âWe donât really need to split up, do we? Maybe just one or two classes I can sit somewhere near, I donât think the teachers will notice-â
Louise groaned. âJust come on, you know what you said about cryptids avoiding broad daylight and all that stuff.â
They were once again near the bustling entrance of their school. Chatters of students intermixed with cars pulling up to the curb.
âYeah but, we werenât actively hunting them. Animals arenât dumb, and I think cryptids are less⦠dumb. What Iâm saying is, weâve never attacked one and let it leave alive.â
Louise rolled her eyes, still smiling. âIâm also sure theyâre not dumb enough to attack a big school in broad daylight.â
âYeah, but-â
She held her finger in front of his mouth. âNo butts! Letâs just get through the school day. If we ARENâT attacked in broad daylight, we can go somewhere populated after. Like a shopping center or something, do some stuff there.â
She stared at her friend with a warm smile.
Davis was still shaking, holding his hands close to his chest. He kept glancing to his sides, occasionally turning around to watch his back.
She shook her head at him. âIâm goin off to class, just donât act crazy, okay?â
She waved, running off into the building. He looked behind his back one last time, before sprinting into the building as well.
----------------------------------------
How many more periods until I can stop being aloneâ¦
Davis was constantly fidgeting his leg, glancing all around the classroom. He was only two classes through, and his mind was all over the place. This class in particular was especially agonizing, as he was seated right next to a large window.
It displayed an unassuming line of suburban houses, but his mind still raced with paranoia.
Anyone, or anything, could easily stare in and watch him.
His eyes would zip from the window, to anyone who fidgeted amongst the teacherâs lectures. Every creak of the classroomâs heater drove his senses crazy, fearing that eventually something would sprout from the vents to kill him, and flee before anyone could realize what had happened.
Everyone probably thought he was some kind of tweaker, he worried to himself.
In reality, the few students who cared about him thought he was undergoing some caffeine withdrawals.
He tried to bring his fidgeting under control, but he still couldnât shake the thought of more monsters beginning to attack him, as some kinda punishment for messing with the forest.
He glanced over to the window and saw something, standing casually on the front yard.
It was a deer.
[https://fishstoriesblog.files.wordpress.com/2023/05/ch9-p1-min.jpg]
All it did was stir his paranoia more.
First, deer were incredibly uncommon to come anywhere near suburbs. At least for Tomahawk Hills. Deer themselves were pretty rare too, which Davis addressed to the townâs monster populace.
Then there was something he couldnât properly word other than a gut instinct.
The deer looked wrong.
The fur of it looked like plastic. He thought if he were to walk up and stroke it, it would be hard and prickly, rather than soft deer hide.
The worst part was that the animal was staring straight into the classroom. It was slowly scanning its head, until it met its eyes with him.
The period bell rang, and he flinched. Looking back at the window, the deer was gone. He waited for everyone else to get up, trying to blend himself within the crowd of students.
----------------------------------------
Lunch had rolled around, and Davis was further crouched into the corner of the cafeteria. Food wasnât even on his mind, his stomach churned too much. He thought even a simple bite out of one of his sweets would cause him to puke.
He kept quietly glancing around, until Louise arrived, two sandwiches in hand.
âHey, how you holding up?â
He nearly jumped out of his seat. She glared at him.
âDo I need to chuck this at you again?â She wagged the wrapped sandwich around.
âNo no no no, justâ¦â
He grabbed his head.
âI canât shake the thoughts of that monster. Like, did you see that thing? How are you staying so⦠calm???â
âWell, I seriously doubt it left that factory. Second, I got my gauntlets on me at all times.â She motioned to her backpack. âSo if it does rear its ugly mug, Iâll beat it in.â
âYeah, but I donât have the magic gauntlets. If that thing surprises me, Iâm toast.â
âYeah but you can be like, a ghost or something? Thatâs gotta count for something, even if it DOES attack.â
His brain paused to try to process her statement.
âCan you give me like, an ounce of that self confidence? Or somethin? We could be in so much more trouble than we ever imagined-â
Louise threw one of the sandwiches at his face. âTry eating for starters. A full stomach will probably help you out a bunch!â
His anxiety paused just to give a stare of death back at Louise. âWhen will you stop doing thatâ¦â
âSee, the food got your mind off that cryptid, right?â
His eyes widened, and he went back to fidgeting. âYeah Iâll just, skip lunch at least.â He pushed the sandwich away. âThis nerve is gonna make me pukeâ¦â
Louise sighed, sitting down and beginning to eat her lunch.
