© Hiraeth Publishing
Late last month saw the publication of the Samhain 2024 edition of the fiction, non-fiction and poetry magazine The Hungur Chronicles. I’m pleased to say it includes an 8000-word short story of mine called The Tears of the Pontianak. The story is a horror one so, as with all my horror fiction, it’s attributed to the pseudonym Jim Mountfield.
I had the original idea for the story one day while I was exploring Singapore’s impressive Asian Civilisations Museum. A couple of items of antique furniture – beautifully ornate and lacquered and each containing a dozen drawers – caught my eye and got me thinking. I imagined a chest of drawers like these being acquired by a rich man with a lot of guilty secrets in his past, secrets his conscience could only deal with by compartmentalising them and totally shutting them away from his existence now. Not only would the drawers be symbolic of how he’d compartmentalised his life, but they’d somehow have a supernatural power to revive his guilty secrets and force him to confront them.
The Hungur Chronicles is a rebooted version of Hungur, a magazine I wrote stories for back in 2010 and 2011. The reason I hadn’t written for Hungur / The Hungur Chronicles since then is because the publication features “short stories, poems, articles, and illustrations related in some way to vampires.” And until recently I’d found it difficult to come up with a fresh and interesting vampire story. Like zombies, vampires are a staple of horror stories that have been used a zillion times before. It seemed impossible to write about them in a way that wasn’t clichéd.
So, yes, The Tears of the Pontianak isn’t only about a strange chest of drawers. It’s about a vampire. However, the ‘vampire’ in question is something a little out-of-the-ordinary, at least for Western readers. It’s a Pontianak, a malevolent female creature that appears in the folklore of Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. Though Pontianaks have different attributes in different places, I went with the Malaysian version of them, which, according to Wikipedia, “depicts them as “vampiric” blood-suckers that dissect through the internal organs of men.” But to link the Pontianak with the other elements in my story, like the haunted chest of drawers and the rich man with a guilty past, I had it feed on something other than blood. I also needed to set the story in Southeast Asia. Thus, The Tears of the Pontianak is a minor milestone for me because it’s my first published story that takes place in Singapore.
Finally, I’m fond of basing fictional characters on gnarly old cinematic character-actors whom I like. For example, ones inspired by James Robertson Justice and James Cosmo have turned up in stories of mine that’ve seen print during the past year. The Tears of the Pontianak contains a character modelled on Michael Smiley, the grizzled Northern Irish character actor whose CV includes roles in several weird, disturbing and violent Ben Wheatley films: Down Terrace (2009), Kill List (2011), A Field in England (2013) and Free Fire (2016). As I’m also grizzled and Northern Irish, and people tell me I’m weird enough to be a character in a Ben Wheatley film, I identify a lot with Smiley. And in The Tears of the Pontianak I pay tribute to him.
© Film4 Productions / BFI / Rook Films / StudioCanal
Containing four additional stories, some poetry and a non-fiction article, and with a striking cover by painter Sandy DeLuca, the Samhain 2024 edition of The Hungur Chronicles can be purchased here.