tatterdemons
I have
always had a certain fondness for crows.
I have
a family of crows who sit outside of our house every morning and yell in our
windows until we go out and feed them a mixed diet of peanuts, dry cat food and
scattered bread. I expect that it peeves the blue heck out of our neighbors but
they can always move a way if they really want to.
:)
The
crow family actually followed us when we moved here from the house that we were
renting about one block away. I expect the neighbors there were just as happy
to see us go.
:) :)
I can
understand why farmers are so intent upon scaring crows away from their fields.
There is nothing I like better than a big old feed of fresh vegetables and a
dedicated swarm of crows can really put a significant-sized dent in a growing
field's productivity.
That's
right.
You
heard it here first.
Crows
like to eat.
:) :)
:)
So - I
have ALWAYS felt a special bond to scarecrows. There is just something that is
too freaking cool about the sight of a scarecrow all alone in the middle of an
autumnal field. When the wind is whistling soft and low and the distant woods
are bleeding and burning in anticipation of the onset of winter's grim white
cold blanket.
There
are entire festivals dedicated to the fine art of constructing scarecrows. Even
here in Nova Scotia the town of Mahone Bay annually celebrates the time-honored
custom or building scarecrows.
The
scarecrow knows no boundaries. They can sprout up anywhere. In Britain they
refer to them as HAYMEN. On the Isle of Skye they are called TATTIE BOGGIE. In
Russia, they call them PUGALO. The Japanese call them KAKASHI. In the
Philippines they are TAO-TAO, in Malaysia they are ORANG-ORANG, and in Malta
they are NUFFARA.
The
tradition of scarecrow building is very near and dear to my heart.
Why?
Because
this is what we horror writers do. We set up our scarecrows in the fields of
our imagination and we try and bring them to life and we hope that they will
terrify you just a little – and then maybe make you giggle.
Let me
tell you about my scarecrows. I call them Tatterdemons and you will find them in
the pages of the scariest novel that I have ever written – namely, TATTERDEMON.
Let me
give you an excerpt.
You
might brew yourself a cup of tea before you start reading this.
TATTERDEMON – AN EXCERPT
Chapter 1
Preacher
Abraham Fell stared down at Thessaly Cross, breathing like he’d run for a good
long stretch. He leaned over, bending at the knees to lay another slab of
fieldstone upon her chest.
“We
beat you with hickory and we beat you with iron,” he said, “and you withstood
every blow.”
He
stooped down and picked up another rock, never taking his eyes off her, as if
she were some kind of dangerous viper who might strike at any moment.
He set
the next rock on top of her, directly beside the others.
“We
shot you and the musket balls swerved in midair like they were afraid of
sinking into the taint of your flesh.”
He
scooped up another rock, grunting as he scooped. He just wasn’t as young a man
as he used to be – and no wonder…
Sights
like this one aged you faster than years ought to run.
“We
hung you in a noose woven from a widow’s gray hair, a noose soaked in
children’s tears and you kicked and cackled like a hell-kite in the wind.”
He
laid the next rock down, sank to his knees and scooped up another stone. He was
building a kind of rhythm that made the labor just a little easier.
“We
burned you but even fired failed us.”
It was
true. She had witched a storm from a cloudless sky and drowned the blaze cold.
Seth Hamilton, the town smith who had been the only man to dare kindle her pyre
had been cindered black.
“Let
the stones crush you and the dirt eat you,” Fell said, laying another rock –
which made thirteen stones in all. These were all good-sized stones,
hand-picked, at least the weight of child’s corpse. She ought to have been
crushed by the weight upon her, yet she carried the load as if it were nothing
but sticks and straw.
“Where
did you hide the broom, witch?” Fell asked.
“Maybe
it’s up your bunghole,” Thessaly taunted.
The
broom was her power and Fell feared it – although he knew that he shouldn’t
have. It was just a thing of woven willow. His grand-nanny swept the pine
boards of her cabin daily with just such a broom and she certainly wasn’t a
witch.
Was
she?
He
bent for another stone.
Thessaly
spat in his face. “Bury that, God kisser.”
He
dropped the fourteenth stone upon her. It made a hard sound, like she had
stared too long at the Gorgon. He grunted at the effort and she laughed at his
strain – which stung his pride hard.
“You
must pay for your crimes against God and this community,” Fell said.
Thessaly
snorted. It wasn’t any kind of human sound. Her snort sounded like a boar in
rut.
“What
I pay for is refusing to give you my land,” she pointed out, as the wind
rattled the grass. “What I pay for is witching your field in return for your
greed. I pay for your cattle that ate the gray grass. Happiest of all, I pay
for your daughter, Fell.”
Eliza.
Damn
it.
