The Hitchhiker

A creepy short story

Image by Nils from Pixabay

He walked alone on the road ahead.

Arthur wondered if they all spotted the man at the same time, because it seemed that way. His mother, sitting forward in the passenger seat beside his father, lifting a finger, pointing. His father’s head jutting forward and a single surprised word falling from his lips.

‘Oh.’

And Arthur, his eyes widening as the figure came into sight, emerging out of the darkness ahead. He sat forward too, his fingers curling around the edge of the seat, his breath shortening in his throat.

The figure was tall, broad in the shoulders and wore a long dark coat and a wide brimmed hat. It made a strange sight, thought Arthur, as the car drew closer. Almost looked like a walking scarecrow. The man was using a stick to walk, leaning on it heavily as he trudged along.

‘We should stop,’ his mother said sweetly, as the rain hammered against the windscreen. ‘It’s so awful out there, Frank.’

Arthur saw his father nod, agreeing that it was.

‘No!’ he said sharply from the back seat. ‘We shouldn’t stop!’

His mother looked back at him with a frown and pouting lips. ‘Darling, it’s all right. He probably just needs a lift into town. We’re passing through on the way home. We can just drop him off.’

Arthur felt his teeth clench together. He shook his head at her but no words would come out. Instead all he could do was stare ahead at the figure on the road, as his father slowed the car. His heart throbbed weakly under his winter clothes and his eyes strained in their sockets as his mouth gaped wordlessly. Arthur had no way to articulate the raw fear he felt coursing through his small body.

‘It’s the right thing to do on a night like this,’ his father agreed, as the car caught up with the figure in the road. He rolled his window down as they drew parallel. ‘Do you need a lift, young fella?’

The man stopped walking and looked back at them in surprise. Arthur’s father stopped the car and put it into neutral. The stranger leaned down to see them all better. His eye caught Arthur’s and a smile crept slowly across his narrow face. It was too dark to see well, but Arthur saw sharp cheekbones and large teeth revealed behind thin lips when the man smiled.

‘That would be amazing, how kind of you!’ the stranger enthused. ‘I missed the bus, didn’t I? Was meant to be up in the mountains by evening, but that’s not going to happen now.’

‘What’s in the mountains?’ Arthur’s mother asked, her tone friendly while Arthur’s guts churned and writhed inside him.

‘My sister and her family,’ the man replied. ‘I’m spending a few weeks with them.’

‘Come on, get in,’ Arthur’s father prompted. ‘It’s getting worse out there. There’s meant to be a storm coming, you know.’ He nodded to the trees at the side of the road whipping wildly back and forth as a cold wind screamed through them.

‘Thank you!’ The stranger opened the back door and slid in beside Arthur. Rainwater flew as he took off his hat. ‘You okay, son?’ he asked him, patting his leg in a friendly gesture. ‘Look like you’ve seen a ghost.’

‘Oh, he’s just shy!’ Arthur’s mother laughed. ‘That’s Arthur, I’m Clara and my husband is Frank. It’s a pleasure to meet you.’

‘You too,’ said the man, as the car started off again. ‘I’ve been hitchhiking across the country and rarely have I met a family as friendly and kind as yours.’

Clara beamed at him. ‘That’s just lovely. Thank you, sir.’

‘We only live on the other side of town,’ Frank said then. ‘We can drop you off there if you like?’

‘But everything will be closed,’ said Clara. ‘What with the storm coming in.’

They drove on in silence for a while. Arthur sat rigidly, his eyes fixed on the silent black road. He felt the man relax beside him, leaning back slightly, his legs spread, his hands loose in his lap and the walking stick between them. Outside, the rain grew harder and fiercer and strong winds began to rock the car.

‘This is nasty,’ grumbled Frank, slowing down. ‘But we should make it, all right.’

‘Perhaps you could stay at ours tonight?’ Clara said then, turning to smile at the hitchhiker.

‘He’s a stranger!’ Arthur burst out, his gaze flicking between his mother and the man beside him. He side-eyed the man with a frown, but the man just shrugged.

His mother’s mouth fell open. ‘Arthur, don’t be so rude! What has got into you?’

