The Horror From The Mound
Robert E. Howard
STEVE BRILL did not believe in
ghosts or demons. Juan Lopez did. But neither the caution of the one nor the
sturdy skepticism of the other was shield against the horror that fell upon
them—the horror forgotten by men for more than three hundred years—a screaming
fear monstrously resurrected from the black lost ages.
Yet as Steve Brill sat on his sagging stoop that last
evening, his thoughts were as far from uncanny menaces as the thoughts of man
can be. His ruminations were bitter but materialistic. He surveyed his farmland
and he swore. Brill was tall, rangy and tough as boot-leather—true son of the
iron-bodied pioneers who wrenched West Texas from the wilderness. He was
browned by the sun and strong as a long horned steer. His lean legs and the
boots on them showed his cowboy instincts, and now he cursed himself that he
had ever climbed off the hurricane deck of his crank eyed mustang and turned to
farming. He was no farmer, the young puncher admitted profanely.
Yet his failure had not all been his fault. Plentiful
rain in the winter-so rare in West Texas-had given promise of good crops. But
as usual, things had happened. A late blizzard had destroyed all the budding
fruit. The grain which had looked so promising was ripped to shreds and
battered into the ground by terrific hailstorms just as it was turning yellow.
A period of intense dryness, followed by another hailstorm, finished the corn.
Then the cotton, which had somehow
struggled through, fell before a swarm of grasshoppers which stripped Brill's
field almost overnight. So Brill sat and swore that he would not renew his
lease-he gave fervent thanks that he did not own the land on which he had
wasted his sweat, and that there were still broad rolling ranges to the West
where a strong young man could make his living riding and roping.
Now as Brill sat glumly, he was
aware of the approaching form of his nearest neighbor, Juan Lopez, a taciturn
old Mexican who lived in a butte just out of sight over the hill across the
creek, and grubbed for a living. At present he was clearing a strip of land on
an adjoining farm, and in returning to his but he crossed a corner of Brill's
pasture.
Brill idly watched him climb through the
barbed-wire fence and trudge along the path he had worn in the short dry grass.
He had been working at his present job for over a month now, chopping down
tough gnarly mesquite trees and digging up their incredibly long roots, and
Brill knew that he always followed the same path home. And watching, Brill
noted him swerving far aside, seemingly to avoid a low rounded hillock which
jutted above the level of the pasture. Lopez went far around this knoll and
Brill remembered that the old Mexican always circled it at a distance. And
another thing came into Brill's idle mind—Lopez always increased his gait when
he was passing the knoll, and he always managed to get by it before sundown—yet
Mexican laborers generally worked from the first light of dawn to the last
glint of twilight, especially at these grubbing jobs, when they were paid by
the acre and not by the day. Brill's curiosity was aroused.
He rose, and sauntering down the
slight slope on the crown, of which his shack sat, hailed the plodding Mexican.
"Hey, Lopez, wait a
minute."
Lopez halted; looked about, and
remained motionless but unenthusiastic as the white man approached.
"Lopez," said Brill
lazily, "it ain't none of my business, but I just wanted to ask you-how
come you always go so far around that old Indian mound?"
"No Babe," grunted Lopez
shortly.
"You're a liar,"
responded Brill genially. "You savvy all right; you speak English as good
as me. What's the matter-you think that mound's ha'nted or somethin'!"
Brill could speak Spanish himself and read it,
too, but like most Anglo-Saxons he much preferred to speak his own language.
Lopez shrugged his shoulders.
"It is not a good place, no
bueno," he muttered, avoiding Brill's eyes. "Let hidden things
rest."
"I reckon you're scared of ghosts,"
Brill bantered. "Shucks, if that is an Indian mound, them Indians been
dead so long their ghosts 'ud be plumb wore out by now."
Brill knew that the illiterate
Mexicans looked with superstitious aversion on the mounds that are found here
and there through the Southwest-relics of a past and forgotten age, containing
the moldering bones of chiefs and warriors of a lost race.
"Best not to disturb what is
hidden in the earth," grunted Lopez.
"Bosh," said Brill. "Me and some boys busted into one of them mounds over in the Palo Pinto country and dug up pieces of a skeleton with some beads and flint arrowheads and the like. I kept some of the teeth a long time till I lost 'em, and I ain't never been ha'nted."
