Tuesday, December 31, 2013

2014: A Story A Week



2014 is the year of #AStoryAWeek. All you have to do is write a story a week. I know, I know,ALL you have to do--like it's not hard. It will be hard at times, but some weeks will be easier than others. Hell, just scroll down through the 
list here: http://mcnito.blogspot.com/p/a-story-week.html. It's not really that long. I actually copy/pasted way too many "weeks" and was pleasantly surprised at how few there were. :)

REMEMBER: a story is a story, no matter how long. It can be 6000 words or 60 words. It can be written, edited, and polished for submission, or it can be a super-rough first draft. It can be brand new, or it can be an old story you've finally completed. Just THINK IN INK and get those words down! I will update this list with my story titles to show how I'm progressing, and I encourage you guys to comment with your lists, too! GOOD LUCK!! YOU CAN DO IT!!

Saturday, November 2, 2013

COFFIN HOP 2013 WINNERS

THANK YOU TO EVERYONE WHO PARTICIPATED IN MY COFFIN HOP CONTEST. I chose the winners using Random.org.
THE THREE LUCKY WINNERS ARE BELOW:

GEORGINA MORALES

Signed print edition of From The Herald's Wearied Eye: JEANETTE J

Signed Print Limited Edition of Rabbits in the Garden: POPPLE

If I haven't contacted you by the time you see this post, please email me at jessica.mchugh@ymail.com.
THANKS AGAIN, EVERYONE.
If you would like to purchase a signed limited edition copy of Rabbits in the Garden, message me at the address above or on Facebook. It's $30, including US shipping. 

And PLEASE purchase a copy of Death by Drive-In if you can. All profits will be donated to LitWorld.org! 

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Coffin Hop: A Crash Delight


Welcome to the 6th day of COFFIN HOP 2013, 
my cute little chloroform addicts!

What follows below is a flash piece about car crash fetishes...but not the JG Ballard kind...This horrerotica is from a different POV entirely. >:)

(By the way, ONLY ONE PERSON HAS ENTERED MY PRINT CONTEST.
If you'd like to win an autographed print copy of my novel FROM THE HERALD'S WEARIED EYE or the 1st edition of my bestseller RABBITS IN THE GARDEN, spend $0.99 on a copy of my collection Virtuoso at Masturbation, and More McHughmorous Musings or my short story Food for Thought. Comment with your purchase code to enter! And don't forget to leave any ol' comment to join the giveaway for the COFFIN HOP anthology ebook DEATH BY DRIVE-IN.)

A Crash Delight
by Jessica McHugh

The twisted metal moans, longing to contract until only screams escape between slits of Chevrolet flesh. According to GE-197, humans sound like stuck pigs when they panic. Before joining the others along Route 15, he worked near a farm, so there’s no reason to refute his claim. After all, they’re both just animals—screaming meat gnashed to jelly by misfortune and negligence. Their shrill voices used to irritate us, but we’ve learned to appreciate their part in the symphony, a pointed overture to a violent highway ballet. Each crash is a masterpiece. To see things spin together and split apart so fast—how could anyone judge our sexual affections?

We delight in silver skin sweating crimson, the broken mirrors shearing muscle from bone as the crash shears our inhibitions. It is a glorious intoxication watching humans crawl from wreckage, but no one complains when drivers find themselves trapped between Death’s thighs. The more they struggle, the tighter he squeezes, their innards oozing over a steel picture of the Show Me state.

Pulpy metal makes me slick, so I pray for a struggle. Above the dew and scarlet handprints from a passenger’s fight to stand, electric oil drips down my pole, decorating the pavement with lamplit lust.

Erect in the night, we shine together as an orgy of stars bent over fiery foreplay. When flashes of red and blue color the road, we know our fun might end soon. Satisfaction is close, but we don't let our lust peak until we're sure it can't get any better. We wait for ribbons of smoke to turn to billows, savoring the climb to the big bang.

My lovers hum, the fire crackles, and humans attempt to scatter. Vermillion death swallows the cars and their cargo, brighter than the barrage of vehicles sent to save them. It’s too late for that now. When their bodies ignite beneath us, our climaxes explode with their flesh, soaking the street in rivers of light.

The blood is most beautiful then, enough to keep our juices pumping while the scene is scrubbed clean. But despite how hard the crews work, the blood will always be there. Flowering spots and spatters keep us tingling. The memory is nowhere near the pleasure derived from the crash itself, but as we wait for another slippery night, we stay alight with the stains—the masturbatory roses of humanity’s daily grind.

