Read Werewolf Stories to Tell in the Dark Online
Authors: Anthony Masters
âThis on-shore wind should keep the berg here for a few more hours of daylight, but we need cutting equipment first. We'll get the wolf out and put it in one of the deep freezers. Then we'll take a look at it in the lab. Of course, it's going to be the biologists' baby,' Mum said regretfully. âAnyway, he makes a change from inanimate rocks.'
âHow do you know the wolf's a “he”?' I asked,
amused by all the assumptions my mother was making. She seemed to have completely abandoned her usual procedure of scientific reasoning.
âI've got a hunch,' Mum replied.
Her hunch proved to be correct. The wolf was a male, and when cut out of the glistening ice he was much larger than I had imagined and perfectly preserved.
âIt must have got trapped in the ice,' said Professor Lomas, the chief biologist on the base, as all the scientists gathered around the table in the lab on which the beast lay.
The hide of the wolf was jet black, and his enormous limbs, spread out on the table, looked as powerful as they must have been when he was alive. In fact it was hard to believe the thing was really dead.
âWhat happens if he gets properly thawed out?' I asked the professor.
âHe'll disintegrate, so he's going back on ice. What a specimen. Who would have thought the beast could have remained intact for centuries like this?'
âWere wolves all as big as he is then?' I asked.
The professor shook his head. âHe's special.'
That night, just before I went to bed, I met Professor Lomas in the corridor.
âI'm going to put the wolf back on the table,' he told me. âI want to take another look.'
âWhy?' I asked.
But the professor didn't reply. Instead he said, âWould you be prepared to give me a hand lifting him out of the freezer? I was going to wake one of the lab assistants but they're both on early shift and â'
âOf course I'll help,' I replied.
*
In the end we only just managed to lift the wolf from the freezer to the table. At one point we staggered, and for a moment I thought we were going to drop him on the floor. I also had the strangest feeling that for a split second the thing had moved. But the wolf was frozen solid and had been dead for centuries and I dismissed the idea as ridiculous, born out of my own fatigue.
âThat'll do,' snapped Professor Lomas abruptly, and when I met his gaze I saw that he was looking impatient, as if he wanted to be alone with the wolf and resented every moment of my presence. Reluctantly he managed an apologetic smile. âThank you, but I have further studies to complete and they may take me some time.'
I wanted to ask what they were, but took the hint and went to bed. It was some time before I slept.
I woke early the next morning, well before my parents were up. The lab was not far from my bedroom so I decided to take a stroll over there, although I was far from certain whether I was going to get a good reception. If Professor Lomas was still there it wouldn't be the first time he'd worked all night. He was a man consumed by his work and I had often almost envied him for that. To have such burning curiosity must be wonderful.
When I reached the lab, I saw that the door was half-open. This surprised me, knowing Professor Lomas's obsession with privacy. I paused, knowing how angry he would be if I just barged in. Hesitantly I crept towards the half-open door so that I could just peer round it and then quickly back off before he saw me. Curiously, the room appeared to be empty. The table was bare, so he had clearly put the wolf back in the freezer, although how he had managed to do so without
my help I couldn't imagine. Maybe he had had to resort to waking up one of the lab assistants.
Then I saw the red lake on the floor.
Professor Lomas was lying on his back, his eyes open and staring ahead, his lips twisted in a snarl of surprised, frenzied horror. There were teeth marks on his neck and face. The blood was everywhere.
I went to the freezer and opened it. The space was empty. I wheeled round, expecting to see the huge wolf crouched in a corner, waiting for me, but there was no sign of the beast. My gaze returned to what had been Professor Lomas, and I stared down into his sightless eyes while my mind raced in circles, returning again and again to the conclusion that I didn't want to accept: the wolf had somehow become animated and the little movement I had felt had been the first stirrings of renewed life. Now the thing was free and prowling the base, searching for more victims.
Somehow I forced myself outside the lab and raced down the corridor to my parents' bedroom, thinking the wolf would leap out on me at any moment. But I reached them in safety and slammed the door shut behind me with relief. It took some time to convince them of what had happened to Professor Lomas.
âI'll go and check,' said my father at last. âYou're in shock, Matt, and â¦'
He went to the door in his dressing-gown but I yelled at him in panic, âDon't go outside, Dad. For God's sake â don't go outside.'
âSit down.'
But by this time, I was barring the door. âDon't you see â it's wandering the base. You haven't seen â what it did to him.'
My father went to a cupboard and took out a
hand-gun. âEmergency use only,' he muttered and tried to smile reassuringly.
I stood aside reluctantly as he walked out into the soft light of the corridor.
The wail of the emergency siren went off just as my father returned, looking shocked and ill. âSomething got him,' he muttered. âIt's unbelievable.'
âThe wolf â' I began.
âHow can a creature like that, frozen in ice for centuries, reanimate? It's just a coincidence the carcass has disappeared. Someone must be â'
âI felt it coming back to life, Dad. Don't you see â we've released it.'
âThere's no sign of the thing,' he snapped. âSomeone attacked Lomas and took the wolf. Professional jealousy can be â'
âLeaving teeth marks on him like that? It's out there somewhere,' I promised him.
The wail of the siren was cut short by an announcement over the Tannoy. âAttention. Attention. We are on Red Alert. Repeat. We are on Red Alert. It is essential that all personnel remain in their quarters. We have a large animal loose on the base. The animal has been located and is about to be shot. Keep your doors closed. I repeat. Keep your doors closed until you are notified that the Red Alert is over.' The voice was replaced by the renewed wail of the siren.
The knocking on our door was panic-stricken and my mother rushed to open it. Ted Morgan, one of the security men, flung himself in and slammed the door. He acted only just in time, for seconds later it shuddered with an enormous impact. But the door held, although the impact came again and again.
Then there was a long silence while Morgan, my parents and I watched the door in terror, waiting for another attack, waiting for it to splinter, wondering if, with a terrible sound of rending wood, the thing would be upon us.
Still shaking, Morgan sank down on the bed. âBob,' he muttered over and over again. âBob.'
âHe's dead?'
âIt ripped him to pieces. There was nothing I could do for him. Nothing.'
âBut you were both armed,' said my father unbelievingly. âWhy didn't you shoot the wolf?'
âI did,' said Ted Morgan. âI emptied this gun into it. But the bullets didn't have the slightest effect.'
âIt
must
be badly wounded,' I said hopefully.
âThere wasn't a mark on him,' replied Morgan.
Something stirred in my mind. A legend. An impossible legend.
âSuppose it was all true,' I blurted out. âNot a myth after all.'
âTrue?' Morgan turned on me in angry frustration. âWhat the hell are you on about?'
âYou don't understand,' I said impatiently. âI mean we could be dealing with a werewolf.'
They all three stared at me in amazement, and although a look of angry contempt immediately crossed Morgan's face my parents remained uneasily silent.
âThis isn't a time for jokes,' Ted Morgan said angrily.
âIt's
not
a joke,' I insisted, suddenly confident that I was right. âI mean it. And you'll only destroy that wolf with silver bullets.'
Morgan laughed contemptuously. âAnd how do you come to that conclusion?'
âI read it in a graphic novel â kind of comic,' I added unguardedly.
He laughed again, harshly sarcastic.
âWait a minute,' said my mother. âIt's also recorded in folklore. I remember reading it as a child.'
âIf real bullets don't work,' said my father, âwhy not
try
silver? What have we got to lose?'
âBecause we don't just have them lying around.' Ted Morgan was incredulous now, gazing at all three of us as if we were completely crazy.
âSilver bullets could easily be made in the lab,' said my mother. âAll we need to do is melt down part of the director's tea service and use an ordinary bullet as a measure. It could take â an hour or so.'
âWhile that thing's on the rampage?' Morgan wasn't convinced; he just seemed stunned at the sheer lunacy of the idea.
âAnything's worth a try,' said my mother.
The thundering on our door began again, but this time it was the desperate beating of human fists. Morgan opened the door a crack and John Slater, the director, pushed his way in.
