FOURTEEN
Ben and Cora rode back to town under the afternoon sun. She had wanted to stay and help James fortify Harcourt's retreat against the vampiric attack, but the scholar would have none of it. He had stood beneath the archway leading to the front door, refusing her passage.
"I can prepare my own home," he said. "It's more important that you return to Leadville and make what preparations you can. You will need all the help you can get should we fail to hold them back."
Cora finally relented, but not before informing James just how much of an old fool he was. Shaking her head, she walked down the path to where Ben stood with their horses. When he saw her approaching, Ben climbed on Book's back and turned the gelding's head toward the road. Cora followed suit, Our Lady swaying beneath her as she mounted. She readied her heels for a punch to the mare's ribs when the scholar's voice echoed back to her.
"You will remember to bring your husband next time, won't you?" James called, waving his hand. "I should so like to meet him."
Cora raised her hand without responding, then gave Our Lady her heels and followed Ben down the road. They rode at a good clip, bandanas pulled up against the frigid air. The town of Leadville was nothing but a dark gray shadow in the distance, ignorant of the menace that threatened to swallow it whole. Above their heads, the eastern sky was beginning to give way to the darker blue of evening.
After awhile, Cora broke the silence. "That James Townsend is a mite touched, if you ask me."
"Why's that?" Ben asked. "Cause he's set on making a stand all by his lonesome?"
Cora shook her head. "He just wants to be a hero, and I can't blame him on that account. There's plenty of times we've made dumb moves just to make the kill that much more fun. You remember the time we cornered that werewolf down in Santa Fe?"
"That's the one them Indians said was a skin-walker, right?"
"One and the same," Cora said. "There I was, set to put a silver bullet in its head while it was still human when you come barging in and tell me to wait. 'It's a better time if you let it change,' you says. So I held my fire until them hungry-looking eyes were staring holes through me. Fool thing nearly tore my neck out before I put that bullet in it, but at least we looked like the heroes we is."
Ben chuckled. "I only said that to get you to hold off on the killing until it didn't look like a man no more," he said. "They'd have hung us right quick if you'd shot it before it changed."
"That ain't so," Cora said. "They knew that boy was a monster. Why else did they call us in?"
"All they knew was that something kept killing their sheep," Ben said. "As I recall, the Mexicans in town thought it was one of them chupacabra critters."
"That notion had us chasing through that desert scrub for near two weeks before we came to our senses."
"We?" Ben shot her a smirk. "Ain't that giving yourself too much credit? You never did have no sense, not then and not now. I was the one that figured we was chasing the wrong spook and turned us back out of the desert. Without me, you'd have been nothing but buzzard chuck."
"You should have left me out there, then," Cora said. "That way, you could have gone off to San Francisco and started up your print shop."
Ben's brow furrowed. "Come on, now, you know I'd never do such a thing."
"Sure you would," Cora said. "Why, you'd leave me to rot in a vampire nest if it meant pulling one of your books out of a fire."
Her husband didn't reply. His shoulders slumped as he sank into a sulk. A silence settled between them, and Cora watched the distant buildings draw nearer. Every so often, she would turn in her saddle and check behind them for any sign of pursuit. She didn't figure James and his men would have fallen yet, but nothing would stop the vampires from bypassing Harcourt's retreat and attacking the town. If they did, she and Ben would have their work cut out for them. If not, it would be a dull evening. Cora sighed at the thought. Another long night of alternating watches that might not even be necessary. It always irked her when the monsters they hunted didn't have the decency to show after she waited up for them.
Cora ran out of patience. "Oh, stop your sulking. You know I was just joshing you."
"I hope you don't really think that," Ben said. "You know I'd face down a whole pack of hellhounds with my bare hands if it meant saving your life."
"Of course I know that," Cora said. "I wouldn't be in this business with you if I didn't."
Ben smiled. "Me neither."
Once they made it back to Leadville, they made straight for the Northern Hotel. They tied the horses to the post out front, giving them a much-needed rest. Back in their room, Cora began digging through their trunk for cloves of garlic while Ben started sprinkling holy water on the door and windows.
After a few moments, Cora cursed.
"What is it?" Ben asked, looking over at her.