The End

REMEMBER THE SPOOKTACULAR PRIZES

I have THREE PRIZES up for grabs. One lucky hopper will win an ebook copy of DEATH BY DRIVE-IN at the end of the hop just for commenting. That's all it takes. Just stop in and say hi. Tell me you dig the post. Tell me you hate the post. Tell me your mom held you too much (or not enough) when you were a baby. It doesn't matter. Just comment. I will pick one person at random to receive the ebook.

The next few prizes are a bit trickier. But that's because the prizes are 
AUTOGRAPHED PRINT COPIES of Jessica McHugh books. 

The first is a copy of my dystopian novel 
FROM THE HERALD'S WEARIED EYE. (Click the link for info)

The second is a LIMITED EDITION 1ST PRINTING of my bestselling novel 
I have the only remaining copies of this book, so once they're gone, they're gone. 
And you can win one!

So HOW do you win one? Well, there are two ways. 
You can purchase my short story FOOD FOR THOUGHT for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. It should be a Dxx-xxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx number. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00FAASNUY
OR 
You can purchase my collection of ponderings, pictures, and writing prompts, VIRTUOSO AT MASTURBATION, & MORE McHUGHMOROUS MUSINGS, for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. http://www.amazon.com/Virtuoso-Masturbation-More-McHughmorous-Musings-ebook/dp/B00E1JSDX2

Nab the short story or collection, save those purchase codes, and DON'T FORGET TO COMMENT!!

Don't forget to check out the LINKY LIST.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Coffin Hop: The Right Stuff


Welcome to the 5th day of COFFIN HOP 2013, 
my gorgeous Garbage Pail Kids!

Today, I'm featuring a short story that will soon be heard far and wide on The Wicked Library Season Three. If you haven't checked out The Wicked Library yet, you're missing out! It features established and up and coming authors, and the host Nelson W. Pyles is simply to die for! >:)

ENJOY the bizarro horror of THE RIGHT STUFF, which was written as a follow-up to Michael A Arnzen's "The Curse of Fat Face." And don't forget to comment!!

THE RIGHT STUFF
by Jessica McHugh

Flat-Chested Charrie was a notorious bra-stuffer. In the beginning, she relied heavily on tissues and paper towels, but after watching her Bounty-filled bosoms shrink beneath the water hurled by two girls in her gym class, she stayed on the lookout for the next great stuffing. So far, socks, peaches, even jumbo jawbreakers she’d won in a David Hyde Pierce lookalike contest, had failed her. The closest she came to normality was in pudding-filled balloons, but something about them never felt right.

It seemed, for Flat-Chested Charrie, beauty would never be abreast. She would never have a boyfriend. She would never know how it felt to be suckled by a man as that feisty goat at the 4H fair had suckled her three years before (and once last year). Staring at her naked body, at ecru nipples that receded into themselves when faced with their reflection, Charrie pondered what she could fix.

She’d always been a skinny thing. Too skinny. Maybe all she needed was some more meat on her bones.

For the next several weeks, no food would be off-limits. Charrie watched in wonder as her ass expanded and her belly bowed under the weight of ambition. Shiny tracks of scar tissue joined the party, stretching across her body and meeting, with jiggling kisses, stripes of irritated skin on her hips, where denim punished her flesh. Her face spread too, her chins mocking the rigidity of other chins. They waved like a pond struck by a pebble, her cheeks echoing the splash. But as voluptuous as she became, as many ferris wheels she caused to be decommissioned with her girder-bending heft, Flat-Chested Charrie remained flat-chested. In fact, what breasts she had took a tip from her nipples and retreated inward. The empty skin on her chest sagged, cold and lonely as slaughterhouse cattle.

Clearly, gaining mass wasn’t the answer.

Charrie jogged every day to drop the weight, but stubborn lumps clung to her bones in the worst places. She had one mushy hip, a chunky ribcage, and an apron of dimpled skin sagging over her crotch that refused to depart.

To distract herself, she returned to her search for the perfect stuffing. She’d never been a garish girl, but she grew to love bra ornaments as an option. Prettier than pudding, they offered the illusion of firm, perky bosoms. Threading the hooks through her shy nipples proved tricky, but with large green and red balls dangling from her chest, a bit of her old spirit returned. Unlike tissues, the adornments were never at risk for falling out or shrinking, and thanks to a few layers of bubble wrap, breaking wasn’t likely, either. There was only one problem.

When Charrie exercised, the plastic rubbed against her sweaty chest, causing staccato squeaks. Other female joggers stared at her in disgust. It was unfair, as the stares she gave them were out of admiration. How lovely they looked in their sports bras, the spandex hugging their breasts while still allowing a romantic bounce. It was a wonder she could see anything else, let alone the twinkle of a jar inside a neighboring house.

