Hugo told me once that fall was his favorite time of the year. Told me to hold leaves as delicate as you would a pretty girl’s hand. His teeth would then spread wide across his face. Pallid and flaked with brown. Rows of sweet tooth that hadn’t been cleared of duff.
On his days off we’d go hunting for mushrooms in the forest behind our house. “It’s hard to tell which mushrooms are edible,” Hugo would say. Always said, giddy over the possibility of the inedible as he led me through the forest. My studies turned to what you can eat. It didn't matter if it were safe or not.
That day, Hugo pulled me along— his meaty fingers pressed white hot divots into my skin. I followed as quickly as I could, but Hugo was excited, alcohol and smoke wafting off him in ribbons. My shoes filled with filth.
Mycology was his most recent hobby. An acquisition from an old friend he said.
Hugo's hobbies often skipped from one gruesome hobby to another. From taxidermy to collecting dead things in jars; these activities though innocuous in some hands, turned sinister in his. A field mouse captured in our backyard was less a friend and more an exercise in how long he could extend its suffering, how well he could preserve those little moments of despair, driving a needle in, then capturing the moment in frame by frame photographs. To pinpoint the exact moment, the most miniscule of details. Measured them in the span of flesh stretched to its limit, twisted in abject horror. It was a different kind of science. One that I likened to a kind of dark magic; powerful and detrimental to its user and the people around him. Wrapped up like something beautiful and awful, sequined and glittering, but dripping in oil slick, rainbow sheets of sludge.
Hugo yanked me forward, grip turning tighter. I tripped and he laughed, still dragging me along over root and rock until we hit a clearing with one solitary tree sitting in its center. Its trunk was devoid of a small swath of bark, smooth even at a distance.
As we got closer, I saw a ring of mushrooms at its base that traveled up its trunk in a spiral pattern. Up and up it disappeared into its canopy.
“Oyster mushrooms,” he said, releasing my hand to pluck one from the bark. He left marks. My reddened wrist contrasted against the pale white of freshly pulled bark. It reminded me of his angry red gums gnashing at me, smiles and frowns. Hugo was smiling at me then, pulling swiftly and roughly, tearing off just as much bark as he was mushrooms, raining clumps of brown to join the clutter of the forest floor.
Bark and mush fell haphazard atop a corpse—a fox—carpeted in what looked like to be more mushrooms. They bisected its torso. The mound of mushrooms, which looked like nothing I'd ever seen in Hugo's many, many books, stemmed like a dress from its waist, draping the rest of its body in its fungal carpet. Only its feet were left uncovered. But they were not bare, frost had started its seasonal creep, transforming the Foxes’ paws into glass slippers. Winter’s supine approach had begun, starting with her. I hadn’t realized it when we first arrived. This was a birthplace; a death, anchoring itself to the forest.
I continued to stare at the fox, searching. Her light-less eyes glittered at me in the dying light. Resurrected under my attention; life found unraveled, unspun at my feet, thread loose and fibers imbued with story. I imagined that she smiled a smile at me full of sharp, friendly teeth. For the briefest of moments I felt the whisper of her touch—her paw caressing my cheek, and telling me how this fate had befell her. A story not too dissimilar from mine. I had to protect her.
I knew what Hugo would do to her if he found her. Exactly the way he’d extricate her and preserve her, perpetually dead in his basement with a sprinkling of mushrooms and fall leaves for company. The other dead animals didn’t count. They had no more half lives; no in-between. That was my domain. With liminal fingers half crusted with frost, straining from the breakdown of cartilage, that life would wrap around the soft bend of my joints, her joints. She’d sit taut and stiff, halfway between specimen and taxidermy, a product of clumsy hands and even clumsier mouths, cruelly propped up against the door to let the draft in. We weren’t meant to be gutted and set for display.
Hugo’s delighted face was sharp; shadows fell across him like they belonged there, deepening the crags and dips of his smile.
The fox’s unseeing eyes still bore into mine, and as Hugo stepped back from his rough foraging to look at me, I blocked the fox from view with my body, leaning languid against the tree.
