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PseudoPod 520: Dermot


Dermot

by Simon Bestwick


The bus turns left off Langworthy Road and onto the approach to the A6.  Just before it goes under the overpass, past the old Jewish cemetery at the top of Brindleheath Road and on past Pendleton Church, it stops and Dermot gets on.

He gets a few funny looks, does Dermot, as he climbs aboard, but then he always does.  It’s hard for people to put their fingers on it.  Maybe it’s the way his bald head looks a bit too big.  Or the fishy largeness of his eyes behind the jar-thick spectacles.  The nervous quiver of his pale lips, perhaps.

Or perhaps it’s just how pale he is.  How smooth.  His skin- his face, his hands- are baby-smooth and baby-soft.  Like they’ve never known work, and hardly ever known light.  

All that and he’s in a suit, too.  Quite an old suit, and it’s not a perfect fit- maybe a size too large- but it’s neat and clean and well-maintained.  Pressed.  Smooth.

And of course, there’s the briefcase.

It’s old-fashioned, like something out of the ‘seventies, made out of plain brown leather.  He doesn’t carry it by the handle.  He hugs it close against his chest.  Like a child.

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PseudoPod 519: Perfect Reflection


Perfect Reflection

by Elizabeth Siedt


You hate mirrors.

You use them, sure, begrudgingly checking your hair and doing your makeup and smiling into them after you’ve finished brushing your teeth. But you’ve never liked them, how they throw back at you a world you take for granted is your own. Antique mirrors in particular unsettle you, like silent mercurial ancestors, hanging on your wall and looking right into your eyes. The worst are the oval ones, with the thin, gold frames. They look like enormous keyholes to a darker world.

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PseudoPod 518: The Tiger

Show Notes

“The Tiger” is one in a loose sequence of stories Nina is still in the process of writing, featuring some continuing characters and all set in and around Lewisham in south east London, where she lived for some years. Other stories in the sequence so far include “Wilkolak” which was published in the biannual British magazine Crimewave, and “The Nightingale”, which was published in the British horror magazine Black Static.


The Tiger

by Nina Allan


There is a bed, a wardrobe with a large oval mirror, a builtin cupboard to one side of the chimney breast. The boards are bare, stained black. There is a greyish cast to everything. Croft guesses the room has not been used in quite some time.

“It’s not much, I’m afraid,” the woman says. Her name is Sandra. Symes has told him everyone including her husband calls her Sandy, but Croft has decided already that he will never do this, that it is ugly, that he likes Sandra better. “I’ve been meaning to paint it, but there hasn’t been time.”

She is too thin, he thinks, with scrawny hips and narrow little birdy hands. Her mousy hair, pulled back in a ponytail, has started to come free of its elastic band. Croft cannot help noticing how tired she looks.

“Don’t worry,” he says. “If you can let me have the paint, I’ll do it myself.”

“Oh,” she says. She seems flustered. “I suppose we could take something off the rent money. In exchange, I mean.”

“There’s no need,” Croft says. “I’d like to do it. Something to keep me out of mischief.” He smiles, hoping to give her reassurance, but she takes a step backwards, just a small one, but still a step, and Croft sees he has made a mistake, already, that the word mischief isn’t funny, not from him, not now, not yet.

He will have to be more careful with what he says. He wonders if this is the way things will be for him from now on.

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PseudoPod 517: Into the Penny Arcade


Into the Penny Arcade

by Claire Dean


She walked down the same street every day on her way home from school. There were no houses along there, just old warehouses with boarded-up windows and rubbish-plugged holes. Red brick dust crumbled from the walls and made patterns on the pavement. Greyish-green moss grew in all the cracks.

The lorry hadn’t ever been there before. It was dark blue with no writing on the side. She crossed away from it, walked faster. Her rucksack dug into her right shoulder, textbooks bounced against her spine, her heels snapped on the pavement. There were no other sounds. The street was like a tunnel; the wind sucked her along it.

