Wolfentraum: One

Story by Aux Chiens on SoFurry

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Under the cloud-murk he moved towards it

until it shown above him, a sheer keep

of fortified gold.

_________ Beowulf, trans. Seamus Heaney

            Siegfried Stone wondered if history

would record his every move these few days he would be in Roanoke - unimportant

minutiae to try to comprehend the incomprehensible, as they did to Oswald in

Dallas - like his dinner, that early afternoon, at the expensive steakhouse across

from the big skyscraper.

            Perhaps that perky, friendly

waitress who was so attentive and sweet - they would interview her, in her

hushed Franklin County accent would she recall him, how nice he was, how

charming he was, the evil he was about to commit unthinkable with his manners,

his charm, but how it all made sense, that feeling she got she couldn't shake,

now it all made sense, oh Lord...

            On his plate was prime rib -

exceptional, but he'd never tell a soul, he was loathe to praise anything

except his family, his kind, himself - he took his knife in one hand, fork in

the other, and stabbed it to steady it before making the cut...

            ...a spurt of blood erupted from

the meat, lashing his face with liquid crimson.

            He blinked, offguard but

steady.

            By the kitchen he saw that the

waitress was staring at him, on her own face written the breathless, primal

arousal of Red Riding Hood face to face with - him. A big, bad wolf.

            They made eye contact - he

smiled at her, the blood a soft drip down into his curving lips, softly,

sinisterly, the only way he could smile, like how the Serpent smiled at Eve as

she bit into the fruit - she could only bear it for a moment before she laughed

aloud, an explosive sound of feral, unguarded sexual excitement, her face went

red, with her own blood, and she turned away and ran into the kitchen,

humiliated.

            He chuckled to himself.

            What a charming little thing.

            He'd spare her.

            His dinner was taken alone,

the steakhouse - Frankie Rowland's, supposed to be the finest establishment in

this wretched valley town - suitably hushed, the people were nothing like the

pulsing, writhing grotesquerie that he had been subjected to last night.

            The people here might remember

him - but the people there most definitely would.

            Those that lived, survived -

they would recollect how they never saw it coming, no hint, no clue, that their blood would be splattered on his

face like the steak on his plate, running down his claws, slathering his teeth.

The terrible new world they were forced to live in was just as much of a shock

and a horror as seeing what he really was, what his family was...all the time

they had to prepare, all those times they never listened to his family that one

day there would come a reckoning, and so still the surprise would be fresh, the

terror eternal.

            The waitress did not return to

give him another glass of cabernet, and Siegfried had to switch to water with

the carafe she had left on the table - he noted with another small chuckle that

he had freaked her out too hard, made things entirely too awkward...it was time

to go.

            He wiped his face off with his

napkin, finished his prime rib, rose, donned his long jacket, threw some cash

onto the table so the waitress could keep her change for the trouble - a nod to

the host at the front of the restaurant and a discreet Thank you, have a good day and he was gone, out into the street

            Now he could saunter, looking

about him, out the door and to his right, at the skyward-sweeping lines and

shapes of the bank tower now above him, reaching desperately yet futilely

toward Heaven - he would contemplate his place in this Commonwealth, in this

country, in this universe.

            They called the structure that

he beheld by many names since it had been here very long, a quarter-century at

best: Dominion Tower, First Union Building, Wachovia Tower...soon it would change

again. But the name one uses for it is very telling: the building has changed hands so many times that one can know

the age of the person, when they moved to Roanoke, how well they know their own

city, all by what they call this place. The name of the

building ultimately gives an identity not to it, but rather he or she who knows it by whatever name they call it,

and details the history of themselves in the city, how well they know they know

Roanoke and how well Roanoke knows them. The neon signage at the top of the

structure is easily replaceable - but the memory of what it was, what it used

to be, stays forever. 

            Why had Siegfried chosen this

place, this Roanoke? Were there not other places - bigger, better, more

exciting places - to reveal himself to the world? Places where he would get

more attention, where he would have more impact?

            Perhaps it was because that,

for all his worldliness, for everything that an education at Mr. Jefferson's

College in Charlottesville and the deep-pocketed wealth of centuries of

exploitation and despoilment could give him - he still could not get out of his

head, still, the impression of

Roanoke from when he was a boy, before the darkness of his destiny occluded

what little innocent spirit he was born with.

            He was so small, and Roanoke

so large - he had seen this building, which

he would always know as the Dominion Tower, and it had impressed him,

impressed him deeply and permanently, this magnificent stone behemoth aching

toward the sky...

            The Virginian late October - a

week, exactly, before Álfablót - came unexpectedly cold even for an afternoon,

and Siegfried pulled his coat closer to him, putting his chin down to his neck

but his eyes ahead, taking in the city that was his first taste of

civilization.

            So it would be here - this

little town that fitfully dreamed of being a city, called Roanoke - it would be

here, it would be where it all began.