As she was drawn to the window, her chest squeaked out a warning, but the jar of jelly on the other side spoke loudest. It beckoned her body, and promised her beauty.

“Can I help you?”

Charrie spun around to face ample breasts, their ivory skin prickled by the breeze. It took her longer to see the woman who wore them—Mrs. Face, the owner of the window made slimy by Flat-Chested Charrie’s drool. She didn’t know the woman well; just that she was over forty and lived alone. Looking at her was like looking into the future—except that future had nice tits.

Mrs. Face stood akimbo, mail in hand, and looked down on the girl, who fumbled for a lie that would get her closer to the glowing mush in the jar.

“I’m selling cookies,” she said, but Mrs. Face said nothing.

“Pizza.” Nothing.

“T-shirts.” Nothing.

“Dildos.” An eyebrow raise.

“I’m selling lots of stuff,” Charrie said, her eyes focused several inches below Mrs. Face’s face. “I have a catalog I can show you girls.”

“It’s just me, dear. My husband left when our daughter Fatima passed. Although, it feels like she’s still here sometimes. Her spirit, I mean.” A blush crossed the bulges above her blouse, and Charrie nodded as she advanced on Mrs. Face, backing her up to the door. “Okay, I guess I have a few minutes to look through your catalog.”

Once inside, Charrie’s concave chest led her straight to the mantle to inspect the jar. It was filled with what looked like pink mashed potatoes and pork. The consistency was similar to the pudding that had once filled her bra, but there was more texture in the jar’s contents, more life in the lumps.

“What’s this?”

Mrs. Face’s breasts sunk on her ribcage. “That’s my Fatima. Beautiful, isn’t she? She never thought so. She wanted so badly to be part of something beautiful. Now, this is all that’s left of her.

Flat-Chested Charrie understood that desire too well. She figured it’s why the jar had captivated her with such intensity, bringing her to the conclusion that if she was ever to be beautiful, she had to help Fatima Face find beauty. The dream had torn poor Fatima apart; Charrie had to find a way for them to live their dreams together, lest she follow suit.

She was nothing if not a desperate girl. (She had Christmas ornaments hanging from her nipples, for Christ’s sake.) So, when she spotted the letter opener on the desk, and her mind churned with thoughts of Fatima’s pink stuffing, only 1% of her plan seemed like the most horrendous one ever.

“Where’s your catalog?” Mrs. Face asked.

“Can I have some orange juice or soda?”

“I think I have some milk.”

“Okay, but I need a whole glass.”

Mrs. Face didn’t try to hide rolling her eyes as she left. Charrie didn’t try to hide grabbing the letter opener and snatching the human gelatin from the mantle. She tore off her top and unhooked her festive breasts. With the letter opener clamped in her fingers, she gave the jar a good swirl.

Yes. It would work. All she had to do was make an incision.

The job was done by the time Mrs. Face entered the room. Holding the flaps below her clavicle closed, Chesty Charrie stood more confident than ever before, the empty jar lying at her feet. It filled with spilled milk when Mrs. Face dropped the glass on the floor, her eyes averted.

“Fatima…my God…” she mewled.

When she looked up again, her tears continued to fall, but they no longer fell heavy. There was a new levity in the woman, something that increased as Charrie neared.

“She’s so beautiful. You both are,” Mrs. Face whispered, beaming. “She’s bouncing with you, perky for once.”

When she embraced Charrie, a bit of Fatima squeezed out the incision. Yelping, she ran for her sewing kit. Once she’d sewn the flaps closed, and Chesty Charrie was well on her way to becoming a beautiful girl, Mrs. Face sat her down and thanked her. “You’ve made a sad woman’s dreams come true, dear. How can I repay you?”

“I’m the grateful one, Mrs. Face. If you want anything, it’s yours.”

“Do you mean that?”

“Of course. What do you want?”

Mrs. Face wrapped her arm around Chesty Charrie, offering a simpering smile as she said, “The thing is, you’re representing my daughter now. And while you look a lot better, you still need to worry about…” Her eyes made the bulgy journey over Charrie’s body. “…Everything else.”

“What can I do?” she asked.

Mrs. Face lifted the letter opener, the metal gleaming between splotches of blood.

Through the extensive surgeries, Charrie bit her lip—until Mrs. Face removed it. After the sawing and scraping and slapping of one garbage heap to another, Charrie clung to her breasts, hoping for a perfect body at last. But when Mrs. Face set down the letter opener, she shook her head in disappointment.

“What’s wrong? Aren’t I beautiful?”

Mrs. Face picked up the empty jar Fatima’s body had once called home. Charrie didn’t have time to question it before the woman slammed it against her head.

