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Shadows & Tall Trees 7
Shadows & Tall Trees 7
Shadows & Tall Trees 7
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Shadows & Tall Trees 7

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Winner of the Shirley Jackson Award!

"Shadows and Tall Trees is a smart, soulful, illuminating investigation of the many forms and tactics available to those writers involved in one of our moment's most interesting and necessary projects, that of opening up horror literature to every sort of formal interrogation. It is a beautiful and courageous series." - Peter Straub

The acclaimed literary anthology Shadows & Tall Trees has featured authors short-listed for the Man Booker Award, and World Fantasy Award winners. Several of our stories have been reprinted in "Year's Best" anthologies and have garnered numerous award nominations. This volume features all-oroiginal new fiction from these masters of weird fiction:
Malcolm Devlin
Brian Evenson
Rebecca Kuder
V.H. Leslie
Robert Levy
Laura Mauro
Manish Melwani
Alison Moore
Harmony Neal
Rosalie Parker
M. Rickert
Nicholas Royle
Robert Shearman
Christopher Slatsky
Simon Strantzas
Steve Rasnic Tem
Michael Wehunt
Charles Wilkinson
Conrad Williams

LanguageEnglish
PublisherUndertowPubs
Release dateDec 8, 2019
ISBN9780463249062
Shadows & Tall Trees 7
Author

Laura Mauro

I am represented by Max Edwards at Apple Tree Literary: [email protected] Email: Laura.N.Mauro at gmail dot com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/l.n.Mauro Twitter: https://twitter.com/LauraNMauro Most writers will tell you they've been writing since they were small, and I'm no exception. I started out writing poems, which graduated into awful teenage angst poems (with the requisite soujourn into Sprawling Epic Fantasy Novel territory). I started writing short stories in 2011 but never took it seriously until 2012, when my first short story was published in 'Shadows and Tall Trees'. Since then, I've been what you might call a 'serious' writer, although I'm yet to give up my day job (it's part of The Dream, along with the apartment in Osaka and the functioning knee joints…) I'm also a sometime pro wrestling journalist; my article on the Golden Lovers received a Kevin Kelly shout-out during NJPW's G1 tournament, which I haven't stopped talking about. In 2018, my short story "Looking for Laika" won the British Fantasy Award for Best Short Story. I haven't stopped talking about that, either. I was born and raised in south east London and currently live in Essex under extreme duress. When I'm not making things up I enjoy reading, travelling, watching wrestling, playing video games, collecting tattoos, dyeing my hair strange colours and making up nicknames for my cats.

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    Book preview

    Shadows & Tall Trees 7 - Laura Mauro

    Shadows &

    Tall Trees 7

    Edited by Michael Kelly

    Also by Michael Kelly

    Songs From Dead Singers

    Scratching the Surface

    Ouroboros (With Carol Weekes)

    Apparitions

    Undertow & Other Laments

    Chilling Tales: Evil Did I Dwell, Lewd I Did Live

    Chilling Tales: In Words, Alas, Drown I

    Shadows & Tall Trees

    Year’s Best Weird Fiction, Vol. 1 (With Laird Barron)

    Year’s Best Weird Fiction, Vol. 2 (With Kathe Koja)

    Year’s Best Weird Fiction, Vol. 3 (With Simon Strantzas)

    Also available from Undertow Publications

    Skein and Bone, by V.H. Leslie

    Meet Me in The Middle of The Air, by Eric Schaller

    Almost Insentient, Almost Divine, by D.P. Watt

    Singing With All My Skin and Bone, by Sunny Moraine

    "Michael Kelly’s Shadows and Tall Trees is a smart, soulful, illuminating investigation of the many forms and tactics available to those writers involved in one of our moment’s most interesting and necessary projects, that of opening up horror literature to every sort of formal interrogation. It is a beautiful and courageous series."

