Category Archives: Fiction

“Mr. Guthrie’s Familiar” Short Story by Glenn Dungan

"Mr. Guthrie's Familiar" Suspense by Glenn Dungan

It’s wild, the things that come to you at night. Like memories almost forgotten and of no significance that bubble steadily, hidden in some forgotten pot. Only until you’re older do you realize the pot was a witches’ brew and you’re a frog at the bottom of the heating black cauldron.

It’s these memories that arise during the hot and clammy moments in between fever dreams, and even though I’m dealing with a flu that my wife gave me, unintentionally, on my birthday, I can’t help but become a little sentimental. I’m an accountant now, for a decent firm. It’s boring work but it pays the bills and provides good insurance. I have a king-sized bed and the acne that once plagued my face has long since been defeated. 

As I stare in the darkened reflection of the turned off television in front of my bed, sweating the sickness out, shivering at the same time, answering birthday calls and texts, I can’t help but think, with a sudden clarity of the interlocking gears, how things really came to pass, or if it was a fever dream of a memory at all.

***

I don’t know if the story of Mr. Guthrie’s Familiar is true, but if you look on any message board and crackpot website, they will tell you it is. I don’t know what I believe. But I know some kids went missing and some grew up to be adults like me.

At sixteen, my dad told me to get a summer job, and while I wanted to play my Atari all day, he took the liberty to apply on my behalf to all the “help wanted” stores in our town. The only place to call me back was for a delivery boy at Comet Pizza, right at the end of Blueberry Street the town over. All I needed was a bike, which I had, and knowledge of the streets, which I also had. 

On my first day, I rolled my bike up and was introduced to Bart, Clyde, and Lionel. Bart was the head delivery boy, which I didn’t know was a thing until that day. It’s really fascinating…I don’t think I had recalled any of their names until just now. Yes. That’s right. There were four of us. Each of us more pimple-faced and greasy-haired than the last.

Well, five. Sort of. 

Her name was Maria, and at the time I thought she was the prettiest girl I’d ever seen. Assuming she had not been stricken by some divine intervention, I imagine she has grown to become very beautiful now. She was the bosses’ daughter, and, like me, had been given a summer job. She was the counter girl, responsible for being the face of Comet Pizza, the empire she would no doubt inherent. She also took the calls, and I looked forward to hearing customers call in for a delivery so I could hear her voice. 

I spent a large part of that first day sitting around and eating pizza, which was considered a tremendous perk at the time. The orientation was minimal; turns out, the training to be a delivery boy meant being able to pedal fast. The three boys were on rotation, switching out every call. They told me stories. Bart once delivered pizza to a house and a naked woman answered the door. Lionel once delivered to the science-teacher who flunked him last year and, with a whisper, said that he made a point of licking each slice before handing it off. After about four hours of sitting in the back, reading magazines and failing to talk to Maria, I got the impression that I wasn’t going to be making any deliveries at all. 

“Not yet,” said Bart, “there is a perfect house for you.”

“You mean, it’s close?” I asked, “I go to school a town over. I know this town well enough. And I’ve been studying a map for the past four hours.”

Clyde shook his head, “Just wait, padawan.”

I remember this clearly, too. I hadn’t seen The Phantom Menace yet, but I was going to next week with my cousin. I remember being slightly offended after the fact. 

Finally, a call came in and Maria’s wonderful voice occupied the room. “One cheese pie for 451 Alberle Road.”

Then the boys lit up, and I knew it was my time to shine. 

“That’s a good house,” said Lionel, his face buried in a magazine. 

“You know where that is?” asked Bart.

I nodded.

“You been there before?” Bart furthered.

I shook my head.

“Why don’t one of us come with you?” Clyde said, suddenly standing. “Just in case you get lost.”

“It’s the perfect first house,” Lionel said, “it was my first house. I was fine.”

“And Greg chose that as my first house when I started too,” Bart said. Greg was the previous head delivery boy, who went off to college.

“I can do it,” I said, wanting to impress these guys. 

They weren’t my friends, but I was used to not having many friends. I did, however, see a lot of commonalities between them and me. We were all physically misshapen in our own ways. Lionel was a little plump. Bart walked bowlegged. Clyde was tall and lanky. The way that the three of them interacted with Maria told me they don’t talk to girls “in the real world” very much, and the number of books and magazines and comic books littered about the backroom told me they spent a lot of their time in between pages.

“He’s fine,” said Bart. Then he turned to me, “You got this. Your first house. Then tomorrow you’ll come into the rotation with us and start making tips.”

“Sure,” I said, and received the pie from Maria, inhaled the fresh-baked aura, and put them in the warming container. My heart got a little fluttered.

She said, “Mr. Guthrie is kind of a weirdo. Just so you know. But if you can handle this one, the others will be easier. Trust me.” And she winked at me. I remember that very clearly. That wink. 

Outside I got my bike out of its lock, fastened the container cradle onto the back of my bike, and latched the container so it fit snug. Clyde appeared next to me, curly hair pushed against the wind. The day had turned into swathes of tangerine and plum; twilight, but darkness by the time I’d get back.

“Hey,” he said, “I just want you to know that Mr. Guthrie is sort of strange.”

“That’s what Maria said,” I said, happy to bring up her name.

He shuffled on his feet, “Yeah, but I don’t think you understand. His house is kind of a rite-of-passage. When I started, they made me deliver to him too. And Greg made Bart do it too. He’s in community college now. Not that it matters.”

“What, is he, like, a pedophile or something?” 

“You haven’t heard about Mr. Guthrie’s Familiar?”

I took my bike and started to round down the path, past the beaten-up cars of the pizza makers, the dumpsters, the pizza trailing savory vespers behind me. “C’mon man.”

