Doughboy - Don Broyles - E-Book

Doughboy E-Book

Don Broyles

0,0
3,99 €

oder
-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

What really lurks under your bed?

Would you like to know about the madness of clowns - or the helpless cries of the Doughboy as he’s stuffed into the oven?

Perhaps you fear being trapped in an elevator…for a rather long period of time. Or going on vacation... to a land where screams are eternal, and the tears are rivers of red.

But be careful when crossing the Cith Bridge, for the creatures there feast on things that are not quite… wholesome.

If this sounds like your kind of journey, let Don Broyles be your guide in Doughboy And Other Strange Tales.

This book contains adult content and is not recommended for readers under the age of 18.

Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:

EPUB

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2022

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.


Ähnliche


Doughboy And Other Strange Tales

Don Broyles

Copyright (C) 2018 Don Broyles

Layout design and Copyright (C) 2019 Next Chapter

Published 2019 by Next Chapter

Cover art by CoverMint

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author's permission.

DEDICATION

For my Mother and Father They never lived to see this book.

AND For my son, Ray.

AND For my wife.

DANGEROUS WIENERS

The wieners lay on the sidewalk, their once long, muscular bodies now mashed and pulped from being stepped upon by hundreds of unwary pedestrians. Having no arms or legs, they could do nothing. Lacking a mouth, their screams were mute. Yet they felt pain, an inexorable, throbbing pain, one that – excruciating beyond belief, to be sure – traveled up and down their wiener bodies like an electric jolt. If able, they would have rocked back and forth in an attempt to escape the clodding heels of their tormentors. But there was little hope for this courageous group of daring, but ultimately doomed, wieners. Having volunteered for a reconnaissance journey, they had soon found themselves packaged within a clear container, where they lay smothered against one another in a way that gave them no room for movement, let alone any way for the more lusty wieners to express themselves in the approved fashion that wieners enjoy…

A short while later, their package roughly shorn in two by a sharp knife and nimble fingers, they were then unceremoniously dumped into a pan of boiling water. They rolled about in pain, their movements confused, their equilibrium shattered, but somehow managed to survive this physical abuse that bordered on the pathological. Then, haphazardly stuck between two pieces of bread and drenched with various garnishes, they were consumed with an energetic zeal reserved for hyperactive teenagers. Their partially mutilated and mangled bodies were then tossed aside to the ground like so much refuse. Some of the wieners, those still able to comprehend their plight, planned an escape, but it was hopeless: In less than three minutes most of the wieners were eaten by a mangy Pug with a ravenous – albeit noisy – appetite, which included numerous snorts, slurps, and burps. As if to punctuate the conclusion to this gruesome feast, the Pug emitted an undignified sound from its anus and then scampered off, seemingly satisfied.

The remaining group of wieners, along with those from the original selection committee, never again planned any reconnaissance missions outside their colony, having seen that first group virtually destroyed. The survivors went through a period of mourning for their devoured comrades, and secretly dreamed of revenge against those who had savaged their race with such unmitigated hunger.

TIGHT LITTLE WADS OF FLESH

Westin sat in the lawn chair, a gin and tonic clutched in his right hand as he watched a weasel burrowing into the ground a few yards away. He could feel his flesh flowing in between the woven spaces of the plastic chair, melting like great gobs of cooling bacon grease that puckered out and then dripped onto the wooden deck to form a gluey puddle around him. As he looked down for further confirmation, he could see tight little wads of pinched flesh that made square patterns on his thighs and buttocks. He was apparently sinking through the chair. The criss-cross pattern on his thighs reminded him of the time he had attempted to draw orange crayon squares on his wife's buttocks in an effort to play tic-tac-toe on a pliable surface. But ultimately she had repulsed his advances, leaving him frustrated and restless. He remembered later wandering around the perimeter of the fenced-in back yard like a dog looking for a proper place to urinate.

Now, as he slowly dripped onto the bleached wood of his backyard deck, he wondered if Frosty, his wife's toy poodle, would find any globules of melted flesh on the ground underneath the deck. She was small enough to crawl around down there on her belly, of that he was certain. He imagined spiders and ants feeding on his flesh, each one taking turns – a heavenly feast for everyone.

