Archive for September, 2011

GHOST STORIES AND BEER: By C.D. Carter

Friday, September 30th, 2011

There on a barstool harder than concrete I sat, sipping on my cranberry-but-mostly-vodka and unable, no matter what I tried, to shake off the chill that skittered across my thighs and the nape of my neck.

Flipping up my jacket collar, rubbing my hands against my jeans hard enough to start a brush fire – nothing worked. It was one of the first truly chilly days of autumn, and I was in Annapolis, where the breeze from the Chesapeake can freeze you where you stand, even in October.

Maybe that explained it. Maybe it didn’t.

My wife and her friends had taken me to the state capitol’s downtown bar scene for something they called a ghost hunting bar crawl. Both the hunting and the crawling were for losers, I had told my wife, Melissa. Combining them was some award-winning achievement in loser dome.

“Then you’re uninvited,” she spat back at me when we parked in Annapolis. “I forgot how much you hate fun.”

Melissa told me to park my fun-hating hind parts at the Maryland Tavern, a cramped little restaurant with an even smaller bar that would serve as the last stop on the five-bar crawl, where a tour guide would tell the gullible pack of beer gulpers how so-and-so had died some terrible or heroic or ironic death way back when everyone was under five feet tall and dead by forty.

It was October, a week before Halloween. People wanted to hear this stuff. They ate it up, and I can only suppose the alcohol made the otherworldly fictions go down smooth.

I ducked into the dank bar, the Maryland Tavern, and took inthe must that permeated the place before plopping down next to a girl dressed for Miami in July and her boyfriend from the nearby Naval Academy. He clearly liked the unsubtle reminder of South Florida in the summer, and she clearly liked his uniform, impeccably white down to the shoes.

They left a minute later.

I sat there, wriggling on the hardwood barstool, seeking some basic level of comfort, when the chill first came. It started on my left thigh, and spread to my right. I rubbed my left leg lazily, wondering if it had lost circulation, when I felt the same cold – even colder, maybe – sweep across the back of my neck.

Had the Navy man or his lady friend pressed an ice cube against my neck in some strange drunken prank? I turned and found nothing but a coat closet made probably three hundred years ago, for those tiny Colonial people who died early.

I ordered my drink – the cranberry and vodka – and watched the elderly bartender pair a splash of the red stuff with a glassful of the clear stuff. I sipped it and winced. The bartender cracked a crusty smile.

It was then that the chill returned. The bartender, wiping down plates, saw me rub the nape of my neck. Again, our eyes met and he smiled. The geezer muttered something indeterminable, and I thought it might’ve been a name, a name with two parts.

“Huh?” I said.

 “Nothin’,” he responded, and shuffled away.

Half an hour passed before the Maryland Tavern’s bar doorswung open and slammed against the worn brick wall, and there, at the top of three concrete stairs, were the boozing brood of paranormal investigators: Melissa, her two friends, and eight others who had shelled out thirty-five bucks a pop for this kind re-telling of campfire stories.

My dear wife was still pissed. She sat three stools away.

“Here at the historic Maryland Tavern,” began the tourguide, a dark-haired college girl with wild eyes, “there’ve been dozens – nay, hundreds! – of eerily similar reports from beyond.”

 The inebriated crew ate it up; they hung on the guide’severy syllable.

“Up above this little establishment,” the tour guide said, pointing and looking at – beyond – the ceiling, “was once Annapolis’s most famous brothel. Men arriving at the nearby docks, after months at sea, would race each other to the tavern.” I felt the iciness spread across my legs again. Instead of rubbing the chill, I gulped my drink.

 

“And these sailors, they’d all ask for the same girl,” theguide said. “They’d request Marybeth Parker, a gorgeous nineteen-year-old girl whose mother had run the brothel for many, many years.”

“One day, after falling in love with a merchant from Spain,Marybeth asked her mother to release her from her duties at the tavern. The mother, wanting anything but to lose her best earner, said no, a resounding no. Eventually, Marybeth Parker refused to accept any more clients, and instead, reserved her bed for the man she loved.”

“One night, while entertaining her lover” – the guide used air quotes; her customers snickered – “the … ahem … activity became so rigorousthat unbelieving bar patrons watched as Marybeth’s bed came crashing through the bar’s ceiling. Both Marybeth and her lover were found impaled on a bedpost.”

 The crowd gasped. So did I.

