Woetown, New York
Hello, this is my attempt at something darker and more self-contained. It's clearly inspired by
Salem's Lot
. But it also takes inspiration from
Fright Night
and
The Grimm Adventures of Billy and Mandy
. You'll find other references in here with a keen eye that I've not mentioned.
All likenesses to real people are coincidental. All likenesses to preexisting characters only exist as homage or pastiche. Everyone in the story is eighteen years or older. Warning of violent content in non-sexual situations.
Prologue
The moving truck pulled up to a house in a very sorry state. It might have once been elegant at some point in the past, but now the eggshell paint was peeling and cracking and the filthy rotting wood beneath showed off the sorry state of the home. The home sits as a shadow of its former self, with loneliness in an equally despicable condition. The driver of the truck immediately saw the man he was looking for on the very stoop of that home. It was a man with a pocked face and covered with the lines of premature aging, most likely due to an overconsumption of liquor. His wispy hair and unflattering clothes completed the man's appearance of someone who'd long forgotten life had more depth than the bottom of a bottle.
The driver of the truck, however, shared more than he cared to admit with the alcoholic man. Except he was nowhere near as lean and still with all the psychical affectations of someone with an overconsumption problem. He was fat, with a nose riddled with varicose veins and thinning hair himself. He wheezed and sighed laboriously, climbing out of that truck more than any person should.
"Afternoon, Kenny," the portly truck driver said.
Kenny approached cautiously, eyeing the moving truck before looking back to his old friend. "Why're you here, Randy?" Kenny spat with a false sense of indignation.
"I'm offering you a job." Randy reached into his back pocket before pulling out a wallet. Randy reached in and pulled out four fifty-dollar bills. "I got two hundred dollars here for you to move a large container from the docks to the Anderson estate."
Kenny went for the money with no intention of taking the job. Kenny was hungry and far closer to sober than he'd care for. That's when Randy snatched the money away with one last statement. "For you and another able-bodied man, that is. You can split it how you see fit, but it's between the both of you, hear me?"
Randy offered the money again and Kenny hesitantly took it. "When's this need to be done?"
Randy pretended to mull it over, but he knew full well. "Tonight, between nine thirty and midnight."
Kenny nodded and looked around the yard. "Why'd you come here to tell me? Could've called?"
Randy ignored the statement. "Figured I'd see an old friend." It was a lie of a criminal-to-be, but someone like Kenny could see that from a mile away.
"Didn't want our call on record?" Kenny mused.
Randy eyed Kenny carefully. "Beside the point. Be on Main Street tonight at seven thirty to get the truck from me, yeah?"
"Yeah, tonight. Main Street at seven thirty pm."
With that, Randy shook Kenny's hand before getting back into his truck and leaving for work that day.
******
Kenny waited in the September chilled air of Main Street. The last of the family shops were closed, leaving only the bars and restaurants open. But the status of being open wouldn't last that much longer for the latter. That's when the big, heavy truck was within earshot for Kenny.
It was Randy's moving truck and for some reason, he had pulled down one of the emptier streets where the old Kerwin butcher shop was. It had burned down back in the seventies and never reopened. It was left gutted because Black families back then wouldn't get the help or support of the banks without a horrible fight. Instead, they took the payout and invested in opening a bookstore at the patriarch's insistence.
Randy disembarked from the truck and looked at the nervous cold Kenny. He wasn't dressed properly, only wearing an old leather bomber. A scarf would've surely helped, or even a working zipper on the front of the jacket for that reason alone.
"Fuck, I thought I told you to bring someone else?" Randy spat from the truck window. He liked looking down on the destitute Kenny. He knew Kenny would do anything for the money.