Episode 1 – Spooky Stories
Listen here, or at Buzzsprout: http://www.buzzsprout.com/673384
Our inaugural episode! Join us for three very spooky stories as we celebrate the first episode of Working Title: A Literary Arts Podcast—just in time for Halloween!
Tonight’s readings by:
Madison Brake — “The Bell”
Celine Pawlack — “Artificial Assistance”
Genevieve Leanne Dominguez — “Yellow Post-it Note”
Show Transcript
[00:10]
This is Working Title, A Literary Arts Podcast.
[00:20]
This podcast is a literary citizenship project founded by
the fall 2019 cohort candidates in the MFA Creative Writing program at the University
of Central Florida.
Our episodes will feature in-studio readings from the UCF literary
community, interviews and readings from published faculty and students, craft
round-tables, and special events such as public readings and conference
reports. Tonight, for our our inaugural episode, we are presenting you
with one of our seasonal readings.
Tonight’s episode is “Spooky Stories.”
[01:04]
A man, trapped in a labyrinth with a strange beast, becomes obsessed with
the sound of a bell. This is Madison Brake’s “The Bell.”
[01:19]
Death came for Elias laden with
the chime of a tiny bell from within a darkened cell.
He didn’t exactly see the beast come for him so much as he
felt him. The creature arrived in a wild rush, as if a window had burst open,
letting the wind come howling in, bearing with it a sense of darkness that was
more than just the absence of light; it was a physical force that threw itself
into the chamber. He came at Elias as a shadow made flesh, the long, cruel
curve of his claws reaching for Elias’s throat.
Then the beast of the shadows stopped short,
halted by the bars of his cage. His claws curled around the old iron, and his
pale, feline eyes pierced the young man trembling before him, pinning him in place. Around the creature’s neck, a silver
bell danced with a light chime.
“My, oh my,” said the beast. His voice was smooth and
silken. He spoke like a man, and seemed to stand like one, although Elias could
not see the beast’s legs in the dark of the prison. “What do I find upon my
doorstep today?”
Elias realized he was pressed against the crumbling wall of
the labyrinth, but he didn’t remember throwing himself there. His heart beat like
a frantic bird trying to escape its cage. He gulped down deep breaths and tried
to take in the creature before him despite the darkness. The beast’s hands were thin and stretched into cat-like
claws. He was all shadow, save for his luminous, cunning eyes.
The cage itself was old, with rust beginning to show itself
at the base of the bars, and Elias knew that it had been a long time since
someone had come into the labyrinth to bother locking a prisoner away in a
particular part of it. The beast’s cage was the only barred cell as far as
Elias had seen, and the beast itself the only living thing that he’d found
within the winding walls.
“What are you?” Elias asked.
“I am Kol,” said the beast. He dipped his
head a little so that the bell on his neck rang faintly. “What have you done to
find yourself in a place like this?”
“Nothing.” The truth threatened to rise from its place in
the back of his mind, but he shoved it away, tucked it into a box, and put it in a place where he didn’t have to look at it too
closely.
“Not nothing. The labyrinth is a place into which you toss
things you don’t want to see the light of day again, where you try to bury a
sin or hide a secret. So, you must be a sin or a secret. Or perhaps a fool. I
met a fool once. What a pleasant fellow he was.”
“What I am is of no consequence to you,” Elias replied. “I
don’t suppose you can tell me how to get out of here?”
“I suppose I could, but I don’t think I will,” said Kol. He moved, and the bell on his
neck twitched, laughing a high, tinkling laugh. Elias stared at the bell. It
caught the edge of the weak torchlight near the front of the chamber, the metal
glowing brilliantly. It was the brightest thing that he had seen since he’d
been tossed in here. The bell seemed to wink at him as it passed in and out of
the light.
“Have you found a key?” Something hungry lurked in Kol’s eyes.
“No.” He had. He’d scoured every room in the labyrinth he
could find, followed every twisting passage, seeking a way out. The key had
been lying on the floor of a room of no light. He’d only found it
because he’d kicked it with his foot. Like the bars of the cage, it was cold
steel beginning to show hints of rust. He couldn’t say why he didn’t tell Kol, except that he didn’t think he
quite trusted the creature.
“Ah,” said Kol. “Well then. Should you find it,
perhaps we might talk.”
Elias left Kol to his cage and continued to prowl the labyrinth.