The man waved a hand. ‘No, no, he’s right. I am a stranger and I couldn’t possibly put you to any more trouble. Town will be fine. I’m sure I’ll find somewhere open.’

‘Have you called your sister?’ Arthur asked him then, his voice thin and strangled with fear. ‘Have you got a phone?’

The man slid his hand into the pocket of his thick dark coat and brought out a slim mobile phone. ‘It’s dead, I’m afraid. Battery died hours back. It’s fine, honestly. I’ll be there by morning, no doubt.’

Arthur nodded silently. The car rolled on. The rain and wind intensified and as they drove through town, it became harder and harder to see.

‘Perhaps we should pull over, Frank,’ said Clara, looking nervously ahead.

‘Everything’s closed, as expected,’ Frank replied, grimacing back at her. He looked in the wing-mirror to catch the stranger’s eye. ‘Sir, we can’t leave you here in this weather. Come back to ours until the worst of it passes. We’ll light a fire, cook food, get warm. Then I can drive you up to the mountains in the morning if you like?’

Arthur wanted to look at the stranger. He wanted to shake his head at his parents and beg them, no, no, no, please no, but he couldn’t move. His lips quivered around his gritted teeth and his fingers dug into the seat so tightly his knuckles ached. It seemed like he had forgotten how to breathe.

The strange laughed softly. ‘I don’t think I can turn down such a kind offer. Thank you so much. That would be amazing.’

With the decision made, Arthur’s father drove on, following the black road until the town was far behind them. The stranger started to talk, engaging his parents in a conversation that ranged from bad weather, to unreliable public services, to how annoying his sister could be sometimes. The three adults laughed and swapped jokes and by the time they turned off the main road and rumbled onto the bumpy track that led to home, they seemed to have relaxed with each other.

Arthur’s bad feeling, meanwhile, bloomed in his chest until he felt like he had been drenched in ice.

The car stopped outside the house. ‘It’s a beauty!’ the stranger declared, looking up at the three storey Victorian building.

‘It’s a work in progress!’ Clara replied, unclipping her seat-belt. ‘We’re gradually updating and modernising it. It’s been in Frank’s family for generations, you know!’

‘I can’t wait to see inside,’ replied the stranger.

One by one they hopped out of the car and dashed through the driving rain into the house. Frank quickly set to work lighting a fire in the living-room while Clara hoisted a large iron kettle onto the stove to boil water for hot drinks.

‘I’ll start a soup,’ she called from the kitchen as the two men and Arthur knelt in front of the fledgling fire. ‘Warm us all up!’

‘This is wonderful,’ the stranger smiled, flames flickering in his eyes as he turned his face to Arthur and winked.

Arthur stared back at him. It was too late now and he knew it. A cold feeling spread through him and the pit of his stomach filled with dread but there was nothing he could do. Not now. Something awful was about to happen to them all and there was nothing he could do to stop it.

Arthur moved backwards when his father picked up the fire poker and brought it down onto the back of the hitchhiker’s head. The stranger never saw it coming, which Arthur supposed was a blessing. Sometimes they knew. Sometimes they changed their minds in the car, panicked or got a bad feeling but even then, there was no escape. Sometimes they turned their head at the last second and saw the poker coming. Sometimes they fought and bit and scratched and screamed and thrashed on the floor, but it always ended the same.

Later that night, Arthur sat in front of the fire while his parents watched TV from the sofa behind him. Their bellies were full. Their teeth stained red. Leg and arm bones joined the logs glowing on the fire and Arthur’s small belly was full of vegetables and flesh.

The Thing In The Woods

Creepy flash fiction

Image by barnabasvormwald from Pixabay

It’s there in the woods.

Dark grey, almost black, hulking yet skeletal, hunched yet clinging.

What does it want? Why is it watching?

I see him every day, when my little car climbs the steep hill and the autumn sun is blinding me through the fragmenting canopies of dying leaves.

I see him hunched and waiting, always watching, dark holes for eyes and something bright and sharp that forms a mouth.

I just get glimpses, just fragments of seconds. I can’t take my eye of the road for too long. I can’t neglect to respect the vehicle in front of me.

