27 Apr Garringerβs Dog
βGarringerβs Dogβ
Written by James Colton Edited by Craig Groshek Thumbnail Art by Craig Groshek Narrated by N/ACopyright Statement: Unless explicitly stated, all stories published on CreepypastaStories.com are the property of (and under copyright to) their respective authors, and may not be narrated or performed, adapted to film, television or audio mediums, republished in a print or electronic book, reposted on any other website, blog, or online platform, or otherwise monetized without the express written consent of its author(s).
π§ Available Audio Adaptations: None Available
β° ESTIMATED READING TIME β 10 minutes
This story was originally featured on James Colton’s official website, and has been reprinted here with his kind permission. You can see the original postΒ here, or visit hisΒ official websiteΒ today for dozens of additional tales of terror.
* * * * * *
βI still donβt think itβs a dog,β drawled Rick. βNot a dog at all.β
I rolled my eyes, ready to make the same argument Iβd been making for the last week. βBut the woundsββ
βYou think a dogβs the only thing what can take a bite out of a man?β Rick interrupted. βYou think aΒ manΒ canβt take a bite out of another man?β
βCome off it,β I shot back. βI know what youβre thinking, and Iβll say it again: it wasnβt old Garringer that killed those boys. It was a dog. Coyote, probably.β
Rick sipped his drink pensively, but I knew he wasnβt done; I could hear the gears clanking in his skull. βYou know,β he said at last, βthey found that tribe in Africa, that tribe ofβwhatβd they call βem, cannonballs?β
βCannibals,β I corrected wearily.
βYeah, cannibals, thatβs what they was. Theyβd raid neighboring tribes, bring back the fat ones for supper. Oh yeah, a manβll take a bite of another man if heβs hungry or mean enough.β
I gave up. There was no point arguing with Rick; he got an idea in his head and nothing in all the world could convince him he was wrong. Instead I just stared out the window at the stretch of darkness between the tavern and the rest of town. The blackness was formed by a dense spur of woodland spilling off the mountain. The road home passed straight through, plunging briefly into a deep hollow and crossing a sluggish little stream before coming out the other side. It was in there, where no one but the animals and the old hermit Garringer lived, that the killings happened.
The first was that Preston kid. He worked part-time at the tavern, and one night he didnβt come home. They found him in the hollow, great chunks of flesh missing from his body. There was no question that it was a wild animal that did itβat least, no question as long as your name wasnβt Rick.
We started back for home, and as we entered the wooded stretch our debate continued. βIt couldnβt have been old Garringer,β I insisted. βGarringerβs lived in the hollow longer than anyone can remember, and the killings have only been going on for a week.β I felt mighty proud of myself for that bit of deduction, but Rick chuckled grimly and shook his head.
βI already thought of that one,β he retorted. βGot it all figured out. You wanna know what would make a docile old man turn cannonball all asudden? Iβll tell ya: Cooner.β
My pace slowed. βNo,β I decided carefully. βThat canβt be it.β
βYou donβt think revenge is enough to turn a man?β
βWhen I was seven,β I replied, βmy dog Floppy was hit by a truck and killed. Now, I felt all kinds of angry, but I didnβt go biting the driver that did it.β
βYou werenβt no crazy old hermit, neither,β muttered Rick.
We both were quiet for the next few minutes. Our boots kicked through the rotting leaves, crushing twigs and occasionally scraping against the gravel hidden beneath the autumn detritus. Rick suddenly spoke up, a ridiculous grin slapped across his face, βI bet Floppy was pretty floppy after that truck got through with him.β
I flashed him a baleful glare. βThatβs not funny.β
βCourse it is,β he shot back, and his booming laugh shook the branches over our heads. It echoed off the distant hills and worked its way back through the dense trees, a distorted shade of what it started out as.
βShhh!β I hissed abruptly, holding up a hand for silence. βDo you hear that?β
Rick brought his laughter under control and listened. βWhatΒ isΒ that?β
βCoyote,β I asserted.
Rick craned his neck in the direction of the sound. It was a wild, stuttering howl, high-pitched and screaming. βThat ainβt no coyote.β The last traces of laughter vanished from his face, and his skin went pale before my very eyes. The sight gave me goosebumps, and what he said next made my neck prickle: βItβs human.β
We exchanged a quick glance, and all arguments over cannibalism and not-funny jokes were dropped as we ran toward the noise. Rick was already reaching for his gunβmost guys who walked that road carried one these days. As we raced the sound began to fade. The howls gave way to moans, the moans died away to silence. Soon the audio trail was lost completely, and we came to a panting stop.
βItβs gone,β growled Rick.
I flashed my light about the woods, trying to chase away the shadows. There was the trunk of a huge oak treeβ¦the scraggly branch of a thorn bushβ¦wait a second, there, behind the oak tree, something moved. βRick, over here!β
We trotted to the spot where I had seenβ¦what? It vanished too quickly for me to positively identify it. It mightβve been a tail, or it mightβve been a coat sleeve. Already my memory was distorting it.
