by Bill Tiepelman
Laughter in the Dark
The Lantern-Bearer Appears
Everyone in the village of Mirewood knew the rules about the forest. The elders taught them in school, the barkeep scrawled them on the back of ale-stained napkins, and old Grandmother Bipple would shout them at anyone walking too close to the edge of the trees. They were simple rules, easy enough to remember, though most ignored them until it was too late:
Never whistle after dark. (It attracts unwanted attention.)
Never follow the sound of laughter in the woods. (It is not your friends.)
If you see a lantern swaying where no lantern should beβrun.
Of course, travelers passing through rarely knew these rules. And travelers, being what they are, tended to scoff at local superstition, right until the superstition waddled out of the bushes and introduced itself with a smile wide enough to make their teeth ache. That superstition had a nameβor at least several variations of one. Some called him Grimble. Others called him Snagtooth. A few claimed his name was Darryl, but those people had been drinking heavily, and possibly had a habit of naming everything Darryl.
Whatever his name, the truth remained: he was a lantern-bearer. Not a guide. Not a helper. Certainly not a friend. A lantern-bearer, and if you saw the light, you were already in trouble.
The night our story begins was moonless, the sky clotted with heavy clouds, and the woods darker than the inside of a cowβs belly. A group of weary merchants, their donkeys sagging under bags of turnips, onions, and exactly one barrel of something suspiciously sloshy, were making their way down the Old Hollow Road. Their boots squelched in the mud, their tempers were thin, and their conversation had dwindled to muttered complaints about turnip prices.
They didnβt notice it at first. A faint glow, like the last ember of a dying fire, bobbing between the trees. Perhaps it could have been a will-oβ-the-wisp, perhaps moonlight glinting off wet barkβbut then came the sound. The laugh.
Oh, the laugh.
It began as a hiccup, as though someone had swallowed a kazoo. Then it rose into a cackle that rattled the leaves, wheezed through the undergrowth, and echoed through the travelersβ bones until their spines tightened like violin strings. It was a laugh that said, Yes, I know exactly where youβre going. And no, you wonβt like it when you get there.
One of the donkeys brayed nervously. The youngest merchant whispered, βDid you hear that?β The oldest merchant pretended he hadnβt. Denial, after all, was cheaper than therapy.
And thenβ
He appeared. A squat figure, not more than four feet tall but twice as broad, stepping out of the trees as though the forest itself had coughed him up. His leather vest looked as though it had been stitched together by someone with poor eyesight and no sense of proportion. His boots sagged, patched so many times they had become more patch than boot. His gloves creaked with grime, and his belt buckle was bent in the shape of something that might once have been a circle.
But the merchants werenβt staring at his outfit. They were staring at his face. At the pointed ears sticking out like dagger handles. At the eyes, round and bulging, that glistened with lunatic cheer. At the noseβred, bulbous, the sort of nose that spoke of centuries of bad life choices. And, of course, the mouth. That enormous, horrifying, magnificent mouth that stretched almost ear to ear and revealed a collection of teeth that looked like they had been borrowed from several different species and arranged without a clear plan.
He grinned. The lantern in his hand swayed, casting a flicker of golden light that danced across the merchantsβ pale, horrified faces.
βHA! HA! HA! YOUβRE LOST, ARENβT YA?β
The laugh that followed could not possibly have come from a creature of his size. It was thunderous, ridiculous, echoing through the trees like a drunk choir of demons trying to sing sea shanties. One of the donkeys sat down in protest. Another began chewing its reins. The merchants clutched their turnips for moral support.
No one moved. The woods seemed to hold its breath. And then, in a voice far too chipper for the situation, the lantern-bearer said:
βDonβt worry. I know a shortcut.β
The Shortcut
Now, in most tales, when a grinning goblin-like stranger pops out of the forest at midnight and offers you a shortcut, the sensible thing to do is refuse, bow politely, and run in the opposite direction until your shoes catch fire. Unfortunately, merchants are not known for their sense of adventureβor their sense of caution. They are, however, known for their greed and impatience.
The youngest merchant cleared his throat nervously. βA shortcut, you say?β
The lantern-bearerβs grin widened, which seemed medically impossible. βOh aye. The quickest way to the village. Quick as a hiccup, quicker than a sneeze, quicker than a goose falling down a well.β
βGoose falling down aβwhat?β the eldest merchant asked, eyebrows furrowing like angry caterpillars.
The creature blinked at him, expression utterly serious, then threw back his head and howled with laughter so violent his hat nearly flew off. The woods joined in, the echoes clattering through the branches until it sounded as if the forest itself was giggling.
