Stephen Jones Graham

Mongrels


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looking at me anymore, but out the window. The eye I could see on my side, it was his cloudy one.

      I think it was the one he was looking with.

      Neither Libby nor Darren said anything, but Libby did accidentally look out the window, like just for a peek. Just to be sure.

      Then she set her mouth into a grim line, pulled her face back to the living room.

      I was going to be late for school and it didn’t matter.

      “Come on,” she said, taking my hand, and on the way past Grandpa I brushed my hand on the sleeve of his shirt, like to tell him it was okay, I think. That it was a good story. That I’d liked it. That he could keep telling me these stories forever, if he wanted. I would always listen. I would always believe.

      He flinched away from my hand, looked around for where he was.

      “Here, old man,” Darren said, handing a strawberry wine cooler across to him, and I climbed into my side of Libby’s El Camino, the one she had from finally breaking up with Red, and halfway to school I started crying, and I couldn’t figure out why.

      Libby switched hands on the wheel, pulled me over to her.

      “Don’t think about it,” she said. “I don’t even know how he really got that scar. It was before we were all born.”

      “Because Grandma was there,” I said.

      Just like my mom, Grandma had died the day she gave birth. It was like a curse in our family.

      “Because Grandma was there,” Libby said. “Next time he tells that stupid story, the tick won’t even be on the back of his arm anymore. It’ll have been that old cut up on his eyebrow, and the doctor heated his pocketknife up, not a coat hanger. One time when he told it to us it was that one scar that pulls beside his mouth.”

      This is the way werewolf stories go.

      Never any proof. Just a story that keeps changing, like it’s twisting back on itself, biting its own stomach to chew the poison out.

      The next week we found Grandpa out in the pasture without any clothes. His knees were bloody, not scabbing over yet, and the heels of his hands were scraped raw, and his fingertips were chewed by the gravel and the thorns. He was staring at us but he wasn’t seeing us, even with his good eye.

      Darren and me got to him first. I was riding on Darren’s back. He was running everywhere at once, and there were tears coming back on the side of his face.

      He let me down slow when we saw Grandpa.

      “He’s not dead,” I said, to make it true.

      It worked.

      Grandpa’s back lifted and fell with his next wheezy breath.

      Darren took two steps away and slung his bottle out as hard as he could, the pale pink liquid tracing drippy circles for the first few feet, then nothing. Just a smell on the air like medicine.

      “How old you think he is?” Darren said to me.

      I looked up to him, down to Grandpa.

      “Fifty-five,” Darren said. “This is what happens.”

      Libby heard his bottle break into whatever it broke into, and traced it back to us. She ran over, her hands in a steeple over her mouth.

      “He thinks he’s shifted,” Darren told her, disgusted.

      “Help me!” Libby said, falling to her knees by her dad, trying to get his head into her lap, her long black hair shrouded over both of them.

      That was one day.

      I quit going to school for that week, and promised myself to keep Grandpa alive.

      The way I did it was with stories. By keeping him talking.

      “Tell me about Grandma,” I said one night after Darren had left, after Red had come and stood at the gate like a statue until Libby drifted out to him. She couldn’t help it.

      I was asking about Grandma because if he thought he was really shifting into a werewolf, then talking to him about it wasn’t going to make him any better.

      “‘Grandma,’” he said in his new halfway slur, then shook his head no, said, “she never ever got to be called ‘Momma,’ did she?”

      I wanted to take my question back. To start over.

      Grandpa breathed a deep important breath in, then out. He said, “You know werewolves, they mate for life, right? Like swans and gophers.”

      He pretty much only sat in his chair now. Used to when he smiled one side of his mouth, it meant something good was coming. Now it meant something bad had happened, Libby said.

      “Gophers?” I said.

      “You can smell it on them,” he said, snuffling his nose to show.

      I’d never seen a gopher. Just the mounds.

      “Grandma,” Grandpa said then, clearer. “You know when she first figured me out, what I was, she thought it meant I was married to the moon, like. That that was the only time I would go out howling.”

      I narrowed my eyes and he caught it, added, “That’s not how it works, little pup. Too short a leash. We’d starve like that. Anyway. I was married to her, wasn’t I?”

      A log in the fire popped sparks up the chimney. Darren called it an old-man fire. It was September.

      “Another thing about werewolves,” Grandpa said at last. “We age like dogs. You should know that too.”

      “Like dogs,” I repeated.

      “You can burn up your whole life early if you’re not careful. If you spend too much time out in the trees, running your dinner down.”

      I nodded. As long as he was talking, he wasn’t dead.

      “Grandma,” I said again, because that’s where we’d been, before the werewolves.

      Grandpa swallowed a lump, coughed it back up and spit it in his hand, rubbed it into the blanket on his lap.

      “There used to be a secret,” he said. “A way for them, for the wives, for them not to …”

      Not to die, I knew. Since Grandpa’d started living mostly in the living room, he’d decided to solve the family curse. It was what all the stolen library books by the couch were for. So he could find the old way for a human woman to live with a werewolf and not die from giving birth.

      His research was the big reason Libby stayed mostly in the kitchen. She said nothing he did was going to bring her mom back, was it? There wasn’t any big werewolf secret. Grandma had just died, end of story.

      Darren thought Grandpa’s books were funny. They were all strange stories, amazing facts.

      “We buried her in the church graveyard,” Grandpa said then, on some different part of the Grandma-story running in his head. “And they—they dug her up, little pup. They dug her up and they—they—”

      Instead of finishing, he lurched forward so I had to push back to keep him from spilling out of his chair. I didn’t know if I could get him back into it.

      By the time he looked up, he’d forgot what he’d been saying.

      He’d told it to me before, though, when Libby wasn’t around to stop him.

      It was another werewolf story.

      After Grandma had died giving birth, a rival pack had dug her up as a message to him. It was about territory.

      Grandpa had taken the message back to them on the end of a shovel, and then used that shovel on them.

      This had all been his territory back then, he usually said, to end that story out. His territory as far as he could see, as much as he could fight for. Some days he’d claim all