ONLY A SCRATCH
A True Documented Terror Case Based on the 1938 Halifax Slasher Panic
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
Prueba gratis de 30 días de Audible Standard
Compra ahora por $4.99
-
Narrado por:
-
Virtual Voice
-
De:
-
Ted Lazaris
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Editorial Review
Only a Scratch is a masterwork of documented psychological horror that transforms the real 1938 Halifax Slasher Panic into something colder, more intelligent, and deeply unsettling. Ted Lazaris strips away folklore and spectacle, revealing a force that does not kill recklessly—but studies, calibrates, and stops precisely at the edge of fatality. The result is a terrifying exploration of fear, restraint, and invisible correction that lingers long after the final page.
ONLY A SCRATCH
A True Documented Terror Case Based on the 1938 Halifax Slasher Panic
It began with a scratch. The fear cut deeper.
Halifax, 1938.
The first man apologizes when he reports it.
A narrow cut along his cheek. Clean. Almost polite.
He says something brushed past him in the alley. Not a shove. Not an attack.
A passing.
Close enough to feel breath.
Police laugh.
Doctors call it nerves.
The newspapers print the word panic.
Then the skin begins to open.
Across throats.
Across eyelids.
Across the backs of hands gripping door handles in empty rooms.
Thin, exact lines — as if traced with care.
No tearing. No struggle.
No witnesses.
Victims describe the same moment before they start to shake:
It stood behind me.
Crowds take to the streets with iron bars and belt buckles wrapped around fists. Strangers are cornered. Windows shattered. Someone screams “There he is” and a mill worker is dragged into the road.
He keeps saying he has done nothing.
He keeps saying he saw nothing.
They stomp him until the sound changes.
The cuts continue elsewhere.
Wrong man.
Wrong death.
Officials charge victims with filing false reports.
Doctors suggest self-infliction.
The courts insist it is hysteria.
Then the wounds change.
A woman wakes with the corners of her mouth opened wider than they were the night before.
A boy feels fingers press lightly along his ribs while lying awake in the dark. In the morning, four shallow incisions sit exactly where the pressure had been.
Locked doors.
Bolted windows.
Cuts placed where no body could stand.
And the most disturbing detail in sworn statements:
No one feels pain when it happens.
Only warmth.
Only breath.
Only the slow awareness that something is standing directly behind them — studying.
Measuring.
Choosing.
The panic tears Halifax apart.
But the wounds are not frantic.
They are careful.
Placed with patience.
As if something is learning how much a body can endure without dying.
When the city finally declares the hysteria over, the crowds dissolve. The arrests stop. Newspapers move on.
Records are filed.
Explanations printed.
But one entry does not fit.
A constable on solitary patrol beneath the gas lamps. He reports hearing footsteps match his own. One pace behind. Every step.
He stops.
The footsteps stop.
He turns.
No one is there.
He walks again.
The breathing returns.
Hours later he is found seated against a brick wall, cap still on his head.
Alive.
Unable to speak.
A single incision runs from beneath his ear down the front of his throat.
Perfectly straight.
Not deep enough to kill.
Deep enough to know it could have.
There is no blood on the ground.
Only on his collar.
Officials close the file.
They call it mass hysteria.
They do not explain why, years later, former residents still insisted on sleeping with their backs against the wall.
It began with a scratch.
And something learned how close it could stand to you without being seen.