High Moor 2: Moonstruck (13 page)

Read High Moor 2: Moonstruck Online

Authors: Graeme Reynolds

Tags: #uk horror, #werewolf, #horror, #werewolves, #werewolf horror, #Suspense, #british horror

BOOK: High Moor 2: Moonstruck
4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Which meant that the only clothes inside belonged to women. And it meant that discovery would be so much worse. He shook his head. “For fuck’s sake, that’s just bloody typical.” Then he made his way around to the front of the building and slipped inside.

The sounds of the squash game echoed around the cold concrete floors of the building, reflecting from the walls until it sounded like dozens of balls were suffering in place of these women’s workmates.

“Do you know what the twat said then?” WHACK!

“No, what did the wanker do this time?” SMACK!

“He said I should wear tighter trousers because my arse looks fat in baggy ones.”WHACK!

“The fucking tosser!” SMACK!

Steven kept low and hurried to the women’s changing rooms. He breathed a sigh of relief. Neither of the women had bothered to use the lockers. The chances of a casual thief deciding to rob the police gymnasium were fairly remote. The women’s clothes lay across the slatted wooden benches, with thick winter coats hanging on the pegs above. Steven grabbed the biggest coat, and the bag beneath it, then ran from the changing rooms toward the car park, pulling on the coat as he did. He flung open the doors, when his nostrils picked up a heavy, animal musk from the west. They’d found him.

Steven fought the panic bubbling up from his stomach, and shoved his hands into the bag, discarding handfuls of loose tampons and pieces of makeup until he found a set of keys. He fished them out from the bag and pressed the unlock button on the key−fob. A surge of pure relief washed over him when one of the cars lights flashed, swiftly replaced by dismay when he realised that he’d unlocked the Smart Car instead of the Mercedes. Still, in his position, he really couldn’t afford to be picky. He sprinted barefoot to the parked car and forced his frame inside, then started the engine and accelerated away. He looked over his shoulder, fearful of pursuit. From the darkness of the playing field, his gaze was met by two sets of glowing green eyes.

***

12th December 2008
.
Finchale Priory. 18.05.

Gabriela burst through a hedge and darted across a field. The crops had long been harvested, and the loose soil shifted beneath her paws as she ran, throwing up a lingering stink of the manure the fields had been sprayed with in late September. She suppressed a shudder at the thought of scrubbing it out from under her fingernails later. The moonstruck was heading straight for the ruined Priory to the northeast. She picked up Troy’s unmistakable scent to the southwest as he pursued the other werewolf. He was gaining on the bipedal creature, but would not get to it before it reached the caravan park and more witnesses. She’d have to head it off before it got that far. With her ears flattened to her head she accelerated her pace, hoping that she’d make it in time.

The ease with which the moonstruck had escaped Oskar and Troy bothered her. By rights, John Simpson should have been chained up in the back of the prison transport, and it should have been a simple matter of putting a bullet through his brain. Instead, another of Oskar’s brilliant plans was unravelling before her eyes. She respected her team alpha, but was not without her own ambitions. When this was over, she’d have to think about how she could use his repeated failure to her own advantage. Before that, though, there was the small matter of John Simpson. How hard could it be? He was just another rabid moonstruck, waiting to be put out of its misery. It was nothing they had not dealt with a hundred times before, even if this bastard was making things difficult. At least he was out of police custody. The hard part was over. Now all they had to do was kill him.

She reached the corner of the field, making a decision. In front of her was another ploughed field. It would be the most direct route, but the soft ground would slow her progress, reducing the likelihood that she would intercept the moonstruck in time. To her right, through another hawthorn hedge, was the small road that serviced the caravan park and the Priory’s visitor centre. It was less direct, and there was always a chance that she’d run into someone, but she should be able to get ahead of Simpson. She hurled herself at the hedge, bursting through without losing a step, then tore along the dark lane as fast as she could manage.

The ruins came into view at the end of the road. She made out the darker silhouettes of crumbled walls and towers, outlined by moonlight reflecting from the ancient stones. To her right, the warm glow of the lights in the caravan park spilled out through the darkness, encroaching on the cool silver moonlight until it was overwhelmed. She heard the sounds of a dozen television sets, playing through the flimsy walls. Smelled a dozen different meals being cooked. A dozen families with no idea of what lay just beyond the relative safety of their caravans.

She leapt a fence and angled herself back to the north. The moonstruck was close now, its raw animal reek assailing her nostrils. The creature stank of blood and death, and she was eager to feel its throat in her teeth.

Then she saw it. It was bipedal, like all moonstruck were, caught halfway between man and wolf. An abomination. The monster was covered in thick brown fur and used its arms in tandem with its legs to hurl itself forward, almost falling onto all fours in an effort to gain more speed. It was working too. Troy burst from the tree line, struggling to keep up with the creature, let alone catch it. She needed to slow it down.

Instinct took over, and Gabriela veered off to the right to intercept the beast. It seemed to register her presence for the first time, and changed direction to increase the distance between them. Heading for the ruins. It leapt over a low stone wall then vanished from her sight. A long, savage howl tore through the silence of the night. She heard the televisions in the caravans turn off, almost in unison. The exterior lights on the caravans flicked on. Faces pressed up against the glass with hands cupped around their eyes, trying to locate the source of that awful sound. Electronic beeping from dozens of telephones, all dialling the same number. She suppressed a snarl and vaulted the wall into the ruins, not expecting the heavily muscled, clawed arm to slash out from the darkness as she jumped.

Claws tore through her chest, but thankfully they glanced off her ribcage and did no real damage. She was hurled against a stone wall and fell to the floor, momentarily dazed.

That was all the time that Troy needed. He leaped over the wall with a roar of rage and crashed into the hulking moonstruck werewolf. The pair of them thrashed on the floor, gouging and biting at one another. Gabriela got to her feet and paused to assess the battle. There was no clear shot at the moonstruck. The combatants were moving too quickly. Whenever she thought she saw an opening and prepared to pounce, the moonstruck would shift position, and Troy would end up between them. She whined in frustration. When this was over, she’d make Troy pay for this. After she’d finished fucking him, anyway.

The battle moved into what would have once been the centre of the Priory. Now only jagged parallel walls stood, with neatly tended grass filling the area where wooden pews once would have been. Teeth tore at flesh, and talons raked jagged wounds through hair, skin and muscle. Blood splashed across the grass, staining it black.

Simpson hurled Troy against one of the stone walls, but Troy angled his body, and instead of crashing into the stone, he used the wall as a springboard to hurl himself back at the monster, jaws agape. The moonstruck’s arm slashed out, passing through Troy’s open mouth, tearing through the inside of this throat with vicious claws. Its other hand grabbed the underside of Troy’s muzzle to prevent him from biting down, before ripping his entire lower jaw away.

Troy went limp, impaled on the moonstruck’s arm like some obscene, twitching glove. The werewolf howled in fury, and ripped its arm free from its fleshy prison, bringing a trail of internal organs with it. Hair retreated back into pores. Bones snapped, reforming the ruined corpse from wolf to man. What remained of Troy slumped to the floor. Then the moonstruck turned to Gabriela and snarled.

Gabriela weighed her options. The urge to throw herself at this monster that had killed her pack mate and lover was almost overwhelming, but the simple fact was that Troy had been among the strongest of them, and the creature before her had torn him apart as if he’d been nothing. She was faster than Troy, but the moonstruck was no slouch either. If it managed to grab her, then she’d be finished. She needed help. She needed Oskar.

She curled back her lips and snarled a challenge to the blood−soaked moonstruck, then feigned an attack at its flanks. The creature responded as she’d predicted, changing its stance and lunging forward. Instead of returning the attack, however, Gabriela darted away from the beast and dashed through a hole in the wall.

She landed in a vaulted undercroft, beneath the main section of the Priory. Stone pillars supported the ornate arched roof, and the remains of inscriptions, long since faded through exposure to the elements, decorated the thick sandstone roof arches. Moonlight shone through a doorway at the far end of the room, and she started running toward it, just as the moonstruck crashed through the opening, dislodging several stone blocks in the process.

