Short Stories
Some short stories for you to peruse.

A puzzle’s appeal is working it through,
after that, there’s nothing
left to do.
The universe is not only
queerer than we suppose,
but queerer than we can
suppose.
--J.B.S. Haldane
Oltion’s Complete
Unabridged History:
BANG! . . .crumple.
--Jerry Oltion
It was dark.
At least it was dark outside the small perimeter of the light provided by the sphere. The sphere itself was a deep obsidian color, it’s surface polished to a mirror-like sheen. It was the densest object in existence; however, after pulling together everything ever created beneath its gorged surface, it was also the only object still in existence.
The soft, bluish-white glow around the sphere was actually an aura, or rather an illusion produced by the sphere itself so that its onlookers could admire its beauty, its power, and its overall control of the worlds it contained.
“Take it,” a voice whispered in the dankness.
“I can not,” came a smaller, quivering reply.
After a long pause, the whisper came again, “You sound sad.”
“I never thought that it would end like this.”
“You mean so quiet? So dark? So empty?” again the whispering voice took a long pause, “Yet the sphere is whole once again. You have finished what you began so long ago.”
“You mock me!” the hopeless voice cried out in anguish, “You promised me that the sphere would chase away the shadows and the silence, and this damnable emptiness.”
“And now you feel cheated?”
“Yes,” the tiny voice cried, and then very remorseful, “I have spent so much time and energy putting the damned thing together, collecting its too many pieces from the very farthest corners of space, and then finally fitting each of those puny fragments together...perfectly.”
“Quite an accomplishment. Completed, the sphere is indeed an impressive work.”
An oversized hand swept across the surface of the sphere caressing its unblemished curves.
“You have completed the sphere, and have beaten my challenge, therefore it belongs to you now; however, if you do feel cheated then I will certainly reclaim it,” another long pause, “But before I do so I must first ask this: as you collected the fragmented sphere, did you not find the pieces interesting?”
“Some were colorful while others were plain. There were a few that sent me tiny voices. I guess those were interesting.”
“Interesting enough to keep away the shadows? Enough to drown out the silence?” one last pause, “Maybe you are right. Perhaps you were cheated.”
A huge hand closed over the glow of the sphere.
“No, wait!”
A small hand pulled apart the fingers that now held the sphere, revealing its fantastic aura once more.
“You wish to keep the sphere?”
“No, but it is mine now, correct?”
“Yes, you have accomplished the challenge.”
“Thank-you then.”
With those final words the small hand captured the sphere with the help of a second, almost identical, hand and then carried it carefully to the zenith of space.
Back in the darkness, where the sphere used to be, the whispering voice shouted as loud as it most certainly could have, “Let there be light!”
The little hands threw the sphere with all their might toward the voice. When it hit the nexus of space, the tiny globe shattered in a gout of explosion.
The sphere cracked, spilling light — true light — throughout the darkness of space. Galaxies, planets, molecules, and particles trillions of times smaller than a quark burst forth from the expanding sphere, filling the empty boundaries of space. By the time the light of the explosion reached the owner of the tiny hands, a buzzing drone of voices began to grow, spreading slowly outward from the nexus.
A smile spread across of the lips of the owner of the tiny hands.
*****
Although the initial explosion had ended leaving not a trace of the sphere for vast distances from the nexus, its particles continued to move, continued to spread out, distributing themselves incredulously in intricate whorls about every corner of space.
The universe is full of magical things,
patiently waiting for our wits to grow sharper.
—Eden Phillpots

Alex Fulton started working as assistant chief coroner in the city morgue during the second week of June. It was now late August and he was pretty well settled in. He had been a surgeon at Wenetachee Hospital for two and a half years, and compared to that, Alex found this job very slow. But it was just what he had wanted. He had decided that his former medical career had far too many patients looking up to him as some kind of heroic god, and then spitting on him as if he were Satan incarnate if he didn’t pull off a miracle. He had decided not to take that kind of abuse anymore. A slow job in the morgue was just what the doctor had prescribed. None of his new patients had yet to file a grievance or lawsuit.
The Washington weather in Wenetachee was beautiful at this time of year, and the picturesque mountains on the outskirts of the city were photo perfect. Since it was Saturday, Alex had decided to take a stroll through the city, trying to get in his exercise for the week. But this wasn’t just a leisurely Saturday stroll. At work the night before, Alex had accidentally broken a dozen light bulbs or so while attempting to replace just one. Since they had been city equipment, Alex was ordered to replace them out of his own pocket, by his boss, Wes Mason. So, today he had to make a side trip to the hardware store.
As he walked into the
hardware store, he noticed a very fragile looking, ceramic kitten. He had
always liked small ornamental objects and was tempted to buy it; but, always
looking for a bargain, he placed it back on the shelf after seeing the price
tag stuck on its bottom. Beside his addiction to knick-knacks, Alex was also
addicted to eavesdropping on other people, especially in public places. Hearing a heated conversation one aisle over,
he nonchalantly inched his way closer to a man speaking with the owner of the
store, hoping to pick up some of their conversation. He lifted a couple of
things off the shelves and placed them in his basket as though he were
shopping, trying not to look too conspicuous.
"I'm looking at the possibility of
bankruptcy you know," said the owner.
Alex crept a little closer.
"If you want my
opinion, you should put your foot down and stop taking orders from your own
damn employees. You own the store for heaven’s sake, cut their salaries,"
said the other man.
"And if they decide to
quit? I’m already short handed as it is!" The owner was getting upset now
and finally noticed Alex’s close proximity.
"May I help you?"
"Uh . . . no, I'm just
browsing." Alex turned red in the face as he realized that he had taken a
considerable amount of merchandise off the shelf. Embarrassed, he began
returning the items back where he had found them. After finally returning everything
except twelve new light bulbs, he checked out and stepped out to the street
once again.
He looked down the length
of Main Street. At the end of the block
was City Hall. Ellie Black had been elected Mayor back in November and Alex had
really respected her for winning by a landslide over the old incumbent. Alex
had always believed in and supported women’s rights. Lately he wished more women worked in the
coroner’s office. You see a lot more
women nurses in hospitals than you see policewomen in the morgue. He glanced
away from City Hall and noticed a small antique shop across the street that he
must have overlooked the weekends before.
It was a small, but old
shop that must have been there a long time. He wondered how he could have
missed it on his previous weekend walks.
In any case, the mere sight of it began to arouse the huge trinket
collector inside him.
He crossed the street and checked out the
large picture window. Trinkets were stacked on tables, grouped together by item
type or usage. From the outside the
store looked neat and, although a bit old, very tidy; inside, however, it had
many items strewn out all over the place in no particular order. He wondered
how the owner was able to keep inventory. The lighting wasn't very good so he
was easily startled when the owner made his entrance from behind a dusty, old curtain.
Most everything was dusty and old, especially a small silver box placed high
upon a shelf that still managed to catch Alex’s eye. Alex probably wouldn't
have seen it if the light, what there was of it, didn't make it blink with a
short glare for a moment. After taking the tiny box from the shelf, he opened
it and found an old ring, costume or estate jewelry it appeared to be – the
kind you’d see in a Dracula movie or some other gothic occult film. The ring
itself was gold and large, like those gaudy class rings you got in high school
or the ones you’d find a snooty college frat-brat wearing. A huge stone was mounted in its center. It
was blacker and darker than anything he had ever seen before. It made Alex
shiver when he touched it, yet it peaked his curiosity. Without taking his eyes
off the ring, he asked the owner how much it cost. Looking tired and
overworked, the shopkeeper explained that he had just inherited the shop a few
days ago with the death of his uncle and he still didn't have all the books in
order. He took the ring and told Alex that he would have to go in the back to
lookup the value of the ring. After ten or fifteen minutes the owner finally
came back shrugging his shoulders.
"I can't find it in my
uncle's records," he said.
Alex, seeing the
opportunity of perhaps getting an extremely valuable ring for practically
nothing, responded quickly.
"Well I'll give you
sixty bucks for it." He said in his most honest voice.
The shopkeeper sighed and
looked Alex over from head to toe, as if sizing him up for a fight,
"Seventy-five and it's yours, no questions asked." The storekeeper
wanted to make a little money from the deal, but Alex could tell he still just
wanted to get rid of the ring along with all the other junk littering the
store. Truth be told, the little
shopkeeper did want to get rid of everything, this particular inheritance was
more work than he felt it was worth, and since the ring itself wasn't even in
the inventory records . . .
"Seventy." Alex
said, still haggling.
"Sold." The owner
put the ring back in the little silver box and then wrapped it in tissue paper
before ringing up the sale on his antiquated cash register.
“Looks like that thing
belongs in the front window too,” Alex said, pointing to the old cash register
and smiling.
The shop owner just nodded
his head and counted out Alex’s change.
Alex returned to his
apartment on South Street in a daze. He
had a feeling of grandeur that he had just bought the Hope diamond from someone
who had thought it was just a lovely piece of glass. He couldn’t wait to get it
appraised. It was almost like winning
the lottery. Alex just knew he held a
winning ticket. He couldn’t wait to tell Patty about it, but when he finally
entered the apartment, he noticed she had left him a note:
Honey, I've gone to Cynthia's,
won't be back until tonight.