"Bosh," said Brill. "Me and some boys busted into one of them mounds over in the Palo Pinto country and dug up pieces of a skeleton with some beads and flint arrowheads and the like. I kept some of the teeth a long time till I lost 'em, and I ain't never been ha'nted."
"Indians?" snorted Lopez
unexpectedly. "Who spoke of Indians? There have been more than Indians in
this country. In the old times strange things happened here. I have heard the
tales of my people, handed down from generation to generation. And my people
were here long before yours, Senor Brill."
"Yeah, you're right,"
admitted Steve. "First white men in this country was Spaniards, of course.
Coronado passed along not very far from here, I hear-tell, and Hernando de
Estrada's expedition came through here-away back yonder-I dunno how long
ago."
"In 1545," said Lopez.
"They pitched camp yonder where your corral stands now."
Brill turned to glance at his
rail-fenced corral, inhabited now by his saddle horse, a pair of workhorses and
a scrawny cow.
"How come you know so much
about it?" he asked curiously.
"One of my ancestors marched
with de Estrada," answered Lopez. "A soldier, Porfirio Lopez; he told
his son of that expedition, and he told his son, and so down the family line to
me, who have no son to whom I can tell the tale."
"I didn't know you were so
well connected," said Brill. "Maybe you know somethin' about the gold
de Estrada was supposed to have hid around here, somewhere."
“There was no gold," growled
Lopez. "De Estrada's soldiers bore only their arms, and they fought their
way through hostile country-many left their bones along the trail. Later-many
years later-a mule train from Santa Fe was attacked not many miles from here by
Comanches and they hid their gold and escaped; so the legends got mixed up. But
even their gold is not there now, because Gringo buffalo-hunters found it and
dug it up."
Brill nodded abstractedly, hardly
heeding. Of all the continent of North America there is no section so haunted
by tales of lost or hidden treasure as is the Southwest. Uncounted wealth
passed back and forth over the hills and plains of Texas and New Mexico in the
old days when Spain owned the gold and silver mines of the New World and
controlled the rich fur trade of the West, and echoes of that wealth linger on
in tales of golden caches. Some such vagrant dream, born of failure and
pressing poverty, rose in Brill's mind.
Aloud he spoke: "Well, anyway,
I got nothin' else to do and I believe I'll dig into that old mound and see
what I can find."
The effect of that simple statement
on Lopez was nothing short of shocking. He recoiled and his swarthy brown face
went ashy; his black eyes flared and he threw up his arms in a gesture of intense
expostulation.
"Dios, no!" he cried.
"Don't do that, Senor Brill! There is a curse—my grandfather told
me—"
Told you what?" asked Brill.
Lopez lapsed into sullen silence.
"I cannot speak," he
muttered. "I am sworn to silence. Only to an eldest son could I open my heart.
But believe me when I say better had you cut your throat than to break into
that accursed mound."
"Well," said Brill,
impatient of Mexican superstitions, "if it's so bad why don't you tell me
about it? Gimme a logical reason for not bustin' into it."
"I cannot speak!" cried the Mexican
desperately. "I know!-but I swore to silence on the Holy Crucifix, just as
every man of my family has sworn. It is a thing so dark; it is to risk
damnation even to speak of it! Were I to tell you, I would blast the soul from
your body. But I have sworn-and I have no son, so my lips are sealed
forever."
"Aw, well," said Brill
sarcastically, "why don't you write it out?"
Lopez started, stared, and to
Steve's surprise, caught at the suggestion.
"I will! Dios be thanked the
good priest taught me to write when I was a child. My oath said nothing of
writing. I only swore not to speak. I will write out the whole thing for you,
if you will swear not to speak of it afterward, and to destroy the paper as soon
as you have read it.
"Sure," said Brill, to
humor him and the old Mexican seemed much relieved.
"Bueno! I will go at once and
write. Tomorrow as I go to work I will bring you the paper and you will
understand why no one must open that accursed mound!"
And Lopez hurried along his
homeward path, his stooped shoulders swaying with the effort of his unwonted
haste. Steve grinned after him, shrugged his shoulders and turned back toward
his own shack. Then he halted, gazing back at the low rounded mound with its
grass-grown sides. It must be an Indian tomb, he decided, what with its
symmetry and its similarity to other Indian mounds he had seen. He scowled as
he tried to figure out the seeming connection between the mysterious knoll and
the martial ancestor of Juan Lopez.