    - Peter Straub

    First Edition

    Shadows and Tall Trees, Vol. 7 copyright © 2017 by Michael Kelly

    Cover artwork (trade edition) copyright © 2017 Yaroslav Gerzhedovich

    Cover artwork (hardback edition) copyright © 2017 Vince Haig

    Cover design copyright © 2017 Vince Haig

    Interior design, typesetting, layout © 2017 Alligator Tree Graphics

    Proofreader: Michael Kelly

    Introduction © 2017 Michael Kelly

    We Can Walk It Off Come the Morning © 2017 Malcolm Devlin

    Line of Sight © 2017 Brian Evenson

    Curb Day © 2017 Rebecca Kuder

    Shell Baby © 2017 V.H. Leslie

    The Cenacle © 2017 Robert Levy

    Sun Dogs © 2017 Laura Mauro

    The Water Kings © 2017 Manish Melwani

    The Voice of The People © 2017 Alison Moore

    The Triplets © 2017 Harmony Neal

    The Attempt © 2017 Rosalie Parker

    Everything Beautiful Is Terrifying © 2017 M. Rickert

    Dispossession © 2017 Nicholas Royle

    The Swimming Pool Party © 2017 Robert Shearman

    Engines of The Ocean © 2017 Christopher Slatsky

    In the Tall Grass © 2017 Simon Strantzas

    The Erased © 2017 Steve Rasnic Tem

    Root-Light © 2017 Michael Wehunt

    Slimikins © 2017 Charles Wilkinson

    The Closure © 2017 Conrad Williams

    www.undertowbooks.com

    Table of Contents

    Introduction — Michael Kelly

    Line of Sight — Brian Evenson

    Everything Beautiful Is Terrifying — M. Rickert

    Shell Baby — V.H. Leslie

    The Attempt — Rosalie Parker

    The Closure — Conrad Williams

    The Water Kings — Manish Melwani

    In The Tall Grass — Simon Strantzas

    The Erased — Steve Rasnic Tem

    The Swimming Pool Party — Robert Shearman

    We Can Walk It Off Come The Morning — Malcolm Devlin

    The Cenacle — Robert Levy

    Slimikins — Charles Wilkinson

    The Voice of The People — Alison Moore

    Curb Day — Rebecca Kuder

    Engines of The Ocean — Christopher Slatsky

    Sun Dogs — Laura Mauro

    Root-Light — Michael Wehunt

    The Triplets — Harmony Neal

    Dispossession — Nicholas Royle

    Contributors

    INTRODUCTION

    Michael Kelly

    OF ALL THE BOOKS I’VE EDITED OR published, the Shadows & Tall Trees series is, unabashedly, and unreservedly, my favourite. The first volume was my attempt at an answer to the various mediocre and dreadful (in the worst sense) volumes of horror that I felt were being published. There are still too many bad books being published; as Series Editor for the Year’s Best Weird Fiction I see them. And that will never change. But since the first volume of Shadows & Tall Trees was published there has been a steady increase in the number of quality presses. Presses that value literary quality, and have a unique artistic aesthetic.

    Horror and weird fiction has seen a definite upswing in regards to literary quality, and respect among genre readers.

    Which brings us to volume 7 of Shadows & Tall Trees, which you hold in your hands.

    It has been three years since the last volume of Shadows & Tall Trees. That volume had many stories reprinted in various ‘Year’s Best’ and ‘Best Of’ anthologies, and was a finalist for the World Fantasy Award, and the Shirley Jackson Award. All the volumes have been very well received. And all told, of the 55 stories published in the first 6 volumes, 18 have been reprinted in ‘Year’s Best’ volumes. All this to say that I believe this current volume may be the best one yet. That’s no disrespect to the previous volumes. The quality of submissions for each successive volume has increased steadily. I’ve seen several stories that I had to regrettably turn down for this volume get picked up for other publications. There is exemplary material being published in the Weird Horror field. It is a good time to be a reader. And it’s a good time to be an editor.

    Thank you to all the writers who submitted work. And thank you to the writers who grace the pages herein. As always, you make me look good.

    Finally, thank you, dear reader, for supporting this endeavor from day one. Maybe, just maybe… there will be an 8th volume of Shadows & Tall Trees.

    LINE OF SIGHT

    Brian Evenson

    1.

    THE SHOOT HAD GONE WELL—ALMOST too well, in fact. So much so that Todd, by the end, was just waiting for something to go wrong: for production to come crashing to a halt, for the union to try to shut them down with some bullshit excuse, for the lead to have his face torn halfway off in a freak accident. The longer things continued to go well, the more strongly he could feel something roiling below the surface, preparing to go badly. And the longer it didn’t, the worse he felt.

    He was tempted to hurt himself, just to relieve the pressure. Cut off his thumb, maybe. But he knew this wouldn’t go over well with the studio. By the time they wrapped, he was jumping at every little thing: he couldn’t have lasted another day. But then, suddenly, it was over, the production a wrap, and instead of being relieved he was flustered, unbelieving, still waiting for something to go wrong.

