Cebu Lit Fest

Posted: November 14, 2023 in Uncategorized

This past weekend, I went to the Philippines for the Cebu Literary Festival in the city of Cebu. It was the first time in a few years that I got to be behind a table selling books at a show. It was fun getting to show my work again, but there were some issues with the event that became evident early on.

On Friday, when I first got to the IEC convention center where Litfest was held, there wasn’t signage or anything indicating where I was supposed to go. From where the taxi dropped me off, I carried luggage up a set of steps and looked into a set of glass doors. They were locked, but I could see into the next room inside where it looked like people were setting up booths. A few other vendors arrived and we all wondered how we were supposed to enter. Some people inside saw us peering in and motioned for us to go around the building. Following their advice, we went up a stairwell on the side of the building, and from there got into the convention area on the second floor. Once I got in, I couldn’t see where tables were marked to indicate whose table was whose. For example, I knew my table was C-10, but I didn’t know where to find my spot. I didn’t see any convention staff, no one with Cebu Litfest shirts or badges indicating that they worked there. A random person who had a table themselves ended up helping me get to my place.

Conventions like this often have one big room for exhibitors. Lit fest had one large room and three smaller rooms in the back for all the vendors. The venue itself wasn’t the best looking. Its walls were painted plain white and a little dirty, and there was no WIFI. On the first floor were a few vendors for coffee and snacks, but no place to get a sandwich or proper meal (There were restaurants and a grocery store just down the street). At least the venue had air conditioning, as this country is hot!

Litfest ran from 1pm to 8pm each day. There was a steady stream of foot traffic most of the time I was there. Saturday was more attended than Friday, but even then it rarely felt packed. My sales were okay. I made more than the cost of my table, but even though Saturday was more crowded, my sales were about the same as Friday’s. I probably would have sold more but with some of my books I had less stock than I realized. It was evident that many people spent their budget in the larger room, before realizing there were a few more rooms left to explore.

Selling my books at the Cebu Lit Fest.

The thing about Litfest was that it wasn’t really a literature fest. There were literally less than ten vendors selling books or comics. All the other venues were artists selling stickers, prints, dolls, etc. Nothing against them, there were some great artists with amazing work, but I was expecting to see other authors, publishers, magazines, etc. Imagine going into a comic book show and finding people sitting around reading poetry, nothing wrong with it per say just not what you’re expecting to find.

In between the large and smaller rooms was a small stage area where they would have artist talks which were broadcast over the venues intercom so everyone could hear. It wasn’t a bad idea in theory, but when in a crowded and small room talking to people it was hard to make out what the people on stage were saying. Other times, pop music played over the intercom, which was a nice touch. On Friday the stage hosted an open mic during which most people sang. I had one of my old poetry books with me and decided to read from it. I hadn’t read on stage in a bit so it was fun, but I only read a couple pieces. I could tell most of the audience was there to see music, and while some gave me there attention, the general background noise drowned out my non musical act.

Reading from my old poetry book.

I did see Roland and Bambi Amago, the husband-and-wife team who have published Carnal Tales, a series of horror comics based around Philippine folklore. I’d met and bought books from them at a previous comic book show. I bought a few more comics from them that I enjoyed reading later. I also met for the first time the team behind the Maharlikan Chronicles, which is a series of comic books about Philippine History and mythology.

There was also a young fan who was really enthusiastic about my work, and was really excited when he found out I help out at wrestling shows in China. He does this shtick where he takes selfie while in a yoga like pose on the ground. He wanted one of these selfies with me and I was happy to oblige. People in my position always appreciate enthusiastic fans. When I was young, if I had met someone that wrote comic books and helped out at wrestling shows I would have thought they were the coolest person ever.

My new biggest fan 🙂

The Philippines seems to have had a good North American style comic book scene for quite a while. Artist from this country have worked for Marvel and DC, and shopping malls here will have comic book stores not unlike those found in North America. Conventions also abound in this nation. Back in March I went to a Komiket show at the Megamall in Manila to scout for artists. There I got connected with artist Roy Allen Martinez who collaborated with me on a web comic called Masked Striker. A few months ago I inquired about getting a table at another show in Manila, I was not able to get in, but was instead contacted about Cebu Lit fest

I printed Masked Striker along with other web comics I’d written previously and bound them in a little booklet to show people and sell at litfest. Obviously, I’m not Filipino, and I wondered if anyone would take issue with my presence. In America I worked with Filipino’s and have visited this country many times before. Filipinos are known to be warm and friendly people. At the show, maybe two or three people gave me a funny look. One guy said, “I wasn’t expecting to see someone like you here.” I asked what he meant, and he specified, “a foreigner.” Everyone else was friendly and welcoming to me.

On Saturday, an artist approached me and apologized for how the festival was going. Evidently there were many complaints about the venue and how apparently there was a Cebu crowd and a Manila crowd that were kept separate from each other. I was given a sticker that said galitfest or something to that effect, which translated to “angry at litfest.”

Sunday I wasn’t able to attend as I had to catch my flight back. In Manila the shows start at 10am, I would have been able to come a few hours in the morning if that was the case. Once I got home, someone personally messaged me saying they didn’t see me on Sunday and wondered if I was upset, as apparently many vendors were not happy with the show.

I wouldn’t say I was angry, I generally had a decent time and sold some books, but I could see why people were upset. On their social media the Litfest issued an apology, on which many people commented on the venue, lack of communication, and other issues. For their own sake, I hope future conventions are better, as they seem to have an active and thriving arts community that wants to be served properly.

No Gein Timeline

Posted: October 31, 2023 in Uncategorized

This is a timeline for my No Gein stories, about what if real life murder Ed Gein was never caught. Up to 1957, the events of the timeline are from real history. From there I venture into what I call pop culture alternate history, where movies and TV shows have turned out differently than they have in our world. Some entries are linked to specific chapters in the series. Minor spoilers are sprinkled throughout this timeline but no major ones. Enjoy.

1902

January 17th: Henry Gein is born to George and Augusta Gein.

1906

August 27th: Edward Theodore Gein is born to George and Augusta Gein.

1940

April 1rst: George Gein, father of Ed Gein, dies of a heart attack. His funeral is three days later.

1944 

May 16th: Henry Gein, older brother of Ed Gein, dies during a brush fire on their property. Though never proven, it is long suspected that Ed murdered his brother.

1945

December 29th: Augusta Gein, mother of Ed Gein, dies at Wild Rose hospital. Her funeral is two days later.

1954 

December 8th: Ed Gein murders Mary Hogan at her tavern in Pine Grove Wisconsin

1957

October 26th: Teenager Sally Kohl runs away from home and has a chance encounter with Ed Gein; leading to the events of the entire No Gein series.

November 16th: In our reality, this is the day Ed Gein murders Bernice Worden and is subsequently caught. This leads to a series of shocking events where it is revealed that Ed Gein had been robbing graves for years. His case is the direct inspiration for the novel Psycho and one of many influences on films The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Silence of the Lambs.

1974 

October 11th: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is released in theaters. This film, about a group of youths on their way to a Lynyrd Skynyrd concert who run afoul of a family of hillbillies, becomes a cult classic, but never leads to any sequels.

1975

October 11th: a young George Kohler, along with his parents and sister, visit his Aunt Sally at Mendota Health institute.

October 26th:  Sally Kohler commits suicide in Mendota Health Institute

1976

Date undisclosed: During a search for her long lost mother, Marylin and her husband confront Milton and his maniacal cannibalistic family. While this happens, a young George Kohler and his family move to Bethlehem Pennsylvania.

1978

October 28th: Halloween is released in theaters, in which unkillable psychopath Michael Meyers stalks Laurie Strode, who is played by Anne Lockhart. The film is a moderate success. It also featured Donald Pleasance as Dr. Gavin.

1980

May 9th: Friday the 13th is released in theaters. Though inspired by Halloween, the producers, shy about imitating what is only a moderately successful film, push for a monster to be the killer. Due to the location of filming, this franchise becomes about the Jersey Devil.

1981

May 1: Friday the 13th part 2 is released in theaters. In this movie, a new group of campers run afoul of the new Jersey Devil, who sets out to avenge the death of his mother in the previous film.

October 30th: Halloween II is released in theaters, ending the original Michael Meyers saga. Michael Meyers/A.K.A. the Shape, will not be seen again on the silver screen for over 25 years.

1982

August 13th: Friday the 13th Part Three is released in theaters. This entry is in 3D. During the course of the story, the Jersey Devil gets burned in the face, allowing the creature to sport an iconic new look designed by special effects master Tom Savini.

October 22cnd: Halloween III is released in theaters. As in our world, producers John Carpenter and Debra hill take the series in a different direction, with the intention of turning Halloween into an anthology series. This film features a deadly cult selling lethal Halloween masks to kids. In the world of No Gein, this movie is a moderate success, as audiences are not as tied to the character Michael Meyers of the two previous films and are more open to an original story for this Halloween sequel.

1983

June 3rd: Night Skies is released in theaters. Produced by Stephen Spielberg, this horror films about aliens features child star Heather O Rourke and her now famous line, “They’re here.”

1984

April 13th: Friday the Thirteenth Part Four: The Final Chapter is released in theaters. At the time, this was purported to be the final entry in the franchise. It stars a young Corey Feldman as Tommy Jarvis.

October 25th: Halloween IV: Return of the Wraith is released directly to VHS/home video, furthering producer John Carpenter and Debra Hill’s vision of continuing Halloween as an anthology series. This ghost story is one of the first big successes of the emerging home video market. It also starts a new tradition where every October teenagers rent each Halloween film and watch them in order, ending with the newest addition.

November 9th: Nightmare on Elm Street is released in theaters. Aside from Kane Hodder playing Freddy Krueger, this franchise moves along the same way it did in our reality.

1985

March 22: Friday the 13th Part Five: The New Beginning is released in theaters. This entry was controversial among fans of the franchise. Tommy Jarvis returns to the series as an adult character, with actor Corey Feldmen having a cameo in the opening nightmare sequence. This is the only entry in the series to have a plot twist, in that this film’s killer is not the Jersey Devil. Instead, it is a disgruntled special effects wizard using the Jersey Devil legend to terrorize a group of campers.

October 24th: Halloween V: Revenge of Samhain is released on home video. This film about the origins of Halloween is a big success on the home video market, as fans continue the October tradition of renting every Halloween movie.

1986

May 23rd, Night Skies II is released in theaters. This entry ties in Native American lore to the UFO/Alien Abduction phenomenon.

August 6th, Friday the 13th Part 6: The Devil Lives is released in theaters. The Jersey Devil returns, and, from here on out through the rest of the franchise, is a genuine supernatural threat. The film opens with a new set of villains; the Cult of Vorhees. Led by Elijah Vorhees, the cult kidnaps Tommy Jarvis, and forces him to resurrect the Jersey Devil.

1987

July 11th: The Werewolf TV series debuts on the inaugural season of the FOX Network. Unlike our world, this series lasts more than one season, concluding its storyline in the spring of 1991.

September 28th: Friday the 13th The Series debuts on television. This horror anthology is mostly the same as it is in our world, with two exceptions. One episode features a murderous cook at a summer camp. Another features a cursed hockey mask.

October 30th: Wanting to amplify the success of the previous Halloween home video releases, Halloween Six, Curse of the Werewolf, is released in theaters. It is the first entry of the franchise to be released in theaters since Halloween Three. It is a financial success which, along with the Werewolf TV show, makes werewolves hot for a few years. However, it is critically panned due to its confusing and incoherent story line. It also creates a split in Halloween fandom as some preferred the series to continue on home video. A directors cut with a more coherent story floats on the convention circuit for years and is given an official release in 2014.

1988

May 13th Friday the 13th Part Seven: A New Blood. Before filming began, producers attempted to make a crossover film where the Devil would meet Freddy Krueger of the Nightmare on Elm Street franchise. No progress was made, and Paramount was briefly approached about crossing the series over with the Werewolf character from Halloween Part 6. These talks also failed, and a script was written in which the Devil fights a psychic girl who previously had been victimized by the previous film’s Cult of Vorhees. Tommy Jarvis also appears in this entry.

June 10th Night Skies III is released in theaters, four months after child actor Heather O’ Rourke tragically died from illness. This entry is about a secret government facility housing alien bodies.

1989

July 28: Friday the 13th Part Eight: The Devil Takes Manhattan is released in theaters. The first film to take place outside of Camp Crystal Lake, this entry sees the Devil go to New York City. It includes sequences in Madison Sqaure Garden, the Brooklyn Bridge, and a spectacular scene where the Devil jumps off the statue of liberty.

Date unspecified-George Kohler leaves film school after his father won’t help him pay for it

1990

10/26: George Kohler meets author Robert Bloch at Hallow-Con in New York City.

1991

July 23: Robert Bloch visits the town of Plainfield Wisconsin, where he stumbles upon a terrifying secret.

August 5: George Kohler and his father Henry visit Plainfield Wisconsin after receivng a letter from Robert Bloch. There they learn of a horrible secret from their family’s past.

1992

Aging author Robert Bloch publishes Psycho, which would end up being his last and most well- known novel. There is some initial buzz and controversy as some feel it is a rip-off of the 1991 novel American Psycho. However, these critiques are dismissed early on and Bloch’s novel is more critically acclaimed than the 1991 Bret Easton Ellis novel.

1993

August 13: The Devil Goes to Hell, the Final Friday is released in theaters. This entry further ups the supernatural aspects of the series. The cult of Vorhees returns, and the mysterious occult tome The Necronomicon, from H.P. Lovecraft stories, plays a role. In a shock to horror fans, Kane Hodder appears as Freddy Kruger, dragging the Devil down to hell during the films climax. 

1994

September 23rd: As in our world, author Robert Bloch dies. 

October 14th: As in our world, Wes Craven’s New Nightmare opens to a disappointing box office. Except for Kane Hodder playing Freddy, the movie is identical to the one we know. The difference is, in this world, after the low box office numbers, New Line Cinema agrees to sell the NOES franchise to Paramount, leading to speculation that a crossover between NOES and F13 is eminent.

Date unspecified: Night Skies IV Kayeri is released direct to video. This is a prequel set in the mid 19th century and features a Native American tribe and their encounters with extra-terrestrials.

1995

September 29th: Halloween Resurrection of the Vampire is released in theaters. This entry is not successful or loved by its fans, but is note-worthy for an action sequence where rapper/actor Tupac Shakur fights vampires. Tupac also has a song on the film’s soundtrack.

