"You think we're
going to catch anything tonight?"
"Don't know,"
said Rusty. "Ain't looking too good so far."
Dale reeled his line in
and looked at the bait. It still hung there on the hook, untouched.
"I know there's
fish out here," he said. "It's a big lake, and we're in the middle of
it. We should be in the middle of all the fish."
Rusty turned around and
opened the cooler.
"Another
beer?"
Dale held out his hand.
Rusty tossed him a can.
"You know, some
nights just ain't the night," said Rusty as he opened his can. The foam
spewed out onto his hand and into the boat. He slurped the top as quickly as he
could to catch what he was able to. There was a splash in the distance.
"The hell was
that?" asked Dale.
"Don't know."
"Anybody out
there?" Dale called out.
"Shut the hell up.
You'll scare the fish."
"Don't see nothing
out there," he said. "Could have been anything."
"Hell, it could
have been a fish."
"Elusive
bastards."
His beer was almost
gone when he heard another noise off in the woods.
"What was
that?" Dale asked.
"I didn't hear
nothing that time."
After a few minutes he
finished his beer and crushed the can in his hand.
"Give me another
one."
"Let me finish
mine first," said Rusty.
There was a large
splash from the edge of the lake.
"I know you heard
that one."
"Probably a branch
falling into the lake."
"A big
branch."
Dale looked around,
alcohol buzzing through his system and hindering his focus. All around, the
crickets chirped. This lake was mostly isolated. A couple of lots over were a
farm and a bunch of cornfields; a mile or two in the opposite direction was the
town, but this small lake always remained a peaceful place to become one with
nature. The more he thought about it, the less fearful he became. Of course
there were noises out here. It was animals, trees, insects — normal outdoor
sounds.
"Can I get a beer,
now?"
Rusty turned around to
get into the cooler.
"You know, it
don't matter if we catch anything or not," said Dale. "I love being
out here, in the outdoors, in the quiet, drinking beers." Rusty grunted.
"How many we got left?"
Rusty turned around and
Dale jumped backwards. In his drunkenness he fell over the edge of the boat.
Rusty glared at him
with wolf eyes. His body was still his, but the head was that of a wolf. He
reached into the water for his friend, and gripped his shirt with huge
monstrous claws. He raised Dale into the air and held him up above his head. Dale's
body dripped with the lake water, and he screamed at the sight of his friend's
monstrous transition as the full moon illuminated his true, beastly form.
In the distance one
could hear a brief scream before being silenced, then a loud howl that echoed
throughout the forest. The wind blew through the trees, causing the branches to
sway and more autumn leaves to fall. Against one of the large trees sat a jack-o'-lantern,
its pumpkin face being that of a wolf. The breeze traveled inside the shell,
and the flame went out. A thin stream of smoke escaped from the eyes and mouth
of the pumpkin face.
Go
to October
11th Go to October
13th
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