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Night Creatures Short Stories Page 13


  “Jack, then. How close are we to a town?”

  “Depends what kind of town yer lookin’ fer. Ghost towns all over the place. Real town?” He shrugged. “Fifty miles ‘r more.”

  “How about a phone?”

  “That I got. Back at my place.”

  “Could we borrow it?”

  “Sure. Follow me.”

  The old man headed toward the slowly descending sun. As he passed Cissy she brayed and skittered backward. Jack pulled on her lead, but she couldn’t be budged. He scratched his head, squinted at the animal.

  “I don’t know what’s gotten into ‘er.” He tethered Cissy to a juniper and lifted the saddlebags from her back. “I’ll just let her think on things a while. Fetch her later.”

  Slinging the pack over his own shoulders, he strode off. Clay and I fell in behind.

  “Why do we need a phone?” I whispered.

  “I’m going to have one of my colleagues pick you up and take you somewhere safe. Then I’ll go after the skinwalker.”

  I didn’t like the idea of a babysitter. I liked the idea of Clay facing the skinwalker alone even less, and I told him so.

  “I’ve done this a hundred times before, Maya.”

  “You’ve killed a hundred skinwalkers?”

  He scowled. “You know I haven’t, but someone has to handle the situation.”

  I’d heard the same explanation from my father and each one of my brothers. Why are you a cop? Someone has to be. I didn’t like the rationalization any better from Clay than I had from them.

  “You don’t know what you’re facing.”

  “I know my job. I’ll do a better one if I’m not worrying about you.”

  “Will I ever see you again?”

  He didn’t answer, which was answer enough.

  We continued to walk. Jack was ahead of us by quite a few yards. The old guy could really make some time. Clay brought up the rear, watching the horizon with suspicious eyes.

  “Aren’t wolves nocturnal?” I asked.

  “Doesn’t mean they can’t come out in the sunlight. They aren’t vampires.”

  “What about werewolves?”

  “Most can’t change until dusk.”

  “Then what are you nervous about now?”

  “A skinwalker is a special type of werewolf. One that can pad around anytime it puts on the skin.”

  Suddenly I was watching the horizon, too.

  We’d been walking for over an hour when Clay asked, “How far away do you live, sir?”

  “Not far now. Keep your pants on, sonny.”

  “I wish I had,” Clay muttered.

  I flashed him a dirty look, which he ignored. We continued to walk for another three-quarters of an hour.

  I wasn’t sure if it was the heat of the sun, the lack of water, the absence of food—but I started to see things. Shadows at the edge of my vision that disappeared when I glanced their way. Moisture hovering above the desert sand. A mountain where there hadn’t been one before.

  Skinwalker.

  I stopped as the wind whispered, except there wasn’t any wind.

  “Maya?” Clay stared at me with a worried expression.

  “Did you hear anything?”

  He tilted his head. “No.”

  I shrugged and kept walking.

  Canon del Muerto.

  My Spanish was as nonexistent as my next book. I ignored the voice I didn’t understand.

  Maya.

  Hell. The wind that wasn’t now whispered my name.

  Jack disappeared around an outcropping of rock. I followed, then halted so fast Clay slammed into me from behind.

  “What the—”

  A huge canyon opened in front of us. Towering walls, rocky ledges, buttes the shade of the sun and the sturgeon moon.

  “Welcome to Canon del Muerto,” Jack said in a low voice that was no longer his own. “The Canyon of the Dead.”

  CHAPTER 8

  Jack yanked me in front of him and pressed a gun to my temple. Clay, who had been reaching for me, too, let his hand fall to his side, where it rested atop his Ruger. The Beretta was already aimed in the general vicinity of Jack’s head, which was, unfortunately behind mine.

  Shadows fluttered past my face, seemed to touch my skin and whisper. There was more here than the living.

  “Let Maya go.”

  “Can’t do that.” The old man’s voice no longer wobbled and wheezed but had become deep, melodic, with an accent I couldn’t quite place. “The red moon will rise, and I’m going to need her for the ceremony.”

  “You’re the skinwalker?” Clay asked.

