By Jim Doran
“If we don’t pull over right now, I’m going to release the floodgates all over your car,” Gavin growled. He knocked the panel of the car door with the edge of his fist. “And I mean right now!”
I pulled over to the shoulder, next to a field filled with row upon row of wheat. Before I had a chance to stop, Gavin swung open the car door and jumped out. Leaping over the ditch that marked the boundary of a farmer’s property, he raced into the golden wheat stalks as tall as his head, his long black hair stringing behind him, and disappeared from sight.
Felicity, seated next to me, rubbed her eyes. “He’s going to pee on the wheat. Fantastic.”
AnnaMarie giggled from the back seat. “When you gotta go…”
Felicity stared into the field. “He could’ve gone behind the car.”
“Peace, Fel,” I said, using my nasally Sir Buckingham the Gnome voice. “Animals unload in fields all the time.”
AnnaMarie made a gagging sound. “Thanks for the image, Marty.”
We were ninety minutes away from GenCon, and Felicity and Gavin hadn’t had a single argument for our entire five hours in the car. I wasn’t about to let a pitstop turn into our usual gaming night bicker-thon. Felicity didn’t want to be late to the gaming convention, and I thought I knew why. She wanted to connect with another group early on and leave us.
Felicity leaned her forehead against the glass, then pulled it back. “What is that?”
AnnaMarie scooted to the passenger side of the car. “It’s a scarecrow, Fel.”
Felicity squinted. “Something’s around its neck.”
She rolled down the window and produced her phone. Holding it outside, she trained it on the straw man and pinched the viewing screen to enlarge the picture. “It’s a sign.”
AnnaMarie giggled. “A scarecrow for intelligent crows.”
In my Vlad the Rogue voice, I said, “Hopefully, it doesn’t say trespassers will be shot.”
Felicity shook her head. “It says ‘Beware.’”
“Beware? Beware of what?” I asked.
Felicity scratched her ear. “You tell me. Beware of peeing on my field, maybe.”
“Where’s Gavin anyway?” asked AnnaMarie. “Why isn’t he back?”
I glanced around. The field looked pristine, untouched. No trace of Gavin anywhere. Odd. In his haste, I thought he had trampled a stalk or two. No matter, he was taking forever. I honked the horn twice and then spoke dramatically in my dark mage voice. “Perhaps the scarecrow killed him.”
Felicity pointed out the window. “Except the scarecrow hasn’t moved.”
“It’s the scarecrow’s spirit,” I answered. “There’s never been a definitive horror movie on scarecrows. Just a bunch of lousy B movies. We don’t know exactly what powers a scarecrow monster may have.”
“Easy to hit. Must dismember its arms to defeat.” Felicity quoted our favorite game’s rules. “Often has five life points.”
AnnaMarie reached for the door. “Gavin’s so stupid. I’ll go get him. Hopefully, he’s zipped up by now.”
My Sir Ghastly voice said, “Failed his saving throw again. Go rescue him, AnnaMarie.”
AnnaMarie left the car, crossed over the ditch, and walked into the wheat field. The yellow stalks stood tall, similar to dominoes carefully placed in formation. AnnaMarie entered the wheat with her hands cupped around her mouth. “Gavin.” The wheat swallowed her after a few steps in.
Felicity bit her lip. “Something seems off.”
“Other than the cliché horror scene of people going off and not coming back? And a living scarecrow that’s killing our friends while we make jokes?”
“The wheat,” Felicity said. “We’ve passed wheat before, but it wasn’t like the wheat in this field.” She grabbed her phone a second time.
I didn’t care. I only wanted to get to Indianapolis and out of this roasting August heat. “Wheat is wheat, Fel. And possibly the most boring of all topics.”
“Says here wheat leaves are called blades,” said Felicity.
Imitating Maximus Boredom, I replied, “Fascinating.”
Felicity held up her phone. “Look. Wheat grows to about four feet tall.”
“So?”
“So, Gavin is five foot ten. We should be able to see him easily. AnnaMarie’s five five.” She gestured to the field. “The wheat out there is at least six feet tall. It’s not corn, Marty.”
The word “beware” came to mind again, and I regretted my earlier wisecracks. I leaned on my horn, letting it blast long enough to signal my frustration. Nothing.
I cursed and threw the keys to Felicity. “Call the cops if I don’t come back in a couple of minutes.”
“No time for heroics, Marty.”
This time, I used my Super Guy voice. “Not to worry. I will turn tail as soon as possible.”
I exited the car and jumped the channel. I stopped before the abnormally tall wheat and gave Felicity a thumbs-up, then entered between the stalks. “AnnaMarie? Gavin? This is no time to be playing Children of the Corn.”
I advanced far enough into the field to be out of Felicity’s sight. Gavin probably decided to play a joke and brought AnnaMarie in on it, trying to get Felicity’s goat. “Where are—”
I pushed aside a column of wheat, then stopped. Sharp pain. I withdrew my hand, surprised at the tiny line of blood across my palm. Without warning, a stalk of wheat slapped one of its leaves across my mouth from behind, flatwise, gagging me. What kind of crazy wheat was this? Before I could react, something tugged at my feet and I lost balance, falling backward. I tried crying out, but the blade against my mouth tightened and my scream became a grunt.
Who?
No one but the wheat.
Another stalk bent down and positioned the edge of one blade at my throat. With the other, it sliced the air in rapid sawing motions above me, then lowered.


