From a distance, Will Dougherty spots the old man and the hounds. They appear like a mirage on the lonesome trail. The vision causes the thoughts in Will’s warring mind to temporarily retreat.
As he gets closer, the image crystallizes: a frail figure and three hulking canines on a leash. The dogs are sleek and tall—skeletal, their coats thin and filthy. Shining ropes of slobber hang from snarled teeth. The middle hound, rearing against the old man’s chest, moves with a lissome gait, despite its emaciated appearance. It reminds Will of his Uncle John’s Azawakh. The old hunting dog, long dead now, was kept in a kennel in the back of his uncle’s garage, near the guest room. The staccato sounds of barking kept Will up at night whenever he and his father visited the large split-level home in rural Michigan. Will imagined the dog somehow getting loose from its kennel and stalking into the house, nosing open the door of the guest room he insisted be left ajar (he wanted to be able to hear the television and occasional bursts of laughter from his uncle and father, to make sure they hadn’t abandoned him in the night as his mother had when he was five). He imagined the dog slinking into the room quietly, only a scrabble of sharp, clacking nails on hardwood …
On the trail, jogging at a slow-to-moderate pace, Will passes the man and his dogs—the former hunched and moving slowly, despite the agitated excitement of the canines—and he endeavors to meet the man’s gaze, offer up a nod. (As a boy, he was often berated by his old man for keeping his head down when he walked—a telltale sign of weakness.) When he does, the look in the man’s eyes chills him. Ice-blue irises stare into his own, and the thin-lipped mouth distorts into a grin that looks more like a leer or a grimace of ire. Decayed yellow teeth glint in the dark crescent of mouth. Webs of white spittle dot the lips.
To Will, it’s the smile of a deranged person, a lunatic in a padded room …
It’s enough to erase the image of Dani and Eric, which, until this moment, has taken residence in Will’s consciousness like a tenant from hell. Even after passing the old man—still hearing the scratching of the dogs’ nails on the hard-packed dirt of the trail—the image of that hoary face and the slavering dogs remains imprinted on his mind and refuses to let go.
#
At home, Will tries calling Dani four times, and each time, the call goes to voice mail. On the third try, he debates leaving a message—something adamant and resolute, yet heartfelt—but decides against it.
Likely she’s with Eric.
Frustrated, Will tosses his phone on the sofa, where it bounces off the white cushion and falls to the hard parquet floor beneath.
Will just wants to talk. About accountability. The last few months have been filled with self-recrimination and regret. April was a mistake. A stupid, terrible mistake. He realizes how reckless he was, jeopardizing eight years of marriage for something as shallow as a one-night stand.
The thought of the willowy paralegal conjures sour feelings. Young and still in school, Will had taken her under his wing, introduced her to the senior partners as a bright and shining star. In turn, she’d shown him kindness, interest. And then betrayed him.
An escapade, nothing more.
And now, she, too, is gone—having failed to show up at the firm one day two weeks ago. (As though, having bulldozed Will’s life, her job at Weise & Weise was now done.)
The more Will thinks about it, sipping whiskey in the large, silent house, the angrier he gets.
He’s downed a third of the bottle of Johnny Walker Green and lies sprawled on the twisted bedsheets, when the image of the old man from his jog comes rearing back—
A shudder ripples down his spine as the wrinkled visage resolves in memory, emerging like a face in the clouds. The ancient rime-blue eyes, staring intently. The curved and hideous smile.
And those dogs. Their disheveled coats buzzing with fleas. Jaws unhinged, slavering. Will scents noxious breath, envisions fangs latching onto defenseless flesh. Clamping down and dragging—
Soon the alcohol pulls him under, and he’s dreaming of the old man and the dogs. The former a shrunken silhouette, hobbling at a snail’s pace; the hounds just as shadowy, serried so close as to be seemingly connected at the neck, like Cerberus …
Closer, advancing over a hillock. Foul breath misting the air. Ropes of slaver swinging like Victorian chains from peeled red lips. One of the hounds, scenting prey, veers off into a bush, and tears out a brown baby rabbit frozen in fear. Another leaps onto a woman in a floral sundress, knocking her down. Jaws clamp over the slender forearm, which shakes and tremble as it attempts to ward off the snarl of teeth gnashing at the woman’s tear-sodden face.
