Sunday, February 8, 2026

The Sweater Curse Ch 17 by Leanne Dyck

WARNING: This story contains adult content

Chapter SixteenThe sweater—it’s Jay’s! I designed it for him. It’s the one I gave him at Christmas.


photo by ldyck

The Sweater Curse

Chapter Seventeen


    Something draws me to the bench at the back of a bus shelter. I push past the faceless mass. A man is sitting on the bench. I’m drawn to him. Why? I don’t know him. Do I? Maybe. It’s hard to tell; his face is buried in his hands. He is wearing the sweater.

    “Do I know y—?”

He mumbles two incoherent words into his palms.

    “Sorry, I—”

He jerks his head up. “I said, go away!”

    His face is grotesque—torn pieces of flesh, oozing green pus. One eye dangles from its socket, suspended there by strings of muscle. I want to look away, but I can’t. I read his story right there on his face. He’s a monster. He’s done harm, and his crime marked him. Fear grips me. I want to run, but I’m paralyzed. I look at his hands; they’re covered in blood.

    “Leave me alone!” He roars. He springs at me, catching my throat in his vise-like grip, and squeezes. “She was a bitch like you! A bitch!” There are tears in his eyes. He squeezes harder, and I’m suffocating. He’s dragging me into his Hell…

***

    In a glass-walled boardroom, businessmen in suits and ties sit around a rectangular table. Garrett Smit stands in front of these men feeling like a sheep among wolves. Sweat pours from his forehead into his eyes. On the floor beside him, an easel holds a chart.

    "You can." His voice quivers. He coughs, takes a sip of water, and tries again. "You can clearly see by this..." He sweeps his hand back—too far. "Ch—." The chart falls from the easel to the fl— Garrett catches the chart but—

    The clients he had hoped to—he needed to impress push back their chairs.

    "Please," Garrett begs, "you need to—."

    The clients make a beeline for the door. Garrett is called into his boss' office. And...

***

    In a quiet suburban neighbourhood, two women sit at a table in an immaculate kitchen, sipping coffee. Bev Smit chats with her friend Mary as she weaves in yarn ends on the man's sweater she has just finished knitting. The cuff on her shirt rides up, revealing a purple bruise.

    "More bruises, Bev?"

    "I'm a klutz." It’s the same excuse she always uses.

    "You're not his punching bag." Mary leaves the table. "Never again!" She heads down the hall to the bedroom.

    Bev is in hot pursuit.

    Mary slides open the glass doors and finds a suitcase in the back of the closet. She puts it on the bed, opens the drawers, and starts to pack.

    "Mary, I can't." Bev notices the time on the alarm clock—5:40 PM. "I need to start supper." She grabs the clothes out of Mary's hands, stuffs them back into the bureau, and rushes down the hall to the kitchen."

    "What are you going to make? I'll help."

    "No, Mary, you need to go. Garrett will be upset if he finds you here."

    "Come with me."

    "I can't."

    On the way to the door, Mary hugs her friend. "Call if you need anything—night or day."

    Alone, Bev goes to the fridge and fills her hands with vegetables. She peels and chops. As she works, she glances out the window. Headlights pierce the night.

    She rushes to the freezer, grabs two pork chops, and puts them in the microwave to defrost. She's taking the pork chops out of the microwave when the front door flies open. She runs to greet him. "Hi, honey. How was your day?"

    "Peachy. Just peachy." He spies the extra coffee mug on the table. "Who. Was. Here?"

    She grabs the offending mug—"Mary. Only Mary."—and deposits it in the sink.

    "How many times do I have to tell you? No visitors!" He roars.

    "Yes, I know. I'm sorry. She dropped by, and I—"

    "You're sorry. You're always sorry."

    "Please, please, don't be mad. I have... I have something for you." She rushes into the bedroom, grabs the sweater, and rushes out.

    "Wow," he mocks, "a sweater." He sneers.

    "I know it's not much...just a sweater, but... I made it for you. Please try it on."

    "All right, all right. Oh, my God, woman." In the bedroom, in front of the full-length mirror, he pushes his head into the neck, hands into the sleeves and pulls it down over his body. He stands admiring himself. And then he sees the suitcase.

    Bev tries to explain, apologize, beg, but Garrett isn't prepared to listen. His anger boils over. He coils his fingers into fists and...

Someone has to do something. Someone has to act.

Before he can kick, slap, or punch, my fingers are around his neck. I’m squeezing. He gasps for breath, and it’s music to my ears. Music. I squeeze, squeeze until he is dead.

Bev falls to the floor beside him. She should be happy. Her attacker is dead. He’s dead, and she’s safe. She’s free. I long to see her smile, but instead, I hear her sobs. Bev draws her knees to her chest and slowly rocks back and forth. “No, no, no, no,” she moans.