  “Got it in one. I heard you were a bright boy.”

  I didn’t understand. I’d seen the Navajo man turn into a wolf, so who was this guy?

  “If you’re a skinwalker, then tell me something,” Clay continued. “How does a witch become a werewolf?”

  “A chant in the language of the people, followed by the cry of the beast. Wear the skin and—”

  “Poof,” I murmured.

  “Exactly.”

  “How do you change back?”

  I wanted to tell Clay to save his questions for a different time, preferably one when I didn’t have a gun to my head. But he slid his gaze to mine. I could read the intent in his eyes. He was trying to buy time.

  “Changing back is the easy part,” Jack explained. “Walk as a beast in the sun, walk as a man beneath the moon, and vice versa.”

  “The rising of the sun or the rising of the moon triggers it.”

  Jack’s head was so close to mine I could feel him nod. “Now the red moon rises and the ultimate power will be mine. I will no longer be forced back into my body at the whim of the elements. The change will be mine to keep or discard.”

  “How?”

  “Blood, death, sacrifice.” His arm tightened across my chest in what would have been a hug, if he wasn’t planning to kill me. “Of the one who is chosen.”

  “Why Maya?”

  “She heard me whisper. Only the chosen can.”

  “What about the others? Why did you kill them?”

  “The legend says the chosen one will have hair the shade of the moon.”

  I recalled the skin walker’s victims—both silver-haired and blond. But what about me?

  “I don’t remember anything about this in the book I read,” Clay said.

  “Book?” Jack’s voice was scornful. “You can’t learn magic from words on a page. There is more to legends than what is written.”

  “Why were all the victims women?”

  “To birth the power there must be yin and yang. Male and female. Harmony first. Chaos later.”

  He nuzzled my hair. “Your death, Maya, for my everlasting life.”

  “Well, as long as that’s all.”

  I couldn’t believe I was joking at a time like this. But it was better than crying. Maybe.

  “I still don’t understand why you hung around her place and watched her. The others you killed the instant you knew they couldn’t hear the whisper of the beast.”

  “She hardly ever came outside. All she did was stare at her computer and listen to music with her earphones on.”

  My block had been good for something at least. It had given Clay time to arrive.

  “You took a chance waiting around until she could hear you. You had to know I’d show up eventually.”

  “Once I saw the moon turn red, then I saw…” He shifted, taking a deep, loud sniff of my auburn hair. “I couldn’t leave.”

  Voices came out of nowhere, swirling around me. I couldn’t make out the words.

  “What is that?” I asked.

  “You hear them?” He rubbed the barrel of the gun along my temple like a caress. “I knew you were special the first time I looked at you. Those are the spirits of the dead, trapped in the canyon that carries their name. Only the Dineh, the Navajo, hear them. Only the Dineh and—”

  “The one who is chosen,” I muttered.

 
I’d never been psychic, though being a writer, hearing voices in my head, having stories spill out my fingertips, is a magic of sorts. However, the ghosts were new to me and not altogether pleasant—even without the promise of imminent death by sacrifice.

  “If she’s your chosen one,” Clay asked, “why have you been trying to kill her?”

  “I needed to get her to the Canon del Muerto. I didn’t think she’d just stumble on it by herself.”

  “But—”

  “Doesn’t matter when she died, just that she died. Once her blood touches me beneath the moon, in this sacred place, I’ll have what I desire. To become in truth what I must now wear a skin to achieve.”

  “A wolf?”

  “Much, much more. Combine a witch with a werewolf, add the ceremony of the red moon rising, and I will become a chindi—a witch, a human wolf—greater than legend has ever foretold. I won’t even need the skin, all I’ll have to do is—” He snapped his fingers. “Can you imagine the power in that? Today I rule the beasts, tomorrow—”

  “The world,” Clay finished. “Why does everyone want to do that?”

  “Not everyone,” I said. “Only the crazy people.”

  “True.” He shook his head. “You’re no different than any other freak of nature I’ve ever met.”

  “There you’re wrong. Skinwalkers are superior to our werewolf kin. We can become anything just by a change of our skin. We exist beneath both the sun and the moon, and we aren’t insane with the blood lust.”