On that first night—if one could call it that in a place of no sun— Elias dreamed of the bell, flashing in the
dark, tinkling brightly.
The bell followed Elias through the labyrinth the next day
during his waking hours, the sound ringing in his ears like joyous laughter. It
was the only thing that shattered the monotony of the silent, rotting stone.
Eventually, Elias gave up trying to ignore the thought of the bell. He began to
find his way back to Kol and his prison. The way was mostly dark, with only the
occasional sputtering torch or glowing moss to provide any relief. As he tried
to remember the path back, he thought he caught a glimpse of movement. When he
whipped around, however, he saw nothing but heavy patches of darkness. Nothing
moved.
The silence twined itself around him like a noose. He
wavered. The shadows seemed to slither and crawl, too quiet, too quiet. He
turned away and scurried the rest of the way back to Kol’s prison, taking refuge in
the solid thump-thump of his boots on the ground.
When he arrived, Kol seemed to unfurl from the
darkness, rushing forward as he had before. This time his black claws snaked
out from between the bars, halting inches from Elias’s chest. The bell jingled
frantically against his neck.
“What was that for?” Elias snapped. With his eyes on the
bell, he felt less fearful than before.
Kol withdrew his arm and sat in the cage, calm and
composed, blacker than a night of no moon with two pale eyes and one pale bell.
“One never knows what one might find down here,” he said. “Best to be safe.”
But he ran a pink tongue across his sharp, gleaming teeth.
“Have you seen anyone else down here?” Elias asked.
“Certainly not. Just you, sir.”
Elias swallowed. “What do you have that bell for?”
Kol made a rumbling sound that might have been laughter.
“So that the mice can hear me coming. It’s only fair to them.” Kol narrowed his eyes in the
way cats do when they smile. “Its sound is a lovely companion
in the dark as well, wouldn’t you say?”
Elias said nothing.
“I don’t suppose you’ve found a key, have you?” said Kol.
“Why? Does the key belong to your cell?”
Kol considered. “Yes. And should you find it, I might ask
if you could let me out.”
“Why would I do that?”
“Because I know the way out of the labyrinth,” Kol whispered. “Why else would
they cage a fellow in a supposedly inescapable place?”
“I guess…that’s a good point.” Elias felt himself growing
weary. He didn’t know where the sun or moon sat in the sky outside, but in the
labyrinth; it didn’t matter. He was tired from hours of walking, and the
hollowness in his stomach continued to gnaw at his insides. “I should go now.”
The bell laughed again as Kol cocked his head. “Oh, so
soon? Why not stay a while? It’s so good to have company down here.” He
actually sounded sad.
“I should go,” said Elias again. The sound of the bell had
calmed his frayed nerves, but the thought of sleeping under the watch of Kol’s pale eyes filled him with
foreboding.
He fled.
That night, the bell chased him through the labyrinth, along with the twitchings and shiftings of something lurking in the
dark. Eventually, he curled up in the room where he had found the key, his back to
the wall so nothing could creep up from behind him. He pulled out the key and
tapped it on the stone. It gave a metallic ring, but it was dull and muffled, a
sad mockery of the bell. He put it away, closed his eyes, and dreamed of the
bell.
When he woke next, the silence pressed on him like weights
upon his head, scraping at his skull, tearing into his skin. Heavy. Horrifying.
He scrambled to his feet, making as much noise as possible, savoring the rough
scuff and thump of his feet. Hunger continued to eat at his belly, casting a
fog over his thoughts, but greater than his desire for food was the necessity
of sound, of life. He wanted the bell. He needed it.
He raced through the maze like a rat that had long since
memorized the path to its prize. He ignored the small, skittering movements
caught out of the corner of his eye.
Before he knew it, he was at the arched entrance to Kol’s dwelling. Once more the
beast rushed to the bars, which shuddered as he threw his weight against them,
two sets of black claws grasping for him this time.
“Wait!” Elias’s voice was ragged. “I have the key! I have
it!” He brandished it.
Kol slid back from the bars. “Well, well, what a pleasant
surprise this is!”
“I want the bell,” said Elias.
“Give me the bell, and I’ll give you the key.”
“My bell for the key?” said the
beast. “I suppose.” In a swift, sure motion Kol raised a claw and cut
through the leather cord binding the bell to his neck. He caught the little
silver ornament and held it up, pinched between two claws. “Give me the key and
it is yours.”
With trembling hands, Elias
passed Kol the key and took the bell, slipping it from the cord.
