"Don't go 'round tonight
It's bound to take your life
There's a bad moon on the rise"
-Creedence Clearwater Revival
***
Lavinia's eyes dropped from the mirror and she couldn't help looking at the newspaper headline blaring at her from the top of the bureau:
"'WEREWOLF' STRIKES AGAIN!"
She stopped what she was doing long enough drop the paper into the trash, holding it with two fingertips. It was a month old; Ray was always leaving old papers around for weeks.
The voices of the evening news filtered through the tinny TV speakers in the next room as she continued getting ready:
"...curfew in effect, as police warn residents no to leave their homes during tonight's full moon. Joining us now is Kate Corrigan, professor of folklore at UCB. Now professor, you don't really believe this werewolf talk, do you?"
"Arthur Conan Doyle said that when you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains must be the truth. No ordinary human being can do to a body what this killer does, and no ordinary animal could get in and out of the victim's homes without a trace. What conclusion must we reach?"
Lavinia applied her lipstick slowly and deliberately.
The newscaster said
, "But in this day and age—"
"That's precisely the point: The belief that malevolent human beings can assume the shapes of animals is contemporary to EVERY age. Fear of the werewolf in particular dates to antiquity. We may not want to admit that such things still happen, but we can't deny the evidence."
Lavinia snapped the clasp on her double chain of pearls, then straightened them in the mirror.
"What can people do keep themselves safe tonight?"
"First and foremost: Don't leave the house. Even though the werewolf has gone after victims still in their homes before, it's much more likely that it will first try to pick off those who expose themselves by going outside after curfew. Most importantly—"
Lavinia turned the TV off. Then she put her keys in her purse and slipped her heels on. Finally she dialed the phone, chewing her lip as she counted the rings and waited for an answer. When the click on the other end came she felt a rush of relief.
"It's me," she said, whispering. "Are you alone? Yes, I—look, I'm coming to see you. Right now."
Her heels clicked on the floorboards as she went to crack the Venetian blinds. Nothing moved outside, but a taxi cab idled at the corner.
"Don't tell me no, I have to see you," she continued. "I'll go crazy if I wait even one more day, and Ray is only gone for tonight. It's got to be now."
She paused, listening, then, "I know it's a full moon, but I don't care about that. And the curfew doesn't start for another hour anyway. I'll take a cab, it'll be perfectly safe."
And then she rushed to get out the next part before she could be cut off:
"Please don't argue. I...I need this. And I know you've been missing me too, right? The streets are lousy with cops, so nothing can happen to me on the way over. Just wait and I'll be there soon."
The blinds clicked as she let them shut again.
"I love you too," Lavinia said. "Bye for now."
After hanging up, she double checked the locks on all of the windows and doors, then paused with keys in hand, listening for the faintest hint of anything...but it was all utterly silent.
Taking a deep breath, she stepped into the hall and shut the front door behind her. Lavinia walked down the dim hallway to the elevator as fast as she could. The peephole on every door felt like a spying eye watching her.
There probably WERE some neighbors eyeballing her curiously, wondering who would dare go out on the streets after dark with a killer on the loose?
Let them wonder, Lavinia thought, getting into the old elevator and punching one of the brass buttons. It jolted and groaned and lurched down to deposit her in the lobby with a ding, and the next thing she knew she was out on the ink-black street.
The full moon peeked from between high-rises but from here looked no bigger or brighter than the street lamps overhead. The taxi she'd spotted still crouched on the corner; normally this block would be full of people, but now even the vagrants had gone to seek shelter indoors, leaving only a few cautious cars poking along, trying to make it home on time.
The cab's light was off, but when Lavinia raised a hand it snarled to life and crept up to her. The door popped open for her automatically, a surprising feature in such an old looking car; the interior smelled crisp as she settled into the backseat and crossed her legs.
"Reynolds Street, please," she said.
The cab pulled away from the curb with its engine humming. The radio was on: "...in and out of homes so easily, Karen?"
"Werewolf lore and legend ascribes a great many powers to the monster. Passing physical barriers is unusual but not unheard of. In Chinese provinces..."
The driver turned it off. She was a woman about Lavinia's age, although Lavinia couldn't see much of her except for the back of her head, with all of its thick hair standing out, and a sharp pair of eyes in the rearview mirror, with two broad, dark eyelashes above them in an arch, so big and expressive that they nearly met.
"You're lucky I was still here," the driver said, looking at her. "I've never seen such a dead night. Is that in poor taste, 'dead night'?"
"Maybe," said Lavinia. "But I'll never tell."
The driver laughed, and Lavinia caught sight of her shiny white teeth. "I'm Elizabeth," she said.
"Charmed."
"You're out awfully late. Under the circumstances, I mean. Running home to beat the curfew?"
None of your business Lavinia wanted to say.
But she scolded herself; after all, the woman was just trying to make conversation. Besides, being standoffish was suspicious...
"Actually I'm just leaving home. I have plans tonight, and I'm not about to break them over some silly curfew."
Elizabeth made a throaty sound of approval. "I like a woman who lives dangerously. Keeps everything more interesting for the rest of us."
"Nothing dangerous going on. Just taking a drive to see...friends."
Lavinia watched the street signs and the traffic lights flicker past one by one: Brandner, Crowe, Housman...
"So you don't care about the curfew, but what about the werewolf?" Elizabeth said, drawing the word out.
The cab sped up a little bit, its engine stirring as she pressed the pedal. The sound of jewelry rising and falling punctuated Lavinia's shrug.
"There's no such thing," she said.
"But on the news—"
"Bullshit," Lavinia said. She kept herself perfectly upright as they turned, Elizabeth not even bothering to slow at the corner because there wasn't a single other car driving. Every fourth thing they passed appeared to be a cop car, but none of them made a move to stop the cab.
"I'm sick of hearing about it," Lavinia continued, letting her voice steep in the anger she nestled deep in her bosom. "It's practically all anyone talks about anymore: 'The werewolf,' 'the werewolf,' 'the werewolf.' Bullshit."
"What makes you so certain that it's bullshit?" Elizabeth's tone was hard to place, but Lavinia couldn't shake the feeling that the other woman was making fun of her somehow. She chided herself for being paranoid.
"It's obvious," she said. "Only a child would believe a story like that. A child or an idiot."
"The police believe it. I hear they're all spending half of their pay on silver bullets. And they travel four to a car now, for safety."
"Police are stupid and crude," said Lavinia. "I was married to a police detective once; he believed anything I told him."
She checked the time. It had been 40 minutes already since the phone call, but it felt like much more than that. Elizabeth was already speeding, but Lavinia wanted her to go faster. She wanted the cab to grow wings and fly. Instead it just swerved to drive around a shape—a garbage bag—in the lane.
"Of course you're right," Elizabeth said, looking at her in the rearview mirror again. "I don't believe in werewolves either. But the murders are real, aren't they?"
"Yes," said Elizabeth, checking her reflection in a compact. "But they don't worry me."
"Why not?"
"I'm just not the sort to worry. Why are we stopped?"
"It's a red light."
"Keep going anyway, no one's around."
"There's still a camera, though, I'll get a ticket. Hey."