by Susan Rich
HALF-MINUTE
HORRORS
EDITED BY
SUSAN RICH
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Something You Ought to Know by Lemony Snicket
The Chicken or the Egg by Jerry Spinelli
In Hiding by Kenneth Oppel
The Old Man in the Picture by Richard Sala
The Babysitter by Erin Hunter
Grand Entrance by James Patterson
Halloween Mask by Sonya Sones
Tenton by Tom Genrich & Michèle Perry
Nanny by Angela Johnson
The Legend of Alexandra & Rose by Jon Klassen
What’s Coming by Arthur Slade
An Easy Gig by M. T. Anderson
Mr. Black by Yvonne Prinz
The Foot Dragger by M. E. Kerr
Trick by Adam Rex
Hank by Dean Lorey
One of a Kind by Sarah Weeks
A Walk Too Far by Gloria Whelan
A Very Short Story by Holly Black
Deep Six by Faye Kellerman
The Turn of the Screw by Henry James, A Novel as Told by Lisa Brown in Fewer than 30 Seconds
The Attack of the Flying Mustaches by Pseudonymous Bosch
Takowanda by Nadia Aguiar
Heart Stopper by Sienna Mercer
Up to My Elbow by Jack Gantos
Four Gleams in the Moonlight by Stephen Marche
The Goblin Book by Brad Meltzer
Worms by Lane Smith
The Dare by Carol Gorman
The Ballad of John Grepsy by David Rich
Soup by Jenny Nimmo
The Creeping Hand by Margaret Atwood
Wet Sand, Little Teeth by Mariko Tamaki
A Thousand Faces by Brian Selznick
Chocolate Cake by Francine Prose
At the Water’s Edge by Ayelet Waldman
My Worst Nightmare by R.L. Stine
The Beast Outside by Adele Griffin
Unannounced by Aliza Kellerman
Krüger’s Sausage Haus by Mark Crilley
There’s Something Under the Bed by Allan Stratton
Cat’s Paw by Sarah L. Thomson
Horrorku by Katherine Applegate
The Itch by Avi
The New Me: A Pantoum by Gail Carson Levine
Always Eleven by David Stahler Jr.
Aloft by Carson Ellis
Skittering by Tui T. Sutherland
Stuck in the Middle by Abi Slone
All Fingers and Thumbs! by Joseph Delaney
Don’t Wet the Bed by Alan Gratz
The Final Word illustrated by Brett Helquist, story by Josh Greenhut
The Shadow by Neil Gaiman
A Day at the Lake by Lesley Livingston
Whispered by Jon Scieszka
A Disturbing Limerick found & envisioned by Vladimir Radunsky
Through the Veil by Alison McGhee
The Rash by Daniel Ehrenhaft
Where Nightmares Walk by Melissa Marr
On a Tuesday During That Time of Year by Chris Raschka
Death Rides a Pink Bicycle by Stacey Godenir
I’m Not Afraid by Dan Gutman
The Doll by Alice Kuipers
Easy Over by Frank Viva
Them by Libba Bray
Tiger Kitty by Joyce Carol Oates
Inventory by Jonathan Lethem
Shortcut by Michael Connelly
Strawberry Bubbles by Lauren Myracle
We Think You Do by Barry Yourgrau
The Prisoner of Eternia by Aaron Renier
In Conclusion by Gregory Maguire
Index
About the Editor
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
LEMONY SNICKET
Something You Ought to Know
“The right hand doesn’t know what the left is doing” is a phrase that refers to times when people ought to know, but don’t know, about something that is happening very close to them. For instance, you ought to know about the man who watches you when you sleep.
He is a quiet man, which is why you don’t know about him.
You don’t know how he gets into your home, or how he finds his way to the room in which you sleep. You don’t know how he can stare at you so long without blinking, and you don’t know how he manages to be gone by morning, without a trace, and you don’t know where he purchased the long, sharp knife, curved like a crescent moon, that he holds in his left hand, sometimes just millimeters from your eyes, which are closed and flickering in dreams.
There are, of course, things he does not know about you, either. He does not know what you are dreaming about, but then it may be that he does not care. His clothes are rumpled and have odd rips in them here and there. One of his coat sleeves is longer than the other, and this may be to cover his right hand. The sleeve is long enough that if you were to wake up and see him, which you never do, you might not see that his right hand is strange and crooked. It would take a while, in the darkness of the room, to notice that it is missing three fingers.
He comes every night. His right hand does not know what the left is doing.
JERRY SPINELLI
The Chicken or the Egg
“I was first,” said Egg.
“I was first,” said Chicken.
“I was,” said Egg.
“I was,” said Chicken.
“I was!”
“I was!”
“I was!”
“I was!”