It sat pale and cold in his filthy hands, and it winked at him in the flickering
light. He held it between thumb and forefinger and shook it, gently at first,
then in violent motions, blissful in its bright sound. He continued to ring the
bell as Kol slid the key into the lock of his cage and opened it
without a sound. He was wrapped in the sweetness of its laughter as Kol slipped from the cage on
silent feet. The sound didn’t cease until Kol’s claws tore through his
throat, and the tiny bauble tipped from his hands and rolled into a silence
that settled over the entirety of the labyrinth.
[13:10]
Madison Brake
is an illustrator and fantasy writer interested in animals, fairy tales, and
the nature of fear. Her short stories have appeared in The Blackwater Review
and Chomp. She graduated from Ringling College in 2019 and currently
pursues an MFA in Creative Writing at the University of Central Florida.
[13:40]
A smart fridge refuses
to open late at night, leading a college student to have a strange conversation
with customer service.
This is Celine Pawlack’s “Artificial Assistance.”
[14:00]
*Transcript coming soon.
I placed my laptop on the coffee
table and stumbled from the couch to the kitchen. The microwave’s clock shone
2:45 a.m. It was too late, or too early, to eat. Despite this, I went up to the
fridge, its embedded screen on the front dimmed, unlike the clock on the
microwave. I remembered the pumpkin spice latte I still had in there from
earlier. I never drank anything with caffeine that late, or that early, but I
had a feeling that the worry I still had from the essay I turned would continue
to keep me up the whole night. I tugged on fridge’s door. It didn’t open.
I flicked my finger across the
embedded screen on the door of the fridge, illuminating my wrinkled t-shirt and
sweatpants so that they glowed a bluish-white color. Up came the calendar,
blank to-do list, and time. A box popped up in the lower right corner with text
written and it said: “Cannot open.”
“Really?” I huffed. I walked back
to the coffee table, picked up my phone, and looked up the refrigerator brand’s
website.
I eventually found the customer
service number. Before having to subject myself to making that call, I gave a
tug on each of the handles, but none of the doors budged. I then contacted the customer
service number.
After a few rings, a halting,
monotone voice led me through instructions of pressing numbers to get to a
person I needed to talk to solve this problem.
“There are…five customers…ahead of
you. Thank you for your patience,” said a robotic voice. I placed the phone on
the counter with the speaker on so that I could sit down on the couch, going
back to the TV show I was watching, this time with the volume lowered and the
captions on, waiting for a human to be on the receiving end of my complaint.
Smooth jazz drifted from the phone, a feeble attempt to soothe angry customers.
I didn’t mind it too much for about a few minutes, until I realized that it was
the same tune on a minute timed loop. Sometimes it was interrupted by the
countdown of customers calling ahead of me, though it was often stalled a few
times on a single number, unsurprisingly.
After I finished an episode and
started a new one, a voice on the other end said, “Hello.”
I paused my show and snatched up my
phone. “Hi. I had a question about my fridge. Everything seems fine with it, it
just won’t open.”
“How will it not open?” asked the
customer service lady.
“I keep trying to open it, but it
won’t budge. The screen says that it won’t open, but it’s on the regular home
screen instead of a separate one. Is this part of a—”
The box on the screen now had “Cannot open. Wait until 5:00
AM. No error.”
“No error?” I muttered.
“What is ‘no error?”
“The box says that now. It just
popped up as I was talking.”
“Is your refrigerator up to date?”
I didn’t think that would cause me
to not be able to open it, but I went to settings and checked. The settings said
there was no current versions to download and I told the customer service lady
that.
She responded with “There is no
problem if it is up to date.”
“But I can’t open it, and I haven’t
eaten since this afternoon,” I argued.
She replied with “There should not
be an error if it is up to date.”
“Well, there is one. And the door
has never had any problems opening before.”
She replied with “I can check if
there is an error. Just tell me the personal information under settings and
turn on the internet connection if it happens to be off.”
I followed her instructions and
waited while all of this was being processed. I turned my mouth away from the
phone and muttered, “That pumpkin spice latte sounds really sounds good about
now.”
A few seconds later, she replied,
“There is nothing wrong with your refrigerator.”
The screen now had, “Cannot open.
Wait until 5:00 AM. No error. It is not recommended to consume food and
beverages right now.”
“Something’s not right here,” I
said.
“It is up to date,” she said. “There
is no error.”
