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@thenoctrium
Horror & Fantasy Author
Do you enjoy my ghost stories? You can follow my author blog for more writing-focused posts!

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To celebrate the recent release of Pages of Dust 4, the rest of the series is on sale for just $1.99 each on Kindle! Nowâs the perfect time to get the complete collection! https://amzn.to/2r95YGb
In the dusty corners of reality, where the darkness refuses to be banished, nightmares lurk. They wait for the curious and unfortunate to stumble out of the well-lit paths of life. Beware, for in opening this book, you part the veil and slip into the realm of the dead. An anthology of ghost stories by James Colton, plus one by his wife Shannen L. Colton.
The Kindle edition of Pages of Dust: Volume 4, packed with 20 terrifying tales from The Noctrium, is available for preorder! https://amzn.to/2QgzRAz
All editions, ebook and paperback, will be released on October 1.
Safe and Dry
Tommy Nier wakes thinking itâs still the middle of the night. If heâd look at the clock above his dresser across the room, heâd know it was 6:59 a.m., but itâs been raining all night and the stormclouds have yet to disperse. The sky outside his window is charcoal and the voice coming under his bedroom door sets his tiny heart pounding. Tommy canât make out words. Itâs just a stream of high-pitched, questioning tones, broken now and then by a listening silence, muffled by doors and carpet and walls until itâs like the house itself is sobbing.
Tommy climbs out of bed at 7:00 and creeps to the door. He pulls it open and steps out into the dark hallway. He sees his motherâs bedroom is open. Her voice, coming from somewhere else in the house, is clearer now, though Tommy still canât understand what sheâs saying. He starts his way down the hall, glancing into his motherâs empty room as he passes.
Her curtains are drawn, blocking even the dim, rainy light from the charcoal clouds, but the green of her alarm clock picks out highlights. The jagged outline of crumpled cloth. The pale crescent of a domed forehead.
Tommy scurries away with a gasp and comes to the stairs. Looking down, he can finally catch hints of language: ââŚsick jokeâŚwhoâs she?âŚIâm notâŚâ
The steps creak under Tommyâs weight, and the voice downstairs cuts off sharply. Thereâs a moment of breathless silence, then rapid footsteps. Nancy Nier appears on the landing below. Mother and son stare at each other in the dark; Nancyâs eyes sit in red sockets. âGo back to bed, Tommy,â she says.
âWhoâs on the phone?â Tommy asks, eyeing the device in his motherâs hand.
âGo back to bed,â Nancy repeats. She vanishes toward the kitchen.
Tommy hovers over the stairwell for a minute, listening as the conversation downstairs resumes. He shivers, then turns back toward his bedroom at the far end of the hall. Heâs halfway there when he freezes. His heart thuds to an absolute stop inside his chest. He feels like every drop of fluid in his body has chilled and drained into the soles of his feet.
Something lays across the floor, protruding from the darkness of his motherâs room. A white shape made gray by the darkness. A small arm that tapers quickly to a tiny hand with five baby fingers.
Tommy sways on the carpet for a second, feeling himself meld with the shadows around him. All the while his eyes remain open and glued to that still shape reaching out of his motherâs bedroom. When he finally draws breath, he screams.
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The Burden, Oil rough, Charcoal rough
2015
Oil on canvas, Charcoal on paper
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Him
By Shannen L. Colton
Iâll never forget the first time I saw him.
I say him, but I donât really know. He resembles a man, but Iâve never seen his face. The first time I saw him, I thought I must have seen wrong. My son was young, only five months old; taking care of a baby leaves one sleep deprived, and this would not have been my first nighttime hallucination while caring for him. Surely, then, it was just the car seat set against the wall beside the crib, with a shirt or a blanket thrown over it. That had to be it, or so I told myself.
But as I rocked with my son in the nursery chair, barely breathing in that dark room, I knew it wasnât a tired hallucination this time. I couldnât stir from it, couldnât blink it away.
It was a man, or something like a man, hunched over on the floor next to the crib. He stared down toward his knees with his head against the wall, and he didnât move.
Neither did I, aside from the gentle rocking motion that quickly becomes second nature to any new parent. I tried not to look at him, but inside I swelled with panic. I dared not make a sound; if I did, would he look? Would he turn toward me?
The thought was unbearable. When my son was fed and back to sleep, I left the room. Left him in the room with the other him. You might think me a terrible mother, but if youâd felt it, you would have left too. This man, this thingâŚto ignore it was the only thing to do.
