Wolf Dreams

Entries from May 2007

The Laundry Monster

May 22, 2007 · 9 Comments

 Anna couldn’t pinpoint when things got quite so out of hand. One day, she was a load or two behind on the laundry, and the next there was a laundry monster growing in the laundry room which quickly spread to the children’s bedrooms. She tried to catch up, she really did, but nothing seemed to work. She taught the older children (who were certainly old enough to be useful) to do their own laundry, and gave everyone a laundry day. She herself did load after load, but the darn mountain of laundry just kept growing. She sorted through and gave away all the outgrown clothes and the things no one would wear because they didn’t like them, and she threw away all the clothes and linens with holes and stains. She pared everyone’s wardrobe down to the bare bones. The pile still grew.

She broke down, withdrew a considerable chunk of cash from the ATM and had her husband take the whole lot to the laundromat one Saturday. (He got black looks from the students who were regulars when he monopolized most of the machines.) The next day, the pile was back and she saw some cloth arms and legs sneaking out from under the children’s beds.

Now, Anna was a practical, down to earth sort of woman. She believed in what she could see and touch, and didn’t indulge herself in fantasy. But even she could see that something strange was going on here. There was no way that pile could be back without some kind of uncanny help.

She went out into the laundry room and plunged her arm into the middle of the pile, pulling out an item at random. It appeared to be a stained, outgrown shirt that had belonged to the oldest child when he was a toddler. She grabbed at another. It was a skirt that she knew she had put in the Salvation Army box because her daughter refused to wear it. She grabbed a basket and put these things in it and grabbed a few more. Every thing was old, outgrown, or given away. There were even a few things she didn’t recognize at all, including some single socks that were unlike anything she had ever purchased. (She would never buy chartreuse socks with little pink bunnies on them- not in this life time, anyway.) Anna piled all of her evidence in the laundry basket behind her.

When she thought she had a basket full, she turned around to grab it and take it - somewhere, maybe to the garbage- and the basket was empty. There was nothing in it, not even the pair of pale pink size 44 boxer shorts she had just put in it. Anna looked slowly back to the pile, which was the same size as ever (or was it bigger?) and then back at the now empty basket again. Then she slowly backed out of the room, shut the door tight and then ran to her bedroom. She spent the rest of the day in bed, with the pillows over her head. When the children came home from school, they tried to get her to tell them what was wrong, but all she did was moan quietly. The children tiptoed around for the rest of the afternoon and made peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for supper. When their dad came home, they made him one, too.

The next day, Anna had recovered. She decided that the day before had been a figment of her imagination. She marched back out to the laundry room with not one, but three baskets in her hands - one for darks, one for lights, and one for bleach whites. She had an uneasy moment when she first saw the pile- was is bigger?- but she steeled herself and started grabbing clothing off the top and sorting them into baskets. She didn’t even examine the things she found- they were probably just hand me downs from friends anyway- she just put them into baskets to wash. When she turned back around, the baskets were all full. She smiled contentedly and put the first load in the washer. “There, now, that was easy, wasn’t it,” she told herself reassuringly.

That load went into the dryer and the next went into the washer and all was still going properly. She folded up the first load, reloaded both washer and dryer and things were still going along swimmingly.

Anna was humming to herself when she put the clean clothes away. These were all things she recognized, all clothes the children had worn over the last week. All was well.

All was well, that is, until she went to start the fourth load. That was when the trouble started.

Anna had just started to fill another set of three baskets. Again, she wasn’t watching what went into them too carefully, but some of it seemed pretty strange, even if the items were hand me downs from the neighbors. She filled the three baskets and turned around to grab the first one. The one with lights in it was empty. The one with darks in it was half empty. Only the one with bleach whites had the proper amount of laundry in it. And as she watched, the level of laundry in the basket of darks slowly dropped, like water in a tub when someone has pulled the plug.

With Anna standing there staring at it, the basket emptied, and the basket of bleach whites began to do the same thing. Anna’s eyes were like saucers. She gulped, and finally realized she could move. She took a deep breath and screamed. Loudly. Then she ran from the laundry room, slammed the door, locked it and ran to the garage for some two-by-fours. Five minutes later, the door to the laundry room was nailed shut.

She called her husband at work. As soon as he picked up the phone, she said, without preamble, “The laundry room is haunted.”

Her husband replied, “What?”

“It’s haunted. The laundry room is haunted. That’s why we can’t seem to make headway against the laundry. It’s haunted and whatever is in there is sucking in the laundry and keeping it there. Some of it isn’t even ours. I mean, you don’t wear size 44 pink boxers. And certainly the boys don’t. They’re way too little.”

“Uh-huh. What was that you said? Sorry, I was in the middle of something. Now tell me again. I could have sworn you said the laundry room was haunted.”

Anna snarled incoherently, slammed the phone down and stormed off to the bedroom, where she spent the rest of the day watching old movies on TV and mumbling to herself. When the children came home from school, she took them straight back out again, first to the park and then to their favorite fast food burger place.

When they came home several hours later, they found her husband in front of the laundry room door. The boards that Anna had put up were pried off, but a new set had been nailed up, and a cross was hung on the door, too.

“I came home early,” he explained. “You sounded so upset on the phone, I thought I’d better see what was going on. I took down the boards you had up, and went out there myself. I tried to start a load of laundry, but the basket was empty before I could put it into the washer. Then I watched the pile- grow.” He turned pale and gulped. “It grew, right in front of my eyes.” He turned to his wife with an earnest look. “I am so sorry. I thought, well, I thought that you were imagining things. But you weren’t. There’s something out there.” He looked at the door and shuddered.

Anna shook her head and said, “No, I don’t blame you. I thought it was my imagination, too. But what are we going to DO!?”

The children had been watching the exchange with interest. The oldest one said, “A haunted room, COOL! But does it have to be the laundry room? That’s kind of lame. It would be better if it was the attic or something!”

The next one down wasn’t so sure. “I don’t like ghosts,” he said.

The littlest one said, “It’s probably the monster under my bed. He hasn’t been there lately. He must have moved to the laundry room.”

Anna started to say something and stopped. Her husband started to say something and stopped. The older children looked thoughtful. Finally Anna said, “If we accept the idea that there’s something - strange - in the laundry room, then maybe a monster under the bed isn’t such a far-fetched idea after all.”

She handed her husband the bag containing the burger and fries they had brought home for him (they were cold now) and looked at the door. Then she turned to the littlest one and said, “Honey, you need to tell us everything you know about the monster under your bed.”

For the rest of the evening, they picked the brains of the littlest one about the monster under her bed and got some information from the older ones, too. By bedtime, at least they weren’t panicking any more. They took down the boards (but left the cross) so they could get at the soap and a few new clothes on the top of the heap. Then they shut the door tight again.

 That night, the littlest one came out of her bedroom complaining that the monster under her bed was back. “”Well, I guess it wasn’t the monster from under her bed,” Anna said to her husband.

For the rest of the week, Anna simply shuttled the dirty clothes to the laundromat. She found that if she grabbed them quickly enough, the clothes did not migrate out to the laundry room. She was making daily laundry runs.

On Tuesday, she took a drill and made a peephole in the laundry room door so she could keep track of what was happening in there. She really wished she hadn’t, because the pile was larger than ever

On Wednesday, Edna Reynolds from across the street came over. “I’ve noticed you’ve been going to the laundromat an awful lot lately, my dear. Is your machine out? Can I help in any way?” If it had been anyone else, Anna would have jumped at the offer of help. Edna, however, was the sort of person who came over, made remarks that weren’t nearly as nice as they sounded, and then went and told the whole neighborhood bad things about your housekeeping. Her house, of course, was always immaculate. Anna took refuge in the knowledge that Edna’s children were horrible little brats.

Anna smiled quietly and just said, “We’re waiting on parts.”

On her way out, Edna managed to walk by the laundry room. A sleeve was crawling out from under the door, clearly trying to escape the horror within. Edna reached over and open the door to push the shirt back in. Anna cringed, but it was too late. The huge pile, towering over the washer and dryer was displayed in all its glory. Edna simply raised her eyebrows, smiled slightly, and said, “As I said, dear, if you need help, just let me know,” and walked away with a triumphant swish in her step.

At dinner that night, Anna told her family about Edna. The littlest one was sympathetic- the Reynolds children had been picking on her on the playground again. The older children looked at each when they heard that and the oldest one simply said, “Don’t worry, I think they’ll stop soon,” and then they all burst into giggles. Anna was suspicious, but couldn’t get anything else out of them. She and her husband spent the rest of the evening trying to figure out what to do about the laundry.

By Friday, she had had enough of everything. At dinner that night, she told her family, “Enough is enough. Tomorrow we are taking back our laundry room.”

