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Eye Candy
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Table of Contents
Title Page
Dedication
PART ONE
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
PART TWO
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
PART THREE
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
PART FOUR
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
PART FIVE
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
PART SIX
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Also by R. L. Stine
Copyright Page
To Jane, my own eye candy
PART ONE
1
I don’t like the way you’re looking at me,” she said.
I lowered my cup of coffee. I kept my eyes on her. “Like how?”
“Like that. Sort of . . . intense.”
I smiled. “I’m an intense sort of guy, Alesha.”
She spun her cup between her hands, returning my stare. “What do you do, anyway?”
“This and that. Actually, I’m a Web site developer. You know. The tech side.”
No point in telling her the truth at this point.
She had coffeecake crumbs on her bottom lip. I wanted to lick them off. She had a nice, full mouth. I liked her eyes, too. Gray-green with yellow flecks, like sunshine.
She licked her lips clean. “Did you work on the dating Web site? You know. The one where we met?”
I shook my head. “Not that one. But I worked on some others. Consulting, mostly.”
Consulting sounds like hot shit.
I could see her thinking, “He must be pretty successful. ” She narrowed her eyes, trying to decide how much I make.
She had a pretty face, with those great eyes and that pouty, full mouth. I’d seen her as soon as I walked into Starbucks, and I’d hoped she was Alesha.
Please—not the one with the ring in her nose, I’d thought. I can’t stand that. It makes my whole face hurt to think about it. And when I talk to someone with a pierced tongue, it takes all my willpower not to heave my lunch.
When Alesha turned out to be the pretty one, I almost cheered. I’ve done a lot of these Internet dating hookups, and so far I’ve been pretty lucky. No Kennel Club members, if you know what I mean.
“What are you thinking about?” Alesha’s voice broke into my thoughts.
I pushed my finger through a tiny puddle of water on the table. “How about some dinner?”
She tilted her head, as if she had to consider it. “Well . . . okay. Great.”
It was only supposed to be a coffee date. You know, a meet-and-greet kinda thing. But I could tell she was into me. And I just kept staring at those dark red lips. I pictured them doing all kinds of things to me.
A squirrely-looking guy with long strands of greasy, brown hair leaned over the table next to us, banging away on a laptop. Was that supposed to be impressive or something? Why couldn’t he do it at home? He’s wireless . . . and he’s clueless, I thought, as Alesha and I squeezed past him.
We stepped out onto Broadway. I let her go first so I could check out her ass. Not bad. She was wearing those low-riding black pants—not too tight but tight enough.
The wind gusted, blowing her chestnut hair back. It was cold for May, no real sign of spring except for the cherry and apple trees in Riverside Park going all pink and white. It had rained earlier, and the sidewalk was still puddled and shiny.
She struggled to pull her hair into place. “Where do you want to go to eat?”
“We’re almost to Eighty-eighth Street. Let’s try to get into Aix,” I said.
She frowned. “It’s always so crowded.”
“It’s early. Maybe we’ll get lucky.” I flashed her my best smile. “I’m a lucky kinda guy.”
She smiled back with that lovely mouth. Another strong gust flapped my raincoat and blew back the canvas bag she was carrying. She pulled it close to her, and that’s when I first noticed her hands, and I felt a little sick inside.
Hands like a truck driver.
I took her to dinner anyway, but now I was a little off my game. I kept glancing at her hands, and I knew the current was going against me.
We sat at a red banquette near the back. She kept her hands below the table, and I made it through dinner. Actually, it was pleasant. I tried hard to revive.
She ordered a glass of some blush wine, and I asked for a Ketel One on the rocks. I could see her expression change when I ordered it. Maxim had it on their ten-most-impress-others list, and I trust them.
The restaurant filled up quickly. It’s hard to find good gourmet food on the West Side of New York, so this place caught on fast. I bring women here a lot, and they always like it.
The middle-aged couple in the next banquette were arguing loudly over whether to get their dog clipped. The old guy was so heated about not trimming the dog, I thought he might stroke out or something.
“So I’m a nurse,” Alesha said, after the food arrived— lamb chops for me, soft-shelled crabs for her. A little early in the season for soft-shelled crabs, if you ask me. “I’m at Roosevelt. You know. Here on the West Side.”
“Yeah, I know,” I said, salting my chops. “From your profile online. You wrote that you’re a nurse. Does that mean you can get all the drugs you want?”
She laughed. She thought I was joking.
I hated her laugh. It was Mom’s laugh exactly.
Uh-oh. Mom’s laugh and those Hulk Hogan hands. I knew where this evening was heading.
She kept putting her big hand on top of mine, squeezing my skin, smiling at me with those beautiful lips, giving me the look. You know. The look that says, “We’re going to end up in my apartment.”
Which we did.
It was only a couple of blocks away on Ninetieth and Amsterdam. A pretty big place, airy, with high ceilings, but shabby. The furniture must have come off the street, and nothing interesting hung on the faded walls, just a framed museum print, some Van Gogh thing I’ve seen a million times.
