Have you ever wanted to write a post on something and then you go down a rabbit hole of like things–in this case, creatures of canine origin? My aim was to find info on the Michigan Dogman, and I found some photos depicting the beast and those will take on the bulk of the rest of this article.
Tag: horror fiction
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BMCR Boot Camp Transformations
Daryl and Gaines ran towards the track. Unlike the rest of the 001, the monsters had extra training. They were late. Daryl couldn’t even fathom what DS Foote would do to either of them. Gaines was literally going to be the death of him.
“How could you forget that we had extra training tonight?” asked Daryl as they ran towards the pull-up bars.
“Relax, Kerns,” said Gaines. “We were going to be punished anyway. We’re the enemy here.”
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Hush part 2
Thomas lowered his binoculars.
“Tom!” said Alec, his business partner, “You need to stop obsessing over this girl! We need to get back on track. Sam Walton, himself, wants to talk to you and you only. You made quite the impression on him and if you don’t show up, we may lose our contract.”
Thomas stared at him. He saw his lips moving, but he couldn’t focus on him right now, he had to watch for Bev to leave the flower shop, where she worked, and then tail her to her next stop…
Alec shook him. “Tom! Please! I know you don’t care anymore, but please do this for me! We’ve been working on this product for 10 years. It took us 2 years to get any shop to stock our it. This is a chance to be in a growing chain of stores. Walmart has 24 stores! We can make this happen, but I need you to forget her.”
‘Forget her…’ Thomas heard that. He stood up and violently ripped Alec’s hand off of him.
“I love Bev!”
He wanted to break Alec’s nose. He needed Bev in his life. He wasn’t going to lose to some strange jerk, pretending to be her boyfriend and he wasn’t going to let his business partner get in the way either.
“If you touch me again, I’ll cut off your hands,” said Thomas.
Alec fell backwards. “I’m done, Tom. We’re done. You’re not a part of Romo any more. Don’t contact me again.”
Thomas sat back down on the bench and raised the binoculars back to his eyes. There she was. She just stepped out. This was his chance to get to the bottom of this.
He stepped up and moved in a crouched walk, his eyes never blinking staring straight ahead at his target. He stayed 20 feet away from her on the opposite sidewalk. She seemed to be heading home.
He straightened up. People were staring at him. He couldn’t draw any more attention to himself. He had to be stealth. When he got there, he was going to confront Bev and figure out why they weren’t together.
He was there! Thomas ducked behind a mail box. He peaked over top of it to the stranger standing next to his car staring right at him. Bev reached out to him and he acknowledged her, nodding his head upward. She turned around and saw him too.
This was not how he wanted things to work out.
Here he comes. The stranger is walking towards Thomas, his fists clenched. Thomas stood up erect, to his fullest height. He was ready to fight to the death if he had to.
“What are you doing here?”
“I have to talk to Bev,” said Thomas, bringing his fists up.
“She doesn’t want to talk to you. You’re scaring her. If I catch you following her again, I’ll call the cops. This is your last warning.”
He stood there blocking Thomas’s view. He couldn’t see her! He tried to peer around the man.
He stepped so close Thomas could smell his laundry detergent.
“Leave! Right now.”
Thomas shook. His mind furiously cycling on how to get rid of this brute. He punched him in the chest and turned around and ran. He ran back to the park bench.
He doubled over, wheezing, fury rising, what was he going to do?
“Watt kin I do fo you?”
Thomas let out a yelp and tumbled backwards onto his bottom. A peculiar man sat on the bench. He sounded otherworldly and his garb equally so: he wore a black blazer, studded with spikes on the collar, a black fedora with a leather strap wrapped around with three strands of stone, bone and feathers hanging from it, and a leather strap around his neck, dangling a metal and bone, engraved with weird symbols.
Worse of all his face. Painted on was a skull that covered his whole face. His lips whitened, as well as his gleaming teeth. He smiled as he tipped his hat towards Thomas.
Thomas looked around, they were alone. It was eerly odd; the park was never this empty. He seemed to be gathering his wits for the first time in weeks. What was he doing there? What was this man doing there?
“Watt kin I do fo you?” He continued to smile, more like baring his teeth. Thomas stood up slowly. He didn’t want to take his eyes off this man for fear of being bitten or something worse.
“I’m not looking for any trouble,” he said.
“I don bring trouble, my child. I bring opportunity.”
“I… I don’t want what you have.”
There was something wrong with this man. He stood up and extended his hand. Thomas did not take it.
“I kin give you anyting you desire,” he said, “Fo da right price.”
Thomas hesitated. “What price would I have to pay to have her?”
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St. Michael Mainstreet
It was a icy, rainy day, when Father Abraham ducked into Jose’s Quick Trims for a haircut. He shook his black felt hat outside before entering. A little bell dinged as he crossed the threshold and set his hat on a coat rack next to service desk.
The lady behind the counter smiled. Father smiled back as he pulled his arms out of his coat and hung it on the rack as well.
