Tag: unscary terror

  • Arbor Day

    Marvin’s war with the squirrels began with the roar of a chainsaw. He stood in his backyard wearing a Budweiser baseball cap, a pair of short shorts, and a farmer’s tan. Red body hair nearly hid a faded “April” tattoo that arched over his round gut. My daughter Tressa watched him front the fence line, as I sweated in to a fresh hole that would soon be home to a young oak tree.

    I wiped the sweat from my forehead with the back of my hand and tossed the shovel aside. “Honey, come on back and give me a hand.” Don’t make eye contact with him, I thought. He might come over here.

    Tressa wandered back to the hole, weaving across the grass. She seemed to drift rather than walk as her new spring dress swirled in the breeze. “Why does he have the month tattooed on his stomach?”

    “I don’t think that is the month, kiddo. It’s a woman’s name.”

    “But his wife’s name is Sandy.”

    I wasn’t sure where to go from there, so like any good parent, I let the line of questioning vanish. Marvin helped out by cranking up a Jackyl cassette on a beaten-up boom box. He downed a can of beer, crushed it, and then tossed it in a growing pile of aluminum next to his patio door. The King of Beers was lucky to have such a devoted subject. Marvin gunned the chainsaw in time to the music as he laid in to an old maple in the center of his yard. Squirrels fled, leaping from its limbs to a nearby oak or fleeing to the grass to be chased by Red, Marvin’s barking pitbull.

    Red snatched a squirrel that had moved too slowly and shook it. Red strutted to Marvin’s side and dropped his prize. Marvin stopped cutting and patted the dog’s head before picking up the squirrel and punting it over our fence. Tressa hurried over to it.

    I called after her. “Don’t touch it, Tressa. Squirrels can carry diseases.”

    She dropped down to her knees beside the body. “Poor squirrel. He’s a mean man. Why is he cutting down the tree?” (more…)

  • The Election

    “Dear, what are you looking at?” The man, hunched over in the doorway, looked over at his wife. She had one hand on her hip, the other held back the dark curtain just enough to poke her sun-spotted nose through the opening. She glared at something outside.

    “It’s back!” She said and let the curtain flutter back into place. She turned to her husband, her white visage a stark contrast against the panel behind her. “What will we do?”

    He sighed and hobbled over to the door and flipped the bolt into place, slid the chain lock over with a click, then grabbed his wife’s hand. “For starters, keep yourself away from the windows! If it sees you, you’re as good as gone!”

    If not for the stillness in the neighborhood, you wouldn’t know anything was amiss. The sun was shining, a slight fall nip chilled the air. In the distance, children could be heard playing and laughing– they had nothing to worry about. Not yet, at least.

    The season was beginning to turn and with it came the election. And with the election came the monsters creeping around the neighborhood. Yes, even in the light of day. One must stay diligent or else you’d be trapped by one. They’d quick-spit their vitriol in your face and then you’d be devoured. The thought sent a shudder through the man.

    “Don’t leave the house! They’ll be gone in a few days,” the man said. They agreed to stay shuttered in until the election was over. (more…)

  • Bunnies

    Orlen stood back and looked at their work. “Do you think it’ll work?” he asked his brother, Neven.

    “Now you want my opinion?” Neven snapped as he knocked on a length of the solid wooden fence.

    “Cloth wouldn’t work, Orlen.”

    “How do you know? Rosella said they tried it and it worked on their section of the Vine.”

    “Yes and Derek, and John, and Pearl tried it on their Vines and those damn beasts barrelled through it like it was nothing. We can’t risk them getting through, the Vine is too fragile right now.”

    “I don’t know what those damn hunters are doing.”

    “Oh come on now, Neven. They’re doing the best they can. We need to plant more diversion crops to draw them away.”

    “Who’s got time for that?”

    If you didn’t spend half your free time drinking, perhaps you would have time for that! Orlen bit his tongue though.

    “Perhaps if we put up a sign up sheet for it?”

    “Sure, why not.” Neven shrugged. He leapt over one of the short fences that separated the property from the main road. (more…)

  • Fear, Rejection and Spring Traditions

    “We fear the wrong things you know.”
    “Why do you say that?”
    “We should be a afraid of not getting a job someday.” He nodded solemnly.
    “Economy is bad.”
    “Exactly.”
    “That is what we should fear.”
    “Agreed.”
    “Not this other stuff.”
    “Agree again.”
    “So are you going to ask someone?”
    “Doubt it.”

    Damon jumped down from the air conditioner he had decided would make a good chair. He was wrong. He hated these chats with Derek. Derek was, for lack of a better idea, Derek. Full of bravado and bluster, but had no depth to him at all. If he was a tree he would be cardboard. Yet he put up with Derek, and Derek put up with him. It worked, and in college they would either both grow up or drift apart. They accepted that by laughing about it sometimes.
    “You going to ask someone? Kristen Shaw?” Derek stared at him as if it was not just answered a moment ago. (more…)