Dogman [Hot CHECKLIST]
I found the pattern. Every twenty to thirty years, the sightings would cluster. A spike in missing persons in the Upper Peninsula. Then silence. Then another cluster. As if the creature hibernated for a generation, then woke up hungry. The last cluster ended in 1993. The year after I saw it.
The first time I saw the DogMan, I was seven years old, staring through the fogged-up window of a school bus. We were idling at the crossroads of M-37 and Old Stage Road—a place the locals called "The Devil's Elbow." The other kids were laughing, throwing half-eaten apples at a stop sign. I was looking into the cornfield.
The last thing I write in this journal is a single line, scrawled in the dark: It wants to be seen. And I looked. DogMan
I look out the motel window. It's dusk. The edge of the forest is fifty yards away. Something is standing at the tree line. Not on two legs. Hunched on all fours. Its eyes are not animal. They are amber. They are knowing .
For a second, I saw his human face—tears streaming down his cheeks, his mouth forming the word "Sorry." I found the pattern
Then the amber eyes swallowed the light.
The door burst off its hinges. The alarms blared. I ran. I ran through the corridors, through the crash doors, into the snowy parking lot. Behind me, I heard the guards screaming, then the wet, percussive thump of bodies hitting the floor. Then silence. Then silence
Edmund was standing in the corner, facing the wall. He was naked. His jumpsuit lay torn on the floor, not unzipped, but shredded from the inside out. His spine was elongating. I watched his vertebrae separate, crack, and reform into a curve that was not human. His jaw unhinged with a wet pop. He turned.