Except for Westin.

He looked down again and realized with a complacent shrug of his shoulders that both legs were now gone. A hairy soup soaked the deck, running sluggishly between two wooden planks, while his shoes appeared to be filled to the brim with numerous curly black hairs and thick yellowish goo. He realized he would have to crawl to safety before more of him melted away.

There was a sudden, disorienting wave of nausea and he felt his world tilt and swim crazily like a spinning dervish as he rolled upon the deck, somehow in the process striking his nose against an exposed nail, which caused a flicker of pain to race through his head. He heard breaking glass and falling ice cubes as his drink scattered around him. After a moment, when the world stopped spinning, he tried to gather his wits about him. A shard of glass lying next to his face reflected the situation: He was now just a head lolling upon the deck, one cheek pressed against the roughened wood and the other cheek exposed to a cool breeze. His head appeared to be stuck midway between the deck and the closed screen door that led into the living room. A slight breeze rustled his hair.

He could imagine Loren's reaction when she found him, the shocked wonderment on her face. There would be endless questions, each one circling around the same tangent like a fly circling around a chocolate fudge sundae: Where was the rest of his body? Would she put him in Frosty's abandoned doghouse, next to the laundry room, to lie on the ground like a discarded sock? Or would she kick Frosty out of her bed and welcome Westin back in? In the morning, would she place him on the kitchen table while she cooked breakfast? When she got cross with him, would she roll him across the floor and into the fireplace, like a bowling ball? Since he no longer had arms, legs or body, who would shave him in the morning? Or brush his teeth? Who would put him in his favorite reading chair and flip the pages of his book? Wearing a tie would no longer be an option. Closet space, always at a premium, would no longer apply, he reasoned, since most of his clothes could be tossed out or given to charity. In fact, the only thing he needed was a hat. His underwear and socks could go the way of his suits, ties, dress shirts, slacks, jeans, T-shirts, gloves, and coats. His wife, constantly complaining about closet space, would be thrilled to have the closet all to herself. Certain conjugal duties would have to be curtailed, although he did have a tongue, he reminded himself. True, so true…they were having marital difficulties, but who wasn't in this day and age? But still, this just might tip the balance toward divorce, he realized.

He heard the front door open and close, and then the familiar tread of her steps as she made her way from the foyer and through the hall and finally into the living room. There was a pause as she stopped, perhaps in order to ascertain his whereabouts. A moment later, he heard the screen door rattle as she started to slide it open…

He steeled himself for the inevitable.

[For Jenny]

THE ELEVATOR OPERATOR

Bartholomew Yam pushed the elevator button. Immediately the door swished open, as if the elevator had been waiting for him. Inside, a gnarled-looking man who looked like a hump-backed toad stared back at Yam with a blank face indicative of extreme boredom. The man, who apparently operated the elevator, turned large, moist eyes and forward-jutting jaw toward Yam.

Yam stepped inside.

“Here for the convention, sir?”

“Yes, that's right.”

The elevator's door closed and the two men stared at each other for an uncomfortable amount of time. The man's name tag had 'Sammy' written on it in stark, white letters. Sammy's mouth, a thin-lipped slit, seemed stretched to the breaking point. His skin looked moist, as if he had just taken a dip in the ocean. The mouth wheezed as it sucked in oxygen, and a sound that was hard to identify – but resembled a rug being pulled with difficulty across a hardwood surface by an anorexic – filled the interior of the elevator. Disconcerting, too, was the smell of water that filled the small enclosure. Yam glanced at the floor of the elevator, just to make sure he wasn't standing in anything wet. As he looked up, Yam caught sight of Sammy's legs, which were bowed as if he were ready to hop to the other side of the small interior of the elevator's cabin.

“It's a horrible affair, sir. There's just no getting around it.” Sammy's voice was thick, as if the words were being forcibly expelled. “There's just no getting around it,” he said again.

Yam had no idea what Sammy was talking about.

