Night Terrors Vol. 2: Short Horror Stories Anthology
- In stock, ready to ship
- Backordered, shipping soon
- Fast Shipping & Easy Delivery
- Safe Transactions
- 30-Day Money Back Guarantee
Listen to a sample here:
š£ Narrated by Johnny Raven and Stephanie Shade
Nightmares canāt really hurt youā¦ can they?
An evil from beyond the stars haunts a young boy and his father at Roswell Airbase. The survivors of a sunken warship take refuge on a deserted island, and discover they are not alone. And terror checks in at an old motel, when a vacationing family finds themselves trapped in an ancient curseā¦
Scare Street journeys into the night to bring you a new volume of skin-crawling terror. This macabre collection contains thirteen chilling tales of supernatural horror. And each story will sweep you away to a world of dark dreams and fantastical nightmaresā¦
Some believe that if you see yourself die in your dreams, then your heart will stop. But thatās just an old wivesā tale, isnāt it? After all, the icy chill of death lurks within every story in this ghastly tome. And your heart hasnāt stopped yet.
In fact, with each turn of the page, you can hear it beating faster and fasterā¦
This bone-chilling supernatural collection contains:
1.Ā Live BaitĀ by Jude Reid
2.Ā The Hungry WormĀ by Michael D. Nye
3.Ā The Magician Needs a VolunteerĀ by Matt Brandenburg
4.Ā Lab Incident, 1947Ā by Martin Zeigler
5.Ā A House DividedĀ by M. B. Vujacic
6.Ā Sundown and ShadowsĀ by Michelle Tang
7.Ā The Old Coach InnĀ by Kris Ashton
8.Ā Ashes to AshesĀ by Robert Douglas
9.Ā Folie-a-DeuxĀ by Gina Easton
10.Ā Do Something FunnyĀ by Clark Boyd
11.Ā Fertile SoilĀ by Brian Sperl
12.Ā Night DiveĀ by Drew Starling
13.Ā Home Sick by Ron Ripley
PRINT LENGTH | |
AUDIO LENGTH | 7 hours and 19 minutes |
NARRATED BY | Johnny Raven and Stephanie Shade |
PRODUCT DIMENSION | |
ISBN | |
LANGUAGE | English |
PUBLICATION DATE | September 14, 2020 |
Ā
Live Bait
By Jude Reid
We were all dead from the moment the torpedo hit the Grangemouth. It just took some of us longer to realize than others.
There were five of us in the lifeboat: my brother Iain and I, a Lieutenant of Marines named Horton, the shipās telegrapher Charlie Senguptaālisted at fourteen years of age, but who looked closer to twelveāand a big Maltese stoker who spoke no English but whose name, Charlie told us, was Joe Abela. We had the luxury of a weekās water supply meant for ten, but at Horton's insistence, we kept the ration short. Abela was suffering more than the rest of us, an eight-inch gouge torn out of his thigh by a piece of shrapnel.
The wound opened every time he moved and gave off a sickly, pungent smell of decay.
There must have been other survivors. Weād seen the other lifeboats cast off during those last, desperate moments on board, and surely not all of them had been pulled down with the ship as she broke deep and took on waterābut once we were out in the open sea, we might have been the only men alive in the world. Half our crew had been killed outright as the U-boatās torpedo ripped a twenty-foot hole through the stern, most of the rest drowning below decks as she sank. I thought we were lucky, those of us who found a space on the life-rafts and made it far enough away that the ship couldnāt drag us under in her wake. If Iād known what was to come, Iād have gone down with the Grangemouth and thanked God for my good fortune.
On the first day, we put our backs to the oars and headed on an eastward bearing, thinking we might retrace our shipās route across the Aegean, but we soon gave up any hope of that. We had tarps to shield us during the blistering heat of noon and the freezing nighttime air, a case of flares, and a portable wireless transmitter-receiver that would have been a lifesaver, if only it had been working.
Close to dawn on the third day, Charlie woke us with a yell, the boat rolling wildly under us.
āSit down before you have us over,ā Iain said, eyes still closed.
āItās land,ā Charlie said. āLieutenant, wake up. Thereās land ahead.ā
The boat pitched as Horton got to his feet, leaning across the side as if getting three feet closer would make a difference to the quality of his view. āThe boyās right, by God,ā Horton said. āCould it be Malta, do you suppose? Ask Abela, Charlie.ā
The lascar knew a few words of Maltese and seemed to have a natural flair for languages. Abelaās eyes remained unfocused, but he answered the boyās halting question with a few words of his own.
āHe says thereās lots of islands out here. Too far south for Malta, he thinks.ā āIāll take a desert island over another day of this,ā Iain said, getting up from the bottom of the boat. āUp you get, Gus, give me a hand.ā
Horton nodded with approval. āTake the oars, men. Give way together.ā
Iain rolled his eyes at me. Horton seemed to have appointed himself cox of our crew, maintaining rigorous attention to discipline that the rest of us had more or less lost in our new role as castaways. My brother had never shown much reverence to the officer class, and he reserved special contempt for the Grangemouthās Marines, who were, in his opinion, an inferior sort of seamen compared to the rest of us. I was sure that when the water ran short, Horton would be first over the side.
I took the other oar, and between us, we navigated toward the rocks. The worst heat of the day was yet to come, but my mouth was already dry and my skin chafed with salt. Charlie was leaning over the bow like an eager dog, the waters below us turning from midnight to a clear pale turquoise.
"Doesnāt look like much,ā Iain muttered, as we got our first sight of the islandālittle more than a bare rocky spur sticking up from the ocean.
āItās land,ā I reminded him. āCount your blessings.ā
Iain and I dragged the boat up the beach, while Charlie helped Abela limp his way through the shallows and settled him with his back to a rock. Even that small exertion had turned him grey with exhaustion, and thick greenish pus was leaking through the bandage around his thigh. Horton was already striding away from us. āHello?ā he shouted. āAnyone home?ā
Here's how to get your thrilling new book!
- Payment confirmed: You're ready for the next step.
- Check your email: Look for an email from BookFunnel.
- Download to your device: Click the download link and follow the instructions on how to download and transfer the book.
- Start reading or listening: Now you're ready to dive into your new chilling book!
See you in the shadows! š»