#
Over the next few days similar dreams persist.
In some, the old man’s features are hideously clear, skin wizened and gray in the muted dreamlight. Eyes like chips of ice under clotted white lashes. In one nightmare, the man is absent; only his eyes, large as asteroids, hover in the sunsetting sky. Downward they glare as the hounds circle a child sprawled on the ground, cowering in a torn rain slicker. Circling, the dogs snarl and bark.
In another dream, he’s the old man. Flabby arms, leathered by age, grip the taut leash, straining as the dogs vie to be let loose.
As their protector, he leads them—
or is it the other way around?
—to a wooden bench, where Dani and her lover meet on weekday afternoons. He lets the leash fall, watches as the hounds bound through blades of grass, ripping up divots of sod with their claws.
Growling, the dogs leap: jaws snapping, teeth grinding hungrily to hook their vulnerable quarry—
Each day after work Will’s back on the trail. Retracing his steps in the hope of coming across the old man and the hounds. From a distance, every silhouette makes him quicken his pace, causes his heart to leap—until the figure invariably crystallizes in disappointment.
Aside from his reveries and nightmares, the old man and the hounds are nowhere to be found.
#
Dani’s laughter trills, riding on the crisp autumn breeze. Her hand, magnified by the viewfinder, rests on Eric’s thigh. Will’s colleague wears a slim-fitted shirt, loosened at the collar; a slim paisley tie hangs from his exposed neck. Eric whispers something in Dani’s ear, which elicits a bark of mirth.
Across the street, behind a phalanx of shrubs, Will sits motionless, the binoculars pressed tight around the depressions of his eyes.
What are they saying? he wonders as he watches the two lovers—a sharp hook digging into his chest when he thinks of them that way—on the small park bench. Are they talking about me? Laughing—at my expense?
At the firm, Will feels like the object of every snicker, the butt of every joke. The partners act like nothing’s wrong. In the beginning, some even offered their condolences about his and Dani’s separation. They never mentioned Will’s indiscretion with the paralegal.
A week ago, Will ran into Eric in one of the third-floor restrooms as the young tax attorney was washing up. The “hotshot”—as he was referred to among the senior partners—had his sleeves rolled up, golden arms sleek in the fluorescent light of the restroom—no doubt admiring his reflection in the mirror when the door swung open, and in entered Will.
Will had imagined similar eventualities playing out ever since learning about Eric and his wife. Various scenarios transpiring in the theater of his mind, some wherein Eric muttered sheepish apologies, claimed he was just being there as a mutual friend. In other conjurings, Will listened quietly and patiently, before driving the young attorney’s head through the restroom mirror—smashing the glass and cutting Eric’s well-proportioned face into bleeding segments. The reality, however, had been predictably banal: Will strode to the urinal, while Eric finished up at the sink, taking his time, it seemed to Will—even pausing to blow-dry his long, knuckly hands while glancing at the mirror, which reflected Will’s back in the urinal—while the older partner tried in vain to piss. Then he sauntered out the restroom door without saying a word. Afterward, Will cursed himself for his cowardice, for proving his father right—Will the Weak—by not saying anything, for not demanding an apology or failing to send a stark and withering rebuke—
Instead, he’d cowered at the urinal, his flaccid dick pinched in his hand.
Eric leans closer, nudging Dani’s neck. She, too, leans in, eyes closed, slim hand encircling his narrow waist. Will’s fingers pale as his grip on the binoculars tightens. Amorphous sweat flowers at his armpits, sweat coats his brow in a sticky sheen.