She emerged into the real world at the other end: cars bombing past, chip shop smell, a mum with a buggy yelling at a kid who was lagging behind.

The lorry was there again the next day. She crossed over. There were girls who got snatched. Men who did things to girls. It would be dark inside that lorry. Was it always going to be there now? Had it moved during the day whilst she was at school, or at night after she’d passed it? And then come back.

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PseudoPod 516: The Fox


The Fox

by Conrad Williams


Megan was trying to push past her mother and now I was able to breathe more easily. Kit was just trying to shield Lucy from what was inside the coop. Or rather, what wasn’t. The chicken-wire had been torn open. All four chickens were gone. No feathers, no signs of a fight whatsoever. Just one spot of blood on the ramp leading into what Megan had been referring to as the ‘chook-chook’s bunga-oh’.

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PseudoPod 515: The Magician’s Apprentice


The Magician’s Apprentice

by Tamsyn Muir


When she was thirteen, Mr. Hollis told her: “There’s never more than two, Cherry. The magician and the magician’s apprentice.”

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PseudoPod 514B: Halloween Parade 2016

Show Notes

Halloween Parade music is “Depraved are Lurking” by Terrortron (a side project of Anders Manga). Download Terrortron on Bandcamp.


The 2016 Halloween Parade

by Alasdair Stuart

 

Parade time again.

It’s a little darker this year.

The nights, drawing, a little further than they have before. There’s still a crowd. Still a big one, but there’s a little more tension to them than usual. The laughs are louder, more brittle, and the music a little bit angrier.

This is a celebration still.

But it’s also a refuge.

And, maybe that’s why the clowns are so unsettling.

You see the thing about the clowns is… not that they’re at the front of the parade. It’s that they’re all around us. They step out of the woods. Step out of the crowd. Walk silently into formation to form the first float.

They’re all immaculate. They’re all clean.  They are all unsmiling. None of them are carrying weapons…

But we know that all of them could.

We know that all of them want to.

That’s maybe why the kid with the goggles is such a relief – there’s not much to him: three feet maybe 80 pounds soaking wet but the goggles and the light spilling out from behind them that’s … strong, powerful, reassuring even.

He walks next to his dad who’s clearly terrified and clearly not moving from his side. Behind them a shorter thicker set man walks backwards, eyes on the other floats, on the crowd, on anything that could threaten the kid and the lights behind his eyes.

Lights that illuminate an advert.

A huge honest to god advert on a float that drives past, and as it goes by you hear groans from your fellow audience members: It’s come to this, adverts in the Halloween parade. But then you hear those groans… fade as people, as you take a look at just what is being advertised: A high-rise building.

An impossibly futuristic and yet somehow horrifically out of date high-rise building.

There are things… spread on the out…things that you choose not to look at. Especially as there’s a very tall very elfin man who is shirtless, on the float, waving to you as he barbecues something. You realise as the smell reaches you, you do not want to know what that is.

The car comes next. And as ever, the two brothers are in the front. In the back. The blonde man with a trench coat tries a few different versions of his face on precise features shifting as he turns and waves. Sitting next to him as a woman in sweatpants and the white top eyes wide laptop on her knees focusing. You realise not on the noise around her but the movement.

When she gets closer, he realised she’s deaf. And she is more aware, more awake than anyone else you’ve seen in this parade so far.

Except, perhaps, for the man in the smiling mask, walking carefully in the cars blind spot.

He looks at us.

Mimes: shh.

And you can tell he’s smiling.

But even he doesn’t quite see the young man with the odd gate and the hospital gown behind him or the scientist, the one in full decontamination gear, carrying an assault rifle.

The one who only seems visible from certain angles.

You’re still trying to figure out what’s going on when you realise it’s time for a little light music or a little heavy music, whichever works.

The band are loud, raucous, and know all the classics and run at them with all the enthusiasm of an over caffeinated puppy. They even hit a few.