Patty
You
couldn't pry those two away from each other if you tried, especially if Cynthia
had some interesting gossip, Alex thought as he read the note scrawled on a
paper plate.
Alex
removed the tissue paper, then took the ring out of the box. He slumped down on the sofa with the ring
clenched in his palm. I wonder where you came from? He thought as he
examined it. He peered at it closer and
closer, scrutinizing it as if it were a body brought to him in the morgue.
On the inside of the band
there was a tiny inscription. It looked like an old style of calligraphy,
something scratched rather than inscribed Alex noted. The words looked foreign,
and Alex didn't bother looking them up, for the most part because he didn’t
really know where to look. With all his
college studies, he never once took a foreign language, or even a Latin or
Classics course for that matter. In
fact, he had barely scraped by the few English courses that he had taken.
Everyone had always told him that he was more of an analytical or scientific
thinker anyway. He slipped the ring onto his pinky finger, because it had been
made for a man with much more slender fingers than his own, and gazed at the
dark stone. Suddenly he felt like the world was slipping away. Everything
became fuzzy and he felt on the verge of fainting. Everything around him grayed out, and he
drifted away into a deep, dark sleep.
Alex always had vivid
dreams, ever since he was a kid. But this dream was different from those he had
had as a child. This one was not only vivid, but seemed real – very real. He
was in a dark forest. The trees were bare and there was a light cover of snow
on the ground. Suddenly, out of the corner of his eye, he saw a wild jackrabbit
dart out across the snow. He was attracted to it as a cat might be to a mouse.
He had a strange feeling that in his other dreams he had been somewhat taller.
Now, his head was only inches from the ground as he chased the rabbit, turning
wildly this way and that, trying to keep on the erratic path of the jackrabbit.
He also realized that he was panting heavily, like a dog on a hot summer day.
With one large leap forward, he finally caught the rabbit, but he didn't catch
it with his hands, instead he caught it in his mouth, or rather, his jaws. He
ripped the rabbit to shreds as he held the carcass down with his . . . paws?
Alex
woke up with a start, and immediately looked at his hands. They were still
human. Somehow he had gotten undressed and ended up in bed, with Patty sleeping
soundly next to him. Quietly, so he didn’t wake Patty, Alex got out of bed
feeling very hungry. He walked to the kitchen looking for something to eat, but
as he got closer to the refrigerator, he realized that he wasn’t just hungry --
he had an overwhelming craving. He wanted meat, raw meat. He took a steak out
of the refrigerator, tore the plastic wrap off, and then tore a large corner of
it off with his teeth before chewing it. He was more than half-way done when
Patty came in.
"What
are you doing?" She asked making a strange face.
Alex
looked at the steak, blinked his eyes and then shook his head. The trance he
had been in seemed to break.
"Patty?
What are you doing here so soon?" He asked, as if it were but moments ago
that he had read her note.
"It’s
three o'clock in the morning. You're the one eating a raw steak, and you ask me
what I'm doing here? Do you feel all right Alex?" She asked, showing
genuine concern.
"Sure.
I'm fine." He said as he put the steak down and walked casually into the
bedroom.
Patty
stood there dazed for a few minutes, looked down at what was left of the steak,
picked it up, placed it in the sink, and then followed him into the bedroom,
whispering under her breath as she walked, "Weirdo."
A
few weeks went by and Alex kept having similar dreams, and he always awoke with
a craving for raw meat. At the day of the full moon Patty was away on a
business meeting in Cashmere, while Alex had the day off, so he was all alone
when the moon rose up from behind the dark clouds of the night. He was sitting
in front of the television reading the TV Guide, because nothing good was on.
Just by coincidence, Alex happened to look down at the ring on his finger as
the moon rose to it’s full height for the night. The dark black stone turned a
cloudy, white color, like a thick, eerie fog. He moved his hand closer to his
face so he could see the stone better, and suddenly there was a sharp pain in
his back. He felt as if someone had struck him with a baseball bat. He was numb
with shock, but at the same time could feel the sharp pain, as if it were very
far away, slowly moving closer, making itself known to his entire body. Then,
all at once, the same sharp pain he felt in his back struck every bone in his
body, including his skull. He glanced down at his hands as tears dripped from
his eyes, and he noticed that his fingernails were growing at an accelerated
rate. Through the tears he could actually see them extending by another half an
inch or so. His skin was turning a mottled brown and coarse hair follicles were
erupting all over his body. Then there was a sound of breaking bones and
tearing skin. Alex finally screamed, as his fingers grew longer, matching the
growth of his nails. His scream became a howl as his nose and mouth breached
forward to form a muzzle. His back arched and his clothes were torn from his
body. His ears formed points and became fuzzy with new hair. His hands and feet
molded into paws and his howls cried up at the moon as Alex Fulton ceased to
exist and the largest wolf in Wanetachee was born.
****
The
wolf was confused in the confines of the apartment, and leapt quickly through
the front window to escape his tight surroundings. Outside the beast surveyed
the environs. Seeing the mountains past the city, the wolf moved quickly and
methodically through the streets, trying desperately to get back into the woods
surrounding the mountains. It had been around 11:30 PM, so most of the streets
were abandoned. The wolf ran invisible through the city until about 11:50 PM
when a homeless man spotted it. The man staggered after it, thinking it was a
stray dog. When he finally caught up to it, he grabbed it by the cuff,
"Nice doggie," he said, petting it on the head with his other
hand. He was drunk and the wolf had
reminded him of a dog he had had when he was a little kid. As soon as the wolf
was touched it spun around, barring its teeth and growling at the homeless man.
The man was knocked off balance and fell when the wolf spun around to face him,
but that didn’t stop him from trying to pet the wolf again.
"Hi
doggie, how you doin'?" He said reaching out once more for the wolf.
The
wolf snarled and tore through the drunk's hand with its sharp canines. Blood
spurted everywhere as the man’s main artery severed. He screamed in pain after the initial shock
of the malicious bite. The blood only enhanced the wolf's carnivorous instinct
and it pounced on the drunken man. Blood splattered the wolf's coat and muzzle
as it tore through the homeless man’s body. When the man’s screams finally
ceased with a bloody gurgle, and his limbs stopped thrashing, the wolf began
his trek through the city once more, moving closer toward the cover of the
outlying forest.
The
next morning Alex awoke in the forest, nude and covered with dried blood. The
day had not yet dawned, so it was still dark outside. Disoriented, Alex began
walking back to the city. He didn't know where he was walking, he was just
walking, still under some kind of trance. Somehow he made it back through the
shadows and alleys to his apartment without being seen.
The
door was still locked, so he climbed carefully through the broken window and
wandered back to the bathroom. He
showered until all the blood flowed off of is body and away down the drain. In a haze, he dried himself off, then
sauntered into the bedroom where he collapsed onto the bed.
Alex
didn't wake again until Patty came home. “Alex?” she asked as if she didn’t
think he was there.
Alex
moaned and pulled the sheets over his head.
Patty stepped into the bedroom and asked, "Alex? Are you alright?”
“What
time is it?” Alex asked as he rolled over and gingerly opened his eyes, staring
at the ceiling.
“Four o’clock in the
afternoon. Have you been sleeping all
day?”
Alex was shocked. He knew he couldn’t have slept that late, he
always got up early, even on weekends
“What
time was it?” he asked.
“Four
o’clock, and what the hell happened to your clothes and the front window?” she
said, holding up the tattered remains of his clothes for him to see.
"What?
What’s wrong with the window?" Alex scratched his head, then rubbed his
eyes as he sat up in bed.
"Come
here." Patty said, grabbing his hand and pulling him to get him out of
bed.
Alex
reluctantly got up and let Patty lead him to the living room. "Jesus, it
must have been the neighbor kids." He remembered nothing of last night or
early this morning.
"Well,
what about your clothes?” She handed him
the rags that used to be the clothes he had on yesterday. Alex just stood there dumbfounded. “The window will have to get fixed by
tomorrow because it’s suppose to rain. I don’t know what you were doing last
night, and maybe I don’t want to, but if you don't hurry and get ready, you're
going to be late for work." She said as she went to the kitchen and
started making coffee.
Alex
managed to pull himself to work, but he needed to down five aspirin before he
left the apartment because his body ached all over. He had also drunk five cups
of coffee, yet a funny, metallic taste still remained in his mouth.
The
morgue was bustling when he got there, over a mutilated homeless man who had
been brought in by his boss on the early shift.
"What
happened to him?" Alex asked one of the assistants who was pulling a
double.
"Don't
know. Thought that was your job.” The assistant smiled, then added, “A store
owner found him like that on a side street early this morning. With all the
stuff that comes in here, I have to say, that’s about the worse looking corpse
I’ve ever seen. The cops are guessing that it's some nut case with a radical
solution to our homeless problem, but Mr. Mason said it looked like some kind
of animal in his preliminary exam.” The assistant handed Alex the corpse’s
chart.
Alex
glanced at the chart, and then asked the assistant, "Is Wes upstairs, or
did he already go home?"
“He
left about an hour before you got here.
You want me to page him?”
“No,
I’ll ask him about the chart tomorrow.
