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House of a Thousand Screams
House of a Thousand Screams Read online
CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
‘Camp Fear Ghouls’ Excerpt
About R. L. Stine
1
“Something bad is going to happen.”
The voice came from right behind me. My hand jerked and knocked over the bottles I’d just arranged on my dresser. I spun around.
Of course, it was my little brother, Freddy.
“You twerp,” I complained. “You should never sneak up on someone like that. Look! You made me spill talcum powder all over the dresser.” I punched him in the shoulder, just hard enough to hurt a little.
“Ow!” He scowled. “What did you do that for, Jill?”
Actually, I felt sorry as soon as I did it. Freddy isn’t bad as little brothers go. He’s very serious. I sometimes call him the Brainiac. He’s kind of a nerd, but he means well.
I would have apologized, but hey, I’m the older sister. Besides, he should have knocked.
“Scare me like that again and I’ll really hit you,” I told him. I turned and went back to unpacking. “Why are you in here anyway? You can’t be done setting up your room already.”
“Yes, I am,” he said, hopping up on my bed. “Well, almost. But I started feeling . . . you know.”
“What?” I asked him, grinning. “Nosy?”
Freddy didn’t smile. “No—weird,” he told me.
I didn’t say so, but I knew what he meant. We had just moved to the one town we never thought we’d live in. A town our relatives always talk about in whispers. Shadyside. And we didn’t just move to Shadyside. We moved to Fear Street itself.
It was all because of Uncle Solly. Well, great-uncle actually. Uncle Solly was our dad’s mother’s brother. When he died a few months ago, he left his house on Fear Street to Dad.
Dad always wanted to move back to Shadyside, where he grew up. And Mom always wanted a real house. So Dad arranged for his company to transfer him. And the Peterson family—that’s us—picked up and moved. Just like that.
Freddy and I were nervous enough about moving. All our lives we’d lived in Texas. Shadyside was a big change. What would our new school be like? Would kids like us? Would they make fun of our accents?
And on top of all that, would we ever get used to living on Fear Street?
I remembered how the movers had acted that morning. I never saw guys move so fast in my life. You’d have thought all our boxes were on fire. It took them two hours to load the truck back in Texas. But once we got to Fear Street, they moved us in in twenty minutes flat.
Freddy’s round face was serious. I sat beside him on the bed. “Look, dweeb, all that stuff about ghosts and monsters on Fear Street is just talk,” I told him. “All families have stories like that. I’ll bet lots of people have lived here on Fear Street for years and never seen anything weird.”
“You think so?” He cocked his head and blinked at me from behind his glasses.
I had to laugh. With that round face, and his green eyes magnified by his thick lenses, my little brother looked exactly like an owl.
I, on the other hand, look more like a stork. I’m long and thin, with straight brown hair and brown eyes. Dad says I’ll grow into my legs one day. I’m waiting.
“It isn’t funny,” Freddy complained. He sounded offended.
“Sorry,” I said. I reached over and gave him a friendly noogie. “Don’t forget, this was Uncle Solly’s house. You loved him. He used to show you those magic tricks.”
“Yeah, he was pretty neat.” Freddy gazed down at his short legs swinging against the bed.
Uncle Solly had been a magician. Not just some guy who was interested in magic. Uncle Solly was famous. He traveled all over the world. He was a star! But to us he’d always been warm and kind. Even if he was a little strange.
Because of Uncle Solly, magic was Freddy’s hobby. Uncle Solly always used to brag about how Freddy took after him. Uncle Solly even sponsored Freddy for membership in the International Brotherhood of Magicians.
Freddy grinned at me. “Remember, Mom always said he was too generous, and Uncle Solly would say—”
“ ‘You have to take care of the little people. Take care of the little people and you’re set for life,’ ” I finished in a phony, deep voice. Freddy and I collapsed in giggles, remembering.
I leaned back on the bed. “The last time I saw him, he even brought it up again,” I told Freddy. “Out of the clear blue, he said, ‘Don’t ever forget about the little people, Jill. Make friends with the little people, and you’ll do okay.’ I told him I was always nice to little kids. Then he got the strangest look and said, ‘Oh, yeah. Them too.’ ”
“He was always joking,” Freddy reminded me.
