David C. Hughes, Writer

“For the LORD your God will bless you in all your harvest and in all the work of your hands, and your JOY will be complete." –Deuteronomy 16:15

Archive for the tag “Spooky stories”

Show-n-Tell (Part 2 of 2)

“Who wants to go first?” Mrs. Hoary finally asked after a morning of eternal delay. Thirty-one hands shot into the air and thirty fell with a groan when the teacher chose Mary Lou Greebe. Daren sighed. Mary Lou was always first and her “tells,” if one could call them that, were always dumb. And not once did the teacher punish her for lying.

Until today.

Mrs. Hoary sent her to the corner for telling the class how a flood had wiped out her house last Friday. A far-fetched story, especially since it hadn’t rained a single drop for two weeks. Daren laughed to himself as Mary Lou slinked into the corner, remembering all those other times he’d filled the same space. He knew how Mary Lou felt—confused, angry, ashamed.

“Why does everyone always pick on me?” he’d once demanded from deep in the corner.

“Because you’re a storyteller,” Mrs. Hoary had answered. “A little fibber.” She didn’t realize that kids liked him even less when he didn’t tell stories.

But now it was Mary Lou’s turn to splash salt water on the cinder blocks. He smiled.

One after another of Daren’s classmates took the spotlight in front of the room. Warren Roe showed off his fossil collection, grinning non-stop at the “oohs” and “ahs” as he held up trilobites, brachiopods, petrified coral, and crinoid stems imprinted in the black shale. Marcy Weaver told a wicked cool story of how her cat spit up a fur ball. “It was awesome,” she insisted. Kathy Myers passed around some homemade cookies that made Daren want to spit up his own fur ball.

While the cookies progressed around the room, Tree Trunk, hand covering his right eye, snuck into the classroom like a gorilla tip-toeing through a church service. Mrs. Hoary slayed the roving beast for being tardy by taking away his turn at Show-n-Tell. He spent the rest of the time moping at his desk, sucking down Kathy Myers’ cookies as if they were actually edible.

Finally Daren’s turn came. He scooped up the shoebox and bounded to the front of the room.

“I got this yesterday.” Daren removed a fist-sized wedge of white marble from the shoebox. He held it up. “It’s a piece of a gravestone, see?” He pointed to the weathered characters etched onto its surface. “Says ‘BORN 17’ and the rest is gone, but it’s old for sure.”

Daren smiled nervously at Mrs. Hoary. She leaned forward in her chair, shoulders raised, mouth scrunched into an expression that said, “Be careful, Daren Lloyd Jensen.” He knew that look well, understanding he had little room to blur the boundaries of truth, despite his excitement. You must show them to change them, the old man had said. Daren refocused his attention on his wide-eyed classmates and continued.

“And what’s more …” he took a breath. “It’s magic.”

Mrs. Hoary sat back with a huff. Her mouth fell open. A buzz spun around the room.

“This rock can make all my dreams come true,” Daren continued. “All I have to do is wish, and poof! I get what I want.”

Melissa Rogers raised her hand slightly. “How do you know, Daren?” she asked, her voice soft and quivery. “How do you know it will make all your dreams come true?”

“‘Cuz an old man in the woods told me so. He said this was his stone, but I could have a piece of it if I wanted.” You must show them. Daren looked at his feet. “And because of the snake.”

“Snake?” Melissa said, squirming.

Daren glanced at Mrs. Hoary. Her face radiated the color of cherry Kool-Aid. He redoubled his effort to keep all exaggeration out of his story, focusing only on the truth.

“Yeah, a snake,” he said, looking back at Melissa’s freckled, questioning face. “On my way home last night, I saw a garter snake all squished on the road. So I pulled this stone out of my duffel bag and said, ‘I wish this snake were alive,’ and poof! it puffed up and crawled away. Never did catch ‘im, though.”

“Daren Lloyd Jensen!” Mrs. Hoary screamed, slamming a fist onto the desk. “You are lying!”

“But … but I can show—”

“No!” she roared, standing now. “You’ve shown us quite enough already, young man. You’ve had your warnings and I assume you’ve had your fun, but it’s time you learned a lesson called ‘telling the truth.’ I cannot believe …”

His teacher’s words clattered like hail against his eardrums, but he didn’t listen. Why doesn’t she believe me? Tears trickled down his flaming cheeks. I am telling the truth. And it was the truth. The snake did crawl away, escaping into the weeds. When he arrived home, his Mom had served pot roast and red potatoes—just what he’d wished for. And his Dad had even bought him a new pair of Nike Bruin lowtops, exactly what he had wanted. Plus, he’d finished all his math homework. In fact, he’d completed all the exercises in his math book, to the last page, and he understood everything. It was magic. Good magic. So how come no one believed? No one ever believed.