“Okay,” said Chicken. “You win.” And pecked Egg. Seven times. From seven holes Egg bled yellow into the barnyard dust. Until all of Egg was out instead of in.
Chicken grinned. “But guess who’s last.”
KENNETH OPPEL
In Hiding
My father and I lay tensely side by side in total darkness, not daring to breathe. The space was small and smelled bad. We were flat on our backs, scarcely able to lift our heads. Above us, the thing shifted restlessly on its bed, grunting. I hoped it would settle itself soon.
Finally the thing stopped moving. I counted seconds. Was it asleep? Or just lying there awake, waiting?
“Now,” my father whispered in my ear.
And very slowly we reached out and up to grasp the child’s ankles with our cold, dead hands.
RICHARD SALA
The Old Man in the Picture
ERIN HUNTER
The Babysitter
The phone rang, echoing around the white-and-silver kitchen that was as glossy as a hall of mirrors. Jess was surrounded by a dozen reflections of herself as she went to pick up the handset.
“Hello?”
For a moment there was no answer, just the faint sound of someone breathing. Jess thought of her friends laughing as they told her not to accept the babysitting job from someone she’d never met. “They probably live in a creepy old house in the middle of the woods!”
They didn’t. They lived in a top-floor loft with a view of the city that made Jess feel like a bird. The white leather sofas smelled of plastic wrapping.
Then a little voice said, “I’m coming home,” before the line clicked off.
Was there another child Jess didn’t know about?
The phone rang again. “I’m coming home!” Now the voice sounded old, tired, and fretful. There was a tap of footsteps. Climbing marble stairs. Like the ones that led up to the loft.
Jess looked down. Something was brushing her leg. It was the phone cord. It had fallen out of the wall.
The sound of scratching at the door. Like a dog. In her hand, the phone rang. “I’m home!” rasped the voice, older than sand. “Did you wait up?”
JAMES PATTERSON
Grand Entrance
Here’s what I remember about that night, and though I’ve been told it’s not possible, I remember everything clearly, like a dream come to life. . . .
I felt trapped. There was terrible screaming.
Where am I? I wondered. Some kind of tightly enclosed space.
My fear was extreme. I tried to stay calm, but I couldn’t.
There was water everywhere around me.
The screaming kept getting louder. And closer.
Then a voice broke through.
“It’s a girl,” said the voice.
Suddenly, it was quiet. Another voice filled the room. I realized it was mine.
And I was screaming like a baby.
SONYA SONES
Halloween Mask
I am me,
but I am not.
I can’t be sure
whose face feels hot.
Is it mine?
Or is it its?
So strange how snug
this new mask fits. . . .
Gazing in the mirror
over my sink,
staring into eyes
that refuse to blink,
holding my ground,
I stare right back
at eyes the deadest
shade of black. . . .
I swallow hard.
This can’t be true—
when last I looked,
my eyes
were blue!
TOM GENRICH & MICHÈLE PERRY
Tenton
Father said stuffed toys were childish. But at nine Ava still adored hers, most of all Tenton, the white rat. Tenton had velvety fur worn thin and long tickly whiskers, and traveled with her between Mom’s place and here. No matter what Ava’s fear, Tenton always knew how to comfort her.
One evening Father, as usual, nodded good night to Ava and closed the bedroom door. She heard his chair whine as he sat down to work again.
Shadows slowly lengthened into night. Under the covers Ava whispered, “I don’t ever want to go back to school. I hate it!” Something drove her to add, “You go, Tenton. You take my place.” Tenton’s red eyes glittered.
The next thing Ava knew, she was being tossed into the air like a rag doll. She hit the carpet yet felt nothing. In the half-light she saw a creature leap out of bed, a girl of sorts with shiny pale hair, her hair, wearing a pendant necklace, her necklace—but a girl who moved like a rat, scurrying stealthily on all fours. Ava screamed: no sound. She scrambled: no movement.
The girl-size rat crept over, red eyes deep with malice. Reflected in them Ava saw a little stuffed toy flung aside on the carpet, white limbs a-tangle, blue eyes wide with panic. Ava’s blue eyes.
The rat hissed and raced to the open window. A long naked tail snaked over the sill; claws clicked down the trellis. Then the sounds of movement faded.
In the morning Ava heard Father’s alarm, his shuffling footsteps. “Ava!” he grunted. “Get up, or you’ll be late! Ava!”
Ava did what she could. Which was nothing.
ANGELA JOHNSON
Nanny
My nanny, Sara, tucks me in as the shadows wait for her to leave so they can creep out of the closet toward me. She smiles as she steps over the books and puzzle pieces I’ve left on the floor, then closes my door.
