Some words are born in shadows.
Some tales told only in whispers.
Under the paper thin veneer of our sanity is a world that exists. Hidden just beyond in plain sight, waiting to consume you should you dare stray from the street-lit paths that sedate our fears.
For centuries the Black Room has stored stories of these encounters, suppressing the knowledge of the rarely seen. Protecting the civilised world from its own dark realities.
The door to the Black Room has once again swung open to unleash twenty four masterful tales of the macabre from the twisted minds of a new breed of horror author.
The Black Room holds many secrets.
Dare you enter… one final time?
That Thing I Did - Tracy Fahey
Eating The Dream - K. A. Laity
A Clear Day In A Season Of Storms - Simon Avery
The Hanging Boy - Gary McMahon
Mam's Girl - J. L. George
Tears Of Honey - John McNee
Decipher - Daniel Marc Chant
Tap, Tap... - Marie O'Regan
Black Silk - Benedict J. Jones
Dragged Down - Ramsey Campbell
Palace Of The Damned - C. L. Raven
Brooks Pond - Mark West
Planning Permission - Hannah Kate
Shrivelled Tongues Of Dead Horses - Eric Hofstatter
Death Wish - Margot Halgadottir
Size Isn't Everything - James Everington
Pain Has A Voice - Stephen Bacon
Swimming Out To Sea - Penny Jones
Reanimation Channel - Mark Cassell
Craft Ail - Duncan Bradshaw
Dr Zwigli's Last Paper - Elizabeth Davis
Laurel - Terry Grimwood
Tide Will Tell - V. H. Leslie
The Last Horror Story - J. R. Park
Plus a prologue and epilogue by Tracy Fahey & J. R. Park
Introduction by Michael David Wilson
Afterword by Jim (Ginger Nuts Of Horror) Mcleod
The book is available from Amazon:
This started in February with an email from Tracy Fahey, a great writer herself who also happens to be my FCon disco-buddy, inviting me to contribute a story to the anthology. Since I hadn't written a short since August 2016 (having spent the remainder of 2016 writing The Factory and all of 2017 working on the thriller novel) and because it's always nice to be asked, I readily agreed. That night I had the germ of an idea, which quickly fleshed itself out and, all excited, I started work on it the next day, finishing four days later on my birthday.
I thoroughly enjoyed working on the piece, especially since the process neatly fell into the 'fortnight off' I was taking from the novel. I submitted the third draft to the NSFWG writing group and their enthusiasm for it (and some great comments) bolstered my confidence (so thanks for that, my friends).
How could I ever
forget? The Witches Forest
was on the hill outside of town, well off the beaten track and bordered by farm
fields. It was only maybe an acre or so
but incredibly dense and if you stood outside of it - as we’d done one summers
day - you could see barely twenty feet into it.
Once inside the visibility was shorter, made worse by how closely the
trees were packed together. There were
rumours and local legends, as always happens with places like this, but the key
one concerned a witch who’d lived in a nearby shepherds cottage and lured many
of the children of Gaffney to the forest where she’d performed unspeakable acts
on them.
“We went one
summer,” Pete said, leaning his elbows on the table and looking directly at Jody,
“me, Andy here and three others and walked up and down in that forest all
day. And didn’t see anything.”
“Until it was
getting dark,” I said.
Now Jody
leaned forward. “What happened?”
“We were in
the middle of the forest,” said Pete, his voice dropping. The pub noise seemed to go quieter too, even
though we had this part of the bar to ourselves. “We were all knackered, tired and thirsty and
sweaty and grumpy as hell. So we decided
to head home but it got dark quick in those trees and pretty soon we were
stumbling around in dusk.”
I shivered,
remembering the sensation. Simon glanced
at me, nodded his head then looked back at Pete who told the story so
well. “We were disorientated, I mean it
should have been really easy to find our way out, you know, it wasn’t that
big. But we couldn’t. Then we heard someone singing.”
“Singing?”
asked Jody.
“Yeah, some
kind of old folk song, I’d never heard anything like it. The five of us were shit scared, though we
didn’t admit it to each other. For some
reason, we moved towards the sound and although we tried to be quiet, there was
so much wood and bracken about, we made as much noise as a marching band. But the singing carried on and we came to
this weird little hollow with no trees none of us remembered seeing before and
someone was in there.”
Jody’s eyes
were wide. Simon was watching Pete
carefully, as if waiting for a punchline I knew would never come.
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