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Behind the thick, square glasses, her blue eyes narrowed to slits. “Because it happened again,” she whispered. “Listen to me closely, Ellie: It happened again. Jeremiah’s ghost remained in the house. It never left. It—”
“Whoa. Wait.” I touched Mrs. Bricker’s bony hand with my own. I could feel the big, emerald ring on my palm. “Stop. I enjoy ghost stories. Really. But I have so much shopping to do.”
I glanced out the window. Rain was still drizzling down. The sky had grown darker. I sat there for a moment before I realized that my eyes had slipped from the sky and settled on a man.
I was staring at Chip Harper. He wore a tan plastic rain poncho, raindrops rolling down the front, and a blue Yankees cap. He was staring hard at Mrs. Bricker and me.
He had an intense scowl on his face. But when he realized I was looking back at him, he nodded awkwardly, then hurried away.
“Please let me finish,” Mrs. Bricker pleaded. “I’m not telling you this for my health, you know. It happened again. In the 1950s. You see, Jeremiah’s ghost remained in the guest house. Because the boy wanted his revenge. He had missed his target. He had missed the nanny and murdered the boyfriend instead. And his ghost couldn’t rest until he finished what he intended—until he murdered the nanny. And so, Jeremiah struck again.”
I squinted at her. “A hundred years later?”
I signaled to the waitress for the check. I’d heard enough.
“Listen to me, Ellie. A doctor owned the house. The guest house. The big house still hadn’t been built. I don’t remember the doctor’s name, but it’s in the newspapers. You can see for yourself. He had a couple of kids. A boy, four or five, a little boy. The doctor came out only on weekends. The kids were left with their nanny.
“Don’t roll your eyes, Ellie. I’m not making this up. It happened again. Just like the first time. The little boy caught the nanny he adored with her fiancée. He picked up a harpoon mounted near the mantel. He had to be possessed. He had to be possessed by Jeremiah, seeking his revenge.
“He tossed the harpoon. He missed. He missed again. He murdered the young man. Jeremiah didn’t get his revenge. Afterwards, the boy didn’t remember a thing. Not a thing. And that’s proof—”
“Proof that he was possessed by Jeremiah Halley,” I said.
“Yes. And he’s still there, Ellie. Jeremiah is still in the guest house, waiting. He can’t rest until he murders his nanny. Don’t roll your eyes. Believe me. Your life could depend on it.”
She licked her lips. Her voice had become raspy and hoarse. “I started work at the Harpers’ in March when they first started coming to Watermill. And a friend told me this story a few weeks later. You can imagine how I felt. I—”
“You started in March? Was Brandon talking then?” I interrupted.
“No. Not a word. Poor kid. He seemed frightened to me. Frightened and strange. Clung to his father. A real papa’s boy. Seemed angry at his mother all the time. I don’t know what she did to deserve it. She was the nice one, seemed to me.”
The waitress brought the check. The restaurant had become crowded, louder than when we had entered. I leaned across the table to hear the old woman better.
“I started at the end of March. The boy wasn’t talking. I remember my first day so well. Cold and gray, with the wind blowing something fierce off the ocean.
“The boy disappeared for a while. He did that sometimes. He liked to be by himself. Liked to collect things from the ocean, shells and stones, and things.
“Anyway, that day, my first day, I found him on his hands and knees behind the guest house. I asked him what he was doing back there. Of course, he didn’t answer. He just stared at me, stared with cold, angry eyes.”
“Weird,” I muttered.
Mrs. Bricker grabbed my hand. “Don’t you see? What brought Brandon Harper to the guest house? It’s Jeremiah Halley at work again. I know it. I—”
“Is that why you left the Harpers?” I asked. “Because you thought Brandon was possessed?”
She snorted angrily. Her rouged cheeks turned even redder. “No. I was fired. Unjustly fired by Chip Harper.”
“Why? If you don’t mind my asking.”
“I was telling the story about Jeremiah Halley and the guest house to a friend, and Brandon overheard me. Chip Harper fired me on the spot. I was never treated so badly in my life. Luckily, I got another job down the beach. A better paying job, I might add, with normal kids.”