1996

April 21rst: Night Skies: The Legacy debuts as a TV series on the Showtime Network. This series is about the Legacy group from the films that attempts to fight off alien abductions. Though seen by some as a rip-off of the popular show X-Files, it garners a small fan base and airs for three seasons on Showtime followed by a fourth season on the Sci-fi channel.

1998

August 5th: Psycho is released in the theaters. Based Robert Bloch’s final novel, it is the directorial debut of George Kohler. Starring Vince Vaughn as Norman Bates, it is also first major role for actress Jamie Lee Curtis. Jamie Lee briefly tried being an actress in the late 70’s before going back to law school and becoming an entertainment lawyer. After playing herself in a few small scenes in various films of the early 90’s, she decided to give acting another go. Her mother, famed actress Janet Leigh, said of her daughter’s role as Marion Crane, “that was a part I would have died for in my day.”

October 30th: Halloween H20: debuts in theaters. This entry is about a monster in the ocean off the coast of a California town. Starring then washed-up actor Sylvester Stallone, who was attempting to revitalize his career after his failed attempts at comedy. The film is not a success. Jean Claude Van Damme teases Stallone in the media saying he was offered Stallone’s part first but turned it down, predicting the project would fail.

1999

January 1: At the stroke of midnight, the trailer for Halloween H2K airs on the sci-fi channel, and the Halloween: H2K website launches, kicking off an innovative online marketing campaign.

October 27: Halloween H2K is released on home video. This straight to video release would, unknowingly at the time, mark the final entry of the Halloween anthology series. It is a cyberthriller cashing in on Y2K fears. It’s home release contained a small booklet with puzzles and codes that could be entered on an H2K website which offered mini games and other promotions. The marketing for this movie included a game/scavenger hunt in which the winner would receive various props from the Halloween series, including an original Michael Meyers mask. Along with the Blair Witch Project, which was released in theaters the same year, H2K is cited as an early example of using the internet to promote a film and also an example of an Alternate Reality Game or ARG.

December 27: Franklin kills a young man over the prize of the H2K Contest.

2002

April 26: Devil X is released in theaters: The tenth entry of the Friday the 13th franchise takes place on an apocalyptic Earth. The Cult of Vorhees has survived into the future and has again brought the Devil to life, who, during the course of the movie, ends up in outer space.

Date unspecified: Sci Fi channel airs Night Skies the Beginning. This series is partially a spin-off of Night Skies Four, taking place in the mid 1800’s.

2003

April 25: A trailer drops online for George Kohler’s remake of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre

August 5: Human remains are accidentally unearthed on an empty plot of land in Plainfield, Wisconsin

August 15: George Kohler’s remake of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre premiers in theaters. While the original was about a group of kids on the way to a concert who run afoul of hillbillies, this remake is about a group if youth’s investigating unearthed graves who run across a maniacal and cannibalistic family. Hugely successful and critically acclaimed, it is not without controversy. Critics claim Kohler distastefully took inspiration from the Dhamer murders from the directors home state of Wisconsin. George denys these rumors, but will not reveal where his inspiration came from.

August 27th: Plainfield authorities reveal that the bodies found weeks ago were on the property of former resident Ed Gein, who also went mostly undiscovered as a grave robber in the 1950’s.

October 17th: Freddy vs the Devil is released in theaters. After years of being in development hell, the Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th franchises finally cross over in this Paramount picture. Kane Hodder reprises his role as Freddy Krueger and actor Robert Englund wears the prosthetic suit and heavy makeup for his role as the Devil.

2004

June 11: Two recent high school graduates are murdered in the Plainfield cemetery, where, that same night several graves have been desecrated. The remains were spelled out to form the word “ED.”

That same night, the Gein Ghoul House, a roadside attraction opens off of Interstate 39 outside of Plainfield.

August 27: The Gein Ghoul House is burned to the ground, the remains of its owner and two female escorts are found inside.

October 29: Psycho II is released. George Kohler’s follow up to his 1998 slasher has a controversial ending which some fear could derail the franchise. George stands by his creative decisions in this film, insisting it’s what Psycho author Robert Bloch would have wanted.

November 2nd: George’s sister and her husband are murdered. George subsequently leaves Hollywood and disappears from public view. George’s whereabouts become a mystery in the fan community.

2005

Date Undisclosed: A book is published about director George Kohler, who has disappeared from the public eye. The book covers the brief career of the young successful director and offers much speculation as to what happened to him regarding his disappearance.

2007

Dates unspecified: Devil’s Due Comics releases a variety of comics from the Halloween franchise, including all the anthology films. Also of note is a six-issue min-series called Rob Zombies Halloween, which adapts the pitch Rob Zombie made to the studios for an entire movie about a young Michael Meyers and his time in Smith’s Grove. A follow up miniseries is also in development.

March 2: Freddy vs the Devil vs Ash is released. This sequel to the Nightmare on Elm Street/Friday the 13th crossover throws Ash from the Evil Dead series into the mix.

March 19: Bates Motel premiers on the A&E Network. Set in the 1970’s, this series is a prequel to the 1998 film Psycho, featuring a teenaged Norman Bates and his young mother Norma. This series was proposed by Psycho director George Kholer, and it’s development was held up after his disappearance. The first episode features a voice appearance by John Laraquette as a radio news reporter commenting on a shocking crime that occurred in Texas, which is a backhanded reference to the Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

October 27th, Helloween is released, marking the first film appearance of Michael Meyers in 25 years. This film crosses characters from the various Halloween movies with the Pinhead and the Cennobites from the Hellraiser series.

2008

Date unspecified: Devil’s Due publishing released the second mini-series for Rob Zombie’s Halloween. This six issues comic book series adapts Rob Zombie’s idea for a second Halloween movie featuring the adult Michael Meyers returning home to Haddonfield to wreak havoc.

2009

Date unspecified: Psycho III is released. This film was directed by Vicki Regewitz, who was personal friends with George Kohler. Picking up from where the controversial director left off, this film is about a carnival like attraction that uses animatronics to recreate the Bates Motel and its murders. Inspired by this world’s Gein Ghoul House and the homicides that took place there, murder is afoot at the Bates Motel experience.

2011

Date unspecified: Freddy vs the Devil vs Ash: The Nightmare Warriors is released in theaters. Concluding the Freddy vs the Devil trilogy, this film features surviving characters from previous Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street films.

2014

September 15th: Halloween: Curse of the Werewolf/The Producers cut is finally given an official home video release after decades of it only being available via bootleg at the convention circuit. This version of the film presents a more coherent story than the original theatrical release.

2015

May 25:  A remake of Night Skies is released in theaters. This same month a comic book limited series is released that is a crossover between the Night Skies Legacy TV series of the 1990s and the also alien themed 1990’s series X-Files.

2018

October 19: Halloween, a direct sequel to the 1978 film is released, and leads to the same Halloween Kills/Halloween Ends trilogy as our world. The only difference is the media buzz that Jamie Lee Curtis plays Laurie Strode. Jamie Lee auditioned, but was rejected for, the same part in the original Halloween film 40 years prior. The rest of this Halloween trilogy unfolds the same as it did in our world.

Epilogue: A Happy Ending

Hollywood California 2010

“What do you mean they won’t let me have a tank!?!”

“The studio doesn’t want to pay for it.” said the female voice over the phone.

“But it’s in the script!” the director insisted, “the script you and I both wrote by the way.”

“Yes, we did.” The woman agreed.

“If I don’t have a tank, how am I supposed to film the finale?”

“Listen, let me take care of tomorrow, you get today in the can. Deal?”

“Deal. Thanks Rita.”

The director heard a knock as he hung up the phone. “Enter!” he jubilantly said, expecting it to be his 11:00 appointment. As a result, hhe was surprised to see his head makeup artist come into the room with a devil head and a fake piece of glass.

“You look a little frazzled,” the director asked, noticing her facial expression, “everything OK?”

“This glass prop is not working.” the young woman complained. “I’ve been working on it all morning.” Today’s shooting schedule involved a scene where a character named Tommy stabs the Devil with a shard of glass. He wanted as little CGI effects as possible, and knew his young makeup artist shared his love of practical effects.

“Well, let’s have a look at it after lunch OK?” he said. “I got an interview coming soon.”

“Alright.” she said meekly.

“We’ll get it sorted Stella, don’t kill yourself over it.”

“Really?” She said, half laughing at the director’s remark.

Laughing himself, realizing what he’d just said, the director waved his hand and said, “Just go have a nice lunch ya weirdo.”

The director’s appointment still hadn’t arrived, so, sitting in his trailer, he opened his laptop and logged into Myspace. Being in the public eye, the director recalled a conversation he recently had with his Rita, his producer. Interacting with fans on these platforms was cool, but there were downsides too, toxic fans, flame wars, even the occasional death threat. Some sins he himself committed on small obscure message boards years ago were so much more intense on places like Myspace and Facebook, where seemingly everyone was now.

Again, there were of course positives to it as well. Scrolling through his Myspace feed, he smiled as he saw a movie studio picture of his friends Dan and Vicki. Vicki was directing her third film now. George left a comment on this post kidding that she poached his makeup artist from him, referring to Vicki’s husband Dan.

Another knock at the door shifted the director’s focus. A man walked in with a notebook, a press badge, and a corny joke. “You’re not going to shoot me with a water gun are you?”

“Man, I’m never gonna live that one down.” George said, laughing.

The next hour was spent discussing the last few turbulent years of George Kohler’s life. After a self-imposed exile following the death of his sister, George was on the road to a comeback via his next feature film. George and the journalist were on the set of Freddy vs the Devil vs Ash: The Nightmare Warriors, the final film in a trilogy that mixed the Nightmare on Elm Street franchise with Evil Dead and, George’s favorite, Friday the 13th.

“Do you find it difficult working on violent movies after the personal losses you’ve had in your family?” the journalist asked.

“You know, I can understand why people would think that, but honestly, it’s been really cathartic. I’ve put a lot of my own grief and loss into these characters.”

“The characters of Freddy and the Jersey Devil?”

“No, actually,” George paused for a moment before continuing, “well, I guess the news broke already, so I’ll just say it. We’re bringing back a lot of the surviving characters from past Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street movies. People love the Jersey Devil and Freddy, but I want to show the strength of the people who survived these monsters.”

“That’s no small task you’ve set for yourself. Is this film also a catharsis for you and the fact that your sister’s murderer was never found?”

This question took George back to that cold night in Planfield. He could hear his shovel hitting the hard earth, his breath forming a cloud before him, the stench of death about. “I wouldn’t say that.” George answered quietly. “There’s a lot of things I could say, but I don’t know, I feel like no one ever gets away with anything, you know what I mean?”

“Well said.” The reporter responded. “Relating to that, characters like Freddy and Pinhead have their fans, but so do real murders like Charles Manson and Jeffrey Dhamer. Do you have any comment on that?”

“You’re right they do, and I don’t blame people who have an interest in true crime. When you look back at what happened to my sister, and to my dad, and as far back as my Aunt; all three of those situations were so crazy. If I were on the outside looking in, even now, I’d look at any of those situations and be like ‘Whoa,’ what the hell happened there?” I’d naturally want to know more about it. The difference is, I wouldn’t look at these murders and think “that’s my guy. Ed Gein wasn’t a hero. Milton wasn’t a hero. The guy who killed my sister wasn’t a hero.”

Luckily, the entertainment reporter overlooked that little slip George just made. That oversight didn’t stop George’s heart from racing in his chest as soon as those words shot out of his body,. His body tensed, waiting the next question, but as the reporter’s lips moved, George’s ears blocked out the sound. Remembering those relaxation exercises Franki taught him so long ago, George breathed slow deep breathes; his eyes focused on the blue press bade hanging from the reporter’s shirt.

“You did say in past interviews,” George refocused as the reporter repeated their question, “that in your younger days you were a fan of serial killers.”

George waited, still remaining silent, remembering those days from so long ago. In times long past he would dress up like the Zodiac killer and other famous murders, but those days were far behind him now. “Yes, I did.” George said, now fully present in the moment and focusing directly on the reporter. “I used to think serial killers were cool, but you know what’s cool, the people that survived them.”

The End

Chapter Ten: Buried Truth

November 2nd 2004, Amherst Wisconsin

“I’m warning you, if you don’t make an Gein movie your family is going to pay.”

The email address wasn’t valid anymore, and when looking at the pictures Geinlover69 sent of George’s dead sister, he remembered the police telling him they were merely police photos. They suggested someone probably hacked their system, as sites like rotten.com eat this stuff up. Also, as the police reminded him, George had received all kinds of emails threatening his life over movies.

George was wracked by pangs of guilt as he didn’t stop and see his sister the last time he was on the east coast. Thanksgiving was just a month after Hallow-con, a New York based horror convention that he’d attended. He figured he was just see Helen and her husband for the holiday. Now, Thanksgiving was only a few weeks away, and he didn’t know what he would do. There were some distant relatives on his dad’s side, but he was never close to them and they’d grown even further apart once his father died. George figured he would probably be content spending the day himself in this house in Amherst.

Then it suddenly struck him. Hallow-con, that weird guy that came all the way out from Plainfield. He was pressing him about deleted scenes from Psycho II before insisting George make a Gein movie.

It was then he remembered that Ed Gein fan website. Sure enough, as the angelfire site loaded. He had a whole section on horror con. As the jpeg files loaded showing pictures of the con he noticed a breaking news section. Clicking on that, an article loaded about the Bethlehem murders. George read the recap about how the killer murdered his brother-in-law Chuck outside the home and then proceeded to enter the house and kill Helen in the shower. It was thought that the police discovered the crime fairly early, as the neighbors reported seeing Chuck’s body propped up in the front doorway in a gruesome manner. What police assumed to be a robbery and double homicide was the most shocking crime the Lehigh Valley had seen since the Babysitter Murders of the 1980s.

As he finished the article, something crossed his mind. Whoever wrote this, how did they know Chuck was killed first?

November 12th, Plainfield Wisconsin

The bedroom of Franklin’s parents was perfectly intact. It was the way Ed told him he should leave it. The bodies of his dead parents lay peacefully in the bed below the painting of Jesus looking up at an angel. Since disposing of his parents he also got rid of his mom’s dresser, putting a small desk in his place from which he could work. After updating his website, his small mouse clicked on his ezboards message forum he hosted. It was then he noticed he had a private message.

He couldn’t believe it. It was a private message from George Kohler. A jpeg image loaded for the movie director standing in front of a big white house on a lonely road. The flat landscape behind the director looked as though it could have been right down the street from where Franklin lived. “Here I am at the family home in Amherst.” the message read. “I got some footage from Psycho II that’s never been seen before. Also, got my first screenplay here. Maybe you can come by and check it out and we can discuss my next movie.” Looking at the image again, Franklin noticed the item George held in his hand. It was Deranged, the first screenplay he ever wrote.This was too good to be true. Did he know? Was this a trap? Even if it was, how could he not go?

