Advertisement
Not a member of Pastebin yet?
Sign Up,
it unlocks many cool features!
- On the night before Homecoming Sunday at the Grace Baptist Church, the Reverend
- Lester Lowe has a terrible dream from which he awakes, trembling, bathed in sweat,
- staring at the narrow windows of the parsonage. Through them, across the road, he
- can see his church. Moonlight falls through the parsonage's bedroom windows in
- still silver beams, and for one moment he fully expects to see the werewolf the old
- codgers have all been whispering about. Then he closes his eyes, begging for
- forgiveness for his superstitious lapse, finishing his prayer by whispering the
- "For Jesus' sake, amen" - so his mother taught him to end all his prayers.
- Ah, but the dream . . .
- In his dream it was tomorrow and he had been preaching the Homecoming Sermon. The
- church is always filled on Homecoming Sunday (only the oldest of the old codgers
- still call it Old Home Sunday now) , and instead of looking out on pews half or
- wholly empty as he does on most Sundays, every bench is full.
- In his dream he has been preaching with a fire and a force that he rarely attains
- in reality (he tends to drone, which may be one reason that Grace Baptist's
- attendance has fallen off so drastically in the last ten years or so) . This morning
- his tongue seems to have been touched with the Pentecostal Fire, and he realizes
- that he is preaching the greatest sermon of his life, and its subject is this: THE
- BEAST WALKS AMONG US. Over and over he hammers at the point, vaguely aware that his
- voice has grown roughly strong, that his words have attained an almost poetic
- rhythm .
- The Beast, he tells them, is everywhere. The Great Satan, he tells them, can be
- anywhere. At a high school dance. Buying a deck of Marlboros and a Bic butane
- lighter down at the Trading Post. Standing in front of Brighton's Drug, eating a
- Slim Jim, and waiting for the 4:40 Greyhound from Bangor to pull in. The Beast
- might be sitting next to you at a band concert or having a piece of pie at the Chat
- 'n Chew on Main Street. The Beast, he tells them, his voice dropping to a whisper
- that throbs, and no eye wanders. He has them in thrall. Watch for the Beast, for he
- may smile and say he is your neighbor, but oh my brethren, his teeth are sharp and
- you may mark the uneasy way in which his eyes roll. He is the Beast, and he is
- here, now, in Tarker's Mills. He
- But here he breaks off, his eloguence gone, because something terrible is happening
- out there in his sunny church. His congregation is beginning to change, and he
- realizes with horror that they are turning into werewolves, all of them, all three
- hundred of them: Victor Bowie, the head selectman, usually so white and fat and
- pudgy ... his skin is turning brown, roughening, darkening with hair! Violet
- MacKenzie, who teaches piano ... her narrow spinster's body is filling out, her
- thin nose flattening and splaying! The fat science teacher, Elbert Freeman, seems
- to be growing fatter, his shiny blue suit is splitting, clocksprings of hair are
- bursting out like the stuffing from an old sofa! His fat lips split back like
- bladders to reveal teeth the size of piano keys!
- The Beast, the Rev. Lowe tries to say in his dreams, but the words fail him and he
- stumbles back from the pulpit in horror as Cal Blodwin, the Grace Baptist's head
- deacon, shambles down the center aisle, snarling, money spilling from the silver
- collection plate, his head cocked to one side. Violet MacKenzie leaps on him and
- they roll in the aisle together, biting and shrieking in voices which are almost
- human .
- And now the others join in and the sound is like the zoo at feeding-time, and this
- time the Rev. Lowe screams it out, in a kind of ecstasy: "The Beast! The Beast is
- everywhere! Everywhere! Every-" But his voice is no longer his voice; it has become
- an inarticulate snarling sound, and when he looks down, he sees the hands
- protruding from the sleeves of his good black suitcoat have become snaggled paws.
- And then he awakes.
- Only a dream, he thinks, lying back down again. Only a dream, thank God.
- But when he opens the church doors that morning, the morning of Homecoming Sunday,
- the morning after the full moon, it is no dream he sees; it is the gutted body of
- Clyde Corliss, who has done janitorial work for years, hanging face-down over the
- pulpet . His push-broom leans close by.
- None of this is a dream; the Rev. Lowe only wishes it could be. He opens his mouth,
- hitches in a great, gasping breath, and begins to scream.
- Spring has come back again-and this year, the Beast has come with it.
- May
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement