Thomas Craig - The Outkast

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He's young and innocent, with a typical kid's heart. Yet, he's different, ignored, and despised by everyone around him. He's an outcast.
He's huge and utterly dangerous, with a crazy lust for blood. He's doing everything evil to avenge the death of his pride, and thus pour his indignation upon those who have ignored and spited him. He's The Outcast.
Robert Smallwood is a loner, hated at school by the rest of the students-and teachers alike. He's the twelve-year-old suspect in a high school murder case. At first, Sheriff Brian Stack has some doubt about the accusation. But when more bodies are found, with objects left on the scenes that point towards Robert, the police investigation intensifies.
The Outkast is a story of absolute thrills.

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He stood in the doorway for a while, casting a darkly suspicious gaze at the boy, who was still snoozing. Apparently, he had gone through a screaming bout while still asleep.

Something wasn’t right, but that something had nothing to do with the boy’s susceptibility to attacks from the enemies. What The Outcast felt was more intense.

Right now, he began to experience the level of polarity that had played between the impure blood of Ogre’s Pond and him for so long.

All of a sudden, his subsided shivering resumed.

What the problem was-what he had felt at the boy’s house and in his own chamber-no doubt, was the foul spirit of betrayal.

He was just about to scream in infuriation when the engines rumbled across the quiet night, the sound swelling from the woods towards his abode.

******

As lightning cracked the face of the sky, Allan and Dwayne crouched behind a huge log of wood in response to Dwayne’s observation.

“Do you still notice any movement?” Allan asked in a low, quavery voice.

“Not anymore. Maybe it was just a figment of my imagination,” Dwayne said, whirling his head around to scan the whole area, as if he found it hard to convince himself by his own words. “I saw it through the corner of my eye, after all. Might even be a trick of the light.”

An insect lost its bearings and buzzed right into Allan’s nostril. “Shit,” he muttered as he blew the critter out. “I hate this.”

“How did we wind up here by the way?” Dwayne said.

Allan was still fuming at the winged creature’s intrusion on his mucous membrane-like it was a sacred land that an infidel had just desecrated.

Dwayne added, “I mean, how exactly did Sheriff Stack figure out this place is the criminal’s hideout?”

“Robert Smallwood.”

“Huh?”

“The boy keeps the record of his nightmares.”

“Really?”

“Yeah.”

“Why?”

“I have no idea. And even for a boy his age, if you ask me, makes it weirder.”

“But what has that got to do with us hunkering down here with our asses getting wiped by the itchy brushes?”

“Well, he says he sees this place in his shitty dreams. The kid’s fucked up,” Allan said, and quickly added: “And so is his mother.”

“So, do you believe in that?”

“In what?”

“That what the boy claims to have seen is real-and that this is it?”

“Fuck, no. I’m not that superstitious and stupid. Imagine how much of realness it must have held for us to have missed our way so many times.”

Dwayne kept silent.

Allan said, “But tell you what? Although I don’t believe the boy’s writing is anything more than a sick kid’s report, I’m scared all the same.”

“You’re scared?” Dwayne said, stressing the last word with disbelieve. “Now, that doesn’t make any sense, does it? If you don’t believe in what you’ve read, and you don’t believe we’re in the place described by the boy, why’re you worried?”

“I dunno. Probably doesn’t make any sense to anyone, including me-but whenever I remember that thing and how badly it stabbed Crawford repeatedly, it makes my blood curdle.”

“Nonsense. If I were you, such reflection would only make me wanna leave the son-of-a-bitch torn to ribbons. And I’m damn sure I will do that at some point. If not here, then wherever he is, we’ll track him down.”

They studied the night ahead of them and, having decided the coast was clear, they moved on, dodging behind big tree trunks from time to time, never staying more than six feet apart.

There was another flash across the sky, and at that instant, it was the familiar horrible face that Allan saw first before he even noticed the rest of the figure in black coveralls, whose arm was already coiled around Dwayne’s neck.

Allan watched in awe, thinking, I’ve been in this situation before. This is like lightning striking the same damn place two fucking times.

In the blink of an eye, Dwayne had been lifted off his feet, legs flailing in the air, neck still strangled by the sturdy arm.

What happened at Holly’s cottage was a slow-motion version of what Allan was about to witness. Just as he got over his awe and decided it was time to do something more productive than gawking, the monster flung Dwayne at him, knocking him down to the forest floor. Allan’s gun slipped off his hand and flew away, probably taking refuge underneath a pile of leaves or hiding behind a fallen trunk. Dwayne landed beside him, motionless at first, but then began to jerk his right leg, digging his heel against the dirt as he screamed.

Allan quickly drew out his second gun, and shot straight ahead before realizing the thing was no longer in front of them. He began to rise up, shooting as he did, aimlessly, not giving a damn that he was acting like a lousy amateur. Beside him, Dwayne dug some more and let out a cry-a sonorous, pain-filled shriek. In the flood of the moonlight, Allan could faintly see blood seeping out from underneath his partner. Within the brief time his eyes roamed across his comrade’s body, he saw something sticking out from the side of Dwayne’s chest, along his rib cage. A knife , Allan assumed, and squeezed another aimless shot into the air.

He was all the way up on his feet now. He whirled around in search of his target, but he didn’t have to look for long. The huge thing pounced from Allan’s left side, kicked the gun out of his hand, and slapped him so hard he found his butt on the ground one more time.

Allan cried. He scrambled to his feet again and ran. Ran very fast. Away from the battle front.

Chapter 20

“I’ve seen the devil again. Oh, my good Lord, I’ve come in close contact with death twice tonight,” Allan wept. “It’s a monster. We’ve got to get the hell out of here and run for our lives. We can never stand out against-”

“Would you shut up and just calm down for a sec?” Brian inched nearer and slapped him twice. He pulled Allan down into the trench they had been hiding. “Hell, keep your goddamned voice down.”

Delirious to the level of getting out of hand, Allan spoke bare-toothed. “I cannot, Sheriff… I just cannot calm down. There’s death around here… everywhere, every damn corner you turn, and I just can’t…” He paused to catch his breath. “What’s the point, anyway?”

“The point is, so he doesn’t track us down, you idiot.”

“Fuck, it already knows we’re here. Killed Dwayne. Almost killed me, but I ran,” Allan said, grinning, as if he was proud, very proud of his exceptional skill of escape. Brian thought his deputy might be going crazy under the power of the moon.

Craig groaned at the news of attack, looking from Allan to Brian, and then back to Allan.

Brian whispered, “Allan, I can see why you look and sound so hysterical-”

“No, you can’t. Not until you meet it.”

“I can see why you’re losing-”

A boy’s voice interrupted Brian’s next comment. The boy was talking to someone, pleading to let him go. There was a momentary flash of light from the mouth of the cave that made shadows scamper across the woods. Then, silence engulfed the place again.

About sixty meters ahead, from the side of the cave that was further away from the entrance Brian and Craig had spotted earlier, a figure emerged from behind a grove of trees, wearing a robe that the moonlight transmitted on a range of shades from gray to blue, to anything in-between. The figure briefly trained its flashlight forward in their direction.

For that short length of time, Brian’s heart stopped. He thought they had been spotted where they crouched. “Down,” he muttered.

Swiftly, the three men kept down even further, only allowing themselves a peep around the edge of a fallen tree that lay at the lip of the entrenchment, running their surveillance from behind it.

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