Driving home that afternoon from work, Jack felt overly
exhausted. His boss had written him up for some other jerk's mistake, he almost
got into a fight with a coworker close to quitting time, and at this point, he
was beyond stressed out. The sun set in the distance, casting its red and
orange hues across the clouded sky. He was so exhausted, so frustrated, and he
didn't even notice the little animal walking across the street. The street
lights had not kicked on yet, and it grew darker by the moment. He felt a thump
and heard a high pitched cry.
"Shit," he said out
loud. He climbed out of the driver's side door and walked behind the car. The
smog from the muffler blew into his face. He waved the smoke away and saw the
dog lying in the middle of the road. It was small —possibly a cocker spaniel or
a westie. The blood pooled around the dog's body.
"Oh no," he said. He
approached the animal, and when he saw it close up, he knew with certainty that
it was dead. The sky was black now. Nobody was outside of their house. He
looked in all directions. There were no witnesses. The dog didn't have a
collar, so he was unsure of what to do. He opened his trunk and looked for
something to place the dog in. Buried beneath the lug wrench, hydraulic jack,
coolant, and oil containers, he saw a plastic grocery store bag. He lifted the
dog off the ground, blood smearing all over his hands and drizzling onto the
concrete. He tried to keep it off his clothes, but it started trickling along
his forearms. He dropped the dog quickly into the bag, looked for a paper towel
or napkin, and cursed when he realized he had neither of these. He tied the bag
tightly, and contemplated what to do next. Garbage pickup was the following
morning, and many people already had their trashcans on the curb. He approached
one, hoping it didn't belong to the dog's owner, lifted the lid, and dropped
the bag inside.
When Jack walked inside his
house, his black lab ran for the door to greet him. The blood was still wet on
his hands. His dog froze when he saw him. It sniffed the air for a second, stared
at him, then growled. Jack ignored his dog and tried to push past so he could
get to the kitchen and wash his hands, but the second he stepped forward, his
dog snapped at him.
"What's wrong, boy?"
The hair on the dog's back stood
up, and its guttural growl grew louder as it stepped slowly towards its master.
Jack backed up and reached for the door. The second he opened it, his dog
lunged forward. He ran.
The black lab stopped for a
moment and howled several times. Jack looked back at his house and saw a
strange jack-o'-lantern burning with a dog's face carved into it. He mentally
questioned this for a slit second, then hurried to get away. He turned the
corner and hoped his dog would give up chase. Dogs in the backyards of other
houses barked hysterically. Some lunged against their fences. He heard the wood
fence panels crack, and ran again. He turned one corner, and saw three dogs
coming towards him so he took off the opposite direction. He turned another
street, and when he attempted the next corner, he was blocked off by more dogs.
They herded him down a dead end with no houses. The edge of the road was fenced
off, and he had nowhere to go. When he turned around, dozens of dogs stood in
front of him and growled. There was a single bark, and then silence. The dogs
stopped growling and parted to either side, allowing his black lab to walk
forward. The dog he'd owned for three years sniffed at his hands. It looked up
at his master, almost shamefully, then stepped back.
"I'm sorry," Jack said.
"It was an accident."
The black lab barked, then all
the other dogs lunged forward. Jack's dog stood and watched as the
neighborhood's canine population tore his master to pieces.
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