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The Tales of Time
The Tales of Time
The Tales of Time
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The Tales of Time

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In The Open Book, award-winning screenwriter and novelist L. Marie Wood told the world about a ravenous magical book. The Tales of Time looks perfectly innocent, maybe a little old-fashioned, nothing to be afraid of. But anyone who opens its cover finds a bespoke tale of unspeakable horror created just for them. A tale that will devour them alive, body, mind and soul.
Don't you want to peek inside? There are so many lovely stories here about so many lovely people—lovers, parents, monsters, crooks, each with their own terrifying tale to share. Who knows? You might even find a story written just for you.
Tales of Time is best enjoyed with its companion volume, The Open Book.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 10, 2023
ISBN9798223832973
The Tales of Time

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    Book preview

    The Tales of Time - L. Marie Wood

    $5.99

    The movie went off and cycled back to the main screen, burning the stationary main page into the plasma TV more and more with every passing second. Carla had fallen asleep in front of the television again, as she had most nights since she got the DVD, unable to pull herself away from the screen to make it to bed. That really wasn’t true though. She hadn’t made it to bed because she didn’t want to go to bed. She was right where she wanted to be.

    Her sister thought she was crazy. Not literally, but she would have if she knew—if she believed. It wasn’t like Carla hadn’t tried to tell her, hadn’t tried to share him with her… once... in the beginning. But Carla’s sister didn’t see it. He didn’t speak to Tami the way he spoke to Carla. It was only right, really. He was Carla’s, after all.

    There wasn’t anything special about the DVD, just a B-level movie with a cast that you think you might have seen before, but if so, you can’t remember where. Carla got it out of one of those bins full of surplus movies discounted to $5.99.

    But that wasn’t all it was. Not to Carla.

    The storyline was slow-paced and didn’t really go anywhere, but Carla wasn’t listening to the lines. The actors either never really made it, were over-the-hill has-beens, or were newbies, but Carla recognized one of them. She should. She had seen him in her dreams for years.

    Well, not him specifically, and not in the dreams like the ones you have when you’re sleeping. But in her fantasies, in her daydreams, he was always there. He looked like a combination of her first love, a guy she knew from work, and the last guy she slept with. Such an odd mix, with unkempt hair, deep, penetrating eyes, the most sensuous lips. Carla could hardly tear her eyes away from the screen when he was in a scene and found herself reaching for the remote to fast-forward to his next one even if it meant she’d have no idea what was going on in the movie when she got there.

    After her second time watching the movie all the way through, he started talking to her.

    At first it was just a look. He would look at the screen, seemingly at her, when he should have been looking at the actor opposite him. The first look was just a peek, just a glance; Carla almost didn’t notice it at all. His second look was so much more meaningful. There was a playful twist to his lips that was endearing. His third look was downright obscene, the way he licked those luscious lips of his and lowered his eyelids. It gave Carla chills. The good kind.

    Twenty minutes into the movie he spoke to her.

    Carla.

    She felt as though she was waking from a dream when she heard her name. He was looking at her again, full on, shoulders squared to the screen—watching her. He was smiling just enough for her to see a hint of white from his teeth. She felt herself respond though she knew she shouldn’t. He didn’t have many lines in the movie; he was nothing more than a glorified extra, really, yet he had spoken her name as clearly as if he were sitting in the room whispering it in her ear. Carla spun her head around, looking in all corners of the room to be sure that he—that someone—wasn’t there making fun of her, laughing at her expense. But she was alone.

    With him.

    She watched the movie three more times that day and more that weekend, blowing off shopping with her sister, a date with a guy she had been interested in for months, sleeping in her bed, and eating. With every viewing he said more to her, sometimes telling her how beautiful she was, pouting his lips as he spoke, letting her see all the curves and contortions they went through as they formed words, other times asking her to remove garments so he could see more. She felt silly and excited at the same time. It was weird, strange; all of those things, but it was the best fantasy she’d ever had.

    As Carla snored, catching her first reluctant winks in 30 hours, the screen flickered and blinked before finally catching again on the beginning of the movie. For a second, gone faster than Carla’s eyes could have deciphered had she been awake, a roiling sea of red bubbled to the surface, washing Carla’s face in blood as a tentacle reached out to stroke her cheek.

    INHERITANCE

    To Wilson’s credit, his attempt had been a good one. Sharon was surprised he’d had the presence of mind and initiative to call Hattie into service before Sharon could find a suitable slave. The argument must have really burned him up, so much he went straight home that night and set to the business of concocting his potion. But Hattie had been easy to dissuade, at least thus far. Sharon didn’t have to do much more than lock the door against her to keep her at bay. A quick sidestep and the old girl was lost. Wilson hadn’t bothered to teach Hattie anything more than how to get up and walk again. He told her to go after Sharon and to kill her, but he hadn’t told her how.