It was then he saw Ed again. Images of Ed would randomly appear to him sometimes. He looked so real, as real as the bodies of his dead parents that sat in the bed. “Did you see that Ed?” Franklin said excited. “He’s got footage of Psycho II. Maybe we’ll see Norman in action more?”

“Norman didn’t need action,” He heard Ed say. “he needed help.” The image of Ed Gein looked down at the desk. Franklin still had his notes regarding Leon who briefly worked at the Mendota Health Institute back in the 70’s. “I wish I could have gotten help.”

“Really?” Franklin answered aloud as he looked back towards his dead parents. “I thought you two would have been like brothers.”

“Brothers, you know what happened to my brother?”

Outside Franklin’s house the leaves had long left the branches of the tree that stood over his car. The fallen foliage crunched below his feet. After taking a few more steps towards his car he heard another sound, it sounded like a cross between a person yelling and a dog barking, and it was coming from below him. Looking down to the cold earth, the dead leaves had yellow faces that stared up at him with an evil look. In an instant he bolted to his car, the inhuman barking sound followed with each step as he frantically removed the keys from his pocket to unlock his car door. Plopping himself down on the car seat, he looked out the window to the tree lurking over him. Way up high on a rotting empty branch, a slack necked buzzard glared at him with blood red eyes. Then, looking back at his house, he saw Ed standing on the porch. “Are you coming or not.” Franklin shouted. Looking back up, the buzzard was gone, then looking to his right, there was Ed sitting in the passenger seat. It looked like Ed was trying to say something but Franklin interrupted with an enthusiastic, “Off to the film’s climax!”

Approaches the house, Franklin could see the light on in upper bedroom. He hoped George didn’t start it without him. Walking into the house, he didn’t see anyone, but his body shook in anticipation as he heard George’s voice upstairs. Stopping in his tracks he takes a deep breath. Something about the director’s voice sounds different, then he realizes, it’s the movie playing upstairs. George put himself in Psycho II as a film director who gets murdered by an obsessive fan. Life was about to imitate art as he gripped his machete handle tight and ascended up the steps.

Peering down the at the end of a the dark hallway a door sat open, light and sound emanated from within. Creeping down the corridor, he only heard one sound, but it was a sound he recognized, it was dialogue that he knew by heart. Franklin stood in the doorway as he looked into the room, it was empty, but there it was, Psycho II playing on a big screen TV. Approaching the big screen TV in holy reverence, he reached up towards the footage, his finger tips lovingly caressed the glass on the TV screen, the static electricity crackled on his skin. It was like touching a woman for the first time.

Looking behind him, he remained alone in the room. An empty wooden chair sat in front of a desk. A desk lamp was left on, its light shining down to what looked like an old stack of papers. Coming closer, he saw they were bound by heavy staples. Reading the red ink on the cover, he gasped in amazement as if he were an archaeologist discovering ancient stone tablets.

“Deranged.” The blood red letters read. This was George Kohler’s never produced screenplay that he wrote in film school. Evidently, it was inspired by his Aunt’s stories of encountering Gein, decades before the general public ever knew of the Plainfield Ghoul’s existence. Anxiously, he turned the page, but it was not the opening scene he found underneath. Instead, it was a wedding picture. Confused, he looked closer to realize it was a picture of Helen and her husband Chuck, Franklin’s last two victims. Turning the photo over, he’d found beneath that was a small pile of photos and other items. There pictures of George with his father on the red carpet at Maan’s Chinese theater, Christmas cards, but no screenplay. He slammed the pictures down on the desk in disgust as the Psycho music played behind him. Then suddenly, the music climaxed with an electronic zap. The room went dim, save the light of the desk lamp. Franklin turned around to see a small object hit the ground with a small crashing sound. He presumed this to be the remote control as he looked in the doorway. It was there that he saw him. He knew that George had cut weight, but the director’s frame still filled the door. His hair was cut short, and, from the shadows, a chainsaw blade protruded from the doorway. The figure remained still, but then its hand pulled the ripcord, and, just like in the movies, the chainsaw roared to life.

“YEAH!” Franklin shook his arms in excitement. George entered and the two circled around the room. “The film’s climax! The director fights to avenge the death of his slutty sister!” Frankling laughed mockingly. George took two quick steps forward, for a moment it looked as though he were going to charge, but his feet quickly stepped back and the two continued their circular movement around the room.

Franklin’s hand shook with excitement as he and his opponent circled the arena that was the director’s office. George revved the chainsaw a few times lightly thrusting the blade toward him the way a heavyweight boxer might throw a few light jabs. Franklin himself parried the knife while licking his lips in excitement. In his mind he and his opponent would swing their weapons simultaneously, colliding these instruments of death in the center of the room. That would be the image on the poster for the movie that would be made about them someday. The two combatants standing atop of a pile of bodies, their blades colliding in a dance of death. Sparks would rain down over the film’s title, which would be… hell, maybe they’d call it, ‘Deranged.’

In the midst of this mortal combat, Franklin’s mind raced through thoughts of how this movie would be cast. Maybe Edward Norton would play him. Who would play George? Perhaps Jack Black?”

His mental casting couch was cut in half by the site of the chainsaw being tossed up in the air. “This wasn’t part of the script,” he thought to himself as he watched the power tool fly through the room before the blade bounced on the wooden floor and the motor came to a stop. He turned back to his opponent who had quickly pulled something from the belt at his waist. Franklin’s ears burst from a loud popping sound as a white light flashed in the room. Instantly, he felt an incredible pain, as if someone speared liquid metal through his gut, the force of which knocked him flat on his back. A puff of smoke floated in the room while the scent of gunpowder filled his nostrils. Franklin’s neck stretched up just in time to see his assailant place the revolver on his desk, but his mind was still dazed at what had just transpired. 

“That couldn’t have been in the script!” Franklin protested as his head rested back down on the hardwood floor, his eyes looked up at the ceiling above while the palm of his hand pressed on his wound. George was now back in his line of site. Looming over him, he planted a boot on Franklin’s chest, the chainsaw was again in his hands.

Now Franklin smiled as blood trickled from his mouth. His ears welcomed the sound of the motor being revived, the saw-blade now buzzed inches from his face. It was so much sweeter than the sound of a firearm. It was honorable, it was pure, it was classic. “Yeah!” Franklin cheered with what little breath remained in his lungs. “That’s more like it!”

Then, standing to his side, looking down on him, Franklin again saw the image of Ed. He knew this wasn’t visible to George, only Franklin could see Ed this past year, but there he was observing the proceedings. He looked back to George and said, “This is gonna be one hell of a movie!”

Suddenly the saw blade went still. The room was again silent save Franklin gargling the blood that rushed up his throat. “Movie?” George looked down confused. Did he still not get it? George was gonna direct a movie about all of this, and it was gonna be great. At least that’s what Franklin believed right up  until this moment, this moment when he heard former director say “No one is ever going to even know your name.”

“What? What, no! NO!” but Franklin’s cries were smothered by the chainsaw roaring back to life. Desperately looking to Ed, Franklin pleaded, “Help me! Help me!”

The vision of Ed just stood there, hat in his hands. Inside his head Franklin heard Ed’s voice. “You never listened to me.” it said. “I was trying to warn you.” 

“I just wanted my movie!” Frankling pleaded.

“I just wanted my mother.” The voice answered. Franklin saw the man put his hunter’s cap back on his head and turn his back to Franklin. Soon the image of Ed Gein quietly faded away into nothingness.

Meanwhile the roaring blade of the chainsaw inched closer to Franklin’s right shoulder blade. “No, No!” Franklin cried out as his left arm was severed from his body. George wouldn’t know this, but the shrieking of his victim was not out of pain. This crying was born out of fear; and it was not fear of the unknown, as H.P. Lovecraft described most fear as being. No, the fear Franklin screamed in was fear from the known, as he now realized exactly what George was intending. Franklin was indeed going to die right here in this small town in Wisconsin, another small town just like Plainfield, just like so many small town across this part of the nation. His body would be cut up right here on this wooden floor, and no one was ever going to know.

George was in a daze driving down the highway. He didn’t even bother to activate his Pandora and actually had the old-fashioned FM radio on. The dial was set to a random oldies station playing some song about going on a moonlight swim. Driving through the darkness, George thought how his Aunt Sally, his father’s sister, probably made this same drive almost half a century ago. In a way, her journey that fateful night started all this. He couldn’t help but wonder, what if Sally hadn’t gone down this road? Would she still be alive now? If so, she’d probably be some old hippy out in the streets protesting Bush’s war in Iraq. Had she still lived, his father might not have ever moved to Pennsylvania. Hell, he would have grown up in Amherst playing for the Falcons in the Tomorrow River School District. Looking out over the pure black empty space that enveloped his car, he mused how he once considered that a horrifying thought.

As the now infamous Plainfield approached, he couldn’t stop himself from thinking of something else. What about Ed Gein? If Gein hadn’t ended up dying that night he encountered Sally, what would have happened? Would he have killed more unsuspecting people in this little town? Would Gein have died in obscurity, his horrible secrets buried with him, or would he have eventually gotten caught, still bringing infamy to this little town? Was his Aunt Sally a sacrifice made by the gods of fate to prevent more madness from occurring? George remembered his late mentor Robert Bloch, who had been dead for ten years now. Bloch lived not too far from here back in the 50’s. Who knows, maybe he would have written Psycho back then.

This thought sent George’s thought’s down a third path, one he couldn’t stop himself from mentally exploring. What would filmmakers of the 1960’s done with Bloch’s novel? Imagine Alfred Hitchcock directing it. The fan in him couldn’t help ponder the possibilities. How would Texas Chainsaw Massacre and the 80’s slasher scene have looked with the Ghoul of Plainfield lurking over American horror. In another world, he might have been lauded as a sort of grandfather of American gore.

And what would George himself had thought of this patron saint of splatter had he only known of him in the abstract? Remembering the morbid nihilistic attitudes held in his youth, George knew full well he would have idolized Gein just as his own obsessive fan had. George recalled his days dressing up as the Zodiac killer, and understood that a Gein costume wouldn’t have been far behind.

The empty shell of the burned building ahead brought him back to reality. Coming off the interstate at the town of Plainfield, George shook his head at the ruins of the Gein Ghoul House. Looking in his rear-view mirror, thinking of what was in his trunk, he spoke out loud. “Did you do that?” It just now occurred to him that it was probably this psycho that killed the owner and two others before burning this attraction to the ground a few months ago.

Soon he came to a stop. While his property in Amherst wasn’t far from this place, this was the first time since that night ten years ago that George was on the former Gein property. Roger, a local he’d met in this spot was gone now, but he remembered standing here with his father while Roger told him the story of what happened to Aunt sally, and the night that Gein died. Opening the trunk, it already smelled as he reached past the trash bag and pulled out a shovel. Then, he pulled out the trash bag and slung it over his back as though he were the Santa Clause of violence. Setting the bag down on the wet grass, his shovel pierced the earth below. George began digging deep into the ground. He knew no one was around for miles, and did not fear being seen. It was ironic that no one ever came out to this spot where Gein actually lived. It wasn’t close to the interstate, it wasn’t close to anything. That asshole Leon knew what he was doing, building his sick attraction right off the interstate. George knew that, had circumstances been different, he’d have done the same thing.

Digging deeper into the earth, he couldn’t help but wonder if any other remains were still buried here. If there were, they were about to have some company. Pulling himself out of the hole he’d dug, George grabbed the trash-bag and unceremoniously tossed it into the hole. Covering the fresh grave with dirt he looked out over the empty field. Nothing remained of Gein’s house, nothing stood here for decades. Remembering that awful attraction up the road, he figured the world would have been better off never knowing the name Ed Gein. Shoveling the last pile of dirt, he knew that at least no one would know of this murderer that lay buried before him. As a matter of fact, George himself didn’t even know his name.

Chapter Nine: Exposure

Milwaukee Wisconsin March 26th: 2007

On a dark city bus a small light from a flip phone shined on Stella’s face. Jonathan had invited her to a poetry night at the Emporium where they had their first date. As the bus passed by the Emporium, she remembered how she had planned to go, but something came up, something she couldn’t get out of her mind the last two days.

“Just curious,” Stella texted, “did you say that comic book guy grew up in Milwaukee?”

Looking down at the phone lighting up the palm of her hand, she read the words. “You mean Harry?”

“Yes.” her fingers quickly typed back as the bus came to a stop. Now exiting the bus, her hand gripped her cellphone tight as she hopped across a small puddle as the spring showers sprinkled down. After opening her umbrella, she checked her screen again, he hadn’t texted back yet, but she kept her eyes on the small screen until her feet reached the edge of the curb.

“Dammit!” she said aloud as she hadn’t seen the puddle in front of her but now felt the cold splash as a car sped by, its tires tossing water onto her jeans like a mean prank. She stepped back and wiped herself off until the green blinking man began his dance indicating it was safe for her to cross the street.

Still gripping her phone once she reached the other side, she felt the vibration on her skin. Looking down at her flip phone Jonathan finally texted back. “He told me he grew up in Milwaukee, but I remember when we went out for my 21rst, we went to that German bar. Ever have their sausage? My friend Steve worked their last year and he said it was really good.”

Stella’s eyes rolled as she thought to herself, “He texts the way he talks.”

Finally, he sent the text she was waiting for. “Anyway, Harry introduced me to liverwurst, good stuff, you should try it. He mentioned he had family in Amherst. I said you were from there, but he didn’t say much after that.” 

Standing before Deranged Comics and Games, its lights were still on, but she knew it would be closing soon. The electronic bell rang as she pushed the door open, and she entered to the sound of shouting.

Harry had enough of Richard’s’s shit. The store’s owner let Richard run a World of Darkness campaign at his store because he was practically an expert on the product, but his people skills needed work. Tonight, Richard admonished a young player who was trying the game for the first time, and Harry was sick of the attitude.

“He was an idiot.” Richard protested as Harry admonished him. “I’m sick of these stupid people ruining game night.”

“Oh, sorry Einstein, I didn’t know we were writing the unified theory of physics, I thought we were just having a role-playing session.”

“He’s a noob, you know how noobs are.”

“All he did was ask if he had a flashlight!”

“And I said, ‘I don’t know do you!”

“That’s not how you run a game!” Harry could feel his anger welling up within him, but his feelings rolled back with the sound of the door opening and the sight of a somewhat familiar face. “He’s a new player and he should feel welcome here.” Harry said, finishing his thought.

“Yeah, so you can make money off him!” Richard cynically said.

“So, he can enjoy the hobby asshole!” Every nerd thinks they can run a comic book and gaming store, but Harry knew that like anything else it takes work. “Until you realize that, you’re the one who’s not welcome here. Go spend your money somewhere else.” Harry didn’t need his business anyway. Besides, it’s not like he needed this store for his livelihood, which was a fact he never shared with anybody.

Harry knew he finally got through to this jerk as he sat there with that deer in the headlights look. Returning to the register, he saw Richard’s large frame stand up from his chair and storm out in a huff, saying nothing as he walked past Stella. Harry wondered if Richard even noticed her, as he wasn’t known for noticing anyone accept himself.

The bell rag again and the glass door swung closed at Richard’s exit. Harry breathed a sigh of relief and said to Stella, “Hey, sorry about that.”

“It’s OK.”

“Jonathan’s girl, right?” Harry said pointing to her.

Blushing, she nodded her head. The store owner thought to himself how those two were a cute couple. Jonathan was a super nice guy, but he just rambles on and on and on, and here’s his girlfriend who’s all quiet. Harry couldn’t help but find it amusing.

Reaching back to the small shelves behind him Harry pulled out a comic that was just delivered today. “Anyway,” Harry said, “I saved #6 of Rob Zombie’s Halloween for you.”

Stella wiped her hands on her shirt before reaching for the comic. “Oh, I’d forgotten all about that. Thanks.”

“No problem.” Harry’s voice betrayed a hint of confusion as he rang her up. She’d forgotten about it? What was she doing here on a Wednesday night in the rain if she wasn’t intending to pick this up?

“Got a chance to read it earlier.” Harry said, making small talk while he took her money. “Cool stuff. Makes you wonder, what if Rob Zombie would have made a Halloween movie.”

The girl simply said “Yeah.” As he handed over her change. Inside he laughed to himself again. She’s like Jonathan’s exact opposite.

“The name’s Stella, right?”

“Yeah.” She continued being a brilliant conversationalist.

Harry then looked at his watch. It was already past closing time. “Alright well thanks for stopping by, I gotta close up soon.”

Stella then suddenly blurted something out, something he wasn’t expecting, something that stopped him dead his tracks. “So, why did you pick the name Harry?”

“What?”

“That was your grandfather’s name, right?”

It was now a slight panic that his voice betrayed as he attempted to brush her off asking, “What are you talking about?”

“You told Jonathan you had family in Amherst. I think I was at your old house. I thought for a minute maybe someone hacked you up with a chainsaw.” She then laughed while Harry’s face froze. “You know kids party in your house now?”

“Look,” his hands slightly trembled as he raised them up in defense. With one last attempt to dismiss her, he said. “I think you have me confused with someone else.”

“I remember the first time I saw you.” Stella recalled. “That night in the theater, you were crying in your seat.” The man gave no reaction, but in his mind, he remembered that night where his dreams shined there, right in front of him, yet so far away. “I read later, that was your dream gig, directing Friday the 13th.”

“Everyone wants to direct Stella. Look it’s time for you to go.”

“You even named this store after that your first screenplay.”

“Who’s screenplay?” The man called Harry asked in vain, but he knew it was too late.

“George Kohler’s.”

He turned his head down in defeat as he left the register. He hadn’t talked to Franki since his father died, but he remembered the breathing exercises dad’s last wife taught him as he calmly walked towards the door. He remembered her teaching walking meditation, taking each step as if it’s both your first step and your last. He managed to block everything out until he heard the sound of the metal clicking as he locked the door and flipped the sign around to indicate the store was closed.

It was the girl who looked a little scared now as he turned back around to face her. He wondered what she thought he was going to do. What he did was ask one simple question. “What do you want? You want money?”

“What?” Stella appeared to have gone from fear to confusion.

“Well forget it. I’ll close this shop and disappear tonight. Is that what you want?” He pointed to the wall displaying pictures of the gaming club. “Where are these kids gonna go then?”

“I don’t want your money.”

“Well, what do you want then?”

Stella looked around at all the merchandise before answering. “I never thought I would really get to meet you, but I always wanted to thank you.”

Now it was he who was confused. “Thank me for what?”

“I lost a sister too.” Stella said. “She got in a car with her drunk boyfriend and got herself killed on 51.” Harry knew that road, the killer highway they called it. In fact, he thought he might have caught the local news report about that when it happened. That would have been during one of his visits to his father in Amherst years back.

“Everybody loved my sister.” Stella went on to explain. “She ran track, did good in school, did good with boys.” Her voice then trailed off as she added. “I was the weirdo sibling nobody liked.”

“Okay.” Harry nodded in understanding. His own sister was also popular in school back when he was a nerdy teenager. It took nearly a decade for him to realize that the reason people hated him back then wasn’t because he was fat or because he was a nerd, it was because of his arrogance, the same kind of arrogance his now former customer had. Looking at this girl before him, he could tell she had some real pain, and didn’t peg her as being conceited.

“Dad started drinking more, I got even more depressed.” the young girl continued. He may have understood her feelings, but he still didn’t get why she was sharing all this. Either way, he kept listening. “I remember my school had this art contest. My sister always encouraged me with my drawing, but now, I just drew a blank. It was right before your chainsaw movie came out.” The comic store owner hadn’t fondly remembered anything from his Hollywood days until just that moment. That was where his life peaked, being at the premier with his father and his sister, right before everything went to hell. “I watched a preview of it.” Stella recalled. “I never forgot the end. You had that image of the guy with the chainsaw spinning around in the field, it was amazing. For some reason it just stuck with me. I sketched a picture of it and submitted it. Figured it would be my last work.”

Harry was still listening, but in his mind, he was remembering that scene, as well as that maniac he spotted on the highway years ago when he was just a kid that inspired such an image. That last thing Stella said brought jolted him back to the present. “What do you mean, your last work?”

Stella answered by rolling up her sleeves. “I was pretty depressed even before my sister died.” The store owner gasped as Stella exposed old cut marks on her arms. He remembered girls he grew up with that did that, some of them didn’t survive high school. “Once she was gone everything got even worse; kids at school were on my case, dad was drinking more. One day he passed out and I took his bottle of whiskey, then I grabbed a bottle of pills and, well you know…”

“Oh my god.” Was all he could say.

“I mean, obviously I didn’t do it.” She said, half cracking a smirk. “I was just about to when the phone rang. I don’t know why I even bothered answering it, but I did. It was the school.” She then laughed, continuing, “You know I was actually a little annoyed, because I thought, God, now I have to go into school and get the stupid award and then off myself.” Stella stopped for a moment. The rain was still coming down outside. She slightly titled her head and shrugged her shoulders as a light thunder sounded in the sky outside. “But I stuck around.” She resumed. “Dad stopped drinking, I ended up getting a scholarship and, well here I am.”

That was a nice sentimental story, but it still didn’t fill the hurt he had inside. “I lost my family to all that shit. No offense but you think this is supposed to make up for that?”

“No,” she answered simply. “but my sister always encouraged my drawing. She wouldn’t have wanted me to stop. Would they have wanted you to stop?”

“If I’d kept my job in Pennsylvania, I’d still have my family.”

“Wow, being stuck in a cubicle, sounds like a great life.” The store owner’s sarcasm detector was going off the charts.

“Look, I’m not gonna tell anybody. I just wanted, I just wanted to tell you.” Staring at the door, Stella said “Now are you gonna let me out or are you gonna cut me up with a chainsaw?”

His heart pumped again as his hands frantically unlocked the door. He pushed the glass door open hard and his arm remained still holding the door open.

Stella laughed walked past him. “God, I was just kidding. You’re so serious.”

Harry was now long gone as the door closed. George breathed a heavy breath as he locked the door again. Somewhere in his gut he knew he could trust her. He knew she wouldn’t tell anyone.

Walking back to one of the comic book shelves, he gazed longingly at a Friday the 13th comic, and remembered that dream from so long ago. Flipping the wall switch the light’s dimmed while he walked back to the register.

Sitting down trying to close out the register, his mind was still in a fog. One thing occurred to him. She never asked what happened to his sisters killer?

Chapter Eight: A Familiar Face

March 14th, 2007 Milwaukee, Wisconsin

“Welcome to your first comic book store!” Jonathan giddily announced while holding the door open for Stella. Walking into this strange new world that was Deranged Comics and Games, Stella saw unfamiliar faces looking her over. In the back, a heavy-set guy with big poofy hair sat at a table surrounded by a few other men as papers and dice lay scattered about. The table-top gamers stopped mid roll to stare at the store’s potential new customer.

“Hey, Jonathan,” a goth looking girl in a Wednesday 13 shirt greeted them with a smile, “so this is the is the girl you’d been telling me about!” Stella blushed nervously as she wasn’t always comfortable with people discussing her. Still, looking around at the other people in this store, Stella was glad to see this place wasn’t a total boys club. Stella gave a timid wave as the girl said, “I’m Rachel, the store manager. It’s great to have you here. What kind of things do you like to read?”

“Um,” Stella looked around at all the single issues, shelves filled with graphic novels tables covered in labeled boxes and answered, “all kinds of things I guess.”

“Alright, well these are our newer releases.” Rachel said while walking over a display rack against the wall covered with comics. “They’re all arranged alphabetically, and the boxes on the tables are older back issues. If you have any questions let me know.”

Stella nodded politely as Rachel went back behind the cash register. Looking at the comic book rack was like gazing upon an alien world, its god like citizens clad in spandex fighting the good fight for all time. Stella scowled at the sight of some of the barley dressed female fighters. “You know I was thinking,” she heard her boyfriend Jonathan say, “we should start a new charity.”

“Oh yeah, for what?” Stella asked, her eyes still perusing the titles.

“We should raise money to buy some more clothes for these female characters.” He quipped while holding up one of the offending floppys.

Stella rolled her eyes as she still wasn’t used to his cornball humor. “It’s a good thing I like you.” she said.

Looking back to the shelves, Stella noticed the titles displayed weren’t all spandex. She recognized some manga like Death Note and Oh My Goodness which her roommate Amber liked. There were a few horror books too, including what looked like several separate issues all with Halloween in their title.

“Rob Zombie’s Halloween.” Stella said out loud as she picked up her first comic book. The name Rob Zombie stuck out to her as she was a fan of his music and his House of 1000 Corpses movie.

“Oh, that’s right.” Jonathan went on to explain, “Rob Zombie was set to do a remake of the original Halloween, but the studio canned that so they could do Helloween. Zombie’s idea was for two movies,” Jonathan continued, “one about a young Michael Meyers in the sanitarium, the other basically redoing the Halloween night he escapes. This series is about Zombies first idea.”

“Wow, neat.” Stella said while taking issues 2-5 off the shelf.

Looking over her shoulder, her curly brushed against him as Jonathan leaned into her saying, “Supposed to be a six part series.” Jonathan then made his patented goofy smile and said, “I guess that means I’ll have to bring you back here for the sixth issue!”

He didn’t notice her blushing as his attention immediately diverted to the cover of another issue. It was a cyberpunk style collage of computer images straight out of the Matrix, only the monitors were dripping in blood. Jonathan quickly reached for issue one of Halloween: H2K Rebooted. Yanking the title off the shelf he said, “Check this out. Ever since Devil’s Due comics got the rights to the Halloween they’ve been doing all the follow ups to those anthology films. Pretty neat stuff.”

Jonathan then snatched Halloween title featuring a pair of dueling werewolves explaining, “Oh, this one is a crossover between Halloween Six and some 80’s TV show called Werewolf. Ever hear of that?”

“I don’t remember anything from the 80s. Do you?” She said teasing her boyfriend who was just a few years older.

“Oh, she burned you there Jonathan!” A thin man in a Bart Simpson T-shirt laughed as he approached and introduced himself to Stella. “Hi, I’m Aaron. Buying some Halloween comics huh?”

Stella nodded while looking down at her books. Aaron then asked, “Did you hear they’re doing a movie with Halloween and Hellraiser.”

“Helloween, right?” Stella responded, naming the title of next year’s crossover film.

“That’s right.” Aaron said excited. “Rumor is the cult leader from Halloween 3 is gonna get Michael Meyers and the characters from the anthology films; like the sea monster from H20 and the vampire from Resurrection, to team up against the Cenobites! Trying to top Freddy vs the Devil I guess.”

Another man approached and chimed in, “Hey Jonathan, that reminds me, did you hear they’re doing a comic crossing Pumpkinhead with Friday the 13th? It’s gonna be called Devil of Evil, Demon of Vengeance.”

“No Paul, I haven’t.” Jonathan said, but looking at his shirt, filled with the image of the titular character from the hillbilly horror movie known as Pumpkinhead, he added “and I can’t tell who your money’s on either.”

Paul then laughed saying “Wow, my sarcasm detector is going off the charts.”

Aaron then mimicked holding a scanning device, and in a nasally voice said, “Oh, a sarcasm detector, that’s a really useful invention!”

While the four all laughed together Stella saw a familiar face walked out from the back of the store. “Jesus mighty, you guys need to make like Jon and get a girlfriend.” Stella knew she’d seen this man before, with his mustache and dyed orange hair, but she couldn’t remember where.

“Oh hey, it’s Harry, the owner.” Jonathan pointed to him and said to Stella, “This is guy is like the Howard Hughes of comics. Remember this moment as we don’t see him here that often.” Then looking to the shop’s owner he said, “Harry, this is Stella, you might not recognize her, as last time you saw her it looked like she was dancing in a barbecue pit.”

“Oh,” Harry recalled, excitedly pointing at her saying, “you were at the movie dressed up as Freddy Krueger.”

Stella shyly nodded as Harry complimented, “That was a great costume!”

“Thanks.” She wondered how much he meant it, given she was slim and not all buff like Nightmare on Elm Street’s Kane Hodder.

“Have you been finding everything OK?” The owner asked.

Stella held up her Zombie Halloween comics as John said, “Yeah, it’s your lucky day. She’s about to buy her first comics!”

“Awesome,” Eying the five titles she held Harry said “Just so you know, issue six of that will probably come out next week. Despite how Johnny boy here is crackin on me, I’m always here on Wednesdays. You can come by and pick it up then.”

“Sounds like a date.” Stella said.

“Well how about that!” Jonathan jokingly protested. “You know some guys have a story about losing their girl to Mick Jagger or Robert Plant, here I lost my girl to Comic Book Guy!”