“The corpses of Marybeth and her lovely Spaniard were face toface, the bedpost shoved through their bodies, searching each other’s eyes,”the tour guide said. I nearly toppled off my barstool this time – the cold didn’t just touch my neck, it rubbed across it, back and forth.

“And ever since,” the guide continued somberly, “untold scores of men here at this bar, at this tavern, in this city, have told storiesof Marybeth Parker. Not of seeing her, no – but of feeling her.”

 “Like she did during her time here, before her gruesome death, Marybeth sits on the laps of her potential customers, and wraps her arm, ever so gently, around the backs of their necks.”

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©2011 C.D. Carter

Between his full-time job as an education reporter in Washington, D.C., and his freelance gigs for local magazines, C.D. Carter has written tales of the macabre for a host of horror publications, including Dark Moon Digest, Flashes in the Dark, SNM Horror, Static Movement, Lost Souls Magazine, and Death Head Grin. Much of Carter’s short-story horror is based on the life of a journalist in the big city, while others are musings that become, with a little, work, short stories. Carter credits his wife, Melissa, for green-lighting his best ideas, and telling him which stories should be buried and left for dead.

PREMONITIO​N: By Alexa Rima

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

Suddenly, she knew.

Kathy didn’t know how she knew, or why. She was simply filled with such certainty that she dare not question it:

Greg would die today.

Kathy lessened her grip on the steering wheel, letting blood flow back into her fingers. Another wave of revelation crashed over her: she didn’t love Greg anymore. That was almost more surprising than the
news of his impending demise.

She hadn’t been in love with him for years, of course, but she thought she’d felt something for the man.  His death would be a relief, she realized, not uncomfortably. Greg was a good man. Divorce would be too
messy, protracted, and painful to even think about. But death…

She wouldn’t wish it on him – wouldn’t wish it on anybody – but if it was fated to happen, she might as well start planning. If she allowed herself to be dispassionate about the whole thing, this was nothing
more than a socially acceptable release from a contractual obligation that had long ago staled.

As she switched lanes, Kathy wondered how it would happen. Car accident, probably. Or a heart attack. What with the hours he kept and his genetics, it was bound to happen sooner or later. She just hoped
it was fast. She wouldn’t want him to suffer. Greg was a good man.

Mikey would be torn up. Kathy’s lips quivered at the thought. Regardless of how heartless she might seem, she didn’t want anyone to suffer. Especially not Mikey. Kathy turned the radio down. They’d be
fine, she told herself. She was practically a single mother as it was.
Stupid programming career… Yes, practically a single mother, save for Greg’s money.

 It occurred to her that they’d be fine financially after his death. Better than fine. Greg’s life insurance was worth $1.5 million, plus they’d get a few thousand from Social Security every month for years.
Yes, she decided, there’d be a transition period for Mikey, but this was all for the best. Maybe she could even start working on that catering business she’d always dreamed of.

She just hoped his death was painless.

***

The police officer stopped in front of the bench and cleared his throat. Kathy stared at his shiny black shoes.

“If you would…”

Kathy nodded and got up. Knowing about it wasn’t the same as living it, she realized. The lights, the sound of the shoes clicking against the linoleum, the temperature in the morgue – everything felt off
somehow. She must be in shock.

Keep it together, she coached herself. You knew this was going to happen.

The enormity of those words hit her. You knew, you knew, you knew. Why didn’t you do something? Why didn’t you call him, try to stop it, say you’d had a nice run – something!

A cry died in her throat. The officer cleared his. “We don’t have to do this, you know. There are other ways to identify a body, but they take time. The thing is, this accident was…”

The officer trailed off, sighed, then tried again, switching to a clinical tone. “The body was decapitated on impact. Death was instantaneous. There was no pain.”

Kathy forced her mind past the decapitation part. No pain, no pain, no pain. Kathy repeated it like a mantra to steel herself from what she was about to see.

She nodded slightly and the officer lifted the cloth. Kathy felt the bile rise to the back of her throat.

“What kind of sick joke is this?” she raged.

Kathy suddenly noticed Greg standing next to her. He motioned for the attendant to cover the remains. “That’s her,” he gasped, pale.

Superimposed over her husband, Kathy saw the 18-wheeler that had barreled at her earlier that day. Then she screamed, a shriek of pure fury at a life robbed. As her own sonic blast ripped her incorporeal
self apart, she heard Greg sob.

“She was a good woman.”

Then she was gone.

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©2011 Alexa Rima