“I’ve never seen a creature like this!”
Professor Siegfried Engel examined the drawing and struggled to make sense of the nightmare rendered in sharp pencil strokes and streaks of jet-black charcoal.
The roiling fireplace at his side cast a crimson hue over the strange scene: a winged figure in a trench, lording over the twisted remains of the Kaiser’s finest.
There are at least a dozen dead…maybe more.
“How tall do you think it is?” Marius Drummer asked.
Siegfried turned toward his assistant, seated to his right, and glared at the young man. A glimmering ribbon of liquor flowed from Marius’s lips, down his pockmarked chin, and over the fleshy, grapefruit-sized goiter bulging from his neck.
“For God’s sake! Stop drinking the Major’s whiskey,” Siegfried said.
The young man hiccuped and set the crystal snifter down with a wry smile. He pushed his wire-rimmed glasses back up his nose and a reflection of the roaring fire in the stone hearth danced upon their smooth glass.
“Apologies, Professor Engel,” Marius said, sneaking a handful of pickled carrot slices into his mouth. “But I’m curious if you’ve deduced the monster’s height?” he asked between crunchy bites.
Siegfried rolled his eyes. Marius had the habit of stuffing his face with any edible scrap he could get a hold of. Who could blame him? Four years into a seemingly never-ending war, food was harder to come by, even back in Dresden.
“Indeed, I have,” Siegfried said, turning his attention back to the drawing. “Let’s assume the trench is of standard depth and the victims of average height, then the monster is no taller than a eight-year-old child…” Siegfried frowned. “…albeit one with a two-meter wide wingspan.”
“How could such a little thing do all that damage?” Marius asked.
Siegfried placed the drawing on the rough, pinewood dining table and tapped the image. “Didn’t you notice the creature’s hands?”
Marius leaned forward. “They resemble eagle talons, professor.”
“And from all the blood the artist drew dripping from the tips, one can assume that they’re just as sharp.”
As terrifying as the claws were, Siegfried thought, they were nothing compared to the creature’s head—an amorphous black blob with two white discs for eyes that radiated malice and hatred. The note scrawled at the bottom of the page read: Organism 646, April 26, 1918. Cantigny, France.
What the hell are you? Did our American friends drag you here from their wild forests or did you crawl out from some ancient French cesspool?
Siegfried lifted his gaze from the page and glanced at the soldiers working inside the commandeered country house turned battalion headquarters.
Most of the officers, fitter versions of Siegfried, were in their mid to late forties, sported neatly trimmed grey beards, and wore glasses. Out of uniform, they wouldn’t have looked out of place teaching at a prestigious university.
Several of the war scholars argued in front of an enlarged wall map of Cantigny, the town they occupied, while subordinates shuttled notes to typists a few feet away in what was the former occupant’s living room. These younger men, hunched over beetle-black Erika typewriters, clacked out reports, orders, and requisition forms, stopping only to feed a fresh sheet of paper into the platen.
Siegfried ignored the distractions and ran a finger over the drawing feeling the deep grooves the lead had carved. There was a frenetic quality to the lines, as if the artist had slashed at the parchment with an ink-stained blade instead of a pencil tip.
Siegfried’s stomach growled, but he ignored the gnawing hunger growing in his belly. He wanted to focus all of his mental energies on solving the mystery of Organism 646 for his Will. Of course, Major William Gräf wasn’t his Will anymore, not since Siegfried’s medical discharge from the military academy.
Had it really been two decades since they last saw each other? Siegfried’s heart raced at the thought of being in the same room with Will again. So much had changed. William was now one of General Oskar von Hutier’s trusted advisers and tonight’s benefactor.
There was little work for occultists these days and Siegfried was thrilled to receive William’s telegram, requesting his presence and expertise at the front. A generous advance of a hundred Marks accompanied the train tickets along with a simple request: bring your most potent charms.
Beyond that, however, there were no words of affection. No signs of what they had once been to each other. That was to be expected with messages censored by legions of monitors. And Will was smarter than that. But still, it grated on Siegfried.
A group of soldiers entered the house, bringing with them a cold draft. The drawing fluttered against the wood, threatening to fly into the fire. Siegfried placed a pewter fork on top of the page and then clutched his right arm, massaging the stump through the suit’s threadbare fabric.
Cool evening air always made what remained of his arm tingle with pain. Strangers assumed he lost the limb early on in the war, but he was too embarrassed to admit that it happened twenty years ago, as a cadet at Berlin’s Kriegsakademien, far from any battlefield.
Will was there on that horrible night and if wasn’t for him, Siegfried would have lost more than an arm. He closed his eyes and winced. The memory was still as painful as the bullet that altered his life.
#
“Professor Engel?” Marius asked, snapping Siegfried back into the present moment. “You drifted away.”
Siegfried groaned.
He was annoyed that Marius had interrupted the memory, but also grateful that he didn’t have to think about the days in which Will didn’t visit him in the hospital or the sudden discharge papers the academy served him soon after.
“Apologies,” Siegfried said, shaking the thought away. He reached into his inside suit pocket and pulled out a magnifying glass. “I want to show you something interesting here.” He tapped the page with the instrument’s rounded edge. “We’re dealing with a chimera. Notice how the creature’s wings are drawn to resemble those of an insects, but the body is shaped—more or less—like a man’s.” He held the lens over the drawing. The creature’s chest area bulged into view. “See how the artist shaded the musculature?”
“It looks like medieval armor,” Marius said, scooting closer. His chair screeched against the stone floor. “Couldn’t this just be a man dressed as a knight?”
It was a possibility.
Germany, France, and England had experimented with body armor throughout the war, but no one would be mad enough to wear such obsolete and burdensome protection to a modern battlefield, especially without a helmet.
“I don’t think so,” Siegfried said. “Besides, the arms and legs are too long and thin for this thing to be human.”
“Whatever it is, it’s terrifying,” Marius said, tracing a finger over the creature’s face. “What color do you think the eyes are?”
Siegfried shrugged. “I’d wager that they’re—”
A whiskey glass suddenly sliced the air between the two men and crashed into the fireplace. The wood hissed and bright embers zipped out from the hearth like demonic hornets.
