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Black and Tan – M.E. Proctor

It’s been a long time coming…Horror…our very own for your filthy little eyes. M.E. Proctor produces some magic on the page here and I hope you enjoy it as much as we did.
-Doc

“It’s not a good idea, Lisa.”
            
“We talked about it.”

Yes, they did talk about it. Never in depth, always staying on the surface, a mention here and there, a possibility. Colin never paid much attention. Having a pet crept in their conversations at intervals, usually following some innocuous remark like ‘Greg and Josie’s dog died, poor thing, she was quite old, they’re thinking of getting another one,’ or ‘Clare asked me if I could feed her cat while she’s on business trip,’ accompanied by ‘isn’t she going on a three-week cruise in the fall?’ or something similar that left no trace on Colin’s mind. 

“You remember the lab puppies we saw in the parking lot,” she said.

Seriously? Did she go all mushy again at the sight of some runt of the litter being hawked from the back of a pickup truck? “Was that guy out there again?” Colin said. “These people! You’d think they’d fix their dogs; not bring more unwanted creatures into the world.” It was shocking how some dog owners treated their animals in these parts. Irresponsible. Despicable. Every evening on his way home Colin saw his neighbor’s pitbull cruelly tethered to a short leash. It lunged at every passerby and jumped at all the cars, half-strangling itself in fury and frustration; the poor beast was outside, rain or shine, freeze or thaw. Every evening, Colin was one heartbeat away from calling animal protection on the guy, and neighborhood harmony be damned.

“Come on, Colin,” Lisa said. “You know I would never get a dog from the side of the road.”

That was not what he meant, not at all. He would without a second thought adopt a dog from the side of the road. A puppy thrown off a car, an abandoned stray, a jolly wanderer that ran with him on the jogging trail. But getting a dog from that sleazy guy in the Walmart parking lot? No way. Colin’s dislike had been immediate. It had nothing to do with the puppies. They were SPCA-ad ready, so sweet they made his molars ache. It was their owner that gave off a bad vibe. He talked to Lisa without looking at her, with that mixture of contempt and shyness that passed for masculinity in the trailer park set, a cigarette dangling between his fingers, faded jeans complementing muddy boots. When Lisa had asked if they were his dogs, she got a nod and a shrug for an answer, and a flat: “Givin’ ‘em away.” Lisa was indeed too sensible to get a dog from the back of a truck, and the man knew it. He took a card from his shirt pocket and handed it to her. “Droppin’ ‘em there, tonight.”

“I went to the shelter,” Lisa said.

She was holding that crumpled card with the smiling husky logo. The one the man had given her. She had kept it all that time. The encounter in the parking lot had left Colin with a vague unease that he had conveniently filed away under ‘creep making a pass at my wife.’ He was uncomfortably reminded of all the times when the pet topic had come up. It had seemed random, but it wasn’t. It always popped up when the house was too quiet in the evening. When the gibberish emanating from the TV didn’t dispel the gloom, or when the music blasting through the expensive sound system couldn’t fill the silence that took root between the notes. Because they weren’t really talking about getting a pet, of course; they were circling a chunk of dark matter, invisible and heavy, loaded with a toxic mix of sadness, regret and above all, emptiness.

Ten years earlier they had moved into their new home. They had hopes, they planned for the kids to come, they wondered if the place would be big enough, and worried about the precious travel keepsakes that they would soon have to move to safer, higher places. Now, the keepsakes that neither of them cared about anymore were still on the shelves, indifferent objects reminding them of everything that didn’t happen. Reminding them of what was missing. And the house was definitely too big.

“They have that cute puppy at the shelter. He’s perfect. You’ll see.”

Perfect. Perfect for what? Colin was upset she had gone to the shelter without telling him. How many times? More than once, for sure. It was infuriating that she had gone behind his back. She was telling him that she didn’t trust him. Not in these words, she would never say it so bluntly, but the meaning was clear. She had been hiding this from him because she knew he didn’t want a pet. He resisted lashing out with a stinging ‘why didn’t you get the dog already if you want it so much?’ It sounded petty and Colin didn’t want to sound petty; he didn’t want to be that kind of guy. Instead, he tried the rational, adult approach.

“You should think it over. What happens if the dog runs away, or gets hurt, or gets sick. It’ll break your heart.” And he didn’t say it, but he would be left with picking up the pieces.