By the following Monday Stella had forgotten all about that humorous exchange as she stared at the computer monitor. “Bleep, bleep, bleep,” and the sound of the clacking keyboard echoed through the dormitory. Over AOL instant messenger Jonathan informed Stella of a poetry reading at the coffee shop that would be held in two nights. The memories of their first date lingered in her nostrils as she recalled the smell of freshly ground coffee. Memories of hot java were replaced by the actual present aroma of melted butter. “Hey love bird,” Amber said “I made some popcorn. It’s almost showtime.”

“Oh right!” Stella realized she’d lost track of time and excitedly typed “c ya l8r” into the instant messenger chat window. She smirked as her computer instantly bleeped back with the message “Not if I see you first.” Stella then left her desk to join her roommates on the couch.

The A&E network was on the television and the station hyped its series premier. Bates Motel was a prequel to Psycho set in the 1970’s. Early in the episode, an old car with luggage tied to the top drives by the beautiful Oregon coast. To one side were mountains lush with greenery, while the other side small waves crept onto the sands as the scene was scored with soft piano music. The scene then cut to an interior shot of the car, driven by the youthful beauty that was Norma Bates. In the passenger seat, her teenage son Norman flipped through the radio dial, stopping on a news broadcast that altered the mood of the splendid scenery about them.

Stella’s ears perked up as she heard the familiar voice on the show’s car radio. “in one of the most shocking and brutal crimes in the annals of American history.”

“Who is that?” Stella wondered aloud.

“Oh right, I heard about this.” her flatmate Michelle answered. “That’s Jon Larroquette.”

“Larro-who?” Stella asked.

“He was on an 80s show called Night Court.”

“Did you watch that when you were a kid?” Amber coyly asked.

“Fuck, I’m not that old!” the senior student said while playfully tossing a piece of popcorn at her.

“Anyway,” Michelle added, “he did the opening narration in the Texas Chainsaw movies.”

“Oh, right.” Stella said.

“Yeah, I heard the guy that directed Chainsaw pitched for Larroquette to have this bit.” Michelle said, pointing at the screen. “He pitched the TV show to appease the studio after killing Norman off in Psycho II. In his notes he had this idea kind of backhandedly tying in Psycho with chainsaw.”

“Isn’t that that director that disappeared or something?” Amber asked.

“Yeah, Stella,” Michelle chimed in, “aren’t you reading a book about him?”

“Yeah?“

“So where is he?” Michelle asked.

“Buried at my house.”

Michelle laughed. “Stella you’re hilarious.” 

“Yeah, just kidding,” Stella said, “he’s tied up in my room.”

“Jonathan better not find out.” Amber cracked on her before asking, “but really what do you think happened to him?”

“I don’t know. The book talks about this obsessed fan he had who they suspect murdered his sister. They both disappeared, so who knows.”

“Man that’s fucked up. I heard he killed himself.”

Stella tensed as those words were spoken. She loved these girls. In her short time here they became like a new family to her, but not even they knew of that dark night she had all those years ago.

After the TV episode was over, Stella went back to her desk, carrying with her a peculiar feeling she just couldn’t shake. That book they were talking about sat at her desk. Thumbing through it, she found a picture of George Kohler. He looked heavier his face looked fuller than she remembered him looking on TV. It was an old picture from before he broke into the business. Back then he had this bombastically big poofy hair. As she focused on his eyes, there was a familiarity with him she couldn’t place, it wasn’t just from seeing him on TV. Placing a bookmark to keep the page she pulled out her sketch book. Her pencil scratched the pages, lines formed the facial features of the missing and possibly departed director. The top of the pencil floated up to George’s forehead, about to draw his massive mop of hair, but it stopped. Almost instinctively, the pencil drew a crew cut on the head instead. The wooden pencil then returned down to the face where it drew a small mustache above its lips. Her hand dropped the pencil as she looked down at her work. Her hand then reached for her colored pencils, her fingers gripped the utensil that was orange in color. Stella was able to see the finished product in her mind before she continued. Thinking back on her day, butterflies fluttered in her stomach as the thought fully dawned on her. It was not a sensation of fear, as if she had something to be afraid of, but it was a shock, a realization of a truth that had stood before her. Still looking down at her drawing while her hand effortlessly colored the sketch pad, she knew it was true. The resemblance was uncanny.

Chapter Seven: The Shower

Customer: Bartender, what’s a Gein beer?

Bartender: It’s got lots of body, but no head.

Why did Ed Gein always have the heat on in his house?

So, his furniture wouldn’t get goosebumps.

November 2nd 2004

George hated to admit it, but that last one was pretty funny. While surfing the web looking at various horror sites, George stumbled upon an Angelfire page called the Ed Gein Appreciation Zine. While George wasn’t appreciative of the adoration expressed towards this deranged individual that terrorized his Aunt, he was impressed with the thoroughness of site’s information. He knew, had circumstances been different, he himself would have designed a site like this. What little information about Gein’s life, as well as his grave robbing and apparent murder of Mary Hogan were all covered in gruesome detail. Of course, much of the site’s information was “borrowed” from Kohler’s own book Deranged, which detailed the personal and disturbing story of how George came to learn the secret to his Aunt’s madness.  

However, there were a few original essays, such as one comparing Gein to Norman Bates, the character from Psycho, as well as Gein’s influence on George’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Reading the article about Chainsaw, George chuckled to himself as he remembered how people falsely assumed that his remake took inspiration from Jeffrey Dahmer.

Then there were these Geiners, morbid jokes about Ed that were all the rage now. While he couldn’t help but have some respect for the gallow’s humor, what was not amusing was a section of the website that directed it’s ire towards George himself. “George Kohler is a fucking pussbag.” read the page titled No Gein Movie? “He’s had the greatest story in the history of modern horror fall right into his lap and that fucking tool won’t act on it. The fat lazy fuck is sitting at home counting his millions while the greatest horror movie ever goes unmade.” George shook his head as he wiped the sweat still hanging off his brow. Just before he sat down at the computer, he was working out on his bowflex machine. Taking a sip of water, he continued reading. “Kohler owes it to us fans. Let him know we demand our Ed Gein movie.” Then one of George’s personal email addresses was listed below for the world to see.

“Ah shit, I guess I’ll have to close that account now.” George thought to himself. It was a shame too, because he used this particular email to talk to fans. Opening this email account, he scrolled through hundreds of messages, most of which had clever subject titles like Make that Gein Movie or Die or Gein Film or Bust. Messages like “advice for breaking into the film business,” or honest fan questions about his films were now few and far between. While this was certainly annoying, George was able to brush it off. He remembered himself firing off angry messages in Friday the 13th forums, especially toward the director of Friday the 13th Part Five, The New Horns. It was embarrassing now to think he had acted like these trolls once. Perhaps it was some form of Kharmic justice.

The wanderings of George’s mind were interrupted by the ringing of his flip phone.  “Is this my famous director brother?” the familiar voice said on the other end.

“Well, I think I’m still famous.” George answered his sister as he looked back at the monitor and its angry emails. “Though looking at some of the online chatter its maybe more infamous.”

His sister Helen laughed as she said, “Well I hope you’re not too famous to join us for Thanksgiving.”

“Oh, I’ll definitely be in for that.” George assured her. “Sorry I couldn’t see you after Hallow-con, I had to fly back to LA and sort shit out for Psycho III. Also, big news,” his voice raised in excitement as he rapidly spoke, “something opened up at Paramount. Tomorrow, I got a meeting about maybe directing the next Friday the 13th film, Freddy vs the Devil vs Ash!”

“Wow, that’s awesome!” Helen was well aware of her brothers life-long love of the Friday the 13th franchise. The two of them spent many a night watching them on TV when they were kids. Their father even once took them on a camping trip in New Jersey to look for the legendary Jersey Devil. “You’ve been waiting for this for so long. I’m sure you’re gonna do great.”

“I hope so.” George said humbly.

“Well, you’ll have to let me know how it went over Turkey.”

“Sure thing. How’s the Chuckster?”

“He’s good. He’s just hanging out watching TV now.” Helen then looked to her husband, who she saw looking out the window. From outside she could hear their dog barking as the sun set behind the homes across the street. “What’s wrong hon?”

“I don’t’ know, the dog’s acting up.” George heard her brother in law Charles say. “Probably barking at the skateboarders again.”

The dog’s barking then stopped as Helen said, “Anyway, I’ll see you soon. I’m real proud of you.”

“Thanks Helen. You know I’m proud of you too.” Hanging up the phone, George closed the window of his email and started began to work.  

Opening a word document, he began jotting down ideas for Freddy vs the Devil vs Ash. The Necronomicon, was a good place to start. That mysterious and evil book which originally appeared in the prose of H.P. Lovecraft before being used in the Evil Dead series was a natural fit to tie the three franchises together. Maybe Ash Williams, the Deadite slaying hero of the Evil Dead series from the evil dead series would work at the Crystal Lake S-Mart, the fictional equivalent of Wall-Mart. George then typed out random ideas for how the Freddy, the Devil, and Ash would interact. Maybe Freddy could use the Necronomicon to bring back the Devil’s past victims as Dead-ites, the creatures of the Evil Dead series.

Even cooler, he thought to himself, would be if the surviving characters from Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street would appear, such as Friday’s Tina Shepard and Nightmare’s Alice Johnson. This could be the horror equivalent of Crisis on Infinite Earths, the epic DC Comics story from 20 years prior which featured pretty much every DC comics character. George leaned back and stopped himself for a moment. He remembered his departed mentor Robert Bloch, advising him against over-stuffing his stories. “A good story is like a good recipe.” He recalled Bloch telling him. “Too much stuff can ruin it, just stick with what you need.” Still, he felt really intrigued about this idea of surviving characters from past films. Who knows, maybe this idea could be in the next sequel? Yet again, George knew to restrain himself. Knowing how Hollywood works, he was aware of the dangers of getting too far ahead of himself. He knew to take things one movie at a time.

“You know I’m proud of you too.”

Helen felt glad to hear that from her brother as she hung up the phone. “I’m going to take a shower.” she said to her husband as she felt the cool November breeze blowing into their house. “Chuck?” she said as she looked out the open door. She didn’t hear the dog barking anymore, but she didn’t see her husband either. She figured he probably went to talk to the neighbors and closed the door behind her making sure it was unlocked.

In the safe comfort of her shower, she thought about how the relationship between her and her brother had grown stronger over the last few years. They were close as young kids, spending afternoons playing outside and watching monster movies at night. Once they moved east, their teenage years found them drifting apart, especially when he developed that massive ego. Strangely enough, fame seemed to have made George humble. Well, there were other reasons too. Especially since their father died, that was so hard on both of them, not to mention how bizarre and macabre that whole situation was. “Be careful in the shower.” Helen hated remembered the dying words of her father, rambling and nonsensical in his final moments. While lost in thought, the steam from the shower formed a fog around Helen as her mind wandered to that place where she was still bitter; resentful that her father had been taken from then so soon, just a few years after they’d all grown closer as a family. At the very least, she was appreciative of George, who often took the time out of his busy schedule to check on how she and Chuck were doing.

What she didn’t know was that Chuck wasn’t doing well, not anymore. His body now rested in the bushes and wouldn’t be found until the next day. As she’d drifted in that mental fog, she didn’t hear the light footprints enter her bathroom. She did hear the shower curtain pull back, and she heard herself scream as the knife plunged into her body. She had no idea who Franklin was, but as her brother’s stalker repeatedly plunged his steel into her, she knew his face would be the last thing she ever saw.

George’s head was swimming with the possibilities of another sequel to these franchises. Taking a break from his brainstorming, he closed the window on his word document to find his Firefox web browser still open. It was then he noticed something on that Gein fansite hadn’t noticed before. Clicking on ‘Gein Today,’ he uncovered some more recent and gruesome news. According to this page, Gein apparently now had a copy-cat. In Plainfield Wisconsin, where Ed resided and is buried, someone dug up several graves, apparently the same graves Gein himself violated half a century prior. A jepeg file of the local newspaper clippings seemingly confirmed this crime to be true. Adding a gruesome showman ship to the foul acts, a color photo, separate from the newspaper clipping showed some of the remains were laid out on the cemetery grass in such a way that they spelled out a word, one word. Ed. Even worse than that, the bodies of two youths, a young couple that just graduated high school, were found murdered in the cemetery. The webmaster of this morbid site seemed to take particular delight in describing the tragic death of what seemed like a bright and beautiful young girl.

“Enough of that.” George thought to himself, clicking on the X closing that awful window. He didn’t feel much better as he again checked his email to find even more messages from demented fans demanding a Gein movie. His mouse clicked on the small boxes as he prepared to delete them, but one message caught his eye. ‘Your pretty sister.’ the subject read. “What the fuck? Not cool messing with family.” he thought to himself as he clicked on the message. Text at the top indicated this was a follow up to an earlier message. “I’m warning you.” The older message read. “If a Gein movie is not in development by Horror-con, your family will pay.” George hadn’t recalled seeing this message before. He probably deleted it on sight just as he had most of these crazy messages. But the new email below sent a chill through his spine as it read. “You’d been warned.” Below the text were a series of icons indicating this email contained several images that would soon be visible.

George grew cold as the Jpeg files loaded on his monitor. He recognized that house, that home that he’d plan to visit in just a few weeks, the dining room where he planned to cut the Thanksgiving Turkey, the TV they would watch football on. George quickly grabbed his phone and speed dialed Helen. The phone kept ringing as image after image of Helen’s home loaded on the screen. Scrolling down the email, the trail of jpeg files led up Helen’s steps, down the hallway, and finally, through the bathroom door. George almost vomited at the site of the red streaks staining the shower curtains. Finally, the last agonizing image loaded. There, laying in the tub, naked and violated, was George’s sister Helen.

Chapter Six: Don’t Go In The House

Psycho: Movies, Murder, Madness and the Disappearance of George Kohler

Kohler’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre opens with a decayed corpse sitting atop a tombstone. After this shocking image, we get the film’s scant plot involving Sally and her brother checking on their grandfather’s grave after hearing news of several local cemeteries being desecrated. Along the way, they run into a family of cannibalistic murders, least of which is the newly named Leatherface; who replaces Saw-Man from the original 1974 film as the Chainsaw wielding maniac who dons several masks of human skin.

Along with its massive success, much controversy surrounded the 2003 remake. Victim’s rights groups suggested Kohler had taken inspiration from Milwaukee murderer Jeffrey Dahmer, whose apartment was found to have various skeletons and other human remains. The home of the maniacal family in Kohler’s Chainsaw film seemed to have taken cues from Dahmer, with its chairs covered in bones, human skin lampshades and bed posts made of skulls. However, was there possibly an earlier influence on this film that was unknown at the time?