“Red!” someone growled. “The eyes were blood red.”
Siegfried and Marius turned toward the voice. A soldier wearing a tattered uniform stood trembling a few feet away. His body rattled with cold, fear, or anger, maybe all at once. Siegfried couldn’t tell.
“That’s the Devil you’re fawning over! The American—”
“Private Roth!” A typist shouted. “I thought you said that it was a troll?”
Laughter erupted from every corner of the house, leaving the crazed soldier standing with his mouth open. One of the officers standing in front of the map turned and flicked a pin at the private. “I heard that Roth ran away from a huge fairy!”
“I didn’t run!” Roth growled. “You bastards don’t believe me, but I know what I saw. It was a giant—”
Before he could finish, the front door swung open. Siegfried looked past Roth and focused on the men entering the house. His heart jumped at the sight of Will towering above the mustachioed officers led by General Hutier.
Everyone in the house stopped what they were doing and stood at attention. Hutier returned the gesture and cleared his throat.
“I’ll need everyone, except my staff, Professor Engel and his assistant, and this…” Hutier hissed, glaring at private Roth. “…miserable excuse for an infantryman to step out!”
Within moments, the country house was emptied and all Siegfried could hear was the crackling of burning logs.
“I see you’ve met private Thorsten Roth,” General Hutier said, breaking the silence. “Roth’s the artist behind the sketch you’ve been studying and the sole survivor of the Cantigny massacre.” Hutier glared at the drunk private. “That’s the only reason we’ve let him get so pissed these past few nights.”
Hutier continued speaking, but Siegfried was too focused on William, standing to the General’s right. He was as handsome as he remembered, but age and the war had taken a toll on his friend’s appearance. William’s thick, brown hair had thinned and receded into a sharp widow’s peak with streaks of white racing along the temples. Deep crow’s feet radiated from the corner’s of his kind, green eyes and his uniform strained to contain a watermelon-sized paunch.
William grinned and winked.
Siegfried’s body warmed as if he had taken a double shot of schnapps. The lovely feeling fizzled as the glint from the wedding band on William’s left hand caught Siegfried’s eye.
Siegfried couldn’t believe what he was looking at. Slowly, he became aware of the General’s speech.
“…and making private Roth here sound like a lunatic blunted the psychological effect the massacre had on the army. It was my idea to spread the rumor that the Americans were using convicts as shock troops as a way to explain the brutal nature of our boys’ deaths.” The general snapped his fingers. “Professor Engel?”
Siegfried dragged his gaze away from William and stared at Hutier. Unable to salute, he bowed slightly. “Thank you for having me, General. I hope to be of service.”
“You have Major Gräf to thank. He suggested that you were the man for this mission.” Hutier’s eyes settled on Siegfried’s right stump. He stroked his thick mustache and turned toward William. “You stand by this recommendation, Major?”
“Most certainly.” William stepped forward and dropped a leather portfolio onto the table. He opened the folio, revealing clippings from European occult periodicals featuring Siegfried’s accomplishments.
Siegfried’s jaw dropped. After all these years, Will’s followed my career!
“Professor Engle is one of the world’s foremost paranormal experts,” William said. He gestured for everyone to sit down at the table. “He’s been called on to consult all over the world, even America.”
Hutier pursed his lips and nodded, as if approving of Siegfried’s onetime visit to New York City.
“That’s good to hear. Very well. I’ve always trusted your advice, Major.” Hutier turned toward Roth. “Go on, private. Tell the professor what happened.”
Roth grasped the sides of his head. “Do I have to?”
“Do you want to make it home or…” Hutier’s hand reached into his coat pocket and grasped his service revolver. “…should I put you out of your misery right now?”
Tears welled in Roth’s eyes and his thin lips trembled.
Hutier pulled out the revolver and cocked back the hammer.
“General, please!” Roth shouted, wiping away tears with the back of his hand. The private took a deep breath and poured himself a double shot of whiskey, his eyes darting from the glass to the General’s hand until the liquor nearly overflowed. “Sergeant Rudolph saw it first.”
Hutier holstered his weapon. “Keep going, private.”
“Rudy pointed at a figure silhouetted against the full moon. At first, I thought it was an eagle, but it didn’t move. It just hovered there, high in the sky.”
“I remember Rudy asking me if I thought it was an observation balloon. I wanted to tell him that balloons didn’t have wings, but then that thing’s eyes glowed red.” Roth shivered. “It must have been a hundred feet in the air, but we could all see those red orbs as if they were right in front of us.”
“Then what happened?” Siegfried asked.
“It let out a god-awful screech. We all covered our ears as it dropped from the sky like a goddamn shell.” Roth picked up a steak knife and imitated the creature’s trajectory. “We thought it was going to land right in front of us, but then it leveled out at the last moment, slicing through our boys on the first pass.” Everyone flinched as Roth slashed through a trio of candles at the center of the table. “The poor bastards didn’t even know that they were dead until their heads tumbled off their necks like loose boulders. There was so much blood.”
“My God,” Siegfried said.
“They were the lucky ones.” Roth knocked back the shot of whiskey. “That thing made another pass, landed, and rampaged through the trench, gutting my friends with its claws.”
“Didn’t anyone fight back?” Siegfried asked.
Roth nodded his head slowly. “A few of the boys took shots with their rifles, but the bullets missed their mark. I emptied a pistol clip at point blank range and missed.”
Siegfried closed his eyes and shook his head. “How’s that possible?”
“I don’t know, but that’s when I went over the parapet. Figured a bullet was a better way to go than being ripped apart.”
“Tell them what happened next,” William said.
“A bright, white flare went up from one of our communication trenches and the creature flew up, chasing after it. I crawled back into our trench and passed out.” Roth looked toward the General. “Is that enough?”
Hutier nodded and turned his attention toward Siegfried. “We believe the attack last week was a trial run and that they’ll unleash the beast again. That’s why we need to find the creature and kill it before it does anymore damage. I doubt that we’d be able to hide the creature’s existence from our troops after another raid like that one.”
