Book cover

The Blue Banshee

A dying boomtown with a deadly secret…

August 1899, Grass Flats, California: A woman is savagely trampled behind her cabin.  Witnesses describe a beast of Apocalyptic visage, with a demon riding its back.  Pastor William Everett Spencer and Sheriff Hank Lowry track the monster into mining country—the jagged peaks of the Sierra Nevada.  At the crumbling township of Cauldron Creek, they blunder onto the curse of the Hell’s Gate mine—and its terror…

The Blue Banshee.

*     *     *

William’s stallion halted with a snort.  The horse pranced from the path, scattering rocks into the ravine.  William wrestled him back onto the trail.

“Easy, boy,” he said, battling the brute for control.  “We’re almost clear.  Steady.”

He scanned the forest for wolves, but could not free a hand for his pistol.  If any carnivores attacked, he would be helpless against them.

Without warning his stallion bucked.  Only by a monumental effort did he stay in his saddle.

Two giant beasts materialized in the roadway.  Each carried a hunched rider.

The larger monster bellowed and rammed William’s flank.

For a moment he was eye to eye with…

The Blue Banshee

A Pastor Will Period Mystery

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The Blue Banshee

1

Emma Harris’ battered body lay in a pine thicket behind her cabin.  Blood soaked the homespun dress she habitually wore.  Her chestnut hair, usually gathered into a tidy bun, stretched from her skull like a shredded rag.  Crushed fingers grasped the rope handle of her shattered water pail.

Sheriff Hank Lowry doffed his hat and dragged a hand down his walrus moustache.  “Lord have mercy.”

He stooped to study the corpse.

At his side stood the Reverend William Everett Spencer, pale as frost and trembling from boots to brow.  Pinned to his frock coat was a deputy’s star.

William had been leading his Wednesday evening chapel service when Emma’s neighbors had stormed the sanctuary shouting news of her death.  On hastily borrowed horses he and Lowry had galloped into the hills above Grass Flats.

“Biggest hoof marks I ever seen,” Lowry said, fitting both hands over a single track scarring Emma’s dress.

William choked back the bile clogging his throat.  “They’re twice the size of a horse’s.”  He stripped off his clerical collar and mopped his neck.

Lowry scanned the pulverized body.  “I been a lawman thirty years.  Never seen nothing like this.”

Deep lines rutted the sheriff’s cheeks.  Veins knotted his hands.  On his vest dangled a dented star.

A circle of Emma’s neighbors stared at the two men.  Torches and lanterns blanched every face.

William bent to examine Emma’s mashed ribs and mangled arms.  “Could a bison have done this?  Or an elk?”

Lowry’s hands drooped between his knees.  “If’n so, he’s big as a stage coach.  Loco, too.”

“You think it’s rabid?”

“Got to be.  No right-minded animal’d maul a body so savage.”

“Then it may attack anyone.”

Lowry stroked his stubbled chin.  “Them hoof marks,” he said.  “Never come across the like a’fore.”

“A moose, perhaps?”

Lowry shook his head.  “A horned beast would’ve gored her.”

William leaned into the sheriff’s ear.  “We have quite a mess here.  Some puncture wounds may be more apparent with a…closer examination.”

Lowry munched his moustache.  “Reckon we could string up a canvas.  Don’t need these boys watching us poke at her.”  He rose and surveyed the ring of sweating faces.  “Any of you folks get a gander at this critter?”

“I seen it,” said Orville Endicott.  The old miner cradled a shotgun in one arm.  Gray, grizzled whiskers tangled his shirt flannel.

“Go on,” Lowry prompted him.

Orville bobbed his head toward his claim on the next rise.  “I was stewing a possum yonder when my dogs took to howling up a ruckus.  Then my mule started snorting and pawing real scared-like.  Almost broke down the corral fence.  Never seen it so riled.”

Orville’s boots creaked as his weight shifted between them.  “My dogs was whining and crawling under the porch with their tails tucked.  Even the cat run off.  Unnerved me, it did, and I don’t mind telling you.  Took my scattergun down the hill there, thinking I might rouse a wolf or a wildcat.  Poked around the brush some, didn’t find nothing.  Then that smell come over me.”

