The Chronicles of Kent
as put to writing by Joseph Leskey
It should
have never been. Even so, it came. It came even before thick layers of snow
sheeted the ground. It existed even as the first leaves had begun to fall from
the trees. But, now, it had awakened. It stretched out as a mighty wind,
delighting in its strength. Senses came and it felt the harsh cry of another’s
temper. Memory formed then, a confusion of thoughts, warnings from the future.
Boundaries lifted around it, a greater presence reaching out through the sky.
Its rage and fear spiraled around the highest summits. Balance was abandoned
and a clash split the sky. Strength rippled against strength. It fled. All the
powers of the air chased it. It pulled all its power to one point, minifying to
a weak yet concentrated state, reaching out into the great expanse around it.
The thick emptiness evolved into much life. A sharp call barraged from all
sides and a great force reached, breaking its pull. It reached out in a
desperate attempt at finding shelter, propelling itself away from the now
dangerous vertices of life. Soon, it focused upon a weaker existence and
brought its full might and will upon it, quickly breaking its frail defenses.
It melded with that life, rebuilding its shattered force. Shapes were
appearing, strange colors plastered over them. Cold air moved in quick puffs of
steam. A thick cold substance was flying through the air and covering the
ground. Thoughts were being reached, but too quickly. A roar sounded through the wind, one of anger and confusion. A new
horror dawned: it would be coming. The strength of the other presences faded
and concentration was lost.
Mister Billy
Vigil threw another scoop of snow onto the mountainous pile he had created. He
looked up, squinting at the town hall clock. Only five in the evening. He
wouldn’t go home until seven. He had very few interests other than working on
the roads and perhaps in driveways, so he delighted in winter, getting up day
after day and shoveling vigorously for hours. The townspeople didn’t mind at
all, although some worried that it wasn’t very healthy for a man of nearly
eighty to be doing such amounts of cold physical labor. Nobody made any attempt
at stopping him, however, and he was quite happy that it was so. After several
more scoops, he stepped back against the snow pile and sat down, admiring his
handiwork. It was quite a masterpiece, a cleared road for farther than the eye
could see.
“Neater than
any truck could do,” he grumbled to himself exaltedly. With that, he leaped up,
and an especially strong gust of wind blew him into somebody’s mailbox. “Well,
that’s nice!” he exclaimed, leaping for his shovel as it sailed merrily through
the air. He gripped the mailbox and waited patiently for the wind to stop, but
it didn’t. He raised his eyebrows questioningly as his snow pile leaned, than
shouted out with all the power of inhuman vengeance as it toppled onto the
road. He forgot the wind in his fury and attacked the fallen snow like a
berserker until it was scattered thickly on every surface but the pavement. He
calmed down and set back to work on the rest of the road, throwing snow in
every direction, forgetting to notice that he was more than half frozen.
Slowly, he started to feel numb.
“I’d better
go home,” he murmured wearily. Then he started to feel warm. He turned to head
home, but suddenly he felt as if something had crashed into his head. He
stumbled and looked around as his concentration seemed to be leaving. The snow
became darker and darker and endless in swirling depths. Then, he fell.
Miss Elise McGregor was sweeping her porch.
She had always found brooms more efficient at effective snow removal than
shovels. She kept this opinion to herself, however, to avoid glances of
disbelief. It was because of this opinion that she remained a spinster. She
unhappily swung her broom at some packed down snow, then straightened her back
and stared out at the scenery. There was Mr. Vigil, working on the road again.
A tidy sum of snow was packed up into a nice-sized heap. Mr. Vigil stretched
and stumbled backwards into the snow pile, portraying what could only be
described as a pleased grimace upon his face. He suddenly leaped up. At that
moment a strong torrent of wind threw him into a mailbox. With a little bounce,
he seized his shovel as it flew past. He then grabbed the mailbox and sat
still. The wind was a particularly ferocious one, so strong that Miss McGregor
was obliged to move closer to her house so she wouldn’t be knocked over. She
saw a number of unidentifiable objects fly through the air. Hopefully nobody
would miss them. She then turned and, with a feeling of pity, watched as Mr.
Vigil’s snow mound fell. He let loose a mighty bellow, one so loud that she
could hear it faintly even through the wind. A frenzy seized him and he threw
his shovel at the snow with unbelievable vigor. Then his anger seemed to lessen
and he set about his normal shoveling routine. Miss McGregor set back to
sweeping her porch, suddenly contracting a horrible case of shivers. She
quickened her sweeping, then realized that Mr. Vigil must be very cold at the
moment. She looked up and happened to see him flying through the air and
face-downwards smashing into the ground. Alarmed, she walked towards the edge
of her porch. The wind, she realized, was even stronger than she had thought,
so she went back to the house to call the fire department. She then watched in
pure paralysis as a tree crashed down, splitting the second nearest utility
pole and scattering the snapped wires. To her immense relief, Mr. Vigil picked
that moment to shoot out a hand, then a leg. He shoved them into the ground and
stayed in that position for a few seconds, before throwing another leg into the
snow and lifting himself as though by clockwork. He then mechanically took his
shovel in hand, shook his head and began slicing away at the snow again. Miss
McGregor smiled, relieved, and went to see if her ancient fireplace still
worked.
Mister Boyd
Hayward slunk out of the dingy, mostly unnoticed general store, where he had
just made the embarrassing purchase of maple syrup, three quarts of it, and a
toilet plunger.
“It’s
fine,” he told himself, shuddering. “Just imagine how many toilet
plungers that store clerk has bought.” But, in evident reality, he thought
it not fine at all. He was burning with shame and fear and, deep within his
blood, suspicion. This was the same blood that had placed his father’s mother
in jail. She was a lady who had not forgotten her long heritage of thievery
and, ofttimes, treason to the nearest authority. She had taken upon herself the
gentler occupation of smuggling. Subdued she had become in her imprisonment,
rising to be a great detective as far as they go, yet nothing could quench her
dangerous thrill at the antics the criminals performed. Ah, how Mr. Hayward
wished his ancestors’ blood had died with her. He sat brooding on this history,
as he was often wont to do, crouching in the shadow of a trash can. His car, an
excellent model, was parked neatly in the center of a parking lot, quite within
his sight. Beside it now, however, was a minivan. Even worse, it looked as
though at least three people were within it. Mr. Hayward’s blood could not take
such a risk. He crawled over to a tree and peered out behind it. At that
moment, somebody shouted and he jumped. An eruption of wind threw him away from
the tree and he rolled down into a ditch. Blood dripped from his nose and ear
and he began sneezing. He realized something was broken under him. It was the
toilet plunger.
