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Tales from the Dark Lemmy
Tales from the Dark Lemmy

Welcome to this pulp horror writing space, where I’m bringing back the gritty, wild days of pulpy horror and bizarre storytelling!

This is the place for short, sharp stories that grip you with suspense, creep you out, and keep you scrolling down. Please try to keep the word count under 4,000 words.

Whether it’s creatures from the shadows, twisted revenge, or strange, unexplainable horrors, this is your home for bite-sized, fast-paced fiction.

Embrace the weird, the terrifying, and the utterly bizarre—just like the good old days.

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3 mo. ago

  • The Lady of Endless White

  • The Beholden of the Shifting Vastness

    The Beholden of the Shifting Vastness

    written by Universal Monk

    Part 1

    Evelyn strode into the archive room, a hushed thrill tingling down her spine. She’d come all the way from BYU-Idaho for this, having caught wind of a library of lost LDS manuscripts buried deep in the sprawling basement of a university library in Utah.

    She would never have known if it hadn’t been for a cryptic post she stumbled across late one night on Lemmy. Tagged by a user long since deleted, the post whispered of "forbidden revelations," secrets buried in the deepest corners of the forgotten library. Hidden manuscripts, it hinted, were waiting to be found—relics of visions too dark to ever reach the public eye.

    According to the user, these weren’t ordinary manuscripts—they were penned by early Mormon settlers, writings that delved into ancient rites and visions too unsettling for the light of day. The words seemed to pulse on her laptop screen, tugging at Evelyn with a strange allure, promising se

  • The Grasp of Midnight's Thorn

    The Grasp of Midnight's Thorn

    written by Universal Monk

    PART ONE

    Blood trickled from the deep gash on his hand, dark crimson drops seeping into the soil beneath his prized rose bushes. The rich earth drank it up greedily, staining the roots of the thorny plants. Derek Ahmaogak winced, disgusted by the sharp sting that pulsed through his fingers. His small spade slipped from his grasp, falling uselessly to the ground. He wiped the sweat and dirt from his face with a grimy sleeve, the scent of iron clinging to his skin.

    Being a native from the Inupiat tribe, he often felt the weight of his ancestral roots pressing him to master the land, to connect with it in the way his forebears had, but gardening had proven a fickle and unforgiving task.

    The sky above had turned a bruised purple, the sun sinking low on the horizon, casting an eerie glow that made the world seem as though it were on the verge of nightfall. Shadows stretched long and jagged across his garden as Derek sig

  • The Spores of Lemmoriatic

    The Spores of Lemmoriatic

    Written by Universal Monk

    Feelings of Grandeur and Superiority Aroused

    “What the fuck?” Pip Johnson yelled, his voice echoing off the cluttered walls of his room. He was fed up. Exhausted from the endless back-and-forth. His fingers hovered above the keyboard, hesitating for just a moment before he slammed the laptop shut with a grunt.

    Lemmy was supposed to be fun, a place to toss around ideas, maybe stir up a little debate.

    But lately, his favorite community had been hijacked by propaganda from some troll—had to be an incel. The guy constantly posted made-up crap, and what really set Pip off was discovering the troll had started a whole community about "transracial identity."

    That was it. That was too far. This internet troll had finally pushed him over the edge.

    “Bullshit!” Pip spat, standing up and stretching his stiff limbs. “Pure fucking bullshit. Dude’s probably some rich asshole jerkin’ off to the idea of Trump being president.”

    The di

  • The Cold Hill (A Drabble)

    Drabble–a short work of fiction exactly one hundred words in length. Written by Universal Monk.

    The Cold Hill

    In 1864, upon a nameless knoll, a man quickly slit his wrists and fell.

    One last murder.

    He could hear the dark red snow under him shift and creak, surrendering to warmth.

    Tears blurred his vision as he gazed skyward—inky clouds cradling a crescent moon.

    He recalled his grandmother, her tattered Book of Mormon a warm solace. Soon, he’d finally discover if divine forgiveness really awaited.