Lisa shook her head. “That’s life, Colin.”
#
The kennels looked clean and well-maintained, with fresh food and plenty of water in the dishes, and the puppies seemed healthy. Not happy, no. How happy could they be locked up in a cage when all they wanted was to tumble and rumble in a soft patch of grass. Colin knelt in front of one of the metal boxes and reached for a soft black muzzle. Maybe this wasn’t such a bad idea after all. They were stuck in a routine. A change of pace could be good for them. He had his work to keep him busy but Lisa must be bored. He could see himself coming home to a running, ears flopping, paws pounding the floor loving mutt that would munch on his shoes, tear up his paper and make a mess in the kitchen. He patted the dog’s head and got a wet warm lick as a reward. Nobody had to teach these rascals how to melt a grown man’s heart. He looked up at Lisa, to ask her which one of these cute fur balls she planned to adopt. She had walked further down the row of cages and was about to turn a corner in the back. Colin stared at the puppy with regret. “Sorry, buddy,” he muttered. “Looks like my wife has her mind set on one of your compadres.” He jogged to catch up with Lisa and reached the corner in time to see her disappear behind a brick wall. The place was much larger than he thought.

As soon as Colin reached the brick wall, the stench assaulted him, sickly sweet and cloying with an undertone of something rotten, like tomatoes forgotten in the crisper. He wrinkled his nose. Maybe the place wasn’t as impeccably maintained as it seemed. Where had Lisa gone? He stood in a narrow alley between the wall and what looked like the side of an old barn. Lisa wasn’t anywhere near and he wondered if she had gone into the barn. He was about to look for an access when he heard her calling him. She stood in a patch of darkness further ahead. 

“This way, behind the barn,” she said and was out of Colin’s sight again. 

Where the hell was she going? There were no kennels in this area. The stench grew more intense, and the alley narrowed to the point that two people couldn’t walk side by side. Colin was sorry he had agreed to come. When he turned the corner the quality of the air changed again and not for the better; it carried sour fragrances, vaguely peppery and warm, something Colin instinctively associated with fear and prison. He was in some kind of lean-to shed, feebly lit by a couple of dirty bulbs hanging from the ceiling. Small cages were lined along the walls, stacked on top of each other, three high, impenetrable dark holes. There was life behind the bars, feverish small bodies, naked and shivering creatures, silent and watchful. Colin felt their unnaturally bright and keen eyes observing him. There was no hope and needful love in this ratty shack, only suffering. He fought an urge to puke and clenched a fist to feel the sharp pain of his nails digging in the palms of his hand. He grabbed one of the cages to steady himself and withdrew his hand in disgust when his fingers touched cold slimy metal.

“He’s here, in the back,” Lisa said.

Colin coughed; the stink was almost liquid; it clogged his sinuses.

“It smells like the dump,” he said. He felt sick, probably looked green. Not that anybody could see what he looked like in this gloomy light or cared that he was about to lose his breakfast. His wife certainly didn’t care. He felt a sudden surge of anger.

“It’s a puppy smell, Colin. They’re not trained yet. They’re only babies; they get upset stomachs and such. How would you feel if you were locked up in a cage all day long? You would be freaked out of your mind.”

Lisa sounded dismissive, borderline contemptuous. Colin was too proud to tell her to cut it short, get the damn dog and leave. He swallowed the revulsion rising in his throat and walked to the cage. There was marginally more light there thanks to a lantern hanging from a rusty hook. Enough light to see the dog standing with his nose against the bars. He didn’t back away when Lisa knelt down and reached for him. Colin thought the dog was an unusual color.

“Black and tan,” Lisa said, as if she’d read his mind.

Was that the correct technical term? Colin didn’t think the label fit this dog. His coat was a glossy black, rich and deep, almost oily in its slickness; the belly, the paws and the tip of the tail were a flaming red, flashing in the darkness like the lining of a magician’s cloak. He looked like a terrier with straight and pointed ears and a square muzzle. A pure white crescent slashed between the hard, shiny eyes.

“He’s stunning, don’t you think?” Lisa said. The puppy was licking her fingers through the bars. She was smiling brightly.