“Yeah, he was.” I clapped Freddy on the back. “Anyway, he lived here for years and years. And Uncle Solly wouldn’t live someplace scary, would he?”
Freddy sat there and thought about it. I watched his face anxiously. I had to convince him. It was the first real house we’d ever lived in, and I could see how happy it made my mom.
Besides, the house really was great! It had two stories, and an attic, and extra bedrooms, and doors with old-fashioned key locks, and a big green lawn outside, and plenty of trees.
So what if there were other houses just a few doors down with cracking walls. So what if the street was lined with twisted trees that sometimes looked like monsters crouching over the sidewalk. That was someone else’s problem.
“I guess you’re right,” Freddy finally admitted. He scratched the side of his head. “I hope you’re right anyway.” He turned and looked over my unpacked boxes. “Well, you better get busy. You have lots left to do.”
I poked a finger in his chest. “I’d be done by now if you hadn’t interrupted.”
“Hah!” he scoffed. “If I hadn’t come in, you’d be drooling over your poster of that guy from Friends by now.”
I grabbed at him. He laughed and slid away. “Oh, Joey!” he squealed in a girlie voice. “I love you!”
Grinning, I tackled him. We hit the floor rolling. “Take it back,” I hollered. I grabbed his arm and pushed it up behind him. He was laughing so hard, he couldn’t manage to pull away.
Then there was a crash. The floor shook. It sounded as if someone dropped a buffalo from the ceiling.
I let go of Freddy and we stared at each other in surprise. I glanced around the room. Nothing seemed to have moved.
“Did we do that?” Freddy asked.
Before I could answer, the room filled with noise. Thumps and bangs came from everywhere. First the wall in front. Then behind. I whipped my head back and forth, following the sounds.
“What is it?” I cried. “What’s happening?”
Freddy pointed with a trembling hand. My eyes followed his finger. And then I stared.
I had a lamp made out of one of those pottery jugs, the kind you see in old Western movies. The lamp was big, heavy. And it was dancing and thumping on top of my dresser! The bottom clattered against the wood.
I jumped to my feet. “Earthquake!” I shouted.
“Oh, yeah?” Freddy said, his voice strangely high. “Then how come nothing else is moving?”
Before I c
ould answer, the lamp snapped on and off. Then again. And again. The smell of burning wires stung my nose. I grabbed Freddy to shove him out of the room.
My bedroom door slammed shut. By itself.
The thumping noise suddenly stopped. We turned and put our backs to the door. The lamp rose from the dresser. Its cord whipped free of the socket.
The lamp shot across the room—and flew straight toward my head!
2
Freddy and I threw ourselves to the floor, screaming. The lamp exploded against the door behind us. Pieces of glass and pottery flew everywhere. We lay still for a moment, afraid to move.
Finally, I got to my feet. I shook bits of lamp from my hair.
“Whoa!” Freddy said. “That was close!”
I heard footsteps running up the stairs. My bedroom door swung open, nearly whacking me in the head. Mom stood in the doorway, her eyes wide at the sight of the crumpled lamp shade and pieces of lamp all over the floor.
“Look at this mess!” she cried. “What have I told you two about roughhousing?”
“Mom, we didn’t do anything—” I began to explain.
“Oh, Jill. I heard you two wrestling around up here. Now look what you’ve done.”
“But it’s true, Mom,” Freddy insisted. “We didn’t do anything. There was just this loud noise and then—”
“—and then the lamp just got up and flew across the room all by itself, I suppose,” Mom finished.
“Well . . . yeah.” Freddy’s cheeks turned red. We both realized how stupid that sounded.
Mom looked annoyed. “Honestly. I may have been born in the morning, but not this morning.”
“But—” I protested.
“No buts, Jill,” Mom said sternly. “I want you to get this stuff cleaned up. And part of what that lamp cost is coming out of your allowances.”
“Aw, Mom,” Freddy groaned. He looked at me for help.
I knew better than to argue any more. Mom would never believe us if we tried to tell her what happened. I wasn’t sure I believed it myself. And I had watched it!
