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Black Cat Weekly #139
Black Cat Weekly #139
Black Cat Weekly #139
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Black Cat Weekly #139

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This issue, we have a pair of original stories: Stephen D. Rogers’ “Sonnenblumenkried” (which translates as Sunflower War, for those not fluent in German), courtesy of Acquiring Editor Michael Bracken) and a new Velda story by Ron Miller. Acquiring Editor Barb Goffman snagged a great Edith Maxwell tale, plus we have The Disappearance of Anne Shaw, by Augusta Huiell Seaman as our mystery novel. And don’t forget there’s another Hal Charles solve-it-yourself puzzler, too.
On the science fiction & fantasy side, we have a pair of novelettes from pulp greats: Edmond Hamilton and Arthur Leo Zagat. Plus an early Harlan Ellison story, and tales by Charles V. De Vet and Sam Carson. Fun stuff.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 27, 2024
ISBN9781667603933
Black Cat Weekly #139

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    Black Cat Weekly #139 - Ron Miller

    Table of Contents

    COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

    THE CAT’S MEOW

    TEAM BLACK CAT

    SONNENBLUMENKRIEG, by Stephen D. Rogers

    DEATH BY COMIC BOOK, by Hal Charles

    BYE-BYE, JOJO, by Edith Maxwell

    VELDA AND THE MURDER MUFFINS, by Ron Miller

    THE DISAPPEARANCE OF ANNE SHAW, by Augusta Huiell Seaman

    CHAPTER I

    CHAPTER 2

    CHAPTER 3

    CHAPTER 4

    CHAPTER 5

    CHAPTER 6

    CHAPTER 7

    CHAPTER 8

    CHAPTER 9

    CHAPTER 10

    CHAPTER 11

    CHAPTER 12

    CHAPTER 13

    CHAPTER 14

    CHAPTER 15

    CHAPTER 16

    CHAPTER 17

    CHAPTER 18

    CHAPTER 19

    CHAPTER 20

    CHAPTER 21

    A WORLD TO DIE FOR, by Sam Carson

    DEATH OF A MUTANT, by Charles V. De Vet

    THE UNTOUCHABLE ADOLESCENTS, by Harlan Ellison

    THE SEA HORROR, by Edmond Hamilton

    COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

    CHAPTER 1

    CHAPTER 2

    CHAPTER 3

    CHAPTER 4

    CHAPTER 5

    CHAPTER 6

    VENUS STATION, by Arthur Leo Zagat

    COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

    CHAPTER 1

    CHAPTER 2

    CHAPTER 3

    CHAPTER 4

    CHAPTER 5

    CHAPTER 6

    CHAPTER 7

    COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

    Copyright © 2024 by Wildside Press LLC.

    Published by Black Cat Weekly

    blackcatweekly.com

    *

    Sonnenblumenkrieg is copyright © 2024 by Stephen D. Rogers and appears here for the first time.

    Death by Comic Book is copyright © 2022 by Hal Blythe and Charlie Sweet. Reprinted by permission of the authors.

    Bye-Bye, Jojo is copyright © 2022 by Edith Maxwell. Originally published in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, March/April 2022. Reprinted by permission of the author.

    Velda and the Murder Muffins is copyright © 2024 by Ron Miller and appears here for the first time.

    The Disappearance of Anne Shaw, by Augusta Huiell Seaman, was originally published in 1928.

    A World to Die For, by Sam Carson, was originally published in Fantastic Universe, July 1954.

    Death of a Mutant, by Charles V. De Vet, was originally published in Super-Science Fiction, February 1957.

    The Untouchable Adolescents, by Harlan Ellison, was originally published in Super-Science Fiction, February 1957, under the pseudonym Ellis Hart.

    The Sea Horror, by Edmond Hamilton, was originally published in Weird Tales, March 1929.

    Venus Station, by Arthur Leo Zagat, was originally published in Science Fiction Stories, April 1943. Although in the public domain in the United States, this classic work remains in copyright in Spain and other countries. Reprinted by permission of the author’s estate.