“I’m not trying to scare you,” he said. “It’s just that if you get really weirded out, leave the pizzas on the porch. Knock if you feel like you have too. And then tail it out of there.”

I slanted my eyes. “Is this a trick? Tricking the new guy? Someone will have to pay for the pizza.”

“No,” Clyde said, twisting his face, “I’ll pay for it when you come back.”

I took my bike to the road, waited for a car to pass by. The street was lined with thick elms. They looked like talons pointing towards the sky. Clyde followed me.

“What’s the deal?” I snapped.

“Look,” he said, picking up his hat and rustling his greasy hair before popping it back on. “It’s just an urban myth. But I don’t think it is.”

Another car drove past. This was typically a busy street. If I had been alone, I would have weaved my bike past the cars and taken off-beaten paths. I sometimes rode my bike in this town after school, so I knew the avenues well enough. I could feel Mr. Guthrie’s address like a beacon at the far end of the forest, nestled in the cul-de-sac that I could see in my mind’s eye. But I didn’t want my new coworkers to think I was reckless. 

“What is it then? The myth?” I said. “What’s the deal with his Familiar?”

Clyde chuckled, but it was a nervous chuckle. I would not realize until thirty years later how difficult this was for him. “The story goes that Mr. Guthrie used to be a really nice guy. He was a teacher, or a social worker, or something. A wife. Couple of kids. Then one day he must have accidentally purchased an antique or read something backwards or something because something entered his house and never came out. Something horrible. Like a mega-demon or something.” 

“A mega-demon?” I said. “You’re making me late, you know.”

Clyde shivered. Another car zoomed past. He continued: “It was around that time that Mr. Guthrie lost his job. Started talking about a voice in his noggin. Said that voices need to feed and in exchange it would give him eternal life. Then his wife and kids disappeared.”

“No wonder. He went bonkers. She probably took the kids.” I looked down the road and found myself at the end of the collection of traffic. I kicked off my bike but Clyde grabbed me by the shoulders, which I remember even then being peeved about, even though he was, by some delivery boy hierarchy, my superior.

“They say that whatever may or may not have happened, Mr. Guthrie entered into a sort of relationship with this force. But it wasn’t an even trade off. And now the mega-demon is practically keeping the man hostage, says that if it doesn’t feed, it’ll feed on him.”

“C’mon,” I said, but Clyde pulled tighter.

“He calls the shop every couple of weeks. Orders the same thing. A small cheese pie, with instructions to deliver personally. You know why he does that? Because delivery boys have a high turnover rate. And no one would miss us. Like Randall Fleck, that missing kid from the 80’s? Yeah, he worked here for three days. Or what about Bobby Finch, you know, the same last name that’s above the hardware store? That’s his older brother. I’m telling you, Harold, just leave it on the porch.”

“Okay,” I said, realizing now that Clyde actually believed this. “How do you know all this?”

“You’ll find that most towns have a myth or two.”

“And you’ve done it, and Bart and Lionel,” I said, “I’ll be fine. I can outrun an old man.”

“I did,” Clyde said, and his eyes began to blossom, which, to this day, makes me uncomfortable whenever anyone does that. “And I saw…I saw something in the window…and…and I just stayed too long. Look. I can’t stop you, because I think I’m crazy too, but if you go, just leave it on the porch. If you come back and tell everyone you did it, I’ll back you up. I’ll tell them I tried to talk you out of it, but you were adamant.”

I actually didn’t know what the word adamant meant at the time, but that didn’t stop me from pulling onto the road while Clyde kept yelling at me to just put it on the porch! I did my best to ignore his warnings, because I was too old to believe in that kind of stuff. It was this arrogance that armored me to Bart and Lionel’s challenge, this silly delivery boy rite-of-passage. But I so wanted them to like me, even though they hardly paid any attention to me. And I wanted Maria to know that I had done it. I could not imagine what would happen after the fact, but I wanted her to know. 

Yet Clyde’s fear was so genuine. I turned corners and made sharp turns down bike lanes, but I could not help to feel as if I were slipping slowly into a quick sand of dread, especially knowing that Randall Fleck and Bobby Finch had possibly ridden these very paths, with the same kind of pie, made perhaps by the same pizza Mr. Comet Pizza himself. Because I knew those names. Everyone knew those names. I don’t recall Bobby Finch much, but his name sounded familiar because when Randall Fleck disappeared, they compared his absence to Bobby’s. I was too young then, as I was at this moment of delivery, to really appreciate the pattern of how close I was to this cycle, this myth. My parents had taken me to the school at night and all the kids played in the surreal version of the playground that we played at just this morning while the cops delivered their notes. That was before we grew up. That was before I developed my pimples and my long nose and my greasy hair. 

I turned onto Aberle Road, and I recall very clearly being relieved to find the neighborhood exactly as boring as all neighborhoods should be, so unlike Clyde’s tale. No ghosts, no hockey-masked men. Not even those pedophile vans. I took my bike down the street, looking up at the ocean of stars above, a view that doesn’t really exist anymore. Then I came to 451 and for a second I thought the guys were playing a joke on me. 

The stupid run down house looked as if it had been set aflame and reduced to a charcoaled version of itself. The grass had turned into crisp, nettle-esque blades. The car had not been moved in ages, surrounded by the reclaimed nature. The house sulked, the eaves of the single rancher like heavy, weary eye brows on windows so dusty as to be one-way, even in darkness. I actually rationalized that there was no way a married couple with two kids could fit comfortably in a house like that, so point against Clyde’s validity. Still, there was something foreboding about the house, as it stood like an animated corpse, washed up and chewed on like a sperm whale that had lost a fight with a giant squid. Something had happened here. One time my uncle’s house had gone into foreclosure and when we came back it looked like Mr. Guthrie’s. So maybe that was it.