“We’re sorry, Mom,” was all I said. “We’ll clean it up.”
“That’s better.” We must have seemed pretty down, because Mom’s face softened. She offered a smile. “I know you’re excited. I’m excited too. All those years of apartments and renting from other people.” She reached out and touched a wall. “Now we finally have a real home. Isn’t it wonderful?”
I followed Mom downstairs and got the broom and dustpan. Mom went back to mounting her special collector’s plates on the den walls. Thank goodness it wasn’t one of those that broke. Mom loves her collection.
I returned to my room. Freddy had already picked up the biggest pieces of the lamp, the shade, and a big chunk of the base. He took them to the garbage outside while I swept up the rest of the mess as best I could. I had to rip my yellow spread off my bed and shake it out the window. Bits of glass and pottery were everywhere.
Finally I was finished. Leaning the broom against the wall, I glanced at the door where the lamp had crashed into it.
Weird! I frowned and reached out to run my hands over the door. There was no mark from the lamp slamming into it. No dents. No scratches in the paint. Nothing.
“It’s like nothing ever happened,” I whispered to myself. How was that possible? My lamp must have weighed at least ten pounds. And it had slammed into that door hard. There should have been a big dent. In fact, there should have been a hole!
Maybe it was just a freak accident.
Or maybe it’s Fear Street!
No. I shook my head, trying to push the idea away. I was going to give myself nightmares if I started thinking like that.
Time to finish setting up my room. I grabbed a rag and crossed to my dresser. The powder I’d spilled before was still there.
As I was reaching to wipe it up, I stopped short. What were those strange marks in the powder?
My heart gave a slow, hard thump. It didn’t make sense, I knew. But those marks on the dresser top . . .
They looked like tiny little footprints!
3
I rubbed my eyes and looked again.
They were still there. Tiny little tracks.
There must have been a mouse in my room, I thought. Yes, that was it. I made a face. I wasn’t happy about having a mouse for a roommate. But what else could have made tracks that size?
The mouse must have knocked over my lamp too. Of course! Everything was starting to make sense.
Then I peeked at the tracks again. A cold finger of doubt tickled at my mind. The little prints might be mouse-sized. But did mice really have human-shaped feet?
Or, rather, almost human. Only four toes on each print.
And now that I looked again, the tracks weren’t that small.
I dug in a box and found an old Barbie doll. Not that I still play with Barbies. It’s just that I never throw anything away. Mom says I’m a pack rat.
I compared the size of Barbie’s feet to the tracks. The tracks on my dresser seemed a bit shorter and wider. But they were nearly the same size. Were mice feet that big? A mouse with feet the size of Barbie’s would be a hefty mouse.
More like a rat!
Ugh!
Shuddering at the thought, I quickly wiped up the powder. Maybe when the lamp was thumping and bumping around it made those marks, I reasoned. It was simply a coincidence that they looked like tiny little human feet.
But even so, the question remained: What made the lamp dance like that?
I finished unpacking and put the cleaning stuff away. Whatever happened, there had to be a perfectly rational explanation. No way was I going to start off in our new house afraid of my own bedroom.
Besides, I liked my new bedroom. It was big and airy, with plenty of space to play board games or hang with friends.
Assuming, of course, I managed to make some friends.
My window had a big wide sill you could sit on. Through the window I could glimpse the old mill, and the blue of the Conononka River behind it. This summer Freddy and I planned to find out if the fish in Shadyside were any easier to catch than the ones back home in Texas.
Sighing, I got up to go downstairs. I stopped in the hall and gazed past Mom and Dad’s bedroom to the attic stairs.
I’d avoided the attic so far. Attics are creepy places. If we did have mice—or rats—that’s where they’d live.
And if we didn’t have mice or rats—if we had something else . . . something worse . . .
I shook my head, angry with myself. I had to stop thinking like that. Had to stop wondering if we’d have been better off staying in Texas. This was home now. Shadyside. Fear Street.
Just the same, I was staying out of that attic!
I went down to the den. Mom had finished mounting her plates. She had dozens of them. Each one was in a separate holder that kept it snug against the wall.
