Itâs LAUNCH DAY!! To celebrate, read this teaser of Wendigo, the fourth novella in Devils.
John Calvin Black rode on horseback through the woods with Donehogawa, a tall, straight-backed Onondowaga warrior that heâd known all his life. The two men were of similar age and had become fast friends during the adventures of their youth. Between them, they knew every nook and cranny of the forest west of Lake Seneca in New Yorkâuseful knowledge, considering the sun had just broken over the horizon.
As they approached Johnâs house on the outskirts of the village of Geneva, the distant voice of Captain Wiggin broke the stillness. âI say heâs not coming, Chambers. He couldnât find a heathen, and so heâs not coming.â John cast an apologetic glance at Donehogawa.
Mad Jack Martin stepped his horse out of the woods and onto the path in front of them. He was dressed from head to toe in cured buckskin and wore moccasins like Donehogawaâs. He nodded a greeting and fell in beside John as they passed. âYells too much, that one,â he muttered. He preferred being alone in the forest and rarely came to the village.
Donehogawa chuckled. âLike a bear yelling into his cave to see if heâs alone,â he laughed. âSgeno, Jack Martin.â
âHello to you, Donehogawa,â said Mad Jack with a tip of his hat and a smile for John.
They broke from the trees in time to see Captain Wiggin glaring down at his pocket watch and muttering. Edward Chambers, the bartender and proprietor of Genevaâs ordinaryâGenevaâs tavernâsat on his horse behind Wiggin and grinned. âIt is only ten minutes until seven, my good Captain,â John called out. âI believe we agreed on eight of the clock.â
âI see youâve brought Mad Jack as well. One heathen scout and one crazy scout,â said Wiggin. He shrugged his heavy shoulders. âBetter than no scouts, I guess.â He climbed aboard his buckskin horse and jerked the poor animal in a tight circle. âLead on, Mad Jack! Youâve seen the body already, no? Unlike you lot, I donât have all day to waste on this errand.â
âNyakwal,â said Donehogawa. It was the Onondowaga word for bear.
Mad Jack snickered behind his hand.
âWhat did he say?â demanded Wiggin.
Struggling to keep from smiling, John looked down at his saddle. âHe says âLetâs go.â This is Donehogawa, by the way. You might recognize him.â He knew Wiggin didnât and never would, no matter how much time Donehogawa spent in town. The man just didnât see anyone whose skin wasnât white.
Wiggin grunted and nodded in the American Indianâs direction, somehow managing to make the small politeness feel like something much less well-meant.
Donehogawa grunted back and smiled. âNyakwal.â
Smiling from ear to ear, Mad Jack walked his horse forward and pointed west. âYonder,â he said, and then led them to the clearing where the farmer, Nathan Bryce, had drawn his last breath.
They dismounted at the edge of the clearing. The tall grass lay matted down in a rough circle to one side. Blood stained the grass, and the stench of decay tainted the air. Bryceâs broken body lay just under the branches of a hophornbeam tree, as if he were taking a nap out of the sun.
John meandered back and forth across the clearing, staring at the ground, trying to make sense of the scene. Something large had attacked Bryce, that much was plain. But what that something was, John couldnât tell. By the expression on his face, Mad Jack had drawn the same conclusions. âDonehogawa?â
âGatgon!â said Donehogawa, which meant witchcraft in the language of the Onondowaga.
John raised his eyebrows and looked at the brave. He was as pale as John had ever seen him. John knew his friend well, and Donehogawaâs fear showed in the tightness around his eyes and his grim slash of a smile.
âWitchcraft?â whispered John. Donehogawa wasnât given to flights of superstitious fancy. John wondered if heâd misunderstood.
âBah!â sputtered Wiggin. âThis is just some bear or a large cougar. I donât need the heathen to spout fairy tales at me. I need him to help us track this animal so we can kill it. It is a benefit to his people, too. Can he do that?â Wiggin turned his head and spat. âIf not, then he should just scamper off home.â
âCaptain,â John said, feigning patience he didnât feel, âwe asked him to read the signs here and tell us what he believes killed Nathan Bryce. Can we at least give him a moment to work through this?â
Wiggin harrumphed and stomped over to look down at Bryce.
âWhat is it, Donehogawa?â
âThis was no animal. Not a bear, not a wolf, not a coyote, not a cougar.â He had enough English to more than handle the likes of Wiggin, but he spoke Onondowaga, which spoke to his fear as much as his dislike for the man. âThis was the evil that devours. This is no lying tale, John.â
John turned at looked at the body again. Jagged bones jutted through the skin in multiple places. There were obvious signs of predation, although not much had been eaten, and no scavengers had settled in for a feast. It was as if the body had been arranged so it would be foundâa message of some kind.
All at once, the woods around them went silent, as if some large predator were stalking the area.
âGatgon,â whispered Donehogawa.
âWhat is all that gibberish about?â groused Wiggin.
