Memory

Image credit: wiktord/Shutterstock.com

Image credit: wiktord/Shutterstock.com

I don’t remember when I began to forget I’d been taken. Time melded in my place, the basement, so seamlessly that in the end my former life was but a dream and the walls around me prescribed my only reality. I think I had moments of lucidity, when his stories of the end of the world and our haven did not ring true. I tried to raise images of a devastated world to my mind, from which we fled, but it was imaginings.

But that’s the thing about memory and imagination. They feel the same.

Over time, I came to accept my reality as real. He was unkind at times, but mainly not. He told me he would always protect me. He was all I had.

“Outside is devastation, lass,” he would say. Mostly I believed him. he was my only source of information and authority. Anything before that – my family, my parents, my friends – were as ephemeral as air.

Sometimes he would come to me. He would say: “Just a form of comfort for us, lass, just comfort, nothing more.” And at times it might have been comforting, in a way, to be held, to be close. It hurt sometimes, not always, but if I cried out he would tell me to hush. He was within me but moreso within himself. I felt together and completely, utterly alone. It was a strange business, messy and sticky and somehow hollow. Just like him.

But that was all I had. And I’d forgotten to remember anything else.

Sometimes in dreams I remembered. But dreams are only dreams. They evaporate in the morning air, so dark and dank down in this place, the basement.

When they found me I thought they were aliens. I had no sense of time, but it had been years. They found him too, and something happened to him. They took him somewhere, to his own basement perhaps. They called it prison.

So that is where I had been too, in my own prison. I wondered what I had done, to be there, and why. I knew what he had done, but not why.

I felt his departure like a loss, despite everything. Nothing in my ‘reality’ was real, and nothing in actual reality seemed real. I had to forget how to forget. I had to remember how to remember.

I’d say to them: “How do you know what’s real? How do you really know?”

They didn’t understand.

So I waited, for memory and lucidity, like shards of light in my perpetual darkness. And it came, it came, so that over a year from when they found me, I truly emerged from the basement. I truly remembered who I had been and what the world really was.

But by then neither I, nor the world, was the same.

(c) Helen M Valentina 2017

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Black Cat, Black Cat – Horror Nursery Rhyme

Image credit: Fantom666/Shutterstock.com

Image credit: Fantom666/Shutterstock.com

Black cat, black cat
Purring in the night
Black cat, black cat
Creeping out of sight

Harsh cry, harsh cry
As you must descend
Sharp claws, sharp claws
As you tear and rend

Devil spawn, devil spawn
Mewing at the moon
Dark cry, dark cry
Finding prey so soon

Young child, young child
Sleeping in his bed
Black cat, black cat
So, so soft you tred

Long gone, long gone
See how he has bled
Black cat, black cat
So, so soft you tread

(c) Helen M Valentina 2016

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Broken Chair (Horror Flash Fiction)

Image credit: Michal Steflovic/Shutterstock.com

Image credit: Michal Steflovic/Shutterstock.com

A desolate house and a single broken child’s chair was all the police found upstairs.

The house had been deserted, clearly, for many weeks. The man who lived here was long gone, and only these memories remained. Underneath the house, they knew, would be grislier recollections by far. Evidence that he had been here, and gone, and eluded them once more. He always used houses with basements, as though he liked to layer his artistry in some very specific way.  Above and below.

It was always the furniture that broke the policewoman’s heart. It always told its own story. This time a child’s chair, so it would be the remains of a child they found below. Once it had been a large mirror, such as a young woman might like, and sure enough it was that a female form, brutalised beyond recognition, was left behind. They had imagined him doing that, to her, while she looked in the mirror he left as his talisman, his little artistry.

Another time it had been a table laid out for a family meal. But what was rotting on the plates, and the bodies they found, told perhaps the worst story of all.

At least until this. This simple thing. A broken child’s chair, and therefore a broken child.

And yet again, he was head of the game and long gone. No doubt designing his next masterpiece as they salvaged what little evidence they could from this.

