“What do you suppose did it?” Johnny asked, passing the flashlight over to Dan. The sprinklers had browned the shingles, but that wasn’t the focus. A chunk was missing from the center of the stain, about 2x3 feet, a foot above ground. Johnny observed a pile of plaster and drywall beside an old icebox in the garage. The studs had splintered under the force of some…tool, perhaps. “Teenagers?”
Dan angled the flashlight on the destruction, bit his lip as he mulled over the question, then said, “I don’t see how. None of my teens could’ve done that, not even with a sledge.”
“And that’s not all either.”
“No?”
“Nope. Come.” Johnny led Dan from the garage to the gate that used to block the entrance to the backyard, but now lay as a splintered mess on the grass beside the walkway. Johnny paused a moment, then shook his head and continued. The backyard had a mess of wood and metal beams jutting up into the air where something had uprooted his daughter’s playground. They cracked the slide clean in half. They destroyed two corner supports, just like the gate and garage. “What do you suppose did it then?”
Dan examined the wreckage for a time, still biting his lip, and Johnny wished he had some gum to hand the man. Instead, he just waited, looking towards the back of the yard where similar damage pierced the back fence–a hole about three feet wide, two feet high. Dan followed his gaze and gasped at the sight of the thing. Then, at last, he stopped chewing his lip and said, “The way I see it, whatever did it came through that fence, probably out of the creek, came through the playground on its way over to your garage. Is there an exit wound?”
“Huh?”
“An exit wound. In your garage?”
“Oh, no.”
“It might still be inside. Did you check?”
The idea of a wood-destroying thing in Johnny’s wooden garage bothered him. He looked at the house. Its windows were dark and curtained, all save the living room where he’d flicked on the coffee table light after hearing the racket outside. The crash of the playground and a loud clock-like clack, clack, clack. Thank God the house survived the onslaught.
“Seeing what it’s done, would you check?”
“No, but it’s not my garage. Whew, this will surely cost a pretty penny, Johnny-boy.”
“I’m more worried about what did it than what it’ll cost to fix it,” Johnny said. It was only half-true. This would cost him a couple of lungs to fix. “Would you check with me?”
Dan bent nearly in half to look beneath the playground, shook his head at the wreckage, then said, “No, Johnny, I don’t think I will.”
“Oh, come on.”
“Come on what? Something just smashed through your fence, your playground, your garage–hell, it smashed your fence twice if you count the gate–and you think I want to go shake hands with the critter?”
If Johnny were honest with himself, he probably wouldn’t go anywhere near the thing if he had that as an option, but it was in his garage. “What do you think it is, at the very least?”
“Fuck if I know,” Dan said. “But can I offer a suggestion?”
“What?”
“Bundle up, you know, in case it attacks. And bring a shovel,” Dan said, handing him back the flashlight, “insteadof a flashlight.”
#
Johnny tried his best not to disturb Grace as he put on a second layer, but as he buttoned up the plaid shirt, he found she was looking right at him. She’d woken with the sound too, but had fallen back to sleep when he left to check it out.
“What was that sound, honey?” she asked. Her nightgown had shifted over–the edge of her left nipple was barely visible. Johnny found himself with a painful erection inside his double-layers. He averted his gaze, trying not to appear childish, then sighed, thinking of the garage.
“There’s something in the garage, but I don’t know what.” He finished buttoning his shirt and went over to the foot of the bed, where he had a second pair of socks. “But I’m gonna check.”
“You sure it’s safe? It was loud.”
Breaking through all that wood required tremendous strength. He had cemented the playground into the ground, but when that thing shattered the two front supports, the whole thing ripped free of the ground, cement and all. It wasn’t safe, but she didn’t need to know.
“Of course, it’s safe, Grace,” he said. “Would I go if it weren’t?”
“Is it an animal?”
“I think so,” he said, unsure. “Maybe a raccoon.”
“That was too loud for a raccoon.”
“No, the sound was the playground. It knocked the whole thing over.”
“A raccoon knocked over the playground?”
“Okay, so not a raccoon. You tell me.” He slipped one foot into a sock while she thought about it. “Tell me what you think knocked over the playground, Grace.”
“A bear?” Grace asked.
“We’re in the middle of Nebraska, Grace. We don’t get bears.”
“Justine saw a bear that time, remember?”
“Not a bear, Grace. It was a buffalo.”
She huffed, but remained silent.
He slipped the second sock on over his left foot, then spent several moments putting on a pair of boots. For good measure, he dug out his winter coat and gloves. It was unbearable to wear that in the Summer, but he would do anything before going out into the garage. He was bound to find something in there. No exit wound means it’s inside.
#
He stood outside the garage door far longer than he cared to admit, but he’d never encountered a critter–as Dan had called the thing–in his own garage. Raccoons got in the trash cans, sure, but they were just a minor nuisance. One that he could deal with swiftly using the old BB gun he got as a kid. But Grace was right about one thing; raccoons couldn’t break through a wall like that. This was different.
He unlocked the door, adjusted his grip on the shovel, then opened the door and entered.
He half-expected to be attacked the moment he entered. That’s why he’d bundled up. But there was nothing in the garage except all the stuff they usually kept in there. The icebox, fishing gear, tools. The boxes of holiday decorations that would sit up in the rafters another four months before they took them down and defaced the house.
