Scary Stories

By lauralukridge

530K 13K 2.7K

I decided to write a book about scary stories, however these stories are not written by me. Enjoy! More

War of Conquest
The Body in the Bed
The Babysitter and the Man
Bloody Mary
The Clown Statue
Black Aggie
Axe Murder Hollow
Black Magic
Raw Head and Bloody Bones
Bloody Mary Returns
Bloody Mary Whales
The Brick Wall
The Brothers' Revenge
Burnt Church
Dancing with the Devil
Death Waltz
Devil on Washington Rock
Dispatched
Don't Turn on The Light
The Face
Goblin of Easton
Golden Hand
Ghost in The Alley
Hairy Toe
The Handshake
Hatchet Man
The Hook
The Bad Hour
No Trespassing
Playing Piano
Screaming Jenny
Storm Hag
Sifty Sifty San
Vampire Hermit
Vengeance
Where's My Liver?
White Lady
White Wolf
Wrath of the Creek
Alicia
Amber
Army of The Dead
Aunty Greenleaf and The White Deer
Bear Lake Monster
Big Liz
Black Bartelmy's Ghost
Black Dog of Hanging Hills
Blackbeard's Ghost
Bleeding Sink
Bloody Knife
Bloody Mary, Quite Contrary
Boo Hag
Cow's Head
Death Coach
Dem Bones
Don't Sell My House
Drowned Man
Dungarvon Whooper
The Dead (El Muerto)
Enchanted
Express Train From Hell
Fifty Cent Piece
First Day of School
Ghost Handprints
Ghost Pilots of Time Square
Ghost Ship of Captain Sandovate
Ghost Train
Ghost in the Stacks
Ghost of Pearl White
Ghost on the Tracks
Ghosts of Ringwood Manor
Girl in White
Going Courting
Green Lantern
Haunted Christmas
A Baker's Dozen
A Gift from Saint Nicholas
Eavesdropper
Der Belznickel
I'm All Right
Wait Until Emmet Comes
Never Mind Them Watermelons
Heartbeat
Henry Hudson and the Catskill Gnomes
Hold Him, Tabb
I Know Moonrise
I'm Coming Down Now
Invisible Hands
Jack O' Lantern
Jack and the Devil
Joaquin Murietta: Bandit of The Goldfields
La Corriveau
La Llorona
Lady in Lace
Lady in Red
Lincoln Death Train
Llorona, Omen of Death
Lost
Maco Ghost Light
McLoughlin's Ghost
Milk Bottles
Moll DeGrow
Muriel
Nine-Eleven
Ocean-Born Mary
Ogopogo, The Lake Monster
Olde Forte Mifflin
Palatine
Phantom Diner
Phantom Drummer
Phantom Hiker of Grandfather Mountain
Phantom Lovers of Dismal Swamp
Phantom Train Wreck
Piece By Piece
Pink
Presumed Drowned
Red Dwarf of Detroit
Sachs Bridge
Screaming Tunnel
Shadow Train
Spuyten Duyvil
Suicide
Swept Over
Telltale Seaweed
The Barn Dance
The Bells
The Black Cat's Message
The Bloodstain
The Bloody Mary Ritual
The Blue Rocks
The Cursing of Colonel Buck
The Cut-Off
The Devil and the Werewolves
The Devil's Hole
The Doctor and the Ghost
The Figure in the Window
The Flying Canoe
The Ghost That Followed Me Home
The Grave
The Grocer
The Headless Bride
The Headless Horseman
The Headless Sentry
The Hitchhiker
The Jersey Devil and the Hat
The Melt Shop
The Phantom Bellman
The Skeleton
The Skeleton's Lantern
The Wailing Woman
The Wampus Cat
Tolling of the Bell
Tommy Knockers
Trapper's Ghost
Turnabout is Fairplay
Underground
Werewolf's Bride
Whirlwind
White House Ghosts
White Riders
Who Calls?
Windigo
Yancey's Ghost
Yellow Ribbon
You Can't Get Out
The Russian Sleep Experiment
Humans Can Lick Too
Bride and Seek
Killer In The Backseat
The Choking Doberman
Fatal Hairdo
The Knife and Ductape
The Killer in the Window
The Premature Burial
Carmen Winstead
The Bell Witch
Creepy Crawlies

That Pesky Fellow

1K 31 0
By lauralukridge

A fisherman from Newfoundland was having difficulty finding someone to assist him. Help was scarce, and he couldn't find a soul to hire. Then one day he saw a handsome fellow in fancy city clothes walking along the docks. This was obviously not a man looking for work, but the fisherman still called out, half in jest: "Are ye looking for some work?" To his surprise, the city-man nodded and jumped into the boat.

They agreed to split the catch into three parts, one for the city-man, one for expenses, and one for the fisherman. Then they set out in the boat. At first, the skipper caught three fish to every fish caught by the city-man. He was quite disgusted with this performance. At this rate, he would have done better fishing alone. So he said: "Am I supposed to catch all the fish for you? Why don't you catch some?"

"Well then, if it's fish your looking for," said the pesky stranger. "How about these?" He grabbed the fish gaff and smacked the port side of the vessel three times. "Come aboard, fish!" he shouted. Immediately, fish of every shape and size came leaping out of the water on the port side and flopped into the bottom of the boat. The stranger then hit the starboard side of the boat three times, and fish came hopping and flopping in from that direction until the boat was so full the skipper could barely see the stranger over the mound of fish.

"Stop or you'll drown us both!" he shouted to the city-man. Well, that pesky city-fellow held up the fish-gaff and immediately the fish stopped jumping into the boat.

The skipper eyed the catch, and then grinned in delight at the city-man. "I wish I'd brought us a spot of rum!" he cried enthusiastically. "We should celebrate this fine catch!"

"A spot of rum, coming up," said that pesky fellow. He bore a hole into the mast with a little gimlet he took from his pocket and out poured enough rum to fill a mug. Then he bore a second hole into the mast and poured himself some whiskey.

By this time, the skipper was marveling at the magic produced by the pesky city-fellow, but he wasn't about to ask how he pulled off such stupendous tricks. He was just grateful to benefit from them. He topped off his rum from the hole in the mast and then turned the boat towards shore. The stranger wanted to steer, but the skipper wasn't sure where that pesky fellow would take the boat, so he politely declined the offer and the man grinned knowingly and poured himself some more whiskey.

When they reached the docks, the two men sat down and started dividing the catch between them. "Lay out one for you, one for expenses, and one for the Devil," the pesky city-fellow said with a lazy grin. So that was what the skipper did. He made three piles, and they kept throwing the fish one at a time into a pile, chanting: "One for me, one for expenses, one for the Devil," until the entire catch was divided.

The skipper put the Devil's portion on a wooden rack - called a stage - that was used for drying fish. "Much obliged," said the pesky Fellow with a happy grin. He kicked over the stage, leapt into the sea with his portion of the catch, and the whole kit and caboodle disappeared in a puff of smoke.

The skipper shook his head a few times. Then he went back to the mast to pour himself some more rum. But both of the bore-holes had disappeared along with the pesky Fellow.

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