    THE CAT’S MEOW

    Welcome to Black Cat Weekly.

    This issue, we have a pair of original stories: Stephen D. Rogers’ Sonnenblumenkried (which translates as Sunflower War, for those not fluent in German), courtesy of Acquiring Editor Michael Bracken) and a new Velda story by Ron Miller. Acquiring Editor Barb Goffman snagged a great Edith Maxwell tale, plus we have The Disappearance of Anne Shaw, by Augusta Huiell Seaman as our mystery novel. And don’t forget there’s another Hal Charles solve-it-yourself puzzler, too.

    On the science fiction & fantasy side, we have a pair of novelettes from pulp greats: Edmond Hamilton and Arthur Leo Zagat. Plus an early Harlan Ellison story, and tales by Charles V. De Vet and Sam Carson. Fun stuff.

    Here’s the complete lineup—

    Cover: Ron Miller

    Mysteries / Suspense / Adventure:

    Sonnenblumenkrieg by Stephen D. Rogers [Michael Bracken Presents short story]

    Death by Comic Book by Hal Charles [Solve-It-Yourself Mystery]

    Bye-Bye, Jojo Edith Maxwell [Barb Goffman Presents short story]

    Velda and the Murder Muffins by Ron Miller [short story]

    The Disappearance of Anne Shaw, by Augusta Huiell Seaman [novel]

    Science Fiction & Fantasy:

    A World to Die For, by Sam Carson [short story]

    Death of a Mutant, by Charles V. De Vet [short story]

    The Untouchable Adolescents, by Harlan Ellison [short story]

    The Sea Horror, by Edmond Hamilton [novelette]

    Venus Station, by Arthur Leo Zagat [novelette]

    Until next time, happy reading!

    —John Betancourt

    Editor, Black Cat Weeklyl

    TEAM BLACK CAT

    EDITOR

    John Betancourt

    ASSOCIATE EDITORS

    Barb Goffman

    Michael Bracken

    Paul Di Filippo

    Darrell Schweitzer

    Cynthia M. Ward

    PRODUCTION

    Sam Hogan

    Enid North

    Karl Wurf

    SONNENBLUMENKRIEG,

    by Stephen D. Rogers

    We’d been marching through the field of sunflowers for an hour, and still, I could smell the village burning. The dark smoke rose through the sweltering summer heat to become the clouds that darkened the sky.

    The Hauptmann only asked once. If he didn’t get the cooperation he expected, he discovered undesirables among the local population and ordered them shot. He then waited for someone to come forward with the requested information.

    Nobody in the village we’d just left wanted to tell us which Russian units were operating in this area. The Hauptmann gave the barbarians more than enough incentive to be helpful, systematically shooting newly discovered undesirables every two hours, but the peasants resisted to the end. The end consists of the witch who spat and cursed from the moment she was dragged from her hole until bullets silenced her unintelligible ranting.

    What had been men, women, and children were now just so many lumps of blooded rags. That was how the Hauptmann operated, how he created opportunity and made plain his displeasure.

    We were then ordered to set fire to the buildings and fields to spite the bandits who officially didn’t exist. We torched everything despite the fact that we’ll probably need it next winter when we advance to the rear. Only to straighten our lines, of course, the non-retreat having nothing to do with Russian offenses.

    Not that I would ever dare say such things. My crime of thinking them was serious enough.

    In the Hauptmann’s left blouse pocket, he carried a notebook listing the names of those in his command who failed to show the necessary zeal. These were the Landsers he sent out to spearhead assaults, to probe for mines, to locate Russian snipers. When the Hauptmann had shown me my name, he also pointed out the names through which lines had already been drawn.

    Despite his best efforts, the Hauptmann hadn’t managed to kill me yet.

    Maybe today. Maybe today I would be allowed to redeem myself.

    I shrugged my shoulders to shift the straps out of the ruts they’d worn in my flesh if not my bones. We’d lost the wagon that might have carried our belongings and so they hung on our backs.

