giovedì 24 ottobre 2024

Howl

Welcome to the Spot Writers. This month's prompt is "Halloween with a twist." Today's tale comes to us from Val Muller, author of the Corgi Capers mystery series.

 

Howl

by Val Muller

 

The sun rose in rays cutting through the mist. Randy shook his fur and adjusted his shirt. It was finally here--Halloween. Tonight was his night to prove himself, to terrify small children and howl at the moon, to rustle through bushes and leaves, to claw at doorways.

If he did all that, maybe his dad would finally get off his case.

The werewolf academy was awarding only three red shirts this holiday, making the high award an elite honor most likely out of Randy's league but definitely on his dad's radar.

"You know, there's nothing wrong with being a blue shirt," Randy said at dinner just last week. He had been assigned to terrify a young brother and sister walking their dog after dark, but he really didn't see the need to do such things. Besides, dogs were a little intimidating.

"No werewolf aspires to be a blue shirt." His dad tore a piece of raw meat off the bone, letting the remnants clatter to his plate with a splat while he chewed. Then he rubbed his claws along his size XL red flannel shirt, still emblazoned with the werewolf academy patch and the year he earned it.

"Dad, it's not the seventies anymore. Not everyone needs a red shirt. And even if I stay a green shirt, I--"

His dad growled at the very idea of Randy staying a green shirt. The wereboy lowered his head and munched on a piece of broccoli.

"Dang it, Randy, I've told you how many times. You have to eat your meat first. You think I'm gonna let you fill up on vegetables?"

Randy sighed. The whole week, dad had been like this. Criticizing his diet. Saying his teeth weren't sharp enough, his fur not matted enough.

"You know, Matthew got groomed this weekend," Randy had said. "All the kids at school seem to think his haircut looks nice and--" That set off Dad, of course. Next thing Randy knew, they were at the local dump finding musty discards to roll in.

"No son of mine is getting groomed, and certainly not this close to Halloween."

Since then, they had hunted, clawed, lingered, and howled. But Randy still hadn't found that drive, that urge to scare.

Now, Halloween morning, Randy was determined to put the issue to rest. If he could only just terrify someone, maybe instill in them some indigestion or the need for anti-anxiety meds, maybe that would be enough for Dad.

Randy headed out of their foresty shed in search of victims. The first victim was a woman walking her dog. It was a little one, a chihuahua. But you know what they say about little dogs. Randy chose to stay on the opposite side of the street. He threw the woman a creepy look. Alright, it was more like a sideways smile, but still. Dad couldn't say he didn't try.

The woman gave a half wave and a sympathetic smile. "I like your costume," she said. "Very scary."

The way she said "scary," Randy could tell she really didn't think so.

Randy continued walking toward the town. Surely someone would be frightened. He unbuttoned the cuffs of his green flannel shirt to add that extra little look of dishevelment.

Soon, screeching tires and backup lights. "No. Way." A voice called. Randy caught up to the truck that had stopped on the side of the road. The guy at the wheel looked pretty frantic. Maybe he would make an easy victim.

"Dude," he said. "You look just like Freddy."

"Freddy?"

"Yeah. He was our last werewolf. Something came up, though, and he can't play the role tonight. We don't have any spare actors, and I've been racking my brain all morning. Want to make an easy couple of hundred bucks?"

"Hundred bucks?" Randy approached the car.

The man nodded. "I mean, your costume looks so good, it could be real." He reached out and tugged Randy's facial fur. "That's some beard!"

"You're not scared of me?"

The man laughed. "I run a haunted woods attraction for a living. I'm not scared, but I know hundreds of people who will be."

Randy howled. "Sign me up."

 * * *

 The early November sun gently lit the morning fog. Randy crunched on a celery stalk while Dad ate some marrow out of a freshly cracked deer bone.

Between bites, he looked at Randy and smiled. "So proud of you for earning the scariest character award at that haunted woods place you went to."

"You're not mad I only earned a blue shirt from the academy?" Randy smiled, hoping the whole red shirt thing was behind him.

Dad let out a playful growl. "You only earned a blue shirt for now. There's always next year."

Randy looked down at his "scariest character" medal and the way it gleamed in the sun. His chest swelled with pride, which he released in a long, eerie howl that even made his own skin crawl as his mind wandered to next Halloween.

 

The Spot Writers:

Val Muller: http://valmuller.com/blog/

Catherine A. MacKenzie: https://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/

Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com

Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/

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