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65 Proof

Page 60

by Jack Kilborn


  “Mr. Hollis? Is that a werewolfskunkdeer?” Cecil asked, pointing at something in the woods.

  Hollis shook his head to clear it. The fantasies were getting more and more real. The medication wasn’t working like it should.

  “It’s not?” Cecil asked.

  “What are you pointing at, Cecil?”

  “That thing, with the horns.”

  “You mean the tree?”

  “No, the…oh, yeah. The branches looked like horns.”

  And then the transformation began. For real this time? Hollis bit down on the inside of his mouth as hard as he could. It hurt like hell—this was definitely real. Those little bastards were about to see what a true werewolf could do.

  The scouts stared at him. Their jaws dropped as one.

  The inside of his cheek was bleeding pretty badly. He shouldn’t have bit so hard.

  “That’s right,” he said. “Just like I’ve been hinting over and over, I am a werewolf! And on this night of the full moon, I shall enjoy a Cub Scout gore feast!”

  Cecil screamed. Hollis laughed and then, transformation complete, let out the howl of the beast he had become.

  “That’s it?” asked Billy.

  “What?”

  “You’re not very furry.”

  “My arms are hairy!”

  “Not that hairy. My dad’s arms are hairier.”

  “Look at my ears! Those aren’t normal ears anymore. Look at my fingernails! And my nose sort of looks like a snout now!”

  “I thought werewolves were supposed to be a lot scarier,” said Theolonious.

  “You know what? You kids suck! It’s not my fault that the werewolf who bit me didn’t break the skin all the way, and that I don’t do a complete change! You should still be terrified! When’s the last time you saw somebody’s fingernails grow a full half-inch within ten seconds? Never, that’s when? You’ve never seen somebody’s nose change shape like that!”

  “My sister got hit in the face with a basketball and—”

  “Shut the hell up! I have killed hundreds of Cub Scouts, and if you think your ridiculous werewolfwolfskunkdeermoosepygmy fucker is the height of terror, then you can all just…just…” No, no, no, I promised myself I wasn’t going to do this again. Please, not again. Don’t let it happen again…

  It happened again. Hollis succumbed to tears.

  There was a long, uncomfortable silence.

  “Mr. Hollis, can we go home and play Nintendo?”

  “Yes.” Mr. Hollis wiped the tears from his eyes. “Yes, we can.”

  THE END

  A few years ago on my blog, I held a writing contest. The goal was to write a complete story in 25 words or less. I wrote two entries as examples, and the winner wound up getting some free books or something like that. A while later, a writer named Robert Swartwood told me he’d signed a book deal for a hint fiction anthology. I believe he coined the phrase hint fiction, to describe a story written in—you guessed it—25 words or less. He asked me for a story, and I gave him two. Here are the four I’ve written.

  REFLECTIONS ON REFLECTIONS

  Is my hair okay? I can never tell. Is that why you won’t invite me in for a bite?

  X-JUNKIE

  The adrenaline really kicked in when Parker realized he’d forgotten to pack his parachute.

  DONOR

  Miller watched the TV from his hospital bed, fingers crossed, as the brakes on his son’s racecar failed. When he was pronounced dead, Miller smiled.

  CHUCK

  Flight attendant Sherri was always quick to offer airsick bags. Reverse-bulimia, though a disgusting disease, was bearable when the meals were fresh.

  I‘m not a poet. I’ve written hundreds of funny, often vulgar, poems under the name J. Andrew Haknort, but I mostly shy away from the serious stuff. Except for this one. This poem is special to me, because I wrote it while I was trying to get published. I endured a LOT of rejections while I was struggling to make a go at fiction writing, and those rejections hurt. “The Days” was a pep talk to myself about never giving up…

  Let the days stand up

  In a single file line

  for close inspection.

  The time has come, my friends

  for some serious reflection

  on the way innocence ends.

  Life fluttered down

  like drooling bats

  and fed

  upon my hope.

  My youthful dreams (or so it seems)

  were spontaneously born

  to their ever-present state

  like the facade of a never ending wall…

  One by one I’ve watched bricks fall.

  Faster than I could replace them

  Much too fast to even chase them

  Too many to count

  An ugly amount

  My wall became a pile.

  Let this be a message sent

  Hope is not a good cement.

  And so I screamed

  at the great mess

  Screamed while time slowly

  progressed

  As time usually does

  Burying what never was.

  And then I sat

  Upon my pile

  And cried

  For more than quite a while

  My dreams had died

  Were buried under bricks and bricks and bricks…

  A gravesite for the non-essential

  The tombstone read, “He had potential.”

