Is this fun or am I just batty?

Okay, probably a fair amount of each. Maybe I’m feeling the COVID-19 shutdown (when does it become COVID-20?). I don’t care. I’m doing this. As no one else has ever said (I’m pretty sure), it’s no fun failing unless you do it in public.

Writing is a fickle pastime. I’ve written so, so many things that have never seen the light of day. Not even a hint of moonlight. In many cases I am vastly grateful. In some, however, I feel regrets. Such is the case with Varley the Vegan Vampire. I know, I know. It’s meant to be a kid’s’ book okay?! That’s what I told myself, though I think I wrote it entirely for my own enjoyment. It is, in fact, an unmarketable monstrosity. Yes, with literal monsters.

This thing is in common meter (tetrameter/trimeter) rhyming verse. That’s right, rhyme. It’d make Emily Dickinson think she’d been slipped a bad mushroom (possibly not for the first time). It’s vegan. Did I mention it rhymes? You get it. I could go on. It could only ever be marketable to far left, plant-eating, kinky-goth octogenarians who are super comfy with their inner (way inner) child. I haven’t found a publishing house that has a catalog for that. Strangely, though, this little tale is very dear to my heart.

I probably have sentimentality for Varley because my dad loved him. We worked on the story together. It’s kind of an homage to our shared hero, Edward Gorey. One of our last vacations together before Dad got sick was to the Gorey homestead on Cape Cod.

Additionally, it was Dad’s idea to name the character Varley. After reading the first draft he insisted, “It’s a tribute to Varney but he’s vegan. Get it? Rhymes with barley!”

My dad was of course referring to Varney the Vampire from the British “penny dreadful” papers of the nineteenth century. He owned an authentic printing of one of the Varney tales which he treasured for years. Yes, my Methodist minister father. He had a real goth streak. He loved vintage horror (more kitschy than slashy). He owned several hearses and funereal sedans over the years that he’d bought from local undertakers. “High miles but easy miles,” he said. As mentioned, we both loved the Gorey vibe. You knew I had to get it from somewhere, right?

So, enjoy this little offering if you dare. You may want to read it in segments if you aren’t accustomed to rhyme. It can cause painful brain cramps until you build up your tolerance. Since it was meant to be a story book, I found some vintage Halloween cards (and a couple of Gorey bats) to illustrate. I know, it’s not Halloween anymore. But, it’s not 2019 either. We’re all on a bit of a delay.

VARLEY THE VEGAN VAMPIRE

Varley was a vampire boy

at monster middle school.

He loved his classes, and his friends

the zombies, wolves and ghouls.

He always did his homework without

any howls or pangs.

His teacher thought that Varley was

as sharp as his white fangs.

He always aced arithmetic

no matter the amount.

In fact, on his bat-minton team,

his nickname was “the Count.”

At home, Varley had so much fun.

He loved his mom and dad.

His mother was named Hepzibah.

His father was called Vlad.

When it came to dinner time

he sucked every drop dry,

and then his father taught him things,

like how to prowl and fly.

Varley was a happy boy

the perfect monster tween,

and nothing made him happier

than Monster Halloween.

At Monster Halloween the kids

go out to trick or treat.

For monster kids the treats they seek     

are not so very sweet.

They go out dressed in midnight best

to fill up all their sacks

with ladyfingers, pickled toes and

spicy baby-backs.

The Mummy serves a mean tagine

of succulent professor.

The Wolfman hands out candied hearts

absent from corporate bankers.

Swampthing cooks a gumbo up

with dentist in the roux.

Because of this, it really is

a very toothsome brew.

The Zombies serve assortments of

delectable sweetmeats

that once were brains from travelers

they met upon the streets.

Hepzibah let Varley stir her

sanguinary tidbits.

Her hemoglobin popsicles

can chill whomever visits.

So as the moon grew white and full

and rose up in the night,

Varley and his friends met up.

They truly looked a fright!

They pulled some tricks, like stink bomb spells

and stuffed themselves with meat

until they each had to concede

they’d had all they could eat.

Not one of them could come up with

a single, unused hex.

They’d had their fill of loins and ribs

and sweetmeats, and of necks.

