Monster at Midnight
Twelve-year-old Caleb Prescott was afraid to go home.
All he could think about was what his foster father was going to do to him when he got there.
He stood motionless for a long time. Until the neon sign of the greasy pizza joint across the street turned off, signifying the late hour.
And Caleb knew it was now or never.
Snapping out of his hypnotic trance, he looked down and was surprised to see the aluminum bar of his mountain bike between his knees; he’d been straddling it the entire time. His grip on the handlebars felt stiff and achy. And the groaning of the wind through the half-naked trees sounded like the ghost that haunted his dreams each night.
“You got this,” he told himself. “Just sneak back down to the dungeon and cry yourself to sleep remembering the strawberry smell of her long, soft, hair.”
But the truth was that holding on to those memories using the most fleeting of senses –the sense of touch and smell that fades so fast– was getting harder with each passing day. Spending a night in a cemetery, with evil spirits clawing their way out of graves all around him, would be easier, he reasoned.
Case in point, wasn’t he pretty much doing that now? All alone on a dark deserted street, teeth chattering in fear from a creepy sound seemingly getting closer? Like a pissed-off ghost coming for him any minute?
Only this ghost, when he calmed down enough to listen more intensely, sounded different. More like crying. Like someone in trouble. Not so much a ghost, perhaps, but a real person. Separating the sound from the gusts of wind whooshing past his ears, Caleb decided it was coming from the alleyway.
In a flash, his feet found the pedals and he sped towards the noise, a small-for-his-age, but quick and nimble kid, now on a mission.
Rounding the corner, he hit the brakes and skidded to an abrupt stop.
There on the pavement, under a nearby streetlight, he saw something that broke his heart, at least what was left of it. A Maltese terrier, its fur caked with mud, was whimpering as it lay trapped in a metal dog crate.
Instantly, the anger blasted through Caleb, piercing his heart like shrapnel from a bomb.
Who would do such a thing?
Though he wanted to spring into action, to perform superhero maneuvers fast and all at once, it felt like the opposite was happening. Like everything was swinging in slow motion on a gigantic pendulum. That frustration of taking too long brought tears to pool in his green eyes, clouding his vision, and slowing everything down even more.
Finally, he was able to open the security box on the outside of the cage that kept the lock and pin inaccessible from the inside. His frozen fingers forced the pin to come loose, and, swinging the door open, he crawled on his hands and knees towards the frightened canine cowering at the back.
Caleb brought his face within inches of the little dog. He looked into her eyes and a tenderness seeped into his ragged heart, softening the edges.
The pup licked the teardrops snaking down his face and let him pet her.
“I’m going to name you Midnight even though underneath all that filth, you’re white. But I found you precisely at that time, so that’s your name. Right little one?”
Midnight’s reply was a bark that grew into three consecutive ones, and when she pushed her little snout past Caleb’s shoulder, he realized she was barking at something behind him. A second too late, he heard someone yell “Gotcha!” and turned around in time to see a chubby kid, sucking on a lollipop, slam the cage door shut with a clatter.
Caleb’s heart sank like a thousand-pound anchor to the bottom of the sea.
The freckled boy with orange hair and a Cheshire cat smile, deliberately, almost mockingly, pushed the pin down to lock Caleb and Midnight inside. Looking to be about fourteen, he wore tattered sweatpants and a stained yellow parka.
“Please, let us out,” Caleb begged. “My dog is hurt.”
“Your dog? Really?” the fair-haired bully drawled, “I don’t think so shithead. That dog ain’t yours, you just wanna steal it, dontcha?”
His lips formed an o shape around the bulbous sucker and pulling it out of his mouth with a popping sound, he pointed the fluorescent green confection at Caleb. “I think you’re a turd who wants to be a hero by rescuing the ugly mutt, right? he snickered. “Except you’re no hero, you’re just a loser with a black eye. Your bike looks like garbage too, but I might just take it anyway.”
Caleb could swear he heard his rapid heartbeat pulse in his ears, but he somehow forced himself to tamp down on his anxiety and tried to think hard and fast on the fly.
A beat of silence and then Caleb said “You’re right, I shouldn’t have lied to you, the dog is not mine. But if you don’t mind me asking, what’s your name?” and then quickly added, “So I can show you some respect when I address you.”