âCome on, if it hasnât attacked now, it wonât attack at all. Just eat up.â
âMaybe itâs just being really patient⦠Like, I think itâs been watching me!â
âPsh, what? You think itâs attending school with us?â
âI mean if it can turn into a mannequin, what's stopping it from turning into a person? Or a deer peeking through the window? Or maybe a bird watching-â
âGood, let it turn into a deer! Thatâll be a lot easier to beat up than⦠whatever it was last night.â
Davis put his head face down on the table. âOh jeez⦠I just realized that I'm missing all the class content today too. Iâm gonna be so behind on everything.â He gripped his head again.
Louise shrugged. âWhat, is one dayâs worth of school gonna kill you or something?â
He glanced up. âAcademically, yes. Especially when some of this stuff is test and quiz prep. A quiz which I ALSO have next period too.â
Louise shirked back a bit. âOops⦠uhh⦠good luck? Maybe just imagine me beating up that cryptid for you if you get nervous and distracted, I donât know.â
âIâll keep that in mind, I guess.â
âOnly a few more classes to go. We can spend the rest of the day at a mall.â
Her expression brightened.
âOH actually, how about we go to a restaurant? I know a place that serves some KILLER burgers. We can get some and then do⦠Something I guess. Group research? Maybe plan some defense strategy for your home?â
His heart lightened at the thought. âYeah, that would be kinda nice.â
He took a deep breath, unwrapping the sandwich.
âItâs not gonna attack in broad daylight, right?â
----------------------------------------
After a terrible quiz with questions he couldnât recall, the last few periods of the school day, Davis shared with Louise: History and English.
Simply having her in the same room was somewhat reassuring. If he was attacked in broad daylight, no doubt it would provoke some response from PAIN. Hopefully not the whole town quarantine response. His nerves soothed as his brain thought more rationally about his potential monster stalker.
Even with his good friend near, it didn't do much to quell his wandering mind. Instead of paranoia, it was more focused on planning what to do if he were attacked at that very second. Obviously, he didnât have any of his gadgets with him. Maybe he could use pencil shavings as some kinda makeshift blinding powder? Pens and scissors were decently sharp. He wasnât sure if they were sharp enough to pierce the monsterâs hide, but if his knife did the job, scissors should work too.
Oh right⦠I lost my knifeâ¦
Still, he kept thinking back to anything he could possibly do, anything to not be useless.
When the final bell rang, he was snapped back into reality. Looking down at his desk, it was a shameful reality.
He hadn't taken any notes, and the teacher was already wiping away what was written on the whiteboard. No doubt, the stuff was essential testing information. He sighed in despair, walking over to Louise.
"Hey, can I copy off of your notes? I kinda dozed off today."
She stared back blankly. "Wait, you actually waste time taking notes?"
He returned with a stare of disappointment.
"We'll⦠I guess I know what weâre gonna be doing when we go out to get some burgers. Study."
"Hey, whatever was covered today isn't that big a deal-"
She paused, gears in her brain processing what was said at lunch.
"Oh. That stuff was test prep wasn't it."
He squinted his eyes, nodding.
"Yeah⦠We probably should huhâ¦"
----------------------------------------
Davis stuck close to Louise as they streamed out of the school with a river of students. He was holding tight to her arm, like a frightened child, glancing at all the students surrounding them. She would glance over to keep an eye on her friend, making sure to keep trucking onward.
It was a ten minute walk, but they arrived at a shopping plaza. It was a large parking lot, lined by various fast food places, a few restaurants, department stores, and some smaller shops for miscellaneous needs. Outside the front of the restaurants were dining areas, lined with flowered hedges and fountains.
There were plenty of teens and adults, some students of Tomahawk High, eating, chatting, or just enjoying the nice scenery.
Davis was totally unfamiliar with it all.
She turned to the terrified boy.