That was the trouble with him: once he started laughing, everything laughed. The trees creaked in mirth. The wind wheezed. Even the donkeys let out startled, undignified hee-haws that sounded suspiciously like chuckles. The merchants shivered, because there is nothing more sinister than a donkey laughing at you.
Still, the idea of shaving two days off their journey was too tempting. The merchants exchanged glances. Their boots were muddy, their tempers sour, and the barrel of suspiciously sloshy liquid was already half-empty. A shortcut would mean warmth, ale, and safety sooner. Surely, they reasoned, a creature with such excellent comedic timing couldnβt possibly be dangerous.
βLead on, good sir,β the youngest merchant said bravely, though his voice cracked in three different places.
βSir?β The lantern-bearer clutched his chest as if mortally wounded. βDo I look like a sir to you? My dear boy, Iβm a professional!β
βA professionalβ¦what?β the eldest merchant asked suspiciously.
βA professional guide of lost things!β the creature bellowed, flourishing the lantern dramatically. βLost sheep! Lost coins! Lost socks! Lost sense of direction! I find it all. Except virginity. That one tends to stay lost.β
The merchants coughed uncomfortably. One donkey snorted. Somewhere in the distance, a crow cawed in disapproval.
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And so, against the advice of every folktale ever written, the merchants followed the Lantern-Bearer off the main road. His lantern bobbed ahead of them like a firefly on caffeine, dipping and swaying, sometimes vanishing completely before popping up again with a sudden shout of βBOO!β that made the donkeys fart in terror.
The path he led them on was no path at all. It twisted through undergrowth that snagged their clothes, across streams that soaked their boots, and under branches that seemed to duck too late on purpose. Each time they stumbled, each time they cursed, each time they tripped over a log that hadnβt been there a moment beforeβthe Lantern-Bearer laughed. Loud, long, and wheezing, like a broken organ grinder trying to play itself to death.
After what felt like hours, the merchants were panting, muddy, and less certain about their life choices. βAre you sure this is shorter?β one muttered.
βShorter than what?β the guide asked innocently, eyes gleaming.
βThan the road!β
βOh aye,β he said, beaming. βShorter than the road. Also shorter than eternity, shorter than a giraffe, shorter thanββ he leaned in close, his nose nearly brushing the merchantβs cheekββshorter than your patience.β
He threw back his head and erupted into another gale of laughter. The sound was so loud and so infectious that the merchants found themselves chuckling nervously, then giggling, then outright cackling, though they couldnβt for the life of them explain why. Their laughter tangled with his, until the forest was a roaring carnival of giggles, howls, guffaws, and snorts. It went on and on, until they felt drunk on mirth, lightheaded and dizzy, stumbling through the dark with tears streaming down their cheeks.
And then, just as abruptly, the laughter stopped.
Silence. Heavy, suffocating silence. The kind of silence that pressed on your ears until you heard your own blood sloshing about like soup in a kettle. The merchants blinked, panting, and realized the lantern-bearer was no longer ahead of them. He was behind them. Grinning. Still. Always grinning.
βNow,β he whispered, his voice sharp as a knife scraping bone. βHere we are.β
The merchants looked around. They werenβt on a road. They werenβt anywhere near a village. They stood in a clearing ringed by trees with trunks warped and twisted into strange shapes. Knots in the bark seemed to watch them, faces frozen mid-laugh. Roots curled across the ground like skeletal fingers. And in the center of it all was a stone well, old and moss-eaten, its mouth blacker than the night sky.
The Lantern-Bearer raised his light. His grin somehow grew wider. βThe shortcut,β he declared proudly, βto exactly where you never wanted to be.β
And then he laughed again. Louder than ever. The kind of laugh that promised Part Three of this story was going to get much, much worse.
The Well of Echoes
The clearing held its breath. The merchants stood huddled together, clutching their onions like holy relics, staring at the mossy stone well in the center. The air smelled damp and earthy, with a faint tang of iron, like the forest had been chewing on old nails. Somewhere far above, a crow cawed once, then thought better of it. Silence returned.
βWell,β said the eldest merchant, forcing a laugh that sounded more like a hiccup, βthank you for yourβ¦ services, friend. Weβll just, ah, be on our way now.β
The Lantern-Bearerβs eyes bulged wider. His grin twitched. He leaned forward, lantern swinging, until the glow carved strange shadows across his face. βOn your way? But youβve only just arrived. Donβt you want to see whatβs inside?β
He jabbed a stubby finger toward the well. The moss shivered. The stones groaned as if they remembered something unpleasant. The youngest merchant squeaked. βInside? No, no, we donβtβno time, reallyββ
βINSIDE!β bellowed the Lantern-Bearer, and his laughter followed, booming, crashing, echoing off the trees until the roots quivered in glee. The merchants covered their ears, but it was no use. His laughter slid into their skulls, rattled around in their brains, and leaked out their noses like smoke. They couldnβt escape it. They couldnβt even think over it.
