Tuesday, October 13, 2015

This is Halloween!

It's Halloween! This is one of my favorite times of year. I seriously begin decorating our house for Halloween in September. In honor of the season, I figured I would write a creepy short story. I hope you guys like it! Happy Halloween!

A Halloween Story
By Ashley R. King

                “You’ll need to leave so you’ll make it home before dark. Maybe leave around one?” Katie’s father spoke around his hamburger. He looked to her mother for agreement.
                “You know we don’t like you driving those back roads to Athens in the dark. There’s absolutely no one out there and you never know when a serial killer could be roaming around, especially on Halloween,” her mother added as she shivered from her own words.
                Katie laughed as she shoved the last of her fries in her mouth. “You guys are so over protective. Seriously, I will be fine. I’m supposed to stop over at Jeff’s anyway, so I’ll get home after dark of course.”
                “No ma’am you won’t. You’ll leave here and go straight home. Unless you want to go back to college without a car because I’ll take it away if you don’t want to follow our rules,” her father said as he wiped his gray beard with a napkin.
                Katie’s blood boiled at his response, but figured the more she fought it, the more obvious it would be that she would do it anyway. She was a sophomore at the University of Georgia for crying out loud. She worked at the bookstore and at a pizza shop downtown so that she could pay her bills since she refused student loans. Yet, she couldn’t get any slack. Well then, she’d simply do things her way.
                And that she did. Katie’s Honda was packed up at one o’clock that Sunday and she hugged and kissed her parents goodbye like the dutiful daughter she normally was.
                “I’ll call you when I get there!” she yelled out the window as she disappeared down her driveway.
                Jeff met her at the doorway of his parents’ house. They were going to celebrate Halloween in style with none other than a Halloween marathon. Katie tried not to let her disappointment show, for she was more of a Hocus Pocus girl, her mind too weak for those scary slasher films. But this was time with Jeff, the guy she was slowly falling in love with and never able to see since they both attended college in different cities.
                So watch the movies they did, so many of them that the theme song played on a loop in her mind. When she went to use the restroom, the theme song was there. When she bit into a piece of sweet candy corn the theme song was there. When she kissed Jeff’s amazing lips, the theme song was there.
                At five-thirty Katie disappeared outside to call her parents to tell them she’d made it home. Her gut roiled with guilt, but she was nineteen and she really missed Jeff. Her parents wouldn’t even begin to understand. When darkness descended at six, she and Jeff handed out candy to the trick or treaters, Katie’s eyes ever careful for people who might know her parents. After a late dinner and a nice little make out session and more slasher films, Katie finally left around ten. With perfect luck, she’d make it back to her apartment at two-thirty. She wouldn’t have to worry about waking up her roommate, Penelope, since she had plans to party downtown and wouldn’t be home until four in the morning, regardless of classes to attend.
                The first half of the trip seemed to go pretty well. There were plenty of gas stations and businesses to illuminate the road. Then civilization slowly began to disappear as she reached the desolate two lane road mostly surrounded by trees.
                Images of Michael Myers slashed at Katie’s thoughts, suddenly turning every innocent thing into something sinister. A speed limit sign cloaked in fog morphed into a huge skeleton man. Unassuming cows at the fence line were spawns of Satan with red eyes and sharp fangs. Even the security lights in the way too few yards threw a more hellish glow on everything they touched.
                “I’m seriously losing my mind,” Katie muttered under her breath as she attempted to calm her rapidly beating heart. She cursed John Carpenter for his creation of Michael, she cursed Jeff for being so ridiculously cute, and she cursed her stupid hormones for being the reason she didn’t listen to her parents.
                Moving a trembling hand to the radio knob, she searched for something, anything to take her mind off of the eerie back roads of Georgia. Static filtered through the speakers on every single station. Katie tried to ignore the chill that skittered down her spine. She should’ve charged her IPod up or even her phone. With her car charger MIA and her phone at 15%, she decided against it. Silence and her own disturbing thoughts would be her entertainment then.
                The darkness grew thick, the fog creeping up from the road. Katie sat hunched over her steering wheel as she gunned her car, not caring if she hit a deer. She had to get home. It was past midnight and she still had at least two hours to go and at least one before she reached some semblance of humanity.
                As her car accelerated, cold air pricked Katie’s skin, filling up her lungs, her nose running.  
                “What the hell?” she whispered as she wiped her nose on her sleeve. It was cold for October in Georgia, but it wasn’t this cold…or at least it hadn’t been. She pushed her car a little harder, feeling guilty for the torture she was putting her little Honda through.  It was that last little push that changed everything. Her car sputtered and clanked and then skid to the side of the road, stopping just before dipping into the waterlogged ditch.