“I'm just a simple person, really, with simple thoughts and a simple way to make a living. Not like you writers with your strange ideas. Take me, for example: I've been an elevator operator for going on 52 years. Yes, sir, 52 years can be a long time standing in one place. The pull of gravity, sir. It weighs you down, the heavy burden of years on the body, tugging and pulling until you wonder if you can take any more. The constant pressure, the constant struggle of going up and down, and then pushing buttons over and over again, with no let up, no interaction.” Sammy's moist eyes, which were located higher up on his skull, then turned toward Yam.

“In my memory,” Sammy continued, “I loved the quiet one finds at night and the way the stars sparkled off the surface of the ocean…the passage of the moon in the sky. I can remember these things, sir. Being dedicated to the elevator, I can only imagine now how the clouds and the sky appear to everyone else. The things they must see, the sights that must astound. The sheer wonder of the world is lost to me, sir. Lost forever, I'm afraid. You see, sir, I wasn't permitted to go outside. Not allowed at all, sir. Oh, no. I might get fired – or worse – if I ventured away from my elevator and the awful responsibilities entrusted in me. You see, sir, it's my privilege to move the customers up and down. Sometimes, someone might wish to go to the first floor. At other times, someone might wish to go to the fourth floor. You must understand, sir, it may appear very simple, but it's actually very complicated. There's always a floor that is needed, and Sammy is always here to assist in those endeavors, whether one goes to the fourth floor or to the seventh floor or to another floor. Of course, sir, these are only examples, as you no doubt realize.”

Yam remained silent, afraid that if he spoke he might wake up and find himself trapped beneath a car. He decided to break his silence or go mad with curiosity. The man's story was pathetic, unbelievable.

“Why not just leave?”

“It's always the same, day in and day out,” Sammy said, ignoring Yam's question.

“You're unable to leave this elevator? I really find that hard to believe.” Yam felt like laughing, but didn't want to needlessly offend the old man.

“Stranger things have happened, you know. They've put up a force field, one that keeps me from leaving. Day in, day out, it's my lot to push the buttons, to keep the elevator moving and to move the customers to their desired floor.”

Sammy's right hand moved to the elevator's buttons, as if summoned by an unknown force. The fingers, Yam noticed, were long and knobby and had unusual pads on the ends which made them look flattened. Sammy caressed the buttons, his fingers seeming to engulf the white ivory.

“I'm not complaining, sir. No, Sammy never complains. Sammy loves the smooth softness of the buttons, the way the '1' leads naturally to the '2' and then the '2' leads to the '3.' There's an order to everything that one can't help but admire. See, sir, how all the numbers seem to have a life of their own? Whoever designed the buttons must have been a genius. There's a certain rightness about it. Don't you agree, sir?”

Would this ride never end? Yam thought. He was only going to the third floor, but getting there seemed to be taking forever.

“I discovered them 52 years ago. The aliens.” Sammy raised his head to the elevator's ceiling, as if the aliens might be up there looking down.

Yam, too, raised his head.

Sammy's voice continued to drone on. “They promised me a different life, sir. Different than my life as an elevator operator.” Sammy paused, as if gathering inner strength. “I was young, then. Yes, young. And I believed them. Who wouldn't? They said they were from another planet. They wanted to make me one of them. In their image, they said. I would report to them, to help them with their Plan.” Sammy laughed, the sound reverberating around the elevator's small enclosure like a trapped animal trying to escape. “How could I know what they had in mind? How was I supposed to know? Look at me now, sir,” Sam wheezed. “They've changed me.”

Yam looked, too dumbfounded to say anything. He noticed a spreading puddle of water under Sammy's feet, which he now realized were webbed and naked and resembled those of a frog. Sammy's arms – or forelimbs – were much shorter than his hind limbs. Sammy looked like he might be ready to hop away, if given half the chance.

There was a slight lurch as the elevator came to an abrupt stop.

“Well, here we are, sir. Third floor.”

“Thank you…Sammy.” How had Sammy known that he wanted the third floor?

Yam stepped through the elevator door and onto a beige carpet. He turned around as the doors started to close, just in time to see Sammy's nodding head, the pads on his limbs once again caressing the ebony-colored row of buttons. There was an abrupt 'whisk' of compressed air as the door closed completely. Yam stared at the departing elevator as it continued on its journey, much like an observer watching a departing plane.