If this was an animal, though, it had to be something big.” Alex pulled
on a pair of latex gloves, palmed his micro cassette recorder and picked up on
the autopsy where Wes had left off.
When
he got home he noticed that Patty had taped up some cardboard over the broken
window. When he got into the kitchen he
wrote himself a reminder to call about getting it fixed when he got up later
that day. Within a half an hour Alex was sound asleep in his bed.
****
At about the third week in
July Alex’s nightmares returned along with the full moon.
Patty
was visiting her mother, so Alex was home alone again. This time he was fixing
himself a snack when the ring clouded and he became the wolf once more.
The
wolf didn’t panic this time, however. He
now knew that he was safe inside this house. He didn't crash through the new
window this time, but instead examined his surroundings with his sharp smelling
nose. Not smelling anything overly displeasing, he walked cautiously through
the apartment taking a visual tour. On his self-guided tour he noticed that a
window in the basement had a broken latch and was banging noisily open and
shut. The wolf squeezed through the window and escaped the apartment without breaking
a single thing this time.
Later
that night the wolf killed a night watchman, this time without
provocation. He enjoyed this kill,
relishing in the frantic thrashings of his victim. The watchman’s death didn’t
curb his bloodlust however, so the wolf went stalking for more likely victims.
It got what it wanted in two elderly women walking home late from church.
****
Alex
awoke the next morning and knew he had killed. He didn't actually know for a
fact, but he had a feeling that someone was murdered and that he was the
killer. It was a strange feeling of clairvoyance, something Alex had never had
before. He ran to the front door and picked up the morning newspaper. The
headlines read, "Three Found Mutilated, Police Investigations Under
Way." He remembered the mutilated bum he had been brought about a month
ago and wondered if there was a connection.
For
the next three weeks Alex made his own investigation. He found, from police,
that there were reports of people seeing a large dog or wolf, some even said it
was a small bear, around the areas of each murder. The police sent men out to
try and find the wild animal, but never found anything fitting the unusual
descriptions. July passed and August came with another new full moon. This time
Patty had no where to go, so Alex wasn’t alone when he changed.
Fortunately Patty was in
the shower when the moon had rose above the houses and trees. Alex had gone
into the basement when he heard the window banging open and shut. After he
locked the window and put a piece of wood across it to hold the lock, the transformation
began. He tried fighting it, but it was no use. His bones shortened, his hair
grew, his face became distorted, then the wolf was back. This time it was
different though, Alex didn't blackout, instead he could see through the wolf's
eyes and feel through the wolf's skin. Alex couldn't control the wolf's
movements, but he was there, aware of everything the wolf saw, smelled and
touched. It was like the nightmares he had grown to hate. Without any control
of his surroundings, Alex Fulton was propelled through a nightmare where the
only thing he could do was watch.
The
wolf's mind was still there as well. Alex could sense it. He could feel the
wolf making observations of the house. He could feel it deciding to go upstairs
since the window was now locked. Suddenly Alex remembered Patty. She was still
in the house. The wolf would kill her for sure if it saw her. Alex tried to
think. He tried to scream, but nothing came out. He was in the kitchen with the
wolf now. He could hear the water running in the bathroom and Patty singing
above it’s splashings.
Thank
God, she's still in the shower. Alex thought, feeling more than relieved.
The
wolf walked into the living room and casually sniffed the air. Alex wanted it
to get out of the house, but he couldn't make the wolf’s muscles move, he
couldn’t do anything. He was trapped
somewhere in the wolf’s mind. The water suddenly stopped running in the
bathroom, and Patty opened the door, stepping out into the hall.
"Alex
where's the hair dryer?" She thought Alex was still in the living room.
"Alex?"
She walked into the living room. She had
a towel wrapped around her hair, and another wrapped around her body.
No,
Patty, go back! The wolf will tear you apart! Alex screamed, but nothing was heard. Patty
then saw Alex, or rather, the wolf.
"Alex!
Help!" Patty screamed as she ran through the house. But it was no use, the
wolf was much faster and its agility was unbelievable. The wolf leapt for its
kill and landed right on target. Patty was screaming, trying frantically to get
the wolf off of her, but it truly was as large as a small bear and ripped her
throat out with surgical precision. Alex tried to scream and cry at the same
time, but was unable to do either. He tried closing his eyes, but couldn't, he
had to watch, he had to see, because the wolf wasn’t ready to stop. After
ripping Patty to shreds, the wolf crashed through the window, breaking it once
again, and started running through the city, to get back to the woods.
Alex
didn't know what to do. He wanted to cry for the rest of his life, but knew he
couldn't from inside the wolf. Then he started to hate the wolf. He began to
seek revenge on it. He thought about what he could do, trying to block out the
wolf’s senses as it continued through the city, killing four more victims
before making it to the woods.
The
next morning the police came and asked questions that never seemed to end.
"What
exactly happened?" The officer took his pad and pencil out.
"For
the twelfth time, I was fixing the window in the basement when I heard a
struggle upstairs. When I came up, I found Patty's body." Alex told him
holding back his tears.
"Then
there was a crash, the living room window breaking. He must have gotten out
through it."
"Did
you get a look at him?" The police officer asked the normal questions.
"No,
it happened too quickly." Alex knew he couldn't tell them the truth or he
would be put into some mental institution.
"Did you see a dog, or
wolf, or something like that?"
Alex
jerked his head around, "What?"
"The
neighbors said they saw a big dog or wolf running down the street last night. I
just wondered if you saw it." The police officer talked in a
straightforward voice.
"No."
Alex was so nervous he could hardly stop from shaking.
The
police finally left at about noon. Alex went out and got drunk for the rest of
the day. He took off two weeks from work and just stayed home. He drank and
slept most of the time. The rest of the time he just sat staring at the wall.
Wes came out to the apartment after when Alex didn't come back to work after
his ‘vacation’.
"Look
at you. You’re a mess." Wes was
concerned. Alex and Wes had been close friends ever since Alex started working
in the morgue. Wes had actually gotten
him the job there in the first place.
"Leave
me alone." Alex sounded terrible.
"You
can't sit here wasting away for the rest of your life, Alex." Wes took his
beer and started cleaning the mess Alex had left all over the house.
"You
have to come back to work, Alex, the place is dead without you." Wes was
trying to cheer him up.
Alex
started crying. "Patty's dead Wes, Patty's dead."
Wes
pulled Alex to his feet. "I know, but you're not. You have to get on with
your life. Life is for the living
Alex. You’re somewhere in Limbo right
now and that’s not a good place to be."
"I
can't. I have to die."
"No,
you don't." Wes propped Alex against the wall.
"You
don't understand. I killed Patty. I did." Alex was steady now and sober.
"What
do you mean, you killed her?" Wes looked at him straight in the eye.
"I
know you'll think I'm crazy, but ever since July I've been having these
dreams." Alex sat down as he told the whole story.
"I
don't know what to say." Wes didn't believe him and it was obvious.
"Say you'll help me." Alex seemed to have an idea in the back of his
mind.
“Ok,
I know this great psychiatric hospital in West Hills¼"
"No,”
Alex said, “I don’t need a shrink. The next full moon is at the end of this
month. If you'll just stay here that night and watch me I'll be very grateful._
"Ok
buddy, I'll be here." Wes was very sympathetic.
"Thank-you,
Wes, you truly are a friend." Alex hugged him.
****
On
the night of the full moon Wes kept his promise and came over to
Alex's house.
"So what do I have to
do?" Wes wanted Alex to get over Patty's death as soon as possible. So he
went along with him.
"Here."
Alex gave him a gun.
"What
the hell’s this for?" Wes was dumfounded.
"When
I turn into the wolf, I want you to shoot me." Alex calmly stated, looking
him straight in the eye.
"This
is crazy, Alex. You're just upset about Patty." Wes had enough.
"Please, just take the gun, Wes." Alex held the gun out closer to his
friend and colleague.
Wes
cautiously took the gun. "Ok, but I still think you're carrying this wolf
business too far."
Four
hours went by and the two men sat silently staring at each other. Finally the
moon came up and Alex jumped out of the chair.
"Ahhh!
Shoot me Wes!" Alex said as he started to change.
Wes
couldn't believe his eyes. Alex grew hairy and fell to the floor, his bones
shrinking and skin changing with every second.
"Shoot,
Wes'" Alex's voice was deep and hoarse.
Wes
took the gun and aimed. He couldn't shoot his friend.
"Shoot!"
This came out more as a growl rather than a plea. The transformation was almost
complete.
Just
before the wolf lunged at Wes, Wes got up the nerve to shoot, hoping it would
not only end his friend’s pain, but save his own life as well.
There
was a high-pitched whine, like a small dog might make, then the wolf leapt at
Wes growling.
Wes shot again, then again,
stopping the wolf in midair. It fell with a thud and breathed one last sigh of
life before changing slowly back into Alex. He had a bullet hole in his side
and two in his chest. Wes dropped the gun and knelt down next to Alex.
"Oh,
Alex. I'm sorry."
The
neighbors had called the police when they heard the shot, and when they finally
arrived, Wes was arrested for murder. He didn't try to explain.