At eight o’clock on Saturday morning, they all gathered by the laundry room door. They had basket upon basket and the oldest child had a big butterfly net. They marched into the laundry room and everyone began filling baskets as quickly as they could. The baskets were emptying, but not as quickly as everyone working together could clear the pile.

Gradually, they neared the bottom. The oldest child, with the butterfly net at the ready, got on one side of the pile, and everyone else grabbed the last few pieces of laundry. At the bottom was a tiny animated figure, still covered by a sheet. They couldn’t see much, but it clearly had long arms and a tiny body.  The oldest child quickly slammed the butterfly net down on top of the figure and scooped it up. The bundle in the net squirmed and wriggled, and several more pieces of laundry expanded the net, but the laundry monster did not escape.

Quickly, Anna’s husband took the lid off a five gallon bucket he had ready for just this purpose and the oldest child dipped the net into the bucket. His father slammed the lid down as Anna clipped the net from the handle. The bucket bounced a little and then settled down. They all looked at the laundry pile expectantly, but nothing changed. It didn’t grow any larger. Anna hefted the bucket experimentally. It wiggled a little bit. Whatever had been in the laundry pile was definitely in the bucket now. Anna’s husband grabbed some duct tape and taped the lid down securely - just in time, too, because several items of clothing vanished from the floor and the lid to the bucket began to bulge.

“Well, it looks like it can bring things to it, but not get out itself,” said Anna. “Hopefully.”

“What are you going to do with it?” asked the middle child.

“I don’t know yet,” answered his father. “Let’s go get some breakfast and think about it.”
Later that morning, Anna went out to the laundry room and the bucket was gone. She was moving things around, looking for it, when the oldest child came along and said, “Oh, don’t worry. I took care of it. It won’t bother you anymore!” and then ran away laughing. She couldn’t get anything else out of him.

At lunch, Anna said to the youngest one, “I guess the monster under your bed is next.”

The littlest one answered, “Oh, it’s gone now. We got rid of it.” Again the children laughed.

The next afternoon while they were getting in the car to go to the park, Anna and the children saw Edna Reynolds, looking very cross, coming out of her house with a full laundry basket on her hip and a crying child following her. Anna heard her saying, “I don’t want to hear anything about monsters under your bed. I want to know where all this laundry came from! Have you been hiding it somewhere? I’m going to have to go to the laundromat to catch this stuff up!” Anna looked back at her children, who sat there with their hands stuffed in their mouths, trying not to laugh out loud. She started to say something, and then shook her head and stopped. Instead, she stuck her head out of the car window, smiled, and called sweetly, “Can I help with anything, Edna?”

Categories: Stand Alone Fiction · Wolf Dreams
Tagged: , , ,

The Trouble With Full Moons

May 12, 2007 · No Comments

“Have you seen Grover?” Ellen asked as she came upstairs.

 

“No, I thought you had him locked in the basement,” replied Jeff.

 

“I did. Now I can’t find him.” Ellen said grimly.

 

“Where could he have gotten out? I mean, all the windows are barred and the door is reinforced. Did you forget to lock the door or something?” Jeff sounded annoyed, and a little alarmed.

 

“NO I did not forget to lock the door ‘or something’! And this is serious, Jeff. Don’t just stand there and look grumpy. We need to find him, ASAP. Yesterday, if possible!”

 

“All right, hold your horses, I’m coming. We’ll check the basement again first, just in case he’s hiding somewhere.” Jeff followed Ellen through the locked door at the top of the basement stairs and then to the locked door at the bottom of the stairs.

 

“I came down to give him his dinner, and he didn’t come to the door-slot to take it. I checked the security monitors and couldn’t see him anywhere on them. I went around the outside, but all the windows are still barred from the outside. I don’t know how he got out, but he must have.”

 

Jeff unlocked the door, handed her the keys and said, “I’ll go in and look. You stay here, and lock the door behind me. You know how tricky he can be- I don’t want him to slip out when we aren’t looking at the door.”

 

Ellen took the keys and waited as Jeff carefully went over the entire basement.

 

When he returned, he looked worried. “His bed hasn’t been slept in and the water we left hasn’t been touched. I’d say he’s been gone since sometime this morning. I think I found where he might have gotten out, too.”

 

Ellen followed Jeff back into the basement. As holding cells went, it wasn’t too bad. It was carpeted, and Grover had a big comfortable bed and all the amenities they could fit into the area. They skirted Grover’s things, which littered the floor, and the remains of snacks while Jeff led Ellen to the far back wall where the bed was. He pulled the bed away from the wall and they both looked at the hole where the foundation had crumbled. The basement was really almost the first floor here, so it hadn’t taken too much digging for Grover to make an exit. The exit was behind a large bush.

