teach you the lesson… he knows youโ€™re dying to learn.

Legion is a teacher. An avenging angel. A murderer.

A madman.

Raised in the underground hideout of an insane father, he searches for those who keep secrets and sins. Then he teaches them how to leave those mistakes behind. Even if it means killing them to do it.

Because sometimes murder is the cost of a proper education.

That’s why, when he comes to a neighborhood in the grips of a vicious gang war, he knows the time has come to teach.

Soon Legion – and his imaginary brothers, Water and Fire – are caught in the middle of a vicious fight for control of the Downs, the worst part of a city on the verge of anarchy.

Legion is facing enemies on all sides. Hundreds of men will stop at nothing to capture or kill him.

Legion will teach the lessons. And the students will never forget, no matter how long – or short – their lives may be.

The students are ready.

And the teacher will never stop.

I Am Legion 4: Stranger Sins — What happens in Vegasโ€ฆ slays in Vegas.

Legion is a teacher. An avenging angel. A murderer.

A madman.

Raised in the underground hideout of an insane father, he now travels the world searching for those who torment the weak, who harm the innocent. He uncovers the secrets and sins of evildoers, and teaches them how to leave those mistakes behind.

Even if it means killing them to do it.

But this time, the tables have turned. The ghosts of Legionโ€™s past have come for him; the victims of his madness have returned to torment and destroy him. Wounded, weak, near death: for the first time, Legion is not predator, but prey.

Now, aided by a woman and her daughterโ€”who have themselves been surviving in secret terror for a decadeโ€”he must survive long enough to battle his past, to destroy the ghosts that have come for his sanity and soulโ€ฆand to kill all who would harm his new friends.

Tracked by a crime family more twisted than anything he has ever seen, threatened by a madman whose strength is greater than anything he has ever experienced, Legion has never been closer to danger. They want his pain. They want his death. And they will stop at nothing to achieve their aims.

But Legion is a good teacher. So he will run. He will hide.

And then, when the students are ready…he will teach.

And his lessons are always murder.