The room looked great now that it was all furnished. Across from Mom’s plate display was a brick fireplace. Next to that we had put the entertainment center, with a big comfortable couch facing it. White bookshelves ran across the other two walls. More books sat in the middle of the fireplace mantel, special antique ones that Mom liked to show off.
Freddy was crouched by the fireplace, digging through a cardboard box he’d dragged from the closet by the television.
He gave me an excited look. “Check these out. They’re old movies of Uncle Solly’s magic act.”
I peered over his shoulder. Little tin canisters were piled in the box. Labels were taped to them. PARIS, 1968 one read. CAESAR’S PALACE, LAS VEGAS, 1969 said another.
“Too bad we don’t have a movie projector,” I remarked.
“Aha!” Freddy cried triumphantly. He rose with a videotape in his hand. “I guess Uncle Solly had a couple of them converted to video. Want to see?”
“Definitely,” I agreed. We’d never seen Uncle Solly’s act. Sure, he’d done lots of tricks for us. Close-up magic and sleight of
hand—that sort of thing. But his stage act was where he did the big tricks. The really excellent ones.
I popped the video into the VCR while Freddy pushed the box back into the storage closet. The two of us plopped onto the couch and put our feet up on the coffee table.
“This must have been filmed a really long time ago,” Freddy whispered as the tape began.
I nodded. Freddy had to be right. Uncle Solly looked much younger in the tape than Freddy and I had ever seen him. But he was still big and fat, and his cape flared behind him. He wore a pair of wire-rimmed glasses, perched on the very end of his nose.
Although the video was in color, there was no sound track. Uncle Solly’s mouth moved, but you couldn’t hear what he was saying.
Not that you needed to. Watching him was good enough. His hands blurred as they plucked cards and silk scarves and flowers from the air. His wand turned into a huge silk square. Then, from the empty square, he produced a live pig! I’d never seen a magician produce a pig before.
All the while, things floated around Uncle Solly. Tables, chairs, fishbowls, boxes—even a volunteer from the audience. How did they stay up? Freddy and I stared and stared, but we couldn’t see any wires. Only good old Uncle Solly, calmly doing his card tricks and rope tricks.
Finally, he moved his hands as if he were twirling a lasso. We laughed as he jumped through an imaginary loop. Then he made sweeping motions with his arms, spinning the invisible lasso above his head. He turned to the side of the stage and cast his loop. It looked exactly as if he were roping a steer!
“Yee-hah!” Freddy yelled.
I stared, fascinated. Uncle Solly was hauling on his imaginary rope as if he’d lassoed a wild bull. From the stage wings floated a table with a box on top. We laughed at the way the table seemed to fight against the invisible rope. “How did he do that?” I cried.
Soon Uncle Solly brought the table under control. It settled to the stage in front of him. The camera swept over the applauding audience and then back to a smiling, bowing Uncle Solly. We clapped too. “Someday I’m going to be as good as he was,” Freddy vowed.
Uncle Solly’s beaming smile seemed to fade a little as he turned back to the box. The camera zoomed in, and we could see the box clearly. Its front was decorated with ugly, grinning carved faces.

Say Cheese and Die--Again!
Fifth-Grade Zombies
Revenge of the Invisible Boy
The Dummy Meets the Mummy!
Beware, the Snowman
Welcome to Smellville
Camp Daze
Calling All Creeps
Missing
How I Learned to Fly
I Live In Your Basement
Ghost Camp
Chicken Chicken
My Friend Slappy
The New Girl
Diary of a Dummy
Monster Blood is Back
Beware, The Snowman (Goosebumps #51)
Give Yourself Goosebumps: Beware of the Purple Peanut Butter
Drop Dead Gorgeous
Claws!
61 - I Live in Your Basement
Shadow Girl
14 - The Werewolf of Fever Swamp
You Can't Scare Me!
The Sign of Fear
Red Rain
The Horror at Chiller House
Welcome to Dead House
What Holly Heard
Have You Met My Ghoulfriend?
It Came From Ohio!
The Barking Ghost g-32
20 - The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight
25 - Attack of the Mutant
Vampire Breath
Please Do Not Feed the Weirdo
[Goosebumps 12] - Be Careful What You Wish For...
