Sunday, October 12, 2025

The Pigsty

I'd stared at the pigsty for months now, through the uppermost window of my town house. In indolent mood, I seemed summoned to look. 

It's decrepit state fascinated me; the broken walls, the tangled stones, the rank tussocks failing to grow with any vigour whatsoever.

It was a carbuncle, the sty, situated as it was across the wide field the farmer struggled annually to tend. 

It was approximately halfway along the field's longest edge, opposite, by some length, an enormous sickly oak tree in the very centre of the plot, standing like a tired old guard, it too was succumbing to the malady of it's ward.

I could see it all from my window. 

It was clear every summer that the farmer's already necrotic wheat always suffered the most nearest the sty, some seemingly malignant force stifling the growing crop around it like a garrote. 

It was compulsive to witness this annual malaise and I remained at my window transfixed. 

No blackbird nested there, no wren made song, no fox sloped past, no crow flew by.

The sty was instinctively known to both man and beast as somewhere to be avoided, to be shunned outright and to stay clear of at all costs, lest some pestilence ensue.

So why then was I so animated by this heathen ditch? Why was I drawn to it?

I discussed it's apparent canker with my esteemed friend Torsten, at our late October dinner, who he himself had a penchant for the unusual and the strange.

"Obviously there's a rudiment of poison in the soil thereabouts Eric old boy, a relict of some erstwhile industry on that very spot, which I daresay wasn't farming as we know it," reasoned my old friend, gracefully dropping his monocle from his eye to underline the point.

"But why a pigsty?" I asked.

"I would assume the corruption pre-dates any agriculture, perhaps a bronze age smithy or some such ironmongery involving metals and ores. These have abraded over centuries into something toxic. I doubt the pigs were ever very happy porkers at all with all that below them!", Torsten deducted. 

"Yes, I agree, some past occupation may explain it. Before the piggery. Indeed, an old map may offer a clue as to what was there before," I concluded.

"Indeed!" 

We finished our after-dinner brandies and I bade my friend goodbye, as he stepped out into the dark mews shrouded by fog, the autumn clime more fretful this year than ever.

Inside I was invigorated by our conversation and retired to the small but well-stocked library. There I sought our my late Father's ancient maps. He was a connoisseur of local history and I was sure he would have something of use in the cabinet. 

Yes, there it was! 

A treatise on the medieval and pre-historic usage of local field systems including hand-drawn maps. 

How fortuitous!

If only Torsten had stayed an hour longer, we could have perused the papers together.

But no matter. 

I spread out one of the mouldy folding charts on my desk and turned up the gas lamp mounted on the wall behind. 

The yellow light flickered across the vellum and gave the lines and symbols a particularly eerie presence.

Studying the maps this way and without any modern infrastructure to rely on, it was difficult to calibrate the field's precise circumstance, but I persisted into the early hours of the night.

Eureka!

At last I'd found the large field adjacent to my house, inscribed on the map in black lines of an irregular shape, which certainly bore no relation to modern farming patterns. 

This was a prehistoric tract, delineated by the lie of the rough land, upon which basic frugal gathering may have occurred, perhaps some hunting for meat and maybe even primitive horticulture. There did appear to be strips.

But then I saw it. 

One of the strips was clearly broken, it's long geometry stopped by a dark patch which .....

"By Jove! It's the pigsty's spot!" I cried and in my exuberance knocked over my brandy glass.

Having mopped up the spill with my handkerchief, I looked more intently at the area I now felt sure was the damned place.

The gas lamp wavered and as I peered at the map a shiver ran up my spine, which I could not reasonably explain, other than the nocturnal chill one can expect on this the last day of October.

Brrrr!

Taking a lens I magnified the location and focused my eye.

It was there. Clear to see. A symbol scrawled above the small blackened shape on the tract's boundary. 

A tentacle.

A tiny inked tentacle but one nonetheless. 

My shiver returned and I realized that my concentrated labours had instilled a sort of apprehension, an unease, which had now settled upon me. 

The unease could be even better defined.

It was fear.

The blacked-out spot on the paper had been shunned even then, it's dank structure  unnatural to the earliest of folk. They had singularly linked it to whatever nefarious entity or practice the tentacle inferred.

I inferred my own meaning.

Devilry!

So excited was I; so profoundly stirred by my nocturnal study and it's baleful sum, that I vowed to visit the pigsty in person that very day to test the theorem of the map and in so doing settle my indecent curiosity for the thing once and for all and put my mind at rest.