            Cars came by him, pedestrians

on the other side of the street, unaware of him, his presence. Would they

notice him? Would they recognize him - in the future?

            He lifted his head to the

street, to the pure Autumn sunlight that came crystalline over the buildings.

            He blinked as the phrase came

back to him: in the future.    What future, anyway? The constant reassurance

was that it was his, his family's...his kind's.

            But was it?

            Siegfried, his family, those

like him, were discerning creatures that saw white color on the flesh but no

special gift, no special privilege - outside of his own kind he was far more

comfortable around those that shared his lack of melanin, diversity and

multiculturalism was an acquired taste he could not savor, and so in some

quarters he would be called racist and

still others supremacist. The former

was a mere quibble, a preference - the latter was a plain fact.

            Yet it was the feeling of

supremacy not over any one group, but against a whole swathe of humanity that

transcended all of its polychrome, who were not like him - he, who had wolf's blood run deep in his veins.

            Empathy for humans - white,

brown, yellow - was a country forever undiscovered for him and his people.

Humans had done them terrible wrongs in the past - persecuted, tied to stakes

and burnt alive, tortured in ad hoc courts

of injustice across the European continent...the memory ran long. How could it

not? So like the first time you see a skyscraper, so like the flames of the

bonfires his ancestors in agony writhed in, it was seared into him forever.

Every human being would have his amercement unrelenting and terrible in the new

order he, Siegfried, hoped one day soon to create. For - across the sea in the

New World some of them, a bare few, had escaped, carrying with them the old

customs and the old ways and hoping, one day, that ever eluded them, to live in

peace, to be pack, family, and clan, without the prying eyes and intangible

demands of what Europe once was.

            America - liberty, freedom, democracy: concepts so noisome and

awful it was as though a door had shut in Hell, and from the upthrown infernal

brimstone came forth the whole of this nation.

            All this was illusion. There

was no justice, no democracy, no liberty - only the brutal way of might making

right, only the shedding of blood to acquit guilt, real or imagined...only

strength, and strength alone, to rule and to reign.

            And if this was the philosophy

of the Fascist then - so be it. Not all that long ago did relations of his

reveal themselves as the Werwolf for

Hitler, whose first name, Adolf, had

etymological roots in people like Siegfried, wolf-of-the-land - great leader as he was, he still remained an

Austrian mountebank, the spawn of peasants, an industrious murderer, little

more. Could he ever fathom the secrets that Himmler dare tried to stir up? Of

course not - he was a puny human, they all were. And while Siegfried was born

long after the Werwolf fought and

died for that imbecile with the pencil moustache - the disgrace would be ever

fresh.

            Taking in a breath - the asphalt,

exhaust from the passing cars admixed with the the airish October breeze - he

took the time to let his face twist in an unreserved sneer, his favorite

expression.

            His was the race of both

Beowulf and Sigurd, for whom he was named, though the humans who knew the old

stories would be too dim to know, to understand that - they would deny it, they

would deny him, as a physical

impossibility. And it angered him - his whole existence was endless fury,

bottomless anger.

            This rage that Siegfried felt

in the strength of his denial was the rage of something far greater than he

could comprehend and so he refused to, he refused to question his beliefs, he

refused to question the darkness that poured out of the one blind eye of Odin,

straight into his soul. All he saw was his own suffering, the heaviness of an

imaginary crown across his brow, laurels of patriarchy laid daintily over his

ears to rule over others.

            For the future - as so the

past, as so the present - belonged not to the mongrel wasteland that America

had become, the lowing cattle with their mindless babble in their meaningless

quotidian existence, but to him, what

little was left of his tribe, the tiny minority scattered throughout the world

that, as integrated as they all may now be, would surely still rally to his

flag and assert their true destiny as masters over mankind.

            The past is something one

cannot touch, nor smell, or even, truly see - only in the lonely solipsistic

theatre of the mind does it play, and there, like a daydream, it may as well be

a fantasy.

            And so it was, in the present,

that Siegfried Stone was the very last hope of the lycanthropic people, the

Werewolves - those who had been furry and fanged and were written of in crushed

awe and wonder by the Nordic bards, crossed the sea

            It would not be long at all,

his father had warned him in growing panic before he finally died, before the

mindless hatred for his species would reappear in the form of the demand for a

cleaner and more homogenous demographic hygiene...an overly verbose way of saying

they would be exterminated, the final spasm against them.

            But - not unless he struck

first.

            He longed to do it, but the

moment was not right - he had longed to do it last night at the Hotel Roanoke, he

longed to take that fool Lightfoot who was blissfully unaware of the monstrous

perversity that pulsed just beneath the surface of the town his ancestors had

stolen and impale him on talons and teeth of justice...but then, even then, the  moment was not right then either. He must be

careful, he could not be showy - he would chose his victims one by one, he

would let the body count grow over a few days' time...and only when the hour was

correct, would he lure those who would piece the puzzle together. Then could

the revolution begin.