But tonight I decide to escape the shadows. I open the door and dash toward Sara’s room, only to find her at the end of the hall, whispering to them—the shadows—and telling them with a smile that I was waiting for their nightly visit to my room.
JON KLASSEN
The Legend of Alexandra & Rose
ARTHUR SLADE
What’s Coming
My father always used to say you’ll get what’s coming to you and I really didn’t like know what he meant until like this moment right now ’cause I can’t even move my arms and my chest it’s the pressure you see I’d decided to slip into old Widow Sturm’s house and I stole the heavy silver candlesticks and quiet as a rat I snuck back out the basement climbing over this container with old wood on top it’s for catching rain oh yeah it’s a cistern and the wood broke and I fell into this pit that just has thick slimy mud inside and I keep sinking and as it reaches my nostrils I start to bubble and I can’t help but wonder is it the candlesticks that keep pulling me down
M. T. ANDERSON
An Easy Gig
Galv thought the Kennedys’ baby was being very good. He didn’t hear a peep from the kid all night. As babysitting gigs go, it was incredibly easy. The baby was already down for the night when he arrived. So Galv watched TV and talked to Raoul on the phone and ate the lasagna the Kennedy parents had left in the oven for him.
He did not check the baby’s room to make sure the baby was still sleeping. He didn’t check the crib to make sure the baby was even still there.
He lay on the sofa with his head hanging off the armrest and his lasagna plate on his stomach, making up song lyrics with Raoul. They laughed hard.
And when the parents came home and said, “How was the baby?” Galv said, “Oh, he was good. Really good. I didn’t even hear a peep from him.”
But Galv didn’t know how the baby was. He hadn’t checked.
“No,” said Mr. Kennedy. “The baby was bad.”
“Very bad,” said Mrs. Kennedy. “The baby cried and cried.”
“No he didn’t,” said Galv, confused.
“Before you got here,” Mr. Kennedy explained. “The baby was so bad he had to be punished.”
“And when we punished him,” said Mrs. Kennedy, “we made a mistake.”
“And then,” said Mr. Kennedy, “we needed somewhere to hide the body. And someone to blame.”
Galv backed toward the door, terrified. He couldn’t speak.
“You can’t run from it,” said Mrs. Kennedy. “The police will never believe you. The crime is already yours.”
Mr. Kennedy smiled. “How did you like the lasagna?” he said.
YVONNE PRINZ
Mr. Black
Every morning at seven sharp, my next-door neighbor emerges from the front door of his house. He has no wife, no kids, and no dog. He disappears up the street on foot wearing a black suit, black shoes, and a black hat, and carrying a black briefcase. We call him Mr. Black. One day my curiosity gets the better of me and I peek into his living room window. Through a crack in the blinds I see that it is not a living room at all. It’s a waiting room. Five more Mr. Blacks sit in a row of plastic chairs, not moving, not blinking, not breathing. I hear a whirr, and a small camera mounted up in the far corner of the room swivels and focuses in on me. A red light blinks. I run.
M. E. KERR
The Foot Dragger
My father thought the reason my older brother was mean was that he was short. He’d grow out of it.
When he came in late at night, while my parents were asleep, I would hear him heading toward our bedrooms. He would drag one foot and take his time climbing the stairs.
Step . . . drag . . . step . . . drag. Heavy breathing. The door handle turned.
I decided two could play this game. As the handle turned, I’d jump out at him. I was ready for him. Step . . . drag. The heavy breathing. He was there.
“Gotcha, Paul!” I threw open the door and saw him.
This very tall man.
ADAM REX
Trick
DEAN LOREY
Hank
Hank was one of the most adorable puppies you’ve ever seen, which is why it was such a shock when, seven years after the day we brought him home from the pet store, he looked up at me with his big, beautiful Labrador eyes and said, “I’m going to kill you.”
“You . . . you can talk?” I whispered.
“Of course, dummy. I just haven’t talked to you until right now.”
I was alone in the house with him. It was a freedom I gained on my thirteenth birthday—a freedom I suddenly regretted.
“I haven’t decided exactly how I’m going to do it yet,” Hank continued, stepping closer on his padded
feet. Drool dripped from his long front teeth. “I was going to tear into your throat while you were sleeping, but I think I may just go ahead and do it right now.”
“But . . . but I thought you loved me,” I replied, stumbling backward. “I thought we were best friends!”
“I know. What a dummy you are.” He laughed cheerlessly. “Yeah, every time I licked you, you know what I was thinking? I was thinking, I’m gonna kill him. Lick. Make him suffer. Lick, lick. Watch him die in front of me with that scared, confused look in his eyes.”
“You thought that when we were snuggling?” I reached behind me. My hands closed around a lamp—a weapon, maybe? “I had no idea . . .”