But first sleep.

It was late afternoon, when I awoke in the study. I had not made it beyond the next room from the library when exhaustion from my fervour had obviously taken me. I slept on the chaise longue with a blanket draped across.

It was chilly that October the 31st. Moreso than the season demanded and I questioned my earlier resolve to visit the sty.

"If only Torsten were with me," I mused but he would be wisely ensconced in his comfortable villa with the hearth blazing and a servant proffering a clipped cigar. 

I gathered my resolve and after a small repast of quail eggs, toast, butter and a cognac, I collected the chattels needed for my hike across the huge field: sturdy boots, thick coat, hat, hip flask for further resolve and as a result of my tardy slumbers, a tilly-lamp.

It was already completely dark as I stepped out of my door.

The entrance to the farmer's field was by way of an ancient gate with tremendously weathered gate posts. I stepped in and made my way slowly across the pallid winter wheat, at some point disturbing a large hare, which scampered away like spring-heeled Jack himself.

I watched with interest it's quick retreat over the field via the light of my lamp, as it ran in haste toward the pigsty in the distance. 

It was as it broached the fallen walls, I fancied that it hesitated, attempted to turn, but was ensnared by something darker than the dark itself, a seeming tendril of the night and with a loud throaty shriek the hare was gone. 

"Oh Lord!" I whispered and despite having glimpsed it all in the sulphurous light of my tilly I now doubted that which I had seen.

"Damn hare!"

I took a sip from my hip flask and steadied my nerves. The oak tree was close and thus the half-way mark. 

I can make it.

Reaching the vast oak I heard a noisy gang of crows high up in the canopy, their tortured sleepy chatter ricocheting like hail on an empty church roof. I stared upwards and saw their sable forms held fast to branches beginning to sway.

A wind was starting up. It arrived suddenly and was much more than an Autumn breeze. I braced myself and went headlong  into it, it's fury building rapidly and I imagined some sinister agency at work as I got ever closer to the sty.

It was then that I found the monocle.

I picked it up and my heart sank entirely. This was Torsten's monocle, the very same he had been wearing at my home the night before.

What on earth was it doing in this field?

The reality hit me like a cannonball. 

Torsten, my best friend, had himself secretly been consumed by the self-same curiosity as I and after leaving my house had deigned to see the dreadful sty himself. 

But where on earth was he now?

"Torsten, Torsten! For God's sake!" I bellowed through the tempest, my voice a mere purr in the tumult.

But then the wind ceased as abruptly as it had begun and I realized that I was standing directly outside the derelict wall of my destination, the pigsty.

Quivering, I took one tentative step to the side when my foot trod on something, something soft and pliable, something wet.

I looked down and to my disgust I had stood on the mangled remains of the hare I'd seen earlier. The poor creature had been torn apart, it's entrails cast aside like canapés and it's pelt wrenched off as if some mad butcher had got to work. It's damp crushed innards had risen over the top of my boot.

I grimaced.

It was at this point that the darkness seemed to intensify, to thicken, and an unimaginable stink arose from the sty, an aroma so foul that I had to wretch. It was the smell of a thousand abattoirs, the scent of Hades itself.

As I heaved I became aware of a faint light in the dark within the sty and as it grew stronger I began to make out a form in the blackness.

"Oh dear Mary Mother of God!" I cried as the form fully materialised within the gloom.

Before me was a sight so dreadful, so heinous that my blood ran cold and froze.

I began to scream.

In the abyss within the ditch writhed a collosal and hateful thing, a hissing, quaking red morass of tiny eyes, huge fanged lipless maws and worst of all, yes, by far the worst were the long, coiling, slithering yellow tentacles, horribly festooned with enormous pouting suckers. It slopped and contorted in its cauldron of steaming ooze like a primordial wretch.

But an even more damnable sight in this vision of Gehenna was waiting for me; it was not the beast itself nor it's infernal coils, but the pitiful soul stretched across it's awful palps.

My mind began to slip.

"Tooooooooooorsten!" I wailed as reality collapsed and my reasoning shrivelled.

My friend was mercilessly entangled in the mollusc's seething barbels, his body defiled by despicable hooks, which had ripped away entire chunks of his flesh and muscle. His feet and hands had been shortened by the thousand drooling mouths and his scalp peeled off like a slice of beef.

With tears in my eyes for the unbearable plight of my friend, unfathomably I saw him purse his lips and attempt to speak.