Brill gazed after the receding
figure of the old Mexican. A shallow valley, cut by a half-dry creek, bordered
with trees and underbrush, lay between Brill's pasture and the low sloping hill
beyond which lay Lopez's shack. Among the trees along the creek bank the old
Mexican was disappearing. And Brill came to a sudden decision.
Hurrying up the slight slope, he
took a pick and a shovel from the tool shed built onto the back of his shack.
The sun had not yet set and Brill believed he could open the mound deep enough
to determine its nature before dark. If not, he could work by lantern light.
Steve, like most of his breed, lived mostly by impulse, and his present urge
was to tear into that mysterious hillock and find what, if anything was
concealed therein. The thought of treasure came again to his mind, piqued by
the evasive attitude of Lopez.
What if, after all, that grassy
heap of brown earth hid riches-virgin ore from forgotten mines, or the minted
coinage of old Spain? Was it not possible that the musketeers of de Estrada had
themselves reared that pile above a treasure they could not bear away, molding
it in the likeness of an Indian mound to fool seekers? Did old Lopez know that?
It would not be strange if, knowing of treasure there; the old Mexican
refrained from disturbing it. Ridden with grisly superstitious fears, he might
well live out a life of barren toil rather than risk the wrath of lurking
ghosts or devils-for the Mexicans say that hidden gold is always accursed, and
surely there was supposed to be some especial doom resting on this mound. Well,
Brill meditated, Latin-Indian devils had no terrors for the Anglo-Saxon,
tormented by the demons of drought and storm and crop failure.
Steve set to work with the savage
energy characteristic of his breed. The task was no light one; the soil, baked
by the fierce sun, was iron-hard, and mixed with rocks and pebbles. Brill
sweated profusely and grunted with his efforts, but the fire of the
treasure-hunter was on him. He shook the sweat out of his eyes and drove in the
pick with mighty strokes that ripped and crumbled the close-packed dirt.
The sun went down, and in the long
dreamy summer twilight he worked on, almost oblivious of time or space. He
began to be convinced that the mound was a genuine Indian tomb, as he found
traces of charcoal in the soil. The ancient people which reared these sepulchers
had kept fires burning upon them for days, at some point in the building. All
the mounds Steve had ever opened had contained a solid stratum of charcoal a
short distance below the surface: But the charcoal traces he found now were
scattered about through the soil.
His idea of a Spanish-built
treasure trove faded, but he persisted. Who knows? Perhaps those strange folk
men now called Mound-Builders had treasure of their own which they laid away
with the dead.
Then Steve yelped in exultation as
his pick rang on a bit of metal. He snatched it up and held it close to his
eyes, straining in the waning, light. It was caked and corroded with rust, worn
almost paper-thin, but he knew it for what it was-a spur-rowel, unmistakably
Spanish with its long cruel points. And he halted, completely bewildered. No
Spaniard ever reared this mound, with its undeniable marks of aboriginal
workmanship. Yet how came that relic of Spanish caballeros hidden deep in the
packed soil?
Brill shook his head and set to
work again. He knew that in the center of the mound, if it were indeed an
aboriginal tomb, he would find a narrow chamber built of heavy stones,
containing the bones of the chief for whom the mound had been reared and the
victims sacrificed above it. And in the gathering darkness he felt his pick
strike heavily against something granite-like and unyielding. Examination, by
sense of feel as well as by sight, proved it to be a solid block of stone,
roughly hewn. Doubtless it formed one of the ends of the death chamber. Useless
to try to shatter it. Brill chipped and pecked about it, scrapping the dirt and
pebbles away from the corners until lie felt that wrenching it out would be but
a matter of sinking the pick-point under' neath and levering it out.
But now he was suddenly aware that
darkness had come on. In the young moon objects were dim and shadowy. His
mustang nickered in the corral whence came the comfortable crunch of tired
beasts' jaws on corn. A whippoorwill called eerily from the dark shadows of the
narrow winding creek. Brill straightened reluctantly. Better get a lantern and
continue his explorations by its light.
He felt in his pocket with some
idea of wrenching out the stone and exploring the cavity by the aid of matches.
