Dogman 🎯

Now I'm in a motel in Lansing. The news is on. They're reporting a "mass escape" at the asylum. Seven guards dead. Cause of death: "severe lacerations consistent with a large animal." Edmund Croft is listed as "missing, presumed deceased."

And they are looking right at me.

The records were hidden in plain sight. County coroner reports from the 1970s with "coyote attack" scribbled in the margin, despite the bite radius being three inches too wide. Native American oral histories from the Ojibwe tribe: the Michi Peshu , they called it, but that was a water panther. No, the elders had another name, one they wouldn't say aloud. They called it Giishkimanidoo —the Walking Nightmare. DogMan

"What does it want, Edmund?"

The emergency generator kicked in after forty-five seconds. In that darkness, I heard it. Not a howl. A hum . A low, guttural vibration that felt less like sound and more like a pressure change inside my skull. Then the scratching. Not on the glass. On the concrete outside the wall. Something was dragging a claw across the reinforced stone of the asylum's foundation. Now I'm in a motel in Lansing

The first time I saw the DogMan, I was seven years old, staring through the fogged-up window of a school bus. We were idling at the crossroads of M-37 and Old Stage Road—a place the locals called "The Devil's Elbow." The other kids were laughing, throwing half-eaten apples at a stop sign. I was looking into the cornfield. Seven guards dead

The door burst off its hinges. The alarms blared. I ran. I ran through the corridors, through the crash doors, into the snowy parking lot. Behind me, I heard the guards screaming, then the wet, percussive thump of bodies hitting the floor. Then silence.