A single sentence echoed around the stygian hovel, a string of anguished words from his mouth so utterly devastating that I will never ever forget them.

"For God's sake, run Eric, for this truly is the gate of ...

...... Hellllllllllll!"

Torsten's final tortured yell, twisted into a  muffled agonised scream as a fat glistening tentacle harpooned his open mouth, was audible enough to ring in my ears the whole frantic run back across that insufferable field, stumbling most of the way in the devilish crop, my wracking bouts of sobbing hindering my progress home.

Home. 

The word had the hue of salvation, the very shape of escape from what surely has been a nightmare this All Hallows Eve, a most harrowing one for certain, but a nightmare nonetheless. 

Surely!

I shambled into my living room straight to the drinks cabinet and gulped a large tumbler of whisky, my hand shaking all the while.

I have been asleep and woken too quick.

Surely?

Yes, that's it. Of course.

It was then, whilst reaching for my handkerchief to dab my unaccountably damp brow, that I found once more Torsten's monocle in the snug of my jacket pocket and in turn saw the hare's wet crimson viscera clinging clearly to my boot.

It is at this point I began screaming and haven't stopped screaming since, my small asylum window the only hint I still have of the hellish world outside.

Thursday, October 9, 2025

The Lullaby of Monsters

Magera was the tiniest of things, a mere dot, a bubble of blood with wings and a head of snakes.


She was nestled in torn-up newspaper like a storyline; water dripping into her mouth from a cracked tank where her parents had been drowned.


"You will be special Magera," they gurgled as they tipped her over the edge.


That was a week ago: when she fell from their grip as men pushed them under before they turned to stone.


As empty as the Hadean depths and despite being lonelier than the loneliest of myths, her newspaper nest was warm and soft: a featherbed of gibberish; a bowl of shredded human hatred she knew nothing of. Her snake-hair hissed her goodnight.


Magera woke and cooed at the lightbulb way above the tank hanging like a petrified star. She wondered if cruel men lived there too and whether she would need to hurt them.


Maggots emerged from her parents' softened backs, dropped from the lip and gathered like gnocci on the floor. Magera peered over the edge of her bed. She purred and smiled as the maggots stared.


Magera crawled onto the soft maggot carpet of cousins and was gently carried to the hole in the door, where the caravan entered the street and halted.


The maggots sniffed the air and Magera gawped at the vast skyscrapers of iron and glass towering above; strange metal canisters flying between them leaving trails of thick acrid smoke; gargantuan chimneys blurted out plumes of green and purple gas, which encircled the towers like sick halos: browbeaten denizens trudged through oil-soaked litter and detritus toward massive factories made of iron; their heads down and hands stuffed in their pockets as the driving rain lashed them into submission.


Magera shivered, stepped off the maggots and nodded her thanks. They all said "you're welcome" in unison.


A rickshaw rode past, pulled by six thin men. The occupant was a vast ogre with an enormous paunch and huge wide mouth: a monster hunter. Around his neck was a necklace of fangs and snakeheads. He stopped burping when the blue light on his head began to flash.


"HALT!" He bellowed and the rickshaw came to a stop. 


The vast hunter stood up, although no legs were visible, only feet, and peered round the street with eyes so intent that shadows stopped dead. He swung his dreadful truncheon rhythmically into his flabby open palm.


Magera froze and instinctively sensed that the massive gawping thing meant her harm. She blended into the rubbish in the gutter as best she could, her tiny snakes and wings completely still. She stared intently at his foot above her.


Seeing nothing, his blue light petering out, the quivering man sat down tutting, not yet aware that his big toe had turned to stone.


"ON!" He roared and the six pullers heaved with all their might and away they went, refuse whirling upwards in their wake.


Magera held fast, breathed a sigh of relief and made her way slowly but surely to the small playground across the road, the only sign of childhood life on a street dwarfed by threatening towers.


On a slide sat a boy. He was wearing a black bin bag and a single file of bats circled round and round his head. He looked forlorn, melancholy. He spoke to Magera in a soft whisper.


'Hi, my name is Vinegar. What's yours?'


Having never spoken before Magera pursed her tiny mouth and blew out her name in a bubble of air.


'Magera".


"Well Magera, you're clearly not like them, up there in the superstructures, so you must be like me, something else, something they won't like that's for sure. They call us monsters".


"Oh."


"These humans stuffed in all these skyscrapers can't stand things like us, things they don't understand, things which remind them of magic and they hate magic like the plague! They hate us like the plague!"