“What
have I ever done that the Nornir should be so against me!!?” he
bellowed. The wind, as he intended, made short work of erasing his words. The
maple syrup jars, he noticed glumly, were not broken. He crept back out of the
ditch and glanced backwards as the crazy snow shoveler fell to the ground. He
barely paid attention to this, but made his way slowly back to the general
store. Then, he hesitated, threw his fractured toilet plunger to the wind, and
sprinted in the direction of his car. He stumbled and rose. As soon as he did
so, the air abruptly stilled. He put a leg forward to start running again, but
at that moment, he heard the sound of a nearby howling so intense in potency
and powerful in volume that his hereditary blood grew cold and his body
stiffened. He fell to the ground in a faint.
***
“You know,
Sarge?” police chief Ethan Rue addressed Sergeant Tone. “Anarchy’s a bad idea.”
“Yep.” The
sergeant nodded. “That wind’s blowing bats and chickens outside.”
The police
chief shot up. “It’s cats and dogs. And that’s for rain.”
“Er… yes,
chief. Sorry. I just thought… you know, flight. Wind? Get i–oh, never mind.”
“Just be
more careful in the future.” The chief lounged again. The electricity flicked
off.
“Well if
that don’t just beat all!” exclaimed the chief, instantly feeling the chill of
winter. “Kind of gets me in the mood for Christmas,” continued he.
“Ya know,
chief. I was just thinking the same thing.”
“Me too.”
“I should
hope so, since you brought it up.”
“Eh? Oh
yeah.”
“Sometimes I
wonder if I ought to be the chief.”
“Eh? Is this
mutiny.”
“No, no. Not
at all. Say, where’s Cap’n?”
“Oh. Smith’s
over in the next town serving turkeys to old people. Can you believe it?”
“Nope. We
won’t have any strong leader here while he’s gone. He runs the department.”
“Yep. I… hey!”
The chief bellow, reddening in a good-natured way. “Thought you could pull one
on me?”
“Yup.”
“Hm… I’m
beginning to feel like I’m in Antarctica, you?”
“Nope,”
Sergeant Tone growled. “The Arctic.”
“What have
you got against Antarctica?”
“A polar
bear paralyzed my aunt.”
“You don’t
know much, do you?”
The sergeant
looked surprised and shrugged. “Why do you say that?”
“Oh…
nothing. It’s just… I think your magnetism doesn’t work just right.”
“What?”
“Magnetism?
The south and north poles? Tips of the Earth, get it?”
“What?”
“Never
mind,” roared the chief. “It just seems like you might be the sort of person
who would have penguins being in the Arctic.”
“And why
not?”
“Because…”
the chief poured himself some sadly cool chocolate, with a scowl. “Because…”
The door suddenly burst open and it seemed both ends of the Earth collided,
leaving their temperature behind.
“Oi!”
screamed the chief and sergeant in unison.
“What?” said
a voice. A bumping noise sounded.
“Close the
door, man!” yelled the Chief. “There’s naught to keep us warm in here.”
“Oops.”
There was a final clunk and half a snowstorm rushed in. A lot of snow, a small
patrolman, and a shovel followed.
“Electricity’s
out,” explained the chief. “And it’s subzero in here.”
“I’ll call
Captain and ask him what to do,” announced the man.
“Great
idea!” shouted his audience.
“Hold it
there, Ralph!” said the sergeant matter-of-factly. “No electricity. No
telephone.”
“Um…” said
the officer. “My smartphone?”
“Oh, yeah.”
“Should I
dial it?” asked the chief. “Your hands look frozen.”
Ralph
sighed, picked out his phone, and said, “Phone Captain.”
“Calling
‘Captain,’” responded the clearly Swedish voice.
The chief
and sergeant looked at the officer’s smirk in a bemused fashion.
“Hello?”
said Ralph into his device.
“Hello!
Ralph?” came the loud reply.
“Yep. The
electricity’s out and it’s freezing in the office.”
“Are the
generators not working?” came the Captain’s wisdom.
“Are the
generators not working?” repeated Ralph to his fellow officers.
“We didn’t
check…” muttered the sergeant. He ran into the radio room. Suddenly, all the
lights came back on and luxurious heat fumed from the heaters.
“Turn it up
to seventy-six, man!” shouted the Chief.
“Right!”
After a pause, the sergeant walked back into the room, feeling quite pleased.
“That
worked. Thanks, Cap’n!” said Ralph.
“Good. I aim
to be back soon, if the weather permits it. No, lady, I am not
your son.” The Captain sighed and cleared his throat. “Good bye!”
“Bye!” said
Ralph. He pressed his screen and slid his phone back into his pocket. “Well,
what do you say to that?”
“Well,” said
the chief. “Two things. One, how can you stand pressing a screen to end a call?
I’ve always greatly enjoyed smashing the ear-piece down, sort of destroying the
call forever. And, two, why is your volume so high?”
“Hey, I was
listening to music.”
“Music,” the chief repeated numbly. The door
again burst open.
“Ralph!” The
voice was that of patrolwoman Jill Evans.
“Huh?”
“Is the car
dug out and ready to go?”
“Yep.”
“Very good.
Ethan, Peter Jacks…”
“You can
call me Chief,” he informed her helpfully.
“Chief,
Peter Jacks has just informed me that a wolf attacked Old Charley. Apparently a
large one.”
“Now what in
the world?” gasped the Chief. “Call the animal control. Contact the game
warden. Alert the rangers! How come they didn’t call dispatch?”
“I think the
police will have to handle it this time.”
“Not in our
job description, but oh well… go see to it. Take the tranquilizers. NAN!!!!!”
“What?” came
an aged woman’s voice from the radio room.
“Tell Moody
and Clark to meet Evans–er–Jill at Old Charley’s place. A giant wolf has ripped
him to shreds.”
“No…” said
Jill.
“Don’t you
have a job to do?” said the Chief excitedly. “And keep us posted.”
“Right-o.”
Jill closed the door and everybody inside the building shivered.
***
Jill was
able to easily start up the squad car and she drove it quickly for roughly a
minute, before pulling into Old Charley’s yard. The other police car was
already there, lights flashing for dramatic effect. Jill subconsciously flipped
the switch of her car and got out with a clipboard.
Charles
Davidson was sitting in a rocking chair rumbling off words to two skeptical
officers. Jill walked up and suddenly noticed that he was wearing a purple
cabled sweater that looked decidedly off on his grizzled appearance. “Hello,
young lady!” he said as she approached.
“Hello, Mr.
Davidson!”
“I was just
telling these two ruddy gentlemen my old exaggerated tale. Care to take a
seat?”
“Certainly,
thank you.” Seeing no seat, Jill remained standing. Old Charley didn’t notice.
“I’ll start
right from the beginning, I’m sure these fellers won’t mind. Well, I was taking
my dogs to the outhouse, so then I could… you know….”
Jill quickly
nodded, scribbling onto the paper caught in the clip.
Old Charley
made over-exaggerated coughing noises. “Well, lo and behold, they get in front
of me, see. I move on, but they start growling and getting vicious like. So I
sort of take a step backwards and at that moment, a huge white wolf leaps right
up onto my outhouse. I get my gun off my shoulder so quick, you never would
have believed it.”