The wolfboy got a tummy ache,

young mummy came undone.

So they split up at half-past ten.

They’d had their fill of fun.

Varley made it halfway home   

then suddenly decided

he really wasn’t all that tired.

He spread his wings and glided

above the homes of Monstertown

beyond his neighborhood.

Below he saw monsters and ghouls

clearly up to no good.

And just beyond the village clock         

he saw a jet-black cape.

A vampire boy he had not met?

Varley was agape!

He landed, and he said, “Hello,

and happy Hallows Eve!”

The other vampire waved and said,

“Hello, my name is Steve.”

Now, Varley thought that “Steve” was an

eccentric sort of name,

but he was not the sort to judge.

He liked Steve just the same.

The boy was Varley’s age and height

with fangs so sharp and white

that Varley thought his new comrade

must bear a fearful bite.

Steve preferred arithmetic to

spelling, Varley learned,

and also loved to play his sports.

His passions truly burned

for something he called football, which

Varley didn’t know.

But they had lots in common, so

they agreed to go

around to all Steve’s neighbors, to do

more “trick or treat,” since

Steve assured his new friend that

the sweets could not be beat.

“Did you get to the Miller’s house?”

asked Steve, “their treats are great!”

Before Varley could say a word

they heard, “It’s getting late!”

They turned and saw a mortal mom.

His new chum was a person!

Varley was stunned. His friend was food!

How could his prospects worsen?

No wonder that Steve’s fearful fangs

looked so fresh from the coffin.

In fact they were a plastic pair

just taken from a carton!

Unbidden, his whole life of meals

now flashed through Varley’s mind.

He saw the fingers, toes, and eyes

upon which monsters dined.

And with his super-human ears,

Varley could hear the blood

coursing through his new friend’s veins.

It made him feel like crud.

“I guess I have to go,” said Steve.

“I had a lot of fun!”

And as Steve ran away, Varley

pondered what he had done.

What would his parents say if they

divined his misadventure,

that he had made a friend who had

duped him with vampire dentures?

Varley shuddered at the thought.

He spread his wings and flew

back home as fast as he could go.

It seemed the thing to do.

His mother gave him some warm blood

and tucked him in his coffin,

but Varley stayed up all day long,

which didn’t happen often.

He kept on thinking about Steve.

He chewed and stewed and brooded,

and by the break of dusk Varley

had finally concluded

the foods monsters were raised upon

were archaic and crude.

He had a revelation. He thought,

“PEOPLE ARE NOT FOOD!”

People are not food?” he thought,

it had such implications

on having fun, and fitting in,

and what about starvation?

How could he tell his mom and dad?

He could not even fathom

whatever he could say that would

convey his new compassion?

It was too much to contemplate

how to replace the food

that all monsters relied upon,

but his new attitude

demanded he make changes to his

basic way of life.

Though he did not look forward to

the certain household strife.

Yet there was just no turning back.

Not once he had met Steve.

Could vampires resist human blood?

He wanted to believe.

The next few weeks were just as hard

as Varley had portended.

When he first told his parents, they had

acted quite offended.

His mother thought that he would die.

So dire was her lament!

His father roared, “No son of mine!”

and he’d “prefer impalement.”

But Varley did some research on the

monster’s worldwide web.

He found out that a vampire could drink

vegetables, instead.

His research turned up many facts that

caused him great alarm

about how monsters raised people on

large factory farms.

They had no quality of life, they

languished inside pens

too tiny and too tightly packed to

even lay down in.

Philosophers said hunting free-range

might be more humane.

The livestock had a better life,

so no one need abstain

from harvesting their blood or brains

or tasty this-and-thats,

as long as people could enjoy

natural habitats.

Yet realistically, it seemed

the monster population

could not be fed just on free-range.

It would cause mass-privation.

So hunting free-range people was a

radical flirtation.

After all, what would come next?

Human liberation?

But Varley also found monsters

who lived a kinder way.

They dined simply on plant-based foods,

instead of hunting prey.

With all this information, Varley

fully foresaw why

it would assuage his conscience to give

plant-based foods a try.

He blended up some kale and beets

and plant-based nutrients.