She awoke flat-chested again, her flesh torn open in threaded tabs that wept onto the pavement. It took her several minutes to realize that the flaps on her chest had been removed completely, the muscle beneath shredded. As bosomy joggers bounced past, Charrie sat up and looked to Mrs. Face’s house. Through the window, she saw Fatima’s mother set her daughter back on the mantle. As the jar was gone, the pink goo was no longer visible, but Fatima was still on display—as the stuffing in a globe of skin, accented with inverted nipples.

Flat-Chested Charrie’s quest for beauty had ended. When it came down it, there wasn’t enough human gelatin in the world.

REMEMBER THE SPOOKTACULAR PRIZES

I have THREE PRIZES up for grabs. One lucky hopper will win an ebook copy of DEATH BY DRIVE-IN at the end of the hop just for commenting. That's all it takes. Just stop in and say hi. Tell me you dig the post. Tell me you hate the post. Tell me your mom held you too much (or not enough) when you were a baby. It doesn't matter. Just comment. I will pick one person at random to receive the ebook.

The next few prizes are a bit trickier. But that's because the prizes are 
AUTOGRAPHED PRINT COPIES of Jessica McHugh books. 

The first is a copy of my dystopian novel 
FROM THE HERALD'S WEARIED EYE. (Click the link for info)

The second is a LIMITED EDITION 1ST PRINTING of my bestselling novel 
I have the only remaining copies of this book, so once they're gone, they're gone. 
And you can win one!

So HOW do you win one? Well, there are two ways. 
You can purchase my short story FOOD FOR THOUGHT for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. It should be a Dxx-xxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx number. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00FAASNUY
OR 
You can purchase my collection of ponderings, pictures, and writing prompts, VIRTUOSO AT MASTURBATION, & MORE McHUGHMOROUS MUSINGS, for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. http://www.amazon.com/Virtuoso-Masturbation-More-McHughmorous-Musings-ebook/dp/B00E1JSDX2

Nab the short story or collection, save those purchase codes, and DON'T FORGET TO COMMENT!!

Don't forget to check out the LINKY LIST.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

COFFIN HOP: Hidden Children pt2


Welcome to the 4th day of COFFIN HOP 2013, 
my twitchy little cadaver crickets!

As promised, here's another excerpt from my novella HIDDEN CHILDREN, which will appear in the Dark & Bookish Tour and Documentary anthology, AT THE NEXT EXIT.

(By the way, if you'd like to win an autographed print copy of my novel FROM THE HERALD'S WEARIED EYE or the 1st edition of my bestseller RABBITS IN THE GARDEN, spend $0.99 on a copy of my collection Virtuoso at Masturbation, and More McHughmorous Musings or my short story Food for Thought. Comment with your purchase code to enter! And don't forget to leave any ol' comment to join the giveaway for the COFFIN HOP anthology ebook DEATH BY DRIVE-IN.)

a selection from 
HIDDEN CHILDREN 
by Jessica McHugh

As she dozed in the passenger seat, I did all I could to concentrate on the road. I blasted abrasive music, drummed the wheel, and clung to consciousness. But my eyelids eventually drooped, and I found myself succumbing to liquor and exhaustion. If it hadn’t been for an ear-splitting scream, this drunkie would’ve plowed right into the teenage girl shrieking on the roadside.

I jerked the wheel and hit the brakes. Jenny snapped awake and squinted at the girl standing in my high beams.

I wiped fresh sweat off my face. “Shit, that was close.”

“Sure was,” Jenny said. “Now get moving.”

The girl screamed again, smacking the hood of the car.

“What the hell is her problem?”

“Doesn’t matter. Get going,” she said.

The girl ran to my window, slapping it with open palms to punctuate her pleas. “You have to help me! They’re coming! They’re going to kill me!”

“Oh, hell no,” Jenny spat. “Come on, we gotta go. The Kids are coming for her.”

Tears streamed down her cheeks in thick mascara lines. “Let me in, please!”

“Don’t do it. If she’s near us when the Kids get their hands on her, we could get pulled down, too.”

“We can’t leave her. She’ll be killed.”

“She’ll be happier in Heaven,” Jenny said. She grabbed the wheel and turned the tires to the road. “Come on, we have to go.”

When the girl stared down the road, I saw what appeared to be a burn mark on her neck. “They’re coming!” she screeched. “Please, help me. I’m out of pills.”

I looked to Jenny. She shook her head, and her mother had nothing to offer but snores. The girl pounded on our windows, her focus jumping from me to the road and back. Eventually, the girl shrieked an expletive and bolted away, down the road.

Jenny grabbed my arm. “Don’t even think about it,” she said.

