There are stories all around the world about twins who can sense when the other is hurting. What if there was a real transfer of pain? This short story is about one twin who felt all of the pain and the other who never felt pain. The consequences are tragic.
Penelope Wicket believes that people should follow the rules. This is the fourth story in the Penelope Wicket series where she metes out her own brand of justice.
Meet Penelope Wicket, the sociopath next door. This is the third story in this series in which Penelope metes out her own brand of justice. This time she takes revenge on a common criminal in an unusual way.
Meet Penelope Wicket, the sociopath next door. This is the second story in the Penelope Wicket series in which she metes out justice in her own very special way. This time, at a garden center in Omaha, Nebraska.
Mrs. Wicket is the sociopath next door that you hope to never cross. This sixth story in the series, is one of greed and nepotism found in a Homeowners Association, and the fatal justice that Penelope deals out.
In The Sinner’s Wealth, the fifth story in this series, Penelope visits her only living relative, a cousin, in a nursing home in Denver. While there, she learns about a thief on the staff as well as the personal wealth of her cousin.
Sociopaths are everywhere in the world. Even right next door.
Penelope Wicket has lived all of her life in the small, fictional town of Pierson, Colorado near the Nebraska border. Penelope knows how to do things correctly and she does not tolerate incompetence or laziness in others. This intolerance takes a deadly turn and we see here the beginning of Penelope’s criminal career.
Mrs. Wicket is the sociopath next door that you hope to never cross.
In this seventh and last (?) tale, Penelope Wicket has finally gone past dealing out punishment for rules violations and is acting now merely in her own best interests. But she forgets, other people may be doing the same.
Price:
$0.99 USD.
Words: 2,500.
Language:
English.
Published: June 10, 2021
by
Moonlit Skies.
Categories:
Fiction » Horror » General
There are stories everywhere of children saying things that make them sound like little adults, or even talking about things of which they have no memory.
What if the children are remembering things that happened to them in a past life?
In this short story, one man is terrified that this might be true.