Then he stiffened. Was it, imagination that he heard a faint sinister rustling,
which seemed to come from behind the blocking stone? Snakes! Doubtless they had
holes somewhere about the base of the mound and there might be a dozen big
-diamond-backed rattlers coiled up in that cave-like interior waiting for him
to put his hand among them. He shivered slightly at the thought and backed away
out of the excavation he had made.
It wouldn't do to go poking about blindly into
holes. And for the past few minutes, he realized, he had been aware of a faint
foul odor exuding from interstices about the blocking stone-though he admitted
that the smell suggested reptiles no more than it did any other menacing scent.
It had a charnel-house reek about it-gases formed in the chamber of death, no
doubt, and dangerous to the living.
Steve laid down his pick and
returned to the house, impatient of the necessary delay. Entering the dark
building, he struck a. match and located his kerosene lantern hanging on its
nail on the wall. Shaking it, he satisfied himself that it was nearly full of
coal oil, and lighted it. Then he fared forth again, for his eagerness would
not allow him to pause long enough for a bite of food. The mere opening of the
mound intrigued him, as it must always intrigue a man of imagination, and the
discovery of the Spanish spur had whetted his curiosity.
He hurried from his shack, the
swinging lantern casting long distorted shadows ahead of him and behind. He
chuckled as he visualized Lopez's thoughts and actions when he learned, on the
morrow, that the forbidden mound had been pried into. A good thing he opened it
that evening, Brill reflected; Lopez might even have tried to prevent him
meddling with it, had he known.
In the dreamy hush of the summer
night, Brill reached the mound-lifted his lantern-swore bewilderedly. The
lantern revealed his excavations, his tools lying carelessly where he had
dropped them-and a black gaping aperture! The great blocking stone lay in the
bottom of the excavation he had made, as if thrust carelessly aside. Warily he
thrust the lantern forward and peered into the small cave-like chamber,
expecting to see he knew not what. Nothing met his eyes except the bare rock
sides of a long narrow cell, large enough to receive a man's body, which had
apparently been built up of roughly hewn square-cut stones, cunningly and
strongly joined together.
"Lopez!" exclaimed Steve
furiously. "The dirty coyote! He's been watchin' me work—and when I went
after the lantern, he snuck up and pried the rock out and grabbed whatever was
in there, I reckon. Blast his greasy hide, I'll fix him!"
Savagely he extinguished the
lantern and glared across the shallow, brush-grown valley. And as he looked he
stiffened. Over the corner of the hill, on the other side of which the shack of
Lope z stood, a shadow moved. The slender moon was setting, the light dim and
the play of the shadows baffling. But Steve's eyes were sharpened by the sun
and winds of the wastelands, and he knew that it was some two-legged creature
that was disappearing over the low shoulder of the mesquite-grown hill.
"Beatin' it to his
shack," snarled Brill. "He's shore got somethin' or he wouldn't be
travelin' at that speed."
Brill swallowed, wondering why a
peculiar trembling had suddenly taken hold of him. What was there unusual about
a thieving old greaser running home with his loot? Brill tried to drown the
feeling that there was something peculiar about the gait of the dim shadow,
which gad seemed to move at a sort of slinking lope. There, must have been need
for swiftness when stocky old Juan Lopez elected to travel at such a strange
pace.
"Whatever he found is as much
mine as his," swore Brill, trying to get his mind off the abnormal aspect
of the figure's flight, "I got this land leased and I done all the work
diggin'. A curse, heck! No wonder he told me that stuff. Wanted me to leave it
alone so he could get it hisself. It's a wonder he ain't dug it up long before
this. But you can't never tell about them spigs."
Brill, as he meditated thus, was
striding down the gentle slope of the pasture which led down to the creek bed.
He passed into the shadows of the trees and dense underbrush and walked across
the dry creek bed, noting absently that neither whippoorwill nor hoot-owl
called in the darkness. There was a waiting, listening tenseness in the night
that he did not like. The shadows in the creek bed seemed too thick, too
breathless. He wished he had not blown out the lantern, which he still carried,
and was glad he had brought the pick, gripped like a battle-ax in his right
hand. He had an impulse to whistle, just to break the silence, then swore and
dismissed the thought. Yet he was glad when he clambered up the low opposite
bank and emerged into the starlight.
He walked up the slope and onto the
hill, and looked down on the mesquite flat wherein stood Lopez’s squalid hut. A
light showed at the one window.
