Scary Stories: A Collection of Horror - Volume 2 (Chamber of Horror Series)

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Scary Stories: A Collection of Horror - Volume 2 (Chamber of Horror Series) Page 1

by Billy Wells




  Scary Stories:

  A Collection of Horror

  Volume 2

  Chamber Of Horror Series

  By

  Billy Wells

  Scary Stories: A Collection of Horror

  Volume 2

  Chamber of Horror Series

  Copyright © 2014 by Billy Wells

  This book is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or places, events or locales is purely coincidental. The characters are productions of the author’s imagination and used fictitiously.

  Dedication

  I dedicate this book to Allen Watkins, A fellow writer who provided prompts for three of the stories in this book. Thanks, Allen.

  .

  TABLE OF CONTENTS

  FORBIDDEN FRUIT

  DROOL

  SOMETHING IN THE ICE

  THE REFRIGERATOR

  FINE PRINT

  TIL DEATH DO US PART

  SOMETHING IN THE DARK

  THE PACKAGE

  SOMETHING IN THE CAVE

  GOR

  FORBIDDEN FRUIT

  Up ahead Wesley saw a fruit stand on the right shoulder of the road and slowed his SUV.

  “I feel like having a cantaloupe or a watermelon,” he said loudly as he pulled into a parking place in front of the line of large rectangular boxes full of various kinds of fruit.

  Turning to his wife, Lisa, and looking back at the two kids, Jason and Brent, he saw all three either texting or playing a video game. He said louder, “Does anyone want some watermelon or cantaloupe?”

  Wesley was totally surprised when Brent, not looking up from his game, said, “Sure, Dad. I’d like some.”

  “How about you, Jason?”

  “Not now, Dad. I'm concentrating on staying alive. I only have one life left. Oh! It’s too late. They got me. Jeepers, Dad,” he groaned.

  “Don't blame me for your ineptitude. Do you want some watermelon?”

  “Okay,” Jason said, putting aside his Starship to Oblivion game in disgust. “Now that the Cyborg blitzed me, I might as well.”

  Lisa was immersed in an incredible YouTube video about climbing Mount Everest that was so gripping she ignored Wesley's gibbering about fruit.

  Wesley shook his head, perplexed at how hard communicating had become since everyone had a Smartphone. He rarely had an intelligent conversation with anyone in his family anymore.

  Leaving the mesmerized threesome in the SUV with the AC running, a blast of summer heat took away his breath for a moment as Wesley approached the boxes of fruit.

  “Hello there, sonny,” an old geezer in the straw hat wheezed. “What will it be today? Watermelon? Peaches? Or maybe some juicy tangerines?”

  “Boy, all of them sound so mouthwatering, it's hard to decide. I think I’ll have a bag of each. My wife and my boys are too busy texting and playing games to tell me what they want, so I guess I'll have to choose myself.”

  The old man filled several bags with the fruit and brought them all to the small cash box. He manually wrote up a striped green receipt and, without the use of a calculator, arrived at the $21.50 total.

  Wesley looked at the receipt, checking the math on his phone and arriving at the identical figure, then replied, “Wow, I can’t believe you came up with the total so fast and even added the tax. It’s hard to find someone who can do that without a calculator these days.”

  “My third-grade teacher, bless her soul, taught me the old-fashioned way. By the way, did you ever try one of these?” the elderly man asked, grabbing a purple fruit about the size of a grapefruit and holding it up. “This is something new in genetic engineering. Some scientist fiddled with several different types of fruits and came up what they call ‘purple passion.’”

  “Something about making fruit in a laboratory doesn't sit well with me. I just saw an old movie where some researchers genetically altered cockroaches to stem a deadly disease and inadvertently created a giant bug, hell-bent on wiping out the human race.”

  “Believe me, when you taste purple passion, I guarantee this will be your favorite fruit from now on. Like a potato chip, I'll bet you can't eat only one. Tell you what. I'll give you a sample to try. There are four of you … yes? Two adults and two children.” The old man placed four of the purple fruit in another bag and, with a warm smile, handed it to Wesley.