Perhaps that is what it wants…

To distract and dismay, to terrify and intrigue. Look its way for too long and you’ll lose your way, get distracted and drawn in, get lost. Maybe that is what it waits for. For the screech of brakes and the smell of burning rubber. For the skid marks on the road, for your dying hand lifting and falling. For scattered glass and broken bones.

The thing in the woods is impossible to fathom or classify. Is it ragged or smooth? On different days, in different light, I see one thing then another. Is it bony or fleshy? Are they folded wings on its bony spine or something else? Some growth or protrusion?

Is it scaly skin it wears, crumpled and dry, or is it matted fur I spy when I glance its way? There is a flash of something in its eyes, sometimes red, sometimes yellow. I know I’ve seen the hole that forms its mouth yawn and gape. I’ve seen silver flashes inside that dark chasm. I’ve sensed movement, something wriggling.

Its hands curl around the trunk of a silver birch tree. Sometimes the thing in the woods is further back… a shape in the background, a glint from its eyes, and sometimes it is almost at the roadside. But always it is clinging to a silver birch tree. Always it is upright and watching.

Always it is waiting.

The Shallows – a creepy short story

This is a story originally posted in my Medium publication, The Wild Writers Club!

The Shallows

July tipped into August.

It did so lazily, like the slow sticky drips from a forgotten ice cream.

The hot weather had dulled and bloated us. Like fat lazy flies we could not move. And the days all had that endless quality, like every hour was twice the length and we had stopped being ruled by clocks, and time.

We existed in our own timeless purposeless bubble. The sun had moved and taken our shade from it. The trampoline where we had lounged all afternoon was now a sun trap.

It was the heat and the boredom that drove us to the river. Not the big river, where there would be chaos and kayaks and fishermen and teenagers dunking each other under the water. We headed to the little river, to the shallows.

We strolled down the hot lane, shaded intermittently by oaks and limes and sycamores. They provided blessed shadows as our bare feet burned on the road.

No cars. No noise save the drone of a gigantic dragonfly.

We dragged sticks behind us and thought about how hot it was. It was always too hot to speak, so Pippa and I had almost given it up. Sometimes all we could think to say was how hot it was. Sometimes summer seemed to go on forever and you started to forget how to live in the normal world.

We took the left at Twisty Corners and it was still too hot to talk, despite the darkness that suddenly enveloped us from the trees above and around. They created a tunnel and we ambled down it sluggishly. Pippa was a year younger than me but we were both on the brink of something else.

‘You’re like a pair of foals,’ our dad always said, ‘all legs.’

We were caught in that no man’s land between childhood and adolescence. Everything the adults said and did suddenly annoyed us, yet we still tucked a soft toy under our arms when we went to bed at night.

We traipsed over the stone bridge, pausing lethargically to throw a stick in and watch it float out on the other side. There was nothing to say. Nothing to think. We plodded down the muddy bank, wincing as the overgrown nettles swiped our skin. And there it was. The shallows.

The water flowed slowly from under the bridge, then veered left channeling through a narrow stretch, the banks too high to climb. That way lay madness, I thought, but didn’t know why.

In front of us a great expanse of shining water undulated with the gentle current and we stood and marveled at it, at the way the light came through the canopy of hazel trees and lit up the shallows like a sprinkling of fairy lights.

The shallows had its own light; a unique blend of red and gold as the dappled sunlight broke through the leaves and filtered through water to the red earth below. We stood side by side, our toes curling into the mud, staring at it as if in a trance. Time slowed and we breathed in unison. I was about to tell Pippa I was bored when she gripped my arm and pointed.

‘What’s that under the tree?’

I looked to the right where a fallen tree stretched from one bank to the other. It came down a few years back and was slowly rotting away as the river washed over it in the winter and under it in the summer. Sometimes we’d sit there with our feet in the water, watching the tiny fish swim by as the electric blue damselflies flitted under the bridge.

view of a river shaded by trees with a fallen log across it and a stone bridge just visible beyond
my own photo

Pippa’s grip tightened. I pulled away and started to wade through the water. There was something lodged under the tree. It looked like a pile of clothes, inflated by the water; dark blue material ballooning against the gentle tide.