A current of hatred so violent that it rocked him on his feet went through Colin. It stunned him and scrambled his thoughts. The feral smell was forgotten. All he saw was his wife on her knees smiling at this dog in a way she had never smiled at him. She looked pure, beautiful and young. Like a new bride, he thought, but not my bride. It should have made him fall in love with her all over again, it should have opened his heart in joy, but all he felt was overwhelming fury. At the dog. At Lisa.

“He’s really special,” she said. 

Colin couldn’t speak. Blind rage has no use for words.

Lisa was babbling away. “He’s not pure breed, of course.”

Of course!

“He’s a mix. They’re smarter than the pure breeds.” She turned to Colin. “You don’t expect a pedigree certificate, I hope!”

Her unexpected vehemence acted like a cold shower on Colin’s fraying temper. What had just happened to him? For a moment there, he had been beside himself.

“So, little lady, will you take him?”

Colin jumped, startled. He hadn’t heard anybody approaching.

“Hello, Mr. Macklin. Yes, I’ll take him. He already loves me as much as I love him.”

Colin had never heard Lisa speak in that shy, tentative voice. She sounded like a little girl who wanted to please and that wasn’t like her at all. Was she intimidated by this ragged old man for some reason? The guy certainly didn’t look threatening. A wash-out in Colin’s opinion, probably younger than he looked, too thin, too pale, in that scrawny backwoods way that told of a hard life lived in close companionship with bad habits. The faded sagging jeans and the ratty sweater looked clean; at least he didn’t smell like his wards. Macklin produced a large antique key and opened the cage. The puppy jumped in Lisa’s arms.

Macklin looked at Colin. “He’s had all his shots,” he said. “No worries.”

As if that was what worried Colin. He wasn’t sure what he worried about, but it sure wasn’t a vaccine. The cage door banged shut with a deep metallic noise. It must have been heavier than it looked.

“We came to see the dog,” Colin said. “We haven’t made a decision about adopting him yet.” It was a feeble attempt at resistance. He didn’t think it would take him very far. Lisa was completely sold on the animal.

Macklin looked at Lisa with a questioning expression. He rattled his keyring against the cage. It put Colin’s teeth on edge.

“That puppy is made for you, sweetie,” Macklin said. A hint of a smile played on his pale lips.

Colin felt himself go cold. If it was a marketing ploy, the guy didn’t even attempt to be subtle. One look at Lisa was enough to tell him he had caught himself one big gullible fish.

Lisa cradled the dog, her mouth close to his nose. “How much?” she said in that baby voice. 

Macklin quoted a price that seemed ridiculously low to Colin.
#
“Don’t you think he’d be better in the utility room?” Colin said.

The drive home had been uncomfortably silent. Lisa sat in the back with the dog in her lap, wrapped in a blanket. She was lost in contemplation of her new toy. 

The puppy had jumped from Lisa’s arms as soon as he had opened the front door. 

“It’s like he knows the house,” Colin mumbled. 

The dog trotted trotted down the hallway and went straight up the stairs leading to the second floor without paying any attention to the rooms on the ground floor. He sniffed the carpet in front of the master bedroom but did not go in. He went to the next room instead. For some reason the door was open and it gave Colin a nasty jolt. That door was always locked. Had Lisa broken their unspoken convention? One day, years ago, they had pulled the door shut and never set foot in the room again. This property is condemned. They could have made an office out of it, or a sowing room, maybe, if Lisa had stuck with quilting, but they had never discussed any remodeling, out of superstition, or maybe some pagan fear of desecration. The place was cold and desolate, left behind, uncared for. The furniture had gathered dust. The flowery wallpaper had faded. The window was dirty, with ragged cobwebs hanging in the corners. 

On the floor plan, on that spot, the architect had written Nursery
They both stood in front of the open door. Lisa was too cheerful. Colin felt increasingly glacial.

“We should keep him downstairs,” Colin said. He was tired and his protest sounded as tired as he was. I object for the record, he thought, absurdly. He could have stopped her cold with a single sentence this is the baby’s roombut he could not bring himself to hurt her. Cruelty was not in his nature, no matter how upset he was. Lisa walked into the room and put a brand-new wicker basket under the window. When did she buy that? She patted the red cushion garnishing the bottom, enticing the dog to try his bed. Colin watched, detached. He was letting go and it felt sickly satisfying. She wanted this? Let her have it, warts and all. The hatred that burned him at the shelter was such a distant memory he had trouble recalling the feeling.

“You’ll be fine here,” Lisa said. “I’ll get you some food and water.”