    Sharon got used to the beating against her front door. Hattie could stay out there all night if she wanted to. It didn’t bother Sharon any, and there wasn’t a neighbor to complain about the noise for miles. She figured Wilson would wait until morning to see if Hattie had done the job. At least until after the funeral, just so it would look right. People would wonder why he wasn’t in the family car, it being his brother-in-law’s funeral and all. They would wonder why he would be anywhere except right by his wife’s side.

    Sharon had time.

    Hattie hadn’t figured out that she would do better to bust in the windows yet. Sharon doubted that she would. The woman hadn’t been a brain surgeon in life. How could she be expected to do better in death? Sharon sucked her teeth as she walked into the spare bathroom, the room where she brewed her potions and cast her spells. She thought back on how they had gotten to the place they were now—wanting to rip each other limb from limb as soon as look at one another.

    Their mother had left the shop to both of them. She had been a respected woman in their village, a woman who was known to take care of people’s problems. Half the time she didn’t do anything except sell roots and dried fruit for one potion or the next; she told Sharon and Wilson herself that the whole thing was bogus. But it worked, and she never had to put in a hard day’s labor in the hot sun in her life.

    Wilson played around with it; ‘Momma’s mumbo-jumbo,’ he called it. He was the oldest and the one who was supposed to inherit the business. He never caught on though, and was easily overshadowed by his younger sister, who seemed to have the real gift. When their mother died, she left everything to the both of them. And that’s where the trouble started.

    You’re making us look like fools, Sharon said from the back room of the shop that day. No one will believe us if you keep gallivanting around the street like a commoner.

    They don’t believe us as it is, Sharon, he said, tired of the argument. It was always the same thing over and over. People are smarter now. They know this is a bunch of bullshit.

    Sharon burst through the beads that hung from the ceiling to separate the rooms and growled, Watch your tongue in momma’s house.

    Wilson chuckled. Sharon, momma’s been dead for ten years already. When are you gonna cut it out? He turned his back to his sister and touched one of the dry herbs that hung from the ceiling.

    "Her ánimo is still here, Wilson. She’s angry that you speak of her that way."

    Right, sure, he said condescendingly. Anyhow, I just came here to tell you that I’ll be talking with a man about selling this dump. I’m gonna try and get whatever money we can out of this place and do something with it. Maybe I’ll move to the mainland. Who knows?

    Sharon looked stricken. You can’t sell the place! This is momma’s legacy!

    Wilson flicked the herb and sent it swinging on the string that held it. It’s not much of a legacy, now is it? We can barely live on what we make from it. I have to work a second job just to keep food on the table. He shook his head and stood to leave. I’m selling it, Sharon. And there’s nothing you can do about it.

    Wilson walked toward the door, opened it, and turned to speak before leaving. "But you should have already known that, bruha."

    Sharon cursed him then, vowing to stop him by any means necessary. She didn’t utter a sound as she stood facing the closed door of her mother’s shop, but Wilson heard every word.

    The church was sticky, and the mosquitoes relentless. They couldn’t resist the bounty they were getting: thirty people crammed in a small church with nothing but their hands to protect them. They feasted.

    Wilson escorted his wife in and sat in front of the body of her brother. Clay had been a strong man, muscular and fit for most of his life, but that didn’t save him. He worked out on the boats and was stung by a Portuguese Man of War during an afternoon pull. They didn’t make it back to the dock in time to save him after he went into cardiac arrest.

    As his wife sobbed, all Wilson could think about was Sharon. She wasn’t at the funeral, so she must be dead. She wouldn’t have missed Clay’s service. She fancied him and was genuinely saddened by his death. Wilson tried to conceal his smile as he thought of Hattie taking Sharon by surprise. She must have been shocked to see her, considering she had attended Hattie’s funeral a couple of days earlier. He would talk to the man after they put Clay in the ground, Wilson surmised. He would have his money in less than a month.

    His wife’s shaking grew intense, and a cry was stuck in her throat, choking her. Wilson turned to her and said, Honey? Honey, are you ok? He didn’t see Clay fidgeting in his tight casket, didn’t recognize the sounds of grunting from his chest and the ripping of the stitches in his lips to be what they were. His wife’s eyes were wide open, unblinking, in shock. Honey? He shook her slightly, trying to get her attention and pull her out of day terror she was having. She wouldn’t look at him.

    Wilson turned his head in the direction of his wife’s stare in time to see Clay sit up in the casket. An audible moan escaped his chest as the air escaped his lungs. Clay forced his mouth and eyes open, ripping the stitches apart. He lifted his right arm and then his left, inspecting them in disbelief. The whole

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