‘Someone’s thrown rubbish in again,’ I muttered, reaching the fallen tree.

It was then that I got the prickling sensation on the back of my neck. I put a hand there, self-soothing, but the feeling persisted until I lifted my gaze and saw the man standing on the bridge. I looked back at Pippa and shrugged. She splashed towards me and we stood side by side again, a united force.

I still held a stick and poked at the bundle of clothes with it. I felt self-conscious doing it, as the man on the bridge looked on, but when I gazed up again to see if he was still watching us, he wasn’t there. I nudged my sister.

‘Where’d he go?’

She shrugged and used her own stick to help me with the bundle of clothes. We used the sticks like hooks, trying to free the bundle which had become wedged under the log. We did it lazily, carelessly, poking and jabbing at this thing that had jarred our peaceful vision of the shallows.

That was when we realised it was not just a bundle of clothes.

It suddenly sprung free and floated by. Pippa and I turned slowly to watch it go. We were weary from the heat, as if all our senses and brain functions had been slowed down by sticky sweat. We saw the blue material followed by dark legs. We saw bare feet. We didn’t see a head.

We stood in the shallows, frozen. Our arms hung by our sides, our knuckles skimming the cold water, our fingers still curled loosely around our poking sticks. We didn’t say a word as we watched it go.

It passed the deep spot, the bit that always fooled our terrier Binx when he was alive. He’d paddle out brashly before suddenly finding no land beneath his paws as it dipped away brutally, trying to drown him. He’d sputter and panic and swim back and then he’d make the same mistake again next time.

It moved faster there, the current stronger, but ultimately driving it to the left, towards the narrow channel that we knew eventually met with the huge monster of the river Stour. It was sinking too; the water and the debris were filling the materials, dragging it down.

Still, we watched, Pippa and I, not saying a word, barely breathing as if we were not really there, and I could almost believe that to be true if it weren’t for the tiny sticklebacks circling my toes. I could almost believe if I closed my eyes and then opened them again slowly, I would find myself spreadeagled on my bed with the sun slanting down on me, or face down on the trampoline, exhausted by the endless heat.

The body moved on with some speed, spinning just once as it knocked against the end of another fallen tree. That was the moment I told myself I should have moved. I should have splashed my way over to the other tree, climbed on and made my way to the end. I could have hooked it again then. I could have snagged it and stopped it and Pippa could have called the police.

But it was like I knew I never would.

None of it felt real.

It looked less like a body now, just some blue material still visible as the current drove it towards the narrow stretch. I knew if it went down there we would not be able to follow. The water was unknowable, dark depths promising no foot holds or forgiveness. The banks were steep and slippy and we could never see where it ended. There was a darkness to that place, where the shallows became the deep. We never ventured there.

I also knew if it went down there it would more than likely sink or get snagged on something again, and I knew that no one would ever find it. No one would ever know. And there was something dark and delicious about that knowing.

I thought Pippa might say something. I thought she might cry out, pull my hand or say something. But she didn’t. When I turned my head to look at her, her expression was slack and dull. There was no wonder in her eyes, only a blunted acceptance. Her forehead shone with sweat and I watched a bead of moisture form on her top lip.

When I looked back for the body, it had gone.

I heard a noise escape Pippa. A long, low exhalation of breath.

Then another noise behind us.

I looked over my shoulder and the man was there again. He was wearing a blue shirt and dark trousers. He was staring right at us, some kind of intent in his expression that told me he was about to open his mouth and speak to us, and for some inexplicable reason, this possibility filled me with dread.

I gripped my sister’s hand and yanked her until she moved. Together we splashed back to the flat sandy bank, still holding our sticks. We didn’t look at the man as we crept away, skirting the large clutch of nettles that surrounded the ash tree. On the other side, I peeked out like a rabbit checking the land from its burrow. The bridge was clear. The man was gone.

We started running, our bare wet feet slapping across the old stony bridge where the man had stood just moments before.