"Packin' his things for a
getaway, I reckon," grunted Steve. "Oh, what the-"
He staggered as from a physical
impact as a frightful scream knifed the stillness. He wanted to clap his hands
over his ears to shut out the horror of that cry, which rose unbearably and
then broke in an abhorrent gurgle.
"Good God!" Steve felt
the cold sweat spring out upon him. "Lopez-or somebody-"
Even as he gasped the words he was
running down the hill as fast as his long legs could carry him. Some
unspeakable horror was taking place in that lonely hut, but he was going to investigate
if it meant facing the Devil himself. He tightened his grip on his pick-handle
as he ran. Wandering prowlers, murdering old Lopez for the loot he had taken
from the mound, Steve thought, and forgot his wrath. It would go hard for
anyone he found molesting the old scoundrel, thief though he might be.
He hit the flat, running hard.. And then the light in the but went out and
Steve staggered in full flight, bringing up against a mesquite tree with an
impact that jolted a grunt out of him and tore his hands on the thorns.
Rebounding with a sobbed curse, he rushed for the shack, nerving himself for
what he might see-his hair still standing on end at what he had already seen.
Brill tried the one door of the hut
and found it bolted. He shouted to Lopez and received no answer. Yet utter
silence did not reign. From within came a curious muffled worrying sound that
ceased as Brill swung his pick crashing against the door. The flimsy portal
splintered and Brill leaped into, the dark hut, eyes blazing, pick swung high
for a desperate onslaught. But no, sound ruffled the grisly silence, and in the
darkness nothing stirred, though Brill's chaotic imagination peopled the
shadowed corners of the hut with shapes of horror.
With a hand damp with perspiration
he found a match and struck it. Besides himself only Lopez occupied the hut-old
Lopez, stark dead on the dirt floor, arms spread wide like a crucifix, mouth
sagging open in a semblance of idiocy, eyes wide and staring with a horror
Brill found intolerable. The one window gaped open, showing the method of the
slayer's exit-possibly his entrance as well. Brill went to that window and
gazed out warily. He saw only the sloping hillside on one hand and the mesquite
flat on the other. He starred-was that a hint of movement among the stunted
shadows of the mesquites and chaparral-or had he but imagined he glimpsed a dim
loping figure among the trees?
He turned back, as the match burned
down to his fingers. He lit the old coal-oil lamp on the rude table, cursing as
he burned his hand. The globe of the lamp was very hot, as if it had been
burning for hours.
Reluctantly he turned to the corpse
on the floor. Whatever sort of death had come to Lopez, it had been horrible,
but Brill, gingerly examining the dead man, found no wound—no mark of knife or
bludgeon on him. Wait. There was a thin smear of blood on Brill's questing
hand. Searching, he found the source—three or four tiny punctures in Lopez’s
throat, from which blood had oozed sluggishly. At first he thought they had
been inflicted with a stiletto—a thin round edgeless dagger then he shook his
head. He had seen stiletto wounds-he had the scar of one on his own body. These
wounds more resembled the bite of some animal—they looked like the marks of
pointed fangs.
Yet Brill did not believe they were deep
enough to have caused death, nor had much blood flowed from them. A belief,
abhorrent with grisly speculations, rose up in the dark corners of his
mind-that Lopez had died of fright and that the wounds had been inflicted
either simultaneously—with his death, or an instant afterward.
And Steve noticed something else;
scrawled about on the floor lay a number of dingy leaves of paper, scrawled in
the old Mexican's crude hand—he would write of the curse of the mound, he had
said. There were the sheets on which he had written there was the stump of a
pencil on the floor, there was the hot lamp globe, all mute witnesses that the
old Mexican had been seated at the roughhewn table writing for hours. Then it
was not he who opened the mound chamber and stole the contents—but who was it,
in God's name? And who or what was it that Brill had glimpsed loping over the
shoulder of the hill?
Well, there was but one thing to
do-saddle his mustang and ride the ten miles to Coyote Wells, the nearest town,
and inform the sheriff of the murder.
