4
Daleville was the closest small town. Jack got there shortly after the courthouse clock struck noon, and went into the True Value hardware store. One hand was stuffed into his pants
pocket, touching his depleted roll of bills.
“Help you, son?”
“Yes sir,” Jack said. “I want to buy a padlock.”
“Well, step over here and let’s us have a look. We’ve got
Yales, and Mosslers, and Lok-Tites, and you name it. What
kind of padlock you want?”
“A big one,” Jack said, looking at the clerk with his shad-
owed, somehow disquieting eyes. His face was gaunt but still persuasive in its odd beauty.
“A big one,” the clerk mused. “And what would you be
wanting it for, might I ask?”
“My dog,” Jack said steadily. A Story. Always they wanted
a Story. He had gotten this one ready on the way in from the shed where they had spent the last two nights. “I need it for my dog. I have to lock him up. He bites.”
5
The padlock he picked out cost ten dollars, leaving Jack with about ten dollars to his name. It hurt him to spend that much, and he almost went for a cheaper item . . . and then he had a
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memory of how Wolf had looked the night before, howling at
the moon with orange fire spilling from his eyes.
He paid the ten dollars.
He stuck out his thumb at every passing car as he hurried
back to the shed, but of course none of them stopped. Perhaps he looked too wild-eyed, too frantic. He certainly felt wild-eyed and frantic. The newspaper the hardware store clerk had let him look at promised sunset at six o’clock P.M. on the dot.
Moonrise was not listed, but Jack guessed seven, at the latest.
It was already one p.m., and he had no idea where he was going to put Wolf for the night.
You have to lock me up, Jack, Wolf had said. Have to lock me up good. Because if I get out, I’ll hurt anything I can run down and catch hold of. Even you, Jack. Even you. So you have to lock me up and keep me locked up, no matter what I do or what I say. Three days, Jack, until the moon starts to get thin again. Three days . . . even four, if you’re not completely sure.
Yes, but where? It had to be someplace away from people,
so no one would hear Wolf if— when, he amended reluctantly—he began to howl. And it had to be someplace a lot
stronger than the shed they had been staying in. If Jack used his fine new ten-dollar padlock on the door of that place, Wolf would bust right out through the back.
Where?
He didn’t know, but he knew he had only six hours to find
a place . . . maybe less.
Jack began to hurry along even faster.
6
They had passed several empty houses to come this far, had
even spent the night in one, and Jack watched all the way
back from Daleville for the signs of lack of occupancy: for blank uncovered windows and FOR SALE signs, for grass
grown as high as the second porch step and the sense of lifelessness common to empty houses. It was not that he hoped
he could lock Wolf into some farmer’s bedroom for the three days of his Change. Wolf would be able to knock down the
door of the shed. But one farmhouse had a root cellar; that would have worked.
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A stout oaken door set into a grassy mound like a door in a fairy tale, and behind it a room without walls or ceiling—an underground room, a cave no creature could dig its way out of in less than a month. The cellar would have held Wolf, and the earthen floor and walls would have kept him from injuring
himself.
But the empty farmhouse, and the root cellar, must have
been at least thirty or forty miles behind them. They would never make it back there in the time remaining before moon-rise. And would Wolf still be willing to run forty miles, especially for the purpose of putting himself in a foodless solitary confinement, so close to the time of his Change?
Suppose, in fact, that too much time had passed. Suppose
that Wolf had come too close to the edge and would refuse
any sort of imprisonment? What if that capering, greedy un-
derside of his character had climbed up out of the pit and was beginning to look around this odd new world, wondering
where the food was hiding? The big padlock threatening to rip the seams out of Jack’s pocket would be useless.
He could turn around, Jack realized. He could walk back to
Daleville and keep on going. In a day or two he’d be nearly to Lapel or Cicero, and maybe he would work an afternoon at a
feed store or get in some hours as a farmhand, make a few
dollars or scrounge a meal or two, and then push all the way to the Illinois border in the next few days. Illinois would be easy, Jack thought—he didn’t know how he was going to do
this, exactly, but he was pretty sure he could get to Springfield and the Thayer School only a day or two after he made it into Illinois.
And, Jack puzzled as he hesitated a quarter-mile down the
road from the shed, how would he explain Wolf to Richard
Sloat? His old buddy Richard, in his round glasses and ties and laced cordovans? Richard Sloat was thoroughly rational
and, though very intelligent, hard-headed. If you couldn’t see it, it probably didn’t exist. Richard had never been interested in fairy tales as a child; he had remained unexcited by Disney films about fairy godmothers who turned pumpkins into
coaches, about wicked queens who owned speaking mirrors.
Such conceits were too absurd to snare Richard’s six-year-old (or eight-year-old, or ten-year-old) fancy—unlike, say, a photograph of an electron microscope. Richard’s enthusiasm had
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embraced Rubik’s Cube, which he could solve in less than
ninety seconds, but Jack did not think it would go so far as to accept a six-foot-five, sixteen-year-old werewolf.
For a moment Jack twisted helplessly on the road—for a
moment he almost thought that he would be able to leave
Wolf behind and get on with his journey toward Richard and
then the Talisman.
What if I’m the herd? he asked himself silently. And what he thought of was Wolf scrambling down the bank after his
poor terrified animals, throwing himself into the water to rescue them.
7
The shed was empty. As soon as Jack saw the door leaning
open he knew that Wolf had taken himself off somewhere, but he scrambled down the side of the gully and picked his way
through the trash almost in disbelief. Wolf could not have
gone farther than a dozen feet by himself, yet he had done so.
“I’m back,” Jack called. “Hey, Wolf? I got the lock.” He knew he was talking to himself, and a glance into the shed confirmed this. His pack lay on a little wooden bench; a stack of pulpy magazines dated 1973 stood beside it. In one corner of the windowless wooden shed odd lengths of deadwood had
been carelessly heaped, as if someone had once half-heartedly made a stab at squirreling away firewood. Otherwise the shed was bare. Jack turned around from the gaping door and
looked helplessly up the banks of the gully.
Old tires scattered here and there among the weeds, a bun-
dle of faded and rotting political pamphlets still bearing the name LUGAR, one dented blue-and-white Connecticut license
plate, beer-bottles with labels so faded they were white . . . no Wolf. Jack raised his hands to cup his mouth. “Hey, Wolf! I’m back!” He expected no reply, and got none. Wolf was gone.
“Shit,” Jack said, and put his hands on his hips. Conflicting emotions, exasperation and relief and anxiety, surged through him. Wolf had left in order to save Jack’s life—that had to be the meaning of his disappearance. As soon as Jack had set off for Daleville, his partner had skipped out. He had run away on those tireless legs and by now was miles away, waiting for the moon to come up. By now, Wolf could be anywhere.
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This realization was part of Jack’s anxiety. Wolf could
have taken himself into the woods visible at the end of the long field bordered by the gully, and in the woods gorged
himself on rabbits and fieldmice and whatever else might live there, moles and badgers and the whole cast of The Wind in the Willows. Which would have been dandy. But Wolf just might sniff out the livestock, wherever it was, and put himself in real danger. He might also, Jack realized, sniff out the farmer and his family. Or, even worse, Wolf might have