He walked along the carpet, careful to avoid the many puddles of water.

SWAMP MEMORY

To be a boy of seven living in a swamp is to be alive to all the sounds and smells that such opportunity affords.

I remember the warbling of the gray-brown birds hiding deep in the leafy Cypress trees. I remember the mosquitoes bumping against my bedroom window as they competed with the flitting dragonflies to gain entrance into our house. I remember also the chittering cicadas that smashed into the walls with carefree abandon, leaving in their wake a dark, sticky residue like greasy rain. As I lay in bed at night, I could hear the rustling grunts of some strange animal as it crawled about in the thick, wet mud, licking away the cicadas' remains with their long and efficient tongues. It was a time of great joy to be alive in the swamp with all its humid desires.

Strange, wild flowers droop and sway in the night, growing in abundance next to the familiar Spanish moss and butterfly orchids. Many were the nights that I listened to the joyless loneliness of the frogs as they jumped about. And many were the nights that I heard their strange aborted croaks as something unseen bit deep into their warty bodies, snatching away their lives in an instant. In the morning, stepping into wet clayey muck, I saw heaps of frog legs strewn about in careless abandon next to the old stumps and fallen logs that surrounded our house. Something lived in the hollow trunks, I realized, something that came out to feast only at night. How my heart thrilled at the thought of some creature whose appetite might rival my own.

There is something out there, I thought, something that competes with woodpeckers and warblers, with salamanders and lizards. It is something with an appetite and it's hunger is great. Why did it not eat bobcats and otters, I wondered? They were in profuse abundance. Would that not be a tastier meal…a larger meal?

One night, I lay in bed and watched as large snails crawled in their unhurried manner along my bedroom walls, their slime trails crisscrossing in a pattern that seemed to give new meaning to free form art. It was at that moment, as darkness completely swallowed the swamp, that something scraped against my closed window, as if attempting to gain access. For that one brief moment, I saw a captive bull-frog caught between large splay lips whose width seemed to stretch from ear to ear, although the creature had no ears. Large pop eyes regarded me with unabashed curiosity. I watched in mesmerized glory as those thick lips opened and closed in one quick motion. The creature swallowed and the frog was gone. Four little legs, briefly moving, lay captive between those wide lips.

The next morning, I saw a great accumulation of dismembered legs lying in the muck next to my window. Even now, after all these years, I sometimes see again those tiny movements of something akin to life, as if the frogs' legs are trying to reassemble themselves into something whole again. This knowledge gives renewed hope to my own hunger, which seems even now to rival the creature I saw that night so many years ago.

THE HARBINGER OF EXCRESCENT DOOM (A GOTHIC TALE)

Emily Braughton sat in the wildly jolting coach and willed her thoughts into a more comforting realm, one far removed from the inclement weather that pounded irresolutely without letup upon the wounded landscape. The sky outside was bleak and dark, as if covered with a giant hand. Somewhere above the forbidding Alps a streak of lightening lit up the sky for one brief instant. She nearly fainted at the sight that met her eyes: She found herself surrounded by a tangle of thick trees with intertwining branches, which reminded her of being trapped in a prison in a dank dungeon somewhere beneath those overpowering mountains that leered above her like beetling brows. She imagined her virtue being compromised by the handsome Count Barlow. For some unexplained reason the thought sent a delicious tingle through her body, which again caused her to almost faint with the sheer imagined danger of such an encounter!

The carriage rocked violently back and forth upon the rutted road, further exciting her. She called upon the driver to slow down. A moment later, the carriage came to an abrupt halt and she called out again, inquiring as to the nature of why he had stopped. Silence, except for the cracking of branches and the sound of some malevolent force racing headlong through the thick trees, along with the screeching sound of some wild animal and an additional onslaught of rain, the ever incessant rain pounding relentlessly – rhythmically – upon the darkened forest. Hesitantly, fearfully, she opened the carriage door and peered out.