His eyes raked over me, hungry open maws of sight. He made to move toward me, his basket overflowing with an abundance of mushrooms dangling from his elbow. I did not flinch. I had been chewed up and spat out before. But a single oyster tumbled out of the basket, falling at his feet. His eyes darted down. Curses tumbled from his lips just as the mushroom just had. He crouched and picked up the singular mushroom, angrily brushing the excess dirt off it. He looked so vulnerable there, on his knees, cooing over the fallen thing as though he hadn’t just violently torn it from its home moments before.
A rock sat right by the foxes' head, large enough to serve as its stony pillow, jagged enough that it could promise a painful and messy death. Her dead eyes smiled at me; her form less vulpine and more human the longer I stared at that rock and breathed life into her story. If the fox had hands and strength enough to lift it, would it have lived? Would her paws not be dipped in ice? Would she be here now, acting as my hands? My hands had already found their way to the rock, having leaned down as I had pondered those questions. I inched closer to Hugo, staring at the top of his head. I examined his receding hairline and the numerous nascent liver spots and silver hairs—it looked like pencil lines interrupted by a filthy and worn down eraser.
His eyes met mine then. I don’t know how he didn’t notice until I was already towering over him, rock gripped in both my hands, raised over my head. His eyes bore into me. Terribly blue eyes as death clung to me, whispering to me, “I’d never get them out of my hair—the leaves—the mushrooms—not until…. “
She sat at my shoulder, right there inside the memory of our house sitting quietly without him. A vision tailor made for me. Her tails unfurled; her teeth sharpened. Her gown of mushrooms was apparent and as white as the snow, taking on the quality of shaggy fur. Delicate like the tendrils of a medusa, she was a woman sitting on our porch. She was a fox sitting on my porch, her ears tipped with frost and twitching as leaves fell from our maple tree, never falling outside of the careful circle that we laid out for him.
What would I do without him? she asked.
Maybe spend that fall studying the weight of the leaves and measure them in the fade of green to withered brown. Gather them in piles, feel how they’d crumble to pieces in my hand—the crunch of their skeletons, soft and grainy in their collapse.
Decomposition will sit with you. Set in the circumstance of life. Circles of death and rot. The house will sit empty, but they will sit quietly. No hands to interrupt.
My hands shook imagining the collapse; she shook, shedding the gown of mushrooms, taking on the look of death in its entirety and encouraging me to lift.
And so I did. As I raised the stone higher, I watched his eyes drown with a surety. A certainty. Realization. Recognition. She comes for us all at some point; clever little foxes that don’t stay dead. But for now she wasn’t here for me. All she did was help guide my hand.
The oyster mushroom he had cleaned of dirt sat snug in his hand. I could see it waiting; the knowing of what was to come and the knowing that it would not change anything for it and its brethren. But Hugo and his eyes, those terribly blue eyes did not care. He smashed it in his fist, letting its flesh ooze out between his fingers. And for the second time that day he showed me that sweet tooth smile, wide and menacing.
I swung down.
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108 comments
Some of my favorite lines: "Told me to hold leaves as delicate as you would a pretty girl’s hand." "his meaty fingers pressed white hot divots into my skin." "The mound of mushrooms, which looked like nothing I'd ever seen in Hugo's many, many books, stemmed like a dress from its waist, draping the rest of its body in its fungal carpet." Your writing has a poetic quality, which paints some really nice visual scenes. Congratulations on the win.
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Thank you very much, and I'm glad that those particular lines stood out to you.
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I enjoyed this Fabi! I thought you did a wonderful job of building a gloomy atmosphere that felt consistent throughout. It aptly fleshed out Hugo in the dark way that Hugo existed in this life that I found very well done. The ending delivered without needing the actual delivery. Again, to me, nicely handled. I have only read some of the comments, but wanted to say that I believe any and every story can be better written. I know mine can, and I have a long way to go. Even books by famous authors I've read I'm sure could be improved. Still, p...
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Thank you! I'm glad to hear that you enjoyed it. And thanks for pointing that out. It makes me very happy that the majority of people who enjoyed my story consistently mention the atmosphere and tone as I took great pains to shape that aspect of the story to my satisfaction. And yes the ending! I did originally describe that outcome in great detail in earlier drafts, but in later drafts decided against it. Sometimes there's nothing better than the theater of the mind in that regard, imo. It's a very common horror trope to rely on that ambi...
