The Crowsmoor Curse

Mike Travis

The mists come down quickly and the wind howls like tortured banshees over Bodmin Moor where unwary travellers are advised to keep to the main roads and keep their eyes averted from the rough granite outcrops and moorland bogs. This is the land of smugglers and ghosts and Otherworldly creatures like the Piskies and the Knockers, still said to inhabit the old mines. Hard to keep an open mind in the vicinity, Mike Travis knew he had to be objective.  As a paranormal investigator there could be nothing to cloud his judgement but even so, as he pulled his car over at the edge of Dozemary Pond, legends of the area came to life in his head.

He swallowed two codeine to help relieve the pain in his leg; reconstructed with titanium plates, rods and artificial joints after a helicopter crash in Afghanistan had ended his air force career. Over the years he had learned to blank out the pain but occasionally it got the better of him. The long drive into Cornwallhad exacerbated it and he knew he had to rest.

He looked over the grey water surrounded by reeds and marsh and understood why it had been the source of many legends, including that of Excalibur being hurled into its centre and caught by the hand of the Lady in the Lake. He shrugged off the images and took out the letter that had brought him there.

The handwriting was arthritic and crabbed, written in the Cornish vernacular, it had come from an old man. A frightened old man.

Charlie Paynter was the bell ringer in Crowsmoor, a scattered community of small cottages and a couple of farms presided over by St Michael’s Church and the old Manor. It couldn’t aspire to being a village, being little more than an isolated hamlet in the middle of the bleak moor. It wasn’t even on the map and had defeated his search engine. It was as if it didn’t exist, but maybe it wanted it that way.

He read the letter again, trying to get a feeling for the case. Mike relied on his instincts and they were on high alert. His alarm bells had been set off by one particular section of the letter.

Every morning at six and every evening at six. Six tolls of the bells. The bells have to be rung dead on six; otherwise . . .  Hell come back.

     The dead dont sleep quiet here in Crowsmoor, they never have. Not since he came, anyway. Must be four hundred years gone now. Folk round here close their eyes to it. Dont understand see. They think that when Ive gone they can maybe get someone else to ring the bells, or they wont bother being as they believe its naught but owd superstition and they’m being too modern to think on it. They hear them, everyday they hear them, but they dont understand. They dont understand what the bells keep away.

Mike thought he understood. Cornish folk may believe in their legends and folk lore but above all they were very pragmatic people and didn’t spook easily.

Charlie Paynter was spooked…

Read what happened when Mike arrived in Crowsmoor. Click on the links to the right…

 

 

Midnight Wine

Hi and welcome to my web page.

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Midnight Wine and later, The Crowsmoor Curse, received excellent reviews from unbiased sources but couldn’t get past the agents as an unknown and therefore the publishing houses too. Thanks to this opportunity from Dave at Raven Crest, Midnight Wine and The Crowsmoor Curse are ‘out there’.

Incidentally, so are the vampires!

The front door stood open despite the hammering rain. Lane entered quietly, listening and sensing for sounds of occupancy. By rights she should be able to detect two heartbeats but only one came back to her. There was grief and tragedy in the air, and something else. Someone lost and in despair.

 She had followed the girl from the nightclub after seeing her leave with the masked one. She was afraid for her and her fears had fulfilled their potential as she found her lying dead and cradled in a man’s arms. He was kneeling on the hall floor, her head on his thighs, blood was everywhere and he was crying. And praying. Though she knew the girl was beyond the help of even the divine, she had to stay and watch. She had to be sure there would be no rising. And if there was, she would have to deal with it.

 The man looked up at her, not comprehending. He was covered in the girl’s blood and her heart went out to him. If what she believed was about to happen actually did, then this was only the beginning. Lane locked into his thoughts and read him. The girl was his sister, Grace. And he … he was a priest, Father Beckett. She frowned. It would complicate things. He would be harder to convince about the reality of what had happened to Grace. In her experience priests were resistant to the concept of vampires.

 “I’m here to help you, Father.”

“Are you the police?”

“Something like that.”

 She was in fact a member of the Vampire High Council and it was her job to police the behaviour of the vampires in her area. The majority of who were content with the Sanctuary, a place where they could feed from donors without harming any other human. Those that flouted the High Council’s edicts regarding the taking of life were outlawed and it was Lane that hunted them down and killed them, a ‘Catcher and Despatcher’.

 She lay a gentle hand on the priest’s arm, reaching into his mind, calming and soothing him, preparing his mind for the knowledge that was to come. That his sister had been attacked by a vampire and left to die. That she too, was likely to rise from death, reanimated by what now coursed through her, the essence of the vampire. And that if she rose, Lane would have no choice but to take care of her.

 For hours she talked to him although he remembered nothing of it later. All

he would remember was what took place after the first infinitesimal movement of the sheet with which Lane had covered Grace up to her shoulders.

At first he wasn’t sure if he had seen it at all, he was tired and his eyes stung. He held his breath, trying to hold time in a frame that would remain unchanged, becoming unaware of anything outside the arena of Grace’s bed.   

The atmosphere changed subtly. The temperature dropped and the air seemed rarefied, his chest was tight and his lungs struggled for essential oxygen, making him feel dizzy and disorientated.

He felt Lane tense, on the alert after hours of waiting. Whatever it was that she waited for was about to happen.

There was a heavy silence and then Grace’s lips parted and her left arm began to move under the sheet. In what was a fraction of a second but in what seemed like an eternity to Beckett, Grace brought her arm from beneath the sheet and turned her face to look at Beckett.

And he knew.