A sick groan drew my attention back to Rick, who was shining his light down at his feet. βWhat is it?β I asked.
βI stepped in it,β Rick responded weakly, pointing at the ground in front of him.
I nearly threw up when I saw it. I probably wouldβve recognized the guyβs face if I couldβve seen it, but it had been ripped clean off, gnawed to a bloody pulp. That was the worst of the damage, but there were great, crescent-shaped gouges throughout the rest of the body as well.
βWho do you suppose it is?β Rick asked with a tremor in his voice.
I shook my head. Something in my stomach was blowing bubblesβbig bubbles that released showers of gritty mud when they poppedβas I looked at the boot-shaped dent where Rick had inadvertently stumbled over the corpse. βYou still think itβs old Garringer?β I asked cynically.
βI know it is.β He raised his flashlight to reveal a winding path branching off into the depths of the hollow. It was the road to Garringerβs cabin.
βThat doesnβt prove anything,β I snapped.
βNo? I bet if we pay old Garringer a visit right now, heβll have blood in his beard.β Rick started down the path, and I tried to stop him.
βWhoa, youβre notββ
βOf course I am!β Rick interrupted. βIβm gonna drag that cannonball out of his sorry excuse for a house and bring him to justice. Just you wait and see. As soon as that crazyβs behind bars, the killingsβll stop; I guarantee it.β
Before I could say anything more, he was gone, loping down the road with his gun held ready. I couldnβt let him go alone, so I chased after him. βWait up a minute,β I called. βSuppose youΒ areΒ right. Remember when they found the Wilmet guy, Anthony?β
βYeah, what of it?β
βCome on,β I pressed, βyou remember Anthony Wilmet! The guy was huge, and it wasnβt baby fat. Suppose youβre right and GarringerΒ isΒ the one who did them all in. Youβre just going to lay hands on a crazy who killed a strong guy like Anthony Wilmet?β
βBet Anthony didnβt haveΒ this, though,β Rick replied, brandishing his gun. βBesides, you got my back, donβt ya?β
Garringerβs cabin loomed out of the trees in front of us. By this point the roadβif you could even call it that anymoreβhad become so overgrown it was a wonder the old hermit could get his rusted pickup in and out for groceries. Rick went right up to the door and banged the handle of his gun on the woodwork. βOpen up, Garringer. Me and a friendβd like a word with you.β
βHey,β I hissed, tugging on Rickβs arm as he waited for an answer. βLook at this.β I pointed at the weathered boards beneath our feet. A line of dark spots, brown in the glow from our flashlights, led across the porch and ended at the door.
βConvinced yet?β snarled Rick. βThe old crazy couldnβt even bother to clean up his trail. Thatβs what cannonballismβll do to you. Turn your brain inside-out.β Thereβd been no sound from inside the house, so Rick knocked again, harder. βYou got five seconds to open this door, Garringer, or Iβll knock it down.β
I still couldnβt believe it, even as I stared at the morbid stains by my feet. Did Coonerβs death really make the old man snap? Was he chewing up the townsfolk out of revenge? I shivered as pinpricks danced up my arms. Iβd been one of the men who showed up that afternoon, accompanied by a band of others from town. βCoonerβs gotta go,β the leader of our little hunting party said when Garringer met us on the porch. βLittle Ruthieβs in the hospital. Might have rabies.β Garringer protested, but we were firm. Two of us held him back while a few more went inside to fetch the dog. It was a nasty creature, mostly skin and bones, but with savage bundles of muscle in all the right places so you knew it could mess you up bad if you werenβt careful. How anyone could love a pet like thatΒ was beyond me.
It was Ruthieβs father who pulled the trigger and ended Coonerβs life. Old Garringer was distraught, but we all agreed it was for the best. Couldnβt have a monster like that running loose, not with children around.
βThatβs it, I warned him.β Rickβs resigned sigh broke me from my reverie. He took a step back and planted one booted foot against the door. It held fast at first, but a few more kicks splintered the rustic lock. βAll righty, Garringer, we knowβ¦β
Rick stumbled to a halt and I nearly ran into him. It was pitch black in Garringerβs one-room cabin, but our flashlights picked out the continuing trail of blood and followed it across the cluttered floor. Clothes, furniture, cookwareβit seemed the old hermitβs home was hit by a whirlwind. The blood trail meandered through the mess and terminated next to a dirty mattress. The blankets were tousled and knotted around an irregular shape. We both stood motionless for a second as we processed the scene, then Rick stepped forward, much of the confidence gone from his stride. He reached out and pulled back the sheet.
βWell,β I admitted nauseously, βheΒ doesΒ have blood in his beard.β
βAnd even some meat in his mouth,β agreed Rick, his face turning green, βbut I think itβs his own.β He dropped the corner of the blanket, blessedly hiding what was left of the old manβs face.
βWe should get out of here,β I recommended. βGet back to town and report the bodies.β
Rick nodded and turned gratefully away from the hermitβs corpse. Together we made our way to the door, and as our flashlight beams swept across the opening, something black sped across the porch outside.
