Carter and Abel

⌈Cartɘr & Abɘl—ruining witchɘs’ days sincɘ 629⌋

It’s a cute sign. Done in marker on cardboard, sure, rather than paint on wood, but there’s something almost charming about that to Arlene’s weary eyes.

Pity that building it’s affixed to is such a disaster.

Once it was a handsome little store, with a wide-windowed ground floor and a little first floor perched atop it like a cat curled atop a stove; once ivy climbed its facade and flowers blossomed in pots beneath its windows. It must have been adorable!

Read on … ( ~6 Min.)

7: We All Have Regrets

This is the conclusion to this story’s first arc. It will likely make no sense without the context of the previous stories. Start here.  


Arlene’s last customer of the day is uncomfortably prickly as Arlene looks her over. She’s healing up well: the only trace of the rod’s presence is a scattering of flowers rising up from beneath her flesh, their lines sketched in blisters and bruises and knotted scars.

Read on … ( ~3 Min.)

6: If Such Things Have Ends

“What was I?” Florence asks, the question bubbling up unbidden through her seed’s vestigial throat and out past teeth already well on their way to hatching. Up in the red sky above the little patio where she keeps that memory of her lesser self her hands flutter uncertainly.

It is not what she expected to ask the shining-blazing-sharp-painspitting thing which crawled into her and took away her toys.

She wanted to threaten it.

Read on … ( ~5 Min.)

5: Abstract War

Inside the building reeks of fresh death and fresher growth.

As Arlene creeps through it, guiding herself by apartment numbers and the scant surviving signage, she passes by windows dilated into misshapen staircases and beneath twitching masses of blue-white growths, dangling down from the high ceiling like tangled threads and greasy hair.

She sees no one, not in the oddly large lobby or the small apartment manager’s office or the little laundromat just beside it, but she feels eyes trying to pin her in place with every step.

Read on … ( ~9 Min.)

4: Delicious Morsels

Florence lies on her back, staring up towards the distant sky. A strand of drool drips from her slackening mouth.

Something is wrong.

She feels too much; distantly, indistinctly, like oil slowly dripping through gauze to infiltrate the wounds beneath, but FAR TOO MUCH.

A scream winds its way through the endless corridors of her throat and dies before it ever reaches her teeth—but her teeth are everywhere, aren’t they? Shot all through her body, running in tiled rings along hallways and across warm floors …

Read on … ( ~2 Min.)

3: It’s Probably Fine

Arlene only notices the absence when she glances at her week planner a day later, but as soon as she does she feels it like an aching, toothless socket yawning open in her mind. It’s been a busy week but that’s no excuse to forget, and really, why didn’t Florence come in?

Four days since the surgery, since she implanted that horrible dangerous thing in a woman who wanted nothing more than what it could offer her …

Read on … ( ~5 Min.)

2: The Soap-bubble Moons

Florence kept on looking at her arm on the drive home, glancing down or running her fingers along the carefully sutured line where Arlene had opened her up. And that place at the base of her palm, where her tendons curled into her hand—

“You doing okay, Flor?”

Thorn, sprawled out in the driver’s seat, their arm dangling out through an open window into the cool night air; body language as open as ever. A sharp contrast to the concern in their voice.

Read on … ( ~4 Min.)