A broken child’s chair and a broken child.

(c) Helen M Valentina 2016

Posted in Horror Flash Fiction | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

The Owl (Horror Flash Fiction)

Image credit: Julia Haycocks/Shutterstock.com

Image credit: Julia Haycocks/Shutterstock.com

When the owl comes one of the children must disappear. All the townsfolk know this, and guard their children close every night in case the mystical sound of the owl calling, hooting as it descends, should reach their vulnerable ears.

Those without children count the cost differently. The owl is wisdom, she is Minerva they say, she brings all the sacred understanding that will make the community thrive. In that way the loss of a child, when she requests such company, should not be resented or denied.

The townsfolk with children become clever. They draw new families to the locale with promise of prosperity and gain. And indeed it is true the township is blessed, and produce and commerce thrive. The townsfolk know why, they know so many secrets of the universe, all brought to them on the wing of the sacred owl.

But they will not tell the new families, for they may flee. And if they know, they may protect their children when it is so crucial they do not. They may hide them indoors on the moonlit nights most likely to draw her down into their realm. And then, if the new family children are protected, it may be one of the townsfolk’s own that is taken.

And it works, it works. New families torn apart, not knowing how or why. The cycle continues and the town thrives, and only they know. When the owl comes a child must go, must disappear on the night tide with her.

Only the townsfolk know.

(c) Helen M Valentina 2016

Posted in Horror Flash Fiction | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

My Dear – Horror Nursery Rhyme

Image Credit: IxMaster/Shutterstock.com

Image Credit: IxMaster/Shutterstock.com

You are old my dear
You are cold and drear
To the devil your soul is sold it’s clear
The clock will chime you’ll hear
One more time this year
Then be silent forevermore I fear

(c) Helen M Valentina 2016

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Little Zombie Girl – Horror Nursery Rhymes

Image credit: PlusONE/Shuttertock.com

Image credit: PlusONE/Shuttertock.com

Little zombie girl
With you tongue unfurled
Our survival hangs
On your hunger pangs

Little zombie child
So debased and wild
Hiding underneath
With your grinding teeth

Little zombie lost
Such a dreadful cost
Those that love the most
Find the darkest host

Little zombie girl
Mind is in a swirl
See your soul is gone
No stars to wish upon

(c) Helen M Valentina 2016

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Infection (Horror Flash Fiction)

Image credit: vectorfusionart/Shutterstock.com

Image credit: vectorfusionart/Shutterstock.com

They infect him with electricity. In the laboratory he was sedated but now, in day to day life, assaults come unexpected and unprotected. They are testing their limits, he knows. He knows everything about them because they are a virus inhabiting his soul.

Consciousness devoid of physicality is cruel. The ones who come on waves of electricity still know who and why they are. Technology has salvaged their souls in some sparse, upgraded way. They cannot feel, except through the human animals left behind, but they are immortal, eternal, and this was a small price to pay.

They even like the pain they cause on entry. Anything to feel, they whisper in his brain, connecting synapses to communicate, to let him know of their stealthy invasion.

They like his form, his mind. It has a plasticity that many others lack. Decades of dumbing down the population so they could not see the new lords arise around them has left precious few truly workable models for their experience. They do not waste the ones they do find. They do not waste him.

He will burn out eventually. Indeed, very soon now. The electricity is implacable and he cannot withstand it forever. Soon his little light will go out, and comatose and lost he will spend the dwindling last days of his life a broken shell, shunned by all. He knows this. He knows it all because he knows them.

They are inside him, and for a while they are him. But then they will depart and he will be lost. Just flotsam on the beach of their cruelty and greed.

(C) Helen M Valentina 2016

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Birthday Choice (Horror Flash Fiction)

Image credit: John Arehart/Shutterstock.com

Image credit: John Arehart/Shutterstock.com

She knew her father was different to other fathers. He was far more clever, and some say he had magic in his soul.

And she was not like other little girls, she knew that too. How could she be, with a father like him?

