Remington Manor. It has been called many nicknames. But there is one nickname that has eluded this place of mystery: Home. At least not in seventy years. Well, I could be wrong about that. It could have only been forty. But the characters would soon regret their words. They were a couple. Both in their 30s, one kid. A boy, the American dream. Then suddenly the dream became a nightmare. The kid asked his parents to play in the new house. Their last words to him were, “Don’t play for long, honey! Be back for dinner!” Kid was never seen again. Forty-eight hours later, pronounced dead.
It’s funny how the house has adopted the original owners’ qualities. It’s old and bitter. The couple did nothing wrong to the house. Didn’t try to gut the place or flip it either. They only did renovations—and nice ones too. Speaking of the original owners of the place, I should describe them. Old, ancient, fossils, crazy, insane, nuts. We could go on all day, but they weren’t cardboard cutouts, they seemed different. Not special, just odd. Like a fruit that grows a different shape. It’s rare but not unique. Or maybe like an off-brand product. They just seemed off. Anyway, besides their off-putting demeanor, they just seemed to be people whose mental health corroded because of suffocating loneliness. Just to show, not a single person saw them leave their porch for their entire lives. People still don’t know how they survived so long. Then one day in 1931, a sunny spring day, nothing about the day seemed eventful, but some people close by said they heard huge racking sobs emanating from the house. The sounds sounded like pure unadulterated misery. The police were called, and when they entered the house (the door wasn’t locked), they all heard nothing. When they entered the bedroom, the officers saw the couple on their beds. The couple looked like human raisins, dried out, shriveled up, pillows soaked. The officers said they looked like mummies when unwrapped. The morticians didn’t understand what happened; it looked like they cried themselves to death.
“Jake! Stop scaring your brother,” their mother said. “Don’t worry, George. Those stories aren’t real,” their mother said. But just then, a single sob escaped little George’s mouth.
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Mighty Man vs. Dr. Flame
Seventh period Independent reading teacher says read quietly for 50 minutes. I start to read another boring poem I see words but suddenly they disappear. I am tall, I have a black suit, and I am black. I am a superhero, my name is Mighty Man. I have all powers saving people, saving the world saving the UNIVERSE. I am unstoppable but then Dr. Flame pops in. He pushes my planet closer to his. the Sun! I tried to find him but he turned invisible so I had to use my sense to sense him. I found him. I threw him to water planet where he lost his powers but he absorbed the water and had water power
Something Lost but Never Found
Once there was an electric eel. He was living inside an old man’s head. He was giving electricity to the man’s brain to keep him alive. The old man opened up his head and put the eel in a fish tank. He was still alive. One day, someone took the eel out of the fish tank, so the old man lost his eel. The old man said, “Oh no! The eel is lost now. Oh great, my eel is gone.”