    There wasn’t enough time to wait for a replacement wagon. We must advance, advance, advance to defeat this godforsaken country. There was only enough time to halt if the delay meant slaughtering peasants and burning their stores.

    The smoke stung my nose.

    The invectives of the cursing witch rang in my ears.

    The Kompanie marched dispersed to minimize the risk of losing too many to mines, and to maximize the chance of flushing any enemy who might be hidden in this field. Some Landsers sang, others spoke to whomever was marching close enough, but most trudged along in silence.

    I didn’t need to look left and right to know I was point.

    The Hauptmann never failed to offer me a chance to die for the Führer.

    If storm clouds covered the sky, sunflowers covered the earth. We marched through an endless field of meter-high stalks topped by bursts of yellow that threatened to blind.

    Screams. Schmidt was ablaze and screaming. Twisting and flapping and screaming.

    Something in Schmidt’s pack exploded, and he flopped to the ground, disappearing among the sunflowers.

    All this I saw because I could not turn away from the sight. I simply stared while my Gruppe formed a defensive position without me.

    Slowly I came to, as blooms open to seek the sun. I fell into place and sought evidence of ambush.

    The machine guns probed, firing in short bursts, placing their shots randomly at random intervals. No enemy stood with arms raised or broke and ran. We could have been alone out here.

    In time, the Hauptmann commanded us to stop firing.

    I never even started, too disrupted by the shock of what had happened.

    Although Schmidt had marched in the middle of the formation, he might have tripped some incendiary device that others had missed. Alternately, he might have gone crazy and decided to light himself a Tannenbaum.

    Such things happened on the eastern front. Such things happened even amidst flowers.

    We halted long enough to bury Schmidt in the black soil.

    We halted long enough for the Hauptmann to call me a coward.

    We halted long enough for me to feel disjointed, as if I’d lost the thread, the strings that allowed my legs to carry me across the kilometers without any intervention on my part.

    Schmidt had died and I... I gripped my rifle as though I’d never touched a gun before, wore my uniform as if for the first time, staggered and stumbled.

    Schmidt had died—his blackened corpse left no doubt of that—but what had killed him? Since being thrust into the Wehrmacht, I had seen men die in more ways than I’d ever imagined possible, but there was always a logical explanation.

    Schmidt’s death struck me as so unreasonable that my understanding of the world failed to ground me, failed to even include me. I was here but not here, marching through this field of sunflowers, but not.

    Schmidt might have been dead but at least he was real.

    When had I ceased to be? When I stepped on foreign soil? When I joined the Wehrmacht? When Hitler gained power?

    I was out of step. A bad thing when marching. Especially in this land of vast melancholy.

    But the Hauptmann called me a coward for taking too long to respond. To be reprimanded, I must exist.

    Just as this field of sunflowers must exist for me to stomp its soil and part its stalks. Must exist despite the nightmarish nature of its size. After all, this place was not so different than the other monstrosities I’d marched through, Russian fields and forests and swamps that dwarfed anything found in Germany.

    We could kill every peasant in every village and still I doubted we could ever defeat Russia the country. More reason for the Hauptmann to question my resolve.

    Maeder howled, ablaze, a human torch. Others rushed to smother the inferno, but he pushed through them and bolted, ran past me and through my field of vision, ran as if he could escape the flames following him, chasing him.

    I took my defensive position but could discover no threat, no Russians popping up to attack or staying low as they moved through the flowers.

    Maeder weaved as he ran, perhaps hoping to throw off the flickering tail, the weave slowing to a wobble, but his voice remaining strong.

    I’d seen men disfigured, dismembered, disemboweled. And when you see things like that, you hear the men yell and scream and wail and moan and cry. The experience affects you. But nothing affected me as much as the sights and sounds of someone burning alive. A village burning alive.

    Maeder howled as he ran, outdistancing the men trying to help him, and then he slowed and dropped.