Gabriela ducked her head down and ran as fast as her four legs were capable. The heavy musk of the moonstruck filled the enclosed space like a cloud, and the smell of Troy’s blood in its fur inflamed her senses. She heard the monster’s breath and the clack of its claws against the flagstone floor. The creature was pursuing her and, impossibly, was gaining. An icy finger of fear ran down her spine as she realised that the moonstruck was not only stronger than her, but was faster too.

She leaped through the doorway onto a hard gravel path, then bounded over a metal hand−rail onto the top of one of the Priory’s exterior walls. The bridge lay to her north, just beyond the ruins. In the distance she heard the first sirens and knew that the authorities would arrive soon. Even if she and Oskar were able to destroy the moonstruck, there would be no time to retrieve Troy’s body before they arrived. She shook off the thought, knowing that she had more immediate problems to deal with. She leaped from the wall, just as the moonstruck swiped at her. She landed on the neatly manicured grass, and bolted for the footbridge, praying that Oskar was in position.

The moonstruck was right behind her. She zigzagged her way across the lawn, doing her best to anticipate and avoid the creature’s attacks. The beast snarled in fury as its talons met empty air. Gabriela had felt the air shift behind her that time. It was getting closer, and she knew that there was no way she could avoid it for much longer. She changed direction again, ducking under the moonstruck’s outstretched arm and leaving a deep slash across its thigh, hoping that would be enough to slow it down. Then she ran flat out for the bridge with the enraged monster on her heels.

The bridge was narrow and much longer than she would have liked. Wooden boards set on long iron girders, held above the river by five stone columns. She extended her senses, trying to find any sign of her alpha on the opposite shore, but the roar of the river beneath her drowned out any noise, and her nostrils were filled with the stink of the blood−soaked monster pursuing her.

She’d made it half way across when she saw Oskar step from the trees with his weapon raised. Her heart fluttered at the sight. She’d never been so glad to see anyone in her entire life. Oskar would blow the cursed thing’s brains out, and then they could work out what to do next.

She tried to urge one last burst of speed from her tired body when she felt hot breath on the back of her neck and a flash of searing pain across her back. Her legs gave out beneath her and she crashed onto the bridge. She struggled to regain her footing, but her back legs wouldn’t work. The pain in her back flared into a sunburst of agony, and she realised that the moonstruck had severed her spine. The creature plunged its claws through her back and lifted her from the blood−drenched wooden boards. She felt its fetid breath on the back of her neck, and she knew that it was over.

As long as Oskar takes the fucker out, then I’ll die happy.

Her vision began to fade, and she looked up to the far side of the bridge, expecting to see her alpha preparing to blow the beast’s head off, but Oskar had gone. She had just enough time to feel a wave of despair at her abandonment before the moonstruck tore her in half.

Chapter 8

12th December 2008
.
Finchale Road, Brasside. 19.00.

Olivia started to realise how bad things were when she turned off the main road towards the prison and saw the traffic. The line of stationary cars stretched for over a quarter of a mile, while dozens of irate commuters argued with the uniformed officers as to why they were not allowed to go home. There was only one access road to the Brasside estate, and from what she’d heard over the radio, it seemed unlikely that the forensics teams would be finishing up any time soon.

She flashed her ID at a uniformed officer, and he waved her through on the opposite side of the road, much to the irritation of the stranded motorists. One of them pulled out of line and tried to follow her, but the police officer moved into the centre of the road and blocked him. Olivia sympathized with the man to some extent, and didn’t think that the harsh rebuke from the uniform would do much to improve his mood.

Other books

Claiming Their Maiden by Sue Lyndon
Shady: MC Romance by Harley McRide
North American Lake Monsters by Nathan Ballingrud
Solomon's Oak by Jo-Ann Mapson
Torn in Two by Ryanne Hawk
Destroying Angel by Michael Wallace
Artist's Proof by Gordon Cotler