"Oh."


"Yep, it's true, sorry. So. Little gorgon, where are you going?"


Magera shrugged and as she moved a maggot fell out from her mop of snakes and landed on the grass.


"Oh!"


The maggot yawned and crawled towards Vinegar.


"Not too close baby fly! My bats are asleep but they're always starving!" Explained the boy.


Maggot shuffled onto Magera's hoof.


"I'm planning on leaving this city, this rotten pile of scrapers. There's nothing here but hate and hunters. I'm going where I can sleep every day to the sound of sweet music, where the night-children hum lullabies in a distant place where the monsters live!" said Vinegar.


"Oh!" 


"I'm going to find the Queen Bride's Castle with the swing at the edge of the world, where you can scratch your skin to see the creature within and talk and eat with fiends like us".


Vinegar looked at his audience of two.


"Do you want to come with me?"


Magera and maggot nodded. All the snakes as well.


"Super!"


"We'll need some food to keep us going," said Vinegar.


Each got a little drop of sugary spit from Magera's snakes and off they went.


It took two days to free themselves from the gyres of humanity and break out of the vast structures packed together like implanted teeth. A small posse of factory workers with pitchforks, lead by the fat hunter in the rickshaw, had even seen them off the boundary. 


"Good riddance!" Bellowed the mob, "You're the last of the monsters so don't come back!"


Vinegar turned to them bearing his fangs and raised two fingers, his bats wriggling their rear ends in their direction and defecating.


"Clowns!" Growled the vampire.


After another night of endless traipsing past pylons draped in witches knickers, shambling through the gluminous wastes of landfill, oil, grime and rubbish, at last there was nothing human left, save for one forgotten shed, where the city's trashman had sat and pointlessly scratched at his ledger. 


As they quietly passed the filthy building, they heard the sound of whining and yelping and howling and certainly not sounds a trashman would make.


They followed the noise inside. There, in a deep pit, lay a trapped wolf. A young wolf. A young werewolf to be exact and like the rest of the troop - except maggot of course  - the last of its kind.


"Hullo!" Shouted Vinegar peering over the pit.


"Hello, oh, hello, howl, howl, hello!" Came the frantic reply.


"We'll get you out!"


With an old rope thrown down and tied to a hook, the werewolf climbed out with the help of Vinegar's bats rotating like a propeller beneath his furry feet.


"Thank you!"


"You're welcome!"


"What's your name?"


"Orrible. That's what the old man called me."


"Well, Orrible, why not join us and tell us your story on the way," offered Vinegar.


Magera and Maggot nodded too.


And so the four monsters left the world of humans behind and set off for the fabled castle where dark days lasted forever.


Over windswept moors and forlorn crags they wandered. Like gargoyles perched on the buttresses, ravens grunted their displeasure at being disturbed in their nests but the monsters just laughed and waved goodbye, their spirits soaring like phantoms.


Eventually, after hiking many days and nights, they stood in front of a cave, above which was carved the symbol of a crossed-out pitchfork.


"Queen Bride's Castle!" Gasped Vinegar. "It's through here! No humans allowed, just us monsters!"


"Yay!" said Magera and Maggot.


Orrible howled. The snakes hissed.


They scrambled through the pitch-black cave and popped out like corks from a nebuchadnezzer.


Before them was a fret-shrouded vale full of shrieks and screams and roars and the group immediately felt at home.


Banshees whizzed by them; bogarts ran up trees; greenteeths wriggled in the pools and kelpies in the distant fields were growling.


It was Hell on Earth and the refugees loved it, each one skipping and dancing with joy. Even maggot crowdsurfed the snakeheads, it's little mouth cooing as they flicked their tongues with glee. 


When they reached Queen Bride's Castle; a tremendously high palace of singed barn timber stretching up into the clouds; each was given a hearty welcome, on behalf of the Queen, by the royal Igors and offered a meal of anything they so desired: black pudding for Vinegar, some pus for maggot, spare ribs for Orrible and a gorgonzola for Magera.


The Castle was lit by electrodes, which were constantly fed by lightning flinting off the sleeping Kraken to the North. On every table were devices with dials and sparking arcs and the windows were brimming with flasks of blue and purple liquids, through which the lightning flashed and conjured rainbows like bruises in the air. 


As the companions wandered round the ramparts, they realised that all their dreams would indeed come true and at last they felt accepted. They were really home in the land of monsters.


