No less than six eyes had the demon -- four glaring a blinding,
soulless white, the lowest-set pair a feral, beastly yellow-amber. Of
the rest of the demon, Raibert could descry but little, save a dense,
dark mass, low to the ground, wheezing and whining, snorting and
bellowing its bloodlust as it eas-sayed the steep slope. The hornlike
bellowing was constant, as if the creature had no need to pause and
take fresh breath.
Perhaps it did not need to breathe air at all? What man, priest or lay,
truly knew aught of the bodily working of a Fiend from Hell? Certainly
not Calum Armstrong's son, Raibert. Nor did he intend to learn more,
not at any close proximity.
Moaning with his terror of the Unearthly, he had reined the skittish
horse half about when the monster changed its course, bearing off to
Raibert's left Seeking the gentler slope of the ridge, was it? Or was
the diabolical Thing seeking rather to flank him, to place its
awesomeness twixt him and the camp?
At the new angle, whereat the glaring eyes did not so blind him,
Raibert could discern more of this foul Thing -- long as a good-sized
wain, it was, but far lower. He could see no part of the legs for the
high-grown heather, but he suspected it to possess at least a score, to
move it so fast across the rising, uneven ground.
But most sinister of all, he could now see that a dozen or more
warlocks -- or were they manshaped fiends? -- were borne upon the
thrice-damned Beast's back, all bearing blue-black Rods of Power.
Whimpering, Raibert Armstrong still set himself to do his sworn duty,
despite his quite-justifiable horror. He presented the heavy shoulder
gun and, taking dead aim downward into the thick of the knot of manlike
creatures, he drew back the pan cover, his fingers so tremulous that
they almost spilled out the priming powder. Once again, he checked his
aim at the Beast lumbering below his position, shut his eyes tight,
then drew back the lower arm of the serpentine, thrusting the match end
clamped to the tip of the upper arm into the powder-filled priming pan.
He braced himself for the powerful kick of the piece.
But that kick never came; the match had smoldered out And still the
glaring, blaring Thing lumbered across the low saddle, leaving smoking
heather wherever its demon feet had trod, excreting fire and roils of
noxious gases from somewhere beneath its awful bulk.
Dropping the useless arquebus, Raibert sensed that his only chance now
lay in escape -- for who ever heard of a lone, common man trying to
fight a Monster out of Hell with only a pistol and an old chlaidhimhl -
- and while he could go back the way he had come, the Monster seemed
headed that way too...and Raibert felt that that was just what the
hellish Thing wanted him to do.
There seemed but one thing for it, in Raibert Armstrong's mind; he must
try -- with Christ's help -- to outfox the eldritch Beast. Reining
about, he trotted the frightened, but still obedient, horse a few yards
back along the ridge crest, as if he were blindly falling into the
Monster's coils. Then, suddenly, he drew his antique chlaidhimh -- for,