I dropped a twenty-dollar bill on the check. “Well, thanks for telling me all this.” What else could I say? That she’s a crazy, superstitious old woman who probably shouldn’t be allowed near kids?
I slid from the booth and stretched out a hand to help her up. Her powder and rouge had caked, and her skin showed a thousand tiny cracks. She looked a lot like one of those ancient mummies in a horror film.
“Keep an eye on the boy,” she rasped, waving a bony finger at me. “He looks sweet, but he could be dangerous. And watch out for Chip Harper, too. He’s a shifty one. There’s something definitely wrong with him.”
I laughed to myself and hurried back out into the cool, refreshing rain, eager to get away from the old woman and her ugly stories.
If only I had listened.
24
Is that Christie Brinkley?”
Teresa spun around. “Where?”
“The one in the shimmery red thing. See? Way too tight for her?” I pointed to the other end of the long, curved bar.
“Yeah. She looks great, doesn’t she? I mean, for her age.”
Teresa tossed her hair off her bare shoulders. She wore a silvery low-cut top over straight-legged black slacks. She had a small, temporary, red-and-blue heart tattoo on each shoulder and large silver earrings that dangled down over her cheeks and kept getting tangled in her hair.
I was dressed for our big club night, too, in a new outfit Teresa had picked out for me in Southampton. I had on a tight, pink-and-blue tie-dyed midriff top over a short denim skirt, and clog-type shoes that made me walk about a foot off the floor.
I had even teased and tortured my hair, trying to make it look like a do Nicole Kidman wore in a photo in People magazine.
It had all been Teresa’s idea, and I couldn’t say that I was quite comfortable with the look yet.
“Is my hair okay?” I asked Teresa. “Do I look like Raggedy Ann or something?”
She tugged a tangled strand off my face. “The waif look,” she said. “Guys love it, Ellie. Seriously. You’re Winona Ryder without the criminal record.”
“Ha ha.”
We were at Pulsations, a new club on the beach in a little town past Easthampton called Amagansett. It didn’t look like much from the outside—a high, boxlike structure, like an airplane hangar, painted gray, without any decoration, not even a name sign. We stood in line for about twenty minutes, which Teresa said wasn’t bad, and watched limos and expensive new cars pull up, and all these tanned, well-dressed guys and girls climbing out.
Music throbbed out every time the door was opened. An unhappy-looking crowd of ten or twelve had gathered across from the line. They were pleading with the guy at the door, gesturing wildly.
“They’ve got New Jersey written all over them,” Teresa said. “They’ll never get in.”
A hot, humid night, and I knew my eye makeup was starting to run and my hair was frizzing up like crazy. I motioned to the guy at the door. “Think he’ll let us in?”
And before Teresa could answer, he was giving us the big wave, holding the rope aside, and we were hurrying into the club, my shoes clonking on the concrete walk.
We stepped into a narrow, mirrored entry hall where we paid our admission and a music cover charge—thirty-five dollars before we even entered the club—and then into a cavernous room. My eyes adjusted to the low lights, the blue spotlights sweeping pale light over a crowded dance floor, the blue walls, the endless blue bar curving along one wall.
“I’m beginning to get the color scheme,” I said, keeping close
to Teresa, who was surveying the room, her eyes moving from face to face at the bar.
“See, it’s cool, not hot,” she said.
“Don’t we want to be hot?” But she didn’t hear me.
The deejay was fading a Mary J. Blige song I recognized into some dance hall reggae. The dancers seemed hesitant, then found the beat.
I saw a girl dancing with a cigarette in one hand and a martini glass in the other. A lanky guy in a sweat-drenched T-shirt with ABERCROMBIE blazing across the front waved his arms wildly, singing loudly, seemingly dancing by himself. Despite the fast beat of the music, a couple danced slowly, faces pressed together, his hands gripping her ass as they swayed.
On the other side of the dance floor, at the far end of the club, I saw tables, tall blue booths—a restaurant. “Do we want to eat?” Teresa asked.
“I think we just want to drink,” I replied.