The next morning he was gone. My son was fine. I didnât tell my husband. Heâd say I was too behind on sleep, too mentally exhausted from my five months of motherhood. Heâd tell me to see a doctor.
What new mom has time for that? And I knew it wouldnât help.
A few days later, I saw him again.
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The Bus
The town I grew up in could boast exactly one remarkable event. The accident of 2004. It resulted in the indefinite closure of Stover Road and a stricter screening process for new bus drivers.
No one ever lived on Stover Road, but it was a key stretch of pavement, linking our small town with the even smaller village of Buckhill. After the 2004 tragedy, I learned that the roadâs construction had caused a bit of a fuss with some of the older folks in the region. The few who were still alive in 2004 wasted no time in shouting âwe told you soâ loudly enough to convince the authorities. The resulting closure meant kids from Buckhill had to suffer a doubled commute time to and from school.
I never had to ride the bus. My mom was a bus driver, so Iâd just go to school with her in the dark hours of the morning and wait at the bus garage until the main building opened up. My mom didnât drive the Buckhill route, fortunately, but the accident still rattled her. It rattled a lot of people. I can only imagine what it was like in Buckhill. All those kids, just gone like that.
Because my mom was a bus driver, I knew a few things about school buses. Things that came up frequently in the aftermath of the accident. For instance, federal law requires the body of a bus be strong enough to support one and a half times the busâ weight, the idea being that itâll hold up in the case of a rollover or collision, preventing the kids inside from getting crushed.
Investigators determined that the bus hadnât been properly inspected. The closure of Stover Road spoke to how much faith our town put in the investigatorsâ opinions. Afterall, the bus hadnât rolled over, and there were no other vehicles it could have collided with. And no lack of inspection could explain what had happened to the missing rear half.
They set up orange and white barricades on either end of Stover Road. The pavement crumbled, and slowly succumbed to weeds. The forest through which the road ran closed in on either side and covered everything in fallen leaves. Years later, after the shock and mourning had passed, kids would dare each other to approach the barricade, to shout across it and listen for an answer. But not even the toughest kids would set foot onto that cracked and faded blacktop, nor dare their friends to try. It was an unspoken law that not even the most irreverent among us cared to violate.
There was some argument about what to do with the busâwhat was left of it, at least. Some parents wanted it destroyed, others wanted it preserved as a memorial. It sat behind the bus garage, at the very edge of school property, waiting to learn its fate. The debate went on for weeks, then gradually simmered away without any decision. And so the bus stayed there. The grass grew tall front of it, and the woods, which formed the back edge of the school grounds, reached out to claim it. Between the road and the bus, it was like nature was slowly erasing the tragedy from our history.
But you canât erase something like that. Not completely.
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Night Communion
It was some time past eleven, as far as he could guess, and Jacob was regretting the decision to ride through the night. Beside him, Phillip rode with his head bent against the wind, his dark riding cloak plastered with snow.
Theyâd both agreed to this plan, hoping to reunite with their families all the sooner. Jacob and Phillip were business partners, and the engagement from which they were returning had been a miserable one; all parties had left feeling either disappointed or cheated. Jacob and Phillip were encouraged only by the thought of their own comfortable beds, and any measure that returned them swifter to that reward seemed a good one.
But that had been in the early moments of dusk, before the sky had grown black with storm clouds. Now, as ice pelted his face and his horse staggered through snowdrifts, Jacob wished theyâd rented a room in the last town. It would have been worth delaying their homecoming by a few hours to avoid this blizzard.
The menâs spirits were low enough thanks to their stinging faces and numb fingers, but what really had them depressed was that, some time ago, it had become apparent that they were lost. Their road had been buried beneath the rising snow, and the horses must have veered off at some point. It was Phillip who first noted the unfamiliar surroundings. They had sought to regain their way, but only succeeded in becoming more lost. They passed through strange woods and vast fields, none of which they recognized. But what alternative had they? They couldnât very well stop and camp for the night; they and their horses would be frozen by morning. So they rode. Jacob could barely see his horseâs head in front of him, but still they rode.
Jacob firmly believed that things couldnât be worse. The thought had barely escaped his mind when he heard a CRACK. His horse lurched and Jacob leapt from the saddle as the animal toppled over. Phillip was doing the same, scrambling away from his steed as it kicked and screamed amidst a churning chaos of broken ice and black water. The men watched helplessly as their horses vanished beneath the surface of a hidden pond.
When the last echoes of the animalsâ cries had been swallowed by the water, Jacob asked, âWhat now?â His question was nearly lost beneath the roar of the snowstorm.
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