Brill gathered up the papers. The
last was crumpled in the old man's clutching hand and Brill secured it with
some difficulty. Then as he turned to extinguish the light, he hesitated, and
cursed himself for the crawling fear that lurked at the back of his mind—fear
of the shadowy thing he had seen cross the window just before the light was
extinguished in the hut. The long arm of the murderer, he thought, reaching for
the lamp to put it out, no doubt. What had there been abnormal or inhuman about
that vision, distorted though it must have been in the dim lamplight and
shadow? As a man strives to remember the details of a nightmare dream, Steve
tried to define in his mind some clear reason that would explain why that
flying glimpse had unnerved him to the extent of blundering headlong into a
tree, and why the mere vague remembrance of it now caused cold sweat to break
out on him.
Cursing himself to keep up his
courage, he lighted his lantern, blew out the lamp on the rough table, and
resolutely set forth, grasping his pick like a weapon. After all, why should
certain seemingly abnormal aspects about a sordid murder upset him? Such crimes
were abhorrent, but common enough, especially among Mexicans, who cherished unguessed
feuds.
Then as he stepped into the silent star
flecked night he brought up short. From across the creek sounded the sudden
soul-shaking scream of a horse in deadly terror—then a mad drumming of hoofs
that receded in the distance. And Brill swore in rage and dismay. Was it a pan
lurking in the hills—had a monster cat slain old Lopez? Then why was not the
victim marked with the scars of fierce hooked talons? And who extinguished the
light in the butte?
As he wondered, Brill was running
swiftly toward the dark creek. Not lightly does a cowpuncher regard the
stampeding of his stock. As he passed into the darkness of the brush along the
dry creek, Brill found his tongue strangely dry. He kept swallowing, and he
held the lantern high. It made but faint impression in the gloom, but seemed to
accentuate the blackness of the crowding shadows. For some strange reason, the
thought entered Brill's chaotic mind that though the land was new to the
Anglo-Saxon, it was in reality very old. That broken and desecrated tomb was
mute evidence that the land was ancient to man, and suddenly the night and the
hills and the shadows bore on Brill with a sense of hideous antiquity. Here had
long, generations of men lived and died before Brill's ancestors ever heard of
the land. In the night, in the shadows of this very creek, men had no doubt
given up their ghosts in grisly ways. With these reflections Brill hurried
through the shadows of the thick trees.
He breathed deeply in relief when
he emerged from the trees on his own side. Hurrying up the gentle slope to the
railed corral, he held up his lantern, investigating. The corral was empty; not
even the placid cow was in sight. And the bars were down. That pointed to human
agency, and the affair took on a newly sinister aspect. Someone did not intend
that Brill should ride to Coyote Wells that night. It meant that the murderer
intended making his getaway and wanted a good start on the law, or else-Brill
grinned wryly. Far away across a mesquite flat he believed he could still catch
the faint and faraway noise of running horses. What in God's name had given
them such a fright? A cold finger of fear played shudderingly on Brill's spine.
Steve headed for the house. He did
not enter boldly. He crept clear around the shack, peering shudderingly into
the dark windows, listening with painful intensity for some sound to betray the
presence of the lurking killer. At last he ventured to open the door and step
in. He threw the door back against the wall to find if anyone were hiding behind
it, lifted the lantern high and stepped in, heart pounding, pick gripped
fiercely, his feelings a mixture of fear and red rage. But no hidden assassin
leaped upon him, and a wary exploration of the shack revealed nothing.
With a sigh of relief Brill locked
the doors, made fast the windows and lighted his old coal-oil lamp. The thought
of old Lopez lying, a glassy-eyed corpse alone in the but across the creek,
made him wince and shiver, but he did not intend to start for town on foot in
the night.
He drew from its hiding-place his
reliable old Colt .45, spun the blue-steel cylinder, and grinned mirthlessly.
Maybe the killer did not intend to leave any witnesses to his crime alive.
Well, let him come! He-or they-would find a young cowpuncher with a six-shooter
less easy prey than an old unarmed Mexican. And that reminded Brill of the
-papers he had brought from the hut. Taking care that he was not in line with a
window through which a sudden bullet might come, he settled himself to read,
with one ear alert for stealthy sounds.
And as he read the crude laborious
script, a slow cold horror grew in his soul. It was a tale of fear that the old
Mexican had scrawled-a tale handed down from generation-a tale of ancient
times.