****
Two
years later the house was sold to a single woman. While she was cleaning the
house one day, she found a ring with a large black stone in the corner of the
living room. It made her shiver when she touched it, yet it had some kind of
unseen attraction. She placed it on her middle finger, because it was too large
for her ring finger, and admired it.
At
the next full moon the stone turned an eerie white.
Three months, and two full
moons later, the police were dumfounded when they found Miss Ellie Black in her
living room, with a gun in her hand, a bullet through her head, and a peculiar
black ring on her finger.

A gunshot echoed through the mansion, piercing the quiet stillness of the cold, snowy night.
"What was that?" Albert asked, waking quickly from a light sleep and sitting up in his bed. Considering where he was, Albert had actually been sleeping quite well. It had only been two weeks since he suffered from a bout of insomnia. He and his astute colleague, Professor Derrington, had been in London, resting after a long and drawn-out Scotland Yard case, when they had received a strange letter inviting them to a formal dinner party in Bangor, Maine. The letter urgently requested their presence, and Derrington agreed that they should go. Intrigued, they both packed their tuxedos and left for America as soon as they could.
It was brisk November weather in Maine and a light carpet of snow had covered the ground. Albert and Professor Derrington had flown in two days early, choosing to stay at a hotel close to the mansion until the night of the dinner. It had been snowing all day and it was extremely hard to see as they drove the rental car slowly up to the remote and dismal estate.
When they arrived, Mr. Blanche, their host, greeted them. He was in his mid-thirties, with short blond hair, blue eyes, and dressed quite well. He asked Albert and Professor Derrington to wait in the study until the other guests arrived.
After settling down with some brandy, Albert tried to sum up the other
guests as they filtered into the mansion. First there was Louis Manning, a
heavyset man with blue eyes and light-brown hair. He looked to be about
thirty-two and was introduced as a well-known plastic surgeon from the area.
Next to arrive was Miss Christine Fartho, a novelist, very slim, also around
thirty years old. Then came Dana Millberry, a reporter for the Washington Post,
but not very high on the totem pole. She was still waiting for her big scoop.
Coming in next was Alex Thoreau. Albert
recognized him by the name. Alex had become famous for two presidential
portraits he had painted last year. Micheal Johnson and Sarah Creed came in
together, just after Alex, yet made it very clear to everyone that they had
just met outside. Johnson owned a large hotel chain which brought in around 150
grand each year in pocket change for him. Sarah was a local fashion designer,
about thirty-two, who owned her own studio somewhere close to Bangor. The last
to arrive was Jud Cantrell. Jud came in wearing a ridiculous ten-gallon cowboy
hat, tailored pinstripe suit, and boots with real spurs, giving himself away as
the Texas oil tycoon that he was.
At dinner everyone was treated to an abundance of shrimp and lobster.
Conversations ranged from the superficial to the inanely superficial, but
eventually all the guests began asking exactly why they had been invited to the
mansion, evidently receiving similar “urgent” letters from their host. Mr.
Blanche just smiled and told everyone that they would be led to their rooms
after dinner and by morning the reasons for each of their presence would be
revealed.
That had been but a few short hours ago. Albert had gotten what could
have possibly been the best half-hour of sleep he had gotten it weeks before
being jolted awake by the gunshot.
Albert grabbed a robe and rushed in the direction of the retort. It
sounded like it had come from Mr. Blanche's room.
To his horror, he found the body of Mr. Blanche lying on the floor as he
entered.
"My Lord, what happened?" He asked as he crouched down to
examine the body.
_Seems
he's kill’d hisself." Jud said in his Texan twang as he slipped in beside
Albert, next to the body.
A pistol was stuck in Blanche’s mouth and there was a slowly growing
pool of blood oozing from the back of his head. Given his medical background,
Albert quickly examined the body and found a small, but potentially lethal
fracture on the back of Blanche’s head, within an inch of the bullet’s exit
wound.
"There's a fracture on the back of his head – besides the bullet
wound that is." Albert told Derrington as he cautiously turned the body
over.
"Could it have happened when he fell?" Miss Fartho asked.
"He was more likely murdered." Derrington stated plainly.
"The murderer probably sneaked up on our late host and hit him on the back
of the head with this." He held up an ashtray from the table.
"Whoever murdered Mr. Blanche made the mistake of hitting him with the
corner of it." He pointed out a trace of blood on the ashtray. "Then,
whoever it was, placed the pistol in Mr. Blanche's mouth, pulled the trigger,
dashed down the hall, and then returned to the room acting surprised. Since the
murderer is obviously one of you."
He pointed to each person as he said his or her name. "Was it Ms.
Millberry, the reporter? Ms. Fartho, the novelist? Or maybe Mr. Manning, the
great plastic surgeon?"
"Now just a minute,” Manning shouted defensively.
"I don't even know why I was summoned here in the first
place." Johnson said.
"We all received identical letters, did we not?" Derrington
showed them all the invite he had received. They all nodded in agreement.
"It was not by random draw or social standing that we each received
invites from our host. Each of us had
some kind of relationship with the late Mr. Blanche.” Derrington pointed to Mr.
Manning, “Mr. Manning here, was his plastic surgeon and Fraternity pal from
college; Miss Fartho is Blanche's niece; Ms. Millberry used to be his
secretary; Mr. Thoreau owed heavy gambling debts to Mr. Blanche; last year
one-third of Mr. Cantrell's oil company was acquired by Mr. Blanche; Mr.
Johnson here was actually being blackmailed by our popular host." Everyone
stared in shock as Derrington pointed out their intimate relationships with the
late Mr. Blanche, but they seemed to look even more shocked when they heard
about Mr. Johnson. Derrington continued, "And last, but not least, Ms.
Creed here was having an affair with Mr. Blanche. For reasons still unknown to
me, they broke away from each other just a few short months ago."
Shocked, Dana asked, "How do you know all these things about
us?"
"I received an additional letter from Mr. Blanche." Derrington
eyed everyone suspiciously, He
feared that someone would kill him. He thought it would happen tomorrow when he
confronted each of you alone. He was
going to set each of you up in a little sting operation with Albert and I as
observers, to try and flush the killer out, unfortunately the killer needed no
such ruse."
"So you’re accusing us of murder?" Sarah asked innocently.
"No, not all of you, just one. Even though you all had possible
motives, only one of you actually killed him." Derrington explained
further, "Ms. Creed, you were devastated when Blanche broke off your
affair. You could have easily killed him for revenge. But alas, it wasn't you
because you still love him, even if he broke your heart."
“You're right, I do still love him. I tried to forget about him after the separation, but I just couldn't." She knelt down and kissed the body on the cheek whispering, "Until we meet again, my love. Until we meet again.”
"And you, Thoreau, you owed him a lot of money. If you had killed
him, you'd be free of the debts since no record existed of the debts – no legal
record anyway. But you aren't the killer either." Derrington continued,
pointing to the oil tycoon, "Mr. Cantrell, with Blanche dead you would be
able to buy back the rest of your company and regain control; and you, Mr.
Johnson, had probably the best motive in the lot. I doubt anyone here would
blame you for killing our host after knowing why it was that he was blackmailing
you. Yet, neither of you did it either."
"That only leaves me, Louis, and Christine. Then, which one of us
do you think did it?" Dana demanded.
"The one person he loved most, Christine Fartho, his niece."
"You have no proof!" Christine replied almost shouting.
"No? You should have worn gloves. Your fingerprints are all over
the ashtray.
"No!" she screamed.
"You didn't have time to put any on. Your uncle had you brought in here after everyone else was in their rooms. He told you that he had taken you out of his will because of the “Blanche Biography” you penned last year anonymously. You’ve never had access to the Blanche fortune, so being officially denied of those funds even after your uncle’s death outraged you. In a state of shock you picked up the ashtray and struck him on the head. There was blood. You panicked, you didn't want to be put in jail for murder, so you made it look like suicide. It was easy, you knew where he kept his pistol so you just placed it in his mouth, put his finger on the trigger, and BANG! Then you raced down the hall, only to return looking as surprised as the rest of us.
Dana started to cry, "I didn't mean to kill him." Her voice became softer as she repeated, "I didn't mean for it to happen, I didn't want to kill him."
As the police arrived, Albert asked Derrington, "How did you know her fingerprints were on the ashtray? Without a duster and powder, it's impossible to see fingerprints on marble, let alone know whose they are."
"I didn't know. I was only hoping she was the one. She was the closest fitting piece of the puzzle, but if she hadn't have broken under the pressure of being accused like that in front of everyone else I might have accused Miss Millberry next, or maybe Mr. Manning. Whom would you have accused?"
Albert chuckled under the cry of the sirens as they left the mansion satisfied with another case solved.

Once upon a time, there was a unicorn. She lived and grew in Land
Unborn, until that fateful day. She heard a voice from the sky, telling her
what she feared. She learned that her race had died and she must go to the Isle
of Night.
On the way to the Isle of Night she met a lion, telling her which way to
go. He said, "There is danger there, but also salvation, if you overcome
the evil." He also told her that if she did beat the evil of the Isle she
would be in paradise and she would be allowed to wish for one thing.
After leaving the lion far behind, she met up with the Moose of colors.