    *

    And yet, even in the early stages of post-production, it never did. No issues with sound, no problems with editing, no problems when the footage was processed: nothing wrong. The film came out, so everybody claimed, better than expected. Even though the studio had been a little standoffish with the rushes, they now claimed to love where Todd had gotten to. Unaccountably, nobody had any final notes.

    Really? said Todd, bracing himself.

    Really, said the studio exec. It’s great just as is.

    And? said Todd.

    No ands, he said. No buts.

    Todd folded his arms. So, what do you think needs to be changed? he asked.

    I don’t think you understand, the studio exec said. We don’t want anything changed. And then a moment later, his brow creased. What’s wrong with you? You should be celebrating.

    But Todd couldn’t celebrate. He was still waiting for something to go wrong.

    *

    Nothing wrong, nothing wrong, he told himself, but he still felt like he could feel the exec’s eyes on his back all the way to the door, watching him go. He imagined how he would shoot that scene: a quick shot first of the exec’s face, then Todd’s back as he walked toward the door, then the exec’s face again, expression slightly changed. He should be grateful, he knew he should—there was nothing wrong and everything right, the film was a success. But didn’t that just mean that something was likely to go hideously wrong for him on a personal level? But he wasn’t married, not even with anybody, didn’t even own a pet: what could go wrong that hadn’t already? Okay, so maybe his next film would be an utter disaster? How could he enjoy this success before he knew how much it would cost him down the line?

    He went home. He looked at the wall of his apartment for an hour, maybe more. It grew dark outside, then darker still. Finally, hands shaking, he drove back to the studio.

    *

    It was later than he thought. Still, he had no problem talking his way through the gate, or getting himself into the building. He got the night watchman to let him into the editing bay, then queued up the film and began to watch, pretending that he was seeing a movie directed by someone else.

    It was good, he grudgingly had to admit. If he considered it objectively, he had to agree with the studio. The camerawork was excellent, startling even, the film saturated with shadow in a way that made the slow mental unraveling of the lead seem as if it were being projected all the way across the screen and even spilling off the sides a little. The effect was panicked and anxious, and he began to think that his own anxieties about the imminent collapse of the project had filtered down to everybody participating in the shoot, but in a way that paradoxically served the film. The lead, when he began to unravel, seemed not only like himself unraveling, but almost like a different person. It had become the kind of film that brought you close to a character and then, once that character was going mad, brought you closer still.

    He stared at the empty screen, the film continuing to work inside his head. He should be happy, he told himself. Everybody was right. He should be completely happy, but there was something nagging at him. What was it? The acting was excellent, the blocking and staging and camerawork just as good. Lighting was superb, sound editing was precise. What did he have to complain about?

    He sighed, stretched. He should accept that the film was a success, he told himself, go home, go to bed. Instead, he queued the film up and watched it again.

    *

    The third time through, he began to sense it, began to realize what the problem was. In the interior scenes, the eye lines were a little off. Not all the interior scenes, just the ones set in the lead’s childhood home, before and after he dismembered his parents. Not off by much, just slightly, not enough for anyone to notice consciously, at least not on first viewing. But who knew what it was doing subconsciously? People noticed things, it didn’t matter if it was conscious or not. It needed to be fixed.

    And yet, he remembered the cameraman lining all that up carefully—he’d fired the script supervisor at the cameraman’s request, because the cameraman had insisted he wasn’t meticulous enough about just that: eyelines. He had a vivid memory of the cameraman blocking it, and then re-blocking it, making micro-movements of the camera to get it right every time they shot a scene.

    He went onto the computer, pulled up the digital files of the rough footage in the editing bay. Was he right? Even staring at a frame of the lead looking next to a frame of what, ostensibly, he was seeing, he could hardly tell. Was he imagining it? At first he thought so, but the longer he stared at it the more he thought, no, the eye lines were off.

    Maybe the cameraman had a slight vision problem so that what looked right to him didn’t look right to anybody else. Or maybe Todd was the one to have the vision problem and there wasn’t anything there.

    He toyed and tinkered with a frame a little, seeing, if he cropped and adjusted it, whether the problem could be corrected. But no matter how much he torqued it, it didn’t seem to help.