In the centre of the Castle was an enormous library of monster literature, the Wrathenaeum. It stood on the back of a giant stegosaur called Tomes. It's back plates had become the bookcases and Tomes explained to the new members that everyone got a book written about them and put in the Wrathenaeum, which they could update with fresh adventures whenever they wanted and even before they happened if they lent the Crystal Ball!


The Castle's scarred lumber corridors were adorned with brimstone plaques graced with witticisms, slogans and rally-cries. Some even spoke them out loud as you passed, like 'Halloween Forever!', 'Every Day is a Ghoul Day!', 'No Mobs Here!' and "Dark Days are Here Again!'.


Besides the Igors, a crew of busy skeletons kept the old palace ticking over and catered for all the monsters living within and without the Castle walls. The skeletons were rewarded with endless milk from the Minotaurs.


An ambulance was on call staffed by Sirens and a hospital for sick beasties was overseen by a caring Harpie called Abhorrence Nightingale. She'd been way over-unctuous with her generous ointments so a seconded demon was due to audit the cauldrons. The shredders were going like a Salem seance.


After two nights Queen Bride eventually appeared in the main hall. She was lowered from the tower above, where she'd been recharging her neck-trodes. Smoking from lightning strikes, she sat and joined the new arrivals for a supper of burnt toast, fresh bandages and her daily must, stale wedding cake.


Tall tales were told round the table and the guests and the Bride got on like a house on fire.


It was over a nightcap of ectoplasm that she tells her new friends about her lost love, the Monster, missing for decades and stuck somewhere in the castle's thousand rooms. 


Vinegar, Orrible, Magera and maggot promised to help the Queen find her lost Monster and would begin straight away. All of her Igors joined them too.


They searched high and low, in graveyards, labs, dungeons, wine cellars, tunnels, crypts, vaults, breakfast rooms, back rooms, front rooms, parlours, boudoirs, master bedroom, guest rooms, state rooms, broom cupboard, barns, chests, coffins, the Ghost Train and the Black Lagoon.


Nothing. Not a sniff of the Monster.


"There is nowhere left to look Igors", screamed the Queen at her servants.


"Beg your pardon Ma'am, but there is one place left"


They all stared at that one brave Igor shivering at the back.


"The cinema in the spire!"


"But that's been locked and sealed since we built the castle. It's forbidden to go near it!" Argued the Queen.


However, she accepted her servant's logic and the Queen lead the group up a spiral staircase of one hundred wooden steps, which creaked like vertebrae as they trod. 


Thick cobwebs festooned the walls and banisters. Old hungry spiders ran forward chomping at the bit, only to stop dead and curtsey for their Queen.


As they approached the final flight they could hear strange sounds. Voices, several voices and even music. It was a film being played in the cinema in the spire.


The Queen entered and saw for the first time in decades her beloved husband, the Monster. He was sat on the timber floor transfixed by the huge screen on the wall, a patient stretched ghost on which an old projector was beaming a black and white film.


It was Frankenstein.


The Queen's heart melted as she watched her sweet mesmerized creature reach out to the old blind man in the film and mouth the word 'Friend' just as he did on the screen.


With tears running down her face-paint and sizzling on her neck, she walked slowly towards her beloved, the rest of the group caught up in her bridal trails.


"My darling Monster!," the Queen whispered and hugged him tightly. The Monster stared at her, as if waking from a long dream.


"I've been watching our old films dear. You know, the old ones when people still loved us. When we were famous." He explained, his stitched-on eyes welling up with formaldehyde.


"Don't worry about that now my dearest. I am just so pleased to have you back.  Let's get you to the rooftop and fully recharged".


The small group of new guests followed the Monster and his Bride to the circuitry in the clouds, where the lightning zapped night and day.


In time the Monster was himself again, helping the Queen run the castle and look after all the creatures in her care across the baddest of lands.


The new arrivals settled into their new home and had dreadfully monstrous lives.


Maggot grew up, had a few tantrums, then became a nice shiny Bluebottle living on a Yeti. 'Orrible made some wolfish pals and running in packs, terrorized the castle forest fairies.


As for Vinegar and Magera, they were given top jobs: Vinegar was tasked with tending to the castle's growing bat colony and Magera assisted the regal stonemason with petrifying skill.


They also became the Royal couple's closest friends, got their own haunted house complete with Igors and lived shabbily ever after.


The (fi)end.