âYou can relax. If someone literally tries to jump us, Iâll throw em in front of a moving car.â
âI really doubt you can throw that big of a monster out into the streets.â
She rolled her eyes. âIâm telling you, I SERIOUSLY doubt that monster will reveal itself to everyone after staying hidden for so long.â
âI already told you, this thing is different-â
She tossed her backpack open, slipping on her gauntlets.
âThere. Feel better?â
His heart rate slowed down at the sight.
âWait, wonât that draw suspicion?â
She raised an eyebrow. âWho the heck cares if Iâm wearing gauntlets or not?â
He glanced around at all the students. âWell, they might find it weird and talk about it.â
âSo?â
His heart slowed down more. âDonât you care about how you look to others?â
âNo need to when I constantly look this cool.â she spoke with a grin. She struck a pose, reaching out her hand in a taunting motion.
Davis put his hand on his face.
âStop it, you look embarrassingâ¦â
âFiiiinee. Now, for lunch, you GOTTA try Royalty Burgers if you havenât.â She grabbed his arm and tugged him across the parking lot towards the restaurants.
âItâs not a chain or anything, they grill them there with fresh meat and everything. Itâs AMAZING!â
She was skipping along with excitement.
âThey also got so much more in case burgers aren't your thing, like maybe some chicken tenders, ooh and KILLER milkshakes as well. The fries there are kinda pricey but itâs totally worth.â
Davis took a deep breath, eyes darting side to side. Nothing seemed suspicious. âI havenât eaten out in like forever. It sounds like a nice change of pace from frozen food.â
Louise continued to march towards the food, stopping in front of one of the department stores.
âOh yeah, I also gotta use the bathroom real fast.â
Just the mention reminded Davis. He felt a cramp in his stomach, and he grasped it.
âYou gotta use it too?â
He groaned. âI can hold it. Ugh⦠Ok maybe not.â
She stared at him for a few moments, putting together what had happened.
âDonât tell me⦠Youâve been holding it in all day?â
âThe bathroom would be a perfect place to be ambushed-â
She grabbed him by the arm, tugging him towards the store entrance.
âItâs a packed department store, thereâs tons of people around, youâll be just fine. Just scream like a maniac if you see anything funny, all right?â
She continued tugging until they reached the bathrooms.
Louise finished first, waiting right outside the door for her friend. It didnât seem too busy, as not too many people went into the bathroom. Minutes passed, still no sign of him. She began tapping her foot as she saw people continuing to leave.
âSheesh, this is why you donât hold it all inâ¦â she silently spoke to herself. Finally, a minute later, Davis emerged.
Louise stared at him, concerned.
âJeez dude, you all right?â
He looked even paler than before, and was shivering as if he had a cold. His back was hunched, and eyes incredibly baggy.
âY-yeah.â He spoke in a very hushed voice, chittering his teeth. âIâm j-just⦠still really s-scared.â
She put his arm on his shoulder. âSheesh, I didnât know you were gonna be this much of a baby about it. Probably should have found a family bathroom or something.â
He simply stared pathetically at her.
âWell, come on. Letâs get us some burgers, thatâll warm and cheer you up.â
----------------------------------------
It was a horrid eight minutes on the toilet, both thanks to holding it in for so long, and the paranoia of being attacked at his most vulnerable. Every time somebody came in and out of the door, his heart began beating into overdrive. He continued to heavily breath in and out, trying to relax himself and push through his terrible digestion as fast as possible.
Granted, after it was all done, his stomach cramps were mostly gone, and he felt significantly less stressed out.
Not to mention he felt absolutely starved.
He washed his hands, and grabbed the door handle.
It didnât budge.
His heart accelerated as he yanked again and again.
It still didnât even move an inch.
He banged the door, yelping.
âLOUISE, HELP ME OUT HERE! THE DOORâS STUCK!â
No response.
He banged more, and turned around.
All of the stalls were slightly ajar, and nobody.
He unbuttoned one of his jacket pockets, searching for his phone. It wasnât where he usually put it
He opened every other pocket, scrounging through several pieces of candy, unable to feel the rectangular shape of his phone.
Thereâs no way I left it at home, did I? I didnât take it out at school at allâ¦
He continued to bang on the door, yelling. Between screaming, he glanced behind him, still finding absolutely nobody.