“Wait…” said
Jill. “You had a gun with you?”
“Never use
the toilet without it.”
“Um….”
“Sorry. You
asked. Figured I might as well give you the details, seeing as you’ve got that
badge. Anywho, my gun’s all ready. And just then that big ol’ monster leaped at
me. I shot at it and it retreated back some steps, see, after giving my coat a
nasty clawin’.” The man waved his rough hand. “I run me to the outhouse and
wait until it left, then I went back to my house quick as I could. That’s the
whole… oh, wait. Its nose was very cold. Fact is, everything about it was cold,
even its breath.”
“Its nose
was that close to you?”
“I wanted to
know if it had rabies.”
“Ah.” Jill
was pretty sure she shared her coworkers’ incredulous expression. “You mean it
could be wandering around town right now.”
“Suuuure
thiiiinngg,” came the drawled reply.
“Right.
Well, then, you should probably get inside. It’s safer in there. We’ll go
looking for it.”
“Yes,
ma’am.” He shuffled to his feet and waddled into his house.
“Well, let’s
get going,” said Ted Clark, Jill’s uncle. The men returned to their car and
Jill followed suit. Then they split up, looking for any sign of the wolf. Both
squad cars happened to meet in the center of town and there they found more
than a sign.
***
“Say what?”
bellowed Chief Rue.
“Jill and
the boys are having a gun fight with the wolf, dear,” repeated the dispatcher
patiently.
“Alright.
Communicate this to Captain and call in all scattered officers you can. Ralph,
go as reinforcements.”
“Very well,”
said the old lady. She left to do the task.
“No car…”
Ralph began.
“Use your
legs, man!”
Ralph nodded
and ran off, banging the door.
“Sergeant,
we’ve got to go see the mayor.”
“Yes, sir.”
***
Mayor Ezekiel Clemmons sat brooding in his tall,
skinny office chair. He was approaching sixty-five, yet he looked much the same
as he did at thirty. Still the same black and gray, somewhat shiny hair; long,
pointy ears; eyes with dusty amber irises and one perpetually inflamed blood vessel;
a tall, wiry build; and the same style of tailored outfits that included many
garments, long and skinny, and a wide gray cloak. He looked, as it were, not
unlike–and, in fact, remarkably similar–to his least favorite super-villain.
The poor man was lacking in his knowledge of this fact.
Politics had
been especially bad this year. The town’s economy was failing; the townspeople
were either too lazy or had a bad year at their work. Mayor Clemmons frowned
deeply and cracked the joints in his ring fingers. He picked up a knife and
threw it at a target on the wall. It embedded itself deeply into the bullseye
mark. This did not calm his mind. Instead he let loose an inaudible growl and
turned down the heat of his office. Then he navigated his computer’s web
browser to his emails. He despised external email clients. Seeing an email, he
viciously closed the program. At least his computer ran Ubuntu Studio. He
almost smiled as he thought back to the heated debate where he maintained that
Linux was better than Windows. Against all odds, he won and was granted the
kernel and his nominated operating system. Then his gaze strolled over to his
orderly bulletin board.
“The
Christmas tree,” he muttered through clenched teeth. Every year, the
townspeople expected a Christmas tree to come from the town’s treasury. He
shook his head in sudden determination. Not this year. A fierce hatred
for money squanderers suddenly burst into what felt like his gall bladder. He
rose from his chair and paced for roughly three minutes before sitting back
down. He then glumly thought of those rioting protesters who were steadily
approaching his town. Who knew what they were protesting.
It was
thinking thoughts such as these that the two policemen found him, bursting into
the room and quickly explaining the issue with the giant white wolf.
“This is
more like it,” thought the mayor, at least three times as happy as he was
formerly. So powerful was this explosion of temporary joy that the mayor broke
forth into a simply petrifying grin and then a chilling laugh. Seeing the
officers back off a step, puzzled, he stood and monologued, “Thank you,
gentlemen. You take my mind off many weighty matters. You may leave. I trust
you know what to do. Ah, if you don’t mind, would you alert the other members
of the council?”
They nodded,
swallowed, and ran like frightened dogs. Mayor Clemmons looked on with a smile
and a merry but frozen glint in his eye. He spent the next several minutes
collecting scattered objects that were about his office and reading up on
wolves.
***
Another
gunshot rang out, immediately followed with a roar of pain. Five officers were
hiding behind a barricade of two patrol cars and one pickup truck. They were
equipped with handguns, but these seemed to have no lasting effect upon the
wolf, which looked to be of the arctic variety, being fully white, but was
larger than the police pickup truck.
“Hey!”
shouted one of the officers. “We can’t just keep shooting forever!”
“I’d hate to
think what the wolf would do if we stopped,” called another, letting out three
quick shots. Suddenly, the wolf growled in a way that wasn’t at all natural and
jumped onto a roof. It then leaped at the officers, who fled in terror. At that
moment, the chief and deputy drove in and hurriedly passed out semi-automatic
rifles and some gas bombs.
“We’re the
modern police here!” shouted Chief Rue. “Rally to my semi-automatic
machine gun!” All the police did. Once they were all in a group, the
wolf leaped. They dove quickly to the side and started shooting again. A
massive paw suddenly threw the majority of them against a brick building.
“What’s
wrong with this animal?” shouted Sergeant Tone, scrambling to his feet. “It
seems to regenerate.”
“More than
that,” said an officer named Harry. “The blood even disappears. No, it falls
directly onto the ground, right through all that fur.”
Everybody
else quickly observed this fascinating fact. The wolf responded to their stares
by diving at Harry and taking a good bite. Harry shot it directly in its eye
and it recoiled back, throwing him up onto a snowy roof.
“Are you
alright, man?” shouted Chief Rue.
“Yeah.
Thumbs up for bulletproof vests!” He began firing at the wolf again.
“You know,”
said the other sergeant, Tom Wren, “these bullets do nothing.”
Jill
promptly stopped firing and threw a gas bomb. A fog rose where it exploded.
This seemed to be more effective. The beast backed off in anger, sneezing. A
sudden cold wind quickly disposed of the fog and froze the officers to the
bones. “Brrrrrr…” most of them muttered.
The wolf
suddenly dropped down beside them and leaped, scattering them for many meters.
It quickly turned on Chief Rue and tried to eat him and had almost succeeded
when a voice resonated throughout the area. “Halt, foul creature. Cast the
innocent down.” It was the mayor, standing on the ridge of somebody’s roof,
holding a lit torch in one hand and a very sharp-looking short sword in the
other. The wolf threw the chief at him. The chief only hit the roof and rolled
off into a snow bank. The wolf leaped after him. The mayor executed an amazing
jump and threw the torch into the wolf’s fur. It yelped and reeled backwards,
turning quickly into a pile of snow. Then it darted at the mayor. At the same
moment, a swirling mass of snow put out his torch, which he promptly put into
the creature’s throat. It growled and gagged at this and then simply stopped
making noise. Continuing in its silence, it attacked the mayor in all possible
fury, smashing the torch against his head. Then a massive explosion of air
launched the torch from its throat and it bit viciously at the mayor’s cloak.
The garment was well made, however and did not tear. The mayor, realizing this
advantage, pulled out a stun weapon and pierced it deeply into the wolf’s side.
It howled in pain, twisting away. The mayor wasn’t done yet. He pressed a
button and soon, the wolf was on fire. The mayor jumped onto its back, fanning
the flames, and was looking quite impressive until it suddenly shook violently,
throwing him off, and ran away. The police instantly gave chase, guns quite
readily firing. However, upon turning a corner, it soon disappeared. The police
turned back, discouraged, and a cold wind blew in their faces, snowflakes
starting to accumulate throughout the air.
“I suggest
you bring electricity with you next time,” said the mayor, suddenly present.
“If you had some, we might have killed it by now.”
“Wolves
don’t usually need electricity,” stated the Chief.
“You fool!
That is no wolf.”
“What?”
“It’s a
man.”
“What? A
werewolf?” puffed the Chief.
“Obviously.
You did notice that it was nothing like a wolf?”
“It looked
exactly like a wolf,” groaned Sergeant Tone. He was stretching.
“Visual
appearance means nothing.”
“So, why do
you say it’s not a wolf?”
“It didn’t
act like one.”
“What d’ye
mean, it didn’t act like one?”
“Just use
electricity next time.” The mayor turned. All at once, a tempestuous rabble of
townsfolk poured themselves into the scene, wielding whatever was the first
thing they could get their hands on and shouting the first thing they could get
into their throats.
“Where’s the
wolf!?” demanded one of them.
“It ran
off,” said Officer Ronald Freud. He was the expert in public relations.
“Which
direction!?” pressed the same one.
“It
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“Aye, that
it did, angry mob,” said Sergeant Tone. He was not an expert in public
relations.
The angry
mob angrily retreated, their very human thirst for the sight of hemoglobin not
satisfied. No sooner had they done so, however, than the whole lot of them
started screaming.
***
“Let us
through!” commanded Officer Ronald Freud for the fifth time.
Sergeant
Tone barged through the lines of mob, having the officers and chief follow him
in an arrowhead formation. As soon as he saw the object of attention, he
blinked in surprise. A grotesquely blue and purple figure lay face-downwards on
the road, clumps of ice and piles of snow all about it.
“Wha-t’s all
t-his,” stuttered the chief in horror.
Officer
Ralph started whistling loudly.
“Call the
paramedics?” suggested Sergeant Tone dully.
“This corpse
is beyond human effort,” announced the mayor, shoving his way through the
crowd. “Take it away.” Somebody gulped loudly.
“Alright,”
said Chief. “Sarge and Sarge, take ye a group of patrol-folk and scour the
ground for the cause of this… uh.”
“Bloody
manslaughter?” suggested Sergeant Tone.
“Yeah.
Bloody manslaughter or murder. But… it’s more frozen than bloody.”
“I was
talking about internal bleeding.”
“So…” said
Sergeant Wren. “We look for the murderer.”
“Sure. I’ll
head back to the old HQ. I’m getting too fat for manhunts.” The chief took the
pickup truck and headed back to his office.
“Right!”
said Sergeant Tone. “Let’s get started.”
***
Most of the
officers regrouped at the police headquarters, taking in the moment of pure
relaxation, but still feeling rather discouraged. They had found no trace of
any potential murderer.
“Hey, don’t
feel too badly,” moaned the Chief, downing another comforting mug of hot
chocolate. “Most murderers don’t want to be caught, so it’s a wonder we’re able
to find any of them.” Realizing this didn’t give much hope, he continued, “Of
course, most murderers don’t work by ice either…”
“Silence!”
screeched the mayor. “This is obviously a criminal who does not
conform to normal standards of existence. I very much doubt any of you
would be able to stand up against this being. No doubt both events of today are
connected… the werewolf and the witch.”
“Witch?”
“I am only
making a reasonable assumption. This isn’t a superhero movie.” The mayor’s
voice broke with regret. “This is life. There is most likely not some
freeze-ray operator on the loose.”
“But
witchcraft?” inquired Officer Ralph, his mouth full of toast.
“Not
necessarily, indeed not likely in these enlightened times, but something of a
similar nature.”
“What are we
to do about it then?” coughed the officer.
“It’s
obvious. Get your troopers out there. Let no one rest. Find the sorcerer.”
“But we
searched the whole town.”
“You
probably didn’t inquire into every detail of every person’s life.”
“True.”
“We can’t do
that,” pointed out Sergeant Tone.
“No. You go
about with your patrols. I shall find the culprit.” The mayor exited the
building with an overly dramatic swirl of his cloak.
The chief
poured a new cup of hot chocolate. “Oi! Somebody go steal some eggs from the
fire department and then we’ll start drawing up some plans.”
***
Mayor
Ezekiel Clemmons trudged through the snow, unaware of the frigidity. He was
looking at a bleak darkness contained in a screen, the scenery created by his
thermal imaging camera. Suddenly, he saw a slightly whiter shape which looked
human, apparently buried under the snow. He took three long, snowy strides and
kicked his boot into the figure, prying it out of the snow. It was Mr. Hayward.
The mayor seized him by his shirt and lifted him, noticing with interest the
great quantity of frozen syrup covering the poor man’s shirt.
“Hayward,”
commanded the mayor. “Awaken!”
Mr. Hayward
did so. “Da…dad? Take one more step and I’ll shred you.”
“He
obviously didn’t have very good familial ties,” thought the mayor. “No. I
am not your father. Wake up.”
Mr. Hayward
blinked blearily. “But… the… wolf… it howled. How will I ever plunge the
toilet? I’ll never be able to use it again. My life is… stolen. Why do I need
my blood? I’m tired of it… oh, I’m so warm. Why can’t life….”
The mayor
slapped him.
“Si…rr? I
didn’t do it, by Thor’s hammer, I didn’t do it.”
“What use is
Thor’s hammer to me!? What didn’t you do? Tell me this, or I’ll shred you.”
“Not the
wolf?”
“I fought
the wolf… it’s a wolf, nothing more, except a man and a shape-shifter at that.
Just tell me.”
“Is it warm…
would it make a nice blanket?”
“No. In
fact, it was a very cold beast. Ah ha! I am starting to form something.”
“I didn’t do
it.”
“I know.
I’ll just get the police and have them take you to the….”
A dramatic
change came over the man. He suddenly turned bright red and forced himself out
of the mayor’s grip. He than ran as if Fenrir were chasing him.