    At dawn, Confederate soldiers stumbled upon his frigid form.

    “Press on, men,” said the captain. “I know this man to be a coward. Take his gun and let the animals have at him.”

    END

  • The Man Who Hunted Sea Lions on Lemmy

    The Man Who Hunted Sea Lions on Lemmy

    written by Universal Monk

    The cold night wind swept in from the north, sharp and biting, sending ripples across the dark water. Each wave lapped softly against the side of the boat, a rhythmic, almost soothing sound in the otherwise eerie silence.

    In the center of the boat, a man sat hunched over, his shoulders tense. His fingers raked through his thinning disheveled hair as he muttered to himself, his voice barely rising above the whispering wind, the words tangled in frustration and something darker.

    “I’m gonna do it," he said. "Whatever it takes. I’m gonna get that fucking troll! All he does is fucking sealion and bullshit 24 hours a day. Trying to trick everyone. Calling himself a Socialist Mormon Satanist. Bullshit! It’s obvious he works for Russia. And the fucking mods don’t do anything about it. Fuck that! I’ll do something about it!”

    A piercing cry tore through the heavy night, sharp and unnatural, like something dying just out o

  • Prophet of the Venus Maw

    Prophet of the Venus Maw

    written by Universal Monk

    PART ONE John snapped the laptop shut with a grunt, rubbing the bridge of his nose between his thumb and forefinger. He was sick of it. Lemmy was supposed to be a place for discussion, but lately, no matter what he typed, the responses were always the same: criticism, accusations, harassment. Just because he didn’t fall in line with the majority’s narrow view, they jumped on him like vultures.

    He had tried to start a new community on the site, one dedicated to his passion—the study of plants. It should’ve been a quiet, focused space for discussion and discovery. But of course, others from a different corner of the site showed up, harassing him, accusing him of spreading propaganda. Propaganda?! About plants? The very thought was absurd. What kind of twisted logic could turn his harmless interest in nature into some kind of ideological battle?

    But whatever. In the grand scheme of things, it didn’t matter. He had more imp

  • Zarahemla (Flash Fiction Horror)

    Zarahemla

    Flash fiction horror written by Universal Monk.

    The wind howled across the barren Colorado plains, biting at the man’s cheeks as he trudged through the cold, his breath coming out in ragged puffs. The old Zarahemla mansion loomed ahead, barely visible through the swirling mist, a silhouette against the starless sky.

    Its towering stone walls were dark and cold, like the plains themselves, abandoned by time and cursed by memory.

    “This is it,” he muttered to himself, gripping the printed directions tightly. It wasn’t on any GPS. No, this location had to be mapped out. Exactly. His fingers trembled, but not just from the cold. “Finally. After all this time. I can’t believe it!”

    He had found the directions deep within a secret Lemmy community—one dedicated to the forgotten art of Dark Mormon magick. He had lurked there for months, devouring every post, deciphering each cryptic clue, waiting for this moment.

    Zarahemla.

    The mansion where it all began, where the ancient

  • Whispers from the Elder’s Garden (A Micro Macabre Chronicle)

    Whispers from the Elder’s Garden

    (A Micro Macabre Chronicle is a bizarre, unsettling tale, crafted in exactly 200 words. Written by @UniversalMonk)

    The Abernathy estate loomed at the edge of town, overgrown with wild, unnatural flora.

    Whispers claimed that long ago, a sect known as the Dark Mormons had twisted the land with forbidden rituals, making the garden a place where strange things thrived. The townsfolk avoided it, but curiosity clawed at me.

    One evening, against my better judgment, I ventured closer, peering through the rusted iron gate.

    The garden was alive, its plants twisted in grotesque forms, black petals sickly glistening under the pale moonlight. A thick, unnatural mist clung to the ground, swirling around the plants.

    As I watched in horrified fascination, one of the vines twitched, seeming to pulse with life.

    Suddenly, a figure emerged from the mist—cloaked in shadows, silent, yet undeniably beckoning me forward. I fled, heart racing, desperate to escape.