“Lisa…” Colin said. That was his last gasp of resistance.

“Ramus chose his room,” Lisa said.

The dog had a name. He had been baptized. Colin didn’t linger. There was a residual smell of the shelter in the room and it was more than he could bear.
#
Two months later Colin was promoted to sales manager. He was away on business more often, worked late, and went to the office on most week-ends. Lisa didn’t comment on the change in his routine; she didn’t seem to notice and Colin snapped at her. “You don’t give a shit if I’m home or not!” She shrugged and he didn’t know what else to say. He was late for a meeting and stressed out by an important presentation to a new client, and he let it slide.

One afternoon, back from a road trip, he happened to drive by the animal shelter. What went through his mind was unclear. Maybe he was thinking of the soft brown puppy that had licked his fingers, maybe he was pining for a reenactment of some sort. He parked and went in, determined to turn back and leave at the first whiff of the dreadful stench that had nearly knocked him out on his previous visit.

It was spring, the sun was bright, the puppies looked healthy and playful, and all Colin smelled was honeysuckle with a hint of bleach in the background like a bathroom after a thorough scrubbing. He got close to the cages, reached in, got a lick from a wet tongue and felt guilty for being there and giving a little one a glimmer of hope that would never be fulfilled. He walked along the kennels, looking for the brick wall, the barn and the shed at the end of the narrow passage. The place had seemed big last time, but it wasn’t more than six rows of metal cages and a grassy playpen that he hadn’t noticed before. A few dogs were having a jolly good time running around. He went past the last cage and there it was. Well, not exactly. The wall was lower than he remembered and covered with luxuriant blooming honeysuckle vines. The scent that was pleasant near the entrance of the kennels was too sweet and overpowering at close quarters. Colin walked around the wall, expecting to find himself in the familiar narrow alley. He encountered a barbed wire fence instead. There was no barn, no shed, only a rolling pasture. A few cows gathered around a clump of trees, in the distance.

“Can I help you?”
 
A smiling young woman emerged from the tangle of honeysuckle, a pair of clippers in hand. 

“I’m Jenny Dillon.”

“Colin Farnsworth,” he said.

She pulled off a garden glove and they shook hands.

She sighed. “These plants are taking over. Soon I’ll have to go at them with an ax!”

“The perfume is a tad heavy.”

“It’s a little much, I agree. Are you here to adopt a puppy or do you have an animal to board?”

Colin wished he had thought of a cover story before walking in. “I came here with my wife a few months ago. I was in the neighborhood and I wanted to have another look.” He shook his head. “I have a hard time deciding.” 

Jenny chuckled. “The more puppies you see, the harder it gets! What size animal are you thinking of? For a grown-up dog, I mean.”

Colin didn’t want to be dragged back to the kennels. “You made some changes. What happened to the barn that was here?”

“A barn?” Jenny frowned. “There was one when my father bought this place. An eyesore. We had to tear it down. It was falling to pieces.” She looked at Colin, puzzled. “That was years ago. You’re sure you’re not thinking of another place? Plenty of farms with barns around here.”

Colin was as puzzled as she was. “I guess my memory isn’t as good as I think it is.” There was nothing wrong with his memory. What was going on here? He pointed at the honeysuckle. “I remember this wall. I couldn’t figure why it was there.” He didn’t say that in his recollection, there was not a twig of honeysuckle clinging to the bricks.

“It’s what’s left of the old farm. It makes a pretty backdrop for the kennels, with the climbing vines and all, very picturesque. When Mom planted these, she never thought they would get so big. Talk about invasive!”

“The soil must be full of nutrients,” Colin said, distractedly. He was thinking of the wall that had been much higher, and the barn that was nowhere near collapsing when he walked by it, and the shed with its dirty light bulbs. And old man Macklin with his medieval key. He might not yet fully qualify for the funny farm but reality was definitely starting to feel slippery.

“I wouldn’t know,” Jenny said.

Her voice was different, cold, hostile. Her entire behavior had changed. There was nothing left of the friendly woman of a few minutes ago. It was as if a sudden gust of arctic wind had blown in from the north.

“The dogs are this way. I’ll show you our new arrivals.” 

She was professional and curt. She walked back to the kennels, leaving Colin standing by the brick wall. Was it something he said? He couldn’t remember what he said. Foreboding, like a thin sharp blade, was slicing between his ribs, aiming for the heart. He ran after her.