We pushed up to the bar. Two guys holding bottles of Red Stripe beer were arguing about the Mets. A really tanned guy with black hair slicked straight back was trying to impress a girl: “No, for real. I know two Baldwin brothers.”
I heard snatches of conversations.
“I traded in the Hummer. Too hard to park.”
“My wife is at Jet East tonight. We don’t always go out together.”
“Steven was at the next table. He eats there all the time. He had the smoked salmon, but he sent it back.”
“Sure, he’s a cokehead, but at least he can afford it.”
The bartender was tall and drop-dead gorgeous—and he knew it. Women practically crawled over the bar to get his attention. I was going to order my usual—a glass of chardonnay. But then I thought, Get out of the rut, Ellie. Try to be different tonight. So I ordered a Hennessy sidecar, same as Teresa.
She lit a cigarette and gazed around. I took a long sip of my drink. I felt a little overwhelmed—the pounding music, the voices, the energy, the tension.
All this talk, all this dancing and moving and all this frantic, noisy, sweaty activity—just to get drunk and go home with somebody.
“See those two young blond women?” Teresa poked my shoulder with her glass. “No. Not those. The ones over there, the trampy-looking ones.”
“They’re not trampy. They’re kinda attractive,” I said. “Who are they?”
“They’re the famous Hilton sisters, Nicky and Paris.”
“Huh?” I squint into the blue light at them.
“Don’t you ever read the ‘Styles’ section in the Times? They’re in every week.”
“Yeah, I read it. Well, okay, sometimes. But why are the Hilton sisters in every week?”
“Because they’re rich and beautiful, and they go everywhere. They’re at every party. Every charity event. Every dance club, every restaurant. They’re everywhere. They’re even here tonight. You can’t go anywhere without seeing them. And they get their pictures taken wherever they go.”
“And what do they do?”
“Do? They don’t do anything. How could they do anything? They have to be everywhere!” She stubbed out her cigarette. “Hey, okay! I see two guys from my house. Come on.”
She pulled me over to the two guys at the edge of the dance floor. They looked like they could be brothers. They were both short but had pumped-up bodies—big shoulders and muscled arms, as if they worked out all the time. They both had wavy, light brown hair. One of them wore a green-and-yellow T-shirt with a martini glass on the front under the name DEWAR’S. The other had a silky, shiny red sport shirt, unbuttoned nearly to his waist, gold chains hanging to his chest.
Teresa introduced them. I think their names were Bob and Ronnie. I couldn’t really hear. We were already practically on the dance floor, so it was pretty easy to start dancing. I danced with the one in the T-shirt, and then Teresa and I traded, and I danced with the open shirt, who turned out to have fabulous rhythm.
It felt good to dance again. It had been so long.
I danced with Bob or Ronnie or whatever his name was under the blue lights. And then Teresa found some other people from her share house, and I danced with some other guys, had another sidecar or maybe two, danced some more, feeling light again, moving to the steady, booming beat, feeling lighter than ever under the blue lights, so blue and cool.
Then I fell out of one of my shoes.
I knew I would. They were just too high and clunky for dancing. I started to fall—and someone caught me. A dark-haired guy in a collarless black shirt and black denim jeans.
I saw his brown eyes, his slender, smiling face, glistening with sweat, so close to mine. He steadied me and then dropped away. I stood on one shoed foot, my bare foot dangling in the air.
He bent, picked up the loose shoe, lifted it to his ear, and spoke into it. “Hello? Who’s calling?” He handed me the shoe. “It’s for you.”
I took it from him, raised it to my ear, and listened. I said, “They hung up.”
I leaned on him as I tugged the shoe back on my foot. He felt solid. He smelled nice, of cologne and sweat, something lemony.
It took me a while to realize I was still leaning on him. “Oh, sorry.” I took an unsteady step back. How many sidecars had I had?
I glanced over his shoulder for Teresa. Was she still dancing? I stared into a haze of blue, the dancers suddenly shadows moving up and down in the haze.
I grabbed his arm again. “Is it hot in here? I thought it was supposed to be cool. Isn’t this supposed to be a cool place?”