They know them so well that they sprint through the ones that they do hit, moving so fast we can’t quite see the wounds …every band member has.

The maimed right hand of the lead guitarist,

The holes in the back of another’s shirt.

Behind them a group of very large, very angry, very tattooed men walk surrounding a small polite looking grandfather figure. They are all staring at the band. None of them are smiling.

Unlike the folks surrounding the full size wedding cake float that’s next in line and the floats stuffed with food that they’re handing out to parade goers – and I’m not just talking any food here. I’m talking primo, full-on, badass, gourmet food that’s got its fingers dirty, knows all the words to every Faith No More song, as well as how to both order and prepare steak tartare.

You see one chef, icing war paint on her cheeks throwing cupcakes out to the crowd.

Nearby you see a short intense looking man in a Billy Jack t-shirt next to a tall black woman, a human speed blur and the largest man you have EVER seen. All of whom are holding a shirtless Irish gentleman up, and arguing about knife fights. The Irish gentleman is yelling at the blonde man in the car further down the parade. Something about how he owes him 50 quid.

You catch a cupcake by the way. It tastes great.

And behind the food come the spiders.

Nothing you can see, just a whisper of silk on air on skin. Shadows moving like water. The Impossible clack of an impossible amount of mandibles.

The scent of meat.

An FBI agent – you can tell by how bad his suit is – and an academic walk back to back down the road.

The shadows surround them.

The shadows don’t pounce. Not yet.

You are distracted, thankfully, by an argument.

Two men, both huge, both muscled, both immaculately dressed and both wearing luchador masks or having a blazing row. The row appears to be the about best way to interrogate the terrified men dangling from one each of their meaty fists. There’s also something about bacon wrapped hot dogs but…you figure that’s on them.

The man walking behind them is alone. At first. He casts a very long, very large shadow. He is dressed like an old fashioned PI: hands in pockets, head down low, 30 seconds from opening a conversation with the phrase “It was raining in the city by the bay” But he’s glowering. He’s glowering at a spot right in front of him.

There’s something in that look, something other than rage, loneliness, horror.

Something that drives him.

You find yourself looking at the same spot and that’s why you don’t notice the pair of children when they step out of his shadow. They walk hand in hand and they’re careful not to make eye contact or getting close to the man. They’re not together. But they are… and you don’t want anything to do with anyone stupid enough to try and get between them.

The zombies arrive next. Only two of them this year, flanked by a man whose bearing says police officer and another taller man who’s bearing says ‘born this way’ who is holding a cup of tea in a fine china cup.

You can see his hands are shaking a bit, until the woman next to him steadies them.

Behind her: The second zombie float arrives. A legion of White haired, oilskins, men and women smiling and waving… and not a single one of them without dreadful churning feral hunger in their eyes.

And at last, the director, always immaculate, always precisely dressed and always invisible until she’s right in front of you. She strides down the centre of the road. Heels clacking, shoulders back. You watch her leave.

Make sure she does, and as the parade turns the corner: She turns and faces you all.

You didn’t see her put the clown nose on…or the makeup.

She bows, turns again and follows her collections of monsters and ghosts, horrors and victims, stories and myths off to the next town.

They have a lot of ground to cover.

Happy Halloween everyone form everyone here at PseudoPod Towers.

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PseudoPod 514: The Show

Show Notes

This story was also reprinted this month as part of Nightmare’s special issue People of Colo(u)r DESTROY Horror! Read along with the story over at their site. Listen to two more stories from this issue over on the Nightmare podcast feed, and add it to your podcatcher while you’re at it!


The Show

by Priya Sharma

 


The camera crew struggled with the twisting, narrow stairs. Their kit was portable, Steadicams being all the rage. They were lucky that the nature of their work did not require more light. Shadows added atmosphere. Dark corners added depth. It was cold down in the cellar. It turned their breath to mist, which gathered in the stark white pools shed by the bare bulbs overhead.
Martha smiled. It was sublime. Television gold.