“How old are you anyway?” Alesha asked, narrowing those eyes at me.
“Twenty-five.” This time I told the truth.
“An older man,” she whispered. “I’m twenty-three.” And then she started kissing me, kissing my face, her lips warm and kinda spongey. Kissing me and making these soft, moaning sounds, biting my ear and holding me, those big mitts against my back.
She pulled me into her bedroom. We sat at the foot of her bed. A blue-and-white quilt in a Quaker design spread out on the bed. A tiny TV almost lost in the piles of clutter on her dresser.
She’s so hot. Kissing me and whispering my name.
I could overlook the laugh. But the hands just made me sick.
“Yes, yes,” I whispered. “Alesha . . . yes . . .”
I wrapped my hands around her throat. Gently
at first, and then I began to squeeze.
I brought my thumbs up and pressed them hard into her larynx. It took her so long to realize what was happening, and then it was too late.
I pressed my thumbs in hard and tightened my hands.
She had no air. Her eyes bulged wide and gazed up at me, as if she was asking me a question. But she had no air. And she couldn’t struggle for long. My hands are so strong, and the thumbs do the damage very quickly.
She went limp and stopped breathing.
She was dead but I kept squeezing . . . squeezing. My hands hurt but I kept squeezing. Because I wanted her eyes to pop out. Just like in the cartoons. I love cartoons. I think they’re so funny. If I had a little brother, I’d sit and watch cartoons with him, and we’d both laugh till we peed.
But Mom only had me.
I squeezed till I couldn’t squeeze anymore, but the eyes didn’t pop. I knew Alesha would disappoint me. What a shame.
I let go and her body collapsed onto the quilt. I struggled to catch my breath. My heart was pounding in my chest. I hadn’t been to the gym for a few days. Guess I should go more often.
After a minute or so, I began to feel normal. I hoisted myself off the edge of the bed, clenched and unclenched my hands, trying to work the pain out. Then I stepped into the small, windowless kitchen, no bigger than a closet.
She didn’t have much of a knife collection. But I found a serrated bread knife I figured would do the job. Rubbing the blade gently against my thumb, I returned to the bedroom, steamy now. I hadn’t noticed the ugly flowered wallpaper.
I held the knife in my right hand and grabbed one of her hands in my left. The hand was limp, the arm heavy. I struggled to get a good grip. Then I began sawing off her fingers, one by one.
I finished the right hand, then went to work on the left. She didn’t bleed very much, I guess because she was dead. The fingers felt like asparagus. Real easy to cut.
I realized I had a big smile on my face, so wide my cheeks hurt. Now you have nice small hands, I thought.
But what to do with the fingers?
I counted them—eight fingers. I didn’t want the thumbs.
I couldn’t decide where to put them, so I jammed them into my raincoat pocket. I left a note, explaining why she had to die. I didn’t mention her laugh, just the big hands.
Then I hurried out of the building, a light rain starting to fall, the wind still gusting. I made my way home to my apartment and sat down at the computer without even taking off my raincoat.
Back to the personals site where I found Alesha. After all, there are plenty more women looking for a good time. . . .
2
Is this going to be the most boring date I’ve ever been on?
Would a cold sore be more fun?
Brain liposuction?
I had a lot of time to think about these questions as I struggled to stay awake. I must have fidgeted a lot because at the intermission Jack said, “Lindy, do you want to leave the theater?”
And of course I wasn’t brave enough to say what I really want to do is set my hair on fire and run up the aisle singing “I Enjoy Being a Girl” just to get over my boredom.
So, I said, “No, I’m enjoying it. It’s really . . . interesting.” I covered my yawn. I don’t think he saw it. “Great idea for a musical,” I added.
O, America! It was sort of the U.S. Constitution set to music.
“How did you ever get such good seats?” I asked. The theater was half empty. I was trying to be a good sport here. I really was.
“I got ’em for free,” Jack said. “At my dad’s company where I work. We do marketing for the production company.”
After that, I didn’t know what to say. So I pretended to read my program. I don’t think anyone has ever read a playbill so thoroughly. I could even tell you which Italian restaurant Bernadette Peters recommends.
“I’m working on a really nifty marketing project,” Jack said, when I raised my head from the program for air. “I’ll tell you all about it at dinner.”
Oh, right. Dinner.
Why did I pick this guy? I should have guessed he might be a tad boring from his name. I mean, Jack Smith?
When he picked me up at my apartment lobby, I made a joke. I asked, “What’s your real name?”
He narrowed his eyes at me. I could see he was surprised by the question, as if no one had ever asked that before.
“That is my name, Lindy. Well, actually, I’m Jack Smith the Third, but I don’t use that.”
Three Jack Smiths in his family?
“What’s your middle name?”
“I don’t have one.”
Figures.