    *

    It wasn’t until after he had already dialed that he realized how late it was—midnight or one in the morning now. He hung up. He could wait until morning.

    But, a few seconds later, his phone began to ring.

    Misdial? the cameraman asked when he answered.

    Ah, Todd said. You’re awake. No, I meant to call. Sorry to call so late.

    The cameraman didn’t bother to answer, just waited.

    It’s just, said Todd. I’m … the eye lines, he finally managed. They’re wrong.

    For a long time, the cameraman was quiet, and Todd thought maybe he’d offended the man.

    Just in the house, Todd added, as if that made it better somehow. Everywhere else they’re fine.

    Where are you? the cameraman finally said. His voice sounded strangled.

    Todd told him. Are you okay? he asked.

    The man gave a laugh, part of it cut off by static from the connection. I am now, he said. Now that somebody else has finally noticed.

    2.

    It was awful, Conrad claimed, as he and the director sat over coffee in a deserted diner at two or perhaps three in the morning. "I would set the eye lines, then look and think, yes, that’s it exactly, but the whole time another part of me would be thinking, no, not quite." And so I would frame it again, would check everything again. Each time I would think when I looked through the viewfinder, yes, perfect, and then, a moment later, but…"

    It had been like that through the whole shoot. Most days he just thought it had something to do with the feel of the shoot as a whole, the tension present on the set for some reason. You felt it too, said Conrad to the director. I could tell. But at night, back at home, lying in bed, Conrad kept thinking back through the shots, wondering why the eye lines still didn’t feel right.

    I’ve never felt that way, said Conrad. I’ve been in the business for two decades and I have never felt that way.

    As the shoot went on, it became not better but worse. Not outside, not in the other locations, just at the house. Conrad began to think of the house as a living thing, expanding and contracting, breathing, shifting ever so slightly. As he told this to the director he believed from the look on the man’s face that he felt it too. Being in the house was like being in the belly of something. It was like they’d been swallowed, and that the house, seemingly inert, was not inert at all. It was always shifting ever so slightly, so that even in the time it took to go from a shot of a face looking at something to setting up a shot to reveal where that face was looking, everything was already slightly wrong, slightly off.

    It sounds crazy, said the director.

    Yes, Conrad agreed. It sounds crazy. But you felt it, too.

    And it was even worse than that, Conrad claimed. For when he had stared, really stared, it seemed like something was beginning to open up, like if he stood just right he could see a seam where reality had been imperfectly fused. He had stood there on the balls of his feet, swaying slightly, not caring what the crew around him might think. And then, for an instant, he even managed to see it just right, not so much a threadlike seam as a narrow opening, as well as a someone—or something rather—gazing out.

    Why didn’t you tell me? asked the director.

    Conrad shrugged. You’ve said it yourself, he said. It sounded crazy. And you didn’t say anything either. The film editor didn’t notice it at all. But then, he wasn’t on the set, was he?

    The director hesitated, then nodded. Both men sat in silence and sipped their coffee. Finally the director said, What was it?

    Excuse me? asked Conrad.

    Gazing out, said the director. What was it?

    Conrad shook his head. I don’t know for certain what it was, he said. All I know is what it looked like.

    And what did it look like? the director asked, but you could tell from the look on his face that he didn’t want to know.

    You had to understand, Conrad claimed, that what it looked like was probably not what it was. That if he had to guess, it was the sort of thing that took on aspects of other things that came close to it, a kind of mimic of anything it could manage to approach. In a house like that, in a place where the seam of the fabric of reality was wrongly annealed, it would take on the appearance of whatever it had the chance to observe, to study through the gap in the seam. At first I thought I was wrong, said Conrad, that I was seeing some sort of odd reflection or refraction, that I couldn’t be seeing two things that looked the same. But when they each moved they moved in a way that couldn’t be seen as either the same or as mirroring one another. No, even though they looked identical, they were anything but the same.

    The director struck the tabletop hard with his open palm. Goddamit, he said, what did it look like?

    Conrad looked surprised. How was it the director hadn’t guessed? Why, the lead, of course.

    3.

    The whole production Steven Calder (née Amos Smith) had had the feeling that something was wrong. Not with him, not with his acting, no, that was good. As good as it had ever been in fact, for reasons that he wasn’t sure he could understand. Not with the director either, though the man was an odd one, jumpy as fuck. Cameraman was okay, too, if a bit anal, and so were the rest of the crew. No, nothing visibly wrong anywhere, nothing he could place the blame on. Just a feeling.