“Everyone would panic and the front could collapse,” Siegfried said.
“Exactly! An American victory here would be disastrous.” William said, crossing his arms. “We need to break the doughboys’s backs here, in Cantigny.”
Hutier tapped one of the clippings on the table. “It says here that you tracked down a Yeti for the premier of China.”
“Yes, I used a technique called traveling clairvoyance.” Siegfried stopped, noting the General’s confused stare. “Some people call it telesthesia, but I prefer—”
Hutier waved his hands. “I don’t much care for how you did it or what the technique’s called. All I want to know is, could you do it again?”
Siegfried beamed. “General, I’d be delighted to!”
#
Siegfried loved traveling clairvoyance.
The technique placed him in a dream-like world where he could track down anything with little more than a verbal description. And thanks to Roth’s story and drawing, Siegfried had more than enough material to locate Organism 646. Whatever you are, you’re mine, Siegfried thought, placing his palm over the sketch.
“So, you just sit there and dream about the creature?” Hutier asked, stroking his mustache.
“General, please!” Marius snapped. His goiter jiggled with anger. “Professor Engel needs to concentrate!”
Hutier reached for his gun again and glared at Marius.
“Forgive my assistant, General.” Siegfried said. “But he is right. I do need a few minutes of uninterrupted silence to make this work.”
“Sir,” William said, gesturing toward the map on the wall. “Why don’t we go over Cantigny’s defenses while Siegfried works?”
“Very well, but I don’t like that assistant’s attitude,” Hutier said, following William.
Siegfried exhaled, happy to be free from the General’s curious gaze. Marius wasn’t the most tactful person, but he always had Siegfried’s best interest at heart. Still, he’d have to talk to his assistant again about the virtues of handling clients, especially armed ones, with a velvet glove.
“Do you have everything you need, professor?” Marius asked.
Siegfried nodded and closed his eyes. Slowly, the darkness shaped itself into a landscape he never thought he’d see as a civilian—No Man’s Land. The patch of land between the German and American sides was lightly crated and filled with knee-high wheat waving back and forth in the evening air.
Siegfried flinched as a dark shadow passed over him. He looked up and saw nothing, but heard the steady thrumming of large wings heading toward the American side.
The creature was swift, but in the dream world, Siegfried was faster. He took a step forward and watched the surroundings blur as if he was a bullet hurtling towards its target.
Satisfied with his progress, Siegfried stopped and faced the edge of a dense forest. He glanced backward to see that he had crossed the front and travelled well beyond the enemy’s trenches. A screech turned his attention back toward the woods.
“I’m coming for you,” Siegfried said.
He stepped forward, traveling hundreds of meters through the thick copse. Siegfried stopped and faced an abandoned military camp. He smiled at the sight. At the center stood an oversized map pin slightly taller than himself. It was a visual representation of the creature’s exact location. All he needed to do was touch it to absorb the coordinates and relay them back to Will once awake.
“Mission accomplished” Siegfried said, raising his hand. His warped reflection grinned back at him from the enormous black ball capping the pin’s steel shaft. He flinched at the sound of branches snapping nearby.
Siegfried glanced in every direction. Nothing. The dream forest was devoid of all life except for his presence, but when he turned back toward the pin he found himself staring at a refection of the creature from Roth’s drawing.
Siegfried stumbled backward as Organism 646 snarled from inside the darkness. Its sharp claws slashed at what appeared to be metal bars. He knew that the image was just that—an image—but he still hesitated to touch the pin.
“Do it for Will,” Siegfried said, forcing his hand upward.
He jerked awake and lunged out of the chair, stumbling toward the map of Cantigny. Siegfried shoved William and the General out of the way and pointed at a patch of green near the bottom edge of the hanging parchment.
“The Americans have the creature caged in the Cantigny forest!” Siegfried plucked a pin from the wall and jammed it into the map. “There!”
“Well done, professor!” Hutier said, clapping. “Now that we have these coordinates, all we have to do is get you across No Man’s Land.”
Siegfried shook his head. “I can track these things, but I’m no monster hunter!”
“You’re being modest,” Hutier said. “William tells me that you have other talents. Spell work and such. And you’ve brought along a trunk full of tools, correct?”
“Yes, but look at me.” Siegfried raised his right arm and waved his stump. “I’m not a soldier anymore.”
Hutier laughed, braying like a donkey.
“I’m not expecting you to kill the beast. I’m sending you and your assistant on a raid behind American lines with William and a two-man squad of our best Sturmtruppen.”
Siegfried’s jaw dropped.
“They are what you would call, believers. They’ve been briefed on the subject and they’ll take care of the monster.” Hutier glanced at this wristwatch. “In the meantime, you have two hours to come up with a plan to get to the forest without getting my men or yourself killed. Major Gräf here will prep you as best as he can. Won’t you, Major?”
“Yes, of course.” William said. He turned toward Siegfried and mouthed, I’m sorry.
#
How the hell did I get myself into this mess? Siegfried thought, struggling to keep up with William as they zig-zagged through a maze of communication trenches.
All he wanted to do was speak to Will before the mission started. He didn’t understand why his best friend wouldn’t slow down. God only knew what would happen to them once they were over the top.
Siegfried bumped into a soldier walking in the opposite direction. “Watch where you’re going!” the man hissed.
“So sorry,” Siegfried said, massaging his shoulder.
The cloudy night didn’t help matters. With no illumination, Siegfried was less sure-footed than usual and stopped often, waiting for Marius to catch up. To be fair, his assistant lagged behind, weighed down by the wooden footlocker he carried that was filled with the unique charms they would need to get across enemy lines.
The air smelled of burning wood, sweat, and shit. It was quiet too. Besides his own heartbeat and Marius’s labored breathing, all Siegfried could hear was the occasional patter of machine gun fire or the thudding of shells in the far distance.
Siegfried flattened himself on the ground as one of the projectiles exploded a few yards away. Clods of dirt and rocks bounced off the one-size-too-large helmet William insisted he wear.
After a moment, the ringing in Siegfried’s ears faded and he heard muffled footsteps approaching. “Up you get,” William whispered.