βWhat was that?β gasped Rick, seizing my arm in a painful grip.
βAnimal,β I breathed.
βAinβt no animal I ever saw. Didnβt make no noise when it ran by.β
The words were barely out of his mouth when a hollow thumping tore through the air, a mad, racing rhythm punctuated by the harsh tick of something hard scratching against wood. I knew the sound instantly; Floppy used to make it when heβd go tearing along the hardwood floor in my parentsβ house.
βLetβs go,β I urged once the noise was gone. Rick was close behind me. We cast our lights back and forth when we reached the door, searching the porch for any sign of what weβd seen or heard, but there was nothing. I tried to keep my pace even as we made our way back up the road, but Rick kept kicking my heels, and before I knew it we were running. The woods were full of sound: the ruckus of our hurried footfalls, the wind in the leaves overhead, the crackle of breaking twigs behind and to either side.
βI still donβt think it was a dog,β Rick wheezed.
My frustration with Rickβs stubbornness boiled over, and I shouted back at him, βWell, what do you think itΒ was, then, a chipmunk?β I shot him an angry look over my shoulder, and in that moment I failed to see the tree root rising from the road. I went down hard, my face buried in a stinking pile of damp leaves, and Rick followed suit, stumbling over me with a cry of surprise. My flashlight went rolling off into the forest, throwing its golden beam wildly through the foliage before coming to rest about five feet away. Rick kept hold of his, and I found myself staring directly into its blinding glare.
βGet that thing out of my face,β I groaned, shoving his arm aside so I could see. βYou shouldnβt have been following me so closeββ
Rickβs expression froze the words on my tongue. His cheeks were covered in mud from his spill, and his eyes bugged out of his head like golf balls. He wasnβt looking at me, but rather somethingΒ behindΒ me.
Before I could react, he had his gun out, and I rolled out of the way just before he pulled the trigger. βWatch it!β I screamed, although I could barely hear my own voice for the explosion rattling around inside my head.
Rick leapt to his feet, his weapon still held out in front of him, and I turned to see what he was aiming at: nothing.
βAre you crazy!β I screamed, punching him in the arm as hard as I could. βYou almost blew my head off!β
Rickβs hand was shaking violently, and I noticed his chin was quivering. βIt wasΒ right there,β he whimpered. βI saw it, I saw it!β
βSawΒ what?β I demanded.
But instead of answering he began spinning around, pointing his gun every which way as though responding to noises I couldnβt hear. βRun,β he snarled. βDonβt look back, just run.β He gave me a rough shove and I obeyed. Rickβs mind was crumbling, and I didnβt want to be caught in the dark woods when it gave way completely and he started scattering bullets.
The trees began to thin out, and the moon worked its way through the canopy to illuminate our path. Ahead, I could see the lights of the town growing closer. Rickβs footsteps pounded to my left and a little behind, his raspy whisper chanting, βDonβt look back, donβt look back, donβt look AAUGHββ
I spun just in time to see Rickβs hand vanish into the bushes by the side of the road. βRick!β I shouted, drawing my gun and sprinting to the place where he disappeared. Without thinking, I thrust my hand into the underbrush, and immediately withdrew it with a cry of disgust; my fingers came back warm and wet.
A violent din erupted from the bushes. The leaves thrashed back and forth, something thumped heavily against the dirt, and Rickβs voice rose above it all, high and shrill and unbearable. All reason left me, like a hatch fell open and dumped it all right there. I never commanded my legs to move, but they did, pumping up and down without feeling.Β I was there that afternoon, I joined the hunt, mine was a face it would recognizeβ¦
The freezing night air was sucked in and squeezed out of my lungs by the same machine-like force that propelled my feet. Clouds of it billowed in front of my eyes. Behind me I could hear, as surely as the drumbeat of my heart, a heavy panting. I could hear the leaves and gravel in my wake being torn up by something hard and sharp, and in the back of my mind I felt a rising howl.
At last I burst out of the trees, and the road was paved and lined with streetlamps. Still I kept running, obedient to Rickβs final mandate: βdonβt look back.β Not until I passed the first several rows of houses did I slow and risk a backward glance.
I could see the shadow of the hollow rising, spreading, scratching against the moonlit sky. For a second I thought I saw two pricks of crimson, but those were gone so quickly they might have only been my imagination.
π§ Available Audio Adaptations: None Available
Written by James Colton Edited by Craig Groshek Thumbnail Art by Craig Groshek Narrated by N/Aπ More stories from author: James Colton
Publisher's Notes: N/A This story was originally featured on James Colton's official website, and has been reprinted here with his kind permission. You can see the original post here, or visit his official website today for dozens of additional tales of terror.More Stories from Author James Colton:
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Copyright Statement: Unless explicitly stated, all stories published on CreepypastaStories.com are the property of (and under copyright to) their respective authors, and may not be narrated or performed, adapted to film, television or audio mediums, republished in a print or electronic book, reposted on any other website, blog, or online platform, or otherwise monetized without the express written consent of its author(s).