- Script
- Johnny Craig (signed as )
- Pencils
- Johnny Craig (signed as )
- Inks
- Johnny Craig (signed as )
- Colors
- Marie Severin
- Letters
- Jim Wroten
- First Line of Dialogue or Text
- Heh, heh! Statue, friends?
- Genre
- horror-suspense
- Characters
- The Vault-Keeper (host); Cedric Harrington (sculptor); Christine (villain, model, death); Gary (villain, Christine's lover)
- Synopsis
- Cedric, a sculptor in love with his model Christine, offers to silver-plate a life-sized statue of her as a gift, hoping she will accept his marriage proposal. One day, he accidentally overhears a phone conversation between the model and her lover as they conspire to kill Cedric and run off with his money. When Gary comes to Cedric's studio one day looking for Christine, he finds her, but not exactly the way he had hoped.
- Reprints
Colorist and letterer credits by Craig Delich.
- Script
- Bill Gaines
- Letters
- typeset
- First Line of Dialogue or Text
- Through the murky blue-green water near the bottom of the reef...
- Genre
- horror-suspense
- Characters
- Henderson
- Synopsis
- Henderson was watching his partner diving into the water from their boat, trying to locate the valuable oyster bed that was shown on a map and they had been trying to find the last two days. Then, his partner discovered a huge oyster with a giant pearl inside....but before he could do anything, Henderson pushed his partner back into the water, followed him and knifed him in the chest, and cut the airhose. He was going to tell the crew aboard the boat that his partner had been killed by an octopus, but before he re-surfaced, he was attacked by a giant octopus himself. He passed out, and when he awakened, he discovered the octopus had torn off one leg and a savage tentacle was wrapping around his other leg. All Henderson could do was pray for a quick death!
- Reprints
The text story was printed on the inner halves of the two pages, with EC house ads to either side. One promoted Weird Fantasy #15 [with cover by Al Feldstein], while the other promoted, with covers, the Complete Old and New Testament editions in the Picture Stories From the Bible series, Picture Stories From Science #2 and Picture Stories From World History #2.
- Script
- Bill Gaines (co-plot); Al Feldstein (co-plot, script)
- Pencils
- George Evans (signed as Geo. Evans)
- Inks
- George Evans (signed as Geo. Evans)
- Colors
- Marie Severin
- Letters
- Jim Wroten
- First Line of Dialogue or Text
- You might say this terror tale is...
- Genre
- horror-suspense
- Characters
- The Vault-Keeper (host); members of the posse [Phil; Doc; others unnamed]; Old Hag; Pete Feeley (villain)
- Synopsis
- The posse stood before the mouth of the dark cave, where they had trailed a creature that had killed ten of their own, stripping their flesh from their bones. Doc told them he'd seen this creature long ago....before it came to look like it did now. Pete came to see Doc with a lump on his arm, which he discovered was cancer, and he only had a few months to live. Dejected, Pete went to see the Old Hag up on Baldy Mountain, and she hexed him so that he'd never die....IF he'd agree to never ask her to un-hex him. He began to rot away, but he couldn't die!
- Reprints
- Keywords
- Old Baldy Mountain
Script credit from Tales of Terror: The EC Companion.
The visage of the Vault-Keeper at the top of the of page 1 is a Johnny Craig photostat.
Some of the story is told in flashback.
Cover story.
- Script
- Bill Gaines (co-plot); Al Feldstein (co-plot, script)
- Pencils
- Graham Ingels (signed as Ghastly)
- Inks
- Graham Ingels (signed as Ghastly)
- Colors
- Marie Severin
- Letters
- Jim Wroten
- First Line of Dialogue or Text
- Hee, hee! Yep, it's your renderer of revolting recipes...
- Genre
- horror-suspense
- Characters
- The Old Witch (host); townspeople (many die); Siegfried (villain, a pompous King, death); Gwendolyn (villain, a pompous Queen, death); a pompous Lord High Advisor (villain)
- Synopsis
- A tiny kingdom was overrun with rats and the people decided they'd had enough and proceeded to kill most all the rats. The rulers were a pompous King and Queen, who lived in a castle whose moat the rats couldn't cross over. The Queen had pet white mice she loved, and when she learned that the townspeople had nearly killed off all the rats, which were related to her mice, it became a crime to kill any rat! Furious, the townspeople invaded the castle, captured the royal couple, shoved starving rats down their throats and sewed their mouths shut, and then watched as the rats ate their way out!
- Reprints
Colorist added by Craig Delich (March 2006).
Letterer credit by Craig Delich.