Or perhaps it would have been, except for the faint flicker of a lightbulb that swung at the far end of the house, a pendulum akin to an uvula. 

I parked my bike at the edge of the property. It felt rude to drive it across the lawn, not that I had any opportunities to do so. I put my hands in the container, felt the warmth from the pizza box. I looked around at the other houses. They seemed perfectly fine. Sleeping. 

I remembered the operations. Knock on the door, wait a little bit, knock again, receive the cash, count it, make change, wait for the tip. The entire exchange should take no longer than it would take to reach the house. 

To reach the house. 

Maria said if I could do this, I could do anything.

With the pizza balanced on my forklift spread out hands, I advanced through the thicket of overgrowth, over the uneven cobblestones, the tangle of weeds, the smell of rotting vegetables. I was certain that I could see the bent spokes of an abandoned bike, but it was an old model, so it must have been there for a long time. It was hard to think that kids once played on this lawn. 

The porch was no more than a dais, unwalled, no handrail. It was like walking into the maw of a beast, or onto an altar. My footsteps echoed in the empty street. There was a spot that reminded me of Clyde’s advice. A perfect square that I could drop the pie on and run. I could be back on my bike now. But I would know that if I left, then I would have returned to Comet Pizza a liar. I did not want to have a secret with Clyde, one that would eventually reveal that I had failed the rite. 

Balancing the pizza on my hip, I repositioned and rapped on the screen door. There was no doorbell. I waited, leaned to see if I could see inside. I knocked again. A silhouette passed in front of  the bulb. The sound of unlatching several bolts, each metal unlocking sending a shiver down the frame of the rickety door. The door opened and Mr. Guthrie appeared.

I remember him not looking particularly abrasive. Not fowl like, as Clyde had made him seem. He had not a lost eye nor a crooked nose nor an ugly scar. He looked more like a frail scarecrow, a farmer from that famous painting. Lips receded with age, hollows of his eyes from gravity’s curse. Liver spots that could be countries on a map. Mr. Guthrie was just a lonely old man. Simple as that.

“Pizza delivery,” I said, trying to sound cheery. In hindsight I realize how stupidly ingenuine I must have sounded. I repeated the order: “One small cheese pie.”

Mr. Guthrie nodded. He grunted and pushed open the screen door with a skeletal hand and then it was just the two of us, himself in the threshold, a black infinity behind him, me with the jungle of his unkempt lawn behind me. 

“One small cheese pie for Mr. Guthrie?” I said, repositioning myself so that I held the box before me, like a token. 

Mr. Guthrie licked his lips to wet them before speaking. His voice sounded unused, out of tune, as if the internal wiring was rusty. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a money clip. Yellow, cracked thumbnails sifted through the bills. A light flickered behind him, right over his shoulder, at the edge of the darkness. With shaking hands, he offered what I had hoped was the correct amount on the first try, and it was at this precise moment, yes, I remember, that I felt that our interaction had become a group, that it was not just the two of us, that someone had joined. I felt like I was being watched, and a thought flashed within the undercurrent of my psyche that this was still one big joke by the delivery boys. Hazing and all that. That they would pop out of the brush with monster masks. 

Mr. Guthrie handed me the bills. The cash was warm and damp. There were two twenties in there, which was more than enough for the pie. This money made my heart drop. I didn’t have the balance to hold both the pizza and make change, and I didn’t want to be there any longer than I had to. A second light had gone on behind him, two tiny lights as if at the end of a tunnel. A breeze swept by, moving the bent wheel of a broken bike that had become entombed by Mr. Guthrie’s unkempt lawn. Above the rancid odor of rotting vegetables, the smell of something copper carried with it. I got the sudden feeling of being on the precipice of some great void that had swept me, and my legs had a difficult time remaining steady. It felt as if the shoddy cement cube of a porch was miles above the lawn, that I was, like, standing at the edge of a cliff or something. 

Mr. Guthrie stared at me, unblinking, as I tried to make change. 

“Keep it,” he said, “the change.”

“Thank you,” I said, and I felt something stir behind him, responding to my voice. 

When I looked behind his bony shoulder I could make a faint outline of something. Something. That was it. It was human but it wasn’t. It was more like a painting, like something that was turned into human form, like a marble sculpture. The faraway lights turned into tiny jewels. I got the impression of it raising its eyebrows, for some reason. I tried handing Mr. Guthrie the pizza but he did not budge.

“Would you like me to leave it on the porch?” I said, gesturing to a spot, thinking about Clyde.

No! something croaked, but it was underneath the passing tide of a car. 

Mr. Guthrie said, “No. Please.”

“Okay,” I said, and pushed it a little further into his trembling hands. The hands receded. In the corner of my eye something black zipped around the corner. Like a black stray or something. “It’s yours.”

“I’m an old man,” said Mr. Guthrie, his voice craggy. There was a certain surreal quality about him, as if space warped within the aura of his presence, or that whatever lay behind his back knew that it was only a flesh wall between itself and the outside. He continued, his jaw dropping slightly out of sync with his words. “I’m an old man. Can you help an old man? Please.”

I didn’t say anything. Clyde said to just put it on the porch, and I already had the cash.

“Could you help an old man and come inside and put it on my kitchen table?” Said Mr. Guthrie, his wiry frame twisting slightly, the creases of his splotchy, greasy shirt forming an obscure Rorschach simulacrum. 

“Excuse me?”

“Please, I’m an old man. I can hardly lift the box,” he said, the rustle in the wind sounded like come inside and then he said, his voice deeper, more coming from within his frail frame than from just his mouth. “Please.”

A windchime somewhere startled me. I felt something move in accordance with my sudden movement, and jumped to action. Another whistle said come inside again. I think.