"No nails," Cora said. She held three garlic bulbs in her hand. "How are we supposed to hang these above the door with no nails?"
Ben thought for a moment. "No way that I can think of. I guess we'll have to make do with setting them out around the room."
Cora tossed one at the table. It rolled along the top and came to rest against the wall near the far window. She set another on the bed between the pillows, then slipped the last one into her pocket. Her face grew serious as another thought came to her. "You'll need to leave that crucifix here."
"Why?" Ben asked, his hand dropping to where it was tucked into his belt.
"We'll need something stronger than garlic if that chief vampire feller shows himself," Cora said. "From what we saw in the mines, he don't seem the type to be squeamish around garlic."
"I don't see how you figured that," Ben said as he handed over the wooden cross. "James said it was a human that broke down the crosses in the tunnel."
"Just a feeling I got," Cora said, taking the crucifix. She pushed the trunk shut with her boot and propped the crucifix up against it so it faced the door. She looked around the room, then nodded to herself. "I reckon that's about all we can do for it."
"So what's the plan?" Ben asked.
Cora thought for a moment. "You run on down to the marshal's station and let Duggan know what's happening. I don't know what he'll be able to do, really, but at least he won't be surprised when them vampires start killing his townsfolk."
"You said he was an Irishman, right?" Ben asked. "Could be he's a religious man. Might have a cross or two of his own to lend."
"The more the merrier," Cora said. "While you're seeing to the marshal, I'm going to stop by the Pioneer."
Ben frowned. "This ain't the time to be drinking."
"I spent all afternoon sober, and look where it got us," Cora said. "That poor old man got his throat torn out, and James got all his crosses smashed."
"Ain't neither one of them on account of your being sober," Ben said. "I don't want to ride against no vampires with a drunk partner, even if it's you. You'll get us both killed or worse."
Cora laughed. "Take that bee out of your bonnet. I just feel like getting me a drink or two and having a word with old Boots is all."
"Boots?" Ben asked. "You sure that's a good idea? We don't even know what he is."
"No, but that ain't no reason not to find out," Cora said. "The way I figure, no matter what he is, he's tied in to this whole mess. Maybe he ain't no more than a ghost now, but he can still talk, and I aim to make sure he does."
Ben looked puzzled. "How do you plan to make a ghost talk that don't want to? Ain't like you can smack him across the head or shoot off his fingers."
"I'll work something out," Cora said. "If nothing else, I'll challenge him to a drinking competition."
"Can't you be serious about this?" Ben said.
"Never said I wasn't," Cora said. "We ain't getting nowhere fussing like a pair of old fools. Run along and help the marshal and leave Boots to me."
Ben looked at her for a long moment, then turned and left. Cora counted the silver bullets in her ammo belt before taking one last look around the room. Everything was as ready as they could make it. If the vampires attacked tonight, they would at least be able to fall back here and fight. If they were singled out, that is. She had no reason to think they would be, but it never hurt to be prepared.
Cora put the horses to bed in the hotel's stable before walking over to the Pioneer. Overhead, the sun drifted toward the western peaks, lighting the few clouds in the sky aflame. Her fingers curled into fists as she walked, remembering the unearthly chill of the wendigo. The lesser vampires and their leader, the nosferatu, were powerful and deadly, but at least they couldn't freeze her limbs like that. They preferred the blood of their victims hot and spurting. That thought brought an uneasy chill of its own, and she pulled her coat close around her.
The Pioneer was in full swing at this time of night. Every table was crowded with miners and businessmen playing cards for their day's wages as ladies from the Purdy hung on their arms. Through the din of voices, she could hear the plinking of the saloon's piano. A row of miners in denim pants and thick coats stood along the bar, their backs to the door. Serving girls threaded through the clouds of cigarette smoke with trays of whiskey, coffee, and cider.
Cora stood at the door, her arms folded across her chest. This place would be easy pickings for a pack of vampires, and the Pioneer was only one of dozens of saloons in Leadville. Even if they had all of Duggan's deputies and all of James Townsend's servants-turned-hunters, they couldn't hope to defend everyone in town. If the vampires attacked tonight, people would die. They could only hope to find the bodies and dispose of them before they turned.