  “Could have fooled me,” I murmured.

  “You’ve never encountered one of the bitten. The virus makes them mad. They think of nothing but the kill. A silver bullet is the best thing for them. Once I complete the ceremony beneath the red moon, nothing, and no one, can destroy me.”

  “Let’s find out.” Clay sighted down the barrel of his Beretta.

  “You won’t shoot me. You could hit her. Just like Serena.”

  Clay stiffened.

  “I thought Serena was killed by…” I wasn’t sure what. “Monsters?” I supplied.

  “Ultimately. But only after Clayton shot her trying to save her. Then she was devoured while she lay screaming. Isn’t that right?”

  Clay lowered the gun. “How do you know so goddamned much?”

  “I never leave anything to chance. I knew that as I searched for the chosen one, the unworthy would die. And the Jäger-Suchers would come.”

  “Aren’t you supposed to be a secret society?” I muttered.

  Jack’s chuckle made the gun at my temple shudder. There was also an unpleasant scent rising from him that wasn’t sweat but something worse.

  “Secret to the world at large but not to the ones they hunt. Not anymore. We know Jäger-Suchers exist, only their identities are a secret—for the most part.”

  “How did you find out about me, about my past?” Clay asked.

  “That’s my secret.”

  Clay’s eyes narrowed. I could almost hear the word going through his head, because it went through mine too.

  Traitor.

  Someone in the Jäger-Sucher ranks was selling information to the enemy. But I really didn’t have the time to worry about that, and neither did Clay.

  The sun was falling, which meant the moon was rising. Clay didn’t have much time to do… whatever it was he planned on doing. I hoped Clay had a plan, because I didn’t. I’d run out of ideas the second Jack had put a gun to my head. I seemed to be having that problem a lot lately, even without the gun.

  “A skinwalker is a Navajo witch,” Clay blurted. “You aren’t.”

  “Appearances are deceiving. A skinwalker takes the shape of the skin he wears. Be it beast or man.”

  Suddenly I understood what the nasty smell was. And Cissy, the mule, had known it too. Animals can smell death long before humans. Cissy hadn’t cared for Jack, because Jack was no longer alive. The skinwalker was wearing the skin of an ancient white man.

  “You are Joseph Ahkeah,” Clay stated. “I thought you were Mandenauer’s friend.”

  “Friendship means nothing in the face of power. If Edward could feel what I feel when I run as a wolf, he wouldn’t be so eager to kill me.”

  “He’d be first in line.”

  Jack… Joseph—hell, I didn’t know what to call him except nuts—sighed. “Edward has a most annoying need to be a hero, and he can’t help but hire people just like him.”

  “I can think of worse things to be than a hero,” Clay said.

  Ahkeah merely laughed at him some more.

  “You were a hunter,” Clay insisted. “You’ve seen the evil and destruction these things can bring to the world. How can you become one of them?”

  “I’ve been tracking and killing monsters for years. There are always more. I got tired of fighting a losing battle. I wanted to be on the winning side. We will win, Clayton. It’s only a matter of time.”

  “Not if I have anything to say about it.”

  “Sadly, you won’t.”

  I’d been planning to point out to Clay that Ahkeah was being far too accommodating in answering all his questions. The villain only blabs his plans to those he intends to kill—it’s in every bad movie. I wasn’t the only one who would die tonight if the skinwalker had his way.

  The spirits murmured, louder this time. The very air seemed to vibrate with their presence. Ahkeah took a deep breath, as if to drink in the dead.

  Help me. I thought. Not him.

  The spirits spoke at once in a hundred different languages. Dizziness washed over me in a mind-numbing wave at the same time my stomach rolled. I slumped, and the gun slid from my temple into my hair.

  Jack struggled to hold me upright, but in this instance being a big girl was a good thing. He wasn’t strong enough, and my knees slammed into the ground.

  The moon, red and full, burst over the horizon. The earth began to shake, and a gunshot sounded.

  I caught the scent of sulfur, right before agony burst across my cheekbone. I ate dust when my face smashed into the rocky terrain of the Canyon of the Dead.