“Poor
imbecile.” The mayor walked away from the scene, went directly to his office,
opened a case, and pulled out a short rifle. “The hunt will now begin. And I
shall not be the prey.” He laughed and grimaced at the same time.
***
“Hey, Jill!”
laughed Ralph. He and Jill were patrolling in the car he had dug out of the
snow.
“Huh?”
“Somebody
sent me a picture of their face and asked if they had a rose-leaf complexion.”
Ralph showed her his phone’s screen.
“That’s odd.
I’d place it more under a moldy cheese complexion.”
“Me too.
Rose-leaf complexions always got to me. I mean… that should mean that you’re
green?”
“Look!” Jill
pointed, crashing down onto the brake.
A line of
brightly colored trucks came tearing down the road. It looked as if there were
people on top of some of them. A gunshot rang out.
“Oh, great,”
said Ralph.
Jill nodded.
“The rioters have come.”
***
“I’ll be a
gazelle's kitten!” exclaimed the chief. “Quick, get shields, tactical vests,
guns of all shapes and sizes. You know, the normal procedure. Call the mayor. Nan!!!!!!!
Get the captain over here. We’ll need the army soon with all our problems!”
Everybody
collected the various items and marched in a very noteworthy fashion out of the
building and into the vehicles. They then cautiously approached the area the
rioters were coming from. Unfortunately, smoke was already pouring from the
place.
Suddenly,
screams of fright and shock echoed throughout the city. When the police
arrived, a great deal of the area was covered in ice and snow. Most of the
rioters were encased in this and the rest were hurriedly fleeing.
“It’s the
wolf again!” shouted an officer known as Oliver Peterson.
The massive
creature leaped in front of the unprepared policemen. A gunshot rang out from
the top of a house and a large dart struck the beast in its shoulder. It
stumbled but then the dart cracked, falling to the ground.
“Bring it
down!” shouted the Mayor. He leaped from the roof and joined in the fight.
“The rioters
don’t seem to be totally leaving,” announced Ralph, shooting a bullet into the
wolf’s nose.
“I suppose
you forgot to bring electricity,” growled the mayor, piercing the wolf with a
spear he happened to be carrying.
“We were
expecting rioters, so nothing too fancy.” said Sergeant Tone. “We have
C-E-W’s.”
“Excellent.
Use them.” The officers did so and saw that these seemed to have a vicious
effect upon the wolf, which howled in great distress.
“Whoever
heard a wolf that sounded like that?” demanded the mayor. “Show yourself! We
know that you be man and not beast.”
A faint
thing happened in the wolf’s neck that looked like the essence of illusion and
a slow, dry, human laugh poured out into the frosty air.
“I told you
he was a werewolf!” exclaimed the mayor triumphantly. “Why do you attack, my
good man?”
The great
animal turned and licked the frozen ground, then looked back at them, a gleam
in its eye.
“It’s here
because of the ice?” inquired Sergeant Tone unbelievingly.
“Some
courtesy, man!” exclaimed the chief.
All of the
sudden, the wolf made a fresh attack and then disappeared down an alley.
“Give
chase!” shouted Sergeant Wren. And off the police and mayor shot.
They
suddenly saw its tail disappear behind a house. They charged after it, but it
was nowhere to be found.
“I declare!”
shouted the chief. “That thing runs like a cheetah on a highway.”
“Chief!” It
was Jill who spoke. “Mr. Billy Vigil–he’s here.”
“Ah ha!”
sneered the Mayor. “And this is where the tracks stop. And look at this!” He
pointed. “They turn to boots.”
“A
shapeshifter that keeps their clothes?” asked Officer Ralph doubtfully.
“It is
indeed odd, but question not the supernatural.”
“Mm…” said
the Chief Rue. “I don’t know. It seems like it just couldn’t work.”
“And why
not?”
“There’s
just no logical way….”
“Shut that
mouth up right now!” hissed the mayor. “We need no logic here; you are in the
presence of the paranormal.”
“I declare,
mayor! We need logic in my department.”
“Logic has
its place, but it isn’t here!”
“Rationality,
then?” asked Sergeant Tone hopefully.
“Idiot!”
howled the mayor. “Fool! Silence your jaw, before I add some color to your
complexion.”
Sergeant
Tone blinked, then tried to hold the mayor’s intimidating gaze.
“We need
Captain,” sounded out Officer Freud, trying to break the tension.
“Yeah,”
moaned the Chief.
“Gentlemen,
is this what police do all day?” inquired the mayor curtly. “If so, I fail to
see why you get so much money.”
“Uh… I
wouldn’t mind getting a lot of money,” said Officer Ralph, laughing.
“Bah! You’re
able to pay your bills, man,” exclaimed the Chief.
“Now, if you
shall not make deductions, I shall,” stated the mayor through narrowed lips.
His matching set of narrowed eyes twitched. “We can see here that the wolf was
walking, then the paws turned to boots and led right to this… Mr. Vigil.”
“Are you saying
Mr. Vigil is the wolf?” inquired Jill.
“Since the trained
professionals aren’t doing anything, I must say, yes. Yes, I am.”
“That’s
stupid!” said Sergeant Tone. “That old man wouldn’t hurt a fly… okay. He would.
He’d spread its entrails like nothing you’ve ever seen before.”
Officer
Ralph coughed disgustedly and spouted out, “Ew. Yuck. Oh, wow. That’s gross.
Oh, man, I hated that. Oh, wow. That… that is disgusting.”
“Me?”
slurred out Mr. Vigil.
“Yes, sir,”
said the mayor. “You. What have you to say for yourself?”
“Wolf.” Mr.
Vigil still slurred. “Beast destroy. I destroy. You fell. I take. Shovel!”
“The… what,
man?” asked the chief, confused.
“See!?” said
the mayor through clenched teeth. “O, foolish beings of mortal humanity, we
have captured a lycanthrope. And it’s going to pay.”
***
Most
everybody in the village was gathering in the square, the place where the
Christmas tree normally would have been at that time of the year. A chain of
police kept rioters from coming in and more police patrolled the rest of the
crowd. The two sergeants held their ground in the middle of a circle of people.
In between them was Mr. Vigil, crouching, and behind him was the mayor, looking
suspiciously at the people around him.
His voice
then rang out, cold, clear, commanding, and tired, “Good people of Kent, hail!
I have come here to witness the towns decision upon this man, who is suspect of
being a werewolf.” There were gasps and mutterings of disbelief at this, but
the mayor continued. “I assume you have come for the same reason. As such, we
shall immediately commence. Sir, Mr. William Vigil, have you
anything to say for yourself. You stand suspect; defend yourself, lest ye
become accused.”
Mr. Vigil
snarled and leaped to his feet. “I… death. Hurt you. Save self.” His eyes
became a milky white, mostly covering his pupils. Suddenly, it began to snow.