Fear Games
Red Rain: A Novel
Night of the Living Dummy 3
Werewolf Skin
Curse of the Mummy's Tomb
[Goosebumps 37] - The Headless Ghost
Escape from Camp Run-For-Your-Life
Diary of a Mad Mummy
Little Comic Shop of Horrors
My Name Is Evil
The Rottenest Angel
Monster Blood For Breakfast!
[Goosebumps 41] - Bad Hare Day
The Adventures of Shrinkman
House of Whispers
The Taste of Night
Say Cheese and Die!
Wanted
One Day at Horrorland
Scream and Scream Again!
Haunted Mask II
[Goosebumps 03] - Monster Blood
Tick Tock, You're Dead!
Lose, Team, Lose!
Night of the Puppet People
The Boy Who Ate Fear Street
The Birthday Party of No Return!
Toy Terror
[Goosebumps 27] - A Night in Terror Tower
[Goosebumps 39] - How I Got My Shrunken Head
17 - Why I'm Afraid of Bees
[Goosebumps 57] - My Best Friend is Invisible
They Call Me the Night Howler!
House of a Thousand Screams
The Curse of Camp Cold Lake
Mostly Ghostly Freaks and Shrieks
Dangerous Girls
30 - It Came from Beneath the Sink
Killer's Kiss
Attack of the Graveyard Ghouls
62 - Monster Blood IV
Double Date
The Secret Bedroom
[Goosebumps 48] - Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns
[Goosebumps 26] - My Hairiest Adventure
50 - Calling All Creeps!
The Hidden Evil
I Am Slappy's Evil Twin
Planet of the Lawn Gnomes
Piano Lessons Can Be Murder
Let's Get Invisible!
Why I Quit Zombie School
Bride of the Living Dummy
03 - Monster Blood
The Attack of the Aqua Apes
[Goosebumps 15] - You Can't Scare Me!
Goosebumps the Movie
The New Girl (Fear Street)
21 - Go Eat Worms!
02 - Stay Out of the Basement
The Second Horror
Scare School
Beware!
Deep Trouble (9780545405768)
13 - Piano Lessons Can Be Murder
54 - Don't Go To Sleep
29 - Monster Blood III
[Goosebumps 29] - Monster Blood III
Return of the Mummy
[Goosebumps 31] - Night of the Living Dummy II
You May Now Kill the Bride
28 - The Cuckoo Clock of Doom
16 - One Day At Horrorland
47 - Legend of the Lost Legend
Phantom of the Auditorium
15 - You Can't Scare Me!
[Goosebumps 49] - Vampire Breath
Three Evil Wishes
Party Poopers
06 - Let's Get Invisible!
Camp Nowhere
Why I'm Afraid of Bees
[Goosebumps 60] - Werewolf Skin
Series 2000- Jekyl & Heidi
Escape from HorrorLand
[Goosebumps 08] - The Girl Who Cried Monster
18 - Monster Blood II
[Goosebumps 28] - The Cuckoo Clock of Doom
A Shocker on Shock Street
06 - Eye of the Fortuneteller
Don't Close Your Eyes!
Three Faces of Me
The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena
[Goosebumps 51] - Beware, the Snowman
The Barking Ghost
The Wizard of Ooze
Nightmare in 3-D
The Girl Who Cried Monster
The Beast 2
48 - Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns
49 - Vampire Breath
Creature Teacher: The Final Exam
The Sequel
The Secret
Overnight
57 - My Best Friend is Invisible
Night of the Werecat
Please Don't Feed the Vampire!
The Teacher from Heck
33 - The Horror at Camp Jellyjam
Camp Fear Ghouls
The Five Masks of Dr. Screem
41 - Bad Hare Day
Can You Keep a Secret?
Silent Night 3
23 - Return of the Mummy
The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight
Series 2000- Return to Horroland
07 - Fright Knight
Fear Hall: The Beginning
Help! We Have Strange Powers!