Before his time in Hollywood, George was in correspondence with author Robert Bloch regarding an unproduced screenplay George wrote called Deranged. Bloch was a relatively successful novelist and television writer, but never attained true breakout success until his later years when he published the 1993 novel Psycho. Bloch personally arranged for the then unknown George Kohler to be the director on Psycho’s film adaptation, which closely follows the novel.

Norman Bates, an eccentric hotel owner devoted to his live-in mother, is the lead character in both the film and novel. Following several murders comes one of the great surprise endings in film, as it is revealed that Norman’s mother is actually long dead. Her body is preserved by her son and kept in her old bedroom. Even more shocking, Norman dresses as his dead mother, and, apparently suffering from dissociative personality disorder, “becomes” his mother, murdering anyone perceived to be a threat to her son. Psycho turned out to be more shocking to audiences than Silence of the Lambs which was released just a few years prior.

Published just before the author’s death, Bloch was very tight lipped about what inspired him to write such a tale. Upon closer inspection, the name Norman is close to the word normal. Norman of course is not normal, but desperately attempts to don the appearance of normalcy. This seemingly normal man lives in a secluded area with his fanatical mother while hiding a terrible secret. Parallels to Edward Gein are obvious.  

“What are you reading?” Stella’s father momentarily took his eyes off the road to ask.

Holding up the book cover she answered, “It’s about George Kohler.”

“Oh, wasn’t he that movie director?” he asked.

“Yeah.” she answered as her eyes diverted back to the pages.

“Didn’t his mom or somebody run into that Psycho down in Plainfield years ago?” He asked as his eyes focused back on the road.

“It was his Aunt.” she answered while continuing to read.

Thinking back to the local story that made global headlines he recalled. “Yeah, I remember that in the news a few years ago when they found all those bodies. Crazy stuff.” Then, glancing at her book, he added. “What ever happened to that director guy? Didn’t he vanish or something?”

“Yeah, this book talks about it. No one knows what happened. It says he had some crazy fans. Some of them wanted him to make a movie about that Plainfield guy but he didn’t want to. One theory is that a fan killed him.”

“I remember hearing that.” her father recalled. “One story I heard was he checked himself into the Mendota institution up in Madison. Who knows though; can’t believe everything you see on the internet right?”

Approaching their hometown of Amherst, he smiled as the sun hung ahead of them. He was so proud of his daughter. They’d both been through so much loss and hurt, but now he was a year sober, and she was off to college and seemed to have met someone special. He got to meet Stella’s boyfriend today when he picked her up from college. He seemed a little eccentric, but so was his daughter. Either way, Stella seemed really happy, happier than he’d seen her in a long time.

“So, Jonathan huh?” he said. “You really like this guy?”

“Yeah.” Stella said, blushing. She then turned away from her book and looked out the window, the flat plains of Wisconsin lay stretched out to the horizon.

“Well that’s great.” Her father said. “Listen, you know I love you, and, and I know,” he was stammering his words now, “I know you’re not a little kid anymore.” It grew more and more uncomfortable for him the closer he got to the subject. “Just use protection, OK?

“Dad!”

“Okay, okay!” As uncomfortable as that exchanged was, he had to laugh a little as it’d been a long time since he’d seen his daughter show so much emotion as she just had in that moment. “Okay, I’m just saying.”

Finally coming into their hometown, he saw a large white house on the side of the road. It looked empty now, but he was grateful for its presence and the opportunity it provided to change the subject. “That there’s a Kohler property.” He said pointing to the house. “From what I remember, George bought it for his dad.” He saw her glance at the building and its empty driveway as he continued. “Who knows, maybe he’s hiding out there.”

Her dad couldn’t stay long once they got home as he had to go in for the night shift at his new job. Once she dropped her things off in her old room, she went into what was her sister’s room. Before leaving for college, her father converted Juliana’s old room into a studio for Stella. He also kept a small desk there which he occasionally worked out of, so they both shared this space that once belonged to Juliana. In a way, it helped them both heal. Using this room helped them to move on. They both agreed to keep one thing of Julianna’s, her trophy case remained intact, still glowing in the light of the room.

Stella sat at the chair in her desk. Looking at the spot where Juliana’s bed used to be, she remembered and reflected. Her short time in university was the best time of her life, probably better than all of her life before that really. Now looking at the window at the lonely landscape outside, she thought about how she was now back in this place where she didn’t have any friends. At least spring break was only a week. She supposed she could call Meghan, that girl she knew from high school, but she was probably busy. Stella made no real plans for this week. It’s not like she could afford go to Palm Beach or wherever other college kids on TV go for Spring Break. Tomorrow she would give Jonathan a call, but tonight she intended to just stay home and read. However, as the book cover faced up, looking back at her, and she could only think of one thing.

The sun was so far behind her now. As it dipped into the horizon Stella rode her bike down the gravel road towards the large white house ahead of her. Placing her bike in the nearby tree line, she crept toward the house and the looming darkness around it. No lights were visible inside and as she ascended the creaky porch steps she had no idea what she would tell do should she find anyone. “Hi George, I’m Stella, I’m a big fan of your movies and I just wanted to see if you were hiding here.” What could she say? “Hello.” was all she could think of as she wrapped on the door. No curtains hung from any of the windows of the house. Placing the edge of her hands around her forehead she pressed her face towards the large pane of glass on the front porch. Looking inside, most of the furniture was gone. There was an old dusty couch and a few cardboard boxes, but otherwise it looked empty. She jumped and quickly turned around as a breeze blew accompanied by a loud banging noise, it sounded like wood banging on wood. There was nothing behind her, and she realized the sound was coming from around the back of the house.

Walking around the perimeter of the home, Stella noticed a security camera posted to the wall. It remained still, and, looking closer, she realized its light was off. It was long dead. Coming to the back of the house, she found the source of the noise. The back door was open, occasionally slamming shut with the wind. “Hello.” she spoke again as she poked her dead inside. There was still no answer. She pulled a flashlight out her backpack, bringing a little light  into the house while the sun faded away. Inside the kitchen, the refrigerator sat silently. No light emerged from within as its door opened revealing empty contents inside. Walking up the steps to the second floor she found each of the bedrooms to be empty, except one.

This must have been George Kohler’s home. Horror posters remained on the wall, including Friday the 13th Part VIII, the Devil Takes Manhattan, and the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Next to Saw-Man and his chainsaw the text of the poster read, “Who will survive and what will be left of them?” This room was like a shrine to horror movies. Various props and memorabilia sat about. Stella noticed a prop knife along with a wig and dressed that looked like it was from Psycho. A prop chainsaw hung on the wall. There was also a desk with a stack of papers. Rummaging through the desk drawer, she’d found an old, typed screenplay called Deranged, written by George Kohler dated 1989. Flipping through the script, inside the first few pages were photographs. A few of them looked like they were George when he was young. Most of them were of a woman, whom Stella realized was his sister. “Such a shame,” Stella thought to herself. All the other rooms were bare, no clothes, no other personal items, but this room remained intact. Why would all this stuff have been left here?

Looking down, Stella realized that wasn’t the strangest thing about this room. A series of cuts were visible on the floor. Kneeling down, her fingertips traced the grooves in the wood. There were four short cuts, and they weren’t random. In fact, as the frame of her upper body faced downwards, Stella realized the top two marks lined up with her shoulders. Standing up she continued looking down and realized the bottom two marks would have lined up with her hips had she been laying there. These marks weren’t deep and weren’t clean cuts that would have been made with a knife or an axe. It looked like someone took a power tool to the floor. It looked like the marks of a chainsaw.

That wooden door downstairs was still banging, sending echoes through the house, but now there was another sound, the sound of footsteps. Someone else was in the house. Now it was several footsteps she heard, followed by the sound of giggling. “Time to get fucked up.” an adolescent male voice said followed by the crackling sound of an aluminum can opening.

“I’m already high man.” the voice of another boy followed.

Stella quietly crept to the bathroom as the commotion continued downstairs. Luckily the door was able to be locked. At least she wouldn’t get in trouble for trespassing, she thought to herself, as whoever these kids were, they were trespassing themselves.

“I heard that movie director haunts this place.” She heard the first voice say.

“Bullshit.” She heard the other voice reply.

“No man, he was in a cult and summoned up some demonic shit here. They say the devil took his soul.”

Stella almost laughed as she heard the juvenile speculation. It sounded like there was only two of them, but there was still only one of her. She could remain hidden in this bathroom if worse came to worse, but she was long passed tired of hiding. Besides, rummaging through her backpack, she found an old makeup kit. Looking in the cracked mirror, she had an idea.

“What was that?” One of the voices said as the soundtrack from the Psycho movie played on Stella’s Walkman. Its volume was turned up all the way so the sound from the headphones filled the empty house.

“Sounds like its upstairs.” the other voice said as their footsteps approached the stairwell. Their own flashlights shined up to the second floor and screams followed, for what these boys saw seemed inhuman. Borrowing from the special edition of the Exorcist, released just a few years prior, Stella did a spider-walk down the steps. Her hands served as feet as her chest faced the ceiling leaving her head hanging upside down. Makeup formed red and black shapes around her face as her mouth hung agape releasing a terrible screeching sound. The boys almost fell over screaming before frantically running out the door, dropping their beer cans behind them and abandoning their six packs.

Adrenaline still rushed through Stella as she rode her bike home. The night breeze blew softly on her still made-up face. Anyone who might happen to drive by and see her might have been scared to death, but fortunately no one else was around. For once, the solitude of Kodak country was a comfort to her as she rode home in the night. She laughed to herself as she thought back to those boys running out of the house in terror. Still, this humorous thought couldn’t smother that creeping feeling she had. As her own house lay ahead, the warm lights still glowing inside, one horrible thought rattled in her mind. Did she just see the place where George Kohler was murdered?

Chapter Five: The Gein Ghoul House

August 27th, 2004 Plainfield Wisconsin.

“America’s most Brutal and Bizarre Crimes,” read the neon sign at the entrance of the Gein Ghoul House. Leon, the owner of the local attraction, was happy to see the crowd of people ahead of him. Of course, the crowd was moving toward the parking lot as it was now after hours. The victim’s rights group who picketed the attraction were also packing up their signs and banners. Watching them leave, Leon chuckled to himself as he figured they hadn’t deterred any visitors. In fact, they probably attracted some.

A few months back the police questioned Leon when the Plainfield cemetery was desecrated and two youths were found murdered there. Apparently, some psycho was being a Gein copycat. There’d been no other victims since, and of course, Leon had nothing to do with it, but he welcomed the publicity. He also welcomed the jealous stares from the departing crowd as two voluptuous women walked with him to the entrance of the Ghoul House.

The attraction was designed like a simple farmhouse. Walking up the steps to the front porch with Candy and Sapphire on his arm, the trio were greeted by two skeletons sitting in rocking chairs. “You girls are gonna love this.” Leon said excitedly as he opened the door to the now empty attraction.

The first room they entered was not made up like a home but instead looked like a mental asylum. Mannequins of sinister looking Doctors and sexy nurses were set up around the room to appear as they were treating deranged patients in hospital gowns. The girls looked up at a TV hanging on the wall and saw a familiar face.

“Wow, I love Jerry Springer!” Candy said as she looked up at the screen playing America’s favorite tabloid talk show.

“Yeah,” Leon said, hugging her tight with his left arm, “look who else is up there.” Both girls looked at the screen, but it didn’t register yet. Then, they heard a familiar voice.

“No one believed her but me.” The voice from the TV said.

“Hey, that’s you!” Candy observed, her squeaky voice revealed genuine surprise.

“Yeah, no shit.” Sapphire said, taking out a pack of cigarettes from her purse as they both watched their “date” on the set of the Jerry Springer show.

“That’s right toots.” Leon said. “I worked over at Mendota Health Institute in back in the 70’s. One of our patients ran into Gein back in the day. Poor girl, no one believed her.” Leon’s voice showed no remorse as it told this story. In fact, he looked giddy as he passed the fake operating table where one of the dummy’s was getting vivisected. “Then, one day,” Leon gleefully continued, “it was just too much.” Creeping over to a door with a sign that read ‘Lobotomy Wing’ he went on. “The Doctors, those damned Doctors, they dragged her kicking and screaming to this door. I can still hear her shrieking, even now.” Leon then cradled his face with his hands. “No, please.” His voice now sounded lighter as he began his performance. Using his best acting skills, he mimicked his patient. “Please don’t take me there! Please no!”

“What did they do?” Candy asked.

A wicked smile emerged from Leon’s face as he thrust the door open and proclaimed, “They gave her a lobotomy!”

Leon’s mood went from glee to confusion as neither girl expressed any fright. In fact, Candy giggled and Sapphire took another drag of her cigarette, her boot tapped the floor not only to stomp out her ashes but to express her boredom. Leon’s head swung back; his eyes scanned the small room behind the door. The lobotomy chair sat empty, his plan of having Zeke, one of the house workers leap out at the girls had gone unfulfilled.

“Well, that was awkward.” Leon mumbled. His voice then perked back up as he said, “Let’s go to the kitchen!”

In the next room Sapphire felt Candy’s hand squeezing her tight. Even Sapphire was visually disturbed as a mock dinner scene sat before them. A ghoulish looking family feasted upon human arms and legs. A mannequin of a human head, eyes bulged in fright, it’s mouth agape as if trying to scream served as the table’s center piece. Surrounding this devilish dining scene were scantily clad female mannequins hung on meat hooks from the kitchen ceiling. “Don’t worry,” Leon said dismissively. “They’re just dummies!” Leon laughed while squeezing one of the fake plastic breasts; its body covered in fake blood lightly swung from its chain near the fake oven. With his other hand Leon then threw the oven door open, the sound of metal clanging startled Candy, who squeezed Sapphire’s hand even tighter. Leon was no longer expecting Jane to jump out as planned, and of course the mock oven was empty. However, Leon himself now appeared disturbed as he spied the door to the back entrance. “Oh, look what they did to the door!” he complained as he examined the broken doorknob while the wooden door swayed. “Can’t find good help these days. Here toots” he ordered Candy, “slide that chair over to me.” Candy grimaced as her small hands gripped the back of one of the chairs at the kitchen table were a mannequin of a maniac sat. “Don’t worry doll face that’s just a dummy it’s not gonna hurt you.” Candy still nervously pushed the chair over to him. It’s metal legs squealed on the tiled kitchen floor. Leon then carelessly pushed the mannequin off the chair and propped the seat against the back door keeping it shut.

“Won’t that make a fire hazard.” Sapphire asked.

“What are you the fucking Fire Marshall now?” Leon said sarcastically. “Come on, let’s go upstairs.”