Siegfried looked up to see Will offering a hand. He took it and stood up.
“That was close,” Siegfried said, slapping dirt from his trousers.
“That was just a tickle compared to barrages we’ve come under,” William said, turning. “Come on, we’re close to the reserve trench and then it’s just a quick hop to—”
“Will? Could you please slow down!”
“…and before you know it, we’re at the front to meet with the team—”
“Major Gräf!”
William stood rigid at the mention of his rank and surname. He turned and arched his eyebrows. The look reminded Siegfried of a dog’s who knows it’s about to receive a whipping.
It was now or never.
“Will, why didn’t you come find me after the accident?” Siegfried asked, clutching his right stump. “I waited for so long.”
“You want to do this now?” William asked. His eyes darted from side to side. “Here?”
“I think I deserve an answer after all these years.”
William pursed his lips and nodded.
“The faculty knew about us, Siggy. About our meetings.” The word came out as a whisper. “They made it clear that if I were to have any future in the military that I’d have to let you go.”
Siegfried stumbled backward as if slapped.
“That’s it? A simple threat?” Siegfried croaked. “Is that all it took for you to abandon me and our future? We had plans, Will! We were supposed to retire in Berlin!”
“For God’s sake! They were going to expose us, Siegfried! They had witnesses, and the letters to our families were already written. We could have been jailed! It would have destroyed all of our lives.” Tears welled in William’s eyes. “What could I do?”
“You could have said, no.”
“I should have, but it wasn’t so simple back then.” William grasped Siegfried’s shoulders. “You know how horribly conservative the military is. It’s nothing like the community we had outside of the academy in Berlin!”
“I miss it so much,” Siegfried whispered. He placed a palm on William’s chest. “I missed you so much.”
William grasped Siegfried’s hand and massaged his slender fingers. “I came looking for you in Heldburg after you were discharged, but no one, not even your family, knew where you had gone.”
“I told you that there was nothing for me there.” Siegfried looked at the ground. “How long did you look?”
“For as long as I could, but then the army swallowed all the time in my life. It wasn’t until I came across that article about the Yeti that I even knew you were still alive. It didn’t take me long to track you down to Dresden.”
“And you couldn’t stop by and say hello?”
“Not with the war. My responsibilities were here to my men.”
“And to her,” Siegfried said, glaring at Will’s wedding band.
“Her name’s Maria and you have no reason to be mad at her.”
Siegfried wanted to hate the faceless woman who shared Will’s life now, but the anger roiling inside of him petered out. There really wasn’t any reason to hold any malice toward Maria, and Will had faced an impossible situation twenty years ago. Did Siegfried protest his own, sudden medical expulsion? Would he have really said no if their positions were reversed?
“I’m sorry, Siegfried,” William said. “I really am, but what’s done is done.”
“I never expected to make it to the front lines at my age,” Siegfried said, meeting Will’s gaze.
“I’m so sorry. I didn’t expect the General to volunteer you like this. I’ll do everything I can to keep you safe.” Will sighed. “How’s that helmet?”
Siegfried laughed. “You know it’s too big for me, right?”
“I think it looks great paired with a suit,” William said.
“You cheeky bastard,” Siegfried said.
He didn’t want to forgive Will, but his heart had already decided that he could let go of the bitterness and sadness that had haunted him over the years. What choice did he have?
“The quicker we find this thing, the quicker we can get you back to safety,” William said, looking around. “Where’s your assistant?”
Marius turned the corner and set the foot locker on the ground.
“How’s our cargo?” Siegfried asked.
Marius squatted and patted the top of the box. “They’re in good hands.”
#
Siegfried stood in front of two stone-faced stormtroopers. He couldn’t tell if they were angry or confused. Who could blame them? He just explained how he could make them invisible.
Invisible!
If he was in their shoes, would he have trusted a handicapped occultist holding a shriveled hand covered in candle wax? Probably not.
One of the soldiers, the shortest of the two, wearing half a dozen stick grenades around his belt, stepped forward and pointed the tip of a long trench knife at Siegfried. The murderous edge glinted in the dark. “You’re telling us that that trinket is going to get us across No Man’s Land without getting shot at?”
Siegfried looked to William, standing to his side, for help or intervention of some kind. Perhaps if the explanation came from their commanding officer, they would simply obey. No such luck. Instead, Will encouraged Siegfried to continue with the nod of his head.
Siegfried took a deep breath.
“As I explained, a Hand of Glory has the power to render the user undetectable,” Siegfried said, glancing at the charm gripped in his fist. It was pitiful looking—child-sized, the color of spoiled milk, and smelled like it too. No wonder the men were incredulous. Still, he knew its power. Siegfried raised his voice. “Once lit, the Americans won’t be able to see you, allowing us to pass through their lines undetected.”
“That’s bullshit!”
“Private Eichhorn!” William snapped. He jabbed a finger in the stormtrooper’s direction. “Watch your tongue!”
“But, Major!” Eichhorn said, sheathing the trench knife. “You’re asking us to risk our lives on a raid behind American lines with this…” he glared at Siegfried. “…this magician?”
Siegfried rolled his eyes. His mind struggled to find a better way to explain the charm’s power, but the other stormtrooper, a svelte, blond man leaning against the trench exhaled deeply, distracting him.
“Eichhorn, my friend,” the man said. His pale skin seemed to glow against the dark, grey tunic he and his shorter companion were wearing. “I would have thought a spiritualist like yourself would have a more open mind.”
“What’s that supposed to mean, Koch?” Eichhorn said.
William tilted his head toward Siegfried and whispered, “That’s sergeant Wolfram Koch. He does tarot readings for some of the senior staff.”
“You and I have seen things we can’t explain,” Koch said. “Your mum was a spirit medium back in Frankfurt, just like mine.”
“So? So what?” Eichhorn said.
“We grew up surrounded by seances, spirits, and ectoplasm—” Koch’s slate blue eyes widened. “Ectoplasm, for God’s sake!”
Eichhorn sighed. “Ghosts are one thing. What this man’s talking about goes against the laws of physics.”