I guess I picked him because he had a nice smile in his photo. Jack isn’t a bad-looking guy, actually. He has crinkly blue eyes (I’m a sucker for eyes that crinkle up at the sides), short, brown hair spiked up a bit just in front, and that winning, reassuring smile. Plus he turned out to be almost as tall as I am.
I’m five-eleven, so believe me, size matters. I just feel so awkward when I can reach down and pat my date on the head.
Well, I made it through the second act of O, America!, hoping I didn’t snore too loudly. When it ended, Jack jumped to his feet, applauding wildly, shaking his head in awe. . . . I guess. Everyone else stood up to put their jackets on and leave. The reaction wasn’t terribly enthusiastic, but Jack didn’t seem to notice.
We stepped out into a chilly night. The wind blew pages of a newspaper down the sidewalk. I was wearing a red linen vest jacket, open over a sleeveless white T-shirt, and matching red linen pants, and I wished I’d picked out something warmer.
We were halfway through May and, so far, the city hadn’t any spring at all. Depressing weather, especially when you don’t have a guy you really care about to snuggle up to.
I took Jack’s arm, mainly for warmth. He led me past a group of people, middle-aged and older, huddled at the stage door. The door swung open, and a shaggy-looking bear of a man in a gray sweatshirt and black overalls stepped out. Was he Ben Franklin or Cotton Mather? I didn’t recognize him. But the small crowd of fans cheered and surged forward to greet him.
“I love New York!” I gushed.
“It’s too crowded,” was Jack’s reply.
Leaning into the wind, we walked up Eighth Avenue, past small groups of people, all desperately trying to wave down taxis.
“Where are we going for dinner?” I asked.
“My dad’s company does some work for this great Italian place on Forty-sixth. I think you’ll like it.”
Another freebie.
I’m not exactly the Material Girl. But you’d think Jack might have spent at least a dollar or two on our first date.
But hey, the restaurant turned out to be the very one that Bernadette Peters recommended!
Momma Mangia’s was long and narrow, the red walls covered with framed paintings of Italian villages. Two rows of tables, each with a red-and-white checkered tablecloth, stretched to the back wall. At a front table, people were toasting one another loudly, clinking glasses and laughing uproariously.
The hostess had trouble finding Jack’s reservation. Finally, she led us to a table next to the kitchen door. Two men stopped talking to their wives and watched me as I lowered myself into my seat.
I’m used to it. When you’re tall and blond, you notice men watching you. You can feel their eyes on you without even looking. I guess I’m lucky. I mean, would I like it better if they didn’t look? I doubt it.
As soon as we sat down, a white-aproned waiter leaned over the table and, in a very heavy Italian accent, asked if we’d like a drink. A totally phony accent. He had to be an out-of-work actor. I ordered a glass of red wine, to warm up, and Jack ordered a Diet Coke.
Jack clasped his hands on the tabletop and leaned closer. He grinned at me. “That play got me all psyched. I mean, I’m not the most patriotic guy. But those songs . . . they really made me feel something.”
Was he for real?
r /> “Tell me about your exciting project,” I said. Clever change of subject?
He unclasped his hands, then clasped them again. He had very smooth, large hands, I noticed. Very well-groomed. “It’s the biggest assignment I’ve had since I joined Dad’s firm.”
“How old are you anyway, Jack?” I interrupted.
“I’ll be twenty-six in July.”
“So I’m out with an older man. That could be dangerous,” I teased, squeezing his hand.
He didn’t pick up on it at all. “Why? How old are you, Lindy?”
“Twenty-three.”
And going on 110 tonight!
He nodded. “My sister is twenty-three.”
So what?
“It’s for Cat Chow,” he said.
I had lost the thread for a moment. “What is?”
“My marketing project.”
My hair fell over my face. I swept it back with a shake of my head. I glanced to the next table and saw the two men still staring at me. They looked away when I stared back.
“It’s the biggest Cat Chow promotion we’ve ever done, see. And Dad tossed it in my lap.”
I pictured Dad tossing a cat into his lap. My face started to itch. I’m allergic to cats.
“And here’s my great idea,” Jack said, his eyes going bright, his whole face suddenly alive. “I thought of it while I was watching cartoons. You know. Sylvester the Cat and his little cat son.”
“You watch cartoons, Jack?”
He nodded excitedly. Eager to tell me his big Cat Chow idea. “I call it The Whisker Walk.”
He raised two fingers on each hand to the sides of his face, like little cat whiskers, and he began moving the “whiskers” up and down in a little dance while he me-owed a little song.
That’s when I faded out. Or rather, that’s when Jack faded out.
I didn’t hear another word he said. I just kept picturing him meowing and doing his little Whisker Walk with his fingers. Would I ever be able to forget it? Where is a rewind button when you need it?
O, America! O, America! I had no idea the play would be the best part of the evening.
How did I get into this? Why am I going out with guys I meet on the Internet? After all, Jack isn’t the first. Last week was Brad. And next week will be Colin. And here’s what I don’t know as I sit here pretending to listen to Jack . . . here’s a little detail I haven’t learned yet . . .

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