He told her to travel south if she was going to continue her quest to
the Isle of Night. So onward she went, traveling south on her perilous trip to
the Isle of Night.
Through a valley and up a hill, she journeyed long and hard. She asked a giant bird to fly her on the majestic birds back, but it was out of his way. He did tell her though, that she could ask the Cloud king to take her half the distance.Hours later she found the king and asked him if he could take her to her destination. The Cloud king said that he could take her half the distance as the bird said, but no more than that. The unicorn hopped on the kings puffy, white back and off they went. They saw many sights and many different lands which brought wonder to her mind. Half way there he kept his bargain and left her in a quiet, pleasant sight.
From this height she could plan the next stretch of her quest. She saw some familiar fairies and other wood folk, she knew they would help. They told her of a waterfall through which she could take a short cut. Behind the waterfall is a cave. There are very helpful creatures there, but evil also creeps in through the cracks.
The guardian of the waterfall warned her of the danger, but she had to keep going. She stopped to quench her thirst, the water seemed to give her the energy to press on, it nourished her mind and soul.
On the other side of the waterfall she knew not what to do. The snake
woman told her to come with her, but she felt reluctant and went deeper in the
cave. Suddenly a light came through the darkness; relieved, she followed it.
After walking a long time, she came to a meadow and found a beautiful bird.
She called up to it and it heard. She asked it if it could fly her to
the Isle of Night, but it said it was too weak to fly with such a heavy load.
It said, "Follow the rainbow to the end of the line and there you will
find your way to the Isle of Night.”
She found the rainbow and followed it to the other side. There she found
a magnificent fish of POWER and SIGHT. The huge fish told her to climb on his
back and they swam away to the Isle of Night. On the way there she and the
colorful fish talked:
"Fish of power, fish of sight,
You take me to the Isle of Night.
Evil things I see afar,
Yet I do not know what they are.
Oh mighty fish you'll take me there,
And the wealth I'll get, with you I'll share.”
Said the wise fish proud and bold,
"Unicorn of Land Unborn,
I need not wealth from you,
just finish your quest
and do your best,
I'll always care for you."
Then to the shore the fish did go and left our friend alone to face the
evils of the island.
Quiet sleep the woods at
night,
All creatures are at rest.
Shining moonbeam, what a
sight.
The unicorn is on her
quest.
Gallantly she enters here,
Takes a look around.
Evil things seem to sneer
She runs quickly to safer
ground.
The creatures were hiding
as if frightened by something. She asked one of them what was so frightening,
he timidly said, "The dragon scares us and forces us to hide, for if we do
not he would surely eat us up."
Begging, he asks the
unicorn, "Please, oh unicorn, please help us now. We cannot go on like
this any more. Go to the top of the great, big hill and rid him of this
land."
The unicorn tells them all that she will do her very best. So on she
goes to face the dragon with hope and courage as her weapon. When she got to
the top, the great dragon was there, all green and scaley and covered with
slime. As he breathed, fire and smoke filled the air. The way he stared with
his six glowing eyes was enough to scare Satan right out of his hide.
She charged at the beast as fast as she could. She lowered her horn and
lunged it deep into the ugly creature. He moaned and groaned so loud the ground
was shaking. Green blood oozed from his wound and he fell to the ground with a
giant thud.
With victory in her eyes she sharpened up her horn and looked about. As
she looked, she could almost not believe her own eyes. The things around her
transformed into the most beautiful things anyone would ever see.
All of a sudden she remembered that she had a wish, she thought and
thought and finally wished for love and kindness and lots of friends, but most
of all for everlasting peace. Suddenly everything around her became pitch
black.
When she opened her eyes she found, to her surprise, that she had become
a beautiful angel and all of her race was here too. She was truly the happiest
being alive! She had finally found true PARADISE!

Once upon a time, there lived a unicorn. She galloped and roamed in a
Land Unborn, home to many wondrous creatures.
One day she heard a voice from inside her mind, telling her things she
could never believe. The other unicorns had all died, she was the last one. The
voice told her that she must make a journey to the Isle of Night in order to
resurrect her race. The whispering voice told her that she would know what to
do once she got there. It also told her that there would be other creatures on
the way to the isle who would help her; and, others that would try to stop her.
The voice told her that it would be very dangerous and gave her a choice: she
could stay in the Land Unborn and live forever, alone as the last of her kind,
or go and revive her race from the edge of extinction.
She loved the land she had always called home, but she could not live
there anymore knowing there were no more unicorns in the world. If there was
any hope of returning even one unicorn to the world she had to leave. Thus she
began her most perilous quest.
On the first path she took she met a lion.
There is much danger on the path to that isle," he said, "But there is also salvation. The isle is a crossroads of magic, both good and evil. If you are able to overcome the evil, the goodness of that place will surely bless you." Before she moved on, the king of beasts also told her that if she actually did win out over the evil of the isle then she would find a land which was more beautiful than anything he or any other creature of the world had ever seen. “The goodness of that isle is great, that’s why evil besieged it. But the evil could never penetrate the goodness, just mask it. So in the center of the isle lies the greatest land of all goodness, while evil surrounds it like a thick blanket, blocking out all those who wish to see it. It is also said,” he told her, “that anyone who could penetrate the evil and make it to that land of goodness would be given one wish, for anything they wanted -- even the revival of an almost dead race.”
After leaving the lion far behind and travelling for many days and nights, she met up with the Moose of colors. He told her to travel south if she was going to continue her quest to the Isle of Night. So onward she went, traveling south on her perilous trip.
Through a valley and up a hill, she journeyed long and hard. She asked a
giant bird she met to fly her on his majestic back, but it was out of his way.
He told her that she might be able to get the Cloud King to take her half the
distance, however.
After hours of seeking the Cloud king, she finally found him asked if he
could take her to her destination.
"Why sure," said the Cloud king, "But I can only take you
half the way and no more."
The unicorn hopped on the king’s puffy, white back and off they went.
They saw many sights and many different lands which brought much wonder to her
eyes. Half way to the isle he kept his bargain and left her on a nice, quiet
hilltop.
From this height she could plan the next stretch of her quest. She saw
some familiar faeries and other wood folk, and she knew that they would help.
"There is a waterfall through which you could take a short cut._ They told her.
“Behind the waterfall is a cave. There are very helpful creatures there,
but evil also creeps in through the cracks." They warned.
The guardian of the waterfall, a small gnome-like creature, warned her
of the danger also, but she had to keep going. At the waterfall she stopped to
quench her thirst. The water seemed to give her the energy to press on. It
replenished her stamina and nourished her mind and soul.
On the other side of the waterfall she became lost and did not know what
to do. A snake woman told her to follow her, but she felt reluctant and
wandered on through the cave on her own. Suddenly, a light shone through the
darkness. Relieved, she followed it. After walking a very long time, she came
to a meadow and found a very beautiful bird. She called up to it and it heard.
"Could you fly me to the Isle of Night?" She asked the bird.
"I’m sorry, I'm far too weak to carry such a large load." The
bird told her.
"Do you know which way I should go traveling by foot then?"
The unicorn asked.
"Follow the rainbow to the end of the line and there you will find your way to the Isle of Night." It explained.
She saw the start of the rainbow and followed it to the other side. At
the other end of the rainbow was a cliff at the edge of a vast ocean. Far off
in the distance she could just barely make out an island. She did not know how
to swim, so she lowered her head in despair. Then she saw a great shadow moving
under the water near the cliff. She splashed the surface of the water with her
hove and a giant fish emerged from the depths.
"Could you take me to
the Isle of Night?_ She asked the magnificent
fish. The huge fish told her to climb on his back and they both swam away to
the dark island.
On the way there she and
the colorful fish talked, "Fish of power, fish of sight, you take me to
the Isle of Night. Evil things I see afar, yet I do not know what they are. Oh
mighty fish you'll take me there, and the wealth I'll get, with you I'll
share." The unicorn's voice was poetic and very pleasant to the ear.
"Unicorn of Land
Unborn, I need not wealth from you. Just finish your quest and do your best,
I'll always care for you._ The wise fish said,
equally poetic and very proud and bold.
Then to the shore the fish
did go, leaving the unicorn alone to face whatever evils the island beheld.
Quiet sleep the woods at night, all creatures are at rest. Shining moonbeam,
what a sight; Unicorn, on a quest. Gallantly she enters here, takes a look
around. Evil things seem to sneer she runs quickly to safer ground.
All the tiny woodland
creatures were hiding, as if frightened by something.
"What is wrong, little
one?" the unicorn asked a chipmunk she noticed peeking out from under a
leaf.
Timidly he said, "The
dragon scares us and forces us to hide, for if we do not he would surely eat us
up. Please, oh unicorn, please help us, we cannot go on like this any more.
Please go to the top of the great mountain and rid that evil beast of this
land." He begged.
"I will do my
best." She said, trying to give him hope.
So on she went to face the
dragon with hope and courage as her only weapon.
When she got to the top,
the great dragon was indeed there, all green and scaly, and covered with slime.
As he breathed, a thick black smoke filled the air. The way he stared with his
six glowing eyes was enough to scare the bravest man right out of his hide.
“How dare you invade my
domain," cried the dragon.
