Stephen King “Cycle of the Werewolf”

through to the other side. A Currier and Ives painting falls onto its head, skates

down the thick pelt of its back and shatters as the werewolf turns. Blood is

pouring down the savage, hairy mask of its face, and its green eye seems rolling

and confused. It staggers toward Marty, growling, its claw-hands opening and

closing, its snapping jaws cutting off wads of blood-streaked foam. Marty holds the

gun in both hands, as a small child holds his drinking cup.

He waits, waits … and as the werewolf lunges again, he fires. Magically, the

beast’s other eye

blows out like a candle in a stormwind! It screams again and

staggers, now blind, toward the window. The blizzard riffles the curtains and

twists them around its head

– Al can see flowers of blood begin to bloom on the

white cloth-as, on the TV, the big lighted ball begins to descend its pole.

The werewolf collapses to its knees as Marty’s dad, wildeyed and dressed in bright

yellow pajamas, dashes into the room. The .45 Magnum is still in Al’s lap. He has

never so much as raised it.

Now the beast collapses … shudders once … and dies.

Mr. Coslaw stares at it, open-mouthed.

Marty turnes to Uncle Al, the smoking gun in his hands. His face looks tired …

but at peace.

“Happy New Year, Uncle Al,” he says, “it’s dead. The Beast is dead.” And then he

begins to weep.

On the floor, under the mesh of Mrs. Coslaw’s best white curtains, the werewolf has

begun to change. The hair which has shagged its face and body seems to be pulling

in somehow. The lips, drawn back in a snarl of pain and fury, relax and cover the

shrinking teeth. The claws melt magically away to fingernails … fingernails that

have been almost pathetically gnawed and bitten.

The Reverend Lester Lowe lies there, wrapped in a bloody shroud of curtain, snow

blowing around him in random patterns.

Uncle Al goes to Marty and comforts him as Marty’s dad gawks down at the naked body

on the floor and as Marty’s mother, clutching the neck of her robe, creeps into the

room. Al hugs Marty tight, tight, tight.

“You done good, kid,” he whispers. “I love you.”

Outside, the wind howls and screams against the snow-filled sky, and in Tarker’s

Mills, the first minute of the new year becomes history.

Afterward

Any dedicated moon-watcher will know that, regardless of the year, I have taken a

good many liberties with the lunar cycle-usually to take advantage of days

(Valentine’s, July 4th, etc.) which “mark” certain months in our minds. To those

readers who feel that I didn’t know any better, I assert that I did … but the

temptation was simply too great to resist.

Stephen King

August 4, 1983

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