But the thought had already come to stay. I twisted the keys out of the ignition and dashed from the car. Pulling Andrew’s K37 from my pocket, I chased her down. I spun her around, told her to open up, and tossed the white pill into her mouth.

She swallowed and sunk to the ground. Clinging to my leg, she wept her gratitude.

“You’re okay. You’re going to be fine.” I pulled her up, and she hugged me. For the first time in years, I felt like I’d been put on the Earth to do more than be a drunkie. I’d saved the girl’s life.

So why the hell was she still screaming?

As she backed away, her eyes opened so wide her pupils looked like pinpoints.

“What did you do?” she yelled. “You evil, goddamn bitch, why did you do this to me?”

She ran but almost immediately tripped over her feet. Sobbing, shaking, she continued on her hands and knees. I heard Jenny calling me back to the car, but I was too mesmerized by the hysterical girl to listen. A shriller scream preceded the girl’s abrupt stop. She turned around, crawling back to me, but within a few feet, a dozen soggy figures materialized, surrounding her. They slogged forward, looking like boiled meat with finger bones clawing the air. She wailed as the Kids closed in, an unnatural amount of sweat running down her face.

The girl tried to fight them off, but there were too many. When the Kids latched on, her scream broke so violet through the night I had to cover my ears. A vortex opened in the ground, and when it sucked her legs down, they broke backwards with a wet snap. The hole tugged on her lower body while the Kids held her arms, their burnt hands cooking her flesh. Her skin sizzled, and panels of her blackened face stripped away, disappearing into the oily abyss.

I yelped when a hand covered my mouth, but the pill Jenny dropped onto my tongue calmed me. She took the keys and pulled me back to the car, pushing me toward the passenger side. I opened the door, but before I could slide in, fingers like scalding wax wrapped around my arm.

The Kid’s face was a pit of broken bone. Only three teeth remained on its splintered jaw, jutting up like yellowed monoliths into an empty night. But with the sudden drowse that struck me, the Kid’s solidity thinned. It hissed one more blast of boggy breath before vanishing with the others. Only the teenager remained—for a few seconds before the road sucked the rest of her in, silencing her. Inside K37’s fog, I didn’t feel the burns on my arm or Jenny pulling me into the passenger seat. I was just there, my head lolling as she slammed the gas and sped away. On the first frantic turn, I knocked my head against the window, but I didn’t care. The glass was cool, and the swelling body buzz coaxed me into blissful dreams.

***


I awoke to screaming pain in my arm, followed by a breath of cool comfort as my mom blew on my wounds. She smiled, her crow’s feet extending to her paling hairline. Jenny stood behind her, giving a small wave when we caught eyes. When Mom helped me sit up, I realized my hangover was still hanging on, thumping in time with my arm.

“That girl…” I said. Jenny shook her head, looking away to pop a red pill from a baggie.

“What are those?” I asked.

She jostled the bag. “What do you think, drunkie?”

“K37? That’s what you gave me?”

“Do you think I’d dose you with XK4? I'm not a complete asshole.”

I shut my eyes, a knot in my throat. “Then I am. I didn’t give that girl a red pill.”

“Sweetie, what are you talking about? What girl?” Mom asked.

“She tried to help some teenager on the way here. That’s how she got touched,” Jenny said. She sat beside me as my mom wrapped gauze around my burn. “The pill you gave the girl—was it white, oblong?” I nodded, tears welling.

“Why did you give her an XK4?” my dad asked.

“Andrew said it was K37. He gave it to me in case I had trouble after the reunion.”

“Or to cause you more.”

“Why would he do that?”

“Jealousy, boredom—I guess we’ll never know,” Jenny said. “At least you’re still here.”

“But that girl—”

“They were already going to get her. There was nothing you could do.”

Dad clapped his hand to his chest. “Oh my God, you saw it happen?”

“We all did,” Jenny said, squeezing my hand. “Look on the bright side. Now you know you had nothing to do with Andrew’s death.”

I growled. “Now I kinda wish I had.”

Mom pulled me close and kissed my forehead. She sounded sadder than ever when she said, “Welcome home, sweetheart.”

....stay tuned for more selections from HIDDEN CHILDREN....

REMEMBER THE SPOOKTACULAR PRIZES

I have THREE PRIZES up for grabs. One lucky hopper will win an ebook copy of DEATH BY DRIVE-IN at the end of the hop just for commenting. That's all it takes. Just stop in and say hi. Tell me you dig the post. Tell me you hate the post. Tell me your mom held you too much (or not enough) when you were a baby. It doesn't matter. Just comment. I will pick one person at random to receive the ebook.

The next few prizes are a bit trickier. But that's because the prizes are 
AUTOGRAPHED PRINT COPIES of Jessica McHugh books. 