The teenager was so caught off guard, he remained speechless for a moment. And though Caleb had never been one of those count your chickens before they’re hatched kind of guys, he felt hopeful.
“Yeah jackass,” the boy finally exclaimed, “You should respect me. So, you can call me Richie when you tell me what that bike’s worth.”
“Thanks, Richie,” Caleb said, “and you’re right, that bike is on its last legs. If it isn’t the chain falling off, then the handlebars don’t turn, and the worst part? The brakes are shot. Honestly, Richie,” he sighed, “it’s not worth more than a penny. But I’ve got something for you that’s much better.”
Richie pulled the bare stick of the sucker out of his mouth and Caleb could hear him crunching the last pieces of hard candy between his teeth. Throwing the stick on the ground, Richie scowled at the bike like it was a vile thing. Giving up on it, he turned back to his prisoner.
“Whatcha got?” he demanded, adding “It better be good or I’m gonna drown this mutt in the river and make you watch.”
Caleb opened his mouth to speak but closed it again when Richie pulled a BB gun out of a duffle bag sitting on the ground next to him and said, “Go on, tell me, pinhead.”
Caleb said, “You let us out of here and I’ll give you my last ten bucks.”
He held his breath, then released it when Richie exclaimed “Right on, show me the dough.”
With unsteady hands, Caleb pulled a ten-dollar bill from his sock.
Richie’s open-mouthed laughter, revealing gaps from missing teeth amongst a few rotten black ones, sent Caleb’s mind rushing back to when being reminded to brush his teeth, annoyed him. Especially when he was tired. Now, the gratitude for his mom’s nagging washed over him like a hot shower after getting caught in the freezing rain.
“You better not think about running before handing me that cash,” Richie warned. He aimed the BB gun, not at Caleb, but directly at Midnight. He said “That runt tried to bite me when I captured it and I wanna shoot it for payback. And fun,” he smiled. “But you give me the ten bucks, and I won’t kill it, got it?”
Caleb nodded vigorously, afraid to say the wrong thing or make the wrong move right up until the second Richie opened the cage and stood aside to let them out.
Free at last, and immediately after Richie grabbed the money with his meaty fingers, Caleb made a beeline towards his bike, calling Midnight to follow him. But Midnight, terrified of Richie, froze on the spot right outside the dog kennel when he suddenly stepped towards her, pointing the gun, once again, at her little face.
As Midnight edged away from him, Richie turned towards Caleb and hissed “Psst, I was lying. I’m gonna put a bullet in its leg first and then stomp on its face till it’s good and bloody… and dead.” He wiggled his pale eyebrows in an up-and-down motion, that evil smirk still pasted to his face.
Caleb’s mouth went powder-dry, his stomach lurching like he was on a free-falling plane about to crash. He felt Richie’s threat slam into him, one sadistic word at a time.
With a roar, Caleb rushed at Richie, his right hand curled into a fist and, before Richie could react, Caleb drove his knuckles into the spongy cartilage of his big nose. The crunch of bone, followed by Richie’s earsplitting howl, ricocheted down the alley. Caleb watched the blood gush from Richie’s face and felt more nausea churn within his gut. Moments later, the agony splintered through Caleb’s hand like it was on fire.
Despite the pain, Caleb wasted no time running towards Midnight.
But before he could reach the little terrier, Richie, his fingers slick with blood and snot, aimed the BB gun at the dog a third time, only this time, he fired as she took off with surprising swiftness. As Midnight rounded the corner at the end of the alley, she let out a tortured yelp, and Caleb felt his knees buckle when Richie cackled in glee for hitting his mark.
Hopping on his bike, Caleb followed Midnight at warp speed. But by the time he rounded that same corner, Midnight was nowhere in sight.
Car headlights, road signs, and blowing trash, all became a blur through the onslaught of Caleb’s tears. Every bit of the fear, anger, and grief he’d been holding so tightly within, tore loose, like a deluge of water from a broken dam. Not knowing where Midnight was, whether she was in pain or even alive, was a new kind of hell.
And speaking of hell, on top of his worry for Midnight, there were the horrors that waited for him when he got back to his foster home.