“… now, young man.” Mrs. Hoary pointed, not at the corner, but at the door.

“Wha—?”

“To the office. Go! And take that silly rock with you.”

Mary Lou Greebe snickered. Melissa Rogers shrank in her seat. As Daren stomped out the door, he caught Tree Trunk staring at his shoebox, his right eye now calm. His menacing grin had returned.

 

***

 

Mr. Harper, East Meadows Elementary School principal, sentenced Daren to a half-day suspension.

“And tomorrow,” the principal said, picking up the phone. “We’re going to have a nice little chat with your parents.”

Daren sank deeper into the black vinyl chair, hugging the shoebox to his chest, and watched Mr. Harper’s fingers pound out his home phone number on the buttons. He made a wish. … Darn, he thought, as Mr. Harper caught the phone cradle before it slid off the desk.

A puzzled expression washed over the principal’s face.

“Told you it was true,” Daren mumbled.

“What’s that?” Mr. Harper stammered, then, “Uh, Mrs. Jensen? Um, we’re sending your son home right now. … No, nothing like that, just a disciplinary measure. …”

 

***

 

Daren’s rear-end tingled in anticipation as he trudged toward home. Normally a half-day off would be groovy, but now all he could think about was survival. “I didn’t lie,” he mumbled, holding the shoe box tightly to his chest. “I—”

Something slammed into him from behind. Daren hit the blacktop hard, sliding on his stomach as a crushing weight fell onto his back. “Hi, twerp,” Tree Trunk wheezed.

“Get … off … of … me!” Daren panted. Gravel pressed into his chest. His ribs groaned.

“Ooh, temper, temper,” Tree Trunk said. “I’ll get off as soon as you give me that neat-o rock of yours.”

“Wha—?” Daren gasped. “What rock?”

“This one.” Snickering, Tree Trunk shoved the piece of marble into Daren’s face, clobbering the bridge of his nose. “Guess I really didn’t need to ask for it, since you threw it on the ground.”

Daren squirmed and kicked, blood pouring from his nostrils, but the massive weight pinning him to the ground wouldn’t budge.

“Finders keepers, losers weepers. Ain’t that right, twerp.”

“No!” Hot tears merged with the blood on the asphalt.

Tree Trunk snorted. “Now maybe all my wishes’ll come true. For once.” The weight lifted, leaving Daren lying in the bully’s shadow. He looked up just in time to see Tree Trunk tuck the stone under his shirt. “Thanks, twerp.”

“It won’t work for you, jerk wad,” Daren sobbed. “It only works for me!”

“Uh-huh. Keep yapping, twerp. Maybe someday someone will actually believe you. Not today, though.”

The bully tromped up the road. Daren raised himself onto his knees, gasping for breath as his archenemy just walked away with his stone. All his anger and frustration boiled to a festering head. He was tired of being Tree Trunk’s punching bag, fed up with stolen lunches and sick of dealing with the Charles Atlas wannabe trudging away from him right now. Three strikes and you’re out. But this time it wouldn’t be Daren Lloyd Jensen. Oh, no. Not this time.

“Hey, Parker!” Daren yelled.

Tree Trunk spun around.

“Yeah,” Daren said, choking back his tears. “Yeah, you dork. I’m gonna make a wish, something I’ve been wishing for, for a long, long time. I’m gonna show you.”

The color drained completely out of Tree Trunk’s face. “But … but you can’t,” the bully sputtered. “I got the stone.”

“And I told you it won’t work for you.” Daren’s eyes darted to the lump under Tree Trunk’s T-shirt. “When are people gonna learn to believe me?” He stretched his hand toward the bully’s torso.

The T-shirt stretched away from Tree Trunk’s stomach. His mouth dropped open and his right eye exploded again into a raging twitch. He tore at the bulge under his shirt.

“Stop it!” he screeched as his T-shirt flew up around his head. The piece of marble thumped to the road and slid toward Daren.

Daren snatched it up. “And now for my wish.”

He looked at Tree Trunk …

“No! Jensen—”

… made a wish …

“I believe you! Don’t do—”

… and laughed.

 

***

 

Show-n-Tell the next day was like watching oil turn into asphalt. Mary Lou Greebe told how her father had replaced a fuse in their downstairs fuse box with a penny. Marcy Weaver droned on and on about feline grooming. The only break in the monotony was Kathy Myers’ surprisingly good date squares, which she later confessed were made by her mother. Warren Roe forgot his fossils, making the entire experience a living H-E-double toothpicks. While one after another of Daren’s classmates put each other to sleep, Mrs. Hoary sat quietly at her desk and smiled. How does she do that? he thought.