He taught her many things – poetry, philosophy, the mysteries of the universe. He told her, over and over, the only thing that mattered was choice.

“But most choice is blind,” he would say, “which is the tragedy of singular existence.”

“What do you mean father?” she would ask.

‘If we could all be one,” he said, “we would know everything, and there would be no more need for choice. It is in the not knowing we risk all, every day.”

For many years this was but a wordplay between them. Se knew what he meant, on some level. When she had a crush on a boy at school she yearned to know how he felt, if such feelings could be rerutned. But she could not know. Not without an action. Not without blind choice.

And again, when she attempted exams to further her studies, sometimes she knew the answers and sometimes it was just a guess. So choice, as ever, meant the difference between a high mark or low, a pass or fail.

On her eighteenth birthday her father took her to a house. She had never been there before but it seems he owned it, but had not told her or her mother of the fact. This was not surprising, for he was full of secrets. But she did not know why he brought her there that day, or why he was so grave at a time that should be celebrated.

“When I was your age,” he told her,”my father took me to this house, and his father before that and on and on. Come up these stairs dear child and meet your fate, your choice.”

At the top of the stairs was a hallway with two doors, innocent and white, both closed.

“Everything,” he said, with a voice like a lament, “everything rides on which door you choose. One will take you to the future you dreamed and another to something else entirely. You will not know, not at first, which fate you have chosen, even if it seems all at once dark or light across the threshold, but over your life you will come to know, and at its end, you will know even more.”

“And you chose a door father?” she asked. “Which choice was yours?”

“I chose with dumb luck and had you, my lovely child, but now as I stand at the door, my heart breaking at what you must now do, I do not know if I chose the best or worst of worlds for myself, for all that I ever could have desired is simply this, that you choose your dream and not your nightmare.”

She regarded the doors for a moment, weighing the balances of both her fate and that of her beloved father. One door may open to a heaven, and the other to a hell. But which was which? There was simply no way to tell.

She walked slowly, choosing the door to the right, and hesitated a moment before opening it.

All she saw was the darkness, swirling around her. The unknown, the untested, the unborn.

But her heart broke just a bit when she heard her father scream.

And yet, because she had to, she walked through the door and into the darkened room.

(c) Helen M Valentina 2016

Posted in Horror Flash Fiction | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Flaming Tree

Image credit: Marcin Perkowski/Shutterstock.com

Image credit: Marcin Perkowski/Shutterstock.com

At end of times
The people come
To see the flaming tree
On porches dark
Awash with blood
They fall upon their knees
And little hopes
Are cut adrift
By slow and harsh degrees

The flaming tree
Will burn the ground
And shine eternally
Our spirits lost
Like flotsam cut
Adrift on endless seas
Yet crueller still
The mewing cries
Of those still so in need
Before the flames
We offer up
Our hearts so they may bleed

At end of times
The people come
To see the flaming tree
One soul is saved
But little one
It isn’t you or me

(c) Helen M Valentina 2016

Posted in Poetry | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Blue Roses (Horror Flash Fiction)

Image credit: Pavelik/Shutterstock.com

Image credit: Pavelik/Shutterstock.com

He held the blue roses in his hand, petals falling with each moment he gazed from the castle window to the barren, winter land below.

Only the harshest flowers survived here, though the woodlands were indeed lush.

Blue roses, he knew, meant impossible love. Impossible love. She was gone.

The deceit of war had taken her but also by her own hand. So they must pay for bringing her so low, drowned within the implacable waters below.

A would be king has blood as his passageway, every time. And with blood this time would come his immense, creative cruelty. For only through the pain of others could his own agony be assuaged. Impaled as symbols of emerging artistry.

His battle with the infidel was now personal. Not some idea to pursue, some flag to hoist all his burgeoning ambition upon. He would be the greatest warrior of all, remembered for eons, and his badge of honour would be his embrace of the terrifying, the unholy and the damned.

Blue roses, impossible love, but oh so possible hatred.

(c) Helen M Valentina 2016

Posted in Horror Flash Fiction | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments