Immortals After Dark 06 - Dark Desires After Dusk
swirled above them, like a gossamer lid over all.
Cadeon leaned forward on the steering wheel. “This area should be bare, the river frozen.”
Instead birch and aspen trees still had their leaves, and there was not a single patch of snow.
“Maybe it has its own microclimate? I’ve read that hot springs can melt the area around them.”
“Yeah, that’s probably it,” he said, but he was distracted.
They followed the road as it ran parallel to the river. “Look, it’s a little town,” Holly said, then frowned. “A ghost town.” And she didn’t use that term lightly anymore.
“It’s an old coal mining village. I saw the entrance to a shaft a while back. Groot must have set up here so he could have fuel for his forge.”
They passed a startlingly well-preserved sign that read: Prosperity, NWT, est. 1902, pop. 333.
Along the water stood forty or fifty abandoned buildings, each appearing to be from the early nineteen hundreds. They had wood shingles for the siding and roofing and were austere, built in that creepy, unadorned Quaker style.
Though there was no snow, a crystal clear sheen of ice covered everything, like a varnish. “This place literally looks frozen in time. Why did the residents leave? Did the mine go bust?”
“They didn’t leave,” he said quietly, turning onto the main street.
It was then that she noticed doors were wide open, or hanging at odd angles, attached to stretched hinges. She spied a pair of antique-looking bicycles, turned on their sides in the middle of the street, as if they’d been abandoned in a panic.
“Cadeon, what is this?”
“Wendigo. They attacked here. I’ve heard these mountains are teeming with them. They act as a natural boundary for Groot.”
“I read about them. They used to be humans, but were turned into cannibals. They eat corpses. They even…eat people alive.”
He nodded. “Cousin to the ghoul, ravenous for flesh and highly contagious—even to other immortals. All it takes is one bite or scratch.”
“How?”
“A toxin emitted from the claws and fangs.”
“How long does the transition take?”
“Three to four days,” he answered. “Long enough for a victim to realize what’s happened, to come to terms with it, and then to decide what has to be done.”
“What? What has to be done?”
In answer, Cadeon pointed off to the side of the street to a towering birch tree. Tattered nooses swayed from its limbs.
“Are the Wendigo still here after all this time?”
“Probably. They can survive on animal flesh if they have to.”
They neared the town’s church. “Is that what I think it is on the chapel?” The building was still eerily pristine—on its sides. Across the front, ruddy spatter stretched in distinct arcs at least fifteen feet high.
He nodded. “It’s blood.”
“Oh, God…”
“The villagers still living and uninfected probably barricaded themselves in that church. The windows are boarded on the inside.”
The front doors hung askew. Just past them, Holly spied stacked pews. She could imagine the scene all too clearly. Once the front blockade had fallen, the people inside had been trapped by their own defenses. The Wendigo likely dragged out screaming villagers, tossing them to the waiting pack….
“Cadeon, even if I’m not interested in being human again, I’m glad you brought me.”
“How could you be?” His tone was almost sharp.
“Just in case you need me to get your back,” she said, frowning when she saw his knuckles go white on the steering wheel.
Just as she parted her lips to ask him what was wrong, he said, “There’s Groot’s fortress.”
As the mist began to clear, she glimpsed a magnificent waterfall, at least four hundred feet high. Directly atop it was…a castle, built at the fall’s edge.
Five towers all conjoined to a central keep over the water. Above it, a stone smokeshaft billowed gray smoke. Even from this distance, the mighty forge was visible.
“That’s why the river isn’t frozen and why there’s so much mist,” he said. “It heats the water—”
“Cadeon!” She swallowed. “Down a side street. I think I just saw something running!”
42
C ade had spotted them, too. Wendigo hunted in packs—and they were stalking them.
“Are they still following us?” she asked, eyes darting.
“Yeah.”
The road continued up the escarpment, taking them ever higher and closer to the keep. He turned on the wipers when mist from the falls became as thick as
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