Chapter 0.4 - Fangs
2011/01/06, almost noon
Our old phone rang like an alarm bell. It was an authoritative ring: not shrill or feeble like the newer electronic ones. Stately almost, except for the way it made me scamper when I heard it.
"Hello?"
"It's me."
"Hi Dad!"
I could hear the bunched up wrinkles between his eyebrows. "How are your, um, how is everything?"
"Good! Mostly good. Uh."
"Talk to me, kiddo."
"Okay." I tried to keep the giddiness out of my voice. "I emailed Panacea to say thanks, but then Laserdream wrote me back because Panacea is on vacation and I accidentally told her I have powers and now Laserdream wants to come over and say hi, she can come right from class, can she, is it okay?" Inhale. Deep breath. Exhale.
"Wow. Wow, um, sure. Sure she can. Do you know when specifically?"
"Probably after dinner?"
"Sure."
"Thanks Dad! Uh."
"Hey, I know you're nervous, but I'm sure it'll be fine. I'm proud of you for talking to someone."
"Uh, also." My throat was uncomfortably dry. I should really tell him about Nibbler. "Also I read online that the average American swallows seven spiders a year in her sleep so it's totally normal if I ate one last night."
"That's interesting, but I've got to get back to work. See you around six?"
"Uh, okay, love you. Uh."
"Love you too, kiddo."
Click.
Damn it.
I didn't want to tell him, so I didn't tell him, so I basically just lied to my dad. There was one way to fix that. I'd just have to find Nibbler before Dad got home.
To: laserdream@newwave.hero
Subject: Re: Eating Weird Stuff???
Hi again Laserdream, sorry for the delay. Dad said sure!! I told him might to drop by after dinner. We're on the north side of Paul Revere (house 128), right on the Birch Creek woods. Our phone is 959-555-1261.
Hope to see you later! Thanks again -Taylor
I hit Send, then got ready to go out again.
~ °w° ~
2011/01/06, afternoon
Jog, jog, stop. Hands on knees, heavy breathing.
The woods to the east, by the river: no Nibbler.
Jog, trudge.
The public park south east of our house, near the bigger apartment units: no Nibbler.
Trudge, trudge. No sign of Nibbler in the apartment development, either.
I checked through the alleys and peeked into the dumpsters at the mall west of our house. I called for Nibbler quietly. I didn't go inside, because I didn't want to make trouble by bringing a pet in, and I didn't want to leave him alone outside.
It was frustrating.
I opened my mouth and billowed a steamy cloud in front of me. No use worrying about that. I'd do what I could and hope for the best.
My legs were sore from all the jogging and walking. I trudged my way homeward, making one last stop on the way, at the side door of a prefab home much like my own.
Knock. Knock.
"Coming!"
I heard soft steps on carpet. Step step thump, step step thump, step step thump.
I took a breath in and addressed the door from my belly, with gusto, to pierce both the door and her hearing difficulty. "Hi Mrs. Santos!"
A faint voice came from the other side of the door. "Oh it's Taylor, isn't that nice?"
I heard a chain jangle, and two locks clicking open, and then the side door opened to reveal a wiry gray bun, then below it a wrinkled yet warm face, slightly tanned even in the dead of winter.
"Sorry to bother you, Mrs. Santos."
"Oh my, you're no bother, please come in."
The old woman shuffled back, pulling the side door open as she went.
I didn't want to make her keep the door open to the cold, but I had to ask first. "Can I bring in a pet? He's, uh, he's kind of a cat."
"Of course, dear," she assured me, then turned and called into the house, "Karla! Come say hi to Taylor!"
The reply was faint from distance and carpeting. "Coming Gramma!"
The Santos' house was pretty much the same layout as ours, just like all the houses in our development, so I could guess that the thump-thump-thump of little bare feet was coming from upstairs. I pulled Giggler into the house by the skin on the back of his neck. He didn't complain much, so I guess he really was kind of a cat. The thumping slowed, that would be a careful descent of the stairs.
I shut the door behind me and picked up my little monster, supporting him in the crook of my left arm. "Giggler, this is Mrs. Santos. Mrs. Santos, this is Giggler." I used my right hand to make him wave his paw.