“Others have done it,” Mr. Guthrie said, “other young boys.”

I don’t remember exactly when I dropped the pizza box in the corner of the porch, but I do remember, in hindsight, being unsettled. That the world had suddenly become very unsafe, not for greasy losers like me. There was a figure behind Mr. Guthrie, something vague and shapeless, too far for me to see, too enveloped in the blackness of the house. The pungent smell of garlic breath seeped from the cracks in the sheeting, from the black void behind Mr. Guthrie. When I put the boxes in the corner and stood, I saw, maybe, I don’t know. I saw Mr. Guthrie floating several inches off the lip of his front door, his dirty loafers dipping slightly to give the impression of a ballerina on their toes. 

There was a loud noise, a honking of a car or some strong gust of wind, and I left Mr. Guthrie on the porch, walking backwards at first, tripping over the step and into the thicket, grabbing onto the overgrown bike and cutting my hands as I ran across his lawn and hopped onto my own bike. Before kicking off I looked over my shoulder and saw that lone bulb, moving like a pendulum with such force as to be resistant to all logic of gravity. It was swinging like a kid that tries to circulate a swing set with the force of their momentum. On the downswing of the light Mr. Guthrie’s lanky figure appeared underneath it, shoulders hunched, arms as if guarding from something. 

“I’m sorry!” Mr. Guthrie yelled, but I was already speedily away so I couldn’t be sure if it was for me or not. 

I had no idea how out of sorts I was until I returned to the Comet Pizza. Grass stains over my knees, my new Comet Pizza shirt had been chewed by the reclaimed bike on his lawn. I must have scratched my cheek to, for a small curtain of blood now lined down my chin. I parked my bike, walked into the warm glow of the Comet Pizza. 

The others looked up from their magazines. Clyde seemed visibly relaxed. Maria noticed my cut and she offered me a rag, and I hoped that interaction meant more to both of us. 

“How was it?” Said Lionel, counting his tips, not really looking at me.

“You looked like you got chewed on and spit out,” Bart said. 

“Yeah,” I said, and sat down. Someone brought me a slice of pizza. 

Clyde leaned over and whispered, “Did you leave it on the porch?”

I nodded, my mouth chewing the pepperoni and mushroom. “He left a nice tip.”

“He always does,” Bart said, shaking his head. 

“He’ll call again in a couple of weeks?” I asked, wiping my mouth.

Lionel nodded. “Yeah. Listen, I know Clyde tried talking you out of it. Glad that you went through. In the future though, just leave it on the porch and don’t stay for chit-chat.”

“Guy’s got nothing to say anyway,” said Bart. 

On the way out the four of us said goodbye to Maria and went back to our bikes. I noticed a strange, almost black tar smudged on my seat, and Lionel pointed out that a similar smear was on my lower back too. 

“Take a shower, new guy, and see you tomorrow,” he said. 

Before leaving, Clyde approached me again. “Hey,” he said, “did you really leave it on the porch like I asked?”

I nodded. “But not originally though.”

This seemed to shake Clyde, who fell silent. “So, you met him. Did you…see it?”

“It?”

“Mr. Guthrie’s Familiar. What did it look like?”

I shook my head. I wasn’t trying to be coy but it was true. I could quite place what I had seen on Mr. Guthrie’s porch, could not prove exactly if I had seen anything at all. I shook my head and said, “Next time I’m really just going to leave it on the porch. Anyway thanks, Clyde, for the advice.”

“Yeah, sure,” he smiled, seemingly pleased to be validated. It was a feeling that I yearned for too. I felt his eyes trail me as I kicked my bike into gear to follow the others down the road, and then soon it was the four of us riding home, each together, before going our separate ways until tomorrow. 

I don’t really remember Mr. Guthrie calling Comet Pizza much that summer, or at all. I hardly remember the rest of that summer, much in the way that all summers blend when you’re young. I didn’t lose my virginity, hardly had a summer fling. I don’t really remember hanging out with Bart, Lionel, or Clyde much outside of the shop, and Maria and I’s only real interaction was when she handed me a pizza for delivery. It was only a dumb summer job, one that consisted of a bunch of teenagers who hardly knew themselves, buried themselves in magazines and yo-yos and the occasional cigarette to look cool. Mr. Guthrie himself was discovered half a year later in his house, his body reportedly looking like a dropped napkin in the middle of the floor, discovered after the neighbors complained of the rotting smell that had begun to invade the cul-de-sac.

It’s funny how memories like this pop up in the middle of fever dreams, blossoming like stubborn flowers in the snow. Those two kids, Bobby Finch and Randall Fleck, were the only ones that had disappeared from town, so hardly any excuse to fuel the urban legend. But there were no calls. I guess I was the last. I don’t know if Mr. Guthrie’s familiar was real, but the memory feels on the precipice of reality, like how when you’re young you climb because you don’t realize how high you are, or the consequences of falling, and when you think back all you can remember is not how high you were, but how close to the edge you were. Mr. Guthrie was like that, for me, so inconsequential as to be buried in my mind, yet so significant for reasons that I can not as of yet determine.


Glenn Dungan is currently based in Brooklyn, NYC. He exists within a Venn-diagram of urban design, sociology, and good stories. When not obsessing about one of those three, he can be found at a park drinking black coffee and listening to podcasts about murder.


If you would like to be part of the RFM family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines.

If you like dark fiction, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.