If these men were raised by mediums, Siegfried thought, then there was only one way to convince them.
“A demonstration is in order!” Siegfried blurted, placing the Hand of Glory into his assistant’s grip.
Marius lit a match and held the dancing flame close to the wick protruding from the appendage’s middle finger until the braided cotton ignited. Then, Marius vanished as if he was erased from existence.
The stormtroopers gasped.
Siegfried grinned.
“Any questions?”
#
Siegfried watched Eichhorn and Koch arm themselves with shotguns, pistols, knives, grenades, ammo, and hobnail-studded truncheons. He was impressed by how much they could fit in their holsters, pockets, or on their belts. But for all the weaponry, Siegfried thought, they’d be limited to using a pistol while holding a Hand of Glory.
“That went well, didn’t it?” William asked.
“Honestly, I thought those two were going to kill me,” Siegfried said, still looking at the stormtroopers.
“They’re rough, but they are the best we have.”
“Do you think they can handle the creature?” Siegfried asked, turning toward William
“Eichhorn’s a beast himself,” William said. “You should see him use that trench knife of his. I’ve seen him gut three Frenchmen in a single stroke.”
Siegfried shivered.
“Here,” William said, pulling a pistol from his hip holster. “Take this.”
“I haven’t fired a weapon since the academy,” Siegfried said, pushing the weapon away with his left.
“Please, do it for me.” William said, pressing the weapon against Siegfried’s chest. “Besides, you were always the best shot in our class.”
“Good thing I’m still left-handed,” Siegfried said, sliding the pistol into his coat pocket.
“We’re ready,” Koch said, drawing Will’s attention.
“Do you still have that flare gun, sergeant?” Will asked.
Koch nodded, handing the weapon over.
William opened the chamber and nodded approvingly. He jammed it into Siegfried’s waist belt. “Just in case.”
“What good are fireworks going to do?” Siegfried asked.
“It’s a signal to send reinforcements if we need them. Use it if anything happens to me or the men.”
Siegfried thought of the creature from Roth’s drawing and hoped that it didn’t come to that.
#
Siegfried followed Marius up the ladder. He envied how his assistant climbed the groaning rungs without breaking a sweat. It was like watching a mountain goat scamper up a near-vertical cliff.
I should have stayed in better shape, Siegfried thought, watching Marius’s rump disappear over the parapet. The tallow-colored light, visible only to those within its protective spell, pulled away from Siegfried’s body like an uncooked egg sliding off a pan.
He hoped Marius had sense enough to stay close to the edge of the trench so that Siegfried’s head would stay hidden as he made his way over the top.
“Hurry professor,” Marius hissed, holding the lit Hand of Glory over the trench. Siegfried exhaled in relief as the halo enveloped him once again. He heard muffled laughter as he grasped the final rung.
“How long’s it going to take for grandpa to climb a ladder?” Eichhorn asked.
“Give the man a break,” Koch said. “He’s only got the one arm.”
It didn’t bother Siegfried that the men were talking about him. He’d grown used to insults and odd looks over the years. No, what troubled him the most was that he appeared so weak in front of Will. Siegfried gritted his teeth and doubled his efforts. He flopped over the edge of the trench and lay breathing heavily upon his back.
William rushed to his aid, carrying a lit charm in one hand and a pistol in the other.
“Don’t run so fast,” Siegfried hissed. He drew his knees up and pushed off with his good arm into a standing position. “You’ll extinguish the flame if you’re not careful.”
William nodded and marched back toward Eichhorn and Koch. The soldiers stared out toward the American side and marveled at their new-found invisibility.
Eichhorn waved at a machine gun nest on their side. “Not even our boys can see me.”
Siegfried turned in a circle. The landscape they stood upon looked exactly like what he had seen while using traveling clairvoyance with one major the difference—the smell.
A putrid stench rose from the short stalks of wheat. The wind picked up, flattening the thin reeds against the ground, revealing the rotting remains of mangled soldiers.
William signaled for everyone to move.
“Here we go,” Siegfried mumbled
The stormtroopers giggled like school children as they walked across the field.
“Act like soldiers, please,” William whispered. “Remember what Professor Engel said. These charms only dampen sounds.”
The troopers sobered up and marched forward. Siegfried followed close behind with Marius by his side. The slate grey clouds above parted revealing a beautiful half-moon. Feeling nostalgic, Siegfried marched next to William with Marius in tow.
“This feels like one of our walks back at the academy,” Siegfried whispered. “Don’t you think?”
“Yes, it’s just like the Kriegsakademien.” William sighed. “If it wasn’t for all the craters, bodies, and the stench of death, I’d think I was right there.”
There was a sharp edge to his friend’s response. Siegfried worried that he had overstepped by sharing such a personal memory within earshot of the men.
William glanced at Siegfried. “I’m sorry. I just don’t like reminiscing about my life before—” he waved the pistol over the ruined landscape. “—all of this.”
“I’m sorry. We should focus on getting to the forest,” Siegfried said, letting William march forward.
As they neared the enemy trenches, Siegfried could hear American soldiers talking. Eichhorn and Koch crouched lower as they approached, reminding Siegfried of stalking wolves. He did his best to imitate their smooth, predatory movements. William gestured for everyone to jump into an unoccupied section of the trench. They obeyed and quickly climbed back out, eager to avoid enveloping a stray American within their magical cloak.
Siegfried’s arms and legs were sore after repeating the process through the multiple lines of trench works. He exhaled in relief after crossing over the last ditch and faced the long line of pines and ash trees standing like sentries.
#
Siegfried trudged through the Cantigny forest with Marius, three car lengths behind William and the stormtroopers. He glanced at his wristwatch and frowned. Siegfried had expected to reach their destination sooner, but they were slowed by frequent enemy patrols.
Instead of marching past the Americans, the Major ordered everyone to stop and let the roving squads pass.
“Do not engage!” William had hissed.
Siegfried sucked his teeth at the memory. Will was being over-cautious and had cost their hunting party an hour or more in delays. They had more than enough time to reach the camp, but Siegfried wondered if they’d stay cloaked long enough to kill the creature and make it back to their lines.