Goosebumps Most Wanted #5: Dr. Maniac Will See You Now
11 - The Haunted Mask
[Goosebumps 47] - Legend of the Lost Legend
46 - How to Kill a Monster
Party Games
A Nightmare on Clown Street
The Horror at Camp Jellyjam
Deep Trouble 2
Moonlight Secrets
[Goosebumps 50] - Calling All Creeps
Dumb Clucks
Judy and the Beast
The Heinie Prize
Full Moon Halloween
[Goosebumps 45] - Ghost Camp
First Evil
[Goosebumps 22] - Ghost Beach
Switched
39 - How I Got My Shrunken Head
Toy Terror: Batteries Included
32 - The Barking Ghost
The Big Blueberry Barf-Off!
The Third Evil
The Blob That Ate Everyone
Return to the Carnival of Horrors
College Weekend
How I Met My Monster (9780545510172)
Heads, You Lose!
Let's Get This Party Haunted!
Attack of the Mutant
Dance of Death
My Friends Call Me Monster
[Goosebumps 13] - Piano Lessons Can Be Murder
Who Killed the Homecoming Queen?
58 - Deep Trouble II
Body Switchers from Outer Space
[Goosebumps 09] - Welcome to Camp Nightmare
The Haunted Car
The Twisted Tale of Tiki Island
The Great Smelling Bee
Secret Admirer
Creep from the Deep
[Goosebumps 25] - Attack of the Mutant
Field of Screams
The Creature from Club Lagoona
[Goosebumps 40] - Night of the Living Dummy III
10 - The Ghost Next Door
[Goosebumps 44] - Say Cheese and Die—Again!
Here Comes the Shaggedy
[Goosebumps 52] - How I Learned to Fly
[Goosebumps 16] - One Day at HorrorLand
Trapped in the Circus of Fear
Series 2000- Are You Terrified Yet?
59 - The Haunted School
[Goosebumps 24] - Phantom of the Auditorium
Series 2000- Horrors of the Black Ring
[Goosebumps 56] - The Curse of Camp Cold Lake
All-Night Party
Thrills and Chills
Zombie Halloween
04 - Say Cheese and Die!
The Second Evil
Night of the Creepy Things
Weirdo Halloween
The Cabinet of Souls
44 - Say Cheese and Die—Again
Liar Liar
[Goosebumps 43] - The Beast from the East
[Goosebumps 18] - Monster Blood II
The Wrong Number
They Call Me Creature
Spell of the Screaming Jokers
[Goosebumps 30] - It Came from Beneath the Sink!
Got Cake?
Cheerleaders: The New Evil
Egg Monsters from Mars
Night of the Living Dummy
Silent Night
The Conclusion
26 - My Hairiest Adventure
Eye Candy
Welcome to Camp Slither
The Howler
Lizard of Oz
Under the Magician's Spell
[Goosebumps 02] - Stay Out of the Basement
The Knight in Screaming Armor
05 - The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb
[Ghosts of Fear Street 06] - Eye of the Fortuneteller
The Beast
The Best Friend
The Third Horror
Punk'd and Skunked
[Goosebumps 19] - Deep Trouble
A Midsummer Night's Scream
Secret Agent Grandma
[Goosebumps 55] - The Blob That Ate Everyone
Why I'm Not Afraid of Ghosts
34 - Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes
Series 2000- Brain Juice
[Goosebumps 05] - The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb
My Best Friend Is Invisible
The Deadly Experiments of Dr. Eeek
19 - Deep Trouble
Bad Moonlight
Who's Your Mummy?
Broken Hearts
The First Horror
Series 2000- The Miummy Walks
Revenge of the Living Dummy
A Night in Terror Tower
12 - Be Careful What You Wish For...
[Goosebumps 53] - Chicken Chicken
The Wrong Girl
Go Eat Worms!
When the Ghost Dog Howls
Escape From Shudder Mansion
The Sitter
The Betrayal
The Ooze
[Goosebumps 20] - The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight
The Stepsister
Wrong Number 2
[Goosebumps 01] - Welcome to Dead House
How I Got My Shrunken Head
Little Camp of Horrors
[Goosebumps 62] - Monster Blood IV
How to Be a Vampire
Attack of the Jack
09 - Welcome to Camp Nightmare
40 - Night of the Living Dummy III
Daughters of Silence
No Survivors
[Goosebumps 34] - Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes
Shake, Rattle, and Hurl!