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Skinvent's Bane

He was a dishevelled old man with a terrible gait as he walked up the path to the cottage that afternoon. It was the first of January, the first day of a year and was as new as a nail.


Winter crows guzzling seed seemed to writhe away as the old man trod with old boots way too big for his whippet legs.


His long ancient gabardine was stained and burnt and tied at the waist with fraying string.


It reeked of something like gunpowder and cardinal sin.


"Morning Madame, Villbleed's the name. Mind if I take a winter apple from your tree, for which I'll trade you this bag of dust?"


Skinvent the woman stared at the stinking vagrant for a second or two but saw no harm in letting him take an apple.


After all there were far too many for her this year, a fecund crop of pudgy bakers, which even her three cruel uncles couldn't manage, save if she she cooked them all and gave them bellyache from one huge pie.


Shaking away her wishful thoughts, she replied from the candlelit doorstep.


"By all means do take an apple or two Sir. And no need to give me anything in return. Tis New Year and all."


"Why thank you kind lady. Most benevolent of you. But I insist, if I scrump I must leave you this dust. Its been swept from my house last New Years Eve it has, by my dear dear departed, and will bring bad luck to whomsoever you wish."


"Bad luck?"


"Yes, for the pesky irksome oafs we all have to endure in our lives. Maybe they deserves a bit of misfortune eh dear? I say, let's forget our manners, to hell with them all and begin anew!"


Skinvent considered his strange but reasonable thesis and conceded its attraction. She could indeed deploy the dust to some good use.


She smiled.


"Take your apple and leave me the dust."


Items so exchanged, the tramp and the woman parted company, but as he left the lady was certain she spied scarlet skin beneath his sleeve.


Thinking nothing of it more the day bled into night.


"Where's my tea you slovenly sow!" bellowed Uncle Stomach, named as such by her dear departed Mother, his Sister, on account of his insatiable and revolting appetite. 


Stomach would eat anything and everything, with not a care for anyone else. They could starve for all Stomach cared. A selfish, heinous gobbler; a stealer of meals; a greedy, belligerent pig-bag, who, like the rest of Skinvent's Uncles, was the bane of her life.


"Bring my fuckin tea!" He roared and slapped his niece across her face with his tablespoon. 


Used to Stomach, but sick of him entirely,  Skinvent had no hesitation whatsoever at mixing the bag of dust into his gravy, which it thickened admirably and fell in fat drips over the dish of hot food.


No sooner had Stomach tucked in he began to choke. He stood up suddenly and grabbed his throat, huge globules of dusty meat erupting from his frothing maw.


"You, you fuckin...."


He glared at Skinvent and she could feel his hot hatred. He knew for sure she'd done something to him.  But it was too late for the greedy man, who died on that very spot, liquefying slowly like lard around his gut, a steady reduction of tissue and bone, eventually leaving nothing but his bloated stomach, the acid sloshing out as it fell on its side like a discarded haggis.


"Hmmm. My my. Well I never did see such a thing!" said Skinvent beaming from ear to ear.


She carefully hung the dripping stomach on a hook inside the pantry and blew out one of the candles in the window, a pair still burning for lonely strays lost in the dead of night, strays bearing wonderful gifts perhaps.


"One down, two to go!" she whispered as she closed her eyes and endured the agony of her remaining pair of Uncles for another long, dreadful dozen months.


The next New Year's day, as Skinvent had prayed for every night, Villbleed returned seeking one of her succulent Christmas apples.


Goatsuckers coughed as he strode by, a spring in his step they had perceived and scarpered to the woods to watch.


"Good Morrow sweet Miss, tis I again this start of the calendar, in need of another of your wholesome fruit if we can agree a suitable trade."


"Ah, yes, of course Sir. For certain an apple is a small price for ....?"


"A pot of glue rendered from a nag, my dear departed, just yesterday on New Years Eve. This too will engender harm on whom you choose and will adhere to it, I swear."


"A deal!" She laughed.


"Please scrump old Sir and give me that glue!"


Villbleed turned to the tree and Skinvent was sure she glimpsed a wisp of smoke rising from his coat.


That night the table set, she felt her Uncle's hand cup her breast, his other hand guiding hers upon his bulging ballsack.


"Come here you whore and spread those legs. You're gagging for some Uncle Chestnuts I can tell!"


Skinvent winced but played the part for Chestnuts, so named by her sweet late Mother for his hideous man-bag, which, seldom in his trousers, had banged upon the family whole; girls, boys, women and men. He wasn't fussy whom he entered, his insistent nadgers happily decanting every time.


