Posts Tagged ‘LYCANTHROPY Contest’

AND THEN THINGS GOT HAIRY: By Chris Allinotte

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

LYCANTHROPY  Contestant

Oh. My. God.  Tiffany, Marcus is so GROSS,” said Chelsea. 

She walked into the kitchen, wireless phone pinned snugly between shoulder and ear.
Tiffany was watching TV and snacking loudly on cheese puffs, but replied, “Like, why?  He’s got a totally bitchin’ bod.”

Chelsea was rooting through the fridge, “I KNOW, he’s buff, but he’s all HAIRY and junk.   Like, I just thought it was his arms and everything, but he wore a tank top …”

Tiffany gave the appropriate response, “Eww.  A tank top, on a first date?  Were you at the beach?”

“As if!” Chelsea said indignantly.

“No, we went to a movie.  Me and him and his hairy, stinky body.”

“Stinky?  Barf me out Chelsea!  No WAY he’s stinky too.”  Tiffany’s voice was hard to make out with the obscene amount of crunching going on.

“Tiff? Are you trying to like, make me deaf?  As IF you’re chewing louder than a horse, right in my, like, ear.”  Chelsea moved aside a grody looking casserole that Mom had left, but it was all lentils and beans and junk.  Ick.

“ Oh my god, you’re being a total RAG.” Tiffany sounded hurt, but the crunching slowed to a dull roar, “So what movie did he take you to anyway?”

Chelsea was inspecting half a bacon cheeseburger, but she thought it might be a week old.  God, she was so hungry.  It was making it hard to think. 

“Chelse? Are you still there?” , said Tiffany, still chewing. 

Chelsea was totally starving; it was making it hard to think, but she replied, “I don’t know, some slasher movie thing.  The guy was all burned and gross, like OBVIOUS rubber mask. Marcus totally put his arm around me at the jumpy parts.”

Tiffany gave another, “Eww.  And that’s when you noticed he was stinky? Right?”

Chelsea was busy taking stuff out for a sandwich, and started nodding into the phone before she realized what she was doing, “Totally Tiff.  You know what he smells like?  Remember when Tango got stuck outside last summer, like when you guys went out and left him in the yard, and it was totally nice out, but then it rained for like, the whole afternoon, and then you got home and he’d been in the rain like, all day? Marcus smells like that.”  She surveyed the counter and realized that none of the food looked appealing; though her cat Buddy had jumped up to make up his own mind.

Chelsea became aware of silence on the other end, and said, “Tiff?”

Tiffany didn’t answer for a long moment.  In the distance, Chelsea thought she could hear singing.  There was a sound of fumbling, and Tiffany’s voice came flooding back, “Sorry Chelse, I’m watching Friday Night Videos, and they’re playing Material Girl, and they just got to the good part.  What did you say again?”

Chelsea sighed; she would like, drop dead if she didn’t eat something soon.  “You’re such a cow, Tiff.  Wet dog.  He smells like wet dog.”  She started stroking Buddy.  He felt extra soft and warm tonight.
Tiffany made her gagging sound that had stopped being cool like, last month, “Tell me you got out of there, like, pronto.”

Chelsea stayed non-committal, choosing to go with, “Umm.”

Tiffany started spluttering around a mouthful of snack food.  When she had recovered her breath, she squealed,  “No WAY Chelsea.  Why did you stay if he was totally gross?”

Buddy was staring at Chelsea now.  His green eyes were like green mirrors in the reflected light of the still-open refrigerator.   He suddenly hissed and tried to get free.  Chelsea held him tight; she didn’t want him to leave just yet.  She could smell him now too, and her stomach rumbled again.  She eyed the baloney on the counter.  Nah.

It was Tiffany’s turn to be impatient, “Chelse? Chel-SEA? Are you THERE?  Like, where do you keep going?”

Buddy was spitting now, and digging his little claws in; but it didn’t hurt, “Tiff.  Take a chill-pill, I’m like right here.  I stayed at the movie because, I dunno, he was gross and junk, but I just kind of felt like staying. Weird, huh?”  The cat was frantic now, Chelsea could feel its little body twisting this way and that in her grasp.

Tiffany asked her, “What’s that sound Chelse?”

“It’s just Buddy, he’s in heat.”

That seemed to satisfy her friend, “Well, did you make out with him then?” Munch. Crunch.
Caught off guard, the truth came in a blurt, “Yeah, a little.”

Her friend squealed again, “You SKANK!  How far did he get?”  The high pitch hurt Chelsea’s ears, and she almost dropped the phone out from her shoulder, which was starting to itch.

