“The Headless Hero of Hollow Bay”, an original short story in 7 chapters, blending comedy, mystery, and eerie heroism. Let me know what you think!
Chapter 1: Fog and Regulations
In the village of Hollow Bay, every sunrise was announced not with joy but with sirens and scrolls. The scrolls were thrown from drones (some of which occasionally dropped goats by mistake) and read:
“By Order of Lord Demetrius: Smile, or else.”
Demetrius, the ruler of Hollow Bay, was a towering, gray-bearded tyrant with the flexibility of a broomstick and the warmth of an icicle. He enforced laws like “No whistling after 3:02 PM” and “No buttering toast with the left hand.”
The citizens followed these commands with wide, fake grins and trembling hands.
Then, one Tuesday at precisely 3:03 PM—when a local baker dared to hum—the Headless Horseman returned.
He came with thunderous hooves, riding a massive jet-black horse named Muffin. His armor clanked, his cape whipped in the wind, and his lack of a head did nothing to diminish his commanding presence. No one knew where he came from or how he saw—but he definitely saw. And heard. And probably tasted things somehow.
That day, he stole no heads. He simply stole attention.
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Chapter 2: Apples and Anarchy
The Horseman had a strange habit: he always stole apples.
Not jewels, not scrolls—just apples. He would gallop into town, snatch a shiny red orb from a stand or a windowsill, raise it high above his nonexistent face, and ride off laughing—or rather, emitting a sound like a kazoo stuck in a thundercloud.
Demetrius, of course, was furious.
“He’s mocking me! He’s mocking the law!” he screamed, throwing teacups at his terrified guards. “An apple thief! A menace! A… vitamin enthusiast!”
The townsfolk, however, began to chuckle after each of the Horseman’s visits. Quietly, of course. In dark corners. With the windows closed.
They admired his rebelliousness, his timing, his weird apple fixation. Some even left apples on purpose, daring him to take them.
And take them he did—with flair.
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Chapter 3: The Pie Incident
Demetrius, seeing that fear was slipping like soup through a fork, hatched a plan.
“Make the biggest, most tempting apple pie in the history of Hollow Bay,” he ordered.
And they did. It was 7 feet wide, steaming with golden crust, resting on a pedestal in the middle of town. A sign read:
“FOR THE HEADLESS FOOL. CONSUME AND BE CURSED.”
At midnight, the Headless Horseman appeared—through fog and flute music played by no visible flutist.
He trotted to the pie.
He sniffed it. Somehow.
Then he reached down and—put a fork in it.
Citizens gasped.
He took one bite, waved with dramatic flair, and vanished into the night with a firecracker fizzle.
The next morning, Demetrius awoke to find his own bed filled with apple peels. Screamed. Fainted. Was slapped awake by his butler.
The townspeople laughed. A little louder this time.
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Chapter 4: Hauntings and Hope
Strange things began to happen.
Demetrius’s bathtub filled with oats overnight. His statue wept apple juice. His horse began neighing the tune of “Yankee Doodle.”
Each unexplained event was punctuated by the echo of hoofbeats and a faint, ghostly whistle.
He tried to trap the Horseman with nets. Explosives. Bureaucratic paperwork.
Nothing worked.
Meanwhile, Hollow Bay began to change. Secret murals appeared—depicting the Horseman holding up apples like trophies. Children played “Horseman Tag.” Elders baked apple pies “just in case.”
Even the guards began wearing black cloaks as a joke. Then not as a joke.
The fear shifted. It moved from the Horseman… to Demetrius.
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Chapter 5: The Secret Assembly of Apples
In the basement of the Hollow Bay Bakery, under the pretense of “yeast rising experiments,” the townsfolk met.
“We want the Horseman,” whispered Old Marla. “We want someone who doesn’t tell us which way to sneeze!”
“But he’s headless,” argued someone.
“And still a better leader,” replied another.
They began to write The Apple Charter, a document requesting—no, demanding—that the Headless Horseman become their guardian. They planned to release it during the Apple Harvest Festival, the one day Demetrius allowed merriment (closely monitored by emotion police, of course).
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Chapter 6: The Harvest Hijinks
The festival began with the usual stiff dancing and joy audits.
But at exactly 6:66 PM (yes, Demetrius invented that time), the Horseman struck.
He descended from the sky (some say on a flying muffin, others say via cannon) and landed in the town square.
With a puff of smoke and a kazoo squeal, he produced the Apple Charter—already signed by hundreds.
Demetrius shrieked. “TREASON!”
The Horseman raised one bony, gloved finger.
And pointed.
At Demetrius’s pants.
Which promptly fell.
Then his wig flew off. Then his prized steed dumped him unceremoniously into a haystack.
The town roared with laughter. Real, unfiltered, joyous laughter.
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Chapter 7: Apples and Ashes
Demetrius vanished that night. Some say he fled. Some say the Horseman turned him into applesauce. No one knows.
The next morning, the town awoke to a new sign:
“HOLLOW BAY: A PLACE FOR THINKERS, LAUGHERS, AND PIE ENTHUSIASTS.”
And beneath it, a single carved apple—smiling.
The Headless Horseman never declared himself ruler. He never spoke. Never stayed.
But he still rides in and out of Hollow Bay, always at unexpected hours, sometimes just to juggle fruit or chase cats dramatically.
To this day, no one knows where he lives, or why he chose apples.
But Hollow Bay doesn’t care.
Because they are finally free.
And somewhere in the fog, a kazoo hums… softly.