    The Hauptmann oversaw the burial and then formed us up single file. Single file we made the smallest possible target, tread the thinnest path. The Hauptmann took the lead position and then waved me ahead.

    Maybe today he’d manage to kill me.

    I broke a trail for the Kompanie to follow.

    Maeder had been a member of my Gruppe. A fellow rifleman. He had a girlfriend back in Düsseldorf, a future in his father’s butcher shop. He liked to read.

    A wind came up, pushing me back as it grew stronger. The sunflowers leaned towards me as if baring their teeth.

    We’d lost two to the field and time. I increased my pace before the Hauptmann ordered me to do so. While I didn’t care about whatever schedule the Kompanie was expected to keep, I wanted out of this cursed field, and I did not use the word cursed lightly.

    I was no coward, but this never-ending field of sunflowers, the dark clouds and the stiffening wind, the unusualness of the two deaths, they all combined to keep me on edge. More than anything else, I wanted to put this field behind me and be somewhere else.

    What had that witch been raving before we put her down?

    My mouth tasted of copper.

    I could still smell the village but didn’t know whether the smoke reached me despite the wind blowing in the opposite direction or whether the smoke was in me, caked within my nose and my lungs and my mind.

    I could well imagine that the smell would accompany me to the grave, a grave that waited at my feet.

    My mother had wanted me to follow in her father’s footsteps and become a music teacher, or perhaps I’d achieve his dream of opening a music store and giving private lessons. Adolph Hitler, however, had other ideas.

    I looked straight ahead as I fought the wind. Left, right, and then at the place I was about to step.

    Nothing moved ahead of us except for the sunflowers, the wind at their back urging them forward.

    Ahead of me, they stared and watched me coming.

    Left, right, and then at the place I was about to step.

    Again, I thought about the villagers we’d murdered. As soon as we started down that path, we lost the war, no matter how it turned out.

    I snuck a glance over my shoulder to see if the Hauptmann could read my mind.

    He grimaced, opened his mouth, and burst into flame.

    Did nobody else see what happened? The beams of light that flashed from the sunflowers? Die Sonnenblumen!

    I broke into a run.

    Slowing, I looked back. Light burst from the sunflowers and converged to create balls of fire that engulfed the men. Two or three plants at a time, targeting only a single man, but always winning the encounter.

    We were surrounded.

    I hit the ground as a fireball passed over me.

    Over the din I heard orders and rifle fire. At long last I heard a machine gun join the fight, but the weapon was soon silenced. Much easier to mow down waves of screaming Russians than it was to cut down a field of sunflowers.

    Cut down. I fixed my bayonet to my rifle, and none too soon. I looked up to see a sunflower peering at me through the leaves. I grabbed the butt of my rifle and swung, slicing through the stalk.

    The bloom dropped to the earth merely yellow.

    There were fewer screams now. Concentrated rifle fire. The occasional grenade.

    Someone would start screaming, and then there would be one less firing.

    I quickly poked my head up over the flowers. The Kompanie was quarter strength, if that. I hit the ground and felt the heat pass overhead.

    I extended my rifle ahead of me. Gripped the butt with both hands and swung the bayonet in small arcs, slicing. Used my legs to squirm myself forward.

    The sunflowers tried to get at me. I saw and felt bursts of light but perhaps there needed to be more than one plant involved for the attack to be deadly, and I was crawling down a narrow corridor.

    Behind me, I heard scattered shots. Then none.

    No longer could I hear commands being shouted or men calling to coordinate counter-attacks. I no longer heard screams but then perhaps there was nobody left to kill.

    I wriggled away from the site of the massacre, slowed by the need to clear a path ahead, squirming over and crushing flowers I’d sent tumbling.

    Could the whole Kompanie really have been wiped out? Or were Landers simply staying low and crawling for safety? Was there even such a thing?

    My bayonet dulled. Instead of slicing I had to hack through the stalks, which was taking too much time. I pulled the weapon back and wiped the thick white fluid off the blade.