He downloaded the data that

explained the rudiments.

His parents looked it over, but they

called it “blasphemy.”

To controvert his data and

avert this travesty,

they took Varley to all the monsters

they thought, hopefully,

would show him where he had gone wrong.

His reasoning was woolly.

They took him to the mad doctor

to get an education

about the vampire diet and

their predatory station.

“Monsters should eat people, just like

lions eat gazelles.

It’s our ancestral diet, and it

serves us very well.”

The doctor got out lots of books

to show that he was right.

He read aloud to Varley from

“Drink Right for your Blood Type.”

His teacher got a flow-chart out

that taught natural laws

and how monsters were meant to use

their fangs, stingers, or claws.

She said that, as a species, people

were a little slow.

They were put here to be food.

They wouldn’t even know

what they had missed out on in life.

They couldn’t think like that

(plus, vegetables are insufficient

in protein and fat).

“They are completely corporeal,”

she said, “it can’t be clearer.

If people had a soul, we couldn’t

see them in a mirror!”

It just kept going on like that

as days stretched into weeks.

Everywhere that Varley went, he

confronted critiques.

His friends would laugh and tease him when

he drank his juice, at lunch.

And it started to bother him

to watch as they would munch

on human parts of every type,

which dangled from their forks,

and where they saw a treat, all Varley

could see was a corpse.

On his bat-minton team they joked

that he would be too weak

to help them win their matches and they

said he was a freak,

but Varley felt healthy and strong. He loved

his plant-based diet,

except it started eating him that

no one else would try it.

He couldn’t understand how monsters

he thought of as nice

would willfully continue with

this dietary vice.

Despite what Varley told them about

all that he had learned,

they all remained oblivious and

fully unconcerned.

He felt so sad and mad that he

began to sulk and brood.

His teachers warned his parents to

correct his attitude.

His parents begged, cajoled and scolded

Varley, all alike.

He simply would not budge. It was

juice or a hunger strike.

Finally, he was sent home

from school for being rude

because he made a tee-shirt saying

PEOPLE: FRIENDS, NOT FOOD.

His parents were beside themselves.

This time he’d gone too far.

His father said, “I swear I don’t know

who you even are!”

His mother said to him, “I miss

my happy little boy!

This diet makes you cranky and

it’s sapping all your joy!”

“It’s not a diet,” Varley said,

“this is a way of life.”

His father stood up, dark and tall,

and glowered at his wife.

“This is all your fault,” he said.

“You’ve spoiled this monster rotten!”

“I’m not spoiled,” said Varley, “and

in case you have forgotten,

you taught me to think for myself,

and it made me a misfit.

I thought I could count on your help,

but you’re a hypocrite!”

He then burst forth in torrid tears

and ran down to his tomb.

He crawled into his coffin and

retreated into gloom.

It would be so much easier

just to drink blood again.

He could go back to normal, but then

he’d be bothered when

he thought of all that he had learned

since he had first met Steve.

He didn’t want to give it up, and

comfortably deceive

himself about the impact that

his daily choices made.

So he decided, then and there, he

would not ever trade

the lifestyle he had  chosen for

societal permission.

At least, he promised to himself,

not of his own volition.

So by the time that Hepzibah came down

to Varley’s tomb

he knew that he could not give in.

He just could not consume

the human foods that monsters ate.

He wanted to hold fast

no matter if he ever was

negated or harassed.

But when his mother came to him

he had a nice surprise,

for Hebzibah had sympathetic

teardrops in her eyes.

“I know that you don’t think your dad

or I have got a clue,

but I want you to know that we are

very proud of you.

We really do want you to be

an independent thinker,

and that is true even if you’re

an herbivorous drinker.”

Varley was stunned. He wasn’t sure

if he could trust his luck.

Nevermore would he be asked

to prowl and run amok!

“What about Dad?” he asked, and fully

expected a fight.

But then he heard Vlad from the hallway

say, “Your mother’s right.”

“When I grew up my father taught

me to be fierce and mean.

But you have taught me something, Son,

that I had never seen,

that when you dare to stand up for

what you believe is right

it means you are the bravest one.