                After letting loose a string of expletives that would make a sailor proud, Katie hit the steering wheel, trying to hold back the frustrated tears. Her mind had her all twisted up and she had to stop being so scared. That’s how she got in this mess to begin with. Drawing in several deep breaths, she picked up her cell phone .She’d call her roommate first. Or maybe not. No service.
                “Seriously?” Katie practically yelled, the sound echoing and slamming back into her much louder than anticipated. “Damn it!” she cried as she kicked her floorboard.  That’s okay, she thought to herself. Just calm down. It’s Halloween; it’s not the end of the world. And there was a house back maybe two miles?
                She’d just walk. Thank goodness she’d worn her Chucks. Gripping her phone in one hand, she snatched her purse from the passenger seat and dropped the car keys inside. Katie took a deep breath and started her trek.
                The fog became a living, breathing being before her, stretching and yawning from the ground. A sound filtered through the otherwise still and silent night. It sounded like a…a wail? Hell, she didn’t know and didn’t want to find out, so she moved, her body bouncing with the speed.  
                Another sound broke her concentration as she noticed that the clouds were rather low to the ground, almost kissing the fog. Together they seemed to form something wild and monstrous in the dark. The sound was that of a car. She turned around, her heart racing at the possibilities.
                Her car’s taillights shone through the darkness like blood seeping from a wound. And her car was in reverse. It moved slowly, the sound of the gravel crunching loud and ear shattering in the deafening silence.  Katie’s mind shouted at her to run, to get as far away from her car as possible, but her legs didn’t appear to get the message. She stood there in the middle of the road, completely surrounded by tall, menacing sentinels in the form of pine trees as she watched her car maneuver and slowly roll to a stop next to her. Her mouth hung open so wide that the cool air began to burn her throat. When had the temperature dropped so low? she wondered as she hugged herself. Was this all a dream?  Because…because cars didn’t just move on their own.
                Panic began to claw at Katie’s mind, as she peered inside her car. No one was inside. Of course no one was inside. She’d locked it before putting the keys in her purse. As if struck with an idea, she dug into her bag, only to come up empty. Where the hell were her keys?
                She tiptoed closer to the car and saw the keys sitting in the ignition. But…but hadn’t she taken them out? She knew she did. She knew it, but there they were shining in the blue lights of the Honda’s interior. Her stomach twisted in knots as goosebumps traversed her arms. A breeze blew, lifting her hair across her face, momentarily blinding her. Once she moved it from her eyes, she looked back at her car, only to feel her chest tighten. She had to get the hell out of there. A thick fog had permeated her car and currently filled the inside to the point that it was seeping out through the top cracks of the windows.
                Turning on her heel, Katie broke out into a run, her worn Chucks slapping the asphalt with such force that it shook her entire frail frame. Each step was a punishment as the freezing air dipped into her lungs, hurting and burning, making breathing a labored task. Her mind grew foggy as dizziness swept through her head, causing her steps to stagger and zigzag.
                Why was she running again? She’d forgotten.
                Her car caught up to her again and this time its door swung wide, beckoning, calling her to get in. The fog was a warm embrace as it danced around her body, the comfort almost too much. Katie took one step towards the car, not remembering why she was here in the first place, then another step. Just as her hand touched the top of the Honda, the cold metal shocked her body, jolted her mind back to awareness. No! No! This was wrong. Wrong. Wrong.
                The fog appeared to take form, a large, ominous shape that devoured the night. She would die if she stayed. This time she ran even faster and she forced herself to focus, to not allow the cold or the fog to numb her mind again. Get to that house, she chanted over and over again. Tears rolled from her eyes, but she would not be defeated. The sound of her car behind her forced her to push even harder, but she refused to look back. She did not want to see what the fog had become.
                A security light broke through the darkness, its orange haze a beacon to safety.
                “I can get there,” Katie told herself as she pushed her body to the limit, her side aching, her chest heaving.
                The yard was cluttered, as Katie tried to race through the haphazardly placed objects without falling. Once she reached the door a wail broke through the pines, the sound sinking deep into Katie’s bones. She was going to die.
                “Help! Please help me!” Katie cried as she banged on the door. Tears fell from her eyes as hysteria threatened to overtake her.
                The door opened wide to reveal a tiny sitting room with a television, static plaguing its screen. A shiver crept over Katie as she peered in the room, but not yet feeling brave enough to go inside, the fog and her demon possessed car momentarily forgotten.
                “Hello?” she called out, gripping her phone so tight that her busted up case nearly cut her palm.
                A male voice spoke, thick with a southern accent, ““Should’ve listened to the fog, girl. We’ve been waiting for you.”