She charged at the beast as
fast as she could without giving him a moment to think. She lowered her horn
and lunged it deep into the beast. He moaned and groaned so loud that the very
ground shook. Black blood oozed from his wound and he dropped to the ground
with a giant thud.
With victory in her eyes
she sharpened up her horn on a near by stone and looked gingerly about. As she
looked around, she could barely believe her eyes. The things around her changed
into the most beautiful things she ever saw, even more beautiful than her own
Land Unborn.
All of a sudden she
remembered what the lion had told her, that she had a wish. She quickly wished
for the unicorns to be reborn and placed in this magnificent land.
There was a flash of bright light, then hundreds of unicorns appeared all around her. She had completed her quest and was made a hero by all of the other unicorns, as well as the woodland creatures of the isle. She could have lived there with her fellow unicorns happily ever after, but after some weeks or months she began to feel homesick for her Land Unborn. She decided to leave the Isle of Night and return to her home, which turned into another perilous quest – but that is another story.
THE END

To see the world
as you hope it to be
Is childish by any
degree.
To see the world
with all of its faults
Releases the adult
by leaps and vaults.
To see the world
as it once was
Reveals the elder
who seldom undoes.
But to see the
world as it can never be
Requires the
visionless, wholeheartedly.
The Wishing Well
Institutions have a poor safety record.
The guillotines of orthodoxy keep a clean
blade that is always honed for heresy.
And somewhere near the place where witches
die an unseen sign is posted whose invisible letters clearly read: We are proud to report 0 working days lost
to injury or accident.
–THE MANAGEMENT
Let us pray.
–Calvin Miller, The Singer
Evil is all around us.
That’s why we fear the dark. But
the problem is, evil’s not confined to the shadows alone. . .
Religion can be frightening – angels and demons, spirits
speaking to men from the heavens, the dead rising from their cold earthen
tombs, crucifixion, sin. I was raised in
a nonreligious home. I say
'nonreligious' because our family never really belonged to a particular
denomination. We never attended church
except for funerals and weddings. We
weren't atheists, however. Mom used to
pray all the time. "Please God,
let the car start today. Please don't
let the furnace go out before Christmas again this year. Please don't let me be pregnant." She’d ask God for all of those things when
she thought no one was listening, and she always pressed her hands tightly
together with her eyes raised high to the sky when she whispered each
prayer. My dad, on the other hand, would
always talk to God as if He were right beside him, "Jesus Christ, would this
thing work right for just once?," or "Lord, what now?" I guess I always believed in a higher power
too, just like my folks. It was the
neighbors, though, who really thought we were going to Hell.
We lived a little ways out of Caruthersville, in the
southeast tip of Missouri, right along the Bible belt where everyone attended
church and those who didn't were constantly being told how close they were to
the gates of Hell. At school I had been
branded a 'sinner,' and with every second that my classmates weren't working
they were preaching some part of the gospel to me. Sometimes even the teachers would chime in,
"Why don't you get your folks to take you to church? Take God into your
heart and proclaim Jesus Christ as your savior.
Your sins can be washed free with the love of the Lord." The first time I heard that one I told my
teacher that I didn't have any sins to be washed away. She just stood there in disbelief. I could tell she was trying to think of a
good comeback, but it never came, so it had been the first of many trips that I
ended up making to the principal's office for blasphemy, although most of the
teachers labeled it "disrupting the classroom." Needless to say, by the time I was thirteen,
the Bible belt had smacked me across the buttocks more than a few times. It wasn't until October 22, 1981, however,
that my entire outlook on God and religion took on a whole new meaning. That was the night I stumbled upon the
wishing well.
That afternoon I decided to walk home through the woods that
bordered the junior high school. Don’t
ask me why, because I had never walked home through the woods before. In fact, most of our teachers and parents
made it a point to restrict us to the county road and playground adjoining the
junior high school. At that time the
raccoon, squirrel, and opossum populations were still quite abundant and
considered a reasonable rabies risk. The
woods themselves ran for acres and at the time they were still pretty
wild. With hindsight, I’d probably
guess that it was my subconscious mind that pulled me away from the main road
and my bible-toting school mates.
Anyhow, by the time sunset was upon me, I became so hopelessly lost that
I actually expected to come upon a giant gingerbread house. As it was, the wishing well was worse than
any child-eating witch could ever have been.
Ultimately, that's where I spent the night until rescuers found me the
next day, curled up in a tight fetal position, shivering uncontrollably. But I'm starting to get ahead of the
story. The really important thing is
what actually happened that night.
The sun was just setting over the crest of the forest's
thick, entangled trees. Its eerie orange
light made half the forest look as though it was ablaze. I distinctly remember that my spirits rose at
that precise moment because I suddenly remembered that since the sun rose in
the West and set in the East, I finally knew which direction I should be
headed. Unfortunately, my backward logic
sent me even deeper into the forest and further from my home. I guess I should have paid more attention in
science or geography class back then.
Just before the forest devoured the last light of day, I stepped into a
strange clearing with an old crumbling well near its center. It was strange because there was nothing else
around, no barn, no old settler’s shack, nothing – just the well.
The water hole itself was unremarkable. It was large, about six feet in diameter, and
round, but rough. Flat, broken-edged
river stones had been stacked atop each other, held together with some sand-based
masonry. White stones had been used at
the top to form a distinctive rim. A
gray weathered bucket sat against one side of the well with one end of a thick
fraying rope tied to its crooked handle.
The other end of the rope was hidden beneath the coils wrapped around
the well's wooden spit. I quickly tossed
the bucket over the lip of the well and after hearing its splash I slowly
raised it, hoping the bucket wasn't too leaky.
Maybe even more so, hoping that the water it returned would not be brown,
yellow, or green. To my surprise it was
the clearest water I had ever seen in my life.
Of course, by the time I had gotten the bucket back to the top of the
well, the moon was the only thing providing light, so really, the water could
have been purple with orange stripes and I never would have known the
difference.
Dehydrated from my hours of forest hiking, I scooped up two
good handfuls of the water and quickly swallowed the tart tasting liquid. The wetness felt good as it flowed down my
throat. It tingled too, almost as if it
were water from the Holy Grail, healing all of my body's ailments. As it was, the water must have been drugged
with some natural sedative, either that or I was more exhausted than I had
thought, because just minutes after drinking the water I fell into the deepest
sleep I had ever been in before. I
slumped beside the well and used my book bag for a pillow. Soon I was dreaming of things more
substantial than anything I had ever encountered before in my entire waking
life. I dreamt of leprechauns and
faeries, goblins and ogres, misshapen flying beasts, and creatures once dead
brought back to the living. I dreamt of
gold and silver, treasure chests filled with sparkling gems, and battling
pirate ships. In the end though, there
was just the wishing well, and I wished I could only have dreamt the nightmares
it produced.
It was still dark out when I woke. Although the moon was still providing some
light, sunrise was only three or four hours away. My body was stiff from lying on the ground,
my neck hurt when I tried to turn my head, my skin felt wet and clammy thanks
to an early morning dew. To top it all
off, I had a bad taste in my mouth. I
yawned and stretched a little before realizing that I felt terrible. What I really mean is that I felt sick – the
kind of sick you get when you're bedridden with the stomach-flu for a few
days. My head began swimming when I
tried to stand, and I actually had to catch myself on the lip of the well so I
didn't fall over. I had never fainted
before, so being 'weak in the knees' was a new experience for me. I leaned over the edge of the well hoping
that yesterday's lunch didn't try to crawl back up my throat and was more than
thankful when it didn't. Not thinking
that it could have been the well water that made me sick, I reached down and
picked up the old weathered bucket. I
could barely make a fist to lift the bucket and the thing felt as if it were
full of stones as I raised it shakily up to the tip of the well. I set it on the edge and then took a couple
quick breaths to catch my wind. I felt
feverish, but I also felt extremely thirsty – too thirsty actually to care
about anything else. I swallowed hard
because my mouth was so dry and then pushed the bucket with both of my hands
into the depths of the well. I leaned
over the edge expecting to hear the bucket hit the water below, but the splash
never came. Instead I heard strange
voices.
They were faint, echoing several times off the well's
rounded walls before reaching my ears.
At first I thought it was my imagination, or maybe my newfound sickness,
so I cocked my head to place my right ear directly over the well's mouth. The sounds were definitely voices – foreign
words whispering from a far way off. I
imagined a similar well on the other side of the world with several Far-East
children whispering their innermost wishes.
Sorry, I thought, Your
wishes are coming through, but I'm the only one hearing them, so I guess
they'll go unfulfilled tonight. Then
I thought that if I could hear them, then perhaps they would be able to hear
me. The words I was hearing were
gibberish, far too faint and too garbled to make any sense of, and I had no
reason to believe that my words wouldn't be just as garbled when they came out
the other end, but I gave it a try anyway.
"Hello?" I asked, meaning to yell down into the
well, but the tiny word came out dry and raspy.
I cocked my ear to the well once more.
