Resurrection Pass Read online




  RESURRECTION PASS

  KURT ANDERSON

  PINNACLE BOOKS

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Prologue

  THE BAD COUNTRY

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  YESTERDAY’S WARRIORS

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  PINNACLE BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2017 Kurt Anderson

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  PINNACLE BOOKS and the Pinnacle logo are Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  ISBN: 978-0-7860-3681-3

  First electronic edition: April 2017

  ISBN-13: 978-0-7860-3682-0

  ISBN-10: 0-7860-3682-6

  This book is for Jim Donovan.

  The wind had dropped with the sun, and in all that

  vast world of branches nothing stirred. Any moment,

  it seemed, the woodland gods, who are to be

  worshipped in silence and loneliness, might stretch

  their mighty and terrific outlines among the trees.

  —ALGERNON BLACKWOOD, The Wendigo

  He woke with a start and sat blinking, trying to conjure reason out of the cold and dark air. His lungs burned as though from some deep-seated respiratory infection, and his feet were a throbbing mess, tacky with blood. The light around him was negligible, and although he had hoped for a moment that it was dawn, he knew now it was not. Knew that he had slept for minutes rather than hours, and the night still held the land in her silent, black fist. The only light was that of the stars, burning their thin alien light down upon the land. He was burrowed in under a fallen spruce and he was very cold, and as his consciousness returned, so too did his panic, for he could hear the sound of something making its way along the pine needles of the forest floor.

  Something was coming toward him in the woods.

  Prologue

  The moose was going to die soon.

  Ben Splithand knelt near the reddened grass, the stock of his 30-06 resting on the ground. The blood formed a tacky mat under a balsam fir, and when he glanced to the south he saw the moose had chosen this spot so it could watch its backtrail. He reached down and touched the sticky grass. Thirty minutes since the moose had left? An hour? He had not seen it nor heard it leave. The only indication of its watchful presence was this, an oval of blood-dampened grass drying to brown in the afternoon breeze.

  The moose was much wiser than it had been in the morning, when it ambled through the sparse stand of alders fifty yards from Ben, steam rising off its back. It stood broadside and unaware, pushed out of the dense tangle of brush by Ben’s grandfather and uncle. It was not panicked, just moving away from yet another danger, a yikihcawases that would go seven, eight hundred pounds. Ben had been caught by surprise, looking up from the bright rectangle of light from his phone, his text message to his girlfriend half finished. He had shrugged the rifle off his shoulder as the moose started quartering away through the thicker scrub. It was a bad shot, a low-percentage shot. He had taken it.

  Now, five hours later, he held his reddened thumb up for inspection. The blood was clean, no flecks of pink lung tissue. Brighter than the darker maroon color of a liver hit. No surprise; the moose would have died long before this had Ben’s slug struck the vitals. There wasn’t any partially digested grass or shit in the blood, so at least it wasn’t a gut shot. About the only good thing he could salvage out of this situation.

  He stood. The wind was blowing crossways, west to east, and the moose was headed north, into the bad country. His uncle had thought the moose had been hit in the leg; his grandfather opined it had been struck somewhere low in the belly. “You were thinking about your own dick, after all,” the old man had said to Ben. “That must have been where you aimed.”

  Ben followed the blood trail down the slight decline, hoping the death he read in the moose’s resting places would hurry along and make its claim.

  * * *

  Now the night was coming down on the land, the shadows under the hazel and mountain maple taking on substance, congealing around him. The mosquitoes hovered, landing on the backs of his hands, stinging him through his blue jeans. He was very thirsty.

  The blood trail was easy to follow even in the low light; something had happened after Ben had spooked the moose from its last bed, and what had been dribbles of blood were now freshets. A bone end must have splintered, the sharp edges severing an artery. The moose was just ahead of him, leaving a wake of blood as it crashed into a long, deep valley.

  The valley was several miles wide, the bottom shrouded in fog, with the tops of the balsams and white pines that lined the side slopes jutting out of the mist. The bottom was hidden in the fog, but the far side was visible, the granite bluffs rising almost vertical out of the mucky ground. Evening thermals rose from the valley floor, carrying a thick, funky odor up to Ben. He stood at the top of the valley. It would be another story for him to tell, one of the few living Cree in Highbanks who had visited Resurrection Valley. He worked his tongue around his mouth until he could spit, then let the little globule of saliva drop to the ground. He had less than an hour before the Canadian twilight would swallow up the trail.

  The brush crackled less than a hundred yards away as the moose’s hooves dragged through the underbrush. Ben held his 30-06 up and peered through the Leupold scope, pausing when the scope passed over a jack pine stump, the budworm scars like tiny rivers. There was still plenty of shooting light left.