 

“You know how crafty he gets around this time of month,” Jeff shook his head. “I wouldn’t have thought he would figure this out, though. I HATE full moons.”

 

“There’s no point in beating ourselves up over this now. We need to find him, fast, before we have to do damage control,” said Ellen.

They grabbed flashlights and their cell phones. At the last minute, Ellen took some clothes from Jeff’s closet and stuffed them in a small back pack. “We might need these, if we don’t find him soon enough,” she said.

Jeff said, “Good idea. And I’ll go upstairs and grab Daisy. She loves Grover. She follows him everywhere. Maybe she can track him.

 

As Ellen headed for her car, she looked up at the sky. A full moon was breaking the horizon, with misty clouds glowing around it. It was beautiful, but so very dangerous. Since the moon was already rising, it was probably too late already. She called to Jeff, and he looked at the moon and grimaced. “So it’ll probably be damage control, then?” he said. She nodded and they set off.


Martha Watson remembered the clothes on her line just as she was finishing the supper dishes. Grumbling at herself for being so forgetful, she grabbed a laundry basket and slammed out the door to get them. She looked up and groaned. The clothes line had been pulled down and the clothes were dragging in the grass. She took the clothes off and put them in the basket anyway. “Must’ve been some dog!” she muttered to herself, looking at the tooth marks in the corner of one of the sheets. She never even noticed the slightly hairy shadow in the bushes near the clothes line.
 

Jeff got Daisy, a lovely yellow Labrador retriever, and they set off on foot.  He kept a sharp eye out and listened for sounds in the underbrush.

 

Ellen drove slowly down the lane towards the main highway, looking carefully all the way As long as Grover had been out, she figured he had already made it close to town, but you never knew. She slowly made for the place he always wanted to go when he got out.


A group of children were playing Frisbee and ball under the lights at the park on the edge of town. There were no adults with them, and even better, no dogs. They didn’t see the shadow lurking under the trees near the river.
 

“Grover!” Ellen called out of the car window as she crossed the bridge over the small river on the outskirts of town. Grover always liked to linger on the bridge and explore near the river whenever he got the chance. “Grover!” She passed over the bridge and saw the empty park on the other side.

 

Jeff poked in the underbrush near the river. He found a soaking wet brightly printed sundress balled up and tossed under the bushes. Daisy sniffed it and whined. Jeff heard the sound of a child crying and winced. He went to investigate it.


The man with the six-pack of beer was already a few drinks deeper than he needed to be. He sat down on the bench on the deserted street to wait for the bus home, tossing his jacket down beside him. He never saw the shadow in the alley behind him.
 

 Ellen drove down the nearly deserted street. She paused behind the bus when it stopped to let someone off at the stop. There was a jacket abandoned on the bench, and the person getting off the bus stopped and looked at it, as if to see if it were worth taking. Ellen shook her head at the dishonesty of some people.

 

Jeff heard someone screaming incoherently, but by the time he was close enough to see what was going on, there was no one there.


The girls at the sorority were having an end of the semester party. They were all laughing, eating, and having a lot of very loud fun. Young men wound between the girls like bees buzzing flowers. The shadow watching them through the window noted every move they made. When they were all sufficiently distracted, it made its way to the back door.
 

Ellen met Jeff near the bus stop. “What do you think, the sorority?” asked Ellen.

 

“I’m afraid so,” answered Jeff.  Daisy was pulling at the leash and whining. She was looking in the right direction. Ellen sighed. “I really wish this weren’t happening,” she said.

 

“I know,” said Jeff. “Me too.”

 

Ellen and Jeff arrived at the corner of campus at almost the same time. Jeff and Daisy had taken some short cuts through alleys and yards, Daisy pulling on her leash the whole way. Ellen parked the car. She and Jeff exchanged glances and she sighed heavily. “I hate to think what the damage control is going to be like on this one,” she said. Jeff just shook his head.

 

They made their way to the sorority house that Grover liked best. There were lights on all over the house, and there was a police car out front. Jeff and Ellen broke into a run.

 

When they entered the house, the young women were all bunched together in a group on the far side of the room. Several of them were whispering to each other. They all looked frightened. There was food spilled everywhere.

 

Some of the boys were piled on top of something that was thrashing and howling on the floor. The police officer was trying to haul them off, so he could see what was going on.

 

“Grover!” Ellen shouted.