“Good evening, Marsha,” he said, “I’m looking to get a trim. How long is the wait?”
“We have a couple of appointments, but they seem to be running behind,” she said. “My best guess is probably ten minutes at least.”
“That’s wonderful. I’ll take a seat.”
Father sat down in a chair across the window. He loved watching the rain smack the pavement outside, the cars bursting through it, the puddles spray and the nervous passersby ducking and jumping the waves of water from under their umbrellas.
He didn’t want them to get splashed; he just remembered what it was like as a child playing in those streets on days like this. He frolicked in the puddles, but most people didn’t seem to enjoy it as much as he.
It wasn’t long however until his joy was broken. A message deep inside him awoke a curious horror. He stood up suddenly, face ashen as he focused on the apartment building across the way. There was a deep disturbance inside, something dark and horrible was happening within and he was under the notion that an innocent was involved.
He hurried to the rack and retrieved his coat and hat. Marsha frowned at his urgency to leave.
“Sorry, my dear,” he said, mustering a smile, “I just remembered something very important. I will be back tomorrow.”
He turned and walked out, back into the torrent. Gripping his coat collar, he crossed the street quickly, adhering to the laws as best as possible, however, it wasn’t man’s law he was afraid of at the moment.
The doorway to the building was made of metal and glass, and next to the door an electric fob prevented non-tenants from entering. Father said a quick prayer, tightly grasping his beads and he heard a click. The door unlock. He whispered a thank you to the sky and ventured onward.
Inside was dark. The only light was a flickering bulb in the entry way, and more as the hall turned. To his left and right were darkened halls, only illuminated by a single source. The silence was overwhelming, as if there were a tiger in the shadows ready to jump. Father held close his cross, as well as stroked the bottle of holy water he had in his right pocket.
“Holy Spirit, guide me to where I must go, and bless me with the discernment to act accordingly…”
He turned to the left. The darkness thickened and that familiar feeling of being stalked kept his wits about him. As he turned the corner, he could hear a growling deep in his gut. He was getting closer. The hall felt stuffy, foggy, and repellent. His mind reached out and touched the innocence; it was close. He only needed to make a few more steps and he would be there.
Number 6… He touched the door of number 6 and immediately felt the malevolence inside. Again he whispered a prayer and the door unlocked. Without warning, Father Abraham opened the door wide open to find an old woman standing over a cauldron. Surrounding her were cages and cages of animals. It was incredibly loud and he wondered why he couldn’t hear them from outside.
The smell, as well, was deafening. Urine and feces everywhere. The floor covered in straw, of all things, sandwiching the excrement with the carpet. She seemed not to notice him, until he stepped forward and she suddenly slashed out a cleaver that was in her hand.
“Who are you!” she hissed. Glaucoma settled in her eyes, deep lines exaggerated her sagging cheeks, her nose red and swollen. She was short, perhaps 4’3″ with gnarly gray hair and whiskers.
She stepped closer with her cleaver. Father Abraham stood his ground, not out of bravery but because there was some creature breathing down his neck. He felt the wispiness of whiskers behind him, and a guttural growl that sounded almost feline.
“What are you doing here?”
Father Abraham swallowed. “I know what you are doing. You have a child in here. I’ve come to take it.”
“You can’t take him! I found him! He’s mine!”
“He is not yours. I have under great authority to take him away from you. Either you give him to me of your own free will, or a greater force will intervene.”
She swiped at him with the knife. He flinched. “Look at you!” she said, cracking a smile, “You’re scareder than a chicken who wandered into a fox den. You’re in luck. No foxes here. Only Mul!”
Behind him, another sensation, like a large cat tongue raking across the back of his head.
“Do you think your god can stand up to Mul?”
With that blasphemy the darkened room and hallway erupted with light and Father Abraham felt the presence of Mul disappear with an angry shriek.
She as well began to convulse from the light. Dropping her blade, she clasped her ears and closed her eyes, wailing and collapsing to her knees. The sound was awful and mixed with the horrid scent of the apartment, Father Abraham, too, nearly faltered in the brightness.
Then her heard a baby crying in the next room. He walked past the witch into the kitchen, where he found the baby on the cutting board. She must have been just about to cut him up.
Not wanting to linger, he scooped up the baby and fled the premises and back to the St. Bartholomew’s Cathedral.
The parents were never found. Father Abraham reared the child as his own, but this is not the end of that child’s story…
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Genesis Chapter 2
Mankind looked much like man of the present, however, they were much furrier. It would be easy to say that they were apes. By all accounts they showed a lot of the same physiology. But unlike apes, they had a higher perception of the Vibration.
The drakonians did not understand. Though centuries before they were able to vibrate with the Most High, it was a perception long lost to their kind. So as they hunted and captured as many humans as they could, it concerned them when they heard their mutters, hands clasped with intertwining fingers, eyes squeezed tight, and chins anchored to their chests.
They shivered, the humans, and what the drakonians mistook for fear, was really powerful, spiritual experience.