            Still - still how he longed to

do it now.

            He adored the exquisite pain

that would come when he directed his hand to turn - the nails would start to

grow out, longer, sharper, but he would have to stop, he would bid the muscles

in his hand to cease even as they seized, he would have to file them back to

looking normal again.

            How badly he wanted them to

stay the way they were becoming - how badly he wanted to go further, deadlier,

and let one hand, then the other, accomplish their needed task...and kill.

            His heart raced at the thought

  • the fantasy of bloodshed.

            Yet who would be first? Who,

the first thrall to swing from his personal branch of Yggdrasill, choked on the

hangman's rope of his claws?

            He stopped - he had been

walking away from the friendly corners of the restaurants and shops, passing by

an ugly parking lot, an uglier Greyhound terminal, neither of which had

benefitted from the gentrification that was slowly but surely polishing and

bettering this town. On the other side of the street was a squat brick building

that was some sort of outreach center for junkies...

            ...who often, he had heard

hinted by those who'd lived here, like to sleep in the parking garage near the

Greyhound station.

            It was perfect - a perfect way

to begin.

            Siegfried had to do it. What

were they always saving in     Germany

about Destiny - Providence?

            It was time.

            He dashed across the street,

ducking into the parking garage, his nose wrinkling at the unseemly smells of

gasoline, concrete, the aching odor that buildings like it seemed to give off

after so many years.

            The parking garage was a dim

concrete cavern strewn with orange-yellow lights, the roar of distant engines a

constant ambient din like a far-off cave-monster warning away intruders.

            Amidst the maze of cars and

columns, one floor and then the next, no one seemed to notice him - he was just

another person looking for where he'd left his vehicle.

            They would never guess he was

about to commit murder.

            He found his victim sitting in

the space between a pickup truck and a minivan, eyes picking up a liquid light

from being glazed with some kind of stupor.

            Siegfried approached his prey,

stalking it cautiously.             The man was lean and wiry - not much meat. He seemed to be in his late

thirty's - he was dirty but not filthy, an unruly but short head of sandy,

brownish-blonde hair with a full, tawny beard and moustache that seemed to have

been trimmed recently, flecked in places with streaks of grey. He was

prematurely aged - he had a great scar across his face from his nose to his left cheek, adding to the

overall affect of being rough and having been

roughed by life itself. He wore a grey shirt that was so faded one had to

squint to read it: Green Bay Packers--1998--Super

Bowl Champs. It had holes in parts that revealed a hairy tummy, the hair the

same color as his beard - workaday jeans and ugly, unfashionable shoes

completed the look of a neglected hobo.            But he was the refuse of human society, he had been dumped here from

somewhere and he would be doomed to a nothingness and oblivion...no one would

even remember his name.

            How ironic, then, that his

fate would be so important: the first full step to the Werewolf's return at his

rightful perch.

            Now Siegfried came closer: "Hello,

friend."

            The man blinked in surprise

before letting out a loud guffaw. "Well hey there, stranger." The man

tilted his head back and grinned - he seemed to be drunk, completely out of it,

blissfully and luckily not in this world. "Why ye'd wanna say hey ta me, I

ain't nuthin special."

            "Oh, I dunno about that..."

Siegfried's expression was still smug, but he could hide no longer the

wickedness within it. "How would you like to - be - special?"

            The bum jumped to his feet,

swaying, as he did, uncoordinated - public intoxication at four in the

afternoon, Siegfried would be doing the world a favor, dispatching this one

into the next life.

"Whatcha say, now?"

            "Special," Siegfried repeated.

            He grinned again, and

Siegfried felt a twinge, however small, of humanity - he was all goofiness, all

rakish enchantment, he did not seem to really know what was going on around

him.

"Well alright then, sir! I'll do anythin once, yanno - but I gotta ask ya..."

            Siegfried was losing himself -

he felt his adrenaline spike, his inner primal urges flooding him - he let

claws grew enough for the bones in his fingers to, at last, deform and

lengthen, the inner wolf desperate to be free at last.

            He flew forward to attack this

filthy hobo who would not be missed, in a parking garage between two cars where

nobody would see or miss him.

            But he was stopped.

            He was jarred - terribly,

painfully - back to reality.

            He blinked several times

before he felt it: the counter-force against him.

            The man had caught his punch with

one hand, an unnatural, preternatural strength.

            "What the Hell--"

Siegfried hissed.

            "Now wait a minute - wait

jest a minute, here - I ain't rightly think this the way I's s'posed ta be special there, sir," he heard the

man say, his charm clouded over with a knowingness that belied his appearance.

"Yew want me ta suck yer dick for some money, that be fine - but I ain't

bout ready ta die right yet."