He tries, whimsically, willing the old man and the hounds. (The way he used to try manifesting his mother, those sleepless nights after she left, when it was just him and his father, who was so angry all the time, and always taking it out on Will.)
Believing that if he tried hard enough, she might appear …
But, like every day in the last week, the man and his hounds are nowhere in sight. Perhaps Will imagined them? A figment of his overwrought mind.
No. They were there, that day on the path. A fleeting, revelatory moment as he passed them, the old man’s stare icing his blood. In his memory, the man grinned at Will cruelly, as if he could read his mind. As if he found the shambles of Will’s life amusing, a kind of joke.
Fuck you, old man.
Vindictively, Will imagines the hounds turning on their master. Whipping around on skeletal legs and snapping at him, tearing into his feeble form, biting out hunks of pale flesh and champing down like monsters—like the nightmarish, nearly mythological beings from Will’s reveries and dreams.
#
“… Will? Oh my god. No—”
Peering across the street, into the bush, Dani stoops, a slender hand shading her frown. Beside her, at the driver’s door of a white, late-model Mercedes, is Eric. They peer in Will’s direction. Smudged lenses magnify the blonde locks of Dani’s hair. Will lets the binoculars fall, and the image of Dani and Eric shrinks—though the former grows larger as she stalks across the street, the etched frown getting clearer as she skitters around a lumbering van that honks and nearly hits her. Crouched on a bed of dry grass, Will rises as she crosses the street.
“What are you doing here?” she says, voice seething with emotion.
She stands before the bush, staring through the matrix of leaves and thorns. Will looks past her, delighted to note that Eric seems to experience a moment of hesitation, following Dani across the street. His gait is slow and timid. Shameful, almost.
Will turns his attention back to his wife, who glares at him, face a nasty snarl.
“You haven’t been answering my calls,” he says flatly.
Her eyes flare like two struck matches. “I’ve said all there is to say,” she says, the words hissing through gritted teeth.
Past her shoulder, Eric approaches. “Will,” he mutters in a chummy, gravely false tone. A lopsided smile tugging his lips. “What’s going on, bud? You know you shouldn’t be here …”
In a moment that would have made his father proud, Will meets Eric’s gaze for the first time since the restroom encounter a week ago. The gaze holds steady. He’s vowed, in the days since, to atone for that shameful moment.
“I have a pending court order,” Danica says. Her voice, low and quavering, belies the rage in her features.
Will curses the sweat he can feel slipping down his temples in sluggish lines. “I have rights, too,” he says—suddenly hating this woman, his wife of nine years, for making him justify his actions. “And I have a right to see our son.”
Laughter blurts from Dani’s lips. Her eyes narrow, pinning him like a butterfly on wax paper. “Ohh—it’s about Ben, is it?”
Will’s eyes snap back and forth between Dani and Eric. His wife’s lover stands behind her, putting his weight on one gray-trousered leg. He scratches the small of his back, idly.
“Let’s not bullshit each other,” Dani levels. “We both know this isn’t about Ben.” She fixes him with a stare that conjures painful memories. Teachers and schoolyard bullies. Will fights the urge to take a step back from that withering glare. “To be totally honest, Will, I don’t think you ever cared. You certainly weren’t thinking about Ben when you screwed that woman—in our home. While Ben was asleep …”
Will tunes out the stream of vitriol, catching only brief snippets of her diatribe. Occasional words— “narcissist, borderline”—cut through the flimsy mental bulwark he’s erected.
Rage expands in his chest.
“Fuck you, Danica,” he retorts, after she’s finally stopped talking. He looks at Eric, who’s taken a step forward. “How dare you accuse me of being the problem, when it’s YOU who won’t pick up the phone,” he says. “Who refuses to accept an apology. Did I screw up? Yes, I admit it. Am I perfect? No. No one is. Not you, or Hotshot over here—” He points at Eric, whose face has lost its smarmy expression, and now glares, too, a look of pure scorn.