Then, it was a whiteout. Then, bolts of ice began springing out of every
object. Everybody in the area screamed like pumas, feeling certain of death and
knowing only a cold fear. Then, a howl, long and ferocious, fearfully
unaffected by the storm, seemed to come from all directions at once and the
storm quivered and broke, immediately turning into a powdery layer on the
ground. Most everybody got back up, overjoyed to be alive. Everybody turned
their gaze to the gigantic wolf facing off the old man. A sudden bolt of ice
caught the wolf directly in the chest and a barrage of snow fairly drowned it,
but it suddenly leaped, catching Mr. Vigil by the arm and quickly biting it
off. Mr. Vigil showed no signs of pain, but only touched the wolf and turned it
into a statue of ice. As he continued touching it the entire area became colder
and colder, every bit of heat being rendered useless in that icy pull.
Suddenly, the wolf moved. It smashed its front paws into Mr. Vigil and he flew
against a brick building. Its wall crumbled.
“Hi!”
bellowed the mayor at the wolf and charged, the police after him. The wolf
surprised them all and ran. The mayor chased after it. The crowd, along with
the rioters from other towns, suddenly started shouting and picking up weapons,
thundering after it and Mr. Vigil. The police dedicated their full strength to
keeping them stationary and orderly. The rioters tried their best to ruin their
efforts, the more violent ones with weapons.
***
“What a
day!” declared Chief. “What a day.” He bore quite a few bruises, matching all
his officers.
“Those
rioters just make me want to burn their homes to the ground!” hissed Officer
Thomas Phillips.
“Um…
Phillips?” said Sergeant Tone. “That is no way for a civilized policeman to
act.”
“I have a
bruise in my underarm. I am by no means civilized.”
“Ah.”
Suddenly the
door literally burst off its hinges. Fortunately, the man who opened it was a
carpenter. “Come to the square, quickly!”
“Back to the
square?” moaned Officer Ralph. He had managed to get both his shoulders nearly
broken.
“Aye.
There’s a wounded man.”
“Let’s get
us over there,” said the Chief.
***
A murmuring
crowd turned to muttering as they waited for the evidence. At the moment, Old
Charley climbed onto a slight platform in the square, holding up a body. “As I
was saying,” said Old Charley, “there’re no claw prints here. Shot’s done this
job.”
At that
moment, the dispatch of police appeared, filing up through the newly gathered,
cautious crowd.
“Lemme have
a look,” said Sergeant Tone. “Uh… yes. Definitely bullet wounds. Multiple
penetrations about the heart.”
The mayor
came running up at that moment, looking angry. “What happened here?”
“Somebody’s gone
and introduced this poor fellow a little too well to materials foreign to his
body,” explained Old Charley.
“I see. Our
streets are no longer safe. Everybody flee to their houses. Don’t come out
until we officials say. I require a police guard for this man’s burial.”
“I suppose
that could be arranged,” informed the Chief.
“I assure
you, sir, I would not have mentioned it unless if it were destined to happen.”
The mayor stalked off. Suddenly, a loud siren came into audibility. A large armored vehicle with
an escort of two squad cars rolled into the town square. A police officer slid
off the car and walked over to the chief, who indicated himself. “Sir, we heard
you need help. We would have come earlier, but there are rioters literally
everywhere.”
“Ah, I thank
you kindly, man. We have a mess of trouble. We’ve got some of your rioters, a
werewolf, and some old guy with magical power over snow or something.”
“S-ir?” stuttered
the officer. “I understood… I mean….” He blinked and dipped his head. “We’ll be
glad to help anyway.”
***
All the
remainder of the day and all night were spent patrolling the town in great,
well-armed force. No noteworthy event was reported, however, until six o’clock
in the morning, whereupon another victim was found dead, soon followed at
six-thirty by the discovery of two people, ripped by claws. These were still
alive, but barely. At seven, Mr. Vigil was found and put in a jail cell, under
the influence of a sleeping pill. At eight, a huge pool of blood with clumps of
fur and paw and boot prints all about it was located. At eight-forty, Mr. Vigil
broke through the jail wall and was found at nine battling the mayor. And then,
some more action began.
***
All the
police shot down the road. The wolf had apparently joined in the fight and now
all three were contending viciously. The police were not allowed by Mr. Vigil
or the wolf to approach. It was especially difficult to do so, seeing as they
didn’t want to harm Mr. Vigil.
Unknown to
the police or combatants, a third party was hiding behind a barrel, surveying
the scene in terror. The figure was that
of Boyd Hayward. It must have been his blood’s fault that he suddenly came to
be there, but there he was, and, if he moved, he was certain it would be his
last movement. Then, his blood began to boil and he picked up a rock. He was
going to break this standstill, if it was the last thing he did. He was tired
of resenting his blood. He threw the stone at the mayor, because he would feel
bad about knocking out the older man and it wouldn’t hurt the wolf. The mayor
did not expect this and crumpled dramatically to the ground as the rock hit his
head. At that moment, several things happened. The police found themselves out
of the stalemate and the veritable army of them rushed in. Rioters and
townspeople-turned-angry-mob, seeing opportunity, poured in from the roofs and
rushed in through the streets, lingering back as they anticipated the best
place to strike. The wolf lunged at Mr. Hayward and, biting deeply, threw him
against a window, shattering it, and he landed in a slush of snow and blood.
The wolf decided to remove the police from its life. The fiercest battle
anybody had ever seen ensued. Unfortunately for the good officers of the law,
the wolf was a great deal more invulnerable than they and, whilst sustaining no
damage itself, it wrecked havoc upon its opponents.
Mr. Vigil
suddenly shot forth a massive swirling mass of snow and ice, cutting deeply into
the wolf’s hide. This distracted it a bit, then it threw police everywhere.
Upon this act of violence, it attacked the buildings. Two blows of its massive
paws brought down a wall, to screams of protest, and a few more knocked down an
entire house. It leaped at another house, the available police running after
it. Mr. Vigil began shooting everything with snow and ice and another whiteout
began. Everybody and the wolf went into blind panic, trying their best to do
what they were supposed to do and failing more than miserably.
Suddenly, it
seemed that the storm multiplied, coming from many different directions. Then
it lightened, so much so that some things could be seen. Everybody looked
around to see what had happened and there was Elise McGregor, sweeping away at
the snow.
“How did you—?”
started Sergeant Wren. He was the only sergeant still standing.
“I didn’t do
it.”
“Then who…
what? Oh.” He looked at where the wolf was driving its claws into Mr. Vigil.
“That has to hurt.” He shot the wolf and it sprang at him. A low-flying
helicopter abruptly sailed over their heads and the wolf looked up, confused.
