Category: random

  • Guard Dog

    A home in the process of being built was severely vandalized recently, having nearly every bit of copper pulled from its walls. This incident is the catalyst for this horror story…

    Tanner quietly walked up the freshly asphalted street in southeast Reno, and into the cluster of houses under construction. He found one without the drywall in place and knew it would be easy pickings.

    Within an hour he had pulled the majority of the copper wiring and tubing from the wall spaces and the three sink areas. Next he located the hatch that was the opening to the crawl space and he slipped under the house.

    He worked quietly and quickly filling up the last duffel bag he’d brought with him. He was yanking out what he believed to be the last piece of piping when he heard what he thought was footsteps on the unfinished flooring above him.

    Tanner crawled over and pulled the hatch cover into place and then waited as he heard more footsteps crossing back and forth above him. He listen intently as the footfalls faded and were replaced by muffled voices.

    Soon even the muffled voices faded away. Not wanting to take any chance of being discovered, Tanner remained in place for another hour.

    Certain that the coast was clear, he finally dragged the bag of ill-gotten goods over to the hatch and raised the wooden square out of its resting place. As quietly as possible, he lifted the bag up from under the house and slipped the hatch back in place.

    He lift it to his shoulder and raced to retrieve the other two, when he was met with a harsh and gravelly voice, “Going somewhere?”

    Tanner froze in place and slowly turned. He tried to scream as the dog-like figure, with red-glowing eyes and white glistening fangs stood up, crossing the room in two strides and ripped his throat out.

  • The Tallow Fire

    Brady rode the Mustang along the gravel flats of Beowawe, north of the railway, when the wind shifted. It carried a strange, fetid scent, not of sage or dust, but of something acrid and burning.

    The horse snorted, ears flat, and nearly threw him when the odor thickened. He pulled back on the reins and steadied the animal, patting its neck, his eyes narrowing toward the source of the smoke that curled above the flats like a lazy serpent.

    He knew this place. The tallow works, a grim little shack and furnace where the non-edible parts of livestock, and sometimes wild beasts, were rendered down for soap, grease, and leather. The smell was never pleasant, but this was something else, wrong.

    As he drew nearer, Brady saw a figure outside the shack: the owner’s boy, no more than twelve. The lad moved strangely, pacing back and forth from the furnace to the rutted drive, turning sharply at invisible markers, his steps oddly measured, like a man counting time to a rhythm only he could hear. He did not seem to notice the burning stench, nor the smoke rising in sluggish spirals behind him.

    Brady dismounted, loosening the loop that held his Colt. The Mustang stamped nervously and refused to come closer.

    “Hey there, boy,” Brady called.

    The child’s head snapped up as if yanked by unseen strings. His eyes were too wide, pupils small and fixed. There was something off about his grin, not just in its sharpness, but in the way it trembled, as if pulled tight by some deeper, quivering force.

    “Where’s your folks?” Brady asked, taking a few cautious steps forward.

    The boy’s lips parted. “Cooking.”

    “In the house?”

    “No,” the boy said, and his grin widened until it threatened to split his cheeks. “In the pot.”

    He nodded toward the shack.

    Brady saw the revolver then, a Texas .44 tucked in the boy’s waistband, too large for his thin frame. The child’s hand twitched toward it, but Brady was faster.

    The Colt cracked once, echoing across the flats. The boy’s head jerked backward, his body crumpling to the dust like a puppet with its strings cut.

    The world went terribly still.

    Even the wind seemed to die. Only the whisper of the furnace remained a low, rhythmic bubbling, as though something vast and patient stirred within.

    Brady approached the shack. The stench hit him like a physical blow, a choking blend of scorched hair, bile, and fat. He gagged, pressing a handkerchief to his mouth as he looked into the vat.

    At first, he saw only the usual horror, flesh, bone, something unrecognizable in a slurry of grease and lye. But then, through the haze of smoke, shapes began to move beneath the surface.

    A hand rose, or something like one, bloated, translucent, and pulsing as if with a heartbeat of its own. The viscous fluid rippled, heaving like a creature’s chest.

    Brady stumbled back, gun raised, but the liquid was already shifting, forming faces that flickered in and out of coherence. The man and woman he’d known, the owners of the works, appeared for an instant, eyes wide, mouths open in soundless screams. Then they melted away, replaced by something worse: a single visage, stretched thin, eyes merging into one great, lidless orb that gazed directly at him.

