Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition

Chapter 136: Story 136: The Harvest Scarecrow



Every autumn, the small town of Marigold prepared for the annual harvest festival. The fields would glow golden, heavy with pumpkins, corn, and other bounties of the season. But along with the crops, another legend grew—one far darker. It was the tale of **Jack the Scarecrow**, a menacing figure that watched over the fields year after year.

Jack wasn't like any ordinary scarecrow. With a wicked, grinning pumpkin for a head, its sharp-toothed smile gleamed beneath a wide-brimmed hat. Its body, made of brittle straw and dressed in ragged clothes, sat eerily still in the fields, hands clasped over a crooked staff. But his eyes—dark, hollow sockets—seemed to follow anyone who dared approach too closely.

The elders told stories to warn the children. "Don't go near Jack after dark," they'd say. "For when the moon is full, Jack awakens, and he seeks more than crows to scare away."

The warning was enough for most. But one year, a group of teenagers, brimming with arrogance and thrill-seeking, decided to test the myth. They dared each other to visit the pumpkin field late one night. The air was cool, the sky clear, and a full moon hung low in the sky, casting an eerie glow over the rows of pumpkins.

Standing at the edge of the field, they laughed nervously, teasing one another. But as they walked deeper into the field, closer to Jack's post, the air seemed to thicken. The wind stopped, leaving the night unsettlingly silent. The only sound was the crunch of dry corn stalks beneath their feet.

"Look at him," one of them whispered, pointing to the scarecrow. Jack sat, as always, his unsettling grin stretching across his face. "Just a dumb scarecrow."

With a chuckle, one of the teens picked up a rock and lobbed it at Jack. It bounced off harmlessly, but the moment it hit, a gust of wind swept through the field, making the cornstalks sway violently. The group froze, their laughter fading.

"Let's go," one of them urged, suddenly uneasy. But the others refused to leave. Emboldened, another boy stepped closer, daring to touch the scarecrow. His fingers brushed against the rough fabric of Jack's coat—and then the scarecrow moved.

A sudden creak echoed through the field as Jack's head tilted ever so slightly, his hollow eyes now fixed on the boy. The teen stumbled backward, his heart racing. "Did...did you see that?"

Before anyone could answer, Jack rose slowly from his perch. His movements were unnatural, jerky, as if unused to motion. The teens screamed and bolted, running back through the field, pumpkins and vines tripping them as they fled. But Jack moved faster than any of them could have imagined.

His long, spindly arms stretched out, fingers made of dried straw that crackled as they reached for the fleeing children.

One by one, they vanished into the dark fields, their screams swallowed by the wind. The next morning, the townspeople found the pumpkins smashed and the cornstalks flattened as if something heavy had dragged through them. But of the teenagers, there was no sign. All that remained was Jack, sitting back on his post, his wicked grin even wider than before.

The legend of Jack the Scarecrow grew darker that year, and the warnings became sterner. The fields were never the same, and every harvest, the people of Marigold would keep their distance from the scarecrow. No one ever dared to test Jack's patience again, for the townsfolk knew that on those moonlit autumn nights, Jack waited—and he was always watching.


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