The Howling III

The Howling III by Gary Brandner Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: The Howling III by Gary Brandner Read Free Book Online
Authors: Gary Brandner
It’ll clean out the infection fast.
    Better than iodine for sure.”
    From a shelf built over the sink Jones took down a tightly corked bottle. He poured out a thick brown liquid on to a wadded cloth. The concoction smelled of pitch. He sponged it generously on the boy’s wounded ankle. It did sting like fury, but Malcolm never let on that it hurt.
    “That ought to get it,” Jones said. He wrapped a length of clean white cloth around Malcolm’s ankle and foot. He ripped one end to make long strips and tied them in a knot.
    “Too tight?”
    Malcolm shook his head.
    “Okay. Now how about some stew?”
    “I am pretty hungry.”
    “I’ll bet you are.”
    Jones served up the hot stew in wooden bowls along with chunks of coarse bread. To drink there was a steaming, bitter herb tea. Malcolm ate until he could hold no more. The tea, once it was down, warmed him and made him drowsy. The big man helped him ease his shattered ankle up on to the cot, and brought a fresh khaki blanket to cover him.
    “Get some sleep now, son. We’ve got to be up early tomorrow.”
    The pain in Malcolm’s foot eased and gradually drained away. He relaxed, enjoying the feeling of a full belly for the first time in many days. The warmth of the cabin and the deep shadows from the dying fire, the soft splash of rain above him on the roof, all combined to lull the boy into a long, deep, untroubled sleep.

CHAPTER SIX
    For a long while after the boy had fallen asleep Jones sat in one of the chairs in the cabin and watched the dying coals. The chair of wood and woven reeds creaked and settled comfortably under his weight. Outside the rainfall softened. It would be clear in the morning. Jones frowned, thinking about the boy he had found in the trap.
    In the years he had spent alone in the woods he had brushed the lives of many people with many different backgrounds. This boy was not like the others. There was something strange about him. Despite the boy’s reticence, Jones could sense a danger that lurked somewhere deep inside him. Something to be feared. Something not quite natural.
    The big man dug out an old corncob pipe, stuck it in his mouth unlit, and chewed meditatively on the stem. He had not smoked anything since his teenage years, but it calmed him to chew on the old pipe. It helped him sort out his thoughts.
    Tragic fact: the boy’s foot was destroyed. No doctor living could save it. When he awoke Jones would give him another heavy draught of the herb tea to keep him drowsy during the long trip they had to make into Pinyon. Jones was not worried about carrying the boy that far; he was confident of his own strength. But a certain amount of jostling would be unavoidable. His strength could not ease the boy’s pain.
    The kid had been exceedingly brave so far, but he was probably still in partial shock. When he fully realized the damage to his body, he would need a friend close by.
    Jones eyes narrowed and his great shoulders bunched as he thought of the men who had set the deadly trap. He had not struck another human being in anger for more years than he could recall, but at that moment Jones would have happily ripped the trappers” limbs from their bodies.
    The boy stirred in his sleep and mumbled something unintelligible. Jones got up and walked over to the cot. He lay his big hand on the boy’s forehead. There was a fever, but less than it had been. Jones pulled the blanket up snug around the boy’s shoulders and walked back to his chair.
    The presence of the boy in his cabin brought back thoughts to Jones of his own son. Sometimes, not often, the big man let himself think about John. What he would look like now. What kind of a young man he would become.
    John would now be, let’s see, going on fourteen. That would put him in high school. Jesus, it was hard to think of that tiny helpless human as a gawky teenager. Probably the boy would be living with his mother in some comfortable California suburb, if Jones correctly read the

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