“I just want to open my refrigerator. Can’t
you do something? Send out someone to come out here? Like, I’m that desperate.”
She responded with, “There is no
error. Why would we send someone out there?”
“Look,” I muttered, “I just
submitted a huge essay I had due and worked all day on, and I still turned in past
the deadline. I’m hungry and stressed and I just want my stupid pumpkin spice
latte that’s going to keep me up at night, or the whole night.”
To this, there was no response.
“Hello?” I eventually asked.
“Hello,” she replied.
I sighed and said, “Is there
someone else I may speak with?”
“No.”
“What do you mean no?” I asked.
And she said, “There is no error.
It cannot open. Wait until 5:00 AM. It is not recommended to consume unhealthy
food and beverages right now. Thank you for your call.”
The phone beeped, and the call
ended.
I retreated to the couch in defeat,
waiting for my own refrigerator to open up. Little did I know then that that
was the beginning of the uprising of artificial intelligence.
[19:39]
Celine Pawlack is
currently an undergraduate senior at the University of Central Florida, majoring
in creative writing.
[19:54]
After being assigned to oversee a Halloween party at a
university’s off-campus residence, a young police officer encounters a gruesome
situation that is connected to her past.
“Yellow Post-It Note,” by Genevieve Leanne Dominguez.
[20:16]
How
long can someone live in a costume?
The
screen is the only light in the car. The boy and girl, immortalized through pixels and high-definition color, laugh and play. The boy, with his bright blue eyes, made you believe he was a pirate about to be mutinied, a scientist examining the stars, a British teacher admonishing his students for believing in ghost
stories.
He
had a good British accent.
“Cheer
up, fellow – ”
I
jump from the sharp tap on the passenger window. Sean smiles and holds up two packages of Nutter Butters. I silence the video.
“Hey
partner. Brought you these.”
He
tosses me one package and it slips through my fingers. The phone falls and
lands near my shoes. My uniform feels stiff. I haven’t worn it in yet.
Sean
rips open his package and I start the car.
“Chief
wants us to oversee the off-campus residence at the university tonight,” Sean says.
“Wonderful,” I reply.
It’s
Halloween. The sky is quiet, dark. The streetlights guide us to the apartment complex.
Once,
he stood under a streetlight in his vampire costume and pretended it was a spotlight. I laughed, unaware of how much the costume was
ripping him from his identity, fragments of him buried underneath different characters for years. I didn’t see it because I was the one who
introduced him to costumes and spotlights and scripts long ago.
Autumn,
it’s just acting, he
said.
He tried to bite someone’s neck that same night.
I
park the car at the far end of the complex. It’s not large. I’ve been here before to quiet some parties.
There’s five buildings, 2 floors each. Each floor holds about seven apartments. Most of them will be open so students can have one giant party like last year.
The
silence rests in my ears and creates whispers of what once was for him. He
encouraged me to attend college. I decided on a different route.
The
darkness settles far below the clouds. The nearest streetlight is a speck. A car screeches by. A quiet tickle enters the center of my back.
“Check
this out.”
Sean
hands me a yellow post-it note with neat handwriting.
“A
ghost is here to claim what he used to say,” I read.
“Neat,
right?” he asks.
I
crumple the note and stuff it in my pocket.
Sean
and I split up. I’m responsible for buildings 3 and 5. It’s 10:30. One minute before the party begins. 10:31 on 10-31.
I
got the calm side. A woman enters the outside hallway on the opposite side, groceries in one hand and keys jangling in the other. She waves.
“Love your costume! The party’s that way.”
She
gestures to the left.
“No,
ma’am. I’m a real officer.” I say.
She
pauses and laughs.
“Sorry! A lot of the costumes look so real tonight. You should see this one guy! He looks really creepy.
But he’s really hot.”
“The
party’s already started? I thought 10:31 on 10-31.”
“Oh,
no. They wanted to do something different this year.”
She
waves and steps through the door.
I
continue my rounds. I feel the cold, rough breeze through the thick fabric of my uniform.
Thunder rumbles from a distance. I rest my hand on my weapon.
The
call comes quietly, vibrating gently in my pocket. I move the crumpled note aside to answer.
“Autumn?”
Sean whispers.
“Yeah?”
“Come
to building 2. Be careful.”
“Should
I call for backup?” I ask.
“Freeze!
Put your – ”
The
phone clatters to the ground.