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â...Iâm sure this place will serve SOMETHING you like. Just promise me you wonât be picky!â
Louise kept prattling on as she pushed the doors to the restaurant open. It wasnât too crowded, but there were still a fair amount of customers inside.
Davis was still shivering like a terrified animal, keeping hands close to his chest. He glanced at every customer as if they were planning to lunge out and attack him.
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âPlus maybe we can come here after excursions. Theyâre open real late into the night too!â
Davis nodded. He sniffed the air, and straightened out his back. He took in a whiff of the scent of grilled beef patties, fries, chicken, and a mix of various other foods.
âSmells good, huh? I told ya, youâre gonna LOVE this place.â
She bounded over to the cashier, staring up at the menu.
âJust give me a Royal combo with some water, andâ¦â
Davis was staring blankly at the menu. His mouth was slightly agape, looking at the pictures of the delicious-looking food.
âNeed a few moments?â
He pointed at a picture of a thick, double burger. âThat one.â
Louise chuckled. âFeeling hungry now, huh? Isnât food just the best? Ah, wait one second. Do you mind if I take these off?â
She held up her gauntlets.
âI donât exactly wanna be eating with them and all. I havenât washed them properly yet and uh⦠Yeah.â
He nodded, still staring at the picture of the tasty looking burger.
----------------------------------------
Davis had been kicking at the door for several minutes, and was now lying on the floor exhausted. Every now and then, heâd hear somebody shove the door, trying to get in. Sometimes it was a light tap, other times it felt like somebody was trying to kick it down. If he was lucky, somebody would complain about the locked bathroom, and a manager could unlock it.
Unlocking, maybe? He had picked locks before. It was a good way to get into classrooms where he could hang out and be alone during lunch.
He searched around his jacket pockets. Through lint and small bits of garbage, he at least found a paperclip in there. He sighed in relief, bending it into a straight metal wire, and hurrying over to the bathroom door.
He paused in despair, realizing there was no lock on this side.
----------------------------------------
âCould⦠You get me another.â
Louise had barely touched her fries as she glanced at Davis.
The burgers served here were definitely not average. The âRoyal Marriageâ he had just finished were two quarter pound patties, each with two slices of cheese, and finished with lettuce, tomatoes, onions, ketchup, and mayonnaise.
In the time that she had just taken a single bite of her burger, he had demolished his.
âWow⦠Have you ever had burgers before? Like, once in your life?â
âNo⦠Theyâre amazingâ¦â
A big smile grew across her face.
âSee, man I KNEW youâd love this place. Just hang tight, do you want a shake too?â
âShake?â he cocked his head, staring inquisitively.
She paused. âYouâre a frozen food hog and youâve never had a chocolate shake either? Man, youâre missing out on SO MUCH GOOD STUFF. Itâs a good thing I dragged you out here!â
She walked over to the counter, making a new order as he sat, staring at his polished plate of food. He looked up, gazing at Louiseâs barely eaten burger and fries. His mouth began to water, and he reached over, snagging a handful of fries and shoving them into his mouth. He glanced behind, seeing Louise was walking back.
âJust give him a few minutes, and youâll have some more foodâ¦â
She saw a bunch of her fries were noticeably gone, and glanced at the boy.
She squinted her eyes with disgust.
âYou coulda just asked if you wanted me to get you fries too.â
She sat back down, and moved her food further away.
âI gotta keep an eye on this till your next order, huh?â
Minutes later, after Louise finished her meal, she ran over and brought the second helping over to Davis. She kept her eyes on him as he dove straight into the burger again. He tore into it like an animal, shredding it down to nothing but crumbs.
Grabbing the shake, he took off the lid and chugged. His eyes bugged out at the first gulp, and he coughed up the shake, spilling it everywhere.
Louise instinctively ducked, avoiding the projectile shake-spit.
He coughed and gagged, still spitting out little bits of melted ice cream.
âGuess you have a selective sweet tooth, huh now?â
He glared at her. âIt doesnât taste good. Could I get another burger?â
âSeriously? Well, even if I wanted to, I got no more cash left.â
He glared. âSo?â
âDo you got some money to help pay too?â
âNo.â
She gave him a wry look. âYouâre gonna be paying for one heck of a lunch for me in the future for this. Now, are you feeling better?â
He stared at the empty plate again, before staring back at her.