The donkeys brayed in panic, tugging against their reins. One of them backed up, tripped over a root, and landed directly on the barrel of sloshy liquid. The barrel cracked, spilling a stream of something pungent that hissed as it hit the ground. The forest floor slurped it up hungrily, and the trees gave a collective shudder of delight.
βOh, thatβs just lovely,β the Lantern-Bearer sighed dreamily, sniffing the fumes. βReminds me of my childhood. Nothing like a good solvent to bring out the nostalgia.β
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The eldest merchant, summoning what little courage remained in his wrinkled bones, stepped forward. βLook here, you little imp. Weβve had enough of your games. We demandββ
He didnβt get to finish. The Lantern-Bearerβs lantern flared bright, dazzling white, so bright that the merchants staggered back, shielding their eyes. The clearing seemed to warp. The well stretched taller, wider, its stones groaning, until it loomed like a hungry mouth. From deep within, something shifted. Something giggled. Something very large, very old, and very awake.
βYou hear it?β whispered the Lantern-Bearer, suddenly quiet, reverent, almost tender. βThatβs the Well of Echoes. It collects every laugh ever lost in the woods. Giggles from children who wandered too far. Chuckles from hunters who never came back. Even one or two cackles from priests who really shouldβve known better.β
The merchants shivered. The sound rose from the wellβlayered, overlapping laughter, hundreds of voices tangled together, some shrill, some guttural, some hysterical, some sobbing even as they laughed. It wasnβt just noise. It was hungry.
The youngest merchant dropped his onion bag. The bulbs rolled across the clearing, tumbling toward the lip of the well. One onion tipped over the edge and fell. For a heartbeat, nothing happened. Then the laughter in the well swallowed it whole with a satisfied burp.
βWell,β said the Lantern-Bearer, beaming proudly, βthatβs dinner sorted.β
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Panic set in. The merchants bolted for the trees, stumbling and shrieking. But no matter which way they ran, the clearing stretched with them. The well remained at the center. The trees curved back, folding the world like a cruel carnival tent. They were trapped inside a joke, and the punchline was coming fast.
The Lantern-Bearer danced in circles, swinging his lantern, kicking his stubby legs, howling with mirth. His eyes glittered. His teeth gleamed. His voice rang out like a gleeful executioner. βDonβt you see? Youβre part of it now! You came for a shortcut, and youβll never leave! Youβll laugh, and laugh, and laugh, until thereβs nothing left but echoes!β
One by one, the merchants began to laugh. First a nervous chuckle. Then a wheeze. Then helpless, roaring hysteria. Their bodies doubled over, their faces twisted, tears streaming. They clutched their sides, unable to breathe, unable to stop. Their laughter tangled with the voices in the well, pulled downward, dragged into the hungry dark until their own echoes joined the eternal chorus.
Even the donkeys giggled. A terrible, braying, soul-curdling laughter that would have been funny if it werenβt so horribly wrong. Their reins snapped as they bucked and rolled, their laughter tumbling down into the well, swallowed whole.
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At last, silence fell again. The clearing was empty. Only the Lantern-Bearer remained, standing by the mossy stones, lantern glowing faintly gold. He hummed a little tune, tapping his foot, as if nothing strange had happened at all.
βWell,β he said cheerfully, glancing around, βthat was fun.β He adjusted his hat, burped, and wiped a tear from his bulging eye. βBut I do hope the next lot brings better snacks. Onions, really? Pah.β
He turned and waddled back into the forest, lantern bobbing. His laughter trailed behind him like smoke, curling through the trees, drifting down the Old Hollow Road toward the next group of travelers who thought superstition was just silly old stories.
And the well waited. Always waiting. Hungry for the next laugh in the dark.
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Bring the Lantern-Bearer Home (If You Dare)
If the tale of Laughter in the Dark tickled your funny bone (or chilled it), you can invite the mischievous Lantern-Bearer into your own world. His eerie grin and glowing lantern live on in a series of high-quality art productsβperfect for lovers of spooky whimsy and gothic humor.
πΌοΈ Framed Prints β Bring his unsettling charm to your walls in a beautifully crafted frame.
β¨ Metal Prints β Make his lantern glow even brighter with bold, modern metal finishes.
π Greeting Cards β Send a little spooky cheer (and maybe a cackle or two) through the mail.
π Stickers β Add a pop of creepy whimsy to your laptop, journal, or favorite potion bottle.
Whichever form you choose, youβll carry a piece of the Lantern-Bearerβs strange magic with you. Justβ¦ be careful when the lights go out. His laugh has a way of finding you.