  Ben moved slowly down the valley slope, eyes scanning the brush, looking for a darker brown leaf that might be an ear, a sweeping limb that might be the curve of an antler. There was a flat bench carved into the side of the valley, and he crossed it and descended down a steeper grade. He made sure his heel touched first, followed by the rest of the foot; he was much quieter than the moose, whose movements had become sloppy as death neared. The ground grew softer as he descended, and the moose’s hooves made a series of sucking, squelchy noises ahead of him.

  Then the noises stopped. Ben paused, his head cocked to the side, finger resting lightly on the curve of the trigger. After a moment, a long, low bawl issued from a tangle of alders. He took a step back, his finger creeping toward the rifle’s safety. The moose cried out again, louder this time. Ben took a deep breath and waved aside the cloud of mosquitoes in front of his face. It was the moose’s death cry, nothing more. He had heard it befor
e, but for a moment all the old stories about Resurrection Valley, which the Cree called Asiskiwiw, flooded his mind. Stories about the moss eater, the devil’s first cousin, who lived in the low, wild places with his curved, filmy-green teeth, whose laughter sounded like a cross between the cry of a loon and the howl of a wolf.

  All was quiet now, except . . . except something moving in the brush, barely audible. A leg, perhaps, twitching in pre-death spasm.

  He glanced up. The last light from the setting sun was a red smudge. It would be darker inside the bush, too dark to even properly field dress the moose. The mosquitoes would be drawn to the fresh blood. Other reasons to delay, with no need to name, tumbled through his mind and were accepted without question. He slowly backed away, the 30-06 held in front of him, and scrambled up to the flat bench. He paused there and took several shuddering breaths, then continued to the top of the ridge, where the ground was dry and flat.

  He would wait for morning to claim his kill.

  * * *

  Dawn was just a gradual lightening of the clouds in the east. Ben rubbed his face vigorously, then took a few minutes to wipe the dew off the rifle’s barrel with his shirt. Even here, the damp air of the valley was pervasive, the smell and the moisture like an old towel wrapped around his head. When the barrel and receiver were dry, he kicked dirt over the remains of his fire and stood looking down into Asiskiwiw.

  It was not the first time Ben had slept under the stars by himself, but he swore it would be his last. Every time he drifted off, the moose would bawl, a choked, warbling sound that turned into a moan as the night wore on.

  Ten minutes, he thought. Walk down, finish it off. He would pack out the backstraps and the liver, leave the rest for the wolves. He had no children of his own, but his parents had been dead for almost a decade, and his sisters, eleven and thirteen, needed the protein. He supposed by now both of them were frantic with worry after he had failed to return home. No time to think about that now.

  He thumbed back the bolt on the rifle. He had never unloaded it and he knew there was a live cartridge in the chamber, but the bright brass of the casing made him feel better, the gleam of metal like a bit of missing morning sunshine.

  He started down the valley. The fog was still heavy, and even the tops of the trees were covered. He stood in his boot prints from the night before and slowly scanned the trees until he was certain he knew where the moose had fallen. Then he started forward, clicking the safety off the 30-06.

  He had not gone very far when he saw pockmarks from the hooves pressed deep in the soil, filled with water. There was no blood. He followed the little potholes, pushing aside the low-hanging branches. The leaves were dew-laden, and his shirt was quickly soaked. He felt a strong desire to see the sun, to feel its heat on his skin.

  Twenty yards later he stopped, his own feet slowly sinking deeper into the ground, fingers digging into the walnut stock of the rifle.

  The moose lay on its side in front of him, half-buried in the spongy earth. For a moment he thought it had been killed by some predator and the remains cached—bears, as well as the occasional cougar or wolverine, would cover whatever they couldn’t eat with leaves and duff and return later. But the material covering the moose seemed part of the earth itself, as if the ground and roots had risen up to swallow it. There were only minimal signs of struggle; a few overturned leaves, and a long yellow scratch in a small poplar sapling, probably from a flailing hoof.

  Ben moved a step closer. One of the roots was twined around the moose. It wrapped around the knobby spine, pressed against the long, flat shoulder blade, and entered the hide. No, not a root, some sort of thick tendril. Gray and smooth, absent the hair-like offshoots a root would have.

  The moose’s eyes were open and covered with a fuzzy gray mold. The left eye had burst, and the mold followed the vitreum down the side of the muzzle. The antlers, still covered with blood-rich velvet, were coated with a mold so thick they looked bloated, cartoonish. Another tendril snaked into the moose’s open mouth, past the jutting yellow teeth, and disappeared into its gullet. There was still no blood.

  Bile rose in Ben’s throat. He tried to step backward, but his boot was mired in the soft ground. He pushed down with his other foot, the mud forming a vacuum around his boots. He grabbed a sapling and pulled his leg up. The ground gave off a low sucking sound as his foot slipped free of the boot. Ben hopped to the side, his white sock a splash of brightness, as the mud around his submerged boot began to contract. Ten long miles of hopping along the unbroken trail back to Highbanks with one boot flashed through his mind.