The Uncle shambled to toilet himself and the niece went to the counter, prepared a drink and quickly basted his seat with Villbleed's glue. 


"Sit my good Uncle for a cup of punch and then you may have your fill".


Chestnuts sat down and immediately began to quiver and quake as he stuck fast. 


"What the ....!"


He fumed, he raged, he blasphemed and conveniently burst into flames and was handsomely consumed leaving nothing but his pink testicles steaming on the stool.


"Good Lord! Good grief! That is truly a sight for sore eyes!"


"You've well and truly roasted your chestnuts this time Uncle!"


Skinvent chuckled and picking up his sizzling balls she hung them in the pantry on a hook beside Stomach's wincing gut.


"A right pair of Uncles you are now eh!" She howled and blew out a candle, leaving just one alight in the window.


Her dreams were eased but nowhere near fully, as the worst of the Uncles was left, the pugnacious and violent Knuckles.


Skinvent feared him the most and suffered another gruelling year, her open wounds and loosening hair the trophies of Knuckle's unwanted attention.


The world turned whole and New Year came full circle, and like the clockwork dark, Villbleed appeared on January's frost.


"Tis I sweet dear, another year passed and I yearn again for your apple's tang. May I partake today?"


"Oh yes, wise Sir, please do! My apples as always are yours to plunder but I wonder so what you'll trade this year?"


"Ah, the best I feel, the best for last, a tonic for the hands and feet I reduced myself, from my dear departed, to smooth away the evil in your midst but I shall not rub it in my lady"


"Done!" She roared! 


"Please eat old man and give me that tonic!"


As Villbleed scrumped a final time, Skinvent was sure of the fork in his tail she witnessed flick above his boots.


With no time to think Knuckles appeared, punched her square and dragged her to the house,whilst yelling at the tramp:


"Fuck off you old cunt and don't come back. This punch-bag's mine!"


Skinvent was thrown to the flagged floor of the parlour, where she clutched the precious tonic.


"What's that fucking bottle you useless wench?"


"It's for my hands Uncle, a potion for tired skin on hands and feet: to make them tough, something I have always wanted!" She wailed,  hoping against hope that the ruse found purchase in his brutish brain.


It had.


"Fuck you, you scratty old tart, it's my skin it's dressing, not your sissy sack! And when they're even tougher you're gonna get the beating of your pointless little life!"


Feigning resistance, the niece shrieked as Knuckles wrestled the bottle from her, cruelly kicking her in the softest parts and daubing it over his hands and feet in front of her.


"See you minger! Look at your Uncle's iron hide now!" Bragged Knuckles as he clenched his gritty fists and walloped Skinvent fully in the mouth.


She cried and nursed her bleeding teeth and prayed for .....


It began with a welt, then a rash of boils.


Before long Knuckles' whole face was a raft of buboes, scabbing over, then falling off to leave rents exploding yellow puss across the room. Knuckles screamed from a lipless mouth as his entire body, save his hands and feet, gave way to a mass of crusts and blisters, which he frantically tried to pick away, only to reveal deep necrotic holes of gangrenous jelly.


Uncle Knuckles fell to his knees like a dying crab, looked up at Skinvent and wept, the tears loosening his face, which came away completely, landing between his legs.


Splat!


His ravaged body shook and he reached out to his niece, his fists dreadfully clenched one last time, only to find them fall off his wrists and land on the floor like two hams.


Splat!


A shambling sacrifice, he tried to stand but his feet came away from his ankles with a snap. Faceless, handless and without feet, the monstrosity still persisted and staggered towards Skinvent on bleeding stumps, before collapsing at her skirt, crusting over and blowing away in the winter's wind.


Skinvent laughed and laughed and laughed as she stared at what was left: just his terrible fists and feet, harmless and incomplete.


"Oh yes! Oh My! How absolutely awfully wonderful" she howled.


Picking up her Uncle's limbs she skipped to the pantry and tying together sinews, she hung them out to dry like shoes on two of the three remaining hooks.


She admired her handiwork and touched each one in turn, making them swing ever so slightly: Stomach, Chestnuts, Knuckles and feet.


Skinvent shed a tear of joy and smiled in disbelief.


There was one spare candle to extinguish but she kept it lit that winter night and every night the following year, a year of bliss and rightful power, of eating and sleeping without any fear.


But as the Christmas season came, shining brighter than she'd ever known, Skinvent's niggling doubts about the winter vagrant scratched her mind like claws and as December waned they coalesced into full conviction. 