He still remembered when the social worker brought him there on a hot August morning, dumping him on the doorstep, and heading for the hills right after. The act Deborah, his new foster mom, put on, may not have been worthy of an Oscar, but it was good enough for the caseworker. Determined to make a swift getaway, she never even set foot inside the house. Never even bothered to see where Caleb would lay his head that night.
As soon as the woman drove away, Deborah grabbed him by the hair and pushed him hard through the door as she yelled “Get the hell in there, march yourself down to your room in the basement, and stay there until my husband gets home. You understand me, boy?”
Caleb understood when Donald came down the stairs three minutes later.
“You listen to me you motherless, unwanted, punk,” Donald spat. This room in the basement? That’s the only place in this house you’re allowed. Food will be left outside your door two times a day, morning, and night. And you’re never allowed upstairs. There’s a toilet, sink, and shower here and that’s all you need.” His foster father shifted his body closer to poor Caleb, grabbing him by the jaw, and squeezing as hard as he could. Staring into Caleb’s eyes Donald hissed “Now pay even more attention, you scrawny little imbecile. That grey door over there leads to the garage. That’s where you can find your piece of shit bike. Whenever I decide or Deb decides that we can’t stand the thought of you being in our home any longer, you will take that bike and get the hell out of here for at least an hour. And I don’t give a crap where you go. When you get back you will come in through the garage as quiet as a mouse. Got it?”
Caleb was so scared it felt like horses’ hooves stampeding across his chest. Unable to stop himself, he felt the moisture seep into his underwear and spread through the fabric of his jeans. His bladder had already been full, to begin with, but Donald’s speech, that ugly word “motherless”, made Caleb buckle under the strain. He could no longer hold it in. And now he just wanted to disappear, to die right then and there. Better to see his mom again in heaven, than live like this here in hell.
But it wasn’t over yet. When Donald saw that Caleb had peed himself, he hit him hard across the face, so hard that Caleb flew into the opposite wall. Donald barked, “You’re ten, old enough to be toilet trained for God’s sake. Clean up and wash those filthy clothes in the sink. We don’t run a laundry service here.”
Now, for the millionth time, Caleb cursed the car accident that killed his mom and turned him into a foster kid at such a tender age. Missing her for the last two years was like chemical lye rubbed on a wound, and it was this pain that brought disturbing dreams of ghouls and monsters to most of his nights.
But Midnight had performed magic. In the blink of an eye, she had attached herself to his core; an abundance of love sticking to his heart like super glue.
He had to find her.
But things suddenly got worse when Caleb spotted something terrible.
There, on a telephone pole, was a poster of a little girl holding a dog. A Maltese terrier. It looked exactly like Midnight. The child’s name was Amber, and she had lost her dog, Ivory, a few hours ago.
Only briefly did Caleb acknowledge the irony of the dog’s name. His pain was beyond raw and abrasive, it was sandpapering all the way down to the bone. Bad enough that Midnight was gone, but now she also belonged to someone else. Shakily he slid off his bike, leaning it against the wooden pole, his legs unsteady causing the rest of his body to quiver. All he could do was stand there and sob into his hands.
As the first flakes of autumn snow began to fall, something slammed into his hip. A small, soft, something, that let out an excited bark and wagged its tail. Midnight practically jumped into his arms. He was so happy, he cried even harder. After she licked every tear from his frozen face, Caleb put her down on the sidewalk and knelt to examine her, looking for any signs of an injury.
Other than a scrape on her ear, Midnight appeared to be okay. The BB gun bullet must have only scared her.
But his relief was short-lived. What about the kid on the poster?
He knew the guilt would gnaw away at him if he kept a dog that belonged to someone else. Especially a child.
Memorizing the phone number and digging a dime out of his pocket, he scooped Midnight up again and headed towards a payphone, next to a bus stop across the street. As he approached, he could see smashed glass strewn everywhere inside and outside the grimy shelter. A homeless man or woman’s shopping cart full of junk was parked next to the graffitied wooden bench inside. A dirty, torn-apart poster advertising the movie Smokey and the Bandit covered the side where the glass wall was still intact, the cartoon photo of Burt Reynolds, the star of the show, shown wearing a cowboy hat. No doubt it had been there for months; the movie had been released in theatres back in May.