The first is a copy of my dystopian novel 
FROM THE HERALD'S WEARIED EYE. (Click the link for info)

The second is a LIMITED EDITION 1ST PRINTING of my bestselling novel 
I have the only remaining copies of this book, so once they're gone, they're gone. 
And you can win one!

So HOW do you win one? Well, there are two ways. 
You can purchase my short story FOOD FOR THOUGHT for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. It should be a Dxx-xxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx number. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00FAASNUY
OR 
You can purchase my collection of ponderings, pictures, and writing prompts, VIRTUOSO AT MASTURBATION, & MORE McHUGHMOROUS MUSINGS, for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. http://www.amazon.com/Virtuoso-Masturbation-More-McHughmorous-Musings-ebook/dp/B00E1JSDX2

Nab the short story or collection, save those purchase codes, and DON'T FORGET TO COMMENT!!

Don't forget to check out the LINKY LIST.

Saturday, October 26, 2013

COFFIN HOP: Food for Thought


Welcome to the 3rd day of COFFIN HOP 2013, 
my crazy closet monsters!

Today, I'm featuring a selection from my One-Night Stand story FOOD FOR THOUGHT, recently released by Perpetual Motion Machine Publishing. By the way, did you know PMMP also just bought my novel THE GREEN KANGAROOS? Yep. That totally happened. :) Anyway, if you'd like to purchase the rest of this story, it'll put you in the running for one of two SIGNED PRINT books, one of which is a LIMITED EDITION.

Just spend $0.99 on a copy of my collection Virtuoso at Masturbation, and More McHughmorous Musings or my short story Food for Thought, and comment with your purchase code to enter! And don't forget to leave any ol' comment to join the giveaway for the COFFIN HOP anthology ebook DEATH BY DRIVE-IN.



...from FOOD FOR THOUGHT by Jessica McHugh...

One day, as I headed home from a double shift, I noticed a kid squatting on the sidewalk, digging a hole in the dirt. It was almost dark and the kid was alone, so I decided to investigate. He was giggling when I approached, but when he noticed me, he stopped and threw his body on top of the hole.

“What are you doing?” I asked.

“It’s mine, it’s mine,” he howled. “Go, away! It’s mine. I found it.”

“Found what?”

When I pulled him away from the hole, he dropped his treasure: a handful of gold coins. Naturally, I thought they were plastic, maybe chocolate. Despite the boy’s protests, I snatched one from his hand, marveling at the cold, genuine weight. The boy tried to grab it back, but I refused to let go—not to stop the kid from crying or thrashing, not even to stop him from tumbling backwards into the street. As long as I had that gold in my hand, I didn’t care if some random kid got a few scrapes.



As it turned out, neither did the bumper of the Comcast van that mowed the boy down. The bumper hit the kid’s chest with an audible crack, like snapping celery. The force crumpled him, throwing his face against the hood of the van. The wet, meaty smack was more melon than celery, but after his rind had been broken, the hood still had to contend with the bone beneath. The screech of his skull against the hood could be compared to no discernible food, and after seeing that his nose had been bashed off his face, I wasn’t sure I’d ever eat food again. The van hit its brakes, launching the kid backwards, and when his head cracked against the pavement, the impact drove several of his bottom teeth through his top lip.

I froze in place, my palm sweating beneath the gold. I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. It was all I could do to keep breathing, which became more difficult when the boy turned his broken face to me. As he scraped himself off of the pavement, he pointed the only finger that hadn’t been reduced to a swinging tube of broken bone right at me. Although he’d started shambling in my direction, people ran to the spot where he’d landed, as if he were still there. Screaming women gathered around the bloodstain while I broke into a sweating fit so intense, I was afraid I’d pissed my pants. The boy’s jaw slipped down his neck with each bloody stomp until he sat down on the curb like a marionette collapsing into its box.

“How’s that gold working out for you?” he croaked at me.

The voice couldn’t have belonged to the little boy. His jaw hung by a thread of black sinew, incapable of movement, but the voice itself was too deep, too gravelly, and decidedly more menacing.

I tried to say a dozen things before “You don’t look so good,” stuttered out. I think he laughed, but it could’ve been air escaping.

“If you think this is bad, just wait.”

Read the rest of FOOD FOR THOUGHT via the links below.

REMEMBER THE SPOOKTACULAR PRIZES

I have THREE PRIZES up for grabs. One lucky hopper will win an ebook copy of DEATH BY DRIVE-IN at the end of the hop just for commenting. That's all it takes. Just stop in and say hi. Tell me you dig the post. Tell me you hate the post. Tell me your mom held you too much (or not enough) when you were a baby. It doesn't matter. Just comment. I will pick one person at random to receive the ebook.

