It’s bloody and terrible, but it works. At least for the pup.
And now I understood, about Grandpa’s tick. That smooth divot of scar tissue he’d shown me on the back of his arm.
It was so I would look at my own arms, someday.
On the inside of each of my forearms there are two pale slick scars that Libby’d told me were from the heating element of Grandpa’s stove, when I’d reached in for toast when a piece of bread was still as big as my head.
Grandpa had been telling me the whole time, though: dogs?
I’d seen dogs through the window driving to school, but there’d never been a dog at Grandpa’s place.
Dogs know better. Dogs know when they’re outmatched.
“No,” Libby said, looking across to me, looking at my inner forearms with new eyes, matching my two scars up with her dewclaws.
It wasn’t a dog Grandpa had to drag out by the fence.
I can see it now the way he would have said it, if he could have said it the way it happened.
A fourteen-year-old girl starts to have a baby, a human girl starts to have a human baby, only, partway through it, that baby starts to shift, little needles of teeth poking through the gums months too early. It’s not supposed to happen, it never happens like this, she was the one of the litter born with fingers, not paws, she’s supposed to be safe, is supposed to throw human babies, but the wolf’s in the blood, and it’s fighting its way to the surface.
My mom, I didn’t just tear her open, I infected her.
Werewolves that are born, they’re in control of what they are, or they can come to be, at least. They have a chance.
If you’re bit, though, then it runs wild through you.
“We’re going to go far from here, so far from here,” Libby was saying right into my ear, the rest of me pressed up against her, both of us trembling.
Her breath smelled like meat, like change.
Darren wasn’t there the night it happened, when I was born. But she was.
The real story, the one she saw, the one Grandpa was trying to say out loud finally, it’s that a father carries his oldest daughter out past the house, he carries her out and she’s probably already changing for the first time, into an abomination, but he holds his own wolf back, isn’t going to fight her like that.
This is a job for a man.
He raises the ball-peen hammer once—the rounded head is supposed to be kind—but he isn’t decisive enough, can’t commit to this act with his whole heart, but he has her by the scruff, and she’s on all fours now, is snapping at him, her just-born son screaming on the porch, her twin sister biting those baby-sharp dewclaws off for him once and forever, and for the rest of that night, for the rest of his life, this husband and father and monster is swinging that little ball-peen hammer, trying to connect, his face wet with the effort, the two of them silhouettes against the pale grass, going around and around the house.
We’re werewolves.
This is what we do, this is how we live.
If you want to call it that.
I vant … to bite … your neck,” the vampire says, tippy-toeing to see himself in the mirror again.
“No, no no no,” the vampire’s uncle says for the third time. “It’s ‘suck your blood.’ That’s what vampires do. They suck your blood.”
“Then what do werewolves do?”
“They buy their sister a reasonable costume, for one,” the vampire’s aunt says, trying to get elbow room in the tight bathroom to adjust her habit.
She’s a nun tonight, all in white.
The vampire’s uncle is in a rubber werewolf mask, CANDYWOLF traced onto his bare hairless chest in blue marker.
This is Florida, where it’s so wet that soft green fuzz grows on the guardrail posts. They only stopped driving away from Arkansas because of the ocean, not the El Camino. The El Camino would have kept going, probably. The vampire is eight, now. His uncle says that’s the perfect age for Halloween, except for all the other ages too.
Halloween is the one night of the year werewolves go to church.
To get there, they have to drive through the edge of town. There’s mummies and zombies and cowboys and pirates up and down the sidewalks.
“They going to church too?” the vampire asks from the backseat.
“Different church,” the vampire’s uncle says.
The vampire’s uncle is in the passenger seat in his mask, and about every third time a princess or a soldier looks over at this big long four-door’d Caprice creeping past, he lunges half out the window, growling and clawing.
“You’re going to get us pulled over,” the vampire’s aunt says.
“Not this night, sister of the ragged bite,” the vampire’s uncle says back.
In the backseat the vampire wants to smile but he can feel the white makeup on his face like a shell of dried mud, and knows it’ll crack.
And vampires bite necks, anyway. They don’t go around smiling.
He falls asleep once town is gone, wakes in his uncle’s hairy arms, doesn’t realize they’re long gloves until he remembers what night this is. They’re not even walking on a trail through the trees, are just following where his aunt says, from the one time she was here years ago. Her white costume almost glows.
“Who showed you this place?” the vampire’s uncle says.
The vampire’s aunt doesn’t answer this, just keeps walking.
Werewolves aren’t afraid of the dark. Even ones dressed like ghost nuns.
Humans can be, though.
It’s what the vampire still is, under his makeup. It’s what his aunt says he’ll be until he’s twelve or thirteen—and maybe forever, if he never shifts. You never know.
The vampire chews on his plastic fangs and tries to look ahead. They’re going uphill now. His face is cracking into pieces, he can tell.
He doesn’t want to be a vampire anymore. This isn’t like the comic book. He can hardly even remember the comic book anymore.
Ten or twenty or thirty minutes later the aunt stops, lifts her nose to the air. Right above him, the vampire’s uncle does as well.
“Tell me that isn’t who I think it is,” the uncle says.
“You’re just smelling things,” the aunt says back.