My voice spiraled downward, echoing into infinity until my ears could
hear it no more. Then, suddenly, all was
quiet. Not just the well mind you, but
everything. The crickets stopped
chirping. Opossums, raccoons, and
whatever other animals that had been crawling through the woods that night
stopped snapping twigs and crunching dead leaves beneath their feet. The occasional hooting of the night owl was
also gone. Everything was still. I couldn't even hear my own breathing. It was as if I had gone completely deaf. And then, all of a sudden, in the dead calm,
I heard a splash. The bucket had finally
reached water.
I turned my head again so I could look down into the well
and I noticed that the rope which had been tied to the bucket had snapped. About a foot and a half into the well the
rope was dangling free and frayed at the break point. I couldn't believe the rope was really
broken, so I reached over to grab it so I could examine it more closely. As I reached across the well however, a faint
light, far down inside the well, caught my eye.
I stopped reaching for the rope and peered down into the well to see
where the light was coming from. It was
really more of a glow than true light.
It was a darkly yellow-green, which reminded me of the glow-in-the-dark
necklaces the vendors were always trying to sell at the carnivals & county
fairs. I stared hard at the
phosphorescent glow, but I just couldn't make anything out. That's when things started to happen – fast.
First the glow got brighter, and brighter, then brighter
still until it began to hurt my eyes. In
seconds it had turned from a distant glow into a radiant sunbeam. It was as if suddenly someone had opened the
great door of daybreak in the dead of night to chase away all the evening
shadows. It appeared as though the sun
itself was rising right out of the well.
I stepped back, momentarily blinded by the light and tripped over my
book bag. From where I now sat, the well
now looked like a giant flashlight stuck into the ground – its bright beam
spilling into the darkness, held back only by the little roof of the well. It was then that the water hole spewed forth
horrors that no one should ever have to witness.
I could see the light beam was being interrupted in places
by something moving down inside the well, but I never really thought anything
would actually rise into the night. The
first to emerge were two wormlike pillars of slime. They were dripping with a mud-like ooze and
rose quickly to the well's spit, sending it flying to the left of the well as
they rose even higher, crashing through the well's makeshift roof. They rose a good ten feet above the lip of
the well before they bent in opposite directions, oozing over the sides of the
well and finally onto the ground. When
they touched the ground, I was able to see the pillars for what they really
were. Each was made up of thousands of
rotten earthworms, squirming amongst each other as if they were alive, but
falling apart and oozing forth their innards in a hideous death dance. I wanted to scream and crawl as far away from
the worms as I could, but I was paralyzed with fear and my voice was still just
a raspy whisper. Once both pillars had
deposited all their worms on the ground a transformation took place that's
difficult to describe. The worms and all
their oozing parts joined together to form tendon, ligament and muscle. Before my eyes a creature took shape
resembling a pitiful skinless dog.
Bat-like leathery wings then unfolded from its back and reached upward
into the night sky. I could hear bones
cracking as the beast grew larger and taller.
Sharp claws and long fangs quickly emerged. Finally, a thick, leathery skin began to
stretch over the creature's entire body.
At last I was able to recognize its form. The dragon stood twelve feet high when it was
complete and I willingly closed my eyes when its maw opened and its gaze turned
in my direction. With my eyes shut tight
my hearing became even sharper and I shuddered with impending doom as the
dragon released a guttural cry proclaiming its new birth.
A strange, deep throated woman’s voice, powerful and
commanding, rose from the well to match the dragon's presage. "DREAD BITER!" it called,
resonating from the depths of the well.
I dared to open my eyes upon hearing the new voice and saw that the
dragon had turned away from me to crane its neck toward the well.
My heart was beating double-time and I was literally gasping
for breath in fear, but I still took the chance I was given to retreat. Forcing myself into a backward crawl, I never
took my eyes off the dragon in case it happened to turn its attention to me
once again. I was able to get about ten
feet from the well when the dragon moved its hulking body. I immediately froze in my tracks. It carefully wrapped its long tail around the
well and then lied down lazily in front of it, almost like a faithful dog
protecting his master's slippers. When
the dragon lowered its head, I noticed that there was a tiny squirrel standing
up on its hind legs near the tip of the dragon's tail. The dragon also took notice of the squirrel
and quickly snapped its jaws at it.
Fortunately the squirrel was quick and the dragon ended up biting its
own tail. I watched the squirrel as it
scurried back to the safety of the forest, and noticed that at the edge of the
clearing stood a beautiful stag. It was
gnawing on something close to the ground, and for a moment I almost forgot
about the dragon or the well. A loud
bray from somewhere behind me broke my awe-struck trance, and seeking out the
source of the animal’s cry, I found that there were four magnificent stags,
each standing at a corner of the clearing.
A loud, howling wind emanating from the well drowned out the
stag’s voice and refocused my attention to the center of the clearing. Leagues of ragged spirits were lifted from
the well upon the foul smelling wind.
Their bodies were almost insubstantial, disappearing below their
waists. Several flew swiftly by, and I
could see that a few of them had childish faces, while others wore ugly,
twisted remnants of what they must have looked like in their previous
lives. As they escaped the confines of
the well they separated and flew in indiscernible patterns around the clearing
and above the dragon, each howling in a Banshee wail to match the noise of the
wind. I covered my ears and was thankful
that they stayed high above my head, paying me little or no attention.
When the wind and noise finally subsided from the mouth of
the well, teems of insects spilled out into the night. Some were as large as my hand, while others
were so tiny I could barely see them.
The air was filled with mosquitoes, flies, wasps, and other flying
things that I couldn't name. At one
point a rather large beetle landed in my hair and I must have spent at least a
minute swatting at it, trying to get it loose.
Other than that one beetle, the remaining insects left me alone. Even those scurrying across the ground seemed
to avoid me by several inches.
As the plague of insects abated the greatest horror of all
arose sanctimoniously from the well.
Eight demons, one after another, crawled slowly and solemnly from the
confines of the well. Then they stood
like flesh statues, staggered around the well, four to one side and four to the
other. No two looked the same, but all
were demons sure enough. They were all
female, and none of them attempted to hide their sexuality. In other surroundings a boy of thirteen may
have been enraptured to see eight nude women for the first time in his life,
but these weren’t really women, and fear had me in it’s complete control. The first one on the left was ghostly white
from head to toe. She was totally bald,
without a single hair on her entire body and her eyes were a solid white. She stared straight ahead in a blind gaze
that could have turned Medusa to stone.
The next one stood in stark contrast to the first. She was covered in a coarse black fur,
thinner on her face than the rest of her body.
She was ape-like in stature, but her mouth had been overcrowded with
sharpened fangs giving her a distinct spider-like feel. Her eyes were a multifaceted black that
seemed to see everything at once. The
third demoness had wings. They were
leathery, like the dragon’s, but about half the size. She didn’t have any arms, but instead had two
limbs that were at least twice as long as her arms would have been. Her wings were attached to the limbs and two
grisly horns jutted out from where she should have had hands. She folded her limbs across her chest and her
wings covered her breasts. She too
stared into the night with dead, lifeless eyes.
The last creature on the left was a pale green. She had darker green scales on her shoulders,
breasts and upper thighs. Her fingers
were twice as long as they should have been, and seemed to drip with a sticky
residue. She had a long forked tongue
that darted out to taste the air as she continuously moved her head left and
right. Her eyes glowed yellow and
appeared out of focus, and I tried not to look at them for very long. Those on the right mirrored the hideousness
to the left. The first on the right had
a large horn jutting from her forehead.
It was more like a rhinoceros’ horn than a unicorn’s horn, and her skin
matched the wrinkled gray of the rhino as well.
Her eyes were blood red, standing out easily from the rest of her
body. Her mouth was an oily black,
devoid of any teeth, and clumps of tar-like cud dripped repulsively to her
feet. The second one on the right looked
like a cold, dead corpse. The only signs
of life were the rising and lowering of her chest as she breathed. Although I didn’t know how she breathed at
all. Her mouth was sewn shut with a
thick black twine, as was her nose and eyelids – she was the only one whose
eyes I could not see. Her ears had been
cut off and the remaining holes had also been sewn. I tried not to look beneath her waist, but I
saw that all her orifices had been sewn tightly shut. I gritted my teeth, shuddered and quickly
turned away from her visage. The second
to last demoness was beautiful. Her hair
was a reddish blonde that flowed down the length of her body to mid-thigh. Her eyes were a sparkling green and her
gleaming red lips parted ever so slightly to reveal perfect ivory teeth. She was the perfect temptress for any boy’s
(or man’s) desire. I almost lost myself
as I stared into her eyes, but then I caught a glimpse of something hidden deep
within her pupils. She didn’t have a
soul. None of these creatures did. Her beauty was truly only skin deep, and like
the others who stood beside the well, she would eat you alive if she had half
the chance. Of those eight fiends at the
well I believe I feared her the worst.
The final creature was the epitome of repulsiveness. Her features were grotesquely distorted, she
had open sores everywhere on her body and her skin was stretched to it’s limit
from the layers of gluttonous fat that it held beneath it. She coughed up
phlegm and blood, then spat in my direction.
Her eyes held nothing but hate for all that she looked upon. After watching these creatures crawl from
the well, I realized it was not only my life that was in dear jeopardy, but my
soul as well. At wits end, I finally
broke down and began to cry.