“I’m sweating, too.” He had a tiny scar under his chin and tiny dimples, just specks, when he smiled. He had a nice face, I thought. His eyes were warm and seemed to be laughing. I’ve always liked laughing eyes, people who saw the joke in things. I haven’t known too many guys like that.
“Follow me.” He took my hand and started to lead me around the crowded blue dance floor to the back door. “Want to cool off on the beach?”
“No, wait.” I pulled free. The floor tilted a bit around me. “My friend. I can’t leave my friend.”
And then I spotted Teresa at one end of the dance floor, dancing with Bob or Ronnie—or was it both of them? I saw a jumble of arms and bodies and legs, moving as if they were underwater.
Yes, I’d definitely had a few sidecars too many. The problem is, you just think you’re drinking fruit juice. You don’t realize . . .
Well, Teresa was having fun and wouldn’t miss me if I ducked out for a short while to get some air. I took the tall guy’s hand and let him lead me out the back door, past a girl who was dancing in what looked like a red bra and panties, a swooping bird tattooed across her back. Past a table where I jumped, startled, thinking I heard the explosion of gunfire, but then saw it was only a group of guys slamming empty shot glasses down.
He pushed open the back door, and we stepped outside. A restaurant terrace faced the beach, tables jammed with people drinking pitchers of beer, downing big plates of chicken wings. The ocean looked like a wide black stripe under the purple night sky.
I took a deep breath. The air was cool and fresh and salty. Wooden steps led to the beach. I felt dazed, as if I had stepped out of myself, into a different life, allowing this stranger to pull me down to the sand.
“Hey, stranger, what’s your name?” I blurted out.
He turned. His eyes were as dark as the ocean. “Jackson. Jackson Milner.”
“Hi, Jackson. I’m Ellie Saks.”
He took my hand and shook it formally. “Nice to meet you, Ellie. Want to walk?”
As my eyes adjusted to the darkness, I could see other couples walking slowly along the shore. I kicked off my shoes and left them beside the steps. “Sure.”
We made our way closer to the water. The wet sand felt good under my bare feet. The cool air, sweeping off the ocean, helped clear my head.
Music floated faintly from the club far behind us. “Are you out here for the summer?” I asked. I slipped in the sand, and we bumped shoulders.
“Yeah, I’m staying with a guy from school. How
about you?”
I nodded. “I have a nanny job. I’m living with a family in Watermill.”
His eyes studied me. “You like kids?”
“Probably not after this job!”
I liked his laugh. I liked the solid way he felt when I bumped into him. “Are you working, too, or just hanging out?”
He kicked a stone into the water. “I’m mostly hanging out. But I’m working part-time at a bicycle store in Southampton. It’s called Spokes. Have you seen it? On Jobs Lane? But I’m kinda taking the summer off. Fall is going to be tough.”
“How come?”
“Law school. I’m starting end of August.”
“Where?”
“Cardozo.” He sighed. “I thought I was a lock for NYU, but I didn’t get in. I think they get like sixty thousand applications for about six hundred places.”
“Well, Cardozo is supposed to be good,” I said. As if I knew anything about law schools.
We stepped into wide circles of light. I turned and saw that they were spotlights from another club above us on a high dune.
Jackson grabbed my hand suddenly and slid his arm around my waist. He started to dance, spinning me with him. “I can’t resist being in the spotlight,” he shouted.
I tossed my head back and laughed as we danced in the circle of light.
Danced. Yes, danced.
I was dancing again, feeling so light and giddy and . . . free. I hadn’t felt so happy in a long time, and I knew it wasn’t just the drinks.
We stepped out of the spotlight and walked, hand in hand now, along the shore. As we talked, I realized I felt really comfortable. Jackson had an easy sense of humor. He didn’t seem to take himself so seriously. He didn’t seem aimless. You know, not a beach bum type. But he wasn’t crazy intense, either.
He was solid.
Did he like me? I couldn’t tell for sure, but he seemed to.
I told him some stories about my first days in New York, how confusing and foreign it was after Madison. I mean, when I went into a coffee shop, I had no idea what a bagel with a shmear was! And was a regular coffee with milk or without milk?
Was I talking too much? He seemed interested in me, but was it for real? Did he just want to get laid tonight? Who knows?

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