“Black Dog” Dark Short Story by Steven French

"Black Dog" Suspense by Steven French

Lucy Miller hurried along the lane, as darkness fell and the hedges on each side seemed to stretch and lean over. Cloud-rags were sweeping across the face of the moon, driven by the chill wind. She shuddered, not just from that wind but also at the thought of Lord Dacre coming up behind her while she helped the cook make gingerbread. With his foul insinuations and hands upon her body… she’d tried to squirm away as he grasped at her skirt and as a result had lost track of how much nutmeg she’d added to the mix. And Mrs Rusbridger always told her to be careful with that particular spice as too much could affect the heart. Still, if the cook hadn’t loudly bustled into the kitchen at that moment with the eggs, Lucy dreaded to think what might have happened. 

Her body shook again as she came to the crossroads and before turning for home she looked up at the night sky in despair. Before she had been taken on as kitchen help she had heard rumours, of course. Her own mother had warned her not to give Lord Dacre any reason to take an interest in her. Not that any ‘reason’ was needed, it seemed. But Lucy also knew full well that if she left she’d have a hard time finding another placement. And she and her mum had had hard times enough these past few years, that was for certain. She shook her head sadly. Her tears wet the dirt by the side of the lane.

As she wiped her face a gap appeared in the clouds and moonlight spilled across the fields and hedges. It washed across the crossroads, revealing a huge beast, so black it seemed to carry the shadows with it. As it came padding towards her Lucy could see that it was a dog with eyes bigger than those of any she’d ever seen and which glowed a fiery red. She took a step back, hoping the creature would pass by, but instead it came up to her and stopped as if waiting for some command. Tentatively, she held out her hand as if it were one of the village dogs she often met on her way home. Its great head nuzzled against her palm, before it gently licked her fingers. Without thinking she threw her arms around the animal’s massive neck and sobbed into its fur. When she’d finished and had wiped her face once more, the dog stepped away and looked at her before turning and walking back towards the mansion she had just left. As the clouds passed over the moon again, the beast was soon swallowed up in the darkness, but before it disappeared beyond the curve in the road, it turned its head. For a moment Lucy could see its red eyes looking back at her.

Bursting through the front door, Lucy could barely get the words out to tell her mother what had happened. 

“Sounds like you just met a barghest,” the older woman told her as she placed a bowl of stew on the table.

Lucy blanched and held onto a chair for support.

“Does that mean I’m to die soon, mum?” she whispered.

Her mother shook her head.

“It’s a harbinger of death, no doubt, but always of some local notable, not of the likes of you and me.”

The next day when Lucy arrived for work she found the other servants gathered outside and talking amongst themselves. 

“Oh Lucy!” Mrs Rusbridger ran to her. “Have you heard? Lord Dacre’s been found dead in his bed. One of the chambermaids hear him ranting in the night, but she was too scared to go and see what was happening. When she went in with his morning tea, well, there he was, as cold and white as the sheets themselves …”

Then she leant in and whispered, “Good riddance, I say.”

Lucy swallowed nervously, then asked, “Do they know what killed him?”

Mrs Rusbridger pointed over to a portly man with large sideburns carrying a leather bag and who was talking to a distinguished looking gentleman. “Dr Brooks there thinks it was some kind of heart spasm, no doubt brought on by overindulgence.”

“But what’s to become of the house? And us? Lord Dacre had no heirs …” Lucy went on.

The cook laid her hand on the young girl’s arm.

“Don’t worry my dear. The magistrate who’s talking with the doctor there has told us there’s a niece a few towns over who’s been sent for. From what I’ve heard say, she’s a fair employer and I’m sure she’ll see us right.”

As Lucy shook her head with worry her eye caught a shape over by the side of the house, half hidden by the shadows cast across the path. Mrs Rusbridger followed her gaze.

“Old Pete the gardener told me there was a large black dog hanging about last night. Fierce it looked, apparently. He went to chase it off, he said, but then it turned and looked at him with these glowing red eyes like it was a demon sent by the devil himself.”

“I don’t think that was the demon, Mrs Rusbridger”, Lucy replied as the magistrate began to address the small crowd.


Steven French is a retired academic who lives in Leeds, West Yorkshire, U.K. He has had a number of short stories and pieces of flash fiction published in venues such as 365Tomorrows, Bewildering Stories, Idle Ink, Liquid Imagination, Literally Stories and elsewhere.


If you would like to be part of the RFM family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines.

If you like dark fiction, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.

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“Love Tokens in the Sunflower Field” Short Story by Billy Stanton

"Love Tokens in the Sunflower Field" Fiction by Billy Stanton

What, in the end, is the difference between a field of sunflowers and a field of brick-built houses? Both live for a while, both eventually die, it’s just a matter of time doling out unequally heaped bowls of itself one to the other to push the whole thing along. The rot’s different with both, sure, but nothing lasts forever. One grows by itself once the seeds have been sown and the other takes a man’s hands a lot of labour to stand tall for its allotted period. Labour and time, those are the things that count.
            Luke Johnson has taken eight pay-packets and two broken love tokens from the field. One is for labour, the other is from time.
            There’s been a lot of anger since it was announced that Wimpey had bought up the field. Some said it was the last beauty spot on the face of the county being levelled; a final dereliction of duty by the local wardens of the greenbelt. But there had been a rickety garage jutting out into the field as long as Jack could remember: two long and low concrete buildings with rusting doors, a swamp of a forecourt and the obliterated chassis of trucks and hatchbacks and the tops of Range Rovers. People are able to overlook ugliness when it suits them. Thirty homes won’t make for a lot more people around. The quiet won’t be too badly broken. The new commuters might even save the train station, a forlorn branch-line stop threatened with closure that the current station master has given up on. The lilacs he planted long ago in the soil boxes have rotted. They stink. A dirty protest against GWR.
            It is only Luke’s second big job on a building site. Times are different now; it used to be that smart lads in the village could become models of social mobility, heading away from the farms for offices in the capitol or the county seat. Parents swore against their offspring having to sweat and suffer like them; but this western Akenfield no longer offers cannon fodder for the plush new industries because there are no plush new industries. No more silver-lit plexiglass lives. Everywhere in the county seems to be on its knees. Luke tried for a job where the last bit of money was flowing. However, he noticed the head of the local branch of the prestigious estate agents wore a signet ring on his little finger and Luke thought that a bad sign. He saw the landowners themselves wearing those sometimes, like they were all in a little cult. Luke supposed they were. The interview was over quickly. The estate agent’s brochures showed in their advertising blather the names of the schools that would have gotten Luke a job if only he could have put them on his CV. Some things have a steel ring around them, just like the city of London.
            Luke counts out time via his labour. Each round of cement mixing, each new foot of stacked bricks or deepness in the foundation holes, has a portion of more-or-less precise minutes or hours fixed to it. When Luke is with the strict workers he doesn’t ever need to look at his watch. When he is with the bad it’s more tricky, but he’s managed to find the rhythms even in their chaos.
            Most the rest of the men roll in in Mercedes and Ford transit vans at around five or six each morning. They come from the cheap hotels in town. Adrift and alone apart from each other, divested of an individual life for long, long stretches and underpaid, they drink and drink all night. They stagger and stumble over the site when they come in. The site managers take lines of cocaine in their jerry-built office to make sure they have the energy to carry on controlling the doing. Sometimes they share.