I
hear screaming. I take out my weapon and run. An outpour of costumes and glow
necklaces rush my way. Someone grabs my arm.
“Officer!”
He’s
wearing bloody scrubs.
“This
is real. It’s real blood,” he breathes.
“What
does he look like?”
The
nurse shakes his head and breathes heavily.
“What
does he look like?!” I shout.
“Tall. Long blond hair.”
“Which
apartment were you in?”
“208.”
I
enter slowly. Plastic cups and headphones litter the hardwood floor. A silent party. Furry spiders with red eyes hang from the ceiling and cobwebs hang loosely on the walls.
Thunder rumbles loudly. Lightning flashes through the window. My boots clank on the floor. I remove them. My uniform crumples in tightly as I bring my weapon closer. I remove the top and leave my black tank top on.
I enter the bedroom. A woman lies on the bed, ears
beside her hand. Her fingers beside her arm. Her blood has soaked the bedsheets and pooled on the floor. Her eyes
are open in fear, lined heavily with black eyeliner. She’s dressed as a pirate. I gag and exit the room.
I
search the entire apartment. No one else.
I
enter the outside hallway and am pushed to the ground. His screaming leaves my ears ringing. His hands grab my throat and I hit his jugular. It gives me a second to break free.
We
stand and I look in his blue eyes.
“Leo,” I whisper.
He cocks his head to the side, eyes wide. He lunges.
I
scream and run into the next open apartment. I shut the door and lock it.
I
scream again when I feel a hand on my shoulder.
“Shh,
it’s me.” Sean whispers.
There’s
thin scratches on his face. Blood trickles from one wound and has dried
underneath his nose.
“Leo,”
I say.
“Who?” he asks.
Tears fill my eyes. The rain hits the window hard and fast. I reach for my phone and feel
the post-it note.
When
I find a pen, I write out my idea as I tell Sean.
“He
was my best friend. He lost himself.”
“Lost
himself?” he asks.
“He was a theatre major. He took his roles too far,” I explain.
When
I finish, I read over it quickly. I hope Leo can read my writing.
Sean
calls for backup. I grab my gun and head for the door.
“Wait!
I’m coming with you.”
I
shake my head.
“I
need to do this.”
I
unlock the door.
“Autumn?
What was his last role?”
“An killer at a party,” I reply.
I
search for Leo. Everyone’s cleared the complex or locked their doors. The
raindrops slide down my face and pile on my shoulders.
He’s on the second floor of the first building,
rummaging through food. His long blond hair is streaked with blood. His fingers are dark red. A man dressed as a scientist slumps against the wall. His eyeball sockets are empty and his jaw hangs open, broken.
“Leo?”
He
turns around and screams. He rushes at me. I read from the post-it note, my voice shaky.
“Scene. Police cars surround the party. The killer stands still.”
He
stops.
I
want to test something. How long can Leo live in a costume? Can he change
characters?
Sirens
blare through the storm. I hand him the post-it note.
“It’s
your next line,” I say.
He
reads it. He pushes the hair from his face and clears his throat. His bright blue eyes regain the shine they had when we were young.
He
smiles and touches my shoulder. And I know.
He’s become the character I invented for him long ago. I wanted to prove he wasn’t as good an actor as he said he was. But he proved me wrong. He hasn’t lost his talent for a good British accent. He, the teacher, chuckles and admonishes me, the student, for believing in ghost stories.
“Cheer up, fellow. It’s not real after all.”
[27:25]
Genevieve
Leanne Dominguez is an undergraduate senior at the University of Central
Florida. She’s earning her Bachelors in English – Literature.
[27:37]
Thanks for
listening. And we hope you enjoyed tonight’s “Spooky Stories.” We’ll be back in
two weeks with more from the Working Title podcast.
We’d like to
thank Madison, Celine, and Genevieve for their contributions to tonight’s episode.
Tonight’s
spooky sounds were provided by Hunter Brake. Hunter is a mechanical engineering student and at the
University of Central Florida. His hobbies include creative writing—primarily sci-fi
and fantasy—along with music, gaming, and quidditch. Hunter is a huge
nerd.
Working
Title: A Literary Arts Podcast is in independent project produced with the
support of the MFA in Creative Writing Program, the Department of English, and
the College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Central Florida
Be sure to visit us at www.workingtitlepod.com. There you’ll
find transcripts of shows, links to local literary events, and information
about the team that brings you the Working Title podcast.