Lowry’s brow lifted.  “Smell?”

“Like death.  Come rolling through the trees, powerful strong.  Near sick it made me.  The ground shook and I heard something rustling through the scrub at my back.  Then there come a growling like I never heard a’fore.”

“What sort of growling?”

“Hellish as a devil’s laugh,” Orville said.  “Froze me in my tracks.  I don’t scare easy, Sheriff Hank, you know I don’t, but there ain’t man or beast could make such a sound.  I thought Satan hisself was stalking me.”

“So what’d you do?”

“I skedaddled out of there and run back to my stake.”

Droplets beaded the miner’s skin.  Fists clenching his shotgun quaked.

William eyed the man’s whitening knuckles.  “Orville, could it have been a bear?”

“Tarnation, Pastor Will, I know durn well what a bear sounds like, and I know what a bear smells like.  That weren’t no bear.”

“Bears got paws,” Lowry said, mulling the carnage before him.  “This beast’s got hooves.  Big ones.”

“Couldn’t see much from my shack,” Orville said.  “Moon was just coming over the peaks, but I spotted something big wandering the woods.  Seemed to me akin to a dead horse when it’s bloated in the sun and ready to bust open.  I reckon it was ten feet tall at the shoulder, with a neck like a snake.”

Lowry stared at him.

“You heard right,” Orville said.  “Thick as a pine trunk, twisting and squirming all around.  And the rider didn’t look near like a man ought.”

“You seen a rider?”

“Something was on its back.”

Lowry rolled his tongue through his cheek.  “Orville, you sure about that?”

“No, I ain’t.  The thing was gone a’fore I got a good look.  But what I seen was a dead horse with a serpent’s head carrying a circus freak.  Thought I was losing my mind.  Then I got to thinking rustlers or some such.  I was fixing to follow after it when Miss Emma screamed.”

“And you come running.”

“She was yelling her lungs out,” Orville said.  “Whatever beast was mauling her was bellowing savage.  I knew my scattergun wouldn’t do no good against such a critter, but I kept a’coming just the same.  The ruckus stopped a’fore I got to the cabin.  I found Miss Emma lying there like you see her.”

“And nothing of the animal or the rider?”

Tears welled in Orville’s eyes.  “I tried to help her, Sheriff Hank, honest I did.”  He turned away, sniffling.

Pallid faces hovered in the firelight.  Eyes darted back and forth.

William coughed into a fist.  “Did anyone else see the creature?”

“Emma’s sister,” said Henry Holcomb, “she seen it.”

He wagged his lantern up the slope.  William followed his gaze.  Half hidden among the conifers was a cabin belching smoke from a stone chimney.  Amber hues pierced the planks of a shuttered window.

A youth in a slouch hat hammered the planks.  “Miss Elizabeth!”

William recognized Tommy Montag’s voice.  For months the trapper had courted Emma’s sister.  She had confided to William that she liked him very much.

“Come on out, Elizabeth,” Tommy yelled.  “Sheriff Hank and Pastor Will’re here.  You come out, Elizabeth.”

William tramped past the tree stumps scarring the hillside.  A whitewashed cross marked the grave of Emma’s late husband.  His fowler had ruptured on a turkey hunt the previous winter.  The two sisters had taken his passing hard.

Tommy stepped from the window as William approached.  “She won’t come out, Pastor Will.”

William squinted through a crack between the shutter’s boards.  He called through the barricade.  “Miss Prescott, you’re safe now.  Will you open for us?”

A childish whine sounded within the cabin.

 

 

 

Once to die

1

William Everett Spencer swung the ax.  Steel split cedar and the log toppled in halves from the stump.

His breath frosted as he tugged free the blade.  Despite the dawn’s chill he stood in his shirtsleeves, a watch chain draping his waistcoat and a clerical collar wrapping his neck.  He peeled off a leather glove and combed his fingers through his hair.

Sweat dampened the linen clinging to his ribs.  He rested the ax against a heap of hewn timber, reached for the clay jug at his feet and lifted it to his lips.

Frigid spring water iced his throat.  Shivers rattled his chest.  He wiped his mouth, drew a breath scented with cedar and let his gaze wander up the hillside.

Evergreens veiled in mist climbed into a sky of brightening gray.

“Pastor Will!”

The shout pulled his attention down the slope.  Two boys in baggy flannel waded through knee-high grass rising toward the forest.  “Pastor Will, we got the rope swing off’n the big tree.”

“Leave it on the porch,” he said, “then come load this cordwood into the wagon.”

“Yes, sir.”

The boys retreated to the parsonage at the base of the rise, slingshots wagging in their pockets.  The cottage’s clapboard walls gleamed white beneath a roof of redwood shingles.

Oaks shrouded the nearby chapel.  The sanctuary’s empty belfry speared through the trees.  Beyond the grove stretched the lumbered canyon of Grass Flats.

William guzzled another icy mouthful and nestled the jug beside his boot.  He pulled on his glove and placed another log on the stump.

Hooves hammered the town’s thoroughfare.  A pair of harnessed stallions thundered past the textile supply.  In the steeds’ wake lurched a carriage of lacquered burgundy and black, its wheels spewing frost.  Atop the driver’s bench bounced a liveried coachman thrashing whip and reins.

Sheriff Lowry swayed at the coachman’s side, clutching his battered hat to his head.

At the parsonage the carriage skidded to a stop.  Lowry leapt to the roadway and queried the boys.  They pointed up the slope.  The lawman bounded toward the forest, his unfastened frock coat flapping across his back and his Colt revolver whacking his hip.  Both boys scurried after him.

William fought a tremor in his chest.  He hefted his ax and struck a blow that cleft the log in two.

“Good morning, sheriff,” he said, stripping off his glove and extending his hand.

Lowry slapped a tin star into William’s palm.  “Put this on and come with me.”

William scowled at the star.  “Sheriff, we already discussed this.”

“Won’t be no shooting this time.”

Both boys stood openmouthed at the sheriff’s back.

William rolled the star between his fingers.  His gaze drifted to the coachman watching from the carriage.  The coachman’s cloak was lined with satin, his tunic embroidered with gold from cuff to elbow.

William lowered his chin to his chest.  He blew a beleaguered sigh and pinned the star to his vest.  “You boys load this cordwood.”

“Yes, sir, Pastor Will.  You want us to cart it over to Widow Handley’s?  We can fetch my pa’s horse from the livery.”

“I should be back before then.”

“We fixing to deliver it pirate-like?”

William eyed the wooden swords thrust into the boys’ rope belts.  He forced a smile.  “Exactly.  She mustn’t suspect a thing.  Caleb, you’re captain until I return.”

“Can we plant a pirate flag, like last time?” Caleb said.

’May we plant…’”

“James’s been practicing, Pastor Will.  He can make one real good.”

James tugged a square of frayed fabric from his pocket.  “There’s wild berries aplenty down by the creek I can use for dye.  And looky here.  My ma made me a eye patch.”

William perused the proffered items.  “Very well, men, stow that treasure in the longboat and get started on that flag.”

“Aye aye, captain.”  The boys snapped to attention and knuckled their foreheads.

William returned their salute.  He scooped his frock coat and parson’s hat from the wagon bed and trailed Sheriff Lowry down the slope.

“Leave that ax alone,” he called over his shoulder.

Caleb yelled after him.  “Don’t you worry none, Pastor Will.  We’ll be ready to cast off soon as you’re aboard.”

*     *     *

In silence the boys watched the minister clamber into the carriage with the sheriff.  A crack of the coachman’s whip jolted the stallions back toward the town.

Caleb gripped the sword hilt jutting from his belt.  “James, can you fetch your pa’s horse?”

“You heard the sheriff.  Won’t be no shooting.”

Caleb gnawed his lip.  “So why he come looking for Pastor Will?”

The boys eyed the abandoned ax, and the cloven cordwood littering the earth.

They glanced at one another, and bolted for the livery.