Heaving a sigh, she began sifting through the many faces, searching for the round red one that belonged to the bartender. Having no luck, she tapped on the shoulder of a man standing by the door.
"You seen Boots?" she asked, raising her voice over the noise.
"I'm sorry, I didn't quite catch that," the man said, betraying a crisp Irish accent. His brown hair hung in wavy locks on either side of his face.
"Boots," she said again. "Have you seen him?"
"Quite a few pairs in my day," he said, "and all of them dishonest." He smiled at Cora's puzzled look. "You've never met a boot that lies?"
"Can't say I have," Cora said, looking around for someone a little less drunk to help her. She was about to step away from the odd Irishman when he caught her arm.
"Men are like boots, miss," he said. "Don't you trust them. If you must trust anything, trust that." He pointed to a sign hanging above the piano, which read Please do not shoot the pianist. He is trying his best. "That is the only sensible piece of art criticism I have ever seen," the man said with a chuckle. With that, he let go of her arm and settled back against the wall. She offered him a polite smile before retreating into the crowd.
As she searched for the bartender, she reflected on the eccentricities of foreigners. James Townsend was bad enough, with his tea and his fancy speaker down in Denver, and even he had never talked about art criticism or dishonest boots. Cora had never had time or money for any sort of art, and her taste in music was limited to whatever instruments the local saloon happened to own. She couldn't imagine anyone bothering to write criticism about either one.
After a few minutes of searching around the gambling tables, Cora made her way over to the bar and ordered a drink. When the woman set the whiskey down in front of her, Cora spoke over the din. "You seen Boots around?"
"Boots?" the woman asked. "Yeah, I seen him upstairs a bit ago. Said he was going to get off his feet for a spell."
"Do you think he'd mind some company?" Cora asked, handing over a silver dollar.
The woman looked her over. "Maybe so, but not from you. He tends to like his women a bit younger and more ladylike."
"I ain't looking to take care of his pecker," Cora said. "I just need a few words with him is all."
"He looked a sight testy when I saw him," the woman said, "so you might want to buy him a drink to lighten his mood."
"I'll be damned the day I buy a bartender a drink from his own bar," Cora said. She tossed back the whiskey and handed the glass to the woman. "Thanks for the drink."
"Anytime, honey," the woman replied, moving down the bar to refill glasses from the bottle in her hand. Cora headed for the big staircase that ran along the bar's wall. A breath of cold air blew over her as she passed by the front door. She noticed that the Irishman had vanished, probably in search of a saloon with a better pianist. Shaking her head, she made her way up the stairs. At the top, she turned the corner into the hallway and almost collided with the bartender. Cora took a step backward, startled, but Boots didn't seem alarmed.
"Ah, Cora Oglesby," he said, offering her a thin smile. "What can I do for you on this fine evening?"
Cora grabbed the front of his shirt and pulled him down the hallway. He went along, the smile never leaving his face. When they were out of sight of the saloon, she pushed him against the wall and shoved the barrel of her Colt into his belly.
"I want some answers, spook," she said, her voice low.
"My, my, such hostility," Boots said. "Whatever have I done to deserve this treatment?"
"Hush your mouth," Cora said, twisting the gun. "You can't fool me. I know you ain't the real Boots because I done put a silver bullet in his brain just this morning."
"Did you, now?" the bartender said. "Well, isn't that a disappointment. And here I was, planning my entire strategy around that bloated corpse. It looks as though you have foiled me again, Cora Oglesby. If you'll excuse me, I must see to the licking of my wounds."
He placed a palm on her chest and shoved. Cora slammed into the wall behind her and slid to the floor. Sucking in a breath, she raised her pistol and fired at the bartender's grinning face. The gunshot clapped her ears as she pulled back the hammer and waited for the smoke to clear.
Boots remained on his feet. Cora's bullet had punched a hole just above his right eye, carving a gouge in the wallpaper behind him. As she watched, the wound closed in on itself as if it never had been there. She tried to fire again, but the bartender was too quick for her. His fingers wrapped around the Colt's barrel and wrenched it from her hand. He tossed the revolver aside and clamped his other hand around her throat.
