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Tuesday, January 25, 2022

January Vignette - "Wolf Moon" by Linda Mooney

This year, every month I'll be posting a little vignette (sci-fi, paranormal, or fantasy-based) involving the moon for that month.


Here's my January vignette entitled "Wolf Moon"

* * *

January, the Wolf Moon 

            “I heard some people say it’s called a Wolf Moon,” Arlene told him. She looked up at the bright, almost too shiny orb hanging in the night sky. “I guess that means it’s meant for wolves.”

            “I heard that, too, but it’s all hogwash,” Derris grumbled. “Hurry up before someone sees us!”

            She stepped gingerly through the frosty grass. Sometimes it crunched under her feet. She whimpered as a shard of ice pierced the thin soles of her shoes and stabbed her toes. She stopped to pull it out.

            “Are you all right?” He came back to check on her.

            “The grass hurts,” she admitted. “And I’m cold. When can we change?”

            “Not until we’ve had our fill. You know that,” he gently admonished her.

            “It’s been so long since we’ve—”

            “Shhh. We’re almost there.”

            “How much farther do we have to go?”

            “Not far. I promise.” Lifting her face, he noticed the frozen tears glistening on her cheeks. He gently brushed them away before kissing her. His lips were amazingly warm, considering the weather. “Come on.”

            They continued to make their way through the field, avoiding the road or the cement walkway. She remembered the one time she tried to walk on them instead of the dead grass. She’d fallen and nearly hurt herself badly on the invisible layer of ice covering the street. And more than once they’d witnessed vehicles slipping and crashing into each other, the light poles, signs, and sometimes into people when the idiots tried to drive on the slickness.

            “Why do you think it’s called a Wolf Moon?” she asked. Hopefully their conversation would take her mind off of how miserable she felt. She blew on her fingers, but she was barely able to feel her warm breath on them.

            “Something to do with the Indians. I think they noticed wolves gathering to howl at it.”

            “Maybe they howled because they were cold.” Her teeth were starting to chatter. Shoving her hands under her armpits, Arlene struggled to follow her mate as the wind picked up. “Think it’s going to snow tonight?”

            She saw him check the sky. “I doubt it. There’s no clouds. Without any clouds to hold in the heat, it’s going to get colder. Come on, honey.” He looped an arm through hers as they continued. “It’s just ahead. I can see the place now.”

            “Are you sure there’ll be something there to eat?” It was becoming difficult to talk. Her lips were numb, and she’d lost all feeling in her feet.

“Yes. They’ll have something to eat. They always do,” Derris promised. His words were slightly slurred, which told her that he was also succumbing to the freezing temperature.

“And after we eat, we’ll be able to—”

“Yes, sweetheart.”

The world was lit with a bright milky-gray glow from the full moon. With snow covering almost everything until nothing remained distinctive under its blanket, it was impossible for her to tell one lump from another.

However, one massive structure loomed ahead. Arlene gave another little whimper, this time of relief. Derris led her straight to the rear of the building where the trash cans were located. Grabbing the lid of the first one, he threw it open and leaned over to take a deep breath. “This one’s full, and it smells delicious.” He tilted the can until it fell onto the ground, spilling its contents.

He was right. The smell of food filled the frigid air, beckoning them with its promise of a hearty meal. Arlene dropped to her knees as Derris shredded the plastic bags. Lumps of mashed potatoes, a few green beans, and beef bones with some meat still attached slid out onto the snow.

“It’s a feast!”

“Start eating,” he ordered her. “I’ll look for more.”

There was more. A bite of egg and toast. Some French fries. The remains of a salad with bacon bits adhered to the lettuce. And two intact biscuits. Half a slice of cherry pie. Most of everything was peppered with coffee grounds, but they were able to brush off the majority of it.

Someone hadn’t eaten every bit of chicken off their order of wings. There were dinner rolls with a single set of teeth marks on them, a little boiled cabbage, some macaroni and cheese, and—

“Look!” Derris held it out to her. Arlene gaped at the two untouched donuts.

“Why would they throw out perfectly good food?” she asked around a mouthful.

“Stuff like donuts grow stale after a while,” he told her. “Nobody wants stale donuts.”

“Oh, but they’re so good!” she argued. “Even cold and hard,” she added, and giggled.

They continued to eat, using the light of the moon and their sense of smell to find the stuff that was still edible, even if it was a single piece of broccoli, a tidbit of a strawberry, or half a slice of cantaloupe.

They gorged themselves, taking advantage of the contents of all three trash cans. When they were too full to eat any more, they stretched out on the hard packed ground, unable to move. Arlene gazed up at the beautiful moon, when she felt Derris’s hand reach out and take hers, giving it a squeeze.

“Happy now?” he whispered.

“I feel like that moon.”

“Stuffed?”

She tried to laugh, but her stomach was too bloated. “I feel like howling at it myself.”

“Why?”

“Because I’m happy. Because now we can—”

A sound coming from the side of the building interrupted them. Derris hissed in her ear, “Hurry! Change!”

She was already ahead of him, shedding her shoes and ragged clothes. He was waiting for her behind the last overturned trash can when the man came outside, brandishing a flashlight and a baseball bat.

“Scott? What is it, Scott?” A woman appeared in the open doorway.

The light played over Derris and Arlene, revealing their locations. They took off, waddling as fast as they could from the roadside restaurant.

“It’s just a couple of damn raccoons,” the man told her. “They got into the trash cans and made a huge mess out here. Damn, if I can figure out how they’re able to knock over those heavy cans.”

“Well, leave it for now. It’s too cold out to do anything about it tonight,” the woman snapped. “Get back in here before you catch your death!”

Eventually, the man turned off the flashlight and went back inside the building. The last thing they heard was him muttering, “I’m gonna hafta put a fence or something around those cans, or those damn animals will be back.”

They waited for the door to close before emerging from their hiding place. Nuzzling her cheek with his snout, Derris motioned for her to follow him.

They left their clothes behind. There was no need to go back and retrieve them. Even if they did, they had no way to carry them. Not in their present shape. But it didn’t matter. They could always find plenty of cast-off clothing people discarded. When they grew hungry again, and could no longer keep their alternate shapes, it wouldn’t be hard to find more.

Derris paused beside a tree and waited for her to catch up. “Warm enough now?” he teased.

She shook the ice crystals from her thick fur. “Mm-hmm, and full as a tick. Where are we going to spend the night?”

“I was thinking about that storage shed about a quarter mile down the road. There’s a little tunnel underneath the flooring that we can use to get inside. We’ll be all toasty and out of the weather. How’s that sound?”

“Will we be able to see the Wolf Moon from inside?” She glanced up to stare at the orb’s intense brightness.

“The shed has windows. I’m pretty sure we can. Come on.”

He turned to lead the way when she stopped him. “Derris?”

“What, honey?”

“Have I told you lately how much I love you?”

He smiled. The moonlight reflected off his mask, making his dark eyes shine. “Tell me again when we curl up to sleep. I want it to be the last thing I hear.”

Arlene nodded and kissed his mouth. And together the two raccoons hurried along the side of the road to find their resting place for the night.

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