    Turned over onto my back and laid my arms down along my side to rest the muscles. The sky was just as dark. The wind was just as brisk. Russia was just as immense.

    I could be alone here in this sunflower field. Alone in the world. After taking a deep breath, I shouted my existence. Hallo!

    Nobody answered.

    I went down the list of those who had fallen. Recalled hometowns, people left behind, favorite meals. Hobbies and what they intended to do after the war. I remembered friendships and slights.

    The Hauptmann. Had he crossed off names of the two who fell before him? Did my name remain in the pile of charred ash?

    I took several deep breaths. Smelled above the smoke from the village the stench of roasted flesh.

    Hallo?

    I’d called out twice now. Anybody left must know it was safe to respond. Since no one had, nobody was left.

    What about the sunflowers? Perhaps they’d exhausted whatever had allowed them to attack us. Perhaps they’d satisfied the demands of the curse. Perhaps they’d been sated.

    If the sunflower field had represented an endless march, I did not want to imagine how long it would take to crawl free.

    I twisted to work off my pack. I stuck my sleeping bag onto my bayonet and then raised my rifle until the sleeping bag was visible above the field.

    A flash of bright light engulfed the sleeping bag in flames.

    Realizing the setback could be turned into an opportunity, I waved the flaming ball back and forth until with a final thrust I sent the fireball flying.

    If I set the field burning, the smoke might blind the sunflowers, and the fire might clear away the threat entirely.

    I hacked at the plants nearest me, clearing an area to act as a firebreak. Then I froze.

    Burning men had already fallen into the field, and a fire hadn’t sparked and spread. Why would my sleeping bag be any more successful?

    I waited to see if I could be wrong.

    Waited and waited to hear flames and smell smoke.

    Watched the black clouds move across the sky.

    The sunflowers had done what they’d done even while the sun was hidden, which meant darkness was probably not the safe haven I’d been afraid to hope.

    Maybe the opposite was true. Maybe their dark power was related to the ominous cloud cover that blocked out the sun. Maybe night would make them stronger. If that were the case, I couldn’t expect to escape under the cover of darkness. In fact, I couldn’t risk being here past nightfall.

    Opening the various sections of my pack, I cataloged the tools at my disposal. The bayonet was good but slow. Firing at the plants seemed pointless. Gas mask but no gas that might provide cover. Canteen. Breadbag. The entrenching tool had potential, swung like a pick or held up as a shield, however small. Finally, I had the seven stick grenades.

    While the grenades would clear away the plants faster, the blast area might work against me by increasing the width of the corridor in which I hid.

    And I had but the seven.

    No matter. I had bayonet, entrenching tool, and seven stick grenades with which to cross an unknown distance.

    Attack!

    Rolling onto my stomach, I thrust my rifle in front of me and continued cutting.

    Left, right, squirm. Left, right, squirm. Left, right, squirm. I advanced at a snail’s pace but at least I advanced.

    The interminable task made the hours drag. My arms hurt and then ached and then went numb even though I could see them moving.

    I didn’t dare stop or even slow, not knowing how much farther I must travel, how little time I had remaining.

    Left, right, squirm. Left, right, squirm.

    The occasional sight of a sunflower glaring at me, dousing me with light, was all that broke the monotony.

    Come darkness, would a single sunflower be enough to be too much?

    Left, right, squirm.

    I thought of nothing, and I thought of the men who had died. I thought about the men who died before we reached the sunflower field, the men who died in normal ways: gunfire, artillery, mines. I thought about the villagers and the witch who cursed us.

    Left, right, squirm.

    The day was growing darker. I didn’t know for a fact that the sunflowers would be more dangerous at night, but I could not risk the unknown.

    Cutting the stalks while crawling was simply too slow.

    The stick grenades had an effective blast radius of thirteen meters. Using seven of them and allowing for overlap would not buy me the length of a soccer field.

    How could I determine I was that close to the end of the sunflowers without being able to stand? Wait until the last second and then take it on faith. "Gott mit uns."

    Or if not with us, let God be with me.