Siegfried glanced at the charm clutched in Marius’s hand and sighed in relief.
“Not to worry, professor. The Hand’s burned down just to the middle knuckles,” Marius said, gleaning Siegfried’s thoughts. “We have three, maybe four, hours of invisibility left.”
A loud crack echoed through the forest. Siegfried’s head snapped forward. William raised his fist in the air and kneeled. Eichhorn and Koch did the same and aimed their weapons.
“What’s going on?” Marius asked.
“Get down,” Siegfried hissed, turning his head in every direction. He hoped to find the source of the now-fading sound, but all he spied were the faint outlines of sandbag-covered mounds rimming the edge of the camp.
Machine gun nests?
Cold sweat dribbled down Siegfried’s back. He wondered how quick death by machine gun fire would be. Then he remembered that no one could see him.
“Come on! Move up!” William said, waving for Siegfried and Marius to catch up.
Marius shrugged his shoulders. “Must be safe.”
“If Will’s not worried, then I’m not,” Siegfried said, walking forward. As he approached Will’s position, it became clear why he was so confident—everyone in the camp was dead.
#
“We should have brought more men,” Siegfried said, gazing at the heaps of pale corpses littering the American camp. Dark smoke curled from charred canvas tents and the smoldering remains of a pea-green Cadillac staff car resting on its side like a slaughtered bear.
Siegfried flinched as Koch placed a hand on his shoulder. “It’s no Mercedes, but it’s still a damn shame.”
“I’d prefer to lament the dead,” Siegfried said, pulling away from the stormtrooper.
Dismembered with a butcher’s precision, the massacred doughboys resembled broken mannequins on a grotesque, discount showroom floor. Blood oozed from the steaming mounds, carpeting the ground like liquid velvet, adding to the effect.
“There’s more,” Marius said, gazing at the canopy where dozens of disemboweled soldiers were left hanging from the trees, their intestines draped over limbs like exotic jungle vines.
Eichhorn shuffled next to Siegfried, mouth open as if he were screaming. Koch had the same look.
“What the hell have we walked into, Major?” Eichhorn croaked.
“A plum duty assignment,” William said, shouldering past the men. “Come on, we still have to find the creature that did this and kill it.”
“With what?” Koch asked, shaking his pistol. “Look at what happened here! These cap guns aren’t going to do anything.”
“We’ve got plenty of grenades and the two of you have shotguns as back up. Besides…” William said, gesturing with his Hand of Glory. “That thing won’t see us coming. We have the element of—”
William yelped as a hand burst from a nearby heap of bodies and grasped his ankle.
#
“Get the hell off me!” The young American screamed as the stormtroopers pulled him free.
To Siegfried, their new captive looked more like a feral wild man than a soldier. He fought like one too. After exchanging punches, Koch rammed a fist into the doughboy’s belly, causing him to fall to his knees.
“Finally,” William said.
Koch squatted next to the man and snatched the identity disc hanging from his neck. “Here you go, Major,” he said, tossing the coin-sized tag.
William snatched it from the air and read off the name. “Private Nicolas Burnside.” He turned to Siegfried. “I want you to talk to him and find out as much as you can.”
“My English is rubbish,” Siegfried said.
“Do your best,” William said, turning his attention back toward Nicolas. “I want to know everything.”
The skinny, blood-covered doughboy resumed his resistance and flopped on the ground in a vain effort to break free. Eichhorn remedied the situation by twisting the man’s arm behind his back and lifting him up to a standing position.
“Would you please calm down?” Eichhorn growled into the man’s ear.
Siegfried doubted that the stormtrooper’s gruff request—in German no less—would be met with compliance and when their new captive stomped on Eichhorn’s foot, he couldn’t help but smile.
“Private Nicolas Burnside, please stop!” Siegfried shouted in English.
The American stopped resisting and Eichhorn loosened his grip.
“We’re not here to hurt you,” Siegfried said, placing a hand on the private’s shoulder.
“Really?” Nicolas’s eyes focused on the glowing Hands of Glory nestled in the grass in a semicircle behind Siegfried. “Then why’d you Heinies chop off those hands and light them on fire?”
“I suppose that does deserve an explanation,” Siegfried said. “Take a knee, private”
#
“So you’re sure that no one can see us right now?” Nicolas’s eyes darted from side to side. “Not even that thing?”
Siegfried flinched. For a moment, he had forgotten about the deadly creature lurking in the forest.
“We’re perfectly safe,” Siegfried said, patting Nicolas’s knees. He took out Roth’s drawing from his inside coat pocket, wondering if the Hands would actually keep them hidden. Siegfried shook the thought away and handed the sheet to Nicolas. “Is this the thing that killed your comrades?”
The young man’s eyes widened.
“Yeah, that’s it,” Nicolas said, handing the sheet back to Siegfried. The paper rattled like a Fall leaf in the young man’s quivering hand.
“What is it?” Siegfried asked.
“Evil,” Nicolas whispered, hugging himself. “Pure evil.”
“Where did it come from?” Siegfried asked.
“Top brass dug him out from back home,” Nicolas said.
“Where exactly is that?” Siegfried asked.
“Point Pleasant.”
Siegfried frowned. His knowledge of American geography was limited to 23rd street in New York City where he performed a consciousness transfer at the grand Masonic Hall.
“That’s in West Virginia,” Nicolas said with a chuckle. “We’re not as famous as Paris or Berlin yet.”
“Not to worry, my hometown’s just as obscure,” Siegfried said. “But we are known for our delicious—”
“Professor Engel,” William said, clearing his throat. “We need to move things along, please.”
Siegfried’s guts twisted.
When they were at the academy, Will addressed him by last name or rank only when he was disappointed with him. Hearing him say, professor soured his nerves.
“Right. So sorry, Major,” Siegfried said. He turned back toward Nicolas. “Tell me more about this creature.”
“Why?” Nicolas scoffed.
“We’re here to kill it,” Siegfried said.