He approached the icebox, looked inside. Grace used it for long-storage of bulk foods. Veggies and meat, mostly. That’s all there was. He checked the tools, the fishing gear. All was fine. Untampered with.
He breathed a sigh of relief, and then he heard it.
Clack, clack, clack.
He caught his breath. It wasn’t a soft sound, but loud like a dog’s bark. It came from above him, in the rafters. The thing infiltrated the holiday décor. He hurried over to the tools, to where he kept the ladder. He quickly set up the ladder while briefly leaving the shovel on the counter.
Clack, clack, clack.
God, maybe he’d ask Grace to do this. That’d be good. Then she could identify it and tell him after. But that was a cowardly thought. He had to do this. He had to go and see the cause of the damage. The one thought that kept him moving, one foot after another, up those ladder rungs, was that this thing seemed most attracted to wood.
What sorts of creatures did wood attract? Termites? Maybe this was a giant termite.
Clack, clack, clack it sounded again, as if counting down his last steps.
He reached the top, shovel in his right hand, his left gripping the closest rafter. The closest box, a large red Tupperware container, read Halloween décor in a black sharpie. It’d be the first to come down when the holidays overtook them. He couldn’t see much more, but knew there were roughly six boxes on the plywood sheet on the rafters.
He had to move the box to see beyond it, so he set his shovel on the plywood and gripped the box with both hands, slid it over while fighting to keep balanced on the ladder. With Halloween pushed aside, he could see the rest of his wife’s décor. Thanksgiving and Christmas mostly, but some New Year’s and Easter in the back. He couldn’t see anything else there.
Was it behind those other holidays? There was only one way to find out.
He climbed the last few rungs on the ladder, then turned around, gripped the rafters like his life depended on them. Lifting himself, he scooted his butt onto the plywood. He imagined the wood of the rafters splintering as the playground had done; him crashing to the floor far below. That’d hurt like hell. But they didn’t splinter.
Turning, he grabbed the shovel with his right hand.
He crawled across that plywood toward those other boxes, then used the shovel to whack on the boxes. It made a hollow sound as expected. Grace had filled none of them to the brim, thank God. What he also expected was for something to skitter out from behind the boxes, but in that, he saw nothing. Nothing moved.
He scooted closer to the boxes, pushed a couple toward the back of the plywood sheet, right up to the edge. Nothing moved from behind them.
He was certain he’d heard it from up there.
What if, and this was just one terrifying possibility, the thing hung from the roof?
His eyes shot up. He surveilled the beams of the roof for anything hanging on or between them. His hands and shoulders convulsed in panic.
It dropped on him from the dark beams above. It was a monstrous dark brown cylindrical beetle, two feet long.
He screamed, tugged at the thing, but it latched onto his outer layer of clothes and felt at his face with two multi-segmented antennae. Despite a shield covering its head, he could tell it was looking at him. He imagined the thing doing to him what it had done to the garage wall–ripping a hole clear through him, leaving a pile of entrails on the opposite side. In his fear, he smacked the thing with the shovel. It flew off him on impact. Immediately, the thing regained its footing and skittered across the plywood right for him.
Now, at some distance, he could make out the patchwork of yellowish-gray hairs, like one of his wife’s haphazardly made quilts. He struck out with the shovel, knocking the thing out of the rafters and down onto the garage floor.
Heart pounding against his chest, throat swollen, he crossed to the ladder and started down, but then he tripped up on his own feet and fell. One leg slipped between two of the rungs and there was a sickening crack as he hit the ground. Pain shot through his leg like the worst Charlie horse ever. He cried out in agony.
But the thing…he saw it across the room, by the icebox. It came at him, its six skittering limbs tapping like metal on concrete.
His hands were empty. He’d lost the shovel at some point. It lay a few feet away, closer to the tools station. But the rungs still trapped his leg. The beetle was getting closer. He turned, examined his leg. The jagged end of bones jutted out of the leg. There was no time for that, though. He reached forward, sitting up, and freed his useless leg from the ladder.
He lunged forward and grabbed the shovel, and spinning around, he screamed and swung the shovel downward.
The beetle flattened in the middle and became motionless.
He remained above the beetle for moments more, then exhaustion overtook him and he collapsed to the ground.
#
“Johnny,” his wife called from outside.
“I’m in here!” He had laid down on the floor to rest a moment before struggling back to the house, but thankfully, that’s when he’d heard her voice.
She entered the garage, saw the flattened beetle, gasped, then saw him. She ran to him at once.
#
Leg in a cast, Johnny lay down on the bed, knowing he’d taken care of the creature in the garage. The ordeal was over. His wife, wonderful Grace, had found him and taken care of him. And now, all was well.
Until he heard them–
Clack, clack, clack…
Clack, clack, clack…
A dozen clacking in unison.
He hobbled over to the bedroom window and watched as they tore through the fence and came for the house.
When he’s not homeschooling and parenting, Max Blood spends his days spinning horror tales for online audiences. He specializes in the weird, the cosmic, and the monstrous. With a passion for turning cryptid stories into positively horrific monsters, he has created many tales of monster horror. He has also dabbled in ghost stories and body horror.
He currently lives in Bakersfield, California where he writes his novels and short stories, and in 2023, he launched Max Blood’s Mausoleum, a magazine of original horror stories.