  “Thanks a lot. I'll try it, based on your glowing recommendation.” After counting out the $21.50, Wesley grabbed the four bags of fruit and got back into the SUV.

  Looking at the others and seeing no indication they had even noticed he had returned or had left in the first place, he announced, “I just won the lotto for $92 million, and I’ve decided to take a rocket ship to the moon.” It didn't surprise him when no one said anything at his remark. While Wesley waited for an oncoming car to pass, Lisa looked up from the Mount Everest video and saw the old man’s face from the produce stand framed in the window. He gave her a subtle wink and waved as they pulled into the highway.

  When the family arrived home, Lisa started making grilled cheese sandwiches for lunch, and Wesley cut up several pieces of the fruit and put them in a large bowl in the center of the kitchen table.

  They all sat down to eat, and, while waiting for the sandwiches, Wesley and the boys began to munch on the succulent cubes of watermelon, peaches, tangerines, and the new purple passion fruit that resembled a pear on the inside.

  “Wow, Dad!” Jason blurted out excitedly, “What is this new fruit? I've never tasted anything like it before.”

  “It's called purple passion. I must say, the old man was right. He said, once you tasted it, it would be your favorite from now on.” After eating the sandwiches, the family gobbled up every morsel of the fruit before they went about their afternoon activities.

  * * *

  At three o'clock in the morning, an odd noise—which sounded like a muffled scream from the direction of the boys’ rooms—awakened Lisa. She heard the pounding rain on the roof and the rumble of thunder. Lightning lit up the windowpane as she looked at the clock on the table and saw no digital readout. The electricity was apparently off.

  She shook Wesley and aroused him from a deep sleep, saying, “I think I heard one of the boys cry out. I believe it was Jason.”

  “I didn't hear anything,” Wesley muttered, barely awake.

  “Really, darling, you wouldn't hear a bomb go off in the next room. You know how soundly you sleep.”

  “I don't hear anything now, except … is that thunder? Damn, it's raining really hard. Look, maybe Jason was having a bad dream. In fact, maybe you were having a bad dream.”

  “Even after I was awake? I don’t think so. I tell you I heard the tail end of a scream or someone crying out,” Lisa said, staring into the blackness beyond the open door.

  “Well, why don't you check while I get some sleep? Why should both of us go?”

  “Something is not right, Wesley. I can feel it. I want you to go with me. The electricity is off.”

  “Damn, why does this happen every time there's a storm? Well, all right,” he groaned, rising from the bed with a big yawn. “You know I have to get up at six o’clock.”

  Wesley took a small flashlight from the end table, and the two of them made their way into the hall.

  Immediately they detected an odd smell. Not a sharp odor but dull, like a recent fart, and yet not exactly like a fart.

  “What’s that smell?” Wesley finally asked, sniffing the air.

  At the door to Jason's room, the smell grew more pungent. Wesley led with
the flashlight through the open door and slipped on something slick on the tile floor. He was on his butt before he could fathom what he’d seen in the bed.

  “What the hell is this on the floor?” Wesley shouted, with the back end of his pajamas soaked. As he struggled to his feet, the beam of light fell on the scene that would live in their nightmares forever. The room was swimming in blood. It was on the floor, the walls, the bed; and what was left of Jason was covered with it.

  Lisa screamed, and Wesley ran to his son's bedside and threw back the blood-soaked sheet. They both stood there with their mouths agape and emotions soaring, glaring at the handiwork of what had to be some kind of wild animal attack. So much of Jason’s torso and face were missing that their oldest son was barely recognizable as a human being.

  Immediately realizing there was no way to help Jason, Lisa shrieked, “What about Brent?”

  “My God,” Wesley gasped, struggling for breath.

  Without the slightest regard for a beast that could still be lurking in the house, the two of them bolted into the hallway.