"Oh my, what a big boy you are!" She offered him the back of her hand. He huffed, licked her hand, and decided she wasn't very interesting, I guess, because he shrugged his way out of my grasp and onto the floor. "I'll just get him a saucer of milk. Would you like some nice milk, Giggler?"
The thumping came to an abrupt halt just out of my line of sight. I saw a wing of raven-dark hair flutter into view, then a single wide, brown eye peeked at me down the hall from around corner that led to their living room.
"Hi, Karla!" It looked like she was feeling shy. It had been a while since I babysat for her. Maybe longer. I wondered how long it had been. "How old are you?"
"I'm four!"
So it had been over a year. Time sure flies. "Wow, you're so big!"
That emboldened her to stick her whole head around the corner. "You got a kitty?" Giggler was prowling around my feet, paying special attention to the door.
"Yeah."
Kinda. "His name is Giggler." I stepped on the back of one shoe with the other foot, pulling my feet out one by one, as I unzipped my coat.
"Can I play with him?" Her voice was soft, but it somehow caught Giggler's attention.
"He's brand new. You have to be careful." I stuffed my mittens into my coat pockets.
"Is he a baby?"
Mrs. Santos chuckled from the kitchen. "Oh Karla dear, he's too big to be a baby."
"He's like a baby. You have to be really gentle and quiet with him, okay?" I wiggled my coat off and hung it by the door.
"
Okay," Karla whispered, and tiptoed closer.
Giggler had been crouching at my feet, watching her. Now that she was moving closer, he ducked his head and stalked towards her. He wasn't making any noise. I followed behind him, ready to pounce if he tried anything.
"
He looks different from Mr. Fisher's cat," she whispered, looking up at me with her big brown eyes.
"Maybe he's a different breed?" That seemed to settle her mind.
She crouched down and held out her hand. "
Here kitty kitty," she whispered. Her fingers wiggled.
Giggler looked up at me. My eyes were wide and unblinking. I fixed him with a very serious gaze, and I nodded at him slowly, solemnly, authoritatively. "Play nice."
He looked back at Karla, put one of his paws in her outstretched hand.
She held his paw and shook it. "
Hello Mr. Giggler," she whispered very seriously, "
My name is Karla."
Giggler shifted his weight forward, his body moving towards Karla. He licked her thumb. Her other hand reached over his head and stroked his fur away from her. He seemed to like that: his stance relaxed, and he moved closer.
"Try scratching right behind his ears," I suggested.
"
Okay," she whispered, "
Where's his ears?"
"Sorta right around here. Yeah." Scratch scratch scratch.
"Kekekeeeh!"
"
He purrs funny," she observed.
"Yeah, he does. Sometimes I think he's laughing at me."
"Keeeehkeh."
"Come to the kitchen, dears, I put out some milk," Mrs. Santos called to us from around the kitchen corner.
Karla immediately bounced up and thump-thump-thump'd away. "Coming Gramma!" Giggler followed at her heels. Huh.
She skidded in her socks on the linoleum floor tiles. Giggler leaped, striking Karla just under her arm, and latched onto her with his large, strong forearms. I bounded towards them, my hand out to grab him, but his jaw was already separating and his mouth jerked up to her neck and, oh no,
oh no, and he licked her ear.
Huh.
I aborted my tackle as gracefully as possible, which wasn't very graceful at all, but at least I was still standing up. The two littler beings were in the process of toppling over. One of them was shrieking with laughter as the other pawed and licked her.
"What an affectionate cat."
"I think he likes people?" I kept both of them in sight, and within my arm's reach.
"Would you like some tea, Taylor?"
"Oh, uh, sure. Yeah." Giggler had unlatched his separable lower jaw to lick Karla, but he wasn't biting her like Nibbler had done to me. My hand hovered over them like a seagull in the afternoon breeze, looking for a reason to dive. He was pawing her, pushing her head down, but his claws were not extended.
Huh.
Well, no reason to tempt fate. I pinched the furry skin at the back of his neck. Neck-ish area, I guess, he was so squat and solid. I slid a hand under his white, furry belly and half-pulled, half lifted him off of her.
"C'mon. Mrs. Santos put some nice milk out for you."