âDonehogawa is upset by this. He says it wasnât a bear, a wolf, a coyote, or a cougar.â
Wiggin sighed. âIs this heathen a coward?â he demanded.
âNo!â said John and Mad Jack at the same time. Mad Jack, angry and indignant, motioned for John to explain.
âDonehogawa is a very brave warrior. He is known throughout the Onondowaga Nationâindeed throughout much of the Iroquois League. His name means âHe Who Guards the Gate of Sunset;â a name he was given after leading a small group of braves in defense of Ganundasaga during the last war with the Cherokee and the Choctaw.â
Wiggin harumphed and spat.
âThe main war party was elsewhere, and despite being outnumbered five to one, Donehogawaâs party fought so bravely and so hard that the Cherokee war chief broke off his attack. To honor their courage. Donât you dare call him a coward.â Johnâs voice had risen to a near shout, and his eyes blazed at Captain Wiggin.
Mad Jack clapped Donehogawa on the shoulder, but the Indian didnât notice. The brave was staring into the woods on the far side of the clearing, his eyes darting from one shadowed hedge to the next like the wings of a hummingbird. Donehogawa raised a shaking hand and pointed. âWendigo,â he said in a voice that was barely audible.
âWhat is that word?â demanded Wiggin.
âIt means âevil that devours.â Another translation might be âevil that eats.ââ
âAnd what, exactly, does that meanâwith either translation?â
âIâm not entirely sure,â said John. âAs best I can tell from the legends I know, it is some kind of demon that preys on human flesh.â
âBah,â said Wiggin, but his voice lacked conviction, and he all but ran back toward the group of horses.
âJohn! We must leave. Now!â said Donehogawa. His eyes were fixed on a particular hedge across the clearing with an intensity that scared John.
John turned to follow Donehogawaâs gaze. As he did, the brave strode to the center of the clearing and pushed John toward the horses.
âThese men fall under my protection!â called Donehogawa in his native tongue, his voice booming and echoing around them like thunder. âI am Donehogawa of the Onondowaga. Hear me!â
With a majestic grace, Donehogawa turned his back on the hedge and, shoulders back, head held high, returned to his horse and mounted. The others followed suit, each one acting brave, pretending not to hear the soft laughter coming from the woods across the clearing.
âStill think heâs a coward?â sniped Mad Jack.
Wiggin just grunted into his beard.
No one said a word as they rode back toward the village. Donehogawa never stopped scouring the woods around them as they rode. Even Wiggin kept his thoughts to himself, despite several fits of glaring at the Indian and muttering into his long, white beard. Mad Jack seemed to be lost in a reverie of some sort, eyes down on the neck of his mount, holding the reins in a lackadaisical manner and letting the horse walk where it would.
John rode beside Donehogawa in silence. He had never seen his friend as ill at ease in the forest as he was that afternoon. Every cracking branch, every shifting leaf, every noise that would, on any other day, be considered normal and beneath his notice, seemed to garner the braveâs perfect focus.
âWhat is it, my friend?â breathed John as soon as the village was within earshot.
âBe silent,â whispered Donehogawa. âListen.â
John strained his ears but couldnât hear anything but normal forest sounds.
âMeet us at the ordinary, Black. The usual rules apply to the heathen,â said Wiggin, voice blaring.
Donehogawa glared at the fat older man.
The âusual rulesâ dictated that no tribesman could enter the village of Geneva on the shores of Lake Seneca armed. Because of Johnâs association with the tribe and the location of his cabin on the edge of the village, the Onondowaga usually left their weapons and horses in Johnâs corral. While the others rode straight into town, John and Donehogawa stopped at Johnâs house. They put up their horses, and Donehogawa disarmed. Then they walked into the village.
Standing in front of the ordinary, tapping his foot with impatience, Captain Wiggin gave Donehogawa his customary look of disdain and then opened the door and walked inside. It was too early for there to be much custom at the ordinary, so they had the main public room to themselves. Wiggin took a seat at a table near the long bar and looked at Edward, eyebrows raised.
With a wry grin at John, Edward donned his apron. âI expect youâd like a whiskey, Captain?â
Wiggin grunted.
âFor us all, I think,â said John.
They all sat at the table Wiggin had chosen and sipped the strong alcohol. Wiggin glared at Donehogawa, who returned his gaze, his face impassive, a disinterested look in his eyes. It was a look that John hoped Wiggin couldnât interpretâa look that said Wiggin was beneath the braveâs notice.
âTo business,â said Captain Wiggin. âI believe I know the cause of Bryceâs death.â
âBut Donehogawa saidââ started Jack.
âCome now, Mad Jack! We are learned men in this village. There is no such thing as what this heathen described.â
âCaptain, the Bible describes demons on several occasions. If demons exist in the biblical lands they can exist everywhereâeven here. Do you not agree?â said the barman.