Caleb wrinkled his nose in disgust, the vandalized bus stop smelled like stale cigarettes and sweat as did the phone booth next to it when he opened the folding door. Examining the handset first to make sure there wasn’t any regurgitated spit, mucus, or something worse, on it, he was grateful it was surprisingly clean. Lifting the receiver and pushing the dime through the coin slot, he fantasized that maybe he’d get an ‘out of service’ message and there’d be no chance of finding Amber’s family, so Midnight would have to stay with him after all. Yeah, right, he thought and blinked back fresh tears.
One ring, two rings, three rings, … what would he do if the answering machine came on?
On the fourth ring, the machine did come on, but it wasn’t what Caleb expected.
The message told callers that Ivory had been found and was safe at home.
And Caleb’s world suddenly felt drastically different.
With Midnight at his side, he walked his bike toward Donald and Deborah’s place. At least he had blankets in his room, under which they could snuggle together and warm up, along with enough hidden food for himself and his new best friend.
When they got close, however, something suddenly felt off. A strong odor permeated the atmosphere, and when they were only steps away from the two-story estate home‑‑ a mansion funded by Donald and Deborah’s foster care money‑‑ they discovered that the house was black. Specifically, a charred black, and those were only the parts that were still standing. The rest had burned down to ashes.
Caleb’s throat felt raw as he stood there in front of the house he had dubbed the house of horrors, dumbfounded. At that moment, a coughing fit seized him violently, and he realized he couldn’t hang around there any longer, he needed to run far away from the crumbling prison in front of him. Smoke, thick and acrid, still hung in the air, as Caleb came to the painful understanding that he and Midnight were completely homeless now. There was no shelter or food or warmth to be had for the likes of him, he thought. He was about to let the tears fall again when suddenly, he remembered the seven hundred dollars his mom had sewn into the lining of his jacket. And the cheap motel down the road where the owner, always sipping from a cup of black coffee laced with a generous amount of whiskey, was one of the nicest alcoholics Caleb had ever encountered. Caleb would never forget the smell of the booze wafting through the shabby low-lit lobby and the sound of Pete slurring his words. But although Pete was nice enough, he probably wasn’t all that smart, Caleb guessed. The motel business wasn’t booming as much as Pete had initially thought it would, and money was in short supply. For this reason, Pete had taken the risk of renting Caleb a room on more than one occasion. He was a compassionate sort of drunk and, seeing fresh bruises on Caleb's face time and time again, he had simply overlooked his young age. Tonight, was no different. Pete was more than happy to take Caleb’s money, even allowing him to bring Midnight into the motel room if he was willing to pay extra. Caleb was.
By the time Caleb and Midnight were ensconced in a small but warm room on the second level of the Travelodge, the numbness had, thankfully, abated from Caleb’s fingers and toes. It brought a feeling of gratefulness he hadn't felt since his mom was alive. As they sat on the bed with an assortment of sandwiches, bottles of coca cola, and chips from the vending machine scattered across the bedspread, outside, the light snow had developed into a full-fledged blizzard. On the two channels available courtesy of the tiny black and white TV, news reporters announced that driving was treacherous in these whiteout conditions and that everyone should stay off the roads if they can. A shudder passed through Caleb's body when he thought about being out there, cold and miserable with poor Midnight equally as frozen by his side, the two of them trembling in some doorway. The unbearable shame of that would sting harder than the driving sleet, like a barbed-wire fence wrapped around his bare shoulders. Chasing the image out of his brain, Caleb got off the bed and walked to the window. Curving his hands around his face to see the outdoors better, he tried to find Pete’s brand new 1977 Datsun station wagon in its usual spot in the parking lot. The reporters were right, the weather was so bad that he could barely locate it but eventually, it came into view. Genuinely relieved that the old man wasn’t out there, driving drunk, Caleb hoped he was already passed out in his bed, dreaming of better days. Caleb too prayed for a better future and knew he had to come up with a plan to make that happen for himself. He went back to the bed and smooched Midnight right on her little head offering her more slices of baloney.
“Everything is changing,” he whispered in Midnight’s ear, planting another kiss, this time on her nose. From now on, he would get past all the harsh obstacles life threw at him. He would care for this little canine that he loved more than anything and anyone. He would slay all the monsters for her. And maybe even some for himself as well.