âThe damn thing's devouring somebody in the gym. God knows how I got past it. There was nothing I could do for the â'
My father interrupted, not wanting Slater to go on for our sake or his. âIs it â still eating?'
âYes.'
âI'm going to the laboratory on my own.' He looked meaningfully at my mother. âThree of us can't risk being attacked.'
Reluctantly she agreed.
âI'm going with you,' I insisted.
But he was adamant. âNo one's going with me. No one at all. Stay here â I'll be back as soon as I can.' He
took Ted Morgan's gun, opened the door, peered outside and then vanished up the empty corridor.
Time passed with aching slowness, and the tension between us all reached such a pitch that I found it increasingly difficult to breathe. I repeatedly looked at my watch, praying for my father, trying to blot out all thought of the deadly creature outside. But I failed, seeing the werewolf at the door of the lab with my dad working desperately against the clock inside. I saw the thing run at the door â I saw the door splintering, buckling under its weight. Then I saw the wolf landing on his shoulders, bearing him down to the floor while its teeth ⦠Again, yet again, I stared helplessly down at the relentless hands of my watch and saw that, somehow, an hour had passed.
âI'm going after him,' said Morgan. âI can't take this any longer.'
âThat would be very foolish.' Slater stood with his back to the door, but Morgan was determined.
âGet out of my way!'
âI
order
you not to go.' Slater still stood there, while my mother and I felt the tension in the room increase to unbearable heights.
Morgan ignored him and pushed straight past him. âBolt this up tight and don't try to follow me,' he said as he wrenched open the door.
The werewolf sprang, its huge teeth buried in Morgan's throat, while my mother and I watched helplessly.
With a sinking heart I realized that the werewolf would simply gorge itself on us all, one by one.
My father stood on the threshold, his face twisted in
loathing, gripping Ted Morgan's gun and aiming it at the wolf. But he had arrived too late for the security guard.
A wave of helplessness swept over me as he aimed the gun at the werewolf's head. His hand was shaking as the creature looked up at him, but I saw â or thought I saw â a knowledge in the wolf's eyes.
He fired again and again, the silver bullets penetrating the head and then the body. There were little soft splats as they made contact, but there was no blood, no tissue. The thing swayed, feebly sprang at my father â and swayed again. Then the wolf fell on its side, splayed right across the centre of the small room, thrashed wildly and at last lay still.
âIt's dissolving,' said Slater unbelievingly. He was wrong. A haze of steam rose and we saw that the fur and sinew were undergoing a change. A few minutes later, the steam-like substance cleared and to our amazement we could see a large man, completely naked, with an ape-like forehead.
âHe's neolithic,' breathed Slater, but in seconds the body began to decompose before our eyes. Soon there was nothing more than a pool of dark stagnant water on the carpet.
â
It must have been really awful,' said Terry. âThink of that thing in the iceberg all those years â waiting for someone to set it free
.'
â
Freedom's something a lot of people don't understand,' said Aaron, the American boy, unexpectedly
.
The girl had been discovered living with a wolf pack in Africa and had been brought to the San Diego Behavioural Study Unit at Sunset Beach so she could be examined. Brad's father was one of the scientists involved, and had been examining Susan, as the wolf girl had been named, for a couple of weeks now.
The unit was just at the top of the beach and Brad's family lived in an adjoining house. Every vacation, he spent most of the time in the ocean with his surfboard. He loved swimming beyond the breakers, waiting for the right crest and then riding in on it, the surf spiralling under his board, giving not just the sensation of speed but a wonderful light-sparkling exhilaration that he never became used to â and knew he would never get tired of.
Despite his father's close involvement with Susan, Brad had never seen the wolf girl and his curiosity mounted. Although he understood why she was kept under such a strict security wrap, Brad often wondered what Susan was like. Was she covered in hair? Did she run about on all fours? Was she ferocious and aggressive? How did she communicate? The questions raced through his mind. But his father, Geoff, wouldn't tell him
anything, on the grounds that all the unit's scientists were sworn to secrecy and that was the way it would have to remain â at least for the time being.