            Siegfried was shaking,

unyielding in this unexpected match of wills. "Who - who are you?"

            "Ya can call me

Lucky," said the man, his eyes unblinking, a dare, a demand. "Lucky

ta live on the street. Lucky ta meet such a charmin

man - like yerself."

            Siegfried's sneer twisted his

face - his eye twitched, his breaths came in deep and fuming - but he relented,

he jerked his hand back, throwing it into his coat, so that no one could see it

was struggling to become.

            There were so many questions

he wanted to ask him, so many things he feverishly needed to know - how anyone

who was a non-Werewolf could be this strong, how he could have known to parry

his blow so effortlessly like that...

            ...unless, this man, too...

            "That's not your

name - is it - Lucky?" He nearly

spat the last word, the falsehood encased inside it.

            "It'll do fer now, won't it?"

            Siegfried's pulse pounded in his neck, his whole

body a writhing mass of barely-together public decorum. "And why fucking

should it--?"

            "Cuz I knew who yew is - smelt ya on the

way in ere."

            Siegfried's eyes narrowed - he was not to

bested, even as, now, his whole being was awash in the terror of being

discovered.        The punch had been one thing, but this was

something else altogether.

            "You lie."

            "I tell the truth - yew real important,

ain't ya?" He grinned again, his half-lidded eyes full of some inner

knowledge he evidently found irresistible. "Last of yer kin, I

reckon--"

            "Enough. You're a crazy - unwashed homeless

person - dumped out of a booby hatch

and left to stink up the streets." His insults were his only offense,

should this ragdoll, stringbean man be telling the truth. He spun on his heel,

straightened himself. "Go die in a gutter somewhe--"

            "Stink,

huh?" The man - Lucky - called after him. "T'ain't I the one stank, boy - it's yew."

            Siegfried shook his head, mortified he had let

this go on so long - but his mind was a blank what he could, or should, do

next.

            "Yew - stink

  • like one o'them big fellas down yonder." And then, his voice lowered

just enough for Siegfried to hear: "Ya smell like em old boys down where

the Natural Tunnel were - name o'Stone."

            At the sound of his family name, Siegfried's

bowels turned to ice. How could he know something like that? No - a better

question - how could he have blocked his punch, and known that at the same time?

            Over his shoulder, his face giving away nothing.

            "What

did you say?"

            Lucky's face, naturally friendly though it seemed

to be, had grown serious - and a little cruel.

            "Yew heard me - Stone. Yer kin been round a long, long time - down yonder. Ain't I

right?"

            Siegfried paced briskly back to pull Lucky by

his shirt collar so that they were inches apart, face to face:

            "Who the Hell are you. Really."

            Lucky's eyes - blue, like Siegfried's, but

darker, like an old china plate - darted about, studying him, his face, the

contours of his expression.

            "Just like yew, Stone."

            Siegfried stared at him. "The Hell do

you--"

            "Yer gonna take me ta where I live,"

Lucky cut him off.

            "You're homeless," Siegfried said

flatly, trying to recover.

            "Nuh uh. Live up yonder--" He pointed with

his head, behind him, an unseen distance away. "Sugar Loaf."

            Siegfried balked. "That's clear across

town! If you really did live on a mountain why the Hell are you all the way

down here?"

            The man - Lucky - seemed to sway again, the same

kind of pseudo-drunkenness, but his eyebrows went up, defiant. "Think I'll

be askin the questions from now on there, sir."

            Moistening his lips, Siegfried gritted his

teeth, feeling a predicament he had never imagined close in around him. "And

  • if I don't?"

            "Well - ye can either

take me there, or - me n'yew gonna have a little talk--" He grinned - and

as Siegfried watched, his eyes widening in soul-clenching terror at the same

time, his teeth sharpened and grew.

"--and everyone's gonna see. Yew

wudn't want that, would ya Stone?"

            Siegfried said nothing back.

The time for talking had passed.

            He gave a small, noncommittal

shake of his head, the abrupt anxiety of being the hunter captured by the game

tearing into him as he had planned to tear into Lucky.

            But now he turned around, his

face red, blushing with blood like that poor waitress from not so long ago.

            He was deathly shamed, unable

to even look at who, now, was his forced-upon travelling companion.

            He heard himself mutter,

numbly: "F-follow - follow me..."

            And then he heard, the same kind

of numbness, the reply:           "So

glad y'asked." There was a pause, and then, like he was grinning again as

he spoke it, Lucky said: "I really hope we can be friends, after I what

wanna show ye..."

            Siegfried did not answer - the

past weighed too mightily upon him as his present, his future, collapsed in

pieces, as the swaying, grinning hobo - fellow Werewolf, the cosmic irony too

excruciating to comprehend - followed him, polished and well-dressed in his

black coat, out of the parking garage, and back down the street.