The next few prizes are a bit trickier. But that's because the prizes are 
AUTOGRAPHED PRINT COPIES of Jessica McHugh books. 

The first is a copy of my dystopian novel 
FROM THE HERALD'S WEARIED EYE. (Click the link for info)

The second is a LIMITED EDITION 1ST PRINTING of my bestselling novel 
I have the only remaining copies of this book, so once they're gone, they're gone. 
And you can win one!

So HOW do you win one? Well, there are two ways. 
You can purchase my short story FOOD FOR THOUGHT for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. It should be a Dxx-xxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx number. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00FAASNUY
OR 
You can purchase my collection of ponderings, pictures, and writing prompts, VIRTUOSO AT MASTURBATION, & MORE McHUGHMOROUS MUSINGS, for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. http://www.amazon.com/Virtuoso-Masturbation-More-McHughmorous-Musings-ebook/dp/B00E1JSDX2

Nab the short story or collection, save those purchase codes, and DON'T FORGET TO COMMENT!!

Don't forget to check out the LINKY LIST.

Friday, October 25, 2013

COFFIN HOP: Hidden Children

Welcome to the 2nd day of COFFIN HOP 2013, 
my little graverobbers!

Today, I'm treating you with a tricky little excerpt from my novella HIDDEN CHILDREN, which will appear in the Dark & Bookish Tour and Documentary anthology, AT THE NEXT EXIT.

It's not the bloodiest of selections, but it does feature something just as terrifying:
DOMESTIC DISHARMONY (OOOooooHhhooohhhh...) Okay, okay, maybe it's not as terrifying as the gorier passages, but this scene does start our narrator down a dark path which leads her to the truth behind the bloodthirsty ghosts tormenting her hometown.

(By the way, if you'd like to win an autographed print copy of my novel FROM THE HERALD'S WEARIED EYE or the 1st edition of my bestseller RABBITS IN THE GARDEN, spend $0.99 on a copy of my collection Virtuoso at Masturbation, and More McHughmorous Musings or my short story Food for Thought. Comment with your purchase code to enter! And don't forget to leave any ol' comment to join the giveaway for the COFFIN HOP anthology ebook DEATH BY DRIVE-IN.)




HIDDEN CHILDREN
by Jessica McHugh

No one swam in Somerset. Like 'Jaws' instilled fear in beach-goers, Somerset inspired aquaphobia with something worse than a bloodthirsty shark. The terror was so severe that showers rarely exceeded five minutes, and baths were strictly forbidden. But avoiding lakes and pools couldn’t necessarily prevent people from drowning. No, not in my hometown.

But I didn’t remember any of this. Not for ten years.


I abandoned Somerset promptly after high school graduation: the last free will decision I’d made before alcohol took over. Of course this drunkie gave her strange childhood a thought or two in the years since moving to Los Angeles, but they never hunkered down. They never pushed me into homesickness or made me pontificate on the numerous holes in my memory.

Those holes were a concern in the past, sure, but delusion is one of alcohol’s greatest blessings. If I were asked why I’d never learned to swim, I’d simply shrug and have another drink. It was easier than delving into a broken past.

I didn’t view my childhood as unhappy. My parents and I got along well enough, and I’d had a close-knit circle of friends, so what memories I retained remained sweet. Slumber parties and camping, fooling around in the woods and sneaking off for smoke rides—as far as I was concerned, I’d had a good life. Why contest something as silly as time-holes or my inexplicable need to get wasted for a decade?

I didn’t call home often, for good reason. Why would I want my parents to know what I’d become? Why would I want my best friend, Jenny Dwyer, to realize everything I’d said about my fancy life in California was a lie? Even though we’d rarely spoken in the last ten years, I still considered her a friend. Maybe my only friend.

Sad as it was, I valued it more than my relationship with my fiancé, Gary.

While Gary was adamant about our marriage, it felt like he wanted to marry a version of me who'd never existed. But not to worry, he’d say. He planned to work his ass off destroying the drunkie and building a better wife from her vodka-soaked bones. He didn’t seem to like me very much, which was appropriate because I’d grown to dislike him, too. Not a day passed that he didn’t insult me about my drinking. Sure, I had a problem—anyone could see that—but the closer we got to the wedding, the louder his disparagements.

So, I drank more, and he insulted more. I sometimes thought we loved the vicious circle more than each other.

I had no sane reason for staying with him, but I wasn’t looking for sanity those days. My exhilaration at receiving an invitation to Somerset High’s Class of 2003 ten-year reunion was particularly batty. I never thought it would tug my heart like it did, especially considering my terror in appearing a drunken failure to my classmates. But they didn’t have to know Gary and I were on the rocks, or how often I took drinks the same way. As long as I tempered my thirst for loudmouth soup, I figured I could survive the reunion with grace and dignity.