    The light changed suddenly, and then it was dark.

    Left, right, squirm. Left, right, squirm. Left, right, squirm. A sunflower glowed ahead. I rolled to the side and watched a ball of fire land where I’d been, burn for a second and then die.

    I withdrew a grenade, unscrewed the end of the handle, and pulled the porcelain ball. Threw the grenade as far as I could. Four seconds later, the grenade exploded, and I was running at a crouch across the cleared area, glad for the falling soil that provided some measure of cover.

    Nearing the end of the blast area, I dropped to the ground and threw the second grenade.

    I waited for the explosion and then ran at a crouch until I neared the end of that blast area.

    Hit the ground. Threw a grenade. Ran.

    I repeated the cycle again and again until I threw my last grenade, ran at a crouch with my entrenching tool held in front of my face.

    The ground under my feet shifted and dropped. I was stumbling down an incline and then I was splashing. I strode deeper into the water until the current carried me free of the sunflowers. Knowing I’d need to explain what happened to the rest of the Kompanie, I fashioned a story of bandits.

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR

    Stephen D. Rogers is the author of Shot to Death and more than 800 shorter works. His website, www.StephenDRogers.com, includes a list of new and upcoming titles as well as other timely information.

    DEATH BY COMIC BOOK,

    by Hal Charles

    While solving the original Peterson case, State Police Detective Kelly Stone had never been nervous, but here in the studio to discuss that case, when the ON AIR light came on, she found herself literally shaking.

    I’m here with my sister, announced the podcast’s host, Krissy Stone, to discuss her successful closing of the Peterson case. Perhaps Kelly you could start by reminding our audience who Mr. Peterson was.

    Thanks for having me, said Kelly, going slowly so as to regulate her breathing. Jefferson J. Peterson was probably the richest man in the county, and he lived in the biggest house out at Fire Lake.

    He had been divorced what . . . three times? said the host.

    Correct, but we’re getting ahead of ourselves.

    Well, continued Krissy, he was convinced that one of his exes would try to do him in.

    Yes, and to prevent that unfortunate event, Kelly said, Mr. Peterson surrounded himself with an army of guards.

    So tell us then, how was the murder effected?

    Like most of us, Jefferson Peterson had a weakness. He was in fact highly allergic to peanut butter.

    Something all three ex-wives knew about firsthand, interjected Krissy.

    Yes.

    So how was the dastardly deed accomplished? I imagine Mr. Peterson had people to scrutinize anything resembling peanuts as it entered the house.

    He did, but he also had another weakness.

    Another allergy?

    No, but it was an itch he scratched quite frequently. Mr. Peterson was an avid collector of Golden Age superhero comic books. That’s comics published between 1938 and 1956. Day and night Mr. Peterson haunted eFanboy, which is a website for buying and trading such comics.

    I think if I had a husband of his age who sat around all day buying and reading comic books, I’d have killed him, too, commented Krissy.

    Kelly shook her head, but her sister’s attempt at levity was making her feel more at ease.

    Was this hobby of acquiring old comic books something he had himself acquired before his first marriage? continued the host.

    If you’re asking did all three wives know about his real love, yes, they did.

    Believe me, sis, I love the set-up, but the suspense is killing me. Again, how did one of the three witches slay the dragon? Or were they in collusion?

    No, Mallory, wife #3 who had divorced him the previous month, acted alone. Marlowe, wife #1, and Meredith, wife #2, had no knowledge of what their successor was doing.

    Yet all three ex-wives had the same motive?

    Absolutely. To marry Peterson they were all forced to sign unbreakable pre-nups, which left each one angry.

    So basically, since she would receive nothing, the killer was simply satisfying her anger.

    Yes.

    So how was the murder accomplished? posed Krissy.

    The killer knew from seeing his list during their time of marriage what comics he had. The killer simply purchased the comics of Mr. Peterson’s desire on another website and offered them for sale on eFanboy. Also knowing his eFanboy trading name, she could enter into negotiation with him and drop the price low enough to entice him to buy.