Fell
could still taste the smell of the dead meat festering in the back of his
sinuses. He’d put down the last tainted beast this morning. He’d beat it square
in the skull with his best chopping axe. The metal of the blade had chewed into
the bone and stuck hard. He’d had to put his left boot against the cow’s
forehead and lean back to work the axe loose. The unholy cattle hadn’t moved,
not one of them, even after he’d cut the first two down. They just stood there
in his field, the wind making slow soft harp sounds blowing through their gray
rattled guts.
He had
put his daughter Eliza down before he had started with the cattle. Then he
burned what was left of her and buried her ashes in the field.
The
husk that he had burned and buried wouldn’t have nourished a worm.
“Was
the milk tasty, Fell?” Thessaly taunted him. “Did young Eliza find it sweet?”
“Witch!”
Fell hissed.
He snatched
up a skull-sized rock, scraping his hand against the rough granite and marking
it with his own blood. He would match his stone and his blood against hers, he
fiercely swore.
But
first he had to know.
“Where
did you hide the broom?”
“It is
closer than you might imagine.”
She
spat again. The phlegm spattered the grass. The wind blew a little harder as
Fell flung the stone. The granite chipped and sparked upon her flesh.
The
farmer in Fell’s soul feared a run of wildfire. A spark could easily rise up in
dry times like this and tear through an entire countryside.
“I’ll
curse you, Fell. I’ll curse you and all those who stand with you.” The old
woman began to chant. “Merry through the prickle bush, the gore bush, the hump;
careful round the holly fall, she’ll catch your shadow hold…”
The
onlookers stiffened like a pack of wintered-over scarecrows. Fear, or something
darker, rooted their feet to the earth. Fell stumbled back from the pit. The
wind stiffened and gusted as Thessaly laughed all the harder.
“Our
father,” Fell began to pray. “Protect us from this harridan’s evil spells.”
Thessaly
continued to laugh.
“It is
no spell, you fool. It is nothing more than a children’s rhyme, Fell. It was
only a nursery rhyme. Maybe I wasn’t witching your field. Maybe I was merely
waving my broom at a thieving crow.”
Did
she speak the truth?
Fell
smothered his doubt.
Thessaly
Cross had killed Eliza and Abraham Fell would not rest until he saw the witch
finally dead.
He
knelt down and caught hold of the next stone.
Only she
wouldn’t stay quiet.
“Witches
don’t curse, Fell. Only men curse,” Thessaly ranted. “They curse themselves and
their pitiful lot.”
“You
lie,” Fell said, working the stone free
“Truth!
I tell truth. Witches dance in easy circles. We follow the rhythms of time and
tide and the wind that washes the earth’s bones dry.”
The
wind howled. A tangled snare of root rammed through the dirt. Fell stepped back
too late. The root twisted like a snake. It snared Fell’s wrists and held him
fast.
“Witches
plant what men water with tears,” Thessaly shrieked. “Witches sow the sorrow
men must reap. Know this, Fell. When you harm a witch, you plant a grudge as
old as regret.”
Fell
tugged against the root. From the corner of his eye he saw the rest of the
townsfolk, snared like screaming rabbits.
“I
have you, Fell. I have you all. Now you will see what a witched field really
is.”
Thessaly
set the field to work.
She
stirred dead grass into unholy life. The strands and stalks whirred like a wind
of teeth, slicing through men and women who tried too late to run away.
The
first man died in mid-scream, as a gust of grass harrowed the meat from his
bones. A root, flung like a dirty javelin, impaled a second man. A third went
down beneath an airborne avalanche of fieldstone.
The
wind grew gray with dust, straw and flesh. The earth opened in great cratered,
swallowing mouths. The townsfolk all died screaming.
Only
Fell remained.
He
stared at the carnage, as helpless as a snared rabbit.
“Witches
sow, Fell. Witches sow and men must reap.”
She
raised her hands.
He saw
gray dirt imbedded beneath her fingernails.
“Shall
I tell you where I have hid my broom, Fell? Have you guessed? Do you really
want to know? I buried it in your very own field.”
The
broom rose straight up from the earth’s dirty womb, not more than an arm’s
reach from Fell.
“I and
my broom will wait for you, Fell. We will wait for you like a seed waits for
rain. Live with this. I have taken everyone you know, but I let you live to breed.
I let you live with the knowledge that one day I will return to visit your
descendants.”
Fell
braced his feet in the dirt. He prayed for the strength of Samson. He fought
against the root.
“Now I
will show you how to bury a witch,” she crowed.
She hugged
herself as if hugging an unseen lover. The earth moved in reply as a thousand
rocks flew from the flesh of the field and hovered above her homemade grave.
Fell tore his wrists from the shackle of root.
He
felt the skin rip from his bones.
“No
descendants! No curse! Today we die together,” he howled.