As I lifted Giggler, Karla used one arm to help her sit up, and grabbed the cuff of her sleeve into her other hand, which she used to clumsily wipe the monster drool from her face.
"He's drooly like a big dog."
"He sure is," I agreed. There was a bowl on the floor, a kind of mottled autumn brown glazed ceramic, a nice pattern I absently noted. There was milk in it. I set Giggler down in front of it.
"Taylor, could you help me reach the tea?"
"Of course!" I walked over to the cabinets where Mrs. Santos was standing, pointing. "Which one?"
"Can you reach the Rooibos?"
It wasn't all that high. I handed her the box of teabags, smiling the smile of a person who is useful.
"It's a red tea?"
"It is. Do you like those, dear?"
"It smells nice."
"Red teas are very aromatic."
"Sounds delish." My gaze returned to Giggler, who was lapping at the milk in the ceramic bowl. His lower jaw was split, perhaps to facilitate better slurping. Karla was standing nearby, staring at him, just like I was.
"I like to let it steep for four minutes."
"Mrs. Santos, I was wondering if you could do me a favor."
"Of course."
"We had another, uh, pet. Sort of like Giggler but, uh, sort of different. He ran away this morning."
"Oh dear. Did you call the shelters?"
"I will. But if they don't have him, I was wondering if you could ask around."
"Of course I will."
"And uh, maybe put up a Lost Pet poster at church this weekend?"
"You should come yourself."
I sighed. "You know, we're not really, uh."
She let my unfinished sentence hang for a long moment. "I know, dear, but they're good people. We're a good community."
I couldn't really refute that, or even look her in the eyes. I looked down at Giggler instead. Karla had just moved around him and squatted down to watch him slurp up close. He sidled his body around the milk bowl, interposing it between her and his prize. She stood up and moved further around.
Mrs. Santos relented. "Alright, dear, but tell your father that you're both invited to services this Sunday."
"Thanks. I'll tell him."
"Now, show me this poster."
I had drawn a picture. Unfortunately the picture wasn't very good, and double unfortunately I didn't know what he would look like if he changed after he ate, like Giggler had done. I unfolded the paper in my back pocket and showed it to her.
"Just a moment, I need my glasses." She hobbled off to their living room.
I put my terrible drawing on the kitchen table and squatted down next to Giggler. He looked up at me, the chin of his inner jaw dripping with milk. I stroked his furry back.
Karla also looked up at me. "He has lots of teeth."
"Yeah, he does."
"Karla, dear? Could you run upstairs and get your crayons and big paper? Taylor needs to make some drawings."
"Okay Gramma!" Karla shot up, watched by Giggler's two more catlike eyes, and (thump-thump-thump) hurried up the stairs.
Mrs. Santos was standing in the doorway, wearing her glasses. Her left hand on her cane was shaking. "Taylor, dear, that's not a cat."
"He's part cat! Kinda."
Giggler chose this moment to turn towards us and make a whuffly, snuffly sound. It might have been an aborted purr, or perhaps a burp, or maybe even a hairball complaint. Did monsters burp politely to compliment a meal? Was that actually a foreign custom? Whatever.
"Taylor, what have you brought into my home?"
"I'm sorry. I, I should go, I'll just go."
"Taylor Hebert!" I flinched to a halt. I guess all moms automatically learned the Strict Mom Voice. "Are you in some kind of trouble?"
"No, no, nothing like that. I'm just — I'm worried. About the other one."
I looked up. Her dark, grandmotherly eyebrows had gone from angry to surprised.
"There were two. This morning, the other one ran away. I don't know where he is. But I think he might be a danger to someone's pet."
"You think it might attack pets?"
"Yeah. And, uh, this is the weird part. After they hunt something, they sort of turn into it. Giggler didn't look like a cat before this morning. Not before he,"
gulp, "not before he ate one."
"Where did you get these creatures?"
"I can't tell you. I'm sorry."
"Taylor, dear, you know you can trust us."
"I do trust you! But, but I can't."
Neither of us spoke for a moment. The kettle whistled into the silence between us.
"It's winter. Pets will be indoors mostly, but I'll tell the neighbors. There's something which may attack animals."