“Ms. Dillon? Is something wrong?”

“I… Nothing, it’s nothing. I just remembered the receptionist isn’t here today and the phone is probably ringing like mad. Please, take your time. Let me know if you need anything. I’ll be in the office.”
It was the wall. It had to be. He had said something about the honeysuckle going gangbuster. No, that wasn’t it. Something about the fertile soil? It was an innocuous remark. It had spooked her somehow. He made one last attempt.

“Ms. Dillon? Do you have a business card? I can’t stay much longer but I’ll call once we’re close to a decision.”

The card said Dillon Kennelsin a plain bold font; the silhouette of a German shepherd adorned the right top corner. There was no smiling husky.
#
After his visit to the kennels, Colin had driven down unknown country roads and got lost. He tried to gather his thoughts and couldn’t make sense of what he had seen. Going to the office was out of the question. He couldn’t focus. He decided to go home. Lisa didn’t expect him for at least another hour and he wondered what she was doing when he wasn’t around. He liked the idea of surprising her. He felt weirdly excited. It was somewhat perverse, like spying on her.

He walked in through the garage. Lisa’s car was parked in its usual spot. She had to be home but the house was eerily silent. The kitchen was clean, no dishes on the counter or in the sink. The sitting room and the dining room were cold and dark.

Colin stood at the foot of the stairs, listening. “Lisa?”

The silence was unnerving. She could have gone out on foot. It was a beautiful day, a perfect day for a walk, but she was home, wasn’t she? Of course, she was. Colin went up the stairs.

The door of the nursery was closed. Colin raised a hand to knock, hesitated, and opened the door. It was his home after all, why should he knock? The stench attacked him like a rabid animal. It froze him on the threshold. The curtains were closed and the room was dim. He hit the light switch. The last time he had been in there was when they brought the dog home. He didn’t recognize anything. There was a crib, a playpen, shelves with colorful books, toys on the floor. The wallpaper was gone, replaced by a fresh coat of pale blue paint. Blue is for boys, Colin thought, and his heart missed a beat. Lisa was a pale figure sitting in a big armchair by the window; heavy blue velvet curtains framed her like a precious doll in a collector’s display cabinet.

She looked at him. Her eyes were cold, iced over. “You’re back early,” she said.

Colin forced himself to move and took a step inside. “What is this, what have you done? This room… What does it mean? Where’s the dog?” Questions rushed in his head.

Lisa came toward him, pushed him out, closed the door behind her, and locked it.

“That smell. The dog is sick. Let me see,” Colin said.

“Ramus is fine. Let’s go down.”

“You rearranged the room. Why?” Of all the crazy things he’d seen in that room, the crib stuck in his mind. That was a sacred object, something nobody should mess with. He had noticed a rumpled blanket in the crib. He grabbed Lisa by the shoulders, shook her, yelled incoherent questions at her, begged her to make sense of the insanity. She stared at him with an indifferent expression and slipped out of his trembling hold. He had neither the strength nor the will to force her. Force her to do what? To say what? Why wasn’t the world behaving in a reasonable way? He was a reasonable man. He had no taste for the irrational and the inexplicable.

“You’re being foolish, Colin,” Lisa said. “Did something happen at the office?”

“The nursery,” he mumbled.

She sighed. “I don’t want to talk about it.” She was going down the stairs, her back to him, her voice fading in the darkness of the stairwell. Everybody was walking away from him it seemed. First Jenny, now Lisa. “It’s my thing, Colin, my reasons.” She shrugged. “You’ll think it’s stupid, and I don’t want to discuss it. I’m hopeful, okay? That’s all I’ll say about it.”

Hopeful? It hurt to ask but he had to know. “Did you see the doctor?” 