            But Luke is okay. Okay for now. He has the money and he has the love tokens. He supposed the sunflower field hadn’t always been a sunflower field; long before it had been enclosed, he imagined, it might have been some lover’s glen or meadows, a meeting point for sweethearts just outside the confines of the village proper and on the far side from the old church. It was all fumbling in the long grass back then. Luke had heard old songs on the pubs’ Trad Nights (the area had a history for it; scholars still turned up occasionally); half of them seemed to be about men back from wars at sea or on the land, testing their betrothed’s loyalty in their absence by wearing disguises and making clumsy passes, before revealing their identity by the brandishing of half a broken token of devotion when the woman acquiesced or demurred. One of Luke’s tokens was broken in half in this manner; it was an unimpressive old copper ring, definitely worn not for show but simply for symbolism. It had a simple engraving that ran along and over the split: “When I’m gone from you”. Luke had found both halves buried together when he’d been digging; he assumed the couple had left it in the ground when their had separation ended. He liked that. It was like planting a sunflower seed.
            The other token was a coin, bent inwards on the edge of each side. It had two sets of initials, overlapping in the centre of a love-heart with an arrow shot through it: A.J. and S.H. Luke had seen one like this once in the county museum on a school trip. It had fascinated him because there was nothing on it then but an engraving of a stick figure hanging from a noose, with the label ‘1814’ beneath. He’d never been able to decide on who that souvenir was for.

            Luke treasured these droppings more than the real money he was collecting. He figured that would be the way for most when they dug up something deep and forgotten from the ground of their homestead. Besides, time mattered more to him than labour. He’d be labouring his whole life, no doubt, except for when things were really rough. But the labour would never be for him. He helped build nice houses for other people; nice even though they didn’t have a proper garden in order to make room for more plots on the development. Someone would build him a home or had already built it, but it would be smaller and cheaper and nastier than these. That was the way it went. But no-one ever had enough time, right at the final point, when all that labouring for others had been got through.
            The love tokens were a sign that this village, maybe itself on its own long and slow deathbed with its family nowhere to be found to help support it, had held glorious life in its allotted period. Once, Luke had read that God was spread in all things; that he was in man, earth, bud, branch, cattle, beam and bell. Most people would agree that God is in a sunflower, but not in a Wimpey home. Luke wasn’t so sure of that. It all seemed much of a same to him. Men might hide that truth sometimes, but the love tokens were a reminder. There were currents of life and light beneath everything. That was pure religion; a godless God or millions, billions of Gods. Older than Christianity, that way of seeing things. On an evening a few years ago, he’d been watching a documentary on television and when the presenter started talking about “history buried in the ground”, the light that always turned itself on banged itself instead hard three times against the side of his parent’s bookcase. Knock, knock, knock. Luke thought maybe he’d find a third token, too. Things move in synchronicity in that way. They have their own strange rhythms.
            Dig for Victory. That was a war slogan, emblazoned across different posters. There was a stark sepia-toned one with a boot digging a spade into a mound of earth, a spade that stood true and straight and proud to suggest to the pliant observer a nation remaining resilient; there was one with a beaming healthy farm worker in white shirt-sleeves puffing on a pipe and carrying a laden bucket of vegetables; there was another showing the back of a small child in sunhat and short trousers carrying a spade and redolent more of train company adverts for the seaside than the struggles of wartime. Luke didn’t like any of them much. The first seemed almost fascistic; the red background and the earth made him think of that ‘blood and soil’ Nazi line, which wasn’t helped by the man’s footwear being reminiscent of a jackboot. The second’s farmhand didn’t look like any that Luke had ever seen; he was a pink-cheeked gentleman in dress-up, keeping the best produce for himself. The third seemed to suggest the imminent re-introduction of child labour and the final puncturing of all daydreaming. But he liked the slogan- or, at least, he had come to, once he’d managed to shorn it of its propaganda and put it in a new place.
            Dig for Victory. Aye, he could do that. He could keep on doing that. He could go on finding things. He had to. As long as he could work out what victory actually meant in the final reckoning. That was the hard part. Harder than it had been for decades, probably. That would take real time and real labour and that pure religion.


Billy Stanton is a young working-class writer and filmmaker based in London, and originally from Portsmouth. His story ‘Screwfix’ was recently published in ‘New Towns’ (Wild Pressed Books). His short fiction has also appeared in Horla, The Chamber, Tigershark and (soon) Wyldblood magazines. His latest short film ‘Noli is currently in post-production. His blog can be found at: steelcathedrals.wordpress.com


If you would like to be part of the RFM family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines.