Grimacing, Will returns the glare, and says, “And you, Eric, should be ashamed of yourself.”
Dani almost screams, causing the passersby on the street to stop and glance at them. “You’ve confirmed everything, Will. Bravo! You’re actually—truly fucking sick. I feel sorry for you. But this has to end. You need to stay away from us. Me and Ben. You’re … you’re not okay.”
In that moment, Will wishes more than anything to just disappear. He can’t abide these accusations from the woman he loved for so long. The mother of his child.
His heart feels crushed, a pulped, bitter fruit in the cavity of his chest.
He wants to run before the tears come on. Before the shame overtakes him—shame his father exploited when he was young, when he’d unload his angry diatribes, sometimes with the hard end of a belt. He can’t bear to have his wife—and most certainly not Eric—see him succumb to tears.
In a slimy layer, sweat covers every inch of him. He feels lightheaded. Dry-mouthed. He takes a step back as Eric takes a step forward. He’s about to give in to cowardice—proving his dad right, once and for all—when a snuffling sounds in the distance, a scrabbling of dirty nails on pavement—
Then a lacuna … He’s on the ground. Ribs staved in by black patent leather. Eric grunts as his foot connects with Will’s stomach, his gut. Will winces, curled on his side like a slug.
Past the kicking legs, he spies the old man, hunched like a question mark in a thin cardigan. The knobs of his bony fingers hold the leash that restrains the barking hounds. They’re a growling, ravenous paradox: muscular yet starved, skeletons delineated under the mottled hair. Eyes black and glossy; teeth bared, slavering drool.
Help …
Will beckons to the man, grateful the enigmatic figure has sensed his distress signal and come for him. As boot meets chin, Will’s head jerks back with a thud. Blood leaps. A tooth parts, swimming loose, and he spits it out onto the ragged grass. On the ground, collapsed on his side, Will mutters an entreaty to the old man, attempting to meet the cold, level gaze. Silently, he begs the man to loose the hounds. But the old man and the dogs remain still, watching from a distance. The hounds are motionless as statues or ornamental topiary. Will imagines it would take only the slightest nudge from their master for them to leap forward … but the old man simply watches, gelid gaze fixed on Will. A smile splits the sallow face. As if he, too, is enjoying this—reveling in Will’s shame and disgrace.
Airless words punctuate the kicks to his back and side. “Leave—her—ALONE, Will. Enough—is—ENOUGH!”
THWH-UP
THWH-UP
THWH-UP
A kick snaps Will’s jaw to the side. His mouth fills with blood. Spitting another tooth out, it lathers his chin in a crimson froth. He looks up, groggily, past the gathered spectators, for one final entreaty—this time focusing on the dogs.
But they’re gone.
Only the old man remains, holding the leash in his knobbly skeletal hand.
Lips cracked, slicked with red, Will smiles. He looks up, notices the beating has stopped. Dani and Eric stand back, heaving deeply, holding each other. Dani’s eyes are filled with tears. She claws inside her purse, then, possibly for her phone, maybe to call an ambulance or the police.
Lying on his side, Will racks his mind for something to say, one last sentiment, but he recognizes the futility of speech.
So instead, he barks.
Dark red spittle swings. His face a twisted mask.
With amusement, he notes the looks on his wife and her lover’s face—expressions of unmasked terror—which, despite the agony in his lungs and chest, galvanizes him, makes him bark louder.
Aghast onlookers stop and stare, sharing in his shame and humiliation.
Will pays them no mind. He fixes his gaze on the old man, who stands on a rise, apart from the crowd—bent, withered, and smiling.
He meets Will’s gaze and nods.
On hands and knees, Will snarls and yaps, staccato bursts of ferocious noise.
Leon Saul’s (he/him) short fiction has appeared in NonBinary Review and several anthologies, including Broken Olive Branches, Fall Equinox, and Heavy Metal Nightmares. He lives in Southern California with his wife and cats.