“Not far.  He gave me a ginormous hickey though.  I think he broke the skin.  Hey Tiffy? I gotta go get something to eat.  If I don’t get some food like, right now, I’m totally going to waste away and die. Kay?”

“Kay. But this is SO not over.  See ya.” Tiffany hung up.

Chelsea tightened her grip on Buddy’s calico sides, she was salivating. Gross. But kind of okay too — like her date. Marcus had been a biter, but that had kind of made up for his hairiness and stuff.  She probably wouldn’t see him again.  Probably.  He was so weird; but after they’d kissed for a bit, she wasn’t so sure. 

She liked him a little better now.  So maybe.

Buddy wouldn’t stop yowling, so she squeezed his little voice box and made him stop.  Her nails were totally bitchin’ today; they looked longer and thicker than ever.  The phone finally dropped from her shoulder, and when she rubbed at the warm spot, Chelsea wasn’t totally surprised to find a thick patch of coarse blonde hair had sprouted there. 

Deciding suddenly that she wanted some fresh air, Chelsea opened the back door, and walked out into the light of the full moon.  The moon was SO rad.  As she sunk her lengthening teeth into her midnight snack, Chelsea thought she could do a LOT of radical things under a moon like that. 

Totally.

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©2010 Chris Allinotte

CRY WOLF: By Tonia Brown

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

LYCANTHROPY CONTESTANT

One June morning, Butch Jenkins went off his gourd and pushed Doc Keener through the windowpane of the Tool Shack. Butch then leapt after the Doc onto the sidewalk, where he snatched the sawbones up by his tender throat. It took a few moments of watching the older man shake the Doc with rag-doll ease– Doc jumping and twitching like he had ten thousand volts shoved up his pants while his face turned the exact shade of his denim overalls– before someone got the bright idea to step in and put a stop to it.

“Come on, Jenkins,” David said. “Let him go.”

It was David’s store, and although he had already called the law, it looked like Butch might do some real damage to the Doc before they arrived. David stepped through the busted storefront, calculating to himself how much it was going to cost to replace. He grabbed Butch by the shoulder and tried his best to pull the wild man from his prey.

Butch, who had to be in his eighties and never let a sunrise pass without the assistance of a cupful of Kentucky rotgut, was a rock of muscle under David’s hand. He ignored David’s pitiful attempt to stop him.

“What did you do to me?” Butch growled at the man dangling from his grip.

Having long since passed out, Doc couldn’t answer; his tongue protruding obscenely from his mouth, his eyes rolled back to whites made ten times brighter by the robin egg hue of his face.

“Let go of him!” David yelled, pulling on Butch’s shoulder.

The Doc’s body fell to the pavement with a sickening crunch as Butch did as asked. David stood his ground, unsure whom the madman planned on attacking next. Clambering to his feet, hunched and growling and gasping for breath, Butch turned to face the growing crowd.

“Jenkins,” David said. “I don’t know what— Holy Mother of God!”

David, not a man taken to using the Lord’s name in vain, swore it aloud when he got a gander at Butch’s face. The older man was a sheet of hair, from chin to forehead, with cold feral eyes staring out. It wasn’t just an unkempt beard. No. Butch bore a thick fur from cheek to cheek.

“Look what he did to me!” Butch screamed, then tossed his head back to let out an ear-piercing howl.

David’s blood ran to ice as he stared into the maze of Butch’s gnarled fangs. As if that weren’t frightening enough, the man’s ears flattened against his face as his jaw bubbled and stretched to an impossible length, drawing his whole skull into a snout-like shape. Dropping to his hands and knees as fur spread across his swelling arms, Butch screamed and howled in agony, while a melody of cracking bone and tearing skin backed his tormented blues.

David was just wondering what in the hell to do when Larry offered the obvious solution.

“He’s a monster!” Larry shouted. “Git him!”

The distinct clack of metal on metal rang out as the crowd readied their weapons, then opened fire. David leapt for cover, but not before taking three shots to the thigh. It seemed like an eternity of gunfire, barking ricochets of explosive slugs flying one after the other into the riddled body of Butch, ending only at the sound of approaching sirens. But it was far too late for the law to handle it.

It, whatever it was, had already been handled.

By the time the men emptied their guns, all that was left of the thing that used to be Butch Jenkins were scraps of flannel and flesh and fur. Sure enough, Doc was deader than a can of ham, so no one could ever be sure exactly what had happened.

Whatever it was, it didn’t happen fast enough for the trigger-happy men of the sleepy southern town.

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©2010 Tonia Brown