Archive for August, 2011

SAND WOLF: By Robert C. Eccles

Monday, August 22nd, 2011

I used to be able to show people where I lived in Michigan by holding up my right hand and pointing to the spot on my palm I called home.  That was before a sand wolf tore my hand off at Sleeping Bear dunes.  Sure, I could use the back of my left hand to represent the state of Michigan, but it feels weird, showing the back rather than the palm.  So now I don’t even bother trying to show people where I live.

Back when I still had both of myhands I took my wife up to Onekama on vacation.  We stayed at a beautiful bed and breakfast on Portage Lake that was once a summercamp.  As a kid I spent several magical summers there, and one of the annual activities for campers was to travel north to Sleeping Bearand walk across the dunes to Lake Michigan.  I thought my wife would enjoy the same adventure, so off we went one beautiful summer morning.

The trip across the dunes started off well enough.  Truthfully, I had to stop and rest a few times onthe way up that first huge hill.  I’m not in the same kind of shape I was when I was a kid and could tear straight up the side of thething.  My wife mocked me from the summit as I stood with my hands onmy hips, sucking in huge gulps of air.  Finally I made it to the top,and our trek across the dunes began in earnest.

You have to understand that my wife is a driftwood freak.  She collects the stuff.  Our home insuburban Detroit is a clutter of driftwood furniture, sculptures and other knick-knacks.  Since the dunes were once under water, you can guess what they’re covered with.  Yep, driftwood.  So it’ll come as no surprise that we weren’t even halfway to the lakeshore by lunchtime, considering the fact that we had to stop and examine every chunk of driftwood along the way.

I think it was about one-thirty in the afternoon when things got weird.  My wife called me over toexamine an especially lovely piece of driftwood she’d found.  It wasa pretty good-sized log, with one end buried in the sand.  My wife reached down to pick it up, and the strangest look crossed her face when she touched it.  Looking back I guess she was probably wondering why a chunk of driftwood felt so soft.  So…furry.

The sand in front of my wife exploded upward.  For a split second there was a giant swirl of sand,fur, fangs and claws, then my wife was gone.  The sand wolf’s tail –which my wife had mistaken for driftwood – was the last thing tosink into the sand and out of sight.

I ran over to the spot where I last saw my wife and fell on my hands and knees.  I plunged my arm into the sand up to the elbow.  A searing pain shot up my arm, as if I had grabbed a handful of razor blades.  I yanked my arm out of the sand, and all that was left where my hand had been was a bloody stump.  I fell back onto the sand, clutching my arm to my chest.  I might have bled to death if not for a fellow dune-walker who happened to find me and apply a tourniquet.

 It’s not all that rare to hear oftourists going missing during a trek across Sleeping Bear dunes. Most of the disappearances are chalked up to folks drowning in Lake Michigan, and I’m sure some of them are just that – drownings.  But take it from a guy who tends to get a little sour these days when someone asks him what part of Michigan he’s from:  There’s something nasty out there on Sleeping Bear, and if you ever venture across the dunes you’d be wise to examine the driftwood very carefully before trying to pick it up.

 _______________________
© 2011  Robert C. Eccles

SOUNDS FROM THE BASEMENT: John Kujawski

Friday, August 19th, 2011

The noises started at about three in the morning.  It was a banging sound and I could tell it was coming from right bellow the room I was in.  That meant something was happening in the basement! 

 

I was pretty sure it wasn’t one of the residents.  Even though this complex is a good six stories and we have plenty of tenants here paying rent, we just don’t have many late night people.  The younger people here don’t go down to the basement much past midnight.  Who the hell wants to go down there this late anyway?  Basements are always such weird places and ours is plenty dark and dirty.  It gets wet down there too, after these crazy Missouri rain storms we have.    Someone banging around down there is another type of problem all together, though. 

 

They never call the police here anymore and there’s no apartment security guard to check on strange noises.  It seems like I’m always the one who takes care of these things.  And really, at first site, I know I’m a bit creepier than any noises in the night could be.  Most people freak out when I show up. I have a look like some guy who has never been outside in his life.  I guess I’d say I’m pretty pale and I never blink.  I never smile and I guess it’s all a bit morbid. I made some guy wet his pants, literally, just because he saw me right after it got dark one night. I was in a hallway and not some freaky basement.

 

I planned on making whoever it was down there scream. I love the sounds of people screaming when they first see me.  These kids that live here who are really into the whole goth scene seem to share my love for the screams.  It’s something they kind of laugh about. I watch over them on a regular basis and sometimes I even stare at them but they don’t seem to mind when I stare.

 

 I stare at this goth girl Molly Hayes all the time.  I like her the best.  I like her long black hair and her black dresses and I like her red lips.  Every now and then I show up in her room and I’m waiting for her to get home and when she comes in the room, she’ll see me.  I go in and out of that bachelorette pad of hers from time to time and she is used to it.  I know she loves the sounds of the screams more than anyone in that whole place.  She talks about it with the other people here and then she grins in a way that is more satisfying than I could ever describe. 

 

I always got satisfaction here at my home, in general. This is where people always left me alone.  I never had a roommate or anyone to bother me.  I always  liked spending time alone looking at the ivy growing on the building and the red painted walls inside this place.  I was always attached to the place and now there was also Molly.

 

I had Molly in mind throughout this whole incident. I didn’t hear any screams echoing under the floors or anything so it was probably just one intruder down there.  Still, I didn’t want this jerk to be in the same building with her and she had me all fired up that day as it was. 

 

Molly had played her old Ministry cd’s that afternoon.  She played the songs that bring out the anger in me.  I think they bring out the anger in her, too.  I know she has anger, the way she throws her yearbooks around her room like they were trash and gives the middle finger to frat boys when they walk by the apartment.  She can get pretty pissed sometimes, but I can get pissed off really easily if I feel threatened.  This unwanted guest made me feel threatened. 

 

It only took me a second to move down a level and I avoided the basement staircase.  The underground room was not totally dark, and I saw that it was lit by one bulb, dangling from the ceiling.  The first thing that was a bit of a shocker was when I looked at the back door leading into the place, there was no broken glass or anything and the door was closed and latched up from what I could see.  It didn’t seem like anyone had broken in. 

 

The real shock came when I looked in the middle of the room. There in all the dust and gloom was the site of Molly.  She was holding a hammer, her face looking pale, her hair dangling down her back.  She was kind of squatting, hovering over the body of what looked like like some skinny  dead college boy in a tee-shirt and jeans.  I could see the blood on the floor and the gashes on the ground from the hammer from where she missed her target during all her rage.

 

She saw me in the room and I stared at her like I always do. She accepted my presence and nodded her head.  She was never someone who was afraid of me anyway.  A girl like that just isn’t afraid of a ghost.

 

 As I hovered over Molly and her victim, I felt very much in love. I’ve always felt that it was me who was haunted by her.

 

 Molly looked so powerful and so beautiful.  All that was missing was her smile, but I could relate to that empty feeling.  After all, she killed the bastard so fast, we didn’t even get to hear him scream. 

 

__

__________________________________

Copyright 2011 John Kujowski

John Kujawski has interests that range from guitars to the Incredible Hulk. You can listen to him on the weekly podcast at www.comicbookshowdown.com or read his music articles at www.nighttimes.com  He was born and raised in St. Louis, Missouri and still lives there to this day.