    He shrugged it off and kept going, acting like everything was fine. Or, rather, acting like he was losing his mind, which was what the film was about, him losing his mind, his character losing his mind, but when the camera wasn’t rolling yes, then, acting like everything was fine, even racking his brains for stupid jokes he’d heard back in high school—or rather, things that the Amos Smith he’d used to be had heard back in high school—things he could throw out to lighten the mood, things meant to demonstrate that he was at ease and nothing was wrong.

    But he certainly was not at ease. And something was wrong, he was sure of it. In the house meant to represent his parents’ house especially. Meant to represent his character’s parents’ house, he meant. Outside, no, he didn’t feel it—nor, strangely enough, did he feel it in the other indoor locations, but in the house, yes, there he felt it. It made him feel seasick, as though the floor was shifting slightly under his feet, but that was crazy, houses didn’t act like that.

    But that was how this house acted. At least for him. Was he the only one who could feel something was wrong?

    *

    Steven was most sure something was wrong at those moments when he stood at his mark in the house meant to represent his parents’ house—meant to represent his character’s parents’ house—and waited for the scene to be shot. The lighting was adjusted, the camera positioned, and the whole time he just stood there. Soon, he would think, maybe even as early as his next film, someone else would stand on his mark for him, a body double, but for now it was him. This was his big break, but until the break had broken it would be him standing in for himself.

    At those moments, standing on his mark, sometimes he felt he could see, there beside him, a flickering, a strangeness in the air. But if he turned his head to look straight at it, he couldn’t see it anymore. And then the cameraman would scold him mildly, coax him back to looking in the direction he had originally been meant to look, and the flicker would begin again. What was it? The rapid oscillation of the ceiling lights, maybe? Something wrong with his brain? He couldn’t say. He didn’t think it was something with his brain, but if it wasn’t, why didn’t anyone else seem to see it?

    *

    It happened about three quarters of the way through shooting, right in the middle of the murder scene. There he was, the dismembered bodies of what were meant to be his parents at his feet. He was still breathing hard, hyperventilating slightly, his vision fading a little, spattered in what would pass on film for blood, and he saw what he’d come to think of as a flicker. Only this time it was more than a flicker, more like a rip in the air, like an animal had torn the air open with its teeth. The cameraman was seeing something too. There was a strange expression on his face, and he was looking at the air just beside Steven’s head with a sort of mute wonder. Don’t move, something inside him said, and he could feel the hair rising on the back of his neck. He held still, very still indeed.

    There was a smell like ozone, bitter and deep in his throat, the sound of something unfurling, and then he could feel breath hot on his neck. In front of him, the cameraman moved abnormally slowly, as if walking underwater. And then, suddenly, he was jerked, hard and fast, off his feet, the air knocked out of him.

    *

    By the time he had pulled himself up, just seconds later, the room was empty. The camera was gone, the entire crew as well, the room deserted. How was that possible?

    Hello? Steven called, but there was no answer.

    He got up and walked around the room. No sign, as far as he could see, of where they had gone. No sign, if he was to be honest with himself, which he was not sure he wanted to be, that the production team had ever been here: camera gone, lighting gone, none of the cables or other apparatus of a shoot. What the hell? he thought.

    He walked around the room another time, and then again, growing more and more anxious. He tried the other rooms, but found them just as deserted, just as silent. He called out and listened for a response, but there was no response. Finally, he went through the front door and left the house.

    Or at least he would have, if there’d been anything to go out into. There was nothing outside of the house, the door opening onto nothing at all.

    *

    How long had he been there? How many days? A long time, it felt like, though in another sense it felt like almost no time at all. He had tried all the doors and windows. It was always the same: there was nothing outside the house. He wasn’t hungry, which confused him. He wasn’t sure how he could still be alive. Assuming he actually was.

    He sat with his back to the wall, watching, waiting. Looking down at the backs of his hands he could see through them the ebb and flow of his blood. How strange. Had he been able to see that before? It was as if his skin was becoming transparent. He got up and paced, back and forth, back and forth, then sat down again. He slept for a while, woke, slept again, woke, went back to sleep.

    *

    He was just stretching, getting up again, when he caught a glimpse of it—that same flickering he had seen before. Immediately he was on his feet and looking for it, searching for it in the air. He swept his fingers back and forth but found nothing: there was nothing there. And yet, when he turned away, there it was, in the corner of his vision, flickering, again.