Still, we didn’t speak. To speak would be to give it a reality I knew instinctively to avoid. As I rushed us home, as Pippa and I ran hand in hand up the sun-baked lane, the sun punishing us every time there was a gap in the shade from the oaks, I felt a roaring dread that Pippa would open her mouth and speak. I thought perhaps I would punch her in the mouth if she tried to.

By the time we reached home and shoved open the wooden gate, we were drenched in sweat and feeling giddy. We closed it behind us and felt the dread drop away from us. We threw down our sticks and didn’t look at each other as we made our way around to the back garden.

The trampoline was still in full sun so we plodded over to the far right corner of the garden without speaking. There was always this unsaid thing between me and Pippa. We could go hours without talking and still be completely in tune with each other. She was the one who dragged a blanket from the washing line, bone dry and starched stiff from the sun. She threw it on the grass under the sycamore tree and we dropped down on our bellies, our feet kicking at the sky as we buried our faces in our sticky arms.

‘Everything all right?’ we heard a voice call from the house.

We raised our heads long enough to see that it was our father, home early from work, his glasses pushed up on his head as he squinted across the garden at us.

I met Pippa’s eye and knew just what she was thinking. It was so tempting not to answer him. It would be so easy just to smirk at each other, lie back down and ignore him. And we knew he would just accept it. Just shrug his shoulders as if it must be his own fault. Or worse, he would wander over, hands in pockets, hopeful expression on his face.

I decided to end it before it began. I didn’t know why he seemed scared of us lately but it was tiring to say the least. I didn’t want him to amble over to us and try to evoke conversation. It was always too hot and there was nothing to say.

I waved at him. ‘Fine, Dad! We’re just tired!’

‘Been out all day gallivanting, eh?’ he yelled back.

Pippa shot me a scowl. ‘Gallivanting?’ she hissed under her breath.

‘Yeah, something like that!’

Satisfied, he waved again then ducked back inside the house. We both knew he would reappear at some point, perhaps carrying cold drinks on a tray in an attempt to bribe us into words.

We dropped our heads, closed our eyes and breathed. I felt the relentless sun beating down on everything and knew it was too hot to talk of it, too hot to even think of it.

And more than anything, it was simply too late.

Spit Out and Churned Out By The Relentless March Of Time, I Keep Trying To Fight Back

How focusing on moments made Monday mornings a little sweeter..

(Originally posted on Medium)

Image by Bruno from Pixabay

I think our awareness of time really starts when we enter education. I remember sitting in a classroom and staring at the clock willing it to move. When finally it was home time I’d feel elated, but before I knew it, my mother would be saying it was time for bed. And then there was the Sunday night dread… School again tomorrow! Really, already?

Friday night was wonderful. Saturday was great but slightly marred by the knowing that Sunday quickly followed and Sunday kind of sucked because it was the day before Monday. Me and my son were talking about this the other day. He is ten and often expresses sentiments that echo my own relationship with time.

For instance, he often claims that the weekend went too fast, and he is starting to notice that in general, time moves too quickly. He said this about the summer holiday, for example. ‘Today went really quick, this week is over already? It’s nearly time to go back to school!’ His panic echoed my own. It’s not fair, we both wanted to say — slow it all down, please!

I often wish time as we know it had not been invented. We are slaves to the clock and the passing of time whether we like it or not. It’s like a big doom-filled timer hanging over us – reminding you that you are always one step closer to death. Your time is always running out. You are always fighting against time. You always wish you had more of it.

Lack of time causes much stress and resentment. As a writer I never feel I have enough time to write. I always grab what I can and make the most of it but would I like endless time to write? Yes, of course! But life and human made constraints get in the way.

We have invented a world that counts us down in seconds, minutes and hours. We cannot look away. We are glued to it.

As much as I want to ignore time and not be ruled by it I cannot. I have to set an alarm to make sure we get up in time to be ready for the school run. I have to keep an eye on the time when I walk my dogs so that I am back on the laptop in time for Zoom calls. I have to watch the time to know when to pick my son up, when to cook dinner, when it’s time for bed.

Time, time, time. It owns us.