I killed him for you! I want to scream. I want to shake her and say, You’re free! He’s dead. I killed him. And now you’re free.

Of course, I can’t. She can’t hear me. She’ll never know what I did for her.

Who is killing these sweater-clad men?

Me.

Someone needs to stop me. Someone needs to break the curse and set me free. Someone… Someone… Maybe you?

Yes, you.

Don’t you see how he looks at you, like a lovesick puppy? I’ve crawled inside his mind. I know he longs to touch you, hold you, kiss you, make love to you. I know you love him. You should love him. He’s a fine, gentle, loyal man.

Knit my sweater for him. He’ll wear it, declare his love, and I’ll be free.

Don’t you see?

It’s the only way.

Thank you for reading The Sweater Curse.



photo by ldyck

Canadian Cancer Society February Knitting Challenge


On this blog in February


...and the knitting continues...

Sunday, February 15
Knitting Patterns
7 knitting patterns that have received 1,000 page views or more on this blog.

Sunday, February 22
Rebellion
knitting-themed one-act play

New content shared on this blog each Sunday at approximately 4:40pm




Much thanks to Colleen Fraser (publisher, editor, and print production) for including my story in the current issue of the MayneLiner.


photos by ldyck


Items of interest for writers and readers...

Sunday, February 1, 2026

The Sweater Curse Ch 16 by Leanne Dyck

WARNING: This story contains adult content

Chapter Fifteen“Please,” I pray. “Remember me like this: smiling, happy, alive.”

 

photo by ldyck


The Sweater Curse

Chapter Sixteen


    Hey, let me see that. In the magazine you’re reading. The sweater—it’s Jay’s! I designed it for him. It’s the one I gave him at Christmas. It is. I would recognize it anywhere. I designed the arms, shoulders, and neck detailing. I developed the stitch pattern.

    Of course, it’s my sweater pattern. It’s what brought me here to you. You have my pattern, and so I’m here. It’s how I found you.

    The sweater is mine, but I’m not credited as the designer. The name under the title… Heather Newsfeld. She singled me out as unprofessional, and she had the nerve to claim the design as hers. She stole it.

    Steal from the dead, and there are no ramifications. Her secret is safe.

I have more to show you. Come with me.

    Tears pour down with the rain in this place. Grey and black dominate all other colours. Crosses and headstones mark beloved bones. The living cower under umbrellas, shielding themselves from the rain. They stand around a freshly dug, six-foot-deep dirt pit. They huddle together, weathering through their grief.

    A coffin is slowly lowered into the pit as a minister speaks of a life once lived.

    Why are we here? Is Heather Newsfeld dead? Is this her funeral?

    “This is the end. This is my end,” a man announces. “How did this happen? How? I was young. I was healthy. Vital. I was alive with her. I was alive in her.” The voice comes from the coffin.

    I see through the layers of oak, cotton, satin to a handsome man with blond hair and a well-groomed beard. I bend down, through the layers, and whisper in his ear, “You’re wearing Jay’s sweater. Where did you get it? Who knit it for you?”

    “My wife, Heather Newsfeld,” he answers as his body stirs. He leaves your world and wakes in mine. He steps out of the coffin. He looks down fondly at his shell. “I look…looked…good. Handsome. The sweater—the colour, the style—it suits me. My wife was always busy. I needed what men need. So I found her. She was so beautiful. What man… What man could resist her? She liked how I looked in the sweater my wife knit for me. I wore it for her. I wore it to her hotel room. How we enjoyed each other. My last memory is of her—us—in bed together. There she lays, naked, beautiful. I’m tasting her. I want more. I’m removing the sweater, one sleeve, then the other. I’m trying to pull my head out of the neck of the sweater. I try, but someone is choking me. Is it her? Or my wife? Has she caught us? Hands tight around my neck. I try to knock them away. I try to break her hold, but my hands swing into the air. No one is there. It’s… it’s…the sweater. It must be. The turtleneck constricts my neck tighter and still tighter. I fight for every breath. I panic. And now… and now… I’m dead.”

    He is not alone. There are more and more men. They all wear my sweater. Why are men who wear my sweater dying? Have you guessed? Do you know what I have done? What I must continue to do.

    You must stop me.


photo by ldyck

On this blog in February



Clue: Who is killing these sweater-clad men?

...and the knitting continues...

Sunday, February 15
Knitting Patterns
7 knitting patterns that have received 1,000 page views or more on this blog.

Sunday, February 22
Rebellion
knitting-themed one-act play

New content shared on this blog each Sunday at approximately 4:40pm


photo by ldyck

Items of interest for writers and readers...