Some PLURAL NOUN were at a party one night. There was a NOUN down the street, and they were talking about how ADJECTIVE it was.
“Don’t ever VERB on a NOUN after dark,” one of the boys said. “The NOUN inside will VERB you. He’ll pull you under.”
“That’s ADJECTIVE ,” one of the girls said. “It’s just a NOUN.”
“I’ll give you a NOUN if you stand on a grave,” said the boy.
“A grave doesn’t VERB me,” said the NOUN. “I’ll do it right now.”
The boy handed her his NOUN. “Stick this NOUN in one of the PLURAL NOUN,” he said. “Then we’ll know you were there.”
The PLACE was filled with PLURAL NOUN and was as ADJECTIVE as death. “There is nothing to be scared of,” the girl told herself, but she was ADJECTIVE anyway.
She picked out a NOUN and stood on it. Then ADVERB she bent over and PAST TENSE VERB the NOUN into the soil, and she started to leave. But she couldn’t get away. Something was holding her back! She tried a second time to VERB , but she couldn’t VERB . She was filled with NOUN EMOTION.
“Something has got me!” she screamed , and PAST TENSE VERB to the ground.
When she didn’t come back, the others went to look for her. They found her NOUN sprawled across the PLACE . Without realizing it, she had PAST TENSE VERB the knife through her NOUN and had pinned it to the PLACE . It was only the NOUN that held her. She had died of NOUN EMOTION.