    He moved toward it slowly, not looking directly at it so as not to startle it. He followed it as best he could, backing toward it, head down.

    And then, from one moment to the next, his vision shifted, the flicker becoming a line of light, a line that opened until it became a slit and he could see something through it.

    He was looking at the house, at another version of the house. This one had the production crew in it. The camera was rolling, and there he was as well, axe trailing from one hand, breathing heavily, his shirt spattered with blood. He watched the scene come to an end, watched as he, his character, killed both his parents, watched until the director said cut.

    Only then did the figure that was meant to be him relax and glance his way, looking right at him, straight through the narrow gap. For a moment, they both just regarded one an-other and then the other him smiled in a way that bared his teeth, and Steven realized that what he was seeing not only wasn’t him after all, but wasn’t even human.

    Through the slit he’d watched the film wrap, watched them pack all the equipment up, watched whatever it was that had taken his place genially shake hands with everybody and then head out the door, out to live his life. The rest of the crew went too. When the last crewmember had turned off the light, the opening faded.

    *

    There followed a long period in which nothing happened, where it was just he himself alone. His body grew longer, leaner. He didn’t sleep anymore, though he sometimes lay down and pretended to sleep. He was hungry all the time but not for food exactly—for what he didn’t exactly know. The flicker maybe, or what it led to. He wandered the house, looking again for that flicker, but it just wasn’t there. Maybe it was still there, but if it was, he couldn’t find it.

    *

    Or couldn’t anyway, until something changed. There it was, suddenly, the flickering, and there he was, slowly moving toward it while trying to give the impression of moving away, until, finally, he had found the slit again. There it was, he could see it, the twin of the house he was now trapped in, dimly lit by the beams of two flashlights flickering their way through the dark space.

    It’s got to be around here somewhere, said a voice, one he was pretty sure he recognized.

    Are you sure it’s a good idea? asked the other voice, also familiar.

    He wasn’t the one being asked, he knew, but he was sure it was a good idea. Maybe not for these two men, but definitely for him. Whoever he was, now. He could already feel his body changing, becoming more and more like whichever of the two men he looked at the most.

    Even if we do find it, how are we going to get through it? asked the second voice.

    Steven had an answer for this question too. He waited patiently for them to find the slit. When they did, well, they’d have no problem getting through it, because he would help them in. Would help one of them anyway, and in the process swap places and make his own way back out. The problem for that one would not be getting in, as he knew from experience, but getting out again.

    EVERYTHING BEAUTIFUL IS TERRIFYING

    M. Rickert

    But we, when moved by deep feeling, evaporate.

    Rainer Maria Rilke

    THE STRANGOS COME ALL YEAR, identifiable by the clothes they wear, the giggling behind open hands, the wide-eyed pretense of innocence; like belled cats they give their trespass away. I ignore them—for the most part—though recently the baristas have begun giving directions to Laurel’s tree. They think this is funny, apparently, even if they never witness the punch line. Strangos standing in the middle of Wenkel’s cornfield clutching their little purses. Strangos in the Piggly Wiggly parking lot next to the dumpsters, noses squinched against the stench. Strangos in front of my house—not funny at all—so close to each other the heels of their black shoes touch. I found them early on Christmas morning, standing beneath the streetlamp, upturned faces dotted with flakes of snow, matching pea coats frosted with ice, knees trembling above soggy ankle socks and black shoes.

    They arrive all year, undeterred by the season. July and August bring a few carrying guidebooks and taking selfies (which no legitimate Strango would ever do) things get more serious in September, but October is Strango high season. In October the scent of wood smoke mingles with the beeswax candles perfuming my home with honey. Give me that and a blood moon casting everything in a mortal glow. Give me that and the ghost the Strangos seek, though I am not one of them, but an original.

    She was buried, they say, in an unmarked grave at her mother’s request. It was generally understood this was done in the usual manner, but after that movie came out with its silly premise that Laurel’s weary ghost haunts the mysterious location of her body’s interment the Strangos arrived with their earnest obsession. I, myself, seeking answers, once stood on Laurel’s porch until her mother threatened me with a kettle of boiled water.

    Forgive me? the Strangos murmur as they pass. It’s just coincidence. The Strangos murmur their forgiveness request because in the movie that’s how

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