Leering above her, shrouded in the cloudy mists and the pelting rain, a forlorn castle reared starkly into the sky, as if clutching the very edge of the mountain ridge upon which it sat. The sight caused her heart to palpitate with wonder….and dread! She knew this to be the castle of Count Barlow. She had come here hired as the new nanny to fill the abrupt vacancy left by the previous nanny who had died in a bizarre accident that the Count was loathe to discuss, except to say that the woman had been beheaded after falling headlong down a winding set of stairs and landing perfectly onto a guillotine placed at the bottom! The Count would elaborate no further upon the incident, except to say that it was beastly horrid and a messy inconvenience. Although her heart had pounded with prescient dread when offered the position, she nevertheless decided to take the offer, for it meant money she could send to her mother for an operation on her crippled legs. Her mother liked to get down and boogie, but lately found it difficult due to her advanced age, arthritis, bad knees, hammer club feet, and corns.

She nearly swooned with unbridled passion as she thought of the Count and his dark, handsome eyes and the little tufts of curly red hair that protruded from his ears and nostrils. His lips were like ripe raspberries that demanded to be kissed. The thought caused her to blush with embarrassment, as the rain continued to pound relentlessly upon the stopped carriage, a rhythmic pounding that seemed to mirror the very chambers of her wildly beating heart!

She peered into the darkness. Where was that confounded driver? She stamped her little foot and, lifting her petticoats, stepped out of the coach and met a gust of wind that nearly toppled her into a mud puddle. Although momentarily flustered, she walked apace from the coach and horses and peered into the darkness. The driver had apparently vanished, or was perhaps at this very moment in the woods attending to nature's call. Men had such very small bladders, she thought.

Out of the pelting rain, a shadow detached itself from the surrounding darkness and strode purposefully forward. She covered her mouth and stifled a gasp!

“There is no need to be frightened, I assure you,” the strong, masculine voice spoke.

“Come no closer, sir,” she said. “Or I will faint! I assure you that I will!”

“I mean you no harm.” His voice was calm, assured, and strongly masculine.

He stepped nearer and, with sudden relief, she realized that the figure standing in front of her was none other than Count Barlow himself, the very person she had come to see! But what was he doing here? And in the rain?

“Count Barlow!” she managed at last to say. “It is you!”

“At your service!” He clicked his heels smartly, sending a shower of rain into the air. His black eyes shone with intensity, as if a fire had been lit in their depths.

She was speechless for but a moment, then: “But what has become of my driver?”

“Unfortunately, he was taken ill. A sudden onslaught of gastrointestinal distress, I'm afraid. No doubt he is off in the woods attending to his needs.”

He paused, perhaps waiting for her to speak. She was barely listening. She felt distracted by the curly red hairs visible on his half-unbuttoned shirt and how the rain caused them to glisten with dewy dampness. She had an unaccountable urge to twirl her fingers in his chest hairs and make little curlicues. She blushed at the audacity of her thoughts. Thankfully, it was so dark that the Count was unable to see the crimson rise in her cheeks.

“But how shall we proceed to your castle?” she finally managed to articulate.

“However that may be,” he continued, “we shall arrive.”

His words were mysterious, shrouded in secrecy and full of a subtext that she could not untangle. What exactly did he mean? She wondered. Did he have designs upon her heart, or was he merely playing with her affections? And did he detect the fullness of her desires? She stood there, digesting his words, attempting to fathom the full meaning behind his utterances. It took her awhile to understand that he had been speaking for some time and was now pointing behind her.

“Please,” he said, indicating the carriage. “Let me assist you.”

She accepted his assistance as he took her elbow and helped her into the coach. Her heart fluttered when she felt his gentle touch upon her elbow.

“I will drive,” he said.

The rain and wind swept past them blindingly as Count Barlow raced along the narrow path, as if anxious to get them both safely through the rain-soaked forest and within the walls of the castle. She glanced out and saw the forbidding edifice that would be her home for however long she remained in his employ. A part of her wondered why the Count had never mentioned his children; after all, she realized, she had been hired as a nanny. And yet, he had never once mentioned his children, neither their names nor their ages. These questions – and more – occupied her thoughts, along with the undeniable magnetic attraction of the Count's personality.