âYes.â
âSee, a good meal will help your nerves a bunch. Now letâs get on home.â
----------------------------------------
Davis had been staring at the door for a long while, trying to figure out any way through. Help clearly wasnât coming anytime soon. It couldnât have been a coincidence the one time he split off from Louise this all happened.
He looked up to the ceiling, lost in trying to figure some way out of this hopeless situation. Maybe there was some kind of air duct he could crawl through.
The only duct he could see was only small enough for a rat to fit through.
He squinted as he stared at the wide, fluorescent lights.
If only there was a way to turn out the lights, then he could phase through the wall without any issue. There was no light switch he could find.
Though, the switch wasnât the only way to turn them off.
His heart raced and he gulped.
âI really hope I donât get in big trouble for thisâ¦â
There were no cameras in the bathroom, but most likely some watching outside. There was only one way he thought out.
He ran over to one of the toilet stalls, grabbed a handful of toilet paper, and unscrewed the seat.
Wrapping his face in the paper to (hopefully) hide his identity when he broke out, he proceeded to throw the toilet seat at each of the lamps. One by one the bathroom dimmed, until he smashed the last one, submerging himself in darkness. He felt his way along the wall, until he could feel the door handle.
He held his breath, and turned incorporeal, rushing through.
On the other side of the door, he felt the gut-punch of entering a lit area. He stumbled down onto his knees, and materialized back into reality.
A few shoppers leapt back as they witnessed a person whose face was wrapped in toilet paper appear out of nowhere.
They were completely frozen in place, not out of fear, but sheer confusion.
He scanned the people waiting quickly; Louise was nowhere to be found. He scrambled up to his feet and sprinted out.
As he ran, his mind was preoccupied with two things:
Finding Louise, and hoping to god nobody would ever find out this was him.
Running through a crowd of shoppers, he tore away the toilet paper off his face. He threw his hood back over his head, and glanced around.
Not too far off was Royalty Burgers.
She wouldnât abandon him without good reason, right?
He sprinted towards the restauraunt.
He shoved open the doors, glancing around.
She was nowhere to be seen.
His heart began pounding against his chest.
He ran outside, whipping his head all around, trying to find her.
Not too far off, he saw not her, but an all too familiar style of dressing.
It was his style, somebody wearing a big black school jacket with the hood up. And next to him was Louise.
He broke into a sprint.
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âLOUISE!â He screamed.
She turned to him, pausing in confusion. The hooded figure turned, revealing that it was a near perfect looking copy of him. She looked at the Davis near her, and then back to the other in the distance.
The closer Davis screamed in terror, grabbing Louiseâs wrist and fleeing.
The other Davis reached out, yelling for his friend.
He gave chase, running across the parking lot of the shopping center, cars slamming on their brakes to avoid hitting the students. He dragged her towards downtown, where the city streets thinned into more clustered general shops and small apartments.
The doppelganger slowly was putting more and more distance between the two, pushing past pedestrians, and sometimes shoving them into the pursuing boy. The constant obstacles, combined with Davisâs endurance, caused his breath to shorten. His sprint turned into a light jog, and then a full stop as he hunched over. He gasped for breath, staring horridly as his friend disappeared further and further away.
----------------------------------------
Davis kept running with Louise, until he could no longer see their pursuer. He took her to an alley between two shops, free of any pedestrians or passerbys, and sat down behind a dumpster. He was heaving heavily, eyes shut tight.
Louise was panting, but it was more from the adrenaline of the situation than the long run he just tugged her through.
âIâm⦠Sorryâ¦â he heaved out. âThatâ¦â
âThe monster from before?â She finished his sentence.
He nodded. He began to cry.
âItâs been after me⦠all this timeâ¦â
He buried his head in his knees, curling up.
âAnd now it stole my skin. It knows me too wellâ¦â
âHey, itâs just got your looks. I doubt itâs got your personality too. Plus, now that we know that itâs near, we just gotta get a quick plan and pummel it. Just give me a second.â
She turned around as she slung her backpack to the ground.
The gauntlets. Sheâs getting the gauntlets.
She opened it up, squatting down and shuffling through her pack.
From his jacket sleeve, he procures a knife, the same one he had lost at the factory. Without hesitation, he lunged forward with it, aiming straight for her back.