You’re not afraid to fight

even against the things those close

to you told you were true,

and that takes one tough monster, so

I’m very proud of you.”

And things got better, from that night.

His parents even went

with Varley to a monster

vegetarian event

where they met lots of creatures who’d

chosen to abdicate

all monster privilege that said

they could exsanguinate

or butcher, slay, flambe, fillet

or elsewise gormandize

unsuspecting people.  Or, at

least, they vowed to try.

Their motto at this thing was, “Did your

dinner have to die?”

Varley met a zombie who

subsisted on whole grains.

He said that he could just no longer

stomach human brains.

And there was a Cthulhu there,

disseminating leaflets

elucidating “free-range hunting”

savagery and secrets.

A banshee that ate only beans

was keeping her eye on

a cyclops who had just sworn off of

meat, though not for long.

His parents tasted food samples, like

salad from an ogre

who swore that he had gained muscle

forgoing flesh for clover.

There was a boogieman who cooked

porridge instead of children.

He said, “I’m so much happier,

not eating like a villain.”

He gave them lots of recipes

and other information,

then Vlad asked him a question about

humans and predation.

“Why shouldn’t we be eating them

when they are vicious killers?

They overpopulate, pollute

the soil, the air, the rivers,

and wipe out other species as if

it were meaningless.

They even kill each other, so it

doesn’t take a genius

to see that they are pests, and it

is wise to cull their numbers.”

Dad!” cried Varley, mortified

by this parental blunder,

although the boogieman just smiled

and nodded comprehension.

He said, “Yes, I can understand

your valid apprehension.

It’s true that we do not use humans

as a moral compass,

nor any other creature. Just our

own actions concern us.

But human beings have feelings, and

even complex notions.

Some even display ethics and seem

to show some emotions.

Why, there are even people who’ve

designed a plant-based diet.

They call it veganism, and it

causes some disquiet

amongst their friends and neighbors, but

they keep on slogging through.

So if people can do it, monsters

certainly can, too.”

Varley and his parents were

entirely amazed

that humans also know their diets

need to be appraised.

“I never knew that they had thoughts

or feelings,” his mom said.

“It makes me think that I might just

drink vegetables, instead.”

The boogieman agreed. He said,

“The bottom line is this,

we eat to reduce suffering, and

we don’t even miss

the foods that we used to adore.

we find our tastes have changed.

It’s just that our priorities

have all been rearranged.”

“I knew it!” Varley cried out, “I said

people are not food,

and if people can be vegan, then

I can be one too!”

For all his immortality,

beginning there and now,

he’d practice his morality.

It was a solemn vow.

And Varley meant it. From then on

the weeks and months just flew.

All the monsters dubbed Varley

the Vegan Nosferatu.

But his bat-minton team redeemed

the Transylvania Cup,

and when he did his schoolwork, all

his numbers added up.

So slowly, his professors and

his coaches did admit

that Varley’s plant-based diet had

been to his benefit.

The other kids still teased him, but

they started to adjust.

Eventually his juices were not

noticed or discussed

except when someone asked him for

a recipe or two.

In fact his mother got quite good

at juicing up a brew

of kale and beets and blood oranges

she called the “monster mash,”

and even Vlad might steal a sip

or two from Varley’s stash.

They even served popsicles made of

strawberries and greens

when trick or treaters came around,

next Monster Halloween.

More creatures came to try it out

than they had ever hoped,

and many said that it was great,

though several also joked

that they needed more protein, until

Varley’s father said

the juice was good enough for him,

the King of the Undead.

So after he helped Hepzibah

to make these vegan sweets,

Varley flew to where he knew

that Steve and he might meet.

He found his human friend all dressed

to look like Frankenstein

and as he looked at Steve he knew

that he would never dine

on human blood. No matter what

may or may not transpire,

Varley, in perpetuity,

would be a vegan vampire.

Edward Gorey

So if you’re ever out at night

and think that you have seen

a black and bat-like creature that is

vampirizing greens

it’s probably just Varley, so you

aren’t in any danger.

Be sure to shout your thanks to our

crepuscular crusader.

And if you are in Varley’s thrall

he won’t wish you to be.

Instead, just spread the liberty,

by living cruelty-free.