Sergeant Wren took this moment to escape and everybody watched the helicopter
as it circled once then suddenly shot forward and released two people with
parachutes into the air. It then flew off. Everybody watched these figures, one
much smaller than the other, as they glided in a steep descent towards the
scene. The wolf growled at them and then returned to mauling the police
department. Suddenly, a small girl with a stick crashed into it. Startled, it jumped back and glared at her,
only to find the stick newly positioned in its right eye. It howled in pain and
opened its jaw wide. A mighty, swift blow from the girl cracked some of its
teeth. It growled fiercely and attempted right then and there to eat her. She,
however, jumped onto its nose and slid to the ground unharmed. The wolf was
then smitten on the lower jaw.
“Hey, Sarge?
Sarge! Sarge. Sarge Wren!” said the voice of the captain.
“Captain!” Sergeant
Wren leaped into the captain and hugged him tightly, sighing with relief.
“Yes. Er.”
The Captain simultaneously crushed the sergeants’ entrails and pulverized his
back in an attempt to make the whole thing more manly. He then hurled the
sergeant to the ground. “Do that one more time and I’ll pity the person who’ll
tell your mother the result.”
“Yes,
Cap’n,” said Sergeant Wren, still beaming.
“Get these
men in order, sir. Where’s Chief? I have to recommend you for cleaning the
toilets.”
“I don’t
know,” said Sergeant Wren, suddenly less happy. He trudged off and began
hauling people into order. His job was made easier when he found Sergeant Tone
and Ronald Freud just recovering from unconsciousness.
Meanwhile,
the captain trudged around, eventually finding the chief stuck in a window.
“Hi, Chief!”
“Ah, good to
see you, man. It’s good to be back. I mean… I was talking for you. I… wow, I’m
confused.”
“It’s
probably all that blood running to your brain. You seem to be upside down.”
“Oh. I feel
like it. Lend a hand, old Cap’n?”
“Here.” The
captain yanked him out and began strolling back to the reorganized police
ranks. “Hm… you’re bleeding about all over.”
“The wolf
threw me.”
“Oh.”
“Say, what
you’d do with the wolf?”
“Nothing
yet. I was waiting for everything to get organized again. Seems the department
falls to total chaos whenever I leave.”
“Wait!” said
the chief, looking up. “The wolf’s still lose? Oh, wait… is that a little kid
fighting it?”
“Yes,” said
the captain, taking his place in the lines of officers. “She’s my niece.”
“Shouldn’t
we… you know, be helping. We’re the police, after all.”
“Not at all.
I just want the wolf to get confused. Nan told me that people think this is a
werewolf. If so, we’ll convert it to its human form and have a nice friendly
chat.”
“I didn’t
know you had a niece.”
“I don’t
have one in the United States. She met me while I was delivering turkeys”
“What was
she doing there?”
“She came
over from Hawaii.”
“Hawaii?”
“I thought I
told you. That’s the only thing that’s imperfect in my family. See, we had a
big family argument a few decades back over which was better; having perfect
build and physical adeptness or being highly skilled in classical pursuits,
like music and artwork. So, the physical ones moved to Hawaii. The classical
ones moved to Alaska. And, the ones with both things, like me, stayed in the
United States. I heard a long time ago that Aloha–she used to have a long
complicated name, but they changed it to that because it could mean mercy–was
born, so when she turned up, it was like a miniature family reunion.”
“Um… how did
you know it was her?”
“She knew my
name… besides, the perfect white teeth.” The captain revealed his own set,
which were indeed flawless in their whiteness.
“How did she
get over to the United States?”
“A brilliant
question.” The captain stretched.
“Hey! How
are you two surviving without a coat on?” said the chief, amazed.
“An extreme
retainment of thermal energy runs in the family,” explained the captain,
shrugging.
Everybody
watched as the wolf tried to bite Aloha’s head off for the fourth time.
“It still
seems dangerous and I want to do something.”
“Bosh! Look
at her, it’s almost as if she was born fighting giant wolves. Actually, I
wouldn’t be surprised. Besides, how could any creature, no matter how foul,
hurt such a poor innocent little child. And don’t forget that cuteness runs in
my family.”
“Yes,
Captain,” sighed the chief. “You’re very cute.”
The captain
twitched. “Say, is that Mr. Vigil? Where’s his arm?
“He’s turned
into some kind of snow wizard.”
“Hm. That’s
a first.”
“You don’t
seem to be surprised by much.”
“Surprise is
one thing that doesn’t run in my family. We have to work really hard to be in
such a state.” At that moment, Aloha crashed into him with great acceleration.
He caught her and set her on her feet. “Guess its time to talk to the wolf.
Chief, could you get Mr. Vigil into the hospital? He looks like he might need
some attention sometime soon.” The captain stepped over to the wolf.
“Yes, sir.”
The chief called in an ambulance.
The captain
began speaking. “Hi. I’m Captain Cabot Smith. May I ask your name?”
The wolf
coughed.
“If you
wouldn’t mind the notion of turning yourself into a human, I certainly
wouldn’t. Of course, if you feel more comfortable as a wolf, then wolf stay
ye!”
Suddenly,
the wolf’s pupils disappeared into a swirling light which increased in
intensity as the wolf dropped to the ground, closing its eyes. Then, the fur
twisted and flattened, rising again once in a while, looking much like waves.
Then the legs quickly began fashioning themselves into human limbs, as the
backbone got some backbone and stood up straight. The giant head twisted down
into a civilized face and there was a rather gigantic–though far smaller than
the wolf–man. Unfortunately, the poor individual had naught but transparency to
cover him.
“Oh, um,”
said the chief, quickly looking the other way and whistling. Everybody else
rapidly averted their vision.
“Do you have
any clothes?” asked the captain politely.
“Oh, I’m
quite sorry, good sirs, I’m sure. I really didn’t mean… excuse me for a moment,
if you would be so kind as to humor my ambitions.” A sudden swirl of snow and
wind rose around the man and he dissipated into it.
“Where’d he
go?” asked the chief.
“Probably to
his closet,” replied the captain calmly. “You’re doing very well, Aloha.”
She smiled
in the same way the captain did, with the right corner of the mouth slightly
higher than the left and a slight contraction of the skin immediately above and
below the eye, which caused a very small narrowing of the eyes. The entire face
then adjusted in linear motion to accommodate a showing of amazingly white
teeth. The entire chain of action, on both persons, took between four and three
seconds.
“Those teeth
are even whiter than yours!” hissed the chief into the captain’s ear.
“Well,”
returned the captain, “she is of the Hawaiian part of the family. Brilliant
bones. And, though you didn’t know it, you interrupted a conversation just
now.”
“Er, I did?”
“Naturally.
In my family, when having a conversation, you wait for a person to finish
smiling before you speak again.”
“Ah–kay.
Sorry.”
“Apology
accepted. Anyway,” the captain turned back to Aloha, “could you distract the
mob? I see that they are beginning to form a nasty plan.”
“Alright.”
Aloha smiled again and the captain promptly threw her onto a roof and she
leaped into the mob and began tripping them.
“Won’t that
make them angrier?” asked the chief.
“Not at all.
