For twenty years, I told myself it was a deer. A sick coyote. The power of suggestion. I moved to the city, became a forensic psychologist, and buried the memory under case files and coffee. I diagnosed schizophrenia, dissociative disorders, and the occasional delusional parasitosis. I never once diagnosed a monster.
"What does it want, Edmund?"
Edmund was forty-three, a former hunting guide from the Upper Peninsula. He had no history of violence until three months prior, when he walked into a diner in Sault Ste. Marie, sat down, and said, "I saw it again." He then calmly described a series of thirteen murders spanning thirty years, all attributed to animal attacks. He confessed to none of them. He said the DogMan did it.
He looked at me for a long time. His eyes were the same color as the creature's. Amber. "To be seen," he whispered. "And to be forgotten. But mostly, to be seen." DogMan
And they are looking right at me.
I found the pattern. Every twenty to thirty years, the sightings would cluster. A spike in missing persons in the Upper Peninsula. Then silence. Then another cluster. As if the creature hibernated for a generation, then woke up hungry. The last cluster ended in 1993. The year after I saw it.
"It's not a werewolf, Doctor," he said, picking at a loose thread on his gray jumpsuit. "That implies a man who turns into a beast. A curse. A full moon. This is different. It was never a man. It's a thing that learned to walk like one." For twenty years, I told myself it was a deer
It stood at the tree line, not on two legs, but hunched on all fours in a way that was wrong . A wolf’s posture, but a man’s shoulders. Its fur was the color of rust and midnight, matted over ribs that shouldn’t have been that visible. But it was the face that froze the scream in my throat. A wolf’s snout, yes, but the eyes—they were amber, round, and knowing . They didn’t reflect the bus’s headlights like an animal’s. They absorbed the light, like a human’s.
Edmund was transferred to solitary after he bit an orderly. Not to escape—to get away from the window. "It's watching," he kept saying. I humored him. I moved his bed to the interior wall. That night, I stayed late to review his case files. At 2:17 AM, the power went out.
I didn't believe him. But I started researching. I moved to the city, became a forensic
Then the amber eyes swallowed the light.
Now I'm in a motel in Lansing. The news is on. They're reporting a "mass escape" at the asylum. Seven guards dead. Cause of death: "severe lacerations consistent with a large animal." Edmund Croft is listed as "missing, presumed deceased."
The door burst off its hinges. The alarms blared. I ran. I ran through the corridors, through the crash doors, into the snowy parking lot. Behind me, I heard the guards screaming, then the wet, percussive thump of bodies hitting the floor. Then silence.