  Before them, in the beam of the flashlight, they saw, with shocking clarity, Brent sitting on the floor sucking on what looked like a slab of raw meat. His face and his pajamas were soaked with blood.

  “What are you eating?” Lisa screamed.

  “I couldn't help it, Mommy. I was so hungry.”

  “Hungry?” Lisa murmured as Wesley sank to the floor and began to sob. “You killed your brother because you wanted to eat him?”

  Ten minutes later, the police and EMTs converged on the house and filled the driveway and the street with vehicles. A young police officer stared in disbelief at Brent in his bloody pajamas. The officer had already seen Brent’s older brother and couldn't comprehend how a little boy no more than eight years old could be responsible. He withdrew his handcuffs and started to cuff the youngster, but the look in his mother's eyes dissuaded him. As an alternative, he took Brent by the hand and led him to the cruiser outside as a detective approached Wesley and Lisa on a sofa in the living room.

  “I’m Lieutenant Barnes. I can't begin to comprehend what you're going through right now. This is the most horrific crime scene I've ever seen. If you can't talk now, we can wait until later. I'm terribly sorry, but I need to ask you some questions about what happened as soon as you can manage it.”

  Wesley sat in a daze on the sofa staring into space. Barnes turned to Lisa and continued, “It appears your husband has lost it, at least for now. Can you tell me anything about what happened?”

  Lisa looked up at him, her face wet with tears and said, “Our lives are over. A few hours ago we were the Moores, a typical suburban family looking forward to a bright future …”

  “What happened, Mrs. Moore?” Barnes interrupted.

  She glared at him and said, ”My eight-year-old son got hungry. He went to his brother’s room, clubbed him to death with a baseball bat, and started eating him. You saw what he did. That’s all there is to say.”

  She began to cry uncontrollably. Barnes stopped writing, and a tear rolled down his own face. Brushing it away, he gathered his composure and said sadly, “It doesn’t look like something an eight-year-old boy could do. Do you have any large pets?”

  “No,” Lisa said coldly, looking extremely exhausted.

  “It certainly looks like your oldest son …”

  “His name was Jason,” Lisa said.

  “It looks like Jason was attacked by some kind of wild animal that somehow got into the house. We've taken your youngest son into custody based on your assertion that he committed this unspeakable murder. Did you or your husband actually see him kill Jason?”

  “No,” Lisa said in the same tone as before. “I didn't see him do it, but he told me that he did. He said he got hungry, and Jason’s room was the first door he came to with the baseball bat.”

  “You told one of the officers that you don’t think he had an argument with his brother, and, although he had no motive you know of to kill him, you believe he did it. You don’t think for a minute an animal might have done it?”

  “No, a mother can tell when her little boy is not telling the truth. I know my son. He told me that he did it, and I believe him.”

  “Pardon me, Mrs. Moore. I'm still trying to get my mind around what you're telling me. I have two sons at home myself. I can't imagine one of them murdering the other and eating him, but you can. Did your son have some kind of peculiar psychosis or a personality disorder?”

  “None whatsoever.”

  “Did he mistreat pets? Was there ever any clue that he might become dangerous?”

  “No,” Lisa said softly. “He was a normal eight-year-old boy. He loved his brother and had a lot of friends. He got good grades in school and never did anything to suggest he would become violent.” Lisa rose from the sofa unsteadily and said, “I'm sorry, Lieutenant Barnes. I've told you everything I know, and I am exhausted. If you want to keep beating a dead horse, it’ll have to be tomorrow.”

  “I understand. I'm so sorry to have to trouble you at a time like this.” Wesley's brother and his wife were standing in the next room, and Barnes led Lisa toward them.

  The woman took Lisa in her arms, and they both started to sob loudly. The EMTs escorted them out the front door as the coroner and the crime scene unit continued to search for clues.

  As the Moores headed toward vehicles parked along the street, a shrill scream brought several police officers running toward the cruiser where the young officer had taken Brent.

