Chapter Three
“Bart, wake up.” Shae yelled.
Nothing.
Impatient and driven by her panic, she pushed the door open. He was just as she had imagined, asleep on the roll, whiskey bottle leaking the last drops of its contents across the floor. Some of it had seeped into the mat where he was sleeping. She gave him a kick. Nothing so hard it would hurt, but hopefully enough to jolt him out of his self-inflicted coma.
His eyes opened, his drunken haze lingering.
“Bart, they’ve taken Ana.”
“Shae?” Sleep was still rolling around his mind. It bled across his tan face, and wrinkled in the crow’s feet that stalked the sides of his dark green eyes.
“They’ve taken Ana!”
The fog seemed to lift from him for a moment.
“Ana?”
Shae threw the piece of paper at him.
“Have you seen anything to do with this?”
Bart’s eyes focused and refocused as he tried to concentrate on the scrap of paper.
“Is this written in blood?”
“Bart!”
“I thought you were dead,” he said, standing. He wiped his face and tucked the paper into his pocket, kicked the whiskey bottle to the wall. Then he was moving, walking down the stairs into the Tavern. He took a bottle of booze off the shelf and swigged the bottle. Shae said nothing. She just followed. Looking away as he removed his shirt and replaced it with a cleaner one that was tucked under the bar. He took a glass off the shelf and poured some brandy into it, pushing it to her.
Shae downed it. She wasn’t much of a drinker, not really, but when Bart poured her one, she always took it. The familiar warmth was soothing.
He smoothed the piece of paper on the bar.
“They took Ana?”
“They killed all the animals.”
“Who have you got mixed up with this time?” he sighed.
Shae frowned.
“I was hunting out a cult, but that was months ago. I couldn’t find them.”
“Well, looks like they’ve found you.”
“They’ll regret that.”
“I don’t even know what I’m looking at here Shae,” He lifted it up to a shaft of light coming through the window above the Tavern door. “We don’t have any cults here.”
“Haven’t you heard anything? Whispers? These people didn’t just come through and murder everything on the farm without a single trace.”
Bart rubbed his head.
“There was something, but this was last month. This guy, scrawny fella, he was asking about you. Of course, no-one told him anything. The moon witch, he called you. He had this burn… on his right hand, seven prongs twisted. And in each of the spaces was a number. Three, Seven and Thirteen are the ones I remember. I told him to get out. His kind wasn’t welcome here. Creepy little man.”
“Can you draw it for me?”
Bart took a piece of paper from under the bar, sketched the image out with a piece of charcoal.
“What if you can’t find her?”
“I’ll find her.”
“It’s no lead.”
“I have one more to follow.”
Bart stared at the ceiling.
“Want me to come with you?”
Shae laughed.
“And have your blood on my hand’s too? Sophie would never forgive me.”
Bart’s face darkened.
“I thought you were dead.”