 

The police officer turned. “Lady, do you know what’s going on here?” he asked. “I got a call about a fight, but I can’t get to the bottom of it, so to speak. We get these calls all the time, this time of year.” He shrugged. “I don’t see any blood and the only thing that’s broken is that lamp, so if you can sort this out, I won’t haul anyone in.”

 

Meanwhile, Jeff had waded into the fray, and he and Daisy managed to accomplish what the police officer had not. Jeff pulled the angry young men off and sent them over to the knot of whispering girls. Reaching the bottom, he reached out and hauled the bottom figure upright. “Grover, what have you got to say for yourself?” he asked. “What were you thinking?”

 

A stocky young man with sleek black hair wearing nothing but a pair of plaid boxer shorts looked up at him and grinned. “I just wanted to play!” he smiled. “The girls didn’t want to play today, but the guys wanted to wrestle. It was fun!”

 

One of the boys yelled, “Get that creep out of here. He crashed our party, and he’s drunk. And look at him. He’s not wearing anything but boxers. You should get him for indecent exposure!” The young men were gearing up for another fight. Jeff took Grover by the arm and he, Ellen and Daisy hustled Grover out.

 

“Grover…” Ellen began as they started down the sidewalk.

 

“I wanted to play. You shut me in the basement and I just wanted to play!” Grover whined. “You always shut me in the basement so I can’t play!”

 

“Grover, you can’t play all the time,” said Ellen.


Why not? I am a Labrador Retriever,” replied Grover. “We like to play! Everybody should play!”

 

Jeff touched Ellen on the shoulder. “He’s right, you know. Just because he looks like a man during the full moon doesn’t mean he still isn’t a Lab at heart.”

 

“I know, I know. We need to figure out something better. For now, let’s just patch things up and go home,” replied Ellen. “What do we need to do for damage control?”

 

“First of all, Grover, I smell beer on your breath! Where did you get it?”

 

Grover shrugged. “The guy at the bus stop already drank a bunch. I just took his extra. He seemed kind of mad, though, and he chased me a long way.”

 

“One six pack for the guy at the bus stop. I hope we can find him again.” Ellen wrote this down on a little pad.

 

“Well,” said Jeff, “There’s a Frisbee that needs to be replaced- the little boy was very unhappy. And he may be traumatized for life by the sight of a man in a flowered sundress running off with his Frisbee!” He glared at Grover.

Grover drooped. “I didn’t mean to make him unhappy. I thought he’d like to play chase.”

 

“New Frisbee. Got it.”  Ellen noted this too.

 

“About that sundress…” Jeff began.

 

“It was pretty. It was all sorts of what do you call ‘em- colors! Colors almost make up for not being able to smell!” Grover said happily. “But then it got wet. I can’t shake it dry like I can my fur, so I took it off.” Then he looked up at them proudly. “I remembered the clothes this time!”

 

“Where did you get the sundress and shorts, Grover?” asked Ellen.

 

“Mrs. Watson. I kind of pulled down her clothesline, too,” Grover looked contrite. “I didn’t mean too, but I hadn’t finished changing yet, and I was in a hurry.

 

“Is that it?” Ellen asked.

 

“I think so.”

 

Jeff looked back in the direction of the sorority. “I don’t think you did any permanent damage there. I just hope they don’t recognize us when we are walking across campus next year!”

 

Grover looked back at the house with a glazed look in his eyes. “The girls. They always pet me and give me treats. I like them.”

 

“Grover, it doesn’t work quite the same when you’re a guy,” Jeff began. Grover looked puzzled. “Oh, never mind. I’ll try again later.” Jeff sighed.

 

Ellen shook her head. “Who knew that if a werewolf bites a dog, he turns into a man at the full moon? I mean, how weird is that?”

 

“How weird is a werewolf?” Jeff countered. “If you had asked me if I believed in those a year ago, I’d have laughed at you.”

 

“For now, we need to figure out how to keep Grover happy at the full moon, anyway, so he doesn’t escape again,” said Ellen.

 

Grover looked up. “Oh, I won’t be bored next month,” he said.

 

“Why is that?” asked Jeff.

 

“Well, you know when you were pulling those guys off of me?”

 

Jeff nodded.

“I got a little overexcited when Daisy started pulling at me.”

“And?” Ellen asked.

 

“Well,” said Grover, “I kind of bit her.”

 

-She Wolf (c) May 2007

Categories: Stand Alone Fiction · Wolf Dreams
Tagged: , , ,