She said she didn’t need to talk to any doctor. She was hopeful and wasn’t state of mind half the battle won? Colin almost believed her because he so wanted to believe.
#
Nothing makes you more aware that a relationship has steadily deteriorated than a sudden change in the status quo. Colin realized that his marriage had been in a deep freeze when the ice started to melt. He knew he was to blame; he was away from home too much, he was too absorbed by work, and he had taken Lisa for granted. Because she never complained it had been easy to conclude that everything was fine. After what Colin labeled the crib incident, the mood around the house changed. For the past year, their sex life had been so-so, indifferent, academic almost. Now Lisa showed renewed interest, and an eagerness that she had never displayed, not even in the first months of their relationship. Colin was pleasantly, however cautiously, surprised. Maybe Lisa was right and they had given up hope too soon. Sprucing up the nursery had been her way to signal that she was ready to try again. You read about this in the health pages of the paper. The psychological context. Mind over matter. That kind of thing. Colin kept his doubts and his ruminations for himself; he didn’t want to jinx it. He tried to forget his disturbing visit to the kennels, stayed away from the nursery, and decided that he was probably unusually sensitive to animal smells, probably allergic. He deliberately ignored the weirdness behind Lisa’s eyes, the tension he felt in her body, the way she threw herself into sex, with a devil-may-care attitude that was at once exciting and disturbing. He couldn’t help falling asleep as soon as he rolled off her, and if he dreamed, there was nothing left of his dreams when morning came. Nights were black, opaque, one solid block, obsidian hard, that he was afraid to chip at.
#
“Colin, you look terrible,” his assistant said. “You must be coming down with the flu. There’s a bug doing the rounds. You should go home.”

Home. He dreaded going home. He would gladly embrace a flu of pandemic magnitude if it kept him in the hospital or anywhere but home.

“I can’t, it’s budget crunch time,” he said. “I’m not contagious, Annie, I just don’t sleep well right now.” He was putting it mildly. He barely slept at all. The improvement in his marital life had not lasted. He now marveled that he had once thought there was an improvement. Lisa had turned into a stranger. Their lovemaking had gotten increasingly creepy, quick and brutal, with her turning away from him and running to the bathroom as soon as he had climaxed. She was never one for sweet nothings and cuddling afterwards but she used to enjoy falling asleep by his side, and he enjoyed feeling her warmth an arm’s length away. Her practicality–was that the right word?–was chilling. When she came back to bed after the shower, she didn’t say a word to him. She turned on her side, pulled up the covers and pretended to fall asleep. He lay there, motionless, rigid, every muscle in his body turning to stone. His sleep was fitful and troubled and when he woke up in the middle of the night, he was alone. Her side of the bed was cold. No noise, not a whisper came from the nursery, but he didn’t need to check, he knew she was in there, with the dog. 

Colin saw the animal occasionally, always from the corner of his eye, a black shape slinking away in silence. Never a bark even when the doorbell rang to signal some delivery or the rare neighborly visit. They had never entertained much but over the past year–isn’t it more like nine months, since we brought the dog home–they hadn’t welcomed any friends to the house. He had business dinners and lunches, and cocktail parties. Lisa used to accompany him but she had made it clear she wasn’t interested anymore. She rarely left the house. Colin was doing most of the grocery shopping on his way back from work. Because it was more efficient…

“You should take a power nap,” Annie, the assistant, said. “I read they work wonders.” She smiled. “Mr. Sanderson is out today. There’s a comfortable couch in his office. Why don’t you lay down for an hour or so. Then you can tackle the budget!”

She opened the locked office for him. Her voice was soft and warm. Lisa wouldn’t give him that much.
#
Colin smelled the dog’s funk as soon as he opened the front door. The walls were oozing the poisonous stench. The nausea surged with irrepressible force and he vomited on the carpet of the hallway. Whatever he had experienced at the shelter was nothing compared to this. He stumbled into the guest bathroom and closed the door behind him. It blocked the offensive smell and he immediately felt better. He splashed cold water over his face and gurgled to clean his mouth. There was no way he could remain in the house if he had to share it with the dog. For all he knew his health might be at risk. He had slept for three hours on Sanderson’s couch. Annie had woken him up when she left for the day. She was worried about him, he could tell. He wasn’t going to put his life or his career at risk for the sake of a mangy dog! He went to the sitting room and poured himself a stiff Scotch. No ice, barely a dash of water. It drew a band of fire in the pit of his stomach. Liquid courage! It was pathetic but he needed every drop of it to face what waited for him upstairs. A cold woman and a small dog. Laughable, absurd! He knew what his father and his friends would say. Give the woman a piece of your mind and throw the doggie out. If only it was that simple. The image of the bare brick wall at the kennels popped into his head and he pushed it away. It had to have been a hallucination caused by the allergy. It was conceivable, wasn’t it? It had all been in his head. There had been no barn and no lean-to shed. No Macklin. He poured another drink and downed it in one long swallow. Macklin. Could he have imagined him too? Anything was possible in his distraught condition. Then why didn’t he ask Jenny Dillon if she knew an old man by that name? Because he had been afraid of getting an answer? He had looked Macklin up online and had come up empty-handed. He had also looked up the Dillon property in the county tax records. Avery Dillon had bought the place ten years earlier, from a local bank that had held it for as far as the digital records went. Colin had not pursued further. He could have gone to the tax office and looked at older records, he could have called the bank, or contacted Jenny again. He did none of these things. What good would it do? If reality wasn’t anchored rock solid, it was as shifty as quicksand and he was sinking.