Daren looked around the room, counting the number of classmates who’d yet to share their trifling tales. His eyes stopped on Roy “Tree Trunk” Parker’s empty desk. He hadn’t bothered showing up today, and Daren had heard rumors he’d never made it home from school yesterday, either. Poor Roy, Daren thought as he walked to the front of the room, cradling the orange-and-white shoebox in his scraped-up arms. Poor, poor Roy.

Mrs. Hoary’s smile faded when Daren placed the familiar shoebox on the podium and opened the lid. “Today I have something really cool,” he said. “Not a magic rock, but something I found yesterday that everyone will believe.”

He reached into the box and pulled out a gigantic bullfrog …

With a twitching right eye.

 

—THE END—

 

Copyright ©2015 by David C. Hughes

Show-n-Tell (Part 1 of 2)

“No lie? It’ll make all my wishes come true?” the boy asked, turning the white stone over in his trembling hands. When he looked up again, the silver-haired man had vanished, leaving him alone in the darkening woods.

“Mister?” he called. Night sounds pressed in and panic wrapped its icy tentacles around his stiffening body. “Mister?” The boy dumped the chunk of marble into his duffel bag and snatched up his books. Hiding out in the woods had been a last resort—he’d really had no choice. He didn’t think the bully from school would chase him this far into the forest, but if he did—

A branch cracked. A frog chirruped. Something swished through the ferns, brushing his pant leg. The boy bolted, adrenaline carrying him out of the woods and into the unsettled night.

 

***

 

“Morning, Mom.” Daren Lloyd Jensen skidded across the dining room floor in his socks and plopped down at the breakfast table across from his little sister, Karen.

“You’re up early today, too, huh?” Daren’s mom removed a steaming pot from the stove and brought it to the table. She dumped a baseball-sized wad of oatmeal into his bowl. “Don’t tell me you’ve caught your sister’s insomnia.”

“Naw, I just couldn’t sleep anymore. I had a wicked cool dream last night.” He sprinkled a snowstorm of sugar over the pasty cereal. “Besides, I can’t wait for Show-n-Tell.”

His mother’s forehead crinkled. Her smile drooped. “You had another one of those dreams again? … You okay?”

Daren nodded, stabbing the oatmeal with a spoon.

“They aren’t real. You know that, right?”

Another nod.

“Because if you can’t tell the difference, then you’re staying home from school today. I don’t want to get another call from your principal—”

“No way, Mom. I’m not missing today’s Show-n-Tell.” Daren shook his head.

His mom tapped the side of the pot with her long fingernails. “Okay,” she finally said, “but mind your imagination today. Please?”

“I will.”

With a sigh she returned to the kitchen.

He didn’t mind the vivid dreams, but his parents and the folks at school considered them troublesome because he was notorious for mixing them up with reality. “Overactive imagination,” the school nurse had said. Regardless, Daren enjoyed the dreams—they gave him good Show-n-Tell material when he was in a pinch. Today, though, he was not in a pinch.

This morning he had something even better to show and tell, something real. And maybe, just maybe, the other kids in Mrs. Hoary’s third grade class would stop teasing him about his skinny legs and curly hair. Instead, they would show him some respect and listen to what he had to say. The silver-haired man had told him the stone would help.

But you must remember, he’d said as he handed Daren the chunk of marble. Try as you might, you cannot wish another person’s thoughts to be one with your own. Thoughts make the person, and stubborn thoughts lead to stubborn people. You must show them to change them.

Today he would show them for sure.

Something hit Daren in the forehead. He scowled. One of his sister’s oatmeal-covered raisins slip down his nose and dropped into his lap.

“Don’t get in trouble again,” Karen scolded. “‘Cuz when you’re rotten, you put Mom and Dad in a real bad mood.”

“Do not!”

“Do too!”

He flicked the raisin off his pants and made a face at his sister. The little snot ignored him. That is, until he slid an orange and white shoebox onto the table.

“What’s that?” she asked, straightening up.

Daren shrugged. “What’s it look like, stupid? It’s a shoebox.”

“But what’s in it?”

“Nothing.”

Karen squinted. “C’mon, you dork, tell me!”

Daren swept his eyes around the dining room and settled them back on his sister. “Promise not to tell Mom?”

She nodded vigorously and leaned in.

“Okay. It’s a cut-off human head I found rolling around in your closet—”

“Mom!” she bellowed. “Daren’s lying again!”

Daren displayed a half-chewed mouthful of oatmeal.

“Oh gross,” she yelled. “And he’s being—”

“Shut up,” he said. “Or I’ll turn you into a sightless, yellow Amazon frog. With zits.” His threat hushed his sister in mid-tattle; she closed her mouth with a pop. “You don’t want to be turned into a frog, do you? Especially a gnarly, yellow one.”