  I sat and sat

  and found the hours

  were possessed

  with magic powers

  For they’d turned into weeks.

  And when

  I finally led my feet

  and head to leave

  behind the dead

  I stumbled into

  troubled sleep

  leaving brick-dreams far away—

  Then I opened my eyes and it was today.

  Now how should I continue?

  Should I rage against my yesterdays?

  Stoke the fire with my hands?

  Refight all my private wars

  with indignation in command?

  Should I pull the stitches

  on old wounds

  to see if they are healed?

  The problem is not mine alone

  though selfish I may sometimes be

  Impotence is universal

  not exclusive to me.

  So…

  Inspect the days with a jeweler’s loupe

  Select and keep the precious few

  Reject the ones that drip with pain

  Elect to have no more that do

  Reflect on those that still remain

  For those make up the meat of time.

  Life in neither good nor bad

  Homogenous the paradigm.

  And when the shadows of depression

  Lead you to your next couch session

  Unlock the door before you leave—

  You’ll back, for this is not

  the end of time

  as some believe.

  Armageddon’s far away…

  This is simply New Years Eve.

  JA Konrath’s Works Available on Nook

  Whiskey Sour

  Bloody Mary

  Rusty Nail

  Fuzzy Navel

  Cherry Bomb

  Click here for more J.A. Konrath ebooks on Nook

  Compilation copyright © 2007 by Joe Konrath

  Introduction copyright © 2007 by Joe Konrath

  Cover copyright © by Carl Graves

  All stories copyright © 2007 by Joe Konrath

  “A Fistful of Cozy” © 2005, originally appeared on www.Shotsmag.uk

  “A Matter of Taste” © 2004, originally appeared in Small Bites

  “Appalachian Lullaby” © 2006, originally appeared in Requiem For A Radioactive Monkey

  “Basketcase” © 2003, originally appeared in Horror Express Magazine #3

  “Bereavement” © 2006, or
iginally appeared in These Guns For Hire

  “Body Shots” © 2006, originally appeared on Amazon.com

  “Careful, He Bites” © 2006, originally appeared in Small Bites

  “Cleansing” © 2006, originally appeared on Amazon.com

  “Could Stephanie Plum Car Really Get Car Insurance” © 2006, originally appeared in Perfectly Plum

  “Cozy or Hardboiled?” © 2005, originally appeared in Crimespree Magazine #11

  “Don’t Press That Button!” © 2006, originally appeared in James Bond in the 21st Century

  “Epitaph” © 2006, originally appeared in Thriller

  “Finicky Eater” © 2003, originally appeared in Horror Garage Magazine #7

  “Forgiveness” © 2004, originally appeared in Cemetery Dance Magazine #48

  “Inspector Oxnard” © 2006, originally appeared on Amazon.com

  “Light Drizzle” © 2005, originally appeared in Crimespree Magazine #7

  “Lying Eyes” © 2006, originally appeared in Twisted Tongue #2

  “Mr. Pull Ups” © 2007, originally appeared in Tales From the Red Lion

  “Newbie’s Guide to Thrillerfest” © 2006, originally appeared in Crimespree

  “On the Rocks” © 2004, originally appeared in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, July

  “Overproof” © 2007, originally appeared in Chicago Blues

  “Piece of Cake” © 2007, originally appeared in Woman’s World

  “Potshot” © 2006, originally appeared on Amazon.com

  “Punishment” © 2008, originally appeared in Like A Chinese Tattoo

  “Redux” © 2004, originally appeared in Spooks

  “Street Music” © 2004, originally appeared in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, August

  “Suffer” © 2006, originally appeared in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, June

  “Symbios” © 2005, originally appeared in Apex Digest, December

  “Taken to the Cleaners” © 2005, originally appeared in The Strand #16

  “The Agreement” © 2005, originally appeared in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, March

  “The Bag” © 2005, originally appeared in Cold Flesh

  “The Big Guys” © 2004, originally appeared in Small Bites

  “The Confession” © 2006, originally appeared on www.Hardluckstories.com

  “The One That Got Away” © 2004, originally appeared on Whiskey Sour by Brilliance Audio

  “The Screaming” © 2004, originally appeared in The Many Faces of Van Helsing

  “The Shed” © 2005, originally appeared in Surreal Magazine #1

  “Them’s Good Eats” © 2007, originally appeared in Gratia Placenti

  “Urgent Reply Needed” © 2006, originally appeared on Amazon.com

  “Whelp Wanted” © 2004, originally appeared in Futures Mysterious Anthology Magazine, Winter

  “With a Twist” © 2005, originally appeared in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, December

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from Joe Konrath. Is anyone even reading this? Hi, Mom!

 

 

 


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