.
.
.
Louise nonchalantly stepped to the side, letting him crash into the alleyway wall. She scoffed as she slipped on her gauntlets.
âI told you, it ainât got your personality. I mean, eating a bunch was one thing, along with liking the taste of mustard too. But not enjoying ice cream? I KNEW something was up then!â
He turned around, his face now deformed. His mouth had widened considerably, growing terrifyingly large teeth. The sounds of bones cracking and skin stretching emanated from him as his jacket turned from a fabric into a carapace-like material.
Louise gasped, but clenched her fists tight.
He tossed the knife aside as he stretched out his arms and legs. His fingers fused together and sharpened themselves into razor sharp claws.
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In a matter of seconds, the cryptid now stood a head over Louise, looking like a stretched out, horrifying mockery of Davis.
âThe least you coulda done is stop wearing my friendâs skin before I beat the snot outta you!â She yelled.
She shoved her feet off the pavement, slightly cracking it as she dashed forward.
She tackled it in the stomach, pinning it against the wall. There, she proceeded to punch it twice in the chest.
It reacted with a screech, but grabbed the back of her shirt with both of its elongated arms.
It tossed her away to the back of the alley, and leapt towards her.
When she was still getting back up to her feet, it slashed at her chest. She felt the sting of the scratches, and gritted her teeth.
She returned with a punch aimed at its face, but it dodged.
It leapt back and swiped again, but she was barely able to leap to the side. The very tip of its claws grazed her thigh.
She gritted harder, trying her best to endure the pain.
Iâm not gonna win this if it keeps out-reaching meâ¦
She turned and grabbed the dumpster, shoving it at full speed towards the cryptid.
It merely leapt over the improvised battering ram, and landed close behind Louise, preparing to grab her.
âGot ya close enough!â she yelled as she turned around and grappled the hands of the beast. She bent her knees and pushed towards the cryptid. It was one shot, and she had to just out-muscle the monster and pin it down.
The two were at an impasse, barely making way over each otherâs strength.
Very slightly, she was being pushed back thanks to the creatureâs increased weight, but still held strong. The brawler dug her feet into the ground, noticeably cracking the pavement, as she braced to stop its approach.
They continued for several more seconds, locking eyes and matching strength. Neither dared to break the grip and risk giving the opposing party a potential upper hand.
She began to lose more ground as the monster continued to push down on top of her.
She willed all she could to try to shove back, but she was outclassed. She glanced around, staring at its legs. They seemed open, so maybe if she was fast enough she could sweep it then pin it to the ground again.
To her surprise, the force pushing against her suddenly released, and the monster screamed and recoiled.
Something sharp had shoved into its ribcage.
Louise screamed triumphantly as she shoved forward, pinning the massive beast to the floor by its arms, and she wasted no time getting her knees on top of its legs as well.
It flailed wildly, claws just glancing the girl. Each scratch only felt like a small pebble was bouncing off of her skin. She managed to get behind it, trapping it in a headlock and wrapping her legs around its abdomen, holding down one of its arms.
She caught a jacketed figure walking up to the side of her vision.
It was the real Davis. She grinned.
âNgh⦠This is why⦠I say a little bit of cardio⦠wonât hurt!â
The monster struggled and screamed, attempting to stretch out its arms more to try to break free.
Davis walked behind and pulled his knife out of its chest, and stared at the disgusting imitation of himself.
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âCome on Davis, I canât hold it down all too long. Go for itâs throat, or heart, or whatever! Just make it quick!â
Davis nervously crouched down, reaching for the neck of the beast.
It yelped out again, but this time it wasnât a monstrous shriek. It was a cry of a girl.
âPlease, spare me! I donât want to do this!â
Davis was taken aback. The creature ceased struggling, and Louise looked angrily at him.
âHurry up, donât let it trick you!â
âHold on. What do you mean?â
âI donât attack humans. If I do, they seek me out for revenge. But here I had no choice. If I didnât hunt you, they would hunt me.â
âWhoâs they? What do you mean?â
âDavis, quit this, seriously!â
Louise gripped the monster tighter, pushing down harder. It winced more.