She was sure of it, he was coming and wasn't finished, so by the pregnant light of December's final night, Skinvent was ready for the horrors he would surely bring.


And like a leech that's left an empty pond, Villbleed slithered up the path that January first.


"No Uncles left my dearest Lady but apples galore I see!"


"Yes, a fertile tree it is for sure, my mother's in the soil protecting me."


The vagrant nodded.


"So what to trade this year I wonder; what's now an apple's fee?


"How about a hot dinner for you kind Sir?"


"Ah, warm food in your homestead. I do so miss my late dear departed's cooking and everything else I bid her to do for me."


"Well, come in the house."


Villbleed smiled widely, his crammed and copious tapered teeth revealed.


"Oh, I plan to come in my dear. I plan to do so much more besides. Now get that fuckin' sweet ass of yours inside!" He bellowed.


Skinvent had known for certain the man would change; had fully rumbled his ruse a year before but she was still shocked by this terrible switch, his sudden avarice and a whiff of something far far worse, but to her credit and good fortune, she'd seen this jumped-up Trojan tramp for what he really was; just another conniving bastard and bastards well she knew.


Once beyond her door the man took off his fetid mack to reveal his hellish form, the flaming red horrendous figure of Satan himself, his tail thrashing in excitement and his huge member engorged like a crimson canon.


"Now, you wimpering bitch, where's my fucking dinner? If it's decent grub I'll spare you my sharp tongue where it hurts and get straight to the forking. My knackers ache for relief and my late departed mistress just lost .. well, the knack with them, her arid cleft her unfortunate end and I'm fucking starving for it now. Yet fear not my apple-whore, as you can see I have risen to the occasion splendidly and as planned, your three Uncles' charming souls, God bless 'em, came to me like giddy lambs and gave me the lift I so dreadfully needed to stiffen my resolve so to speak! Ha ha!"


The Devil chuckled, steamed and smiled, his sharpened teeth a hyena's.


"Now fetch me my fucking food, wench!"


Satan sat at the table smoking and Skinvent brought out the meal she'd prepared earlier, secretly garnishing it with a hefty dash of the tramp's fell trades saved for such a very day; the dust, the glue, the tonic. They all went in the stew, along with the balls, fists and feet, all served on an empty stomach. 


"Yes," she mused "my hateful Uncles get to play one more part .... or several!"


The Devil gorged himself on the hot casserole, demanding seconds, sucking little bones and finally licking out the stomach. He sat back and burped, his taloned hands caressing his fattened paunch.


"Excellent fayre, my thanks to you trollop. The juicy meatballs and hocks were glorious! The butcher should be complimented on his choice of cuts."


"And now for pudding!"


He rose to his full height, clutching his swollen sceptre.


"You will now know the agony and the ecstasy of the Tartarus cock, so pull up your skirt sweet harlot!"


Satan swept everything off the table with his tail and threw Skinvent over its edge face down, her skirt ruffled around her naked behind.


"Aaah, that's a fine rump I must say, like one big apple for me to core; far better than the last scrag end I shafted. This is a plump harvest for pressing to be sure. Oh hell, my glorious pups will fill your quim to its brim!"


Barely in control the Devil yelled aloft.


"Yes! Let's get to it!"


He gripped her sides and readied himself for the thrust when, suddenly, he stopped.


"What? What's this? You witch! What have you done?"


Satan staggered backwards and stared in disbelief as his turgid member shivered and shook without his hands and he urinated jet black blood. 


His horns sank into his head heading straight for his roasting brain and his tail flew in a circle and shot straight up his burning arse.


His balls tied a clove knot in themselves and he forcibly stuffed both his hands down his throat, where he grasped his intestines hard and pulled himself inside out, the whole gelatinous mess breaking down entirely and running over the steps out of the house.


The birds began to drink.


Slurp!


All that was left of the Devil was his furtive cock.


Skinvent stopped shaking and howled with laughter as she prodded the steaming phallus with her foot.


"Not so cocky now eh! you old twat! Gives a whole new meaning to the Fallen One don't you think!"


She laughed and laughed as she carefully lifted her heavy scarlet wrinkled bounty and hung it on the biggest pantry hook she had, where it shook and swung and suddenly went slack.


"Not so thick now old Nick you fucking prick!" She howled and closed the pantry door on her prize possessions. 


After all, you never know who might come scrumping the next New Year!