"No more hostility," he said. "If you don't calm down, I will knock you out and deny you the honor of looking into my face when I kill you."
Cora struggled against his grip, but she couldn't hope to overpower him. After a few moments, she let her hands fall away from his fingers. Boots rewarded her with a sneer.
She spat in his face.
A look of surprise flickered there for a moment before the sneer reclaimed control. "Really, Cora, I would have expected such behavior from a common cur, but not from a lady such as yourself."
"Sorry to let you down," she said, curling her lips to spit again.
Boots clamped a hand on her mouth. "I would advise you not to test the limits of my courtesy, even if you are an old friend." Her eyes reflected her unspoken question. "You don't remember? I suppose it is only natural, what with my wearing this face. In my vanity, I assumed I had left such an impression when last we met that you would discern my poise and wit even through this mask."
Cora rolled her eyes at him. He hauled her to her feet, pulled her saber from its scabbard, and tossed it aside, then started pushing her down the hallway. As they walked, Cora suddenly noticed that Boots had no smell. This close to the man, she should have been overwhelmed by his usual aroma of sweat, smoke, and alcohol, but all she could smell was the faint scent of the pine floorboards.
Boots opened a door at the end of the hall and shoved her inside. A whiff of rotting flesh greeted her as she stumbled and fell in the semi-darkness. Behind her, the door slammed shut. She picked herself up and turned to face her captor.
"I would apologize for the smell, but I rather like it," Boots said, his face invisible in the darkness. "I have faith that you come to love it as well, given enough time."
"I reckon I'll love it just fine when it's coming from your bloated corpse," Cora said. She tried to take stock of her surroundings. Her nose told her that something nearby had died recently, but she could only see gray shadows. The afternoon sun glowed around the boards covering the windows, but no beams of light cut through the darkness. Despite the stench, she took a deep breath to calm herself. She'd been cornered before and managed to work her way out of it. She could do it again. Besides, Ben would come looking for her once he'd told Mart Duggan about the vampires. All she had to do was sit tight until he showed up or Boots let his guard down.
"Still so unrefined, especially for a woman from the American South," Boots said. "Although, if you relish the scent of an enemy's death, this aroma should be to your liking. The corpse rotting in this room once belonged to a Mr Washington Jones, who I believe made your acquaintance recently."
"Wash Jones?" Cora asked. "You mean that upstart card player?"
"I can't speak for his gambling habits, but he certainly seemed to bear a grudge against you. One strong enough to encourage the sacrifice of his humanity to see it avenged."
"Seems you did the world a favor, then," Cora said. "That boy was fixing to be a bandit, so you just saved some lawman a lot of work by culling him early."
"I doubt the world of humanity has much to thank me for," Boots replied, "and the murder of Washington Jones certainly isn't in their interest."
"Then why'd you kill him for?" Cora asked.
"To turn him, of course." Footsteps echoed in the darkness. "Replacing fallen soldiers is always a difficult task for a general. Not that you would understand such harsh realities yourself. Life is simpler when you are alone."
A cold wave of dread washed over Cora as she put the pieces together. "You're the big bad that James was going on about."
"The word is nosferatu," Boots said, "and you are correct. Frankly, I'm disappointed it took you so long to realize it. Perhaps I've been too subtle."
"Or maybe you just ain't no good at being evil," Cora said. "Me and Ben already wiped out a full half-dozen of your boys without breaking a sweat, and I don't see no reason why we won't do the same to you."
"You and Ben, you say?" The bartender's voice took on an amused tone. "He has been of some use to you these past ten years, then?"
Cora blinked. "Why, sure. We've been riding together hunting the likes of you for a good long while now. Fine work for a man and wife, if you ask me, though some may find it unusual."
"Unusual indeed," Boots said. "Tell me, when was the last time you saw your husband?"
"Not thirty minutes ago, fresh from killing your vampires."
"Is that so?" There was a bright flash as Boots struck a match. The tiny flame sputtered in his hand as he reached over and lit a lantern. A warm glow filled the room, illuminating large crates covered with dust. Strange shadows danced across his round head as he approached her.
"You inquired earlier as to how I am able to wear the body of the former proprietor of this saloon, whom you so decisively killed." Boots stepped closer, and Cora backed away. "I don't suppose your illustrious scholar could enlighten you?" Cora shook her head. "I thought not. Such men pride themselves on their knowledge, but they are only grasping at shadows. Shadows that will one day devour them." His grin deepened at the thought. "I shall relish the taste of his blood, and I imagine he will prove himself a useful servant, just as this portly bartender has."
"Till we came along, anyhow," Cora said. "Boots ain't no servant of yours no more."
"You destroyed his body, yes, but men are more than mere flesh and bone." The bartender's eyes sparkled in the light. "Sometimes, their true usefulness lies in their other natures."
"Your usefulness sure ain't in getting to the point," Cora said. "I didn't figure you'd try to kill me with talk when you dragged me in here, or I would have ate my own gun to spare myself the misery."
"Such spirit in you," Boots said. "It will make the breaking of it so much the sweeter."
"I reckon I'll have a better time breaking your neck."
A single laugh shook the bartender's shoulders. "Such unpleasantness as well. Still, if you would only stop interrupting, I might get to the point you are so eager to hear."
Cora opened her mouth to reply, then shut it. If she could keep this creature talking, it would give her more time to think of a way out. Ben could come crashing through the door at any minute, too, which would solve things nicely.
"That's better," Boots said. He raised the lantern and walked behind a set of crates. "Come over here."
Cora stepped around the crates and looked down. The dead eyes of Wash Jones stared up into the darkness between them. His jaw hung open as if in shock, and his arms and legs were crumpled beneath him.
"Look well, Cora Oglesby," Boots said. "Look at the early stages of vampiric metamorphosis. When the sun sets tonight, Mr Jones will arise anew, a soldier in an unholy army."
Sickened by the glee in his voice, Cora nonetheless found herself drawn to the corpse at her feet. Kneeling down, she looked at his open mouth. His teeth still looked human, not sharp and elongated like those of the vampires she'd killed that day. No blood seeped from the puncture wounds on his neck; his body was completely dry. Cora shook her head. Wash Jones had been an arrogant fool, but he hadn't deserved this. She made the dead man an unspoken promise that she would see his body put to rest.
"Don't waste any thoughts of pity for Mr Jones," Boots said. "He chose to become one of us so he might settle his score with you. I merely provided him the means by which he could achieve such power."
"So you're as honest as the serpent in the garden," Cora said. "Can't say I'm surprised."
"I assure you, I am a man of my word. I did have every intention of allowing him the pleasure of ending your life, but it seems he will not wake up in time. I had not counted on catching you so easily. Still, I suppose I might save some of your blood to serve as the first meal of his new life."
Cora was getting bored with such threats. "Ain't like he'll be around to enjoy it. James already told me that the weaker vampires ain't got their own minds."
"I have reason to believe he will be present." The bartender's voice changed as he spoke, becoming deeper and raspier. Cora looked up at him, and her breath caught in her throat.
In front of her, where Boots had stood a moment ago, the cold blue eyes of Washington Jones looked back her.
Cora fell back against the wall as the living image of the dead man leaned toward her. His sandy-colored hair framed his face, and the same mocking smile spread beneath his beard.
"You seem surprised, Cora," the voice of Wash Jones said. "Surely your Mr Townsend informed you that a nosferatu's power is far greater than that of a lowly vrykolakas."
Cora glanced at the corpse, then back up at the living image of Wash Jones. "He did say that your type could do different things, but he didn't mention taking on a dead man's body. Mostly just that you had your human soul."
"Correct on both counts," the vampire said. "Let us explore the first mystery, then." Cora was silent, so he continued. "As you know, sunlight is fatal to a vrykolakas. We nosferatu find it rather uncomfortable as well, so we prefer to use more indirect means to influence the sunlit world. To accomplish this, we have learned to use the souls of those we drink as familiars."
"The souls?" Cora asked. "Ain't the soul of a vampire stuck in hell?"
"A common belief, but one I find rather insulting," Wash said. "I prefer to think being subject to my will is more of a divine privilege than an eternity of torment."
"I think I'd prefer hell," Cora said. "So you take in the soul through the blood, then?"
"Precisely, and it follows our every command, just as the newborn vrykolakas made of the body does. We can conjure these souls to enact our wills during the day, when we ourselves are somewhat more restrained."
Cora nodded, feigning indifference while her mind raced. The danger of her situation was finally sinking in, stoking the fires of her panic. She was now balancing learning more about her enemy with being devoured and enslaved, and the longer she lingered, the less likely her escape seemed. James needed to know what she knew so he could share it with his friends back in England. If Ben didn't show soon, she would have to make a break for it and hope for the best. Better to go down fighting than to let herself be taken without a struggle. Still, as panicked as she was, she couldn't resist asking one more question. "You all can't drink blood through them souls, right?"
Wash shook his head. "No. Some nosferatu even regret this shortcoming, though I can't fathom why. The thrill of feeling your own lips on a person's pulsing neck, the sweet flow of their lifeblood down your throat, and the screams ebbing to whimpers as you drink them dry simply cannot be replaced."
"You really are a monster," Cora said.
"Words spoken in ignorance," the vampire said. "At times, I try to recall my life before my immortality, when my mind was small and my body frail, but the memories always elude me. I imagine it is what the butterfly feels when it tries to remember its life in the chrysalis: fear and confusion and limitations. I suppose I had a clearer memory when I was still young in undeath, but even an immortal mind cannot hold all the history of the universe."
"Yours sure can hold a lot of bullshit," Cora said.
Wash's blue eyes grew hungry in the dim light. "And what will yours hold, I wonder?"
Cora crossed her arms. "Nothing but my own self till the day I die, which will be well after I put you in your grave."
"Defiant even in the face of certain defeat." The vampire bared Wash's teeth in a smile. "Such willpower is far too valuable to waste in such a miserable shell. I had thought to make you my slave, but you have moved me."
Quicker than a striking diamondback, Wash's hand shot out and grabbed her throat. He pushed her against the wall, his eyes burning with hunger. "No, I shall usher you into the ranks of the nosferatu, and you shall learn to walk the shadows as a true ruler of the night. In time, you will understand the weakness of humanity and their puny gods. We are the gods who shall rule the world, Cora Oglesby."
Cora didn't answer, and silence filled the room. She knew her time had run out, and she struggled to quiet her frantic thoughts enough to prepare for a last stand. Overpowering the vampire was impossible, but it couldn't use the body of Wash Jones to turn her, meaning it would have to come in its own body. When it did, she might be able to get the jump on it and escape. If it left her conscious.
In the silence, she thought she heard footsteps in the hallway. They were slow and intermittent, as if searching for something. She heard a door creak somewhere nearby, and she grinned. She looked into Wash's cold blue eyes and lifted her chin.
"You hear that, spooky?" she said. "That's the sound of my husband looking for me. I hope you got a plan for when he comes through that door and sticks you with a silver dagger."
"Your husband?" the vampire asked. "Surely you don't mean Benjamin Oglesby?"
"The one and only," Cora said. "Even the big bad vampire is scared of him, I see."
"He was never the threat you are," the vampire said.
"Well, that's about to change."
Confusion flickered in the borrowed eyes. "You truly believe he is in that hallway looking for you?" Cora nodded, and the confusion melted into glee. "How absolutely delicious! I heard tales of your madness in the wake of our previous meeting, but I never imagined I could have so thoroughly broken your mind."
"I ain't the one with the touched mind," Cora said. "You ain't hearing me spouting nonsense."
"Oh, but you are," the vampire said. "I cannot begin to tell you the joy that this moment brings me. It will be like reliving ten years past and our first fateful encounter. To break the same hunter twice in one lifetime is a rare thrill even among the immortal." He looked down at her, his face ecstatic. "Cora Oglesby, Mad Madam, scourge of the unholy West, I believe I have some bad news for you."
As he spoke, the face in front of hers changed. The sandy blond beard faded into a well-trimmed brown mustache, and the deep blue eyes of the young gunman gave way to a lighter shade of blue she knew as well as her own brown eyes. The mouth below the mustache twisted into a sadistic grin she had never seen on those lips. All of her fight and spirit evaporated in a single flash of recognition.
"Your husband," said the voice of Benjamin Oglesby, "has already found you."
The Dead of Winter
Lee Collins's books
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