  “Goddammit.”

  He knelt down and plunged his hand into the hole. The mud was cold and fetid, like reaching into the inside of a long-dead animal. The back of his hand brushed something hard and he reached for it. The object moved under his hand, and Ben recoiled.

  He looked at his mud-streaked hand, then down at the closing hole, the edges already folding in on themselves. He tentatively reached back in, and again something closed around his wrist. He grunted and reared back, his knees digging into the soft ground. Whatever was holding him gave way, and he held up his hand to wipe the mud away. There was a pink welt across his wrist, and his hand was already numb and discolored from lack of blood.

  He glanced over at the tendril snaking down into the moose’s throat, his mind starting to make the connection. As he studied the moose, he caught the tiniest of movements. It came again, a slight bulging under the mat of growth on the moose’s intact eye. It took Ben a moment to process what he was seeing: the moose was moving its eyeball, looking for the sound of the commotion. As he watched, a long, low bawl sighed out of its mouth.

  “No,” Ben said.

  Still kneeling, he brought his rifle to his shoulder, disgust and horror and sympathy all mixing together. The rifle was a semiautomatic, and he emptied the clip without aiming, bone and antler and brains flying backward, splattering the brush. The head of the moose disintegrated, torn apart by the 220-grain slugs, but the tendril that had been down its mouth didn’t move. It hung there, suspended, the pale material deepening into a rosy color near the tip.

  Ben set the rifle down and tried to get to his feet. He couldn’t; tendrils the size of garden hoses were wrapped around both ankles. He struggled for a moment, realized he was not going to break free with brute strength alone, and pulled his knife from the sheath. The pale flesh (and it is flesh, Ben thought frantically, not roots) separated easily under the sharp blade. Ben sliced the tendrils off one ankle and kicked them away. The cross sections of the tendrils were waxy, with no arteries or veins. Within seconds the severed ends turned a sickly gray.

  He moved to his other ankle. The remaining tendril was already contracting, as though it expected the blade. It made the cutting easier, and he sliced through it in one quick movement.

  He pushed himself to his feet but only made it halfway to a standing position. Another tendril had wound through a belt loop on the back of his jeans. He reversed his grip on his knife and hacked at it blindly. A sharp pain bloomed across his lower back as he cut himself, and almost immediately something cool and insistent pressed against him, nestling into the cut. He made another vicious swipe, and the pressure released.

  He straightened. More tendrils had coiled halfway to his knees while he had been distracted. There was no pressure until he tried to move. Then they constricted instantly, and he felt his shin bones crack. He moaned and stood still, searching the ground for his rifle. He finally caught a gleam of blued steel and picked out the outline of his 30-06 a few yards off, nearly sunken into the ground, its length wrapped inside more waxy loops.

  The tendrils crawled over him, and when Ben looked down at his hands he saw a gray, fuzzy growth on his skin. He leaned down with his knife again, then was jerked to a stop, an involuntary scream coming from his mouth. He had felt nothing until he moved. But when he did, the tendril that had wound around his shoulder pulled his arm so far back he felt his muscles separate.
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  Ben stood, motionless except for his heaving chest. The tendrils advanced steadily, climbing up his body like vines. He did not move and there was no more new pain. He craned his head upward, hoping for the sight of the morning sun. The sky was still gray; it would likely drizzle later. He hoped his sisters had found breakfast.

  He weighed his options. He flexed his legs the smallest of degrees, and the pressure and pain from the constricting tendrils made him moan. He looked at the moose, thought of what it had been, of how it had not quite been dead. When the main mass of tendrils reached his waist, Ben brought the knife forward, very slowly. Someone would take them in; someone always took in orphans.

  “I’m sorry,” he whispered, and pressed the blade against the skin of his left wrist. He pulled hard, with downward pressure, as if cutting through a length of thick rope. He tried to transfer the knife to cut his other wrist, but he had severed the tendons and the knife fell from his grip. No matter; blood was burbling out of his open arteries, driven out of his body by his hammering pulse.

  A tendril rose out of the mass around his lower body and twisted along his arm. It paused just above the cut, then circled his forearm and squeezed. The blood slowed to a trickle, and the end of the tendril pressed itself over the cut, its waxy end taking on a rosy glow.

  * * *

  Two hundred yards up the slope, on the ridgeline, a gray jay rummaging through the remains of Ben’s paltry campfire cocked its head to listen. The screams came in waves, the voice growing hoarse and then choking off.

  The jay hopped to the far side of the campfire and, finding nothing, flew up into the branches of a spruce tree. It could hear moaning now, low and plaintive. After a while the sound changed, became almost conversational. The jay listened for a few more seconds and then grew bored and flew off into the woods, still looking for its morning meal.