27 - A Night in Terror Tower
Fear: 13 Stories of Suspense and Horror
36 - The Haunted Mask II
[Ghosts of Fear Street 07] - Fright Knight
07 - Night of the Living Dummy
The Haunting Hour
The Curse of the Creeping Coffin
A Sad Mistake
Night of the Living Dummy 2
Welcome to the Wicked Wax Museum
Midnight Games
The Burning
The Ghost Next Door
[Goosebumps 36] - The Haunted Mask II
The Face
31 - Night of the Living Dummy II
[Goosebumps 42] - Egg Monsters From Mars
Trick or Trap
The Headless Ghost
Beware of the Purple Peanut Butter
The Ghost of Slappy
Don't Go to Sleep
[Goosebumps 38] - The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena
43 - The Beast from the East
51 - Beware, the Snowman
[Goosebumps 33] - The Horror at Camp Jellyjam
The New Year's Party
[Goosebumps 32] - The Barking Ghost
Cuckoo Clock of Doom
High Tide (9781481413824)
Zombie Town
[Goosebumps 21] - Go Eat Worms!
Forbidden Secrets
Night of the Giant Everything
[Goosebumps 07] - Night of the Living Dummy
Give Me a K-I-L-L
Ghouls Gone Wild
Night In Werewolf Woods
The Confession
The Good, the Bad and the Very Slimy
It Came From Beneath The Sink
Legend of the Lost Legend
First Date
The Dead Boyfriend
[Goosebumps 59] - The Haunted School
[Goosebumps 11] - The Haunted Mask
Halloween Party
Locker 13
Streets of Panic Park
Dudes, the School Is Haunted!
01 - Welcome to Dead House
A New Fear
It's Alive! It's Alive!
Don't Stay Up Late
Stay Out of the Basement
The Cheater
The Awakening Evil
Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns
What Scares You the Most?
22 - Ghost Beach
Slappy Birthday to You
55 - The Blob That Ate Everyone
45 - Ghost Camp
Ghost Beach
Scream of the Evil Genie
Silent Night 2
Escape from the Carnival of Horrors
60 - Werewolf Skin
Welcome to Camp Nightmare
The Beast from the East
[Goosebumps 61] - I Live in Your Basement
The 12 Screams of Christmas
The Lost Girl
Dear Diary, I'm Dead
Don't Forget Me!
53 - Chicken Chicken
Nightmare Hour
Deep in the Jungle of Doom
Eye Of The Fortuneteller
[Goosebumps 14] - The Werewolf of Fever Swamp
[Goosebumps 46] - How to Kill a Monster
Attack of the Beastly Babysitter
[Goosebumps 35] - A Shocker on Shock Street
[Goosebumps 23] - Return of the Mummy
The Children of Fear
The Dare
Say Cheese - And Die Screaming!
56- The Curse of Camp Cold Lake
Little Shop of Hamsters
Monster Blood IV g-62
Monster Blood
Slappy New Year!
24 - Phantom of the Auditorium
42 - Egg Monsters from Mars
52 - How I Learned to Fly
Temptation
Party Summer
The Scream of the Haunted Mask
[Goosebumps 06] - Let's Get Invisible
[Goosebumps 10] - The Ghost Next Door
Goosebumps Most Wanted - 02 - Son of Slappy
Calling All Birdbrains
Series 2000- Headless Halloween
Dr. Maniac vs. Robby Schwartz
Who Let the Ghosts Out?
Battle of the Dum Diddys
38 - The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena
08 - The Girl Who Cried Monster
Don't Scream!
Visitors
Werewolf of Fever Swamp
[Goosebumps 54] - Don't Go To Sleep
[Goosebumps 58] - Deep Trouble II
Werewolf Skin g-60
37 - The Headless Ghost
Trapped in Bat Wing Hall
Fright Christmas
Bad Dreams
Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes
[Goosebumps 04] - Say Cheese and Die!
[Goosebumps 17] - Why I'm Afraid of Bees
The Curse of Camp Cold Lake g-56