Nicolas cackled, throwing his head back. “That thing ripped this camp apart in minutes! Over a hundred soldiers!” He wiped his eyes and glared at the men standing behind Siegfried. “How long do you think your boys will last?”
“What the hell did he just say?” Eichhorn asked.
“Something about a hundred men, I think,” Koch said.
Siegfried waved his hand, shooing the stormtroopers away. He didn’t dare translate Nicolas’s outburst. Instead, he focused on another mystery tugging at his mind.
“How did your side manage to control the creature?” Siegfried asked.
Nicolas shook his head. “I don’t think they ever had the Mothman under control.”
“The Mothman,” Siegfried repeated. “What a wonderful name.”
“You sound like you’re in love,” Nicolas said, glancing in every direction. “You’ll change your tune if it comes back.”
The hairs on Siegfried’s neck stiffened.
“I’m sure of it,” Siegfried said. “Still. I have to know. Do you have any idea how your superiors directed the Mothman? Did they use an incantation or—”
“How the hell should I know?” Nicolas blurted out. “I’m just a private. They don’t tell me nothing.” He crossed his arms and spit at the ground. “Fucking army.”
“We’re running out of time. Ask him how he survived,” William said.
Nicolas glanced at the Major. “What your boss say?”
“He wants to know how you survived,” Siegfried said.
Nicolas rubbed his chest. Siegfried could see a silver chain around the private’s neck wriggle against his clammy skin.
A cross, perhaps?
“I reckon I got lucky is all,” Nicolas said.
A branch cracked. Siegfried looked up and saw a dark shape glide from tree to tree, knocking several limbs loose.
“What is that?” Siegfried asked, struggling to track the creature through the forest amidst the falling debris.
“What do you think?” Nicolas whispered.
The dark figure darted out of view.
“Where’d it go?” William asked.
Eichhorn screamed.
Siegfried turned his head just in time to see the private pulled from the ground and disappear into the treetops.
Were those claws squeezed around his shoulders?
Eichhorn’s leather belt, studded with grenades, fell to the ground followed by a stream of blood and the lower half of his torso. Siegfried wretched at the sight of the man’s legs pumping in the air as if they were running on solid earth.
“Paul!” Koch screamed, firing into the treetops.
“What the hell was that?” William asked, aiming his pistol.
“So much for your Hands of Glory, professor,” Nicolas said. “We should get out of here. That thing likes to play with its food.”
“What did he say?” William asked.
“That we should run,” Siegfried said, wiping spit and vomit from his mouth with the back of his hand. “That thing can see us!”
“No, we stay here and kill it,” William shouted. “Everyone stay–”
Before he could finish a dark shadow whirled around the trees surrounding the camp, slicing the tops off. The ground shook as the timber crashed to the ground.
“Fuck this!” Koch said, running back toward where they entered.
Siegfried watched Koch disappear into the forest, followed by Marius. William grabbed Siegfried and Nicolas by the back of their coat collars and pushed them forward.
“Run!” He shouted.
#
Siegfried’s lungs burned.
Had he been running for minutes or hours? He couldn’t tell. All he wanted to do was stop, but the creature screeched somewhere above, hidden by thick, interlaced branches. Its wild calls sounded like a cross between a freight train and a squealing hog.
Siegfried and his companions dropped to ground as the beast swooped low, whizzing past their heads. Nicolas was right—it was toying with them. Siegfried glanced around and noticed that the American was missing.
“Where’d Nicolas go?” Siegfried shouted.
“Who cares? We’re almost through!” William said, pointing toward the edge of the forest where a few lights in the enemy’s trench works glinted through the thicket. Inspired by the sight, Siegfried pulled ahead of Marius and Koch, but stopped when a sharp whistling sound filled the air.
“Get down!” William screamed.
A small cylindrical object, the size of a small child, crashed in front of Siegfried, the percussive impact tossing him backward. Koch ran to Siegfried’s aid and pulled him to his feet.
“You lucky bastard. It’s a dud!” Koch said, laughing.
Siegfried pushed Koch away and walked toward the strange object. Pulsating veins streaked its shiny, black surface and two red orbs glowed from somewhere within its center.
“Careful, professor,” Koch said, wiping his sweaty brow. “That’s live ammo.”
Siegfried shook his head. He had fired enough artillery pieces as a cadet to know that the thing in front of him was no shell. Wisps of white steam hissed from a diagonal seam running down the object. The two layers quivered and then parted, revealing the Mothman squatting upon the ground with long arms wrapped around its shiny body. It stood and unfurled its saw-edged wings.
Koch tugged at Siegfried’s elbow, “Get back, professor. It’s…”
“It’s beautiful,” Siegfried whispered, marveling at the red crescents decorating the centers of the Mothman’s fore and hind wings. Moonlight glinted off tiny scales coating the flapping appendages. Siegfried raised his hand, blocking a dizzying spectrum of colors refracting from the creature. The display reminded Siegfried of the Notre Dame’s magnificent stained-glass windows on a bright, sunny morning.
I wonder if I’ll ever see Paris again?
“Professor!” Koch shouted, snapping Siegfried back to the present moment. “Get the hell away from it!”
The Mothman chittered, sounding like an enormous cicada. Siegfried focused on its face where a pair of crimson orbs glowed at the center of a roiling, inky-black cloud where its head should have been.
“You’re blocking my shot!” Koch said, aiming his pistol.
Siegfried stepped backward and the Mothman mirrored the professor’s slow, but measured steps. Its thin, spurred hind legs barely disturbed the leaf-littered ground.
“You’re beautiful,” Siegfried said, admiring the creature’s muscular, obsidian-black body. The plated exoskeleton resembled ancient Samurai armor and jangled like coins in a linen sack. Siegfried realized that poor Eichhorn was right—their pistols wouldn’t put a dent in the beast.
“Use your shotgun, Koch!” Siegfried said, stepping to the side.
Koch dropped the pistol and reached for the more powerful weapon slung behind his back. The creature’s head turned from side to side, tracking both men, black smoke trailing its amorphous head. Its red eyes narrowed to dagger-thin slits.
Koch aimed and fired.
The Mothman chirped like a baby bird.