  Looking through the side window, the first one who approached the car saw Brent feasting on the young officer. Brent’s face was wet with new blood, and slivers of flesh dangled from his teeth. The victim’s open eyes were dead and unseeing. A large hole in his neck was still spurting blood.

  When the policeman jerked open the door and pulled the boy from the car, Brent grinned sheepishly at him, like a child who had just done something naughty and really enjoyed it.

  Another police officer said, “Can you believe what the little monster did to Phil in no more than ten minutes?”

  “How did he kill him?”

  “Dunno … My guess is, from the missing chunk in Phil’s throat, that the kid came from behind and, with his teeth, tore out Phil’s jugular.”

  “Phil didn't cuff him?”

  “Hey, he's only eight years old. Have you ever cuffed a kid that young?”

  “No, but I will from now on, that's for sure.”

  After a month of ineffectual therapy, Wesley’s psychiatrists committed him to the Montgomery Sanitarium. The prognosis for a complete recovery appeared doubtful, but Lisa had not given up hope despite the doctors’ negative outlook. The autopsy proved that Jason Moore’s death had not come from a wild animal attack. The contents of Brent’s stomach confirmed he had devoured his brother, but it did not prove he had killed him. However, the boy’s bloody fingerprints on a baseball bat proved enough to convict him of the heinous, premeditated murder.

  The coroner concluded that Brent’s maniacal outburst was the result of ingesting the strange purple fruit. Although all four members of the family had eaten it, Brent’s allergic reaction to the food, similar to that of an allergy to dogs and cats, had caused his sudden insanity attack.

  * * *

  As the days passed, Lisa could not get the old man’s smug wink out of her mind. It was branded forever in her memory. He had ruined their lives, and she was convinced the act was intentional. She believed he had known the fruit would be catastrophic to certain people who ate it.

  But why would this madman want random people to suffer? Did he consider himself a satanic messenger or did he simply enjoy wreaking havoc on innocent people for some other misguided reason?

  Lisa decided she would spend the rest of her life pursuing the old man, and, since she believed he was evil incarnate, she decided to call him Beelzebub until his real name could be determined.

  Wesley had put away a considerable amount of money fo
r their retirement and their children's education. At this point, since their medical insurance was paying for her husband’s shock treatments and institutionalization, and the state had custody of Jason and his care, she planned to use their savings to find Beelzebub. She didn't know what she would do when she found him, but she would cross that bridge when she came to it.

  Before beginning the journey that might take weeks, months, or even years, she arranged to visit Wesley and Brent one last time. All the previous visitations were fruitless, but she was still a dutiful wife and mother for better or for worse.

  In the past when she visited her husband, she found him strapped to a chair on the patio staring into space, saliva usually oozing down his chin onto his hospital gown. She would talk with him for half an hour and never see any sign he knew she was there.

  Brent lived in the maximum-security section of the same facility. Each time she visited him, she had to speak to him through small holes drilled into a thick Plexiglas shield placed over the bars of his padded cell. He always wore a straitjacket over a jumpsuit and a mouthpiece to prevent him from chewing off his tongue and eating it. His doctors indicated his strange malady made him ravenously hungry, and, if allowed to eat his fill, he would keep eating until his stomach exploded. A strong retractable cord prevented him from battering his head against the bars that separated the cell from the visiting area. A guard watched eight different patients in his ward on separate monitors.

  Lisa cried for hours after those visits with Brent. What was there to say to a raving psychopath who had eaten his brother and would have tried to eat Wesley and her if the master bedroom had been one door closer?

  Brent couldn’t speak to her with the Hannibal Lecter–type mouthpiece, but he didn’t want to talk to her anyway. Lisa could see the hunger in his beady little eyes as he stared fixedly at her like a juicy slab of beef or a french fry loaded with ketchup. The icy stare reminded her of a ravenous beast always ready to spring if he got the chance. Every time she returned to her car, she wondered why she had made the trip. Both her little boys had died that night. The thing in the padded cell was certainly not her precious Brent, the cutest little boy who had ever walked the earth.

 

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