âEdward, you should know better. Demons donât manifest as physical beings! They are forces that influence the world by the temptation of men. And that leads me to what I believed happened to Bryceâif, that is, I might be allowed to continue speakingâŠâ Wiggin glared at each man in turnâexcept for Donehogawa, whose emotionless eyes he avoided. âAs I was saying, I have reasoned out the cause of Bryceâs demise, and I donât need to fall back on superstitions to explain it. Nathan Bryce was killed by the heathensâor at least one heathen.â
The three village men gaped at Captain Wiggin in astonishment. Donehogawaâs face flushed and his eyes blazed with anger.
âCome now, Captain, the Onondowagaââ
âYour pet heathens are not the only red men who walk in the forest, John,â snapped Wiggin. âWe all know that the heathens conduct savagery on their enemies of the same race. What wouldnât they do to one of us? The Mohawk? The Choctaw? The Cherokee?â
âCaptain! It is true that some of the tribes take slavesââ
âAnd scalps!â added the Captain.
ââand that some of the more savage tribes might burn captives or even smoke them like meat. But none of the tribes around here have practiced rites like that for the Lord knows how long.â
âFor longer than any of us have lived,â snapped Donehogawa.
âThatâs right, Captain,â said Edward, which earned him a glare.
âEven if I grant you your argumentâwhich I do not, by the wayâwhatâs to stop some member of another tribe moving to these woods? A man who has been run off by his own tribe. A loner. An outsider.â
âThe Onondowaga Nation and the Iroquois League,â said John.
âAll well and good, but they wouldnâtâcouldnâtâstop one man. They might not even know about the man.â
âNo!â said Donehogawa. âThis was not one of the people. He may have started life as one, but now he is wendigo.â
âSo, then you admit this might be the work of a man?â asked Wiggin.
Donehogawaâs brow furrowed. âNo. You are not listening. Just talking about things you donât understand.â
âCome on, man! Itâs what you just said: that he might have once been a tribesmanââ
âI know what I said,â snapped Donehogawa. âYou refuse to hear my words, though.â He turned to John and spoke in Onondowaga. âThis is a waste of time. I have to warn the council.â With that, he stood and clasped Johnâs shoulder. âStay out of the woods.â
John nodded. âHow do we kill it?â
âWendigos canât be killed. They are gluttonous demons that live to eat. They can be starved, but they donât die. They can be harmed, but they wonât die. The best we can do is trap him in his lair and seal it up. But it wonât hold him forever, sadly, no matter what we do.â
âWhat is all this jibber-jabber? Why is this man getting ready to leave? I havenât dismissed him.â
Mad Jack shot Wiggin a disgusted look and stood as well. He put his hand on Donehogawaâs arm and then turned toward the door.
âJack Martin! Where do you think you are going?â snapped Wiggin.
Mad Jack whirled to face him, his face a portrait of anger and frustration. âYou asked us! You said you wanted our help, but you wonât listen. You donât need him,â he said, crooking a thumb at Donehogawa, âor me. You need someone to follow you around like a dog!â He turned and stomped through the door, leaving the room in a state of shock. No one present could remember Mad Jack stringing that many sentences together at once.
âWell!â muttered Wiggin. âWeâll see who needs whom when the snows fall.â
âHe will always have a place at my table,â John said, voice fierce, eyes blazing.
âOr with us,â said Donehogawa from the door before following Mad Jack outside.
Wiggin glared at John across the table.
âWhatâs more is that Mad Jack is right. If you wonât take our counsel, there is no point in offering any.â John shook his head. âNow, you have no trackers willing to help you. Well done, Captain.â
âI donât understand what has gotten into all of you today. Why is everyone so snappish?â
John sighed and folded his hands on the table. âIs there anything else, Captain?â
âCome now, Black, you canât believe all this superstitious nonsense.â
âIâve learned a lot from the Onondowaga in my life, Captain. One thing Iâve learned is that they believe what they say, and they never ever lie. If Donehogawa says he believes a demon is responsible for the death of Nathan Bryce, I will act on his belief until it can be proven otherwise.â
âBut a demon, Black?â
âWhatever it is,â said John, âour best bet of dealing with it lies with the Onondowaga. Theyâve lived and hunted this forest for a lot longer than white men have been on this continent. They are the experts here, not us.â
âExperts? Those unwashed heathens?â
âSir, I have never seen an Onondowaga go unwashed. Aspersions will not help us get to the bottom of Nathan Bryceâs death and indeed might slow our progress. Recall, sir, that you asked me to bring Donehogawa this morning.â
âOf course I did! I wanted help tracking an animal, Black. I did not want a bunch of primitive superstition!â
John spread his hands, palms up. âAs youâve said repeatedly. Is there anything else I can help you with?â
âEveryone is so snappish,â Wiggin muttered. He leaned back in his chair until in creaked under his weight. âNo, Black. There is nothing else.â
John stood and, with a nod to Edward, left the two men alone.
Remember: You can buy Devils, right now! The price is just $2.99 US, and it includes a four-chapter my next book: Errant Gods.
This is copyrighted material. (c) Erik Henry Vick 2017, all rights reserved.
Tags: Devils, horror, IARTG, indieauthors