Either the smell had abated slightly or the whisky was wrapping him in its vapors. Time to go before the effect dissipated; he would never be more ready. He went up the stairs.  
 
A small desk lamp was the nursery’s sole source of light. It bathed Lisa in a soft glow that didn’t spread beyond her armchair. She sat facing the window like before. Her naked shoulders emerged from a loose silk bathrobe, glossy white, as polished as marble. Colin leaned on the door jamb. It was a picture worthy of an old Dutch master, with the light delicately brushing her hair and the folds of the robe. He felt a heart-stopping stab of love for her. She was more lovely sitting there than she had been walking down the aisle, that day long ago. She turned to face him and the delightful picture of warm homeliness shattered. Ramus was in her lap, black and shiny. His head rested against her chest in a ghastly parody of the Madonna and Child, his paws buried in her shimmering robe. Colin couldn’t tear his eyes away from the dog, from his wife’s full breasts, from the sweat glistening between them, from the swollen nipples. 
Ramus jumped off and pawed toward Colin. Some people say that dogs can smile. If that was a smile, it was a smug satisfied one. Satisfied and fed. The dog stopped a few steps away. He wasn’t a puppy anymore. He was the size of a spaniel but more compact, muscular and short-legged. Colin’s heart was in his throat. This dog was built for strength and speed.

“You don’t look well,” Lisa said.

As if her words had summoned it, the thick animal smell washed over Colin and he staggered. He leaned on a credenza to steady himself. “This is so wrong,” he muttered. “This dog has to go, Lisa. He’s poisoning me. And he’s doing something to you…”

She stood up, not bothering to close her robe. She was extremely beautiful in that state of sensual untidiness. Colin’s senses were in chaos. He was sick to his stomach, slightly drunk and overcome with desire for her. 

For a brief, fatal moment he forgot about the dog. 

“Ramus,” Lisa said, sharply.

One last thought went through Colin’s mind as the dog’s fangs shredded his wrists, just before pain obliterated everything. 

He’s had had all his shots, no worries.

M.E. Proctor worked as a communication professional and a freelance journalist. After completing a cycle of science fiction chronicles, she wanted to explore new themes and is currently working on a series of contemporary detective novels. 
When she needs a break from obsessing about her fictional private investigator, she writes short stories. They all tend to be a little unsettling. It is no accident. 
Her work has been published, both in the U.S. a

M.E. Proctor

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Original Series

AI Journey: Little Red Riding Hood, Part 2

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Continuing our AI journey from last time exploring Little Red Riding Hood herself as the Big Bad Wolf… All of these are based upon the AI generated art and prompts using NightCafe and then created as posters in Canva.

Little Red Riding Hood as a wolf, Sinister style, Aug. 1, 2023
Sinister style, Aug. 1, 2023

How very… Phantom of the Opera predatory… this is definitely not what I had in mind. Maybe something more cutesy?

Little Red Riding Hood woman with wolf head instead of her own, Anime V2 style, Aug. 1, 2023
Anime V2 style, Aug. 1, 2023

Ugh. Maybe not.

Wolf face peering out of red hooded cape, Sinister style, Aug. 1, 2023
Sinister style, Aug. 1, 2023

Wow, that seems like such a cop out, cropping off the head so you don’t have to depict it. And I don’t want to lose the Little Red Riding Hood reference completely.

Wolf in sheep's clothing as Little Red Riding Hood, Artistic Portrait style, Aug. 1, 2023
Artistic Portrait style, Aug. 1, 2023

So no surprise there, I knew that was too many references to work.