Although only minutes had passed since the dragon’s
transformation, it seemed like hours. I
cried for my parents, I cried for my home, and I cried for my immortal
soul. Through my tears I saw that none
of the ghouls had approached me. Like
the insects and spirits, they kept their distance. They were all waiting for their queen. My vision was bleary as she rose from the
well. I wiped my eyes and the sweat from
my palms stung as the tears were blotted out.
I could see better now, but tears were still coming and I couldn’t stop
the sniffing spasms that came with my sobs.
The queen pulled herself from the well in one smooth motion. She was truly a titan. She stepped directly in front of me, and I
could see that she was at least two feet taller than any of the other
beasts. One half of her body was a
charcoal black color, crinkled and pock-marked.
The other half was flesh-colored, tanned dark from wind and sun. Her hair was black and long, braided down to
her waist. Unlike the demonesses, she
wore armor plates that covered her shoulders and upper body. She also wore armored plates over her thighs,
and thick, black leather boots. A
twisted dagger hung from a leather belt she wore around her waist and she wore
black leather gloves on each hand. Her
eyes were dark brown, steadfast and commanding.
Every movement she made emanated confidence and power. She controlled all the creatures in the
clearing, but I was the only object of her attention. When she spoke, I lost control of my bladder.
Her voice fluctuated from a deep baritone of a man to that
of a young child, and then to a raspy old woman’s. “Ahh, such an innocent soul,” she said,
smiling.
“You’ve chosen a glorious night to wander into our clearing
boy. You see, we very rarely leave our
world for this midland – only on very, very special nights. You’re presence here is an omen. You’re soul will provide my sisters and I
with renewed strength.” It was difficult
to understand her when her voice changed in mid-sentence, but then I wasn’t really
listening to what she said. I was too
scared. I was hearing the words, but if
she had asked me a question, there was no way I would have had the courage to
answer.
Her words continued, “Perhaps even strength enough to crush
that pompous Wotaan.”
“Be careful ssssister, he will hear you,” said the green
scaled ghoul.
“It is too late, he comes even as we speak,” responded the
fat, repulsive one.
A giant eagle’s screech cut through the night and the
beating of it’s huge wings blew away the foul air of the clearing. A man, a warrior with silver hair, rode upon
the neck of the great bird and as the eagle landed in one corner of the
clearing the man dismounted and walked steadfastly toward us. He was only slightly taller than the queen,
but his presence was just as strong.
“You spoke my name sister, so I felt compelled to come to
thee.” His voice was also powerful and
commanding, but his had a gentleness to it that actually gave me the slightest
bit of comfort.
“Wotaan. This is our
night, our circle. You are not welcome
here.” The queen placed one of her hands
on the hilt of her dagger and the demonesses all hissed in agreement.
The warrior didn’t flinch, “Come now sister, you’re not
being very hospitable, especially to our young guest there.”
“He’s ours Wotaan.
He’s within the boundaries of the well, so he belongs to us. The Norns have given his soul to us, so you
can’t have him.”
The warrior grunted in disapproval, “By Mimir’s wisdom, the
Norns had nothing to do with the boy finding this place, but I’m more than
suspicious that you and your sisters did.
However, I’m willing to concede that the child’s presence here is just a
mistake.”
“More than suspicious!
You self-righteous fool, you should be scolding Duneyr,” the queen said,
taking her hand off the dagger and waving it at the surrounding forest, “It’s
he and his brothers who’ve allowed the boy to pass, and now that he is here he
belongs to us.”
“You have no rightful claim to this boy or to his soul for
that matter. Finish your ceremony, Hel,
and then return to Niflheim. Loki and
Angrboda are waiting for you.” Wotaan
used names I did not know, but if there was any way to put even the slightest
fear into Hel herself then the invocation of her parents names did just
that.
Her face slumped and Hel closed her eyes to think for just a
moment. Then she peered through the
pupils of my eyes and found the spirit called my soul. She gazed upon me for mere seconds, but it
seemed an eternity. Finally she broke
off with an almost disappointed snort and then addressed her sisters, “The
night is nearly finished, and Wotaan has spoiled the air with his stench. We’ll return again another night.” Then she turned to face Wotaan, “And mark my
words well, my blade Famine will bury its point deep into the belly of the
Beast. So deep that even you will feel
hunger, my brother.”
I don’t remember much else after that. I do remember Wotaan’s large face looking
down upon me. His face was old, rough
and weathered, and his left eye was nothing more than a mass of scar tissue,
but his smile was somehow comforting. He
placed a large hand on my forehead and thankfully, I slept without nightmares
until morning.
Rescuers found me like I described earlier, curled up and
shivering. I spent the rest of that day
in a hospital bed, but never spoke to anyone about what had happened. I don’t claim to understand what happened
that night, and at times I’ve wondered if it were all just a dream – or
nightmare.
Since then I've lead a fairly uneventful life. I met a wonderful woman who became my wife
and over the past twelve years we've raised two lovely daughters. I teach swimming classes at the YMCA, and my
wife loves to be active with my daughters' Girl Scout troop. We go on picnics and take vacations, but I
never let my daughters out of my sight and they never walk alone from school. There are murderers and child molesters out
there you know. We all see it on the
news each and every night – killers in the shadows.
My wife, daughters, and I all go to church occasionally,
mostly around holidays and special occasions.
We’re not overly religious. The
biggest change that probably occurred in me that night at the well was my view
of the bible-toters, the evangelists, the cross-bearers, and all the other
religion pushers. Their religions may
differ from one another, and they may not really understand what good and evil
really is, but it's better to smile and listen to the words they’re compelled
to speak, for although evil is all around us, a few words spoken from a bible
are farthest from that evil.
I wish you well, and God speed.

With a whimper, Daemon Otoh died.
*****
The sun shone brightly in the summer sky, but it was not overly hot due to a gentle breeze that blew listlessly through the neighborhood. The pollen count was up today, so those with allergies were urged to stay inside. Daemon Otoh was an allergy haven. As a child he had always had the sniffles and as an adult he was heavily addicted to Claritin. What made matters worse was that he also suffered from asthma, which he had developed three years ago after a bad bout with pneumonia.
Daemon was sickly and it showed. He was pale and his skin was broken out in hives. His hair was permanently messed, in bed-head fashion, since he had barely moved from his mattress in three days. He was unshaven and in desperate need of a shower. His eyes were red and puffy, and large gray bags drooped under each orb. He had been working all though the night trying to catch up on the past three days and get his monthly reports turned in on time. With the laptop his boss had forced upon him he could connect with the office servers and upload his work at any time. The reports were due at 10:30 AM and it was now 10:45. Daemon would have had them in on time if his connection had not dropped five times over the last hour. The progress meter on the screen slowly crawled past eighty-six percent and Daemon started to get his hopes up that this time it might actually work. A beep and a pop-up message on the screen dashed his hopes.
“Son-of-a-fucking whore.”
Daemon slammed the laptop shut, and pulled himself out of bed. Now he would have to drive all the way into work and dump the spreadsheets there. He yanked the mouse from the back of the laptop (he had never gotten the hang of that little red nipple in the middle of the keyboard), thrust the machine under his arm, and headed for the door. He didn’t bother changing out of the sweatpants and t-shirt he had slept in the night before, instead he just slipped on his shoes, grabbed his keys and stormed out of the apartment.
The door to the apartment complex was locked with a numerical entry system. Since its implementation two weeks ago Daemon had had to use the call box four or five times to get the landlord to let him in or out. Daemon’s blood was already percolating by the time he reached the doorway. He carefully entered his five-digit pin only to have the red LED light up, letting him know that he was still locked inside.
“What the fuck.” With each heartbeat Daemon’s blood now thumped like a monstrous bass drum, high in the back of his head. The blood pushed his dry, puffy eyes relentlessly forward from their sockets until each bulged against his eyelids. His blood swelled and engorged the veins and arteries in his neck until they looked like thick, writhing worms, straining to escape the confines of his pale white skin. He entered his PIN once more, painstakingly slowly this time, pushing one button – dramatically lifting his finger completely off the pad as if the pad itself could see that he had indeed pushed the correct button – and then pushing the next button in sequence.
2 . . . 1 . . . 2 . . . 1 . . . 2
This time the green LED lit and a buzzer sounded. Daemon shifted the laptop under his arm and quickly opened the door, stepping outside.
“What the fuck is the purpose of punching in a god-damn code to get outside anyway,” he muttered under his breath, “Prisoners in our own fucking homes.” Just before he got to his car, Daemon reached inside his pocket to retrieve his keys. He accidentally double-punched the unlock button on his key chain, sounding the car alarm, and almost dropped the laptop onto the asphalt.
“Oh for the love of Christ.” He thumbed the unlock button until the car finally chirped twice and the alarm ended. “Fucking piece of shit.”
SUMMARY ENDING (sorry, left this one unfinished)
On the way to the office he notices the laptop’s screen comes back to life. He didn’t get the laptop closed properly so it didn’t enter sleep mode correctly. He also gets a call on his cell phone from his boss at work just then. He takes his eyes off the road to close the laptop while he answers the phone and gets into a car accident. Machines & technology save his life after he dies briefly on the operating table. His last words in the story from the hospital bed are: “Piece of shit machines!”