    You have the necessary evidence?

    Kelly crinkled a cellophane bag used to wrap and ship the murderous comic book in. I found this bag beside Mr. Peterson’s body. Take a whiff.

    Krissy inhaled deeply. I’ll have the answer in a jiff. That’s the unmistakable odor of peanut butter. Clever.

    And lethal.

    How did you catch her?

    The envelope the comic came in bore the return address of where one of the ex-wives had relocated.

    That sounds a bit easy. I’m sure she used an alias.

    She did, but not an out-of-town post office, but it really didn’t matter to me.

    Why not?

    Long before the address and the subsequent confession, I knew who did it.

    SOUTION

    Deduction. For the killer to be certain to offer to sell a comic book on eFanboy that would attract Mr. Peterson, Kelly reasoned, she had to know what her ex-husband wanted, but more specifically what comics he didn’t have. To be sure of that information the ex-wife had to be very up-to-date on Jefferson Peterson’s list of comic books in his possession. The person most current was ex-wife #3, Mallory, whose divorce was only a month old.

    The Barb Goffman Presents series showcases

    the best in modern mystery and crime stories,

    personally selected by one of the most acclaimed

    short stories authors and editors in the mystery

    field, Barb Goffman, forBlack Cat Weekly.

    BYE-BYE, JOJO,

    by Edith Maxwell

    If that dog doesn’t stop barking, I’m going to kill someone. It’s not like I don’t know how.

    My mind takes me back two years to when I inherited this house after my mean SOB father died. Of course, there are questions about how he died and what I know. I fake grief and ignorance, and that is that.

    It takes a while to settle his estate, but when I move in a year later in the summer, all is quiet. The house behind mine is on the market and unoccupied. Well-behaved retired couples live on either side of me.

    I work at home, and with the ultra-acute hearing I’ve had all my life, I need quiet. The neighbors do not disappoint, and they tell me they head south to climes warmer than Massachusetts for the entire winter.

    I know the neighbors are happy in the fall when I start methodically removing the vines that range over all the walls of the house. I clean up the herb garden near the side door and keep the lawn tidy. Pop had let the place go to hell in a handcart, but I’m not that kind of homeowner. I have one more wall of vines to go, and then I’ll repaint. I buy a nice teak patio set for the deck, where I enjoy a drink and a good book at the end of the day.

    * * * *

    My life goes to all to hell in the spring. A woman—Kay Hobart—moves in behind me. She and her asshole dog. Let me amend that. She’s the asshole. Not her dog. Still, it’s a big black thing with a deep voice, and it’s outside barking nearly constantly. In the morning. All afternoon. Every evening.

    Did I say my hearing is better than 99 percent of humans? That might have to do with my Dumbo ears. I can’t help it if my ears stick straight out from my head, but I was endlessly bullied about them in school. The plastic surgeon I saw this winter said it’s because I have underdeveloped antihelical folds as well as too much cartilage in both conchas. I’m afraid of surgery, so I just have to live with these ears. Unfortunately, they make any set of headphones hurt, including the best noise-canceling ones. I go through pair after pair of silicone earplugs. I can still hear the damn dog.

    One Saturday in May, I watch from my kitchen window as Kay sets bricks in a small circle in her yard. I head out to the four-foot-high chain-link fence that divides our properties. I don’t open the connecting gate but call to her from my side.

    Kay, can I have a word with you, please?

    She glances up, waves, and comes back to the fence. The dog comes with her.

    Hey, Pat. Nice day, isn’t it?

    Yes. I clear my throat. I’m not sure you’re aware that your dog barks all the time when you’re at work. And it barks all evening too. I’d appreciate it if you’d restrain it from barking when you’re home and keep it inside when you’re not.

    She laughs. Oh, that’s just the kind of dog he is. You know I live alone. Jojo protects me. Do you know how dark and isolated this road is with the woods on the other side?

    Well, can you put him in while you’re at work?

    "He wouldn’t like

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