I practically sagged with relief. "Thank you."
For what you're not saying, what you're not asking. "Thank you so much."
"About your poster." She was pouring the hot water into a teapot on the counter by the stove, not looking at me. "It should tell people what you just told me. You're not just looking for your lost pet, you're also warning them."
"Yeah, I was thinking about that, but I'm worried about putting our home phone number on something like that."
"Could you use someone else's phone number?" She caught my hopeful look. "No, not ours, dear. Someone at animal services? Or the police?"
"Oh, yeah, that's a good idea. The police have been really nice."
Out of the corner of Giggler's eye, I caught Karla peeking at us from around the edge of the staircase bannister.
"Good, so you did already call them. That's our Taylor."
"Uh."
"Gramma? I got the paper and crayons."
"Good girl! Now, sit right up here across from Taylor, and Taylor will hold her pet in her lap, and the two of you can each make a poster for Mr. Giggler's lost brother."
I picked up my tabby furred monster, who was licking the dregs from the bowl, which I also picked up and put in the sink. I sat down again, and we started drawing.
When we finished, the crayons were mostly un-eaten.
Mostly.
~ °w° ~
2011/01/06, dusk
We managed to get home before dark, which means before 4:30 because that's how winter is around here: cold, wet, and dark way too early.
We did a quick circuit around the house, just in case Nibbler had come home, but there was nothing. The frozen chicken leg I'd hung out by the side door was still hanging there, frozen, unbitten. In retrospect, it was a bad idea: frozen things don't smell good, so how would he even know to try eating it?
Oh well. I stamped the icy dust off my shoes. We went inside. I unbundled.
The answering machine light was blinking. I hit the playback button. BEEP.
Hello Mr. Hebert, this is Detective Blair. If possible, we'd like your help to clear up some communication issues we seem to be having with your daughter's school. Best time to reach me is this afternoon before four o'clock, or tomorrow morning after ten AM. Or you can just leave your office number with dispatch and I'll ring you up. Cheers."
Well that was ominous. I knew the school blew
me off, but it sounded like they weren't even cooperating with the cops. BEEP.
Hey kiddo, just calling to check in. Call me back when you get home.
Aww. It felt good that Dad was talking to me again. BEEP.
The last message was about ten seconds of electronic tape hiss, maybe some breathing. Something snapping? More nothing. BEEP.
Probably just a wrong number. I picked up the phone and called the Dockworker's Union HQ.
Ring! Ring! "Hello?!"
"Hey Dad, it's me."
"Hey kiddo."
"Sorry I missed your call."
"Everything okay?"
"I'm fine, but one of my little creatures ran away. I was looking for him outside. I'm sorry, I should have told you earlier."
The other end of the line was silent for two breaths. I continued.
"I looked all around the area, and I talked to the neighbors, and I'm going to start putting up signs but I wanted to talk to you about the phone number because I don't know if we want people calling the house or having our name out there since then everyone would know that we were the ones with, uh, with them. The monsters."
"We can talk about that when I get home."
"Can you buy some leashes and collars?"
"You want to take them for
walks?" His disbelief stung a little.
"The one who didn't run away,"
but not for lack of trying, I omitted, "became very calm and docile after we went for a run together this morning. I think they need exercise or something."
"Well, alright." He sounded mollified. "I'll stop at a pet shop. See you around six."
"Oh and Dad! Laserdream is coming over after class! Don't forget!"
He sighed a little, but I could hear his smile behind it. "I'll be on my best behavior."
We said our goodbyes and hung up.
I puttered around the internet as the sky darkened.
~ °w° ~
2011/01/06, 6:10 PM
Dad was late. Not enough to make me worry, but I was worried anyway.
I felt this
tingle, like the hairs on the back of my neck were standing up, but they weren't because I had stupid para-zits there instead, but whatever, this
tingle was giving me an increasing sense of foreboding.
The house was quiet. Too quiet. It was making me feel like I was watching a horror movie, where the music turns all high-tension jittery strings and then suddenly —
Bing-bong-dong-ding! I must have jumped a foot in the air as our cheap electronic doorbell sang its tinny tune.