He
uprooted the broom with his freshly skinned hands. He threw himself upon her.
His momentum drove the broom handle straight through her heart. A gout of
stinking blood splashed his face.
The
willow-twig head of the broom stood out in all directions like an angry star.
Fell saw the flash of tiny unimaginable teeth grinning from the end of each
writhing twig.
Then
the broom took him.
The
broom ate at his face like his skin was nothing more than apple rind. He felt
the white-hot twig-worms gnaw his features. He felt them tear and burn through
the bowl of his skull. They crawled into the jelly of his brain and nibbled at
his thoughts.
He had
time for one last scream.
The
broom ate that as well. It swallowed each morsel of Abraham Fell’s pain and
terror as it dragged him deeper down into the hole with the witch. The rocks
poised above them like a pair of hands, ready to applaud. Thessaly pushed him
from her. She nearly pushed him from the grave.
“Live,
Fell. Let the meat grow back upon your opened skull. Crawl back from the brink
of death. My curse shall stand. This earth grows too cold for me. I will wait
for you and your descendants in the belly of hell.”
“No!”
Fell pushed back down upon her. “The curse ends here.”
He
shoved forward. He felt the broom slide and suck through the cage of his ribs.
He pushed himself closer, impaling himself on the broom handle. The willow wood
splintered inside him. It nailed him to Thessaly’s twisting frame. He felt her
bones wiggling beneath her meat like worms in the dirt.
She
nearly slipped free.
He bit
her lip, tearing grayish meat. The pain racked her concentration. She let her
spell and the rocks above them drop. The grave, the broom, the witch and Fell
were sealed inside completely.
For a
long time, nothing moved.
The
moon rose like a slow ghost, lanterning down upon the butcher field.
A
small gray form pushed from the rocky grave. The gray hairless skin glistened
beneath the cool wash of moonlight, like the hide of a stillborn rat.
It
crawled away into the darkness that surrounded the field.
A lone
owl hooted remorselessly
Sooooon…
****************
Did
you like that?
Do you
want to read more?
Well –
you can pick up a copy of TATTERDEMON in either e-book or
paperback format at the following locations.
Amazon.com
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00RIH2L96
Amazon.co.uk
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00RIH2L96
You
can pay the regular cover price right now if you cannot wait – and who could
blame you – BUT I will let you know that TATTERDEMON will be available at
all of these e-book distributors for a mere 99 cents from October 27, 2015 to
October 31, 2015 – just in time for Halloween.
But
wait – there’s more!
I want
to see the scariest scarecrows imaginable – SO sit yourself down and come up
with a photograph of your SCARIEST scarecrow and post the URL in the comment
section of this blog and I will select the three top winners who will win
themselves a free copy of TATTERDEMON for their Kindle.
GIVEAWAY
FIVE ECOPIES of Steve
Vernon’s TATTERDEMON!!! These are in addition to the three offered above!!!!
To
win: go to the Official FB Event Page; find the post announcing today’s
giveaway; and comment, “I WANT TO WIN” and you just might!!!
AUTHOR BIO
Hi! I'm Steve Vernon and I'd love to scare you. Along the way I'll
entertain you. I guarantee a giggle as well.
If I listed all of the books I've written I'd bore you - and I am
allergic to boring.
Instead, let me recommend one single book of mine.
Pick up SUDDEN DEATH OVERTIME for an example of true Steve Vernon
storytelling. It's hockey and vampires for folks who love hockey and vampires -
and for folks who don't!
For more up-to-date info please follow my blog at:
http://stevevernonstoryteller.wordpress.com/
And follow me at Twitter:
@StephenVernon
yours in storytelling,
Steve Vernon
TATTERDEMON
In 1691 the town of Crossfall
taught the witch Thessaly how to die. They beat her, they shot her, they hung
her - but nothing worked. When they finally tried to bury her alive Thessaly
set the field against them. The first man died as a gust of wind harrowed the
meat from his bones. A root,flung like a dirty javelin, cut a second man down.
Many more deaths followed. The Preacher Fell impaled the witch upon her very
own broom but she dragged him down into the field to wait for three more
centuries.
Three hundred
years later Maddy Harker will murder her bullying husband Vic. She will bury
him in the field as she buried her abusive father years before that. The very
same field where the revenant spirit of Thessaly Cross lies waiting.
In three days Vic
will rise again - a thing of dirt, bone and hatred.
Men will call him
the Tatterdemon.
And hell - and
Thessaly - will follow
This is the first
volume of a three part novel. All three parts are available on Kindle - either
separately or together in a full-sized omnibus novel.
Awesome giveaway. .not sur how to post pictures
ReplyDeleteI'd post link. I'll try to incorporate the at the bottom of the post!!! :)
ReplyDelete