“You can’t do that.”

“Are you sure?”

“No,” she said, dropping her eyes. “Uh-uhn.”

“Good.”

Karen slid off her chair and shuffled into the kitchen. “I don’t feel too good, Mama,” she pouted.

Daren snickered. He sucked down the rest of the oatmeal and chased it with a big glass of orange juice. After grabbing his nifty Evel Knievel lunchbox from the fridge, he grabbed his duffel bag, scooped up the shoebox and zipped out the front door before his mom could smack him for not brushing his teeth. He was on his way to Show-n-Tell and nothing could stop his rise to fame, glory and acceptance.

 

***

 

Show-n-Tell—the high point of the day, and the only reason he came to school at all. Yep, if only they’d do away with reading, writing, social studies, math, science, and gym, the rest of the day would be perfect.

Daren tossed his duffel bag and lunch pail into the coat rack outside his homeroom. He tried the classroom door. Locked. “Dang it,” he said, voice echoing down the empty hallway. Mr. Williams, the janitor, hadn’t come around yet to open the rooms. He sat on the floor in front of the coat rack and rested the shoebox in his lap. It felt like a present waiting to be opened. He hooked a finger under the lid, pulled up—

“Hi, twerp,” boomed a voice from far above. It wasn’t God. No, it was just the opposite. Daren snapped the lid shut and clutched the box to his chest.

Two untied Keds, worn and frayed, stopped three feet away. Daren looked up. And up and up … past the sneakers … past the mustard-yellow corduroys with holes in the knees … past the faded blue T-shirt … past the thick neck … and up into the two cold, black eyes of Roy “Tree Trunk” Parker, East Meadows Elementary School’s resident bully.

“You know the rules,” the tormenter snarled. His lips tightened into a menacing grin. His right eyelid twitched once, twice. “Hand it over, twerp.”

A gurgle rose from Daren’s throat. He couldn’t move. A small group of kids stopped fifty feet down the hallway. They didn’t come any closer. They never did. He hated this daily ritual, hated himself for putting up with it and, above all, hated the shameful waste of human flesh towering over him, threatening to stomp him like an ant if he didn’t submit.

“Never mind,” Tree Trunk said, stretching out an arm the size of an Easter ham. “I’ll help myself.” He plucked Daren’s Evel Knievel lunch pail from the coat rack, flung it open and rooted through it like a hog sniffing for truffles.

“Egg salad again?” he snorted. “Tell your Mom you want liverwurst tomorrow. With brown mustard and a pickle.” He squished the plastic bag containing the sandwich into his pants pocket. “Got it, twerp?”

Daren didn’t answer.

“Didn’t you hear me, twerp?” Tree Trunk slammed Daren’s lunch pail against a coat hook, smashing a deep dent into Evel’s triumphant face.

Daren winced.

The bully threw the misshapen lunchbox on the floor and kicked it down the hall. It slid past the growing crowd of students and banged into the wall behind them. “Liverwurst. With brown mustard and a pickle. Capiche?

“Yes,” Daren squeaked. “I got it.”

“Good. Now what’s that?” Tree Trunk pointed to the shoebox. Daren squeezed it tighter.

“None of your business,” he muttered.

Tree Trunk winced. “Wrong-o, twerp,” he said, reaching for the box. “Everything’s my business around here.”

“No.” The word just spilled out. Daren’s bowels turned to liquid, his face ignited and his fingertips went numb. He stared into Tree Trunk’s face, fixing his gaze on the twitching right eye. Daren held his breath and made a wish. The weight inside the shoebox shifted, clunking to one side. Tree Trunk hesitated and his foul grimace shrank to an O of surprise. The bully stepped backward.

“No, no, no!” he cried. “I’ll kill you, Jensen. I’ll kill you!”

A gasp swept through the growing circle of classmates as Tree Trunk’s eye exploded into jackhammer convulsions. His look of surprise collapsed to horror, and his lungs bellowed a gut-wrenching scream. The bully stumbled, turned away from his prey, burst through the ringside crowd, and rumbled down the hall, crying—really crying.

The circle of students drifted apart with little more than a murmur of disbelief.

Yeah, believe it, Daren wanted to say. Believe it all. Despite the knot in his stomach and his trembling hands, he felt good. Great, in fact. Show-n-Tell would be excellent today. No doubt about that. He stood up just as Mr. Williams arrived at the door and unlocked it. Daren retrieved his smashed lunch pail, returned to his homeroom and sat down at his desk with the shoebox in his lap.

And waited.

(continued)

 

Copyright ©2015 by David C. Hughes

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