And Brill read of the wanderings of
the caballero Hernando de Estrada and his armored pike men, who dared the
deserts of the Southwest when all was strange and unknown. There were some
forty-odd soldiers, servants, and masters, at, the beginning, the manuscript
ran. There was the captain, de Estrada, and the priest, and young Juan Zavilla,
and Don Santiago de Valdez-a mysterious nobleman who had been taken off a
helplessly floating ship in the Caribbean Sea-all the others of the crew and
passengers had died of plague, he had said and he had cast their bodies
overboard. So de Estrada had taken him aboard the ship that was bearing the
expedition from Spain, and de Valdez joined them in their explorations.
Brill read something of their
wanderings, told in the crude style of old Lopez, as the old Mexican's
ancestors had handed down the tale for over three hundred years. The bare
written words dimly reflected the terrific hardships the explorer’s bad
encountered-drought, thirst, floods, the desert sandstorms, the spears of
hostile redskins. But it was of another peril that old Lopez told-a grisly
lurking horror that fell upon the lonely caravan wandering through the
immensity of the wild. Man by man they fell and no man knew the slayer. Fear
and black suspicion ate at the heart of the expedition like a canker, and their
leader knew not where to turn. This they all knew: among them was a fiend in
human form.
Men began to draw apart from each
other, to scatter along the line of march, and this mutual suspicion, that
sought security in solitude, made it easier for the fiend. The skeleton of the
expedition staggered through the wilderness, lost, dazed and helpless, and
still the unseen horror hung on their flanks, dragging down the stragglers,
preying on drowsing sentries and sleeping men. And on the throat of each was
found the wounds of pointed fangs that bled the victim white; so that the
living knew with what manner of evil they had to deal. Men reeled through the
wild, calling on the saints, or blaspheming in their terror, fighting
frenziedly against sleep, until they’ve fell with exhaustion and 'sleep stole
on them with horror and death.
Suspicion centered on a great black
man, a cannibal slave from Calabar. And they put him in chains. But young Juan
Zavilla went the way of the rest, and then the priest was taken. But the priest
fought off his fiendish assailant and lived long enough to gasp the demon's
name to de Estrada. And Brill, shuddering and wide-eyed, read:
"… And now it was evident to
de Estrada that the good priest had spoken the truth, and the slayer was Don
Santiago de Valdez, who was a vampire, an undead fiend, subsisting on the blood
of the living. And de Estrada called to mind a certain foul nobleman who had
lurked, in the' mountains of Castile since the days of the Moors, feeding off
the blood of helpless victims which lent him a ghastly immortality. This
nobleman had been driven forth; none knew where he had fled but it was evident
that he and Don Santiago were the same man: He had fled Spain by ship, and de
Estrada knew that the people of that ship had died, not by plague as the fiend
had represented, but by the fangs of the vampire."
"De Estrada and the black man
and the few soldiers who still lived went searching for him and found him
stretched in bestial sleep in a clump of chaparral; full gorged he was with
human blood from his last victim. Now it is well known that a vampire, like a
great serpent, when well gorged, falls into a deep sleep and may be taken
without peril. But de Estrada was at a loss as to how to dispose of the
monster, for how may the dead be slain? For a vampire is a man who has died
long ago, yet is quick with a certain foul unlife."
"The men urged that the
Caballero drive a stake through the fiend's heart and cut off his head,
uttering the holy words that would crumble the long-dead body into dust, but
the priest was dead and de Estrada feared that in the act the monster might
waken.
"So—they took Don Santiago,
lifting him softly, and bore him to an old Indian mound nearby. This they
opened, taking forth the bones they found there, and they placed the vampire
within and sealed up the mound. Him grant until Judgment Day."
"It is a place accursed, and I
wish I had starved elsewhere before I came into this part of the country
seeking work—for I have known of the land and the creek and the mound with its
terrible secret, ever since childhood; so you see, Senor Brill, why you must
not open the mound and wake the fiend—"
There the manuscript ended with an
erratic scratch of the pencil that tore the crumpled leaf.
Brill rose, his heart pounding wildly, his
face bloodless, his tongue cleaving to his palate. He gagged and found words.
"That's why the spur was in
the mound-one of them Spaniards dropped it while they was diggin'-and I mighta
knowed it's been dug into before, the way the charcoal was scattered out-but,
good God-"
Aghast he shrank from the black
visions-an undead monster stirring in the gloom of his tomb, thrusting from within
to push aside the stone loosened by the pick of ignorance-a shadowy shape
loping over the hill toward a light that betokened a human prey-a frightful
long arm that crossed a dim-lighted window ….