If you like dark fiction, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.

“Thy Kingdom Come” Short Story by B. Craig Grafton

"Thy Kingdom Come" Fiction by B. Craig Grafton

“How much farther Grandpa?”

“It should be up ahead just a little ways. Not too much farther.”

He wondered if his grandfather could remember. If they were even on the right road at all. After all, his grandfather was eighty eight and getting forgetful at times.

He had the job now of looking after his grandfather since his father had passed away last month.  He had driven all the way down here from Hoffman Estates to this god forsaken rural community in west central Illinois that mockingly called itself Forgottonia, nothing but dried up little towns and field after field of corn and beans. He had  gotten his grandfather from the Happy Endings Nursing home, and now was taking him out, per his request, for a nostalgic trip down memory lane, a ride in the country to see the old family farm where he had grown up. He had never been there so he was relying on his grandfather to show him the way.

They had driven for quite some distance in silence when his grandfather suddenly spoke up and said,  “Stop. Stop here please.”

He brought the car to a stop in the middle of nowhere on a dusty gravel road.

“Grandpa there’s nothing but that old abandoned building over there. That can’t be where you grew up. That doesn’t even look like a farm to me.”

“It’s not. That’s where I went to school.”

“In that little dilapidated old falling down building? You’re kidding me.”

“Graduated eighth grade there.”

He knew his grandfather had never graduated high school. There was no need to then if one was going to be a farmer and his grandfather had been one all his life. When he got too old to farm his father had tried to get him to come live with him in Barrington. But Grandpa refused. Consequently his father trekked down here to  ‘Forgottonia’ once a month to visit him and now that responsibility fell on him.

Do you want to get out and go take a look Grandpa.”  He asked more out of politeness than practicality for he knew his grandfather would say no since he was semi mobile and they hadn’t brought his wheelchair.

No, that’s okay.”

Well tell me about it then Grandpa.” He knew his grandfather was dying to tell him. After all that was the whole purpose of this trip to begin with, to harken back. 

Okay, I will,” he said with a smile upon his face. “See how the school is oblong shaped. See the  windows there only being on the east side, the whole east side. There’s no windows on the west. That’s to avoid the afternoon sun making the place too hot. Morning sun on the east side wasn’t so intense and let in enough light so we could do our lessons.”

Well that makes sense,” he commented, beginning to take an interest in this now.  “How many kids went there Grandpa?”

“Forty give or take a few.  First through eighth grades.”

What’s that metal thing sticking up out of the ground there?”  he asked, pointing to it.

“Oh that’s the pump. That’s where we got our water. Drank it straight out of the ground. Had a long wooden trough in front of it to prevent a mud puddle from forming under the spout.”

“You mean you didn’t have running water inside back then?”

“Yep. That’s exactly what I mean.  Didn’t have flush toilets either. Just kind of had outhouses inside the schoolhouse.”

“You’re putting me on Grandpa.”

“No I’m not. When you came in the front door you entered the cloak room where we hung our coats and left our muddy boots but off to the right was the boys room and off to the left the girls. No flush toilet. No wash sink either. Just had a stool over a hole in the ground. Teacher used to dump chemicals down it every so often to keep the stink down.”

“Suppose you didn’t have electricity back then either huh Grandpa.”

“Yep. Didn’t have central heat back then either. Had a wood burning stove. The back room of the school was the woodshed. Kind of got a little cold in the winter at times. Had to keep your coat on all day.”

His curiosity was definitely aroused now. He wanted to see for himself so he said, “Mind if I get out and go  take a look around and in the window Grandpa.”

“Don’t believe me do ya?”

“I do. I just want to see that’s all.”

“Okay go ahead then.”

He got out of the car and entered the school yard.

“There used to be a couple of swing sets and a slide over there,” his grandfather hollered  pointing to the east side of the school.

“Where there’s none here now,” he hollered back.

“You’ll see the old footings where they used to be. Take a look.”

He went to the old well first and tried the pump handle. It was frozen in time and didn’t move. The ten foot long or so wooden trough was there just like his grandfather said, rotting away. It was hard for him to believe they drank unfiltered water straight from the ground. No government regulations back then evidently.

He saw the concrete footings that once had anchored the swings and slide in place. Someone must have stolen them for scrap metal, he thought.

He went up to the window and pressed his nose against it.  There was nothing in there. Whatever had been there was long gone. Probably someone had stolen all the old desks too, he thought and sold them as antiques. He could see a hole in the wall  where the smoke stack used to be. To the front he could see the open door that led to the cloak room but he couldn’t see the doors to the inside outhouses. He wanted to see them.

He went around to the back of the building first though to the door to the back room. It was falling off its hinges and as he swung it open it fell completely off. There in the back were some old broken damaged desks that evidently no one thought worth stealing. The kind that had an inkwell in them, no ball point pens back then. The kind where one was attached to the one in front of it so that the boy behind the girl could stick her pigtails in his inkwell.  There was also a pile of cut wood. He could tell varmints had been living in it; their dried droppings were everywhere. He went around to the front door, tried it, but it didn’t budge. Oh well forget it. He’d seen enough. He better get going and take Grandpa to his old farm house.

“Well it was just like you said Grandpa,” he informed him as he got in the car and started off down the road to yesteryear.

“It was called Kingdom School,” his grandfather announced.

“Kingdom? Why that Grandpa?” He knew his grandfather was having a good time and so was he now.

