A Night in the Lonesome October - Part 3
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Part 3

"Yes."

He led me among trees. Finally, we came to a very rocky clearing, and he halted.

"Yes?" I said.

"This is the place."

"What is it?"

"The remains of an old church."

I walked forward, sniffing. Nothing untoward. . . .

I climbed the low hill on which the ruins stood. Among the blocks of stone I saw an opening. When I peered within I saw that it continued downward.

". . . Goes back," I said, "as if this wasn't always ground level. As if much of it were covered up, overgrown. . . . We're actually standing above the ruin, aren't we?"

"I don't know. I've never been down in it," he replied. "That isn't the spot. The cemetery's down the hill, over that way."

He headed in the direction he'd indicated, and I followed. There were a few fallen, half-buried markers about. Then there was a bigger place, I realized, when I saw that lines of stone in the ground were what had been the tops of walls of a crypt. Weeds grew amid them. Bubo rushed forward, stood in their midst.

"See, there's a hole here," he told me. "His stuff's down there."

I moved toward it, looked inside. It was too dark for me to distinguish anything. I wished Nightwind or Graymalk had been along.

"I'll have to take your word for it," I said, "for now."

"Then tell me the names and places you'd promised."

"I'll tell you as we walk along -- away from here."

"Does this place make you nervous?"

"It's not a month for taking chances," I said.

He laughed.

"That's very funny," he said.

"It is, isn't it?" I replied.

The dying moon came up above the trees, lighting our way.

With midnight's chimes speech comes to me. I rose and stretched, waiting for them to cease. Jack, having roused himself especially for the occasion, watched me with a mixture of amus.e.m.e.nt and interest.

"Busy day, Snuff?" he asked.

"We'd a visitor while you napped. The rat Bubo," I said, "companion of the Good Doctor."

"And?"

"We traded. A list of the players for the location of the Count's grave. He said it was in the cemetery to a ruined church to the southeast. Showed me the place."

"Good work," Jack replied. "How does this affect your calculations?"

"Hard to say. I'm going to think about it, and then I'll need to do some walking."

"Still early in the Game," he said. "You know how the picture can change."

"True," I replied. "But at least we're somewhat better-informed than we were. Of course, we must check the content of the crypt by day, to be certain. I think I can persuade Graymalk to do that."

"Not Quicklime?"

"I trust the cat more. I'd rather share information with her, if it must be shared."

"You know her persuasion, then?"

I shook my head.

"No, I'm just going by my feelings."

"Has she spoken of her mistress, Jill?"

"Not in any detail."

"I believe the lady is younger than she causes herself to appear."

"That may be. I just don't know. I haven't met her."

"I have. Let me know if the cat talks party politics."

"I will, but she won't -- not unless I do, and I'm not about to."

"You're the best judge of that situation."

"Yes. Neither of us has anything to gain by volunteering information at this time. But we might stand to lose something in the way of cooperation. Unless you've some overriding need for the information that I don't know about. In that case, though. . . ."

"I understand. No. Let it be. Have you learned it for any of the others?"

"No. Are we going out tonight?"

"No. We're set, for now. Have you any plans?"

"A little calculation and a lot of rest."

"Sounds like a good idea."

"Do you remember that time in Dijon, when that lady from the other side managed to distract you?"

"It's hard to forget. Why do you ask?"

"No special reason. Just reminiscing. Good night, Jack."

I moved to my favorite corner and settled with my head upon my paws.

"'Night, Snuff."

I listened to his retreating footsteps. It was time to visit Growler, for a workshop in advanced stalking. Soon the world went away.

October 8.

I drew more lines in my head last night and this morning, but before I'd created a satisfactory picture we had a caller.

I barked twice when the door chimes sounded, because it was expected of me. The master went to the door and I followed.

A tall, solidly built man, dark-haired, was on the stoop, and he smiled.

"h.e.l.lo," he said, "my name's Larry Talbot. I'm your new neighbor, and I thought I'd come by and pay my respects."

"Won't you come in and have a cup of tea with me?" Jack said.

"Thank you."

Jack led him into the parlor and seated him, excused himself, and went to the kitchen. I stayed in the parlor and watched. Talbot glanced several times at the palm of his hand. Then he studied me.

"Good boy," he said.

I opened my mouth, let my tongue hang out, and panted a few times. But I did not approach him. There was something about the way he smelled -- an underlying suggestion of wildness -- that puzzled me.

Jack returned with a tray of tea and biscuits and they chatted for a time, about the neighborhood, the weather, the recent rash of grave robbings, the killings. I watched them -- two big men, the air of the predator about each -- sipping their tea now and discussing the exotic flowers Talbot cultivated and how they might fare, even indoors, in this climate.

Then came a terrible crash from the attic.

I departed the room immediately, bounding up the stair, swinging around corners. Up another stair. . . .

The wardrobe doors were open. The Thing stood before it.

"Free!" it announced, flexing its limbs, furling and unfurling its dark, scaly wings. "Free!"

"Like h.e.l.l!" I said, curling back my lips and leaping.

I caught it directly in the midsection, knocking it back into the wardrobe again. I slashed twice, left and right, as it sought to seize me. I dropped down and bit one of its legs. I roared and threw myself on it again, slashing faceward.

It drew back, retreating to the rear of its prison, leaving a heavy scent of musk in the air. I shouldered the doors shut, reared up, and tried to close the latch with my paw. Jack entered just then and did it for me. He held his knife loosely in his right hand.

"You are an exemplary watchdog, Snuff," he stated.

A moment later Larry Talbot came in.

"Problems?" he said. "Anything I can help with?"

The blade vanished before Jack turned.

"No, thank you," he said. "It was less serious than it sounded. Shall we return to our tea?"

They departed.

I followed them down the stairs, Talbot moving as silently as the master. I'd a feeling, somehow, that he was in the Game, and that this incident had persuaded him that we were, too. For as he was leaving he said, "I see some busy days ahead, before this month is out. If you ever need help -- of any sort -- you can count on me."

Jack studied him for several long moments, then replied, "Without even knowing my persuasion?"

"I think I know it," Talbot answered.

"How?"

"Good dog you've got there," Talbot said. "Knows how to close a door."

Then he was gone. I followed him home, of course, to see whether he really lived where he said he did. When I saw that he did I had even more lines to draw. Interesting ones now, though.

He never turned and looked back, yet I knew that he could tell I was behind him all the way.

Later, I lay in the yard, drawing my lines. It had become a much more complicated enterprise. Footsteps approached along the road, halted.

"Good dog," croaked an ancient voice. It was the Druid. There followed a plop on the ground nearby, as something he'd tossed over the garden wall landed. "Good dog."

I rose and inspected it as he pa.s.sed on along his way. It was a piece of meat. Only the most wretched of alley hounds might not have been wary. The thing reeked of exotic additives.

I picked it up carefully, bore it to a soft spot beneath a tree, dug a hole there, dropped it in, covered it.

"Bravo!" came a sibilant voice from above. "I didn't think you'd fall for that one."

I glanced up. Quicklime was coiled about a branch overhead.

"How long have you been there?" I asked.

"Since your first visitor came by -- the big one. I'd been watching him. Is he in the Game?"

"I don't know. I think he may be, but it's hard to tell. He's a strange one. Doesn't seem to have a companion."

"Maybe he's his own best friend. Speaking of which -- "

"Yes?"

"The crazy witch's companion may be running out of steam about now."