After twenty-eight graceless years, I don’t know how I thought I would succeed. Gary wanted me to skip it, saying we needed time together. The wedding was in three months, and I hadn’t started planning, which added to the appeal of fleeing.

“Why do you want to go back? You can hardly remember the place, and you hate everyone there.”

“Not my parents.”

He rolled his eyes. “You could call them whenever you want, and you don’t. Why fly across the country? We could use the money on the wedding.”

“It’s going to be a cheap ceremony anyway,” I said. “We can just go to the courthouse.”

He grabbed my arm, tugging me close. “Okay, let’s go. Right now.”

I smiled and touched his chest to make him think leaving was some sort of battle. “Okay…” I said, easing back. “…When I get back from Somerset.”

He tore the reunion invitation from my hand while pushing me from his embrace. After typing the address into his phone, he threw the filigreed card at me like a Frisbee. A sharp corner hit my arm, but before I could complain, he shoved his phone in my face.

“Look, your hometown is so shitty it doesn’t even show up on GPS.”

“I don’t need a GPS. I remember how to get there,” I said. “I think…”

He scoffed. “Have another drink.”

“I don’t know why you have such a problem with this. I’ll only be gone a few days.”

“I have a problem because we have plans on the day of your reunion.” He’d stared at me, waiting, but except for a wine craving, my mind was blank. “We have to finalize the reception hall on the fifteenth. Both of us.” Just to add insult to injury, he added, “Don’t you remember?”

I averted my eyes but still felt his grin like fire consuming a wobbly tower—the last bit of abuse to make it fall.

Gary snapped his fingers. “Hey, drunkie, eyes on me. Frankly, if you don’t choose our wedding over some stupid town you can’t remember, I don’t want a wedding at all."

“Please don’t be like that, Gary.”

“Sorry, but that’s the way it is. It’s either me or Somerset.”

I plucked the invitation from the floor and tore it in half. Triumphant, he took the pieces, dropped them in the trash, and wrapped his arm around me.

Kissing my forehead, he said, “That’s my girl.”

He didn’t know it, but his girl was as good as gone.

After Gary left for work that morning, I packed the little I valued into one suitcase and took a taxi to the airport. He could keep the rest, including my wedding dress. Maybe he’d be able to get his money back. But with the merlot stain I’d left on the bustier, I doubted it.


...NEXT TIME IN HIDDEN CHILDREN...

The girl tried to fight them off, but there were too many. When the Kids latched on, her scream broke so violet through the night I had to cover my ears. A vortex opened in the ground, and when it sucked her legs down, they broke backwards with a wet snap. The hole tugged on her lower body while the Kids held her arms, their burnt hands cooking her flesh. Her skin sizzled, and panels of her blackened face stripped away, disappearing into the oily abyss.


...Keeping following my  COFFIN HOP posts for more from HIDDEN CHILDREN, coming soon in the Dark and Bookish anthology, AT THE NEXT EXIT.

REMEMBER THE SPOOKTACULAR PRIZES

I have THREE PRIZES up for grabs. One lucky hopper will win an ebook copy of DEATH BY DRIVE-IN at the end of the hop just for commenting. That's all it takes. Just stop in and say hi. Tell me you dig the post. Tell me you hate the post. Tell me your mom held you too much (or not enough) when you were a baby. It doesn't matter. Just comment. I will pick one person at random to receive the ebook.

The next few prizes are a bit trickier. But that's because the prizes are 
AUTOGRAPHED PRINT COPIES of Jessica McHugh books. 

The first is a copy of my dystopian novel 
FROM THE HERALD'S WEARIED EYE. (Click the link for info)

The second is a LIMITED EDITION 1ST PRINTING of my bestselling novel 
I have the only remaining copies of this book, so once they're gone, they're gone. 
And you can win one!

So HOW do you win one? Well, there are two ways. 
You can purchase my short story FOOD FOR THOUGHT for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. It should be a Dxx-xxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx number. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00FAASNUY
OR 
You can purchase my collection of ponderings, pictures, and writing prompts, VIRTUOSO AT MASTURBATION, & MORE McHUGHMOROUS MUSINGS, for $0.99 and COMMENT with your order number. http://www.amazon.com/Virtuoso-Masturbation-More-McHughmorous-Musings-ebook/dp/B00E1JSDX2

Nab the short story or collection, save those purchase codes, and DON'T FORGET TO COMMENT!!

Don't forget to check out the LINKY LIST.