All angry mobs I’ve ever come across love tripping. Anyway, the slight
distraction will give our officers a chance to form a proper wall and prepare
defensive measures.”
“What? How
many–” His words were broken as the snow swirled again and the werewolf in
human form reshaped, dressed as an Englishman of the nineteenth century.
“Sorely
sorry to keep your good presences waiting. I take it you wish to discuss a
matter with me?”
“Just so.”
“I have no
name, so please just call me John. Will that do, Mr. Cabot?”
“Very well.”
“Ah, good.
What would be the subject for our pleasantries?”
“To be very
blunt, sir, why are you here, disturbing and even, may I say, attacking our
people?”
“My sorrow
is terrible,” moaned the man. “But, you must see, I have very little control
over my actions whilst so transformed, especially when I’ve been told to hunt a
scent.”
“From whence
do you receive your orders?”
“The season,
as you would see it.”
“What are
you hunting?”
“An
accident.” The man turned away. “Where’d he go?”
“Who? Mr.
Vigil?”
“Yes, I
think that’s what you called him.”
“What
happened to him?”
“I believe
him to be the embodiment of that which I am chasing.”
“Oh. So
you’re not after Mr. Vigil himself?”
“Far from
it. You notice this new power he is using.”
“Yes,
definitely. It all starts to make sense now.”
“I am
gladdened by that.”
“My instinct
tells me that we simply need to get him really hot to get the accident out of
him.”
“A wonderful
idea.”
“Now, about
this accident. Why do you need to destroy it?”
“I don’t. I
simply need to get it out so the season can destroy it.”
“Is it
alive?”
“In a way, I
would say.”
“Wouldn’t it
be cruel to destroy it, then?”
“Hm… I think
we’ll just have to conciliate that with our judgment. If everything goes right,
it will just disappear without being destroyed. And, if it wasn’t gone, this
would just happen again, only worse and it would completely ruin spring.”
“Well, you
know best.”
“I thank you
for the acknowledgement, sir.” The man stretched. “As it is…” Suddenly, a
gunshot rang out, hitting him directly in the head and he fell roughly to the
ground. The mayor was standing behind him with a rifle.
The captain
drew out a handgun in a streaking movement and shot a hole into the trigger
mechanism. Suddenly, Mr. Vigil leaped into the scene, to which the crowds
responded with violent attacks to the police wall. The mayor pulled out another
gun while the captain was distracted by this new arrival.
“Do that
again, Captain,” he hissed. “And I might just put some stress on
this trigger.”
“Hey,” said
the Captain. “No worries. I’m just looking into Mr. Vigil. I thought he was
locked up.” He indicated the old man, who was beginning to throw ice at him.
“You’d
better be.”
Mr. Vigil
suddenly threw a massive hurl of ice at the Captain, who dodged, shouting, “Get
that crowd out of here, please! They’re making me nervous. I won’t need any
help here.”
The police
immediately responded, moving forward slowly and forcing the mob away from the
scene. The crowd, seeing they were getting nowhere, sat down with the officers
in the snow and watched the action unfurl. After a few impressive dodges,
Captain managed to handcuff Mr. Vigil.
“Chief,
let’s take this feller to your sauna.”
“Good idea,”
said the Chief hesitantly. He ran up and they dragged him off. As they
disappeared, the captain shouted, “Oh, arrest the mayor, fellows.”
“Traitor!”
the same growled. He pointed his gun at Sergeant Tone. “Take one step and death
is your lot.”
“Traitor
yourself!” said Ronald Freud.
The mob
suddenly took the mayor’s more chaos-promising side and leaped up at the
police, who readily began fighting them back down. The mayor, who decided that
he might as well go a step further, leaped to aid the rioters, but was knocked
to the ground by a stick smashing solidly into his head. This vibration seemed
to have an ill effect upon the poor former wolf upon the ground. He suddenly
melted into the ground, which then exploded in a wide chasm between the police
and rioters and the mayor and Aloha.
“You’re
impudence befits thee not, child.” The mayor rolled dramatically to his feet,
cloak flying. “Go back to your mother!”
Aloha
smiled. “Uncle said somebody would have to get you off the upper ground.”
“I have
trained in fighting techniques for forty years in Japan, Brazil, England,
Ireland, and Iran. You stand not a chance.”
“I have
trained for two years in Hawaii, Brazil, New Zealand, Mexico, and the United
States. I think I do.” Aloha once again flashed her teeth at the mayor.
“Stop that!”
fussed he.
“Sorry.”
Aloha then threw her stick into his shin, resulting in a quiet yelp. “Anyway,
the police will come help me when they are done with the rioters.”
The mayor’s
mouth twitched. “Is that stick petrified?”
“Yes.”
“That
explains it.” The mayor suddenly leaped backwards, drew a sword from a scabbard
on his back and brought out a stun gun with his other hand. He bounded into the
air and immediately shot his gun. Aloha blocked the electrodes with her stick
and directly brought the weapon down on the gun, rendering it bound on a short
journey to the ground. The mayor drew another sword and brought them down at
where she used to be. She, with all the speed of a Smith, curved into his legs,
knocking him to the ground. As she twisted back to her feet, he tripped her,
grabbed her leg and threw her at the rift in the ground. Her momentum was not
wasted, however, and she soon was crashing down on the mayor’s chest, her stick
pushing strategically against his chin.
“Little
fool,” he muttered as well as he could. He suddenly snapped his head down,
yanking the branch from her grasp. During the same moment, he sliced his sword
quickly into her side, causing a sharp recoil, upon which he preformed a
massive toss and she flew directly into the chasm, landing onto Jill, who was
handcuffing a rioter.
“Victory!”
roared Sergeant Tone from above them. “Throw all the rioters into the chasm!”
“We’re down
here!” shouted Jill. A wooden broom was launched downward and the two soon were
upon solid ground, their arrival greeted by protesting rioters flying into the
crack. Miss McGregor was standing there, looking anxious.
The two
sergeants then took it upon themselves to seize the broom, vault across the
rift, and tackle the mayor. Surprisingly, it seemed that policemen with a broom
were extremely effective against him, and they soon had him handcuffed.
***
And so it
was that the brunt of unnatural events was completed and never again
experienced in the town of Kent. A looming Christmas tree was set up in the
town square, quite promptly after the mayor’s arrest. The captain began giving
well-needed training to the police and organizing the rioters into a film
production company. Aloha’s cut was treated by the superior medical apparatus
known as the adhesive bandage and she quickly rose to become an actor for the
film company and an honorary member of the police force. Her parents, missing
their child, moved from Hawaii, an event which eventually brought together the
entire Smith family for good, an event which added greatly to the town’s
population. Mr. Vigil, his possessing “accident” purged and he returned to his
proper mental state and lacking one arm, became best of friends with Old
Charley and they instituted themselves as locally renowned philosophers and
authorities on common sense. And, as for Miss McGregor, she took the office of
mayor and kept it for a good long time.