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Great story (no further edits required IMO, haha).
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Thank you! And I appreciate the sentiment haha.
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Really enjoyed this one! Great flow and descriptions.
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Thank you! I try. Haha.
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Congratulations on your win. RG
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Thanks!
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This is the kind of feedback I would love to get on my stories - ways to make it better based on the inferences the reader has to make as they read. Great job with the feedback (and seriously, I wish you'd d mine!). This story is written so differently from how I write that I learned a lot from reading it. It is so poetic and image-rich, without explaining a lot of background - and yet it works. Congrats on the win, the feelings your story brought up in me will stay a while.
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Right! I love when people tear my work to pieces, it gives me insight into what worked and what didn't. Moreover, it helps identify what audience I'm writing for. Thanks so much. I'm glad you learned so much. Sometimes different styles highlight your own style. Its similar to how being bilingual can help you better understand and appreciate your native language. And yes! It is a major goal of mine to create things that well "sit" with a person. So that is a major compliment. Thank you. That made my day!
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The description of the mushroom covered fox corpse was fantastic. .. 'stemmed like a dress from its waist, draping the rest of its body in its fungal carpet.' I rally like the foreshadowing of this line. giddy over the possibility of the inedible as he led me through the forest. Congrats!
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Thanks! Gosh the sentence went through so many rewrites, but I am so happy you loved it. And yay, I'm glad you caught that.
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Your writing is beautiful. Despite the dark tone of the story, I felt enthralled. Congratulations!
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Thank you! I take inspiration from Guillermo del Toro's body of work. He often has such a way with horror and giving it a mesmerizing beauty. So I'm glad to hear you were enthralled by my attempt at horror. I'll be honest, I don't usually dabble in that genre. So this was a little bit out of my comfort zone.
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Congrats on this weeks win!! This story is very interesting and I enjoyed it a lot. Well deserved!
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Thank you!
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Amazing story. I was completely hooked by the storytelling. Congrats on your win~!
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Much thanks!
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Great imagery, and the character of Hugo is such you're rooting for that rock to come down on his head.
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Thank you very much. I always try to make my work as immersive as possible when it comes to imagery. And that's great to hear. I was hoping that Hugo would come across as an unsavory character.
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This made chills run down my spine. I didn't expect the ending at all. Really enjoyed it.
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Very glad to hear it. It's nice to hear that I managed to execute that well. No one expects the victim to take matters into her own hands haha. Well not always. Glad I kept you on your toes.
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Congratulations!
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Thank you!
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Congratulations on your win. I don't know how I missed this one, but I'm glad it's being recognized, because I really enjoyed it.
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Thank you, thank you!
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Ohhh I love love LOVE this. The descriptions are excellent. So visceral and disturbing, but also dreamlike and surreal. The balance of beautiful prose and poeticism with such upsetting imagery and subject matter was chilling. Well done. Congrats on the win :)
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I'm glad to hear I struck that balance well. And that you enjoyed it so much. Thank you so much for taking the time to read and comment!
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Fabi, this is beautifully written! The story has a wonderfully macabre tone, and you wrote it in such a wonderful style that I really felt like I was experiencing the disgust, the possession, the unnervingly composed bloodlust of your protagonist. Wonderfully written; a well deserved win.
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Thank you! I'm glad that my writing garnered such an evocative reaction.
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Absolutely incredible! A well-deserved win. Congratulations! Your thorough descriptions put your audience right there in the forest. I read this story just after taking a walk in the woods near my house. Your story made those recent memories pop out and place the setting right there and making the story even more real to me. I could feel the creepiness of Hugo sneaking up on me. Thanks for creating this wonderful work.
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Truly that is a very high compliment. My story managed to feel real enough to you to place you back in the woods. I am so happy to hear that, thank you very much for reading and commenting.
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I love !
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there was a kid Aaron he killed his dad and we need to stop him and thats impossible DONT SCREAM! Coming Soon...
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It was a good story overall, but you did need to add more to the characters. For example, give them more background information. And also give a little bit more detail about Hugo's hobbys that would make the story line a bit more vibrant and colorful.
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