The private show continued through a few more rooms on the second floor. The girls were treated to other figures set up wielding chainsaws, sledgehammers, and other scenes of brutality reflecting popular horror films.

One particular room seemed eerily normal. It was a clean nicely decorated bedroom with antique furnishing. Old curtains covered the windows and oil paintings decorating the walls, including one of Jesus Christ looking up at an angel. A lone figure sat in a rocking chair facing the window. Frills of the figure’s summer dress rippled as the motorized rocking chair creaked back and forth. Leon gestured his hand towards the gray wig which clung tightly to the fake skull attached to the full skeleton which sat in the rocker. “This was Ed Gein’s mother!” Leon announced as the music from the film Psycho played. Back in showmen ship mode he explained. “It was she that taught him the secrets of the dead, how to cook and devour human flesh!” Sapphire’s eyes rolled but Candy grimaced as she saw large plate resting on the lap of Ed’s “Mother” with a fake bloody dismembered arm resting atop.

Leon was still giddy like a pre-pubescent boy guiding these women through these monstrous displays. Approaching the doorway on the other side of the room, the girls followed behind as he announced, “And now for the grand finale, the Boudoir of Edward Gein!”

Even Sapphire cringed at the site of female heads posted on the bedroom wall. “Ew, gross.” Candy said upon entering. Speakers mounted on the walls projected sound effects of screams and running chainsaws. The far end of the room was not decorated save a simple curtain, but at the center of the room was the bed. Plastic skulls mounted the bedposts, and on the mattress laying face up was a female mannequin. Red makeup effects splattered the body giving the appearance of blood covering her legs to her neck, but not her head, as there was no head. Leering over the headless female was the Ghoul of Plainfield himself. The male mannequin stood upright, its trousers were pulled down it its ankles and was positioned at the edge of the bed giving the appearance of intercourse. Naked from the waist up save a red hunters cap that rested on its head, there he was in all his depraved glory, Ed Gein, the Ghoul of Plainfield.  

“Oh, that’s just nasty!” Sapphire shouted.

“I’m not paying you for your opinion. Speaking of which.” Leon pulled back the curtain which exposed not a window but a door.

“What’s behind there?” Candy asked. Leon opened the door which led to a small hallway. At the end of the corridor a half open door exposed a bathroom. “This is my office.” Leon said, leading the girls past a closed door. He checked to make sure it was locked, then took his keys out to unlock a second door.

“What’s back here, ghosts or something?” Candy asked.

“No sugar-tits.” Leon answered. “This is where we’re gonna party!”

“About time.” Sapphire said as they went in the private room. A large couch sat in front of a big screen TV. In between was a table with weed and cocaine along with bottles of whisky ready to be consumed. A small sink sat in the corner next to a mini fridge with a clear window on the door through which they could see cans of beer. Candy entered more cautiously. She looked around the room expecting more macabre sights to be found, not realizing the show was over.

“You okay sweetheart?” Leon asked as he observed Candy’s apprehension.

“Uh, yeah. Was that a bathroom down there?”

“Sure was hon.” Leon answered. “Feel free to go freshen up.”

As Candy exited, closing the door behind her Leon took a seat on the couch.

“So, you own all this?” Sapphire asked, sitting closely next to him on the couch.

“Sure do.” Leon said as he poured two glasses of whisky. “Got some money off my TV appearances and book deal and invested into this.”

“So, you’re a self-made man huh?” Sapphire said, picking up her glass.

“You got it baby.” Their glasses clinked together in a toast while Leon’s other arm wrapped around her waist. After a quick drink she scooted over and sat on his lap, wrapping her own arms around his neck. His eyes gazed at her bulging breasts almost busting out of her top. His gaze then floated to her thick red moist lips before finally resting in her dark eyes. Her head leaned in, and he squeezed her tight as he felt her tongue gliding on his neck. He closed his eyes an inhaled as he felt her body pressed against his.  Exhaling, he opened his eyes and was immediately taken out of the moment. There in his line of sight was the door to his private room, which reminded him of something he should check on.

“Hey, um,” Leon could still feel the heat from Sapphire’s breath on him neck as he pulled away and said, “why don’t you check on Candy?”

“OK baby.” She said as she stood up and grabbed her purse. “I should freshen up a minute anyway.” Before she went out the door to the small corridor outside, she turned back to say. “Don’t go anywhere.”

After taking another drink of whiskey, Leon approached the closed door ahead of him and said “Zeke, Jane?” His two co-workers were supposed to scare his “dates” as a practical joke. “You better not be boning in there!” He shouted as his hand gripped the doorknob to his private quarters. Behind this door was a small bedroom he made in the attraction for nights like these when he had company. “I’m gonna fire these fuckers” he thought to himself as he found the door to be unlocked. Presuming he was about to find the young couple in his bed; he thought if he were lucky, he would catch a good glimpse of Jane’s goods.

“Candy, you OK girl?” Sapphire said as she walked down the hallway. She didn’t find her in the bathroom. “Bitch better not have run off,” she thought to herself, wouldn’t surprise her though. Sapphire seen a lot of girls come and go in this line of work. Glancing in the cracked bathroom mirror, she reached into her purse and touched up her lipstick. Then applying a spritz of perfume around her neck she thought how this guy wasn’t hardly the weirdest client she ever had. All that mattered was that she got paid.

After touching up her makeup she was about to turn off the bathroom light and walk out when she heard it. It was a wet sliding sound, the sound of skin slipping on wet ceramic. Looking at the closed shower curtain hanging on the edge of the bathtub, it was then that she noticed the smell. It was a distinctly sweet but sickly scent, like that of rotting meat. “Candy, you in there?” she said as the moist sound came to a stop. The curtain remained still as she reached her hand toward it.

Pulling back the curtain, she found something more horrifying than any of the designed frights of this local attraction. There sat Candy in the bathtub, her throat had been cut, and cut for real. Next to her sat another body, a young girl in a Gein Ghoul house shirt. Sapphire instantly knew this was no mannequin as actual blood poured from the open wound of her face. It was also not a mannequin that stood before her in the shower, yet it did appear unreal. Its female face hung from its skull, its body draped in a long dress, and a masculine hand raised up a meat cleaver, burying it in Sapphire’s face.

Leon entered his private bedroom to find a fully clothed Zeke laying face down on the bed. “Sleeping on the job asshole!” he shouted. He was more disappointed that Jane’s naked body wasn’t lying underneath his lazy employee. “You’re fired!” Leon approached his now ex-employee who remained motionless on the bed. It was then he saw the the stains on the sheets. “What, are you trying to Punk me?” Leon asked, assuming a camera was on him somewhere and Jane was about to pop up and scare him. “Come on, show’s over.” He said shaking Zeke and turning his body over. It took his mind a moment to register what his eyes were seeing, as for a split second he presumed Zeke’s cut-throat was a merely a makeup effect and part of some elaborate prank. As Zeke’s eyes rolled to the back of his head Leon knew this was no prank, Zeke was dead.

Leon gave no thought to the girls or Jane as he ran out his private suite, dashed into the small corridor and into the mock-up of Ed’s room. He screamed and collapsed to the floor at the site of a figure standing near the opposite doorway. A young woman’s face sat atop a figure wearing a long dress. One of its hands gripped a blood-stained meat cleaver. “Dammit, it’s just one of those mannequins.” he said aloud to himself as the figure remained perfectly still. Getting back to his feet, he approached the motionless figure. This wasn’t a mannequin he recognized. Face looked cute, kind of resembled that dead girl they found in the local cemetery, wearing too many clothes though. Drawing closer, he gasped as he looked in its eyes and saw his own reflection. It was too late for him to realize who he was looking at as the real meat cleaver swung into his gut sending true blood pouring to the wooden floor below. Collapsing to the ground again, Leon looked up to see the figure standing over him, its mouth began to move.

“You know,” a male voice spoke through dead female lips, “everyone thought I should work here.” The living eyes looked around at the gaudy horror decor, “But actually, this offends me.”

“Who the fuck are you?” Leon cried out while grasping his gut.

Looking down at his latest victim Franklin said “You worked at Mendota Mental Health Institute for a few months in the 1970s before they let you go. What did you do, fool around with the patients?” His assailant then stated. “If you even knew Sally Kohler, it wasn’t for very long.”

Then, looking over at the bed, the hand gripping the meat cleaver began to shake. Franklin let out a sigh of disgust as he viewed the mannequin representing Ed Gein mimicking intercourse with a fake corpse. The mouth of Gein was posed to appear as it was biting a near exposed breast.

“Ed never ate his victims, he never had sex with them either. The bodies smelled bad.” Franklin said in a cold monotone voice.

“How the hell would you know?” Leon protested as his blood spilled onto the floor.

In a calm, manner of fact way, Franklin looked down and answered. “He told me.”

“Ahh, look man,” Leon looked at his wound he pleaded. “You know your stuff, how about you be part of the act? You’d be great.” Pressing his wound, his hand was stained red as he pleaded “I.. I can even get you a movie deal. Would you like to be in a movie?”

“Oh, there will be a movie.” Franklin replied as he removed the skin mask exposing his true face. “Ed and I will see to that,” looking around at the décor one last time he added, “but it’s going to be done right, not this farce.”

Franklin was now the only living person in the psycho house as he’d swung the meat cleaver down, burying its blade in Leon’s skull.

Chapter Four: That First Kiss

Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Spring 2007

It was her second semester living at the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design and she was loving it. The weather was warm again as she sat at a park bench in Catalano Square across the street from her campus. It was there that she heard a voice ask, “That’s Mushroomhead right?” The girl looked up to see another student pointing at her shirt.

Her head nodded and a little smile escaped her lips as she looked up. She had seen this guy around campus but didn’t know his name. Aside from his shoulder length reddish hair, he looked a bit like Jim Carrey from Ace Ventura.

“Cool, I saw them at The Rave last year. Ever go there?” This time she nodded her head no, as the man immediately went to his next question. “So, do you like horror movies?”

“Why?” she asked nervously.

“Just asking.” He then extended his hand as if closing a formal business deal, saying, “I’m Jonathan.”

“Not Larry?” she replied, leaving his hand hanging in the air. Over a Spiderman shirt Jonathan wore a brown collared top with a ‘Patticoni Printing’ label stitched on its right breast and the name “Larry” embroidered above it.

Jonathan looked down at his shirt with a mischievous smirk. “Oh, I just wear these for fun.” He then asked, “So, I heard you’re a horror fan?”

“Yeah, sometimes.” she answered as she wondered why this guy was talking to her.

Jonathan then mimicked the voice of the Ghost Face Killer from the Scream series, asking, “What’s your favorite scary movie?”

The girl leaned back on the bench, startled by the wicked gleam in his eye while his right hand mimicked holding a telephone, but, seeing her reaction, his expression immediately changed. “Oh, sorry, just kidding,” he said, holding his hand up, palm facing towards her. “Don’t mace me.”

Still leaning back cautiously, she did manage to relax a little as he asked her “Have you seen the new Freddy, Devil, Ash movie yet?”

“No, not yet.” She answered as she perked up. She was interested in this sequel to Freddy vs the Devil, the crossover film between Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th. This entry added another franchise to the mix with Ash, the lead character of the Evil Dead series.

“Well,” it sounded like Jonathan’s wall of confidence shook for just for a moment as he spat it out. “I’m off work Friday but I have to work Saturday so I was wondering if you’d like to see a movie with me Friday?” His words ran out of his mouth like a runaway train going down the tracks. It was as though had his words not escaped at that exact moment they would have been trapped, forever stalled at the train station of his dreams.

“Yes.” She felt her eyes widen as her own single word emerged, expressing shock that her vocal cords even formed the sound of that word before her brain even considered it.

“Groovy!” Jonathan said, now mimicking Ash from the Evil Dead. “Hey,” Jonathan’s voice was once again confident and energetic as he suggested, “wouldn’t it be fun if we were in costume? I’m gonna go as Ash.”

“Ok.” She never dreamed of dressing up for a movie before, but it sounded fun.

“You live in the Two50Two building right?” Stella nodded, indicating that was correct. A few exceptions aside, all full time Freshman and Sophomore students were required to live in the Two50Two building.

“Great, I’ll meet you in front of Two50Two, let’s say at five fifty-five?” Jonathan beamed with pride at the corny word pun he just made.

Stella rolled her eyes but said “OK.”

“Awesome.” He grinned at her in triumph. Then, his eyes darted about before he said. “Oh, I suppose you should know who you’re going with.” Extending his hand as if closing a formal business deal, he, “I’m Jonathan.”

“Not Larry?” she replied, leaving his hand hanging in the air. Over a Spiderman shirt Jonathan wore a brown collared top with a ‘Patticoni Printing’ label stitched on its right breast and the name “Larry” embroidered above it.

Jonathan looked down at his shirt with a mischievous smirk. “Oh, I just wear these for fun. My name really is Jonathan.” Reaching for his wallet he said, “I can show you my id if you want!”

“That’s OK.” the girl said, laughing. He couldn’t tell if he was joking or if he was actually serious, but it was cute either way.

Then, pointing at her, he said, “And you’re Stella, right.”

“Right.” she blushed, it hadn’t occurred to her to share her name.

“Ok great. So, see you Friday?”

“Sure.”

“Alright, smell ya later!” Jonathan said as he strutted away.

That Friday Stella’s doormats helped her get her cos-play ready. Jonathan was going as Ash. The Jersey Devil of the Friday the 13th series was a full body suit, which seemed too daunting at this short notice. Hence, Stella would go as Freddy. Amber, one of her dorm mates, lent Stella her black and red sweater that resembled that of the horror villain’s. Stella pulled it over her and saw it fit well while Raina, another dorm mate, helped her with her makeup. After a coat of face paint, Stella appeared to have been horribly burned, just like the character she was cos playing. Tucking her long blonde hair under a black hat, it felt uncanny as she looked in the mirror and saw Freddy Krueger staring back at her.

“There’s just one thing missing!” her other dorm mate Michelle excitedly said. As Michelle approached it appeared she was delicately holding something in her hands. Stella’s disfigured appearing face cracked a smile that glowed through her make up as Michelle presented her a brown leather glove with plastic extensions protruding from the fingers mimicking Freddy’s claws. “I got this last Halloween, but you can have it.”

“Aww, thanks Michelle.” Stella said as she pulled the glove over her slender hand.

The girls collectively looked at Stella’s reflection in the full body mirror and were in amazed at the transformation. Looking over her slender figure, Amber said. “That is one fine Freddy!”