We all want to slow it down, but why? Because of death and not knowing for sure what comes after that. We worry, what if this is the one and only life I get? I’ve got to live it, fill it, appreciate it, make the most of it, but what if I’m not? It panics us. We want to slow it down because ultimately we are not okay with dying.

I resent it and I’m constantly looking for ways to change it only to realise that it’s impossible. Or is it?

Is there a way to slow it down? I’m always wondering this. I have an urge to try an experiment. I want to exist in a timeless weekend. I want to turn off all devices and make sure I cannot check the time at all, not once. I want to eat only when I am hungry and move when I feel restless and write when I feel creative and rest when I am tired. I want to do it and see if it feels faster or slower as I have a sneaking suspicion that watching the clock all the time is one of the things that makes it go faster.

Perhaps loving and enjoying life makes it feel faster. We all know that time slows down when we are bored or unhappy. Those afternoons sat at school watching the clock for the home time bell used to go on forever

And why is it that as we grow older, time goes even faster? I sometimes feel I exist on a hamster wheel that just keeps me spinning around forever. I get churned out every Monday morning to the start of a new week, then suddenly it’s the end of the day, then suddenly it’s morning again, then suddenly it’s the end of the week.

It’s what everyone says all the time. Doesn’t it go fast? How is it nearly Christmas again? Didn’t the summer fly by?

Is there anything we can do to slow time down or make friends with it?

I think so. And being a writer really helps…

Let’s take Monday morning. No one wants it. No one loves it. It’s a very sad and unloved day of the week, but is it really so bad? Sometimes we have to embrace the unwanted and the unloved and look at it in a different way.

I am trying hard to make friends with Monday. I am trying to give it some love, after all, is Friday really the great fun pal it makes itself out to be? I think not when it all too suddenly spits you into Saturday with Sunday on the horizon!

This Monday morning I woke up in a good mood. Despite recent ups and downs, I surprised myself by waking up with a smile. The night before I tucked myself into my own dream world as usual and tried something new. I talked to myself in my head (I know I sound crazy…) about the niceness of tomorrow. I walked my way through the little bits of Monday that would be nice.

It started with my breakfast of oats with a swirl of chocolate spread mixed in. I smiled thinking about it. I know I am very easily pleased but I was looking forward to it. Other nice things were my time on my own before everyone wakes up and playing this little town building game I have on my iPad before reading a bit of news. The next niceness was waking my son up because one of our dogs always has to be involved and always makes it funny in some way. The next niceness was remembering that we bought the Blur Live At Wembley CD yesterday and me and my music mad son could enjoy listening to more of it on the drive to school.

I focused on these nice things more as they came up because I had tucked myself into sleep thinking about them. Then I started to notice more of them. It was Monday morning all right and there was something dark and menacing about it. Dark skies promised more rain and it felt like the sun had barely risen. The landscape looked haunted and beautiful. I smiled. There is beauty in darkness. There is beauty in a dark Monday morning.

I’m not sure if it slowed time down but it made me feel less of a slave to it and I carried it on for the rest of Monday. The niceness of my lovely Zoom group children, the niceness of eating the leftover focaccia bread we bought yesterday, the niceness of another dog walk under moody skies, the niceness of writing ideas filling my head, and eventually us all gathering back at home to eat dinner and talk about our days before another day ends.

And I feel lucky… I am alive. I had another Monday. I woke up. I lived and breathed and thought and felt and dreamed and noticed and experienced…. Yes time passed but that was because I lived. And one day I will be close to dying and I’ll look back and think well, that went fast but I did my best with it, I saw it for what it was and I tried to soak up and experience every moment, even the bad ones, and I didn’t wish it away and I paused as often as I could to think how amazing it was to have had a life.

Wow, if you think about it, it really is a beautiful thing to be alive…

As for now, I’ll end the day with the ultimate reward, writing. Then in bed once more, I’ll talk to myself about my stories, replay and plan scenes, listen to the characters talk and figure out plot holes and then I’ll think ahead about the niceness of Tuesdays…

In conclusion, I’ll let you know if I ever do my timeless experiment but I do wonder if living without time, having endless time would actually be some kind of hell?