  CHAPTER 9

  I must have passed out because the next thing I knew I was staring at the huge red moon blazing in the sky above me. I heard whispers again—soft as the wind, though the air was cool and still.

  Everything came rushing back, and I sat up too fast. My head spun, something warm and wet ran down my cheek. My palm came away slick with blood.

  “Clay?”

  “I’m right here.” And suddenly he was. His dark gaze skittered over my face. “Damn, Maya, you’re bleedin’ like a stuck pig.”

  His accent was back. I must have looked even worse than I felt.

  Clay yanked off what was left of his shirt and pressed it to my cheek, then sat back to stare at me solemnly. Poor guy, if he hung around me much longer, he wouldn’t have a stitch left to wear.

  “It’s over,” he murmured.

  I glanced toward the two shadowy bumps lying a few feet away, then got to my feet, slowly. Once there I was steady. The world no longer shook and neither did my knees. My stomach was steady and so was my head.

  One lump was nothing but skin. The other appeared to be what was left of a thirty-something Navajo male. I guess skinwalkers exploded just like werewolves when shot with silver, but…

  “I thought a silver bullet wouldn’t work.”

  “If I remember correctly, it wouldn’t work once he completed the ceremony.”

  “I’m not dead, so he is.” I lifted my gaze to Clay’s. “He was going to murder me, and you too.”

  “I nicked your cheek.” Clay’s head lowered. “Another centimeter to the left and—”

  He didn’t have to finish. Another centimeter and the world would have been Joseph’s, not ours.

  Once upon a time the realization of how close to death I’d come would have paralyzed me. Now it made me act. I crossed the short distance between us and slipped my arms around Clay’s waist. He stiffened in my embrace, but he didn’t pull away.


  “You had to take a chance, Clay.”

  “I’m too reckless. Always have been. That’s how Serena died.”

  “But I lived. Because of you.”

  Hope lit his face, until he saw mine.

  “You need a doctor. Preferably a plastic surgeon. And your wrist.” He yanked off the dirty bandage, then cursed some more. “Doesn’t look good.”

  I’d forgotten about the wolf bite. Compared to our other problems, it was minor, but Clay was right. The torn skin was red and warm to the touch.

  Clay opened Ahkeah’s saddlebags. “That son of a bitch.” He lifted a cell phone from inside.

  “Like he’d let us use his phone and waltz off before we got to Canon del Muerto.”

  Clay turned on the phone, frowned at the display, then glanced up at the towering stone walls. “I’ll be right back.” He headed toward the center of the canyon.

  The instant he was gone, the whispers returned. Indistinct, they rippled across the air like wind across calm water.

  I cast an uneasy glance at the skin and the body, but neither one moved. When the skinwalker spoke to me, I understood his words. When the spirits of this canyon murmured, I could make no sense of them at all.

  But they’d heard and helped me, causing me to create a diversion so Clay could come to the rescue.

  “Thank you,” I said aloud.

  As if a great switch had been thrown, they were gone. The night was still and I was alone.

  A short while later, the distant whir of a helicopter filled the canyon. Clay, who’d been on the phone the entire time, ran toward me just as the searchlight burst over a stone wall.

  “Let’s go.” He grabbed my elbow and pulled me toward the hovering craft.

  “How did they get here so fast?”

  Clay lifted a brow. According to him, Jäger-Suchers were everywhere. They must have a budget that just wouldn’t quit.

  I climbed into the helicopter and less than an hour later I was being stitched up by the best plastic surgeon in Phoenix. The ER doctor wanted to keep me overnight, probably because I appeared as if I’d had the crap beaten out of me. Besides the crease in my cheek, kissing the dirt far too many times had given me a fat lip and black eye.

  I had countless other scrapes, bumps, bruises, but my wrist wasn’t infected. If the wolf that had bitten me turned out to be rabid upon testing—Clay had already made arrangements to have the body brought in, along with what was left of the skinwalker—I’d get a rabies shot. Not exactly pleasant, but not the life-threatening occurrence it had once been.