âI want to listen to it. I didnât know that monsters could be intelligent enough to like, communicate with us.â
âWho cares, theyâre still a threat and need to be dealt with!â
âIâm not a threat! Iâm trying to live! I will be starved if I return!â
âWait, you mean youâre fed? Like somebodyâs pet?â
âIf I donât do what he wants, he starves me! And he threatens far worse!â
âThat⦠doesnât justify⦠your actions!â Louise yelled, as she gripped the monster tighter. It was now whining like a dog in pain. Its long limbs were limp, and wasnât even bothering to put up a fight.
Davis grimaced at the sight.
âLouise⦠Iâm sorry but this isnât right!â
He put his knife in his pocket, staring pathetically at the creature.
âDavis, you absolute MORON!â Louise screamed. It caused his heart to skip a beat, hearing her genuinely angry.
Her grip loosened at the shock of betrayal. The cryptid, seeing this opportunity, broke free from her grip.
As it ran to the back of the alley, it shrank its limbs back to human proportions.
It re-took Davisâs form, staring pathetically at the two.
Louise glared daggers back at it. âLook, youâre lucky my friend here decided to spare you. But if you ever try anything again, Iâm going to make you pay big time. Far worse than not eating anything. Iâll cut your stomach right out!â
It nodded.
âI donât want to starve though⦠How can I eat without him?â
She turned her head away dismissively.
âMaybe you can beg your master for some scraps of food if finding a wild deer is so hard, huh?â
âDeer⦠There is no more prey to eat. I will starve in days.â
Davis shuffled forward, wallet in hand. He handed it a $20 bill.
âLouise, did you eat with it at that burger place, right?â
Louise nodded.
He turned back to the monster.
âJust when youâre too hungry, go to that place, and hand them this, and ask for food. Do you understand? Just, copy how Louise ordered. Iâm sure youâre smart enough to figure it out.â
It nodded. It turned around to the alley wall, and climbed up it like some kind of insect, disappearing onto the rooftops.
Davis sighed in relief, and felt something smack him from behind the head. He winced in pain, rubbing the spot that was whacked.
âDavis, did you want to get us both killed or something?â
He turned around, and Louise looked absolutely furious. He shrunk back.
âItâ¦â He put his fist against his mouth. âIt felt wrong torturing it like that.â
âOh, just because it speaks, that means you should feel bad? Would you have said the same thing if the wendigo started begging for mercy?â
âItâs not just speech, itâs like⦠intelligent! Itâs creepy that it can shapeshift but like, if it can act and behave like us, and if itâs being forced to go after humans, then we canât just kill it, right?â
âOh let me think, YES. For all we know, you just let some shapeshifting monster run out to go kill some more people, and get PAINâs attention. This was an assured win and you just botched it all.â
âExcuse meâ¦â
They turned to find the monster, still imitating Davis, had returned.
âI need to return this.â It walked forward, handing Davis his phone back. He was somewhat surprised, but surprise changed to joy.
âThank you!â
It scurried to the roofs once more.
He turned back to Louise.
âSo why was it nice enough to return this to me after I took it? Itâs desperate, and needs our help too.â
âOr itâs building fake trust with the only two who can kill it. Iâm done here.â She grabbed her backpack, and stormed out of the alleyway. He groaned to himself, feeling the pangs of anxiety in his stomach once again.
----------------------------------------
The two had returned to their respective homes, and Davis was lying down on his couch. He still had an ache of guilt in his stomach, and wasnât feeling up to do anything for the rest of the day.
He took deep breaths, and tried to reaffirm himself that what he did was right.
His phone buzzed. It was a text message from Louise. He stared at it for a few seconds, heart racing about what it said.
Iâm sorry for hitting you and yelling at you Davis. Youâre my friend, and I should have trusted your instincts. If youâre right, maybe we can find that cryptid again and ask more questions, like who its owner is, and maybe that could lead to more discoveries.
Another one buzzed in.
Thatâs at least like, a best case scenario. But donât think Iâm entirely fine with this. I wanna do whatever it takes to keep our town safe. If I even get a hint of that shapeshifter causing trouble, Iâm going to break itâs neck.
The image of the monster taking his own shape, with its neck broken, sent shivers down his spine .
It was intelligent, it could communicate.
He never expected any of these monsters to be innocent, hoping to live peacefully with humans, but he could only hope this was one of the few exceptions.