(17 votes, average: 2.65 out of 3)


Impressive to be able to quickly develop the personalities of the characters in such a short piece, not to mention the chemistry among the group. The author “sets the hook” early, leaving the reader wanting more as the story quickly unfolds, which is not without its challenges given the brevity of this piece. If the “wheat creature” had a name, might it be “Herman?” As in “Pee Wheat Herman?” :-)
Thank you. I worked hard on giving the four characters a unique voice.
*gulps* I may never look at wheat the same way again… What a spine-tingling tale! Fantastic job!
Thank you. On behalf of all scary wheat, we’re happy you enjoyed the story.
Certainly kept my interest.
Thank you.
I knew gluten was bad for you but it seems wheat is taking the fight against mankind to the next level! Cool story.
Thank you so much.
Eeep!! I love scary scarecrow (SMALL SPACES is one of my favorite spooky MG novels), but I’ve never thought to be afraid of the stalks themselves! Wonderfully done, Jim! And I loved our narrator’s different voices – that added a fun layer of charm to this terrifying tale. :)
Thank you so much! I’m so glad you liked it.
It’s not easy to balance mystery, menace, and humor, especially in so few words but this story succeeds admirably!
Thanks brother and fellow author.
Ok what is ne,xt? I would like to know what is going to happen next. Very engaging and a lot of suspense. Very good job at getting your attention.
You can make up an ending for yourself based on how you want it to turn out. Thank you.
Fun read, Jim. Loved how quickly we got a sense of your characters.
Thanks so much, Amanda!
Scary stuff, and I like the originality.
Thank you.
Great job! Looks like all there skill points were useless in the end lol. Don’t mess with the wheat! What a sneaky killer! Loved the short story Jim!
Thank you. Yes, Marty’s voice skills didn’t help him this time.
highly creative story plot, and great characters.
Thank you so much. Appreciate the feedback.
Wow! Love it. I want more. Keep writing
As. long as you (and everyone) keeps reading, I’ll keep writing.
Hmm. Beware the wheat, for sure. Now I know why I’ve always hated scarecrows.
I agree. Scarecrows are creepy. Thank you for reading.
Great Story – loved the dialogue! Kinda wished they would’ve survived to hear more :).
I enjoyed these four characters too. They were fun to create.
Good job keeping my attention, Would like to have more to find out what happened. Kept me reading and then wanting more. Good job, Jim. Is there a sequel?
Thank you. No sequel written. Not yet, anyway.
Such a classic thriller! I enjoyed this. It really worked in the space of 1000 words!
Thank you. It’s an honor to be on Havok in a week of such great stories.
Bravo. I love it. Can’t wait to read more.
Thank you so much.
Wow! Absolutely awesome!
I’m very glad you enjoyed it.
Excellent read, I was frustrated when it ended, we want more!
PS – I am never going near a wheat field, EVER!
I hope you’re not a farmer. Thanks for reading!
Oh my, what an ENDING. I wasn’t expecting that at all–the voices in this story were AMAZING.
I’m so glad you enjoyed it. I can hear the excitement in your response.
Nice! I like the detail about the height of the wheat. I’m a farmer and noticed that immediately, lol! The characters felt real, even in the short amount of time I spent with them. Great job!
Thank you so much. I’m glad my little wheat detail was caught by you (and others).
Spooky! Really scary. Some situations–like this–don’t allow for any exit. Eeek! Very well written. They were warned.
Thank you so much. Yes, the warning! They come from unlikely sources. Nonetheless, we shouldn’t dismiss them.
More! I want more! I got to smell a great story and now want to eat the whole meal. Bring on the next chapter!!
Thank you so much! But this is all there is (da-dum)!
Wow, chilling!
Thank you so much.
Good story! You did a great job of increasing the tension until the end.
Thank you.
A great read! It only takes a few sentences to feel like you know all about each character. A very unique and terrifying ending!
I’m glad you enjoyed it.
That was scary. Good job and I liked the game references.
The game references were a blast to create.
Nice beginning, Jim. You definitely captured my attention. Wondering what happens after the commercial break. At least I know Marty lives; otherwise, who would’ve written the story. Looking forward to the continuation of the story…
That story was dark and will surely give me nightmares. I like your stories! -Z
Spooky story. I am a gamer so I especially loved the gamer details. -D
I drive rural roads from Kansas almost to the Oklahoma border and back a few times a month for work, thanks to your story, I will never look at the endless miles of fields the same way again. Loved the story!
And so begins/end the adventure. Amazing how quickly you develop the relatable characters. I was getting sucked in and then …. Suspenseful. Loved it.
Yikes. That’s one place I wouldn’t want to go. I loved the atmosphere. It was very spooky. And the characters all felt like real people :D
Thank you for reading. Not many of my creepy stories are set in the middle of the day so I’m glad it worked for you.
Phew! That was an interesting story! The scarecrow was a nice way of throwing off the horror-expectations
The story started with the scarecrow in a field with a sign and evolved from there. Thank you.
That feeling of dread gradually crept in until the end. I loved this one!
Thank you for reading. Havok editor Odile really helped me keep the tension high.
The end was totally unexpected. I was waiting for the scarecrow to come to life. Thanks for the scare.
I’m going to think about this the next time I’m in Indiana!! The characters totally sound like people I would meet at Gen Con (which I miss so much!!). For a group well-versed in both RPG tactics and horror movie tropes, I can’t believe they forgot the first rule: Don’t split the party!
Well that’s scary. Watch out for wheat that is taller than it should be!
Wow—this story’s incredible! Each character felt so real, and I’m amazed at how quickly it pulled me in. Love it!