A tall woman in her late 40s hurriedly gets in from of the camera as she runs a hand through her dark blonde hair

A petite woman in her mid 30s hurriedly gets in from of the camera as she runs a hand through her dark blonde hair. She is dressed nicely in a pale purple blouse and a matching skirt that falls just below her knee. She straitens the silver necklace around her neck, clears her throat, and lifts a blue microphone with 7AAN on it a few inches below her chin.

"Are we almost on, John?" she asks as she stares at the cameraman.

They were sanding in front of what looked like two very aged, brick warehouses. There were three cop cars with flashing lights to the left of them and two ambulances to the right of them. There were multiple police officers running back and forth and a few paramedics that seemed to stay near the ambulances.

"We're going on in…" the man operating the new camera stops talking and holds up his hand to signal that she has five seconds…then four…three…two…he then pulled hand away to mark that she was out of time.

The women stares at the camera with an emotionless face as she moves the microphone to its appropriate position by her mouth and begins to speak, "Hello, I'm Hilary Elsebach with Channel 7 Acme Acres News," her face remains unreadable, "I'm reporting from outside one of the McKittrick Inc. warehouses. This one, in particular, was thought to be empty for the past week as repairs were being made to the ceiling and roof. However, passersby reported hearing several gunshots from inside the complex late this afternoon. The police were called and arrived on the scene to find two dead men, a dead dog, and a shotgun near one of the bodies."

As she spoke, the paramedics were in the background pulling one of the bodies to the ambulance doors on a stretcher. Behind the first stretcher there was another, but, instead of a human shape covered by a snow white sheet there was a more rounded, lumpier item underneath it. This body belongs to the dog that the anchorwomen had mentioned before.

"If any of our viewers have any information about this at all, please call… " She continued speaking as both of the covered stretchers started to move and jerk in varies directions.

The paramedic nearest to them jumped back and started to wave his arms wildly to attract attention of the others near the ambulance, "Hey! Hey! He's still alive! He's alive!"

The anchorwomen stopped talking and turned sharply to observe the event unfold before her as the police and paramedics flooded into the scene. A man and a woman paramedic lifted the sheet off the wounded man as he tried to sit up in the stretcher while a cop removed the sheet off of a bloody and twitching dog only to turn his attention to the man. Both of the human and the dog were seriously injured but very much alive despite the fact that everyone paid more attention to the man then to the canine.

"I-it ap-appears that they h-have a witness a-after all," the newswoman stuttered.

To say that she was thunderstruck by the event would be an understatement.

No one noticed the dog lift its body up so it was standing on all fours atop the stretcher. It wobbled from side to side for a moment but quickly regain its balance. It glanced at the cop that stood beside it. The cop was a fairly young one and his attention was completely wrapped up in the action surrounding the wounded man. He didn't even notice the canine until it jumped on him and started biting his neck.

He screamed as he fell to the ground and shouted, "Get it off me! Shoot it!"

Officers' rush to their comrade's aid as the anchorwomen, in a fit of confusion and terror at the sight of the grizzle scene, jumps backwards and knocks the camera to the ground.

The picture goes into static but the sounds of shrieks and yelling is still clear for a few seconds until the picture goes completely black and the sounds are silenced.