Waiting outside the dorms her outlook darkened as the sun began to dip, its last rays reaching out over the Milwaukee River. She got a few stares from people passing by. Some were startled, others expressed concern as they glanced her seemingly charred face. Stella wondered if anyone even got who she was supposed to be. Stella looked at her watch, it was five fifty-four. As a cool April breeze blew by and the stares continued from passerby’s, she wondered if all of this was such a good idea.

“Hail to the king baby!” Just in the nick of time, Stella heard Jonathan’s booming voice. He confidently walked toward her dressed in a long sleeved buttoned-down blue top. As he drew closer, she noticed the “Shop smart, shop S-Mart,” patch stitched into the shirt. Naturally, the name ‘Ash’ was embroidered above it. Like her, he also bore a costumed glove resembling a metal gauntlet.

“Wow, you look amazing!” He said as he saw her scarred face and her own gloved hand.

“Thanks.” she said, looking over herself, almost forgetting her costume. Then, noticing Jonathan was carrying a small backpack, she asked, “What’s that for.”

“Oh, that’s something for later.” He answered as he raised his costumed fist up where she met him with a light fist bump. She smiled as their costumed hands connected. Just for a moment, it felt electric. In the movies Freddy wasn’t slim, and actor Bruce Campbell didn’t have long reddish hair, but here, on this night, these two were perfect just as they were.

They made small talk on the bus to the theater. Jonathan did most of the talking actually, prattling on about his classes and such. Getting off the bus near the Avalon Atmospheric Theater, Stella felt a pit in her stomach as a small crowd gathered at the entrance. Some patrons were even dressed up like they were. “Just a minute.” Jonathan said as Stella faced the theater. Jonathan stopped to open his backpack from which he pulled out a toy shotgun, the handle of which appeared to have been removed. He rolled up the blue sleeve of his gloved hand and, via a contraption on his prop gun attached the barrel to his limb, making it appear not that his hand was holding the gun, but that his hand was the gun. “My boom stick!” Jonathan proudly proclaimed.

Stella covered her made up face with her own gloved hand, nearly poking herself with the plastic extensions as she giggled. “Oh my god, you’re nuts.”

Approaching the crowd in front of the theater, Stella pulled the brim of her hat down in an attempt to hide her face as the sound of clicking cameras surrounded them. She stood close to Jonathan, moving slightly behind him as he gallantly posed for pictures spouting Bruce Campbell quotes. She couldn’t believe this guy. In a way, he looked ridiculous, but he relished every moment.

After Jonathan bought tickets for the two of them, they entered the lobby to find a few others in costume. Stella was surprised to see a few people actually made full body costumes to dress up as Friday the 13th’s Jersey Devil. Random other monsters were there too, including the werewolf from Halloween Six, Pinhead, and a few other Freddy’s. One cos-player got her attention, it was a character who had quite an impact on her life. There before her, in a fairly accurate costume, was Saw-Man. She instantly zoned out while watching the lead villain from Texas Chainsaw Massacre , not hearing anything around her.

“I said, are you supposed to be Freddy Krueger?” A condescending voice snapped her back to the theater, where in front of her stood a bald obese man with his own chocolate stained unbuttoned S-mart shirt staring at her. Through his thick glasses his eyes looked her over disapprovingly. “Freddy Krueger is supposed to be jacked!” Stella looked down, her eyes avoiding the fanboy and focused on her own slim figure.

Jonathan came to her side and interjected. “Hey, what movie was that where Ash had a giant beer gut?” he quipped, pointing to the man’s belly. Stella let out a small chuckle but still avoided eye contact.

“Whatever.” the man said, walking away dismissively.

“Don’t let that asshole bother you.” Stella heard another male voice say. “You look great!”

“Thanks.” Stella said as her gaze moved upward away from the floor where she saw another large but more fit man with short peroxide blonde hair.

“But I have to tell you something.” the man said. “The Devil wants his rematch.”

The best of the Devil cos-players lumbered towards her. His claws extended outwards, and his fang filled jaw hissed at Stella who stood motionless. She wasn’t scared, she was amazed. The level of detail in this costume was awe inspiring. She couldn’t even dream of being talented enough to make something like this. “Do you mind if I get a picture with you?” The Devil cos-player asked.

“That’d be awesome.” Jonathan answered for her as he took his own camera out of his backpack. The two horror villains faced off in the theater lobby. Stella held up her pretend bladed glove, but her face was blank, her makeup simply hung expressionless on her face.

After a snap of the camera Jonathan interjected. “Come on Stella show some ferocity. You’re the stuff of nightmares!” he said standing next to her mimicking her own pose as he coached. “Here, like this.” Jonathan hissed and glared at the devil with a fierce stare.

Stella’s lips parted, her teeth slightly protruded foreword as she posed for another picture.

“That’s better, now put some snarl into it!” Jonathan said stepping away.

Stella’s lips slid further apart, her eyes widened and her arms tensed as her gloved hand remained pointed to her fictional opponent. Out of the corner of her eye she could see she’d drawn some attention. Other people stopped and were taking pictures of her. Among the picture takers she could see that obnoxious fanboy walking away. It was then that, somewhere within her, an intensity emerged. Feelings long smothered, shamed and shunned, rose from her within her guts, up through her lungs and out of her vocal cords. From her lips sprung horrifying hiss that scared the Devil himself.

“Beautiful baby beautiful.” Jonathan clapped in approval. Stella’s gloved hand shook as it returned to her side as she wondered if those around her were as startled as she was of what had just come out of her.

“Thanks a million.” The older man said. The lobby lights flashed indicating the real show was about to begin. Turning to Jonathan the older man asked the three co-splayers, “Mind if I get a quick one with the three of you?”

Stella’s hands were still shaking, but she managed a deep relaxing breath as she felt Jonathan place his arm around her. The Devil stood happily to her side, as there would be no posing for this photo. The three cos-players smiled as if the characters they portrayed were all best friends.

As the theater grew dark the first trailer began. The lullaby “Hush Little Baby Don’t Say a Word” was softy sung by an older woman as the audience witnessed scenes of a desolate landscape. “What is this?” Jonathan asked. Once that whirring sound effect hit, Stella, as well as others in the audience, knew instantly. “Every Legend,” the chalk white text read on the screen followed by shots of R. Lee Ermey of ‘Full Metal Jacket’ fame playing the patriarch of a family of maniacs. ‘has a beginning.’ The text concluded, as a group of young people are dispatched while cries of terror came from both the silver screen and the in theater audience.

“It’s Chainsaw.” Stella answered before the logo emblazoned the screen. Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning was a prequel to the 2003 remake of the cult 70’s hit. This franchise was all too familiar to Stella, as it accidentally played a crucial role in the young girl’s life.

Once the feature presentation began, the crowd cheered wildly at the title screen. Stella had never experienced theater goers cheering for a movie before. Looking around at the enthusiastic fans, she saw that older man sitting with his Devil costumed friend. The cos-player clapped his clawed hands, but the other man sat still in his seat. In fact, as the light glowed on his face, it looked like he had shed a tear. “He must really be a big fan.” she thought to herself as the movie began.

After the show Stella sat in a comfortable chair. Her hands wrapped around the ceramic mug as she felt the heat from the java in her hands. A few bookshelves and paintings covered the walls. Stella hadn’t been to the Emporium before, but Jonathan seemed familiar with the place. The staff knew him when he walked in, and thought nothing of his shotgun arm prop, never mind his date walking in looking like a burn victim.

“That was so cool when Freddy used the Necronomicon to bring back the past Friday the 13th victims as Deadites.” Stella agreed with her date as she sipped her steaming drink. Jonathan then asked, “Did you like it?”

“Yeah, it was awesome.”

“Think they’ll do another one?” Jonathan asked before sipping his own drink.

“I don’t know. It’d be cool if they did.”

“Yeah, lots of crossover films coming out.” Jonathan began to prattle on again. “Last year was Aliens vs Predator. Tonight was Freddy, the Devil and Ash, next year is Helloween.” Smirking he then asked, “Hey what are you doing next year? Would you want to go see that one with me?”

Stella grinned at Jonathan as she detected zero sarcasm in his question. “Well, I don’t know, let me check my calendar.” she motioned with her hands, mimicking opening an imaginary date book. “Helloween,” she asked, “don’t you mean Halloween?”

“No, Helloween. That will be a crossover between Hellraiser and Halloween.” Jonathan explained. “The cool thing about this is they’re bringing back Michael Meyers from the first two Halloweens.” Jonathan’s eyes then diverted upwards, he always looked like his mind was going a mile a minute. “I wonder if they’ll bring any other characters from the rest of the series.” He thought out loud. After Halloween II, series creator John Carpenter turned the franchise into an anthology, with each subsequent entry standing on its own. “The Wraith from part four would be interesting to see, so would the Werewolf from part six. I don’t know if Halloween H20 would fit though.” He then mimicked the impossibly deep voice of Sylvester Stallone, the washed up 80’s actor who starred in the 1998 Halloween entry in a desperate attempt to resurrect his career. “We’ll tear your soul apart!” Stella laughed again as Jonathan recited the famous line from the first Hellraiser in an 80’s action hero voice. Finally turning his attention back to his date, he asked “Are you a fan of the series?”

“Not so into Hellraiser.” Stella said, then, without thinking, she went on to say, “My sister and I went to see H20.”

“Oh, you have a sister.” Jonathan asked, “What is she doing?”

His face then grew puzzled by the awkward silence. It finally ended with, “My sister, um, uh, she died.”

“Oh, I’m so sorry.” Jonathan sounded genuinely upset to hear this. He looked almost panicked, as if he’d unwittingly lit a fire in the woods. Almost at a whisper he asked, “What happened?”

“It was a drunk driving accident.” Stella revealed. “She got in a car with her drunk boyfriend, so…” finishing her story with a simple shrug of her shoulders.

“That’s terrible.”

In that moment he looked like he needed more comforting than she did as she reached across the table to squeeze his hand. “Thanks.” she said. It felt good holding his hand, his skin was warm and comforting.

Pulling her hand back she heard Jonathan say, “Well don’t worry, I don’t drink and drive, in fact I don’t even drink!”

“Oh, so we’re not going to the frat party after this?” Now, for the first time the whole evening, Jonathan was at a loss for words.

“I’m just kidding,” Stella laughed like she hadn’t laughed in a long time, “I don’t drink either!”

Jonathan himself laughed a sigh of relief as he held up his cup of mocha boasting, “Alright then, well, to not drinking!”

“To not drinking!” She toasted him back.

After they both took another sip of their beverages Jonathan looked around at the surrounding bookshelves and suggested “Well, since we’re not getting black out drunk tonight, want to look at some books?”

As they browsed, Stella saw both old and new books resting on the wooden bookcases. “Ever go to North Carolina?” It seemed like such a random question, but that didn’t surprise Stella at this point. She looked to see Jonathan in the travel section looking at a title that read ‘Islands at the Edge of Time.’ Jonathan explained, “I went their with my cousins one summer. This guy wrote a book about the islands on the outer banks that way. Cool stuff.”

Stella turned back to the shelf in front of her to find an old beat-up paperback. Movie Monsters by Alan Ormsby had the image of Frankenstein and the Wolfman on its blue cover. It was a book for kids, but as she thumbed through it with her left hand, she was curious to find a few pages covering monster makeup.

“Oh, I heard about this book.” Jonathan sounded really excited and as Stella turned to find him in front of the New Release shelf. The book he held bore an image of Saw-man, and the title, emblazoned in big white letters read ‘Psycho: A Tale of, Madness, Murder, and the Disappearance of George Kohler.’

Holding the hardback up, Jonathan said, “This guy directed that other Chainsaw movie.”

Noticing the subtitle, ‘the Disappearance of George Kohler, she wondered, “Oh, what happened to him?”

“Who knows.” Jonathan said as he placed the book back on the shelf. “I guess that’s what the book’s about.”

Stella immediately snatched the book back off the shelf. Removing her prop glove and placing it in her coat pocket, her fingers quickly perused the pages. She didn’t notice Jonathan wander over to the thriller section. She didn’t see him point to a few hardcovers, and only half heard him as he asked, “Ever read Robert Bloch?” Stella was too focused on the tome in front of her to answer, but Jonathan added regardless. “He was one of my favorites. Did you know he went to high school right here in Milwaukee?”

Stella hadn’t even heard the question as she closed the book and stared at its cover price. “Tell you what,” she now heard Johnathan say, “I’ll buy that for you, and you tell me where George is.”

“Really?” She looked up to his eyes as she asked.

“Sure, save’s me the trouble of reading it myself. “ He then gave that odd chuckle she’d already got used to hearing. “Besides,” Jonathan boasted as he pulled a small business card from his wallet. “I get the membership discount.” He then made a clicking sound with his mouth and winked at her.

Stella burst into laughter at Jonathan’s mannerisms. “You’re adorable.” she said as she placed the book into his hands.

On the bus back to campus, Stella clung to the Emporium bag in her hand, anxious to read her newly owned book. Looking out the window she noticed a few familiar superhero logos, along with some she was not as familiar with.

“Ever read comics?” Stella wondered how many girls Jonathan asked that question too. She also wondered how many of them said ‘yes’. “No, not really.” She answered as she remembered her friend Megan. ‘She would have liked a store like that’, she thought to herself as she added. “I knew a girl in high school that liked them. I liked the X-men movies, those were cool.”

“Awesome, well if you ever want to check out some comics. I’ll take you there sometime.”

“Um, ok.” she said, looking back down at her bag.

 Soon their stop came. The pair got off the bus and Jonathan walked her to the Two50Two building and said, “Well, I got an all day shift tomorrow so I’m gonna drop you off here, OK?”

Stella shook her head ‘yes’ thinking to herself how she wished this night would never end. Jonathan then told her, “I had a really good time tonight.”

Earlier in the evening, when Stella stood at this same spot, she was unsure how this evening would be. She wasn’t sure if going out in this costume to meet this guy was even a good idea. Now she stood in front of her new home, having had one of the best nights she could ever remember. “I did too.” She told Jonathan. “Thanks.”

Jonathan slowly reached his arms towards her, his fingers slightly trembled as they brushed her hair. Throughout the evening Jonathan projected an aura of confidence, but there periodic moments like this where he was exposed as being just as nervous as she was. Stella brought herself closer to him as their arms gently wrapped around each other. She felt his head turn towards her. Through her makeup she could still feel his lips brush her cheek, where she heard the gentle sound of his lips part. She couldn’t wait anymore, bringing her mouth to his she heard him inhale, as if he were honestly surprised to be getting kissed himself. His lips were warm and moist, and just for a moment she felt the tip of her tongue on his. It was simple, magical, and perfect just the way it was.

The evening ended with her whisper. “Good night.”