I hurriedly tip-toed to the suddenly threatening front door and peeked through the spy lens thing. Peep hole? Argh, focus Taylor.
I peeped. Of course I hardly saw anything since the front house light was dark, probably burnt out months ago, but I did see the lens-bulged outline of a non-threatening face. She was a long-haired blond girl wearing red-rimmed glasses and red earmuffs.
Summoning up my courage, I opened the front door a crack and peered out.
"Hello?"
"Hi! Are you Taylor?"
"Yes, um, Crystal?"
"Bingo!" she beamed at me, and I swung the door wider.
"You're early." I tried not to say it like the accusation that it was. I put on a smile. "Come on in."
"Thanks! I should have called, but I was just
so excited to meet you!" She continued beaming at me as she doffed her earmuffs (red), stuffed her scarf (red) into her ski parka (purple), and wiped off her glasses (red plastic under frame) with one of those special fabric glass cleaning cloths (purple). Her blouse was white and purple. At least her jeans were blue. I held out my hands to take her stuff, and hung it up.
"I didn't know you wore glasses."
"They're Kents!" She tilted down her head and peered at me over the lens rim, smiling conspiratorially. "I just wear 'em at school to cut down on autograph requests from total strangers."
It felt weird that someone famous was being nice to me, treating me like an equal who was privy to industry secrets. Weird, but nice. I felt a genuine smile wash over my face. "Can I make you tea or something?"
"Anything hot would be great. Are you in high school? Let me guess, you're a senior?" She was practically bouncing across the kitchen on the balls of her feet.
"Just a sophomore," I confided, "We've got tea or Swiss Miss."
"Hot chocolate please!"
As I put the kettle on the stove, I felt the
tingle begin to itch its way up my spine. I spun around, but the only thing out of place was Crystal's mischievous expression looking down at me. Oh, she was flying.
"Hmm-hmm! Now that's settled, Taylor, let's talk about powAAAAAAGH!"
From atop the refrigerator, a furry blur of violence crashed down on my guest.
"Giggler, no!" It wasn't blind panic only because I could see everything clearly, far too clearly. "Stop!"
He leaped at her face, both claws extended. The left claw caught her under her chin, digging into the skin of her jaw. The right claw struck at her hairline then dragged down, opening a slash of crimson across her forehead, through her eyebrow, knocked her glasses off and stuck in her eye. He bent his elbows and brought his mouth closer to her screaming mouth and I was too slow, I was not going to reach them, it was all going wrong, oh shit, I had to make him —
"
Stop!"
I put everything I had into that shout, and amazingly it was enough. Giggler practically threw himself off her.
"AAAAAAAAAH!"
I threw myself between them, gripping her shoulder. Half of her face was covered in blood, and I could see some kind of clear fluid leaking from her ruined eye, mixing with the blood.
This was all wrong, I needed to fix this, I needed to fix
her. I wished my powers would help me make things better.
An uncomfortable liquid
fullness rose in my throat. I spat it at her, spat a stream of black liquid directly into her face.
Something struck me square in the gut, hard, and I flew up at an angle, across the kitchen, and cracked the back of my head on the ceiling of the living room.
I stumbled back into the kitchen. The kitchen was a mess. Giggler was against the kitchen wall, near the basement door. One of his forelegs was bent wrong, probably broken. I was going to fall down. I pushed and leaned and lurched and managed to fall in front of Giggler. I reached out, there, I could see through his eyes, my hand getting closer. I held onto him, pulled him onto me, whispering, "Ssh, ssh. Stay. Be good."
"You healed me."
"I'm so- sorry," I whispered. "I didn't know, I didn't know he would do that." I pulled Giggler's warm furry body to my chest, clutched him close, held him there.
I looked over at Crystal. There was a red sheen in the air between us: her shield must be up. Her face was smeared with my dark, sticky goop. She was looking at me with two wide eyes, both whole and unpunctured. She was poking at her forehead and wiping the oily goop away with her fingertips.
"I think," I gasped, still breathless from the gut-punch, "I think I ruined your shirt."
She looked down at the mottled purple-brown goop dripping down her blouse, then back over at me, and then she started laughing.
I started laughing, too.
And that's how Dad found us when he walked in.