Stephen King “Cycle of the Werewolf”

notepad, is this sentence:

Why don’t you kill yourself?

The Rev. Lowe puts a hand to his forehead-it trembles slightly. With the other hand

he crumples the sheet of paper up and puts it in the large glass ashtray in the

center of the table (Rev. Lowe does all of his counselling in the parlor, and some

of his troubled parishoners smoke). He takes a book of matches from his Saturday

afternoon “at home” sweater and lights the note, as he has lit the others. He

watches it burn.

Lowe’s knowledge of what he is has come in two distinct stages: Following his

nightmare in May, the dream in which everyone in the Old Home Sunday congregation

turned into a werewolf, and following his terrible discovery of Clyde Corliss’s

gutted body, he has begun to realize that something is … well, wrong with him. He

knows no other way to put it. Something wrong. But he also knows that on some

mornings, usually during the period when the moon is full, he awakes feeling

amazingly good, amazingly well, amazingly strong. This feeling ebbs with the moon,

and then grows again with the next moon.

Following the dream and Corliss’s death, he has been forced to acknowledge other

things, which he had, up until then, been able to ignore. Clothes that are muddy

and torn. Scratches and bruises he cannot account for (but since they never hurt or

ache, as ordinary scratches and bruises do, they have been easy to dismiss, to

simply … not think about). He has even been able to ignore the traces of blood he

has sometimes found on his hands … and lips.

Then, on July 5th, the second stage. Simply described: he had awakened blind in one

eye. As with the cuts and scratches, there had been no pain; simply a gored,

blasted socket where his left eye had been. At that point the knowledge had become

too great for denial: he is the werewolf; he is the Beast.

For the last three days he has felt familiar sensations: a great restlessness, an

impatience that is almost joyful, a sense of tension in his body. It is coming

again-the change is almost here again. Tonight the moon will rise full, and the

hunters will be out with their dogs. Well, no matter. He is smarter than they give

him credit for. They speak of a man-wolf, but think only in terms of the wolf, not

the man. They can drive in their pickups, and he can drive in his small Volare

sedan. And this afternoon he will drive down Portland way, he thinks, and stay at

some motel on the outskirts of town. And if the change comes, there will be no

hunters, no dogs. They are not the ones who frighten him.

Why don’t you kill yourself?

The first note came early this month. It said simply:

I know who you are.

The second said:

If you are a man of God, get out of town. Go someplace where there are animals for

you to kill but no people.

The third said:

End it.

That was all; just End it. And now

Why don’t you kill yourself?

Because I don’t want to, the Rev. Lowe thinks petulantly. This whatever it is – is

nothing I asked for. I wasn’t bitten by a wolf or cursed by a gypsy. It just …

happened. I picked some flowers for the vases in the church vestry one day last

November. Up by that pretty little cemetery on Sunshine Hill. I never saw such

flowers before … and they were dead before I could get back to town. They turned

black, every one. Perhaps that was when it started to happen. No reason to think

so, exactly … but I do. And I won’t kill myself. They are the animals, not me.

Who is writing the notes?

He doesn’t know. The attack on Marty Coslaw has not been reported in the weekly

Tarker’s Mills newspapers, and he prides himself on not listening to gossip. Also,

as Marty did not know about Lowe until Halloween because their religious circles do

not touch, the Rev. Lowe does not know about Marty. And he has no memory of what he

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