“The original man that owned the land here back in the 1830’s was a some kind of disposed or deposed royalty from England. So he came to this country to establish his own little kingdom right here in Illinois.  Story is that he actually called his farm his ‘Kingdom.’ Back in those days there were no public school systems but everyone wanted a school and since he owned most of the land in the center of the township he agreed to give up that little tract there for a schoolhouse since it was centrally located. It pained him though to part with part of his ‘Kingdom.’ So he put a clause in the deed that if the ground wasn’t used as school, it would revert back to him, or his heirs, if he was dead.  The locals jokingly named the school  Kingdom since it was located in his ‘Kingdom’. The school was closed back in the fifties when they started busing the kids to school in town here. Anyway the school was supposed to go back to this supposed land baron. Course he had been dead some seventy years by then and nobody knew who his heirs were. That’s why the school’s just sat there and fallen apart. Nobody’s ever come forth claiming to be an heir.”

They rode in silence for a while.

“How much further Grandpa?’

“Not much.  I used to walk to school everyday. There was no bus service back then you know.”

He drove on a ways then,  “Slow down, it’s just up ahead.”

“I don’t see anything Grandpa. You sure?”

“Slow down. Stop right here at the intersection.’  

He did as ordered. Again they were all alone out there in the middle of nowhere by themselves.

“There’s just a cornfield here Grandpa.”

“Well it was here. Right on the southeast corner here. That big corporate farm I sold out to must have torn everything down. Aren’t many family farms left any more.”

The grandfather wiped his eyes, took in and blew out a deep breath, straightened himself upright. “Well we might as well go back now.”

They got back to the nursing home. He helped his grandfather inside.

“Grandpa, I had a good time today but I better get going now. I got a long drive ahead of me. I’ll try to get back sooner next time.”

“Your father came once a month you know.”

“Yah I know but he never took you out to see the old place did he?”

“No, he thought it would be too hard on me. Thank you. I really do appreciate you doing that for me.”

”Oh you’re more than welcome Grandpa.”

“You know next time I think I’ll have you wheel me up to the window there and help me stand up so I can take a look inside. Okay?”

“Okay Grandpa we’ll do that,” He went up to his grandfather and gave him a big hug, fighting back the  tears welling up inside him.

The next time came one month to the day. They went to the school again and his grandfather got his look inside. He died the next

He cremated his grandfather per his prearranged instructions and buried his ashes next to those of his grandmother in the little burg there. Didn’t bury all of them though. No he held some back and scattered them at  Kingdom School. Did that just by himself as he said goodbye to his Grandfather.


Mr. Grafton is a retired attorney. His books have been published by Two Guns Publishing.


“Cane Pole” Short Story by Alan Caldwell

It was the first real warm Sunday in April. The Boy thought fish might rise and bite today. The crick was cold and the fish would never bite till the first warm day in April. The preacher had warned about fishing on the Sabbath, but the Boy couldn’t get away from his chores any other day. He sometimes couldn’t even make time on a Sunday. He chuckled about the preacher, and about the image of an ox in a ditch. He wondered if an ox could pull a plow like a mule did.

He went to the barn to retrieve his pole and tackle, and the Hills Brothers coffee can filled with black worms, brown leaves, and black dirt.. The boy wished he had sifted the rafts of the branches for pennywinkles but he hadn’t had time. He also wished he had some catalpa worms or drone bee larvae, but he supposed he would have to make do with what he had.

The cane rested on the seal over the barn door. Some kept their cane pole leaning in a corner, but the Boy knew better. They were best lain flat so as not to warp. He had put up a strong and supple one last summer to cure, and it was ready now, the color of clover honey and almost 10 feet long.

The boy crossed the terraced field and made his way down to the waters.

The boy knew that the crick widened as it flowed, and the eddied pools that waited half a mile away held bream (brim,) blue on the back and red on the belly. He could taste them as surely as he thought of them. He could taste the flour, and the pepper, and the lard, and the corn dodgers the Mother spooned into the crackling grease.

The maternal Uncle taught the boy where and how to fish. And although he didn’t mind fishing alone, he missed the Uncle. The Uncle passed last spring. The Boy could still hear the Uncle cough and still see the bloody sputum on the white handkerchief he kept in the bib of his Duck Head overalls. The Boy didn’t mind fishing alone, but he missed the Uncle, even though he was glad he had finally stopped coughing.

The Boy’s Father didn’t fish and he didn’t cough, but he had died anyway,  just 3 months ago. He didn’t suffer like the Uncle. “Time and chance,” the Boy thought.  He was eating his tomato soup and cornbread and just fell from his chair, dead before he hit the plank floor.  The doctor called it a widow maker, a heart failure, the same doctor who couldn’t even stop a cough. Sometimes the boy thought physicians and preachers were just guessing.

But the Uncle had taught the Boy to fish and the Father had taught the boy to be small, silent … invisible, cause you he was less likely to beat what he didn’t notice.  And now they both were gone and the Boy had learned all his lessons well.

The Boy extended the cane and dipped the struggling worm in the eddy. He employed neither bobber nor weight, but used the cane’s tip to move the bait up and down and ease it closer to the opposing bank.  The line swirled and then went taut. The Boy set the hook and eased the struggling fish out of the water and worked the cane under his right arm and slid his catch back to his waiting hands.

The Boy gently removed the barbed hook and marveled at the colors he saw, every slant of light a revelation. Then he slid the now-subdued fish back into the stream.  Though he didn’t know why, the Uncle had always freed the first, and the Boy knew he would always do the same. Then the boy began to cry as he had not done since he learned to be small, silent, and invisible, and the tears flowed like the waters of that mountain stream.


Alan Caldwell is a veteran teacher and a new author. He has recently been published in Southern Gothic Creations, Deepsouth Magazine, The Backwoodsman Magazine, and oc87 Recovery Diaries.