Baskerville - Il Mastino Dei

Mortimer had nodded, prescribing brandy and rest. Then he had walked to the edge of the moor and waited.

The fog rolled off the Dartmoor like the breath of a dying beast, cold and thick with the scent of peat and decay. Dr. James Mortimer tugged his collar tighter, his boots sinking into the saturated earth. He had walked these moors for twenty years, but never like this—never with the weight of a legend pressing against his ribs.

Mortimer stood shaking, his hand reaching for the revolver he had forgotten to load. Il Mastino Dei Baskerville

He did not have to wait long.

Because Mortimer had seen the truth in that brief moment before the whistle blew. The hound’s eyes were not the eyes of a demon. They were the eyes of something that had once been a dog—loyal, loving, broken—and had been reshaped by cruelty into a living weapon. The red fur was not hellfire. It was stained with iron-rich mud from a specific tributary of the Dart River, the same tributary that ran behind the abandoned Ferrar mines. Mortimer had nodded, prescribing brandy and rest

“It comes at night,” Sir Henry had whispered, “when the mist is high enough to hide its shoulders. You hear the claws first, clicking on the stone path. Then the breathing—wet, like a man drowning. And then the eyes.”

The hound was a beast of science, not of hell. But science, Mortimer now knew, could forge monsters just as terrible as any curse. Mortimer stood shaking, his hand reaching for the

As dawn bled over the moor, he sealed the letter and added a postscript: Bring the largest revolver you own. And a veterinarian.

Mortimer did not believe in hellhounds. But he believed in the terror he saw in young Sir Henry’s eyes, the way the heir’s hand shook as he held the yellowed family manuscript.