"It's madness!" he
gasped. "Lopez was plumb loco! They ain't no such things as vampires! If
they is, why didn't he get me first, instead of Lopez-unless he was scoutin'
around, makin' sure of everything before he pounced? Aw, hell! It's all a
pipe-dream-"
The words froze in his throat. At the window a
face glared and gibbered soundlessly at him. Two icy eyes pierced his very
soul. A shriek burst from his throat and that ghastly visage vanished. But the
very air was permeated by the foul scent that had hung about the ancient mound.
And now the door creaked—bent slowly inward. Brill backed up against the wall,
his gun shaking in his hand: It did not occur to him to fire through the door;
in his chaotic brain he had but one thought that only that thin portal of wood
separated him from some horror born out of the womb of night and gloom and the
black past. His eyes were distended as he saw the door give, as he heard the
staples of the bolt groan.
The door burst inward. Brill did
not scream. His tongue was frozen to the roof of his mouth. His fear-glazed
eyes took in the tall, vulture-like form—the icy eyes, the long black
fingernails—the moldering garb, hideously ancient—the long spurred boot-the
slouch. hat with its crumbling feather—the flowing cloak that was falling to
slow shreds. Framed in the black doorway crouched that abhorrent shape out of
the past, and Brill's brain reeled. A savage cold radiated from the figure—the
scent of moldering clay and charnel-house refuse. And then the undead came at
the living like a swooping vulture.
Brill fired point-blank and saw a
shred of rotten cloth fly from the Thing's breast. The vampire reeled beneath
the impact of the heavy ball, then righted himself and came on with frightful
speed. Brill reeled back against the wall with a choking cry, the gun
falling-from his nerveless hand. The black legends were true then-human weapons
were powerless-for may a man kill one already dead for long centuries, as
mortals die?
Then the claw like hands at his
throat roused the young cowpuncher to a frenzy of madness. As his pioneer
ancestors fought hand to hand against brain-shattering odds, Steve Brill fought
the cold dead crawling thing that sought his life and his soul.
Of that ghastly battle Brill never
remembered much. It was a blind chaos in which he screamed beast-like, tore and
slugged and hammered, where long black nails like the talons of a panther tore
at him, and pointed teeth snapped again and again at his throat. Rolling and
tumbling about the room, both half enveloped by the musty folds of that ancient
rotting cloak, they smote and tore at each other among the ruins of the
shattered furniture, and- the fury of the vampire was not more terrible than
the fear crazed desperation of his victim.
They crashed headlong, into the
table, knocking it down upon its side, and the coal oil lamp splintered on the
floor, spraying the walls with sudden flames. Brill felt the bite of the
burning oil that spattered him, but in the red frenzy of the fight he gave no
heed. The black talons were tearing at him, the inhuman eyes burning icily into
his soul; between his frantic fingers the withered flesh of the monster was
hard as dry wood. And wave after wave of blind madness swept over Steve Brill.
Like a man battling a nightmare he screamed and smote, while all about them the
fire leaped up and caught at the walls and roof.
Through darting jets and licking
tongues of flames they reeled and rolled like a demon and a mortal warring on
the fire lanced floors of hell: And in the growing tumult of the flames, Brill
gathered him for one last volcanic burst of frenzied strength. Breaking away
and staggering, up, gasping and bloody, he lunged blindly at the foul shape and
caught it in a grip not even the vampire could break. And whirling his fiendish
assailant bodily on high, he dashed him down across the up tilted edge of the
fallen table as a man might break a stick of wood across his knee. Something
cracked like a snapping branch and the vampire fell from Brill's grasp to
writhe in a strange broken posture on the burning floor. Yet it was not dead,
for its flaming eyes still burned on Brill with a ghastly hunger, and it strove
to crawl toward him with its broken spine, as a dying snake crawls.
Brill, reeling and gasping, shook
the blood from his eyes, and staggered blindly through the broken door. And as
a man runs from the portals of hell, he ran stumblingly through, the mesquite
and chaparral until he fell from utter exhaustion. Looking back he saw the
flames of the burning house and thanked God that it would burn until the very
bones of Don Santiago de Valdez were utterly consumed and destroyed from the
knowledge of men.
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