    The shack’s timbers groaned as the fire roared higher. The very walls seemed to breathe.

    Brady’s instincts screamed at him to run, but some deeper compulsion rooted him in place. He could feel it, a hum beneath the earth, like the pulse of buried machinery. A whisper crawled through his skull, faint but unmistakable, not in words but in intention.

    Feed the fire. Complete the rendering.

    He turned toward the boy’s corpse, lying half in the dust, half in the creeping shadow of the shack. His fingers moved without his will, holstering his Colt, grabbing the limp form by its ankles. The skin was already cooling, stiffening, but Brady dragged it toward the vat all the same. The thing inside seemed to quiver with anticipation.

    When the boy’s body hit the surface, the bubbling surged. A hissing sound filled the air, not steam, but laughter.

    Wet, gurgling laughter that slithered into Brady’s mind and filled it with lightless corridors, fleshy walls, and impossible geometries. He saw things vast and formless writhing beneath the flats, their tendrils reaching through the soil, feeding on death, on fat, on the very essence of what the tallow fire rendered down.

    He stoked the flames, though he did not remember fetching the wood. He stayed long into the night, until the stars themselves seemed to bend and twist above him, their patterns no longer those of familiar constellations but of alien, squirming forms that mirrored the shapes in the vat.

    When dawn finally broke, Brady found himself standing outside the shack. The furnace was cold. The pot was empty. The smoke had vanished. Only the faint residue of grease on his hands told him it had been real.

    The Mustang was gone.

    In the distance, from beneath the gravel flats, came a sound, faint and deep, like a great, slow heartbeat.

    Brady turned toward Beowawe, walking as if in a trance. He did not look back, though he knew that behind him, in the ruins of the shack, something new was forming in the pot, something that seemed almost human.

    He would return the following day to check on the family’s rendering.

  • Don’t be surprised to see me standing with my left foot off the ground at midnight as I plan to start the New Year out on the right foot. Here’s to 2020 and thank you 2019.

  • The highest mountain ain’t always the tallest.

  • Good Company

    As I approach my seventh decade of life, I find myself, once again a general laborer.  Though no longer in my teens or twenties, it is in very good company that I find myself.

    Bukowski, Basquiat and Vivian Maier.

    They are each right here with me, sweating out a days work on cheap whiskey, strong coffee and long nights enjoined by memories of our ignorant youths. Oh, how we love our art and how we laugh at ourselves.

  • Repounding

    He kissed me
    I kissed him
    We played
    We snuggled
    We slept together

    He was mine
    I was his
    Forever
    He said so
    Such happiness

    Then she came
    Now I pace
    Unwanted
    Unloved
    And alone

  • Duck, Duck, Goose

    hear the ducks and geese
    in the fog on a pond unseen
    so much fowl language

  • Circus

    a circus came
    to town yesterday
    and I’ll be
    damned if I can
    remember even
    one of those
    politicians names

  • Upon Meeting Jeremy Renner

    In case you misunderstand my sense of humor…this is a fiction story…I’m too lazy to take morning walks —

    My habit in the morning is to walk up the hill take a left at the major intersection in the neighborhood, continue to the main drag and then return using the first street offering entry back into the neighborhood. One morning, I decided to head the opposite direction.

    As I continued along the street, I saw a man in the distance, playing fetch with his Malamute puppy. I said, “Good morning,’ as I passed and he stopped, looked at me and returned my greeting.

    Something in my mind ‘clicked,’ and I stopped, turned back the few steps I’d taken and smiling said, “I know you from somewhere. I’ve seen your face, heard your voice, but can’t recall where from.”

    The man pleasantly smiled, responding, “Take your time – I’m sure it’ll come to you.”

    It was my turn to smile as it had jus’ dawned on me and I excitedly stated, “You’re Batman.”

    We laughed. He continued laughing as he walked up his drive, his walkway and into his house.

    Instantly I knew I had it all wrong, as I mumbled, “How could I be so stupid – not Batman, Green Arrow.”

  • Due to ‘hurt feelings’ there will be no ‘Roaring 20s’ this coming decade.