And we continued to devolve, join us again next week for the final installment to see how this ended… And again, if you want to catch the last AI art journey, you can find it on Haunted MTL here.  To see more such devolutions into AI generated art, check out the Will the Real Jennifer Weigel Please Stand Up? blog.

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Original Series

AI Journey: Little Red Riding Hood, Part 1

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And as promised in Big Bad Poetry, we shall embark on our next AI journey, this time looking at Little Red Riding Hood. I had wanted to depict her as the Big Bad Wolf one and the same, although maybe not so big nor bad. But it just wasn’t happening quite as planned. All of these are based upon the AI generated art and prompts using NightCafe and then created as posters in Canva.

Little Red Riding Hood beautiful woman with red cape hiding her wolf face.  Sinister style, July 29, 2023
Sinister style, July 29, 2023

So I actually like this even better than my original vision, it is playful and even a bit serene (especially given the Sinister style). The wolf is just being a wolf. It’s quite lovely, really. But it wasn’t what I had in mind, so I revisited the idea later to see if I could get that result…

Little Red Riding Hood with wolf face, Artistic Portrait style, Aug. 1, 2023
Artistic Portrait style, Aug. 1, 2023

Well, that’s not quite right…

Wolf face Little Red Riding Hood, Artistic Portrait style, Aug. 1, 2023
Artistic Portrait style, Aug. 1, 2023

Yeah more of the same…

What part of wolf face don't you understand?, Hyperreal style, Aug. 1, 2023
Hyperreal style, Aug. 1, 2023

And as you can see this is starting to devolve quickly. Join us again next week to see how this continued to develop… And if you want to catch the last AI art journey, you can find it on Haunted MTL here. To see more such devolutions into AI generated art, check out the Will the Real Jennifer Weigel Please Stand Up? blog.

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Original Creations

Big Bad poetry by Jennifer Weigel

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So considering my recent revival of a wolfwere and his Lucky Days and Nightmarish Nature’s hostile humanity, it seems we are due for a visit from Little Red Riding Hood, or perhaps even Big Bad himself… Here’s a poem on the subject by Jennifer Weigel.


Over the river and through the wood
flashed the fleet-footed Red Riding Hood
on her way to her “grandmother’s” house.

When running past, who should she see
but just one of the little pigs three
cowering like but a tiny mouse.

“But my dear piggy, what do you fear?”
Red Riding Hood asked as she slunk near,
teeth hidden under a sheepish smile.

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The nervous small pig looked up in fright
and decided that Red was alright,
missing the subtle clues by a mile.

“The Big Bad Wolf, that horrible beast
upon the other wee pigs did feast!”
the last little pig said with a squeal.

Red Riding Hood laughed with a great growl
and threw back her heavy long-robed cowl,
in a vast terrifying reveal.

For she was really the wolf Big Bad
hidden beneath the cape that he had
stolen from Red Riding Hood at point.

“And now I’ve caught you too my pretty
and surely t’wouldn’t be a pity
if I gobbled you up in this joint.”

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T’was then the wee pig leapt to his feet
And cried, “Big Bad Wolf, I shall defeat,
for I am no ordinary swine!”

The little pig also wore sheep’s clothes
spun in spells every woodland witch knows;
Old Granny herself was quite divine.

“Now give me back my granddaughter’s cape,
before I grab you by your ruffed nape
and send you pig-squealing down the road…”

The wolf dropped the cape and ran, that cur,
but Granny was swifter and hexed his fur
and the wolf she turned into a toad.

Thus the moral of this story goes,
when in the woods, no one really knows
what sheepish sheep’s clothing is a ruse
that big bad wolves and old witches use.

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So this is actually an intro to my next AI art journey with NightCafe which developed from me not getting the results I wanted (Little Red Riding Hood herself as a wolf). Here’s a preview with Eric’s versions as he is much more literal in his prompting than I am, but where’s the fun in that? 😉

Prompts (from left to right) in Dark Fantasy style, executed Aug. 1, 2023:

Bipedal wolf in Red Riding Hood’s cloak

Bipedal wolf in Red Riding Hood’s cloak close up portrait

Bipedal wolf in red cloak close up portrait

Portrait of myself with dark makeup and crow skull headdress, backlit by the sun.
Portrait of myself with dark makeup and crow skull headdress, backlit by the sun.

Feel free to check out more of Jennifer Weigel’s work here on Haunted MTL or on her writing, fine art, and conceptual projects websites.

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