Was it laughing?
“It’s not possible,” Koch mumbled.
Siegfried’s gaze darted between the confused stormtrooper and the strange sight in front of him: dozens of ball bearings hovering in the air between Koch and the creature, suspended by some unseen force.
The Mothman walked forward with outstretched claws and parted the floating ammunition as if it was a beaded curtain, the pellets clinking against its chitinous skin.
Koch turned to run, but the Mothman sprang forward, sinking a claw into his back. Before Koch could scream, the creature pulled out a section of spinal cord. Blood sprayed from the wound as Koch collapsed, showering the beast in a thick, crimson shower.
A few drops pattered against Siegfried’s face. Then, a sensation he hadn’t felt since he was a child spread across the front of his pants. He tapped his crotch and looked at his glossy palm.
“I…I pissed myself.”
“I did the same thing the first time I saw Dhu al-Qarnayn at work,” a voice said in English.
Siegfried’s stomach tightened as Nicolas stepped from behind the creature. An acorn-shaped charm dangled from a silver chain in his fist. He held it up and opened his mouth into a wide O. Froth bubbled around his cracked lips followed by a series of squeaks and squeals. The Mothman squatted in response.
Bastard lied! He knows how to control it!
“You’d be amazed at what the Two-Horned One is capable of,” Nicolas said, wiping his mouth. “So long as you know the commands.”
Nicolas stretched open his maw again and the Mothman crept forward. Siegfried focused on its red eyes in a last-ditch effort to communicate with the beast using traveling clairvoyance. Siegfried’s mind connected with the beast and he found himself floating high above an enormous steel bridge. Strange cars, the likes he’d never seen before, rumbled across the span.
Is this the future? He wondered.
The sound of his name shook him out of the spell. Siegfried blinked and saw William tackle the creature. They toppled to the ground, entwined like Olympic wrestlers with the Major on the creature’s back. The Mothman tried to shake him loose, but Will held on, sinking the length of a trench knife into a gap in the creature’s armored neck.
The Mothman bolted upright and roared, sending William flying off. He landed with a thud and gasped for air.
“Will!” Siegfried screamed, scrambling to his feet.
The creature fluttered its wings, rising to the air. It hovered over William’s supine body, releasing white powder from the red crescents decorating its paper-thin appendages.
The flakes plummeted toward Will’s face as if they were made of lead. William screamed and pounded the ground with his arms and legs as lesions bubbled and popped across his skin. Sizzling, green puss arced through the air like miniature signal flares.
“Siegfried! I’m so sorry!” William managed to gurgle before his head lost all shape and collapsed inward like a rotted melon.
Siegfried fell to his knees and sobbed.
“We need to go now, professor,” Marius yelled, trying to pull Siegfried to a standing position. Whistles and the sound of approaching boots filled the air. “The Americans are coming!”
“Is your friend worried that we’ll be interrupted?” Nicolas asked, squatting over Will’s decomposing body. He stood and raised the charm over his head. “Don’t worry. No one can see us, unless I want them to.”
Siegfried pulled out the gun that William had given him from his coat pocket and aimed at the Mothman.
“Haven’t you been paying attention?” Nicolas asked. “You can’t hurt him.”
The smarmy bastard was right, Siegfried thought. The creature was protected by powerful magic, but Nicolas wasn’t. Siegfried fired. The shot obliterated Nicolas’s hand and the charm. The young man fell to his knees and stared at his mangled appendage.
The Mothman squealed. Siegfried watched as the creature’s dark body faded to a dull gray and shriveled. Deep cracks appeared all over its exoskeleton. It looked as if it had aged a hundred years.
“Even if you kill him,” Nicolas yelled. “There’s another one growing back home! It’ll be ready to hatch in 45 years! You’ve met the runt of the litter. Imagine what its—”
Siegfried fired again, striking Nicolas in the forehead. His body convulsed before toppling backward.
The Mothman roared and loped forward. Its fluttering wings propelled it across the forest floor with amazing speed. Siegfried fired at the blurry figure, striking it in the chest, causing it to fall to the ground, just a few feet in front of him.
Siegfried exhaled in relief.
Whatever protective spell the Mothman enjoyed was now gone, thankfully. Out of ammo, Siegfried searched for another weapon. He spied Koch’s shotgun, but it was too far away. Then he remembered the flare gun. He fired just as the creature stood. The hissing flare smashed into its wings and ignited. The Mothman screeched and swung its arms wildly as flames consumed its body.
Marius pulled Siegfried away from the creature and relit what was left of his Hand of Glory just as dozens of Americans appeared. The soldiers stood dumbfounded at the bizarre sight.
“What the hell is that?” One man shouted.
An officer responded by firing his rifle at the burning Mothman, blowing apart its head. The rest of the squad opened fire sending chunks of flaming, gray armor spiraling into the air. The Mothman’s body jerked from side to side until it finally collapsed in a burning heap.
The doughboys circled the creature as it burned out. A few soldiers examined the bodies nearby. Siegfried lunged forward as an American private kicked at William’s corpse.
“Professor, please don’t,” Marius said, holding him back. “The Major saved your life. Don’t throw it away now. We can still get back.”
Siegfried knew that Marius was right, but he didn’t want to leave William’s body behind. If they waited long enough, Siegfried thought, then they might be able to drag William back to their lines. Bright white flares hissed through the air followed by the sound of more American troops approaching.
Siegfried screamed into the crook of his arm.
“Professor,” Marius said. “It’s time to go.”
Siegfried nodded and walked with his assistant. As they approached the first lines of trench works, Siegfried turned back toward forest and whispered, “Goodbye, Will.”
###
Luis Paredes (he/him) is a speculative fiction writer and author of Out On a Limb, an urban noir fantasy.
His genre-blending work appears in Tangled Web Magazine, the Kaidankai Horror Podcast, Crow & Cross Keys, Black Sheep: Unique Tales of Terror and Wonder, Max Blood’s Mausoleum, and Tall Tale TV.
Luis’s first full-length horror novel, Headhunters, debuts Fall 2024 from Platypus Book Press.