Morning came to Carstairs Manor on June 10th in the year of Our Lord, 1873, but it was not a happy one. The sun rose sluggishly, barely managing to displace the swollen moon from the sky, and despite the time of year, a cold fog hung over the moor in the early morning. Inside, James Cromwell, Lord Carstairs ate a tense breakfast served by an anxious serving staff.
"Sire, I am afraid I have unfortunate news to report," said Bidwell, the butler, as he brought the morning paper. "Three of the maids appear to have left during the night. I believe them to be staying with family in the village, if you would like me to dispatch someone to fetch them."
Lord Carstairs let out a derisive snort. "Deserters and traitors, the lot of them. Send along a boy with their last day's wages and tell them I have no room for cowards on my staff."
Bidwell nodded, his mouth set in a thin line. "Very good, sire. However, this does leave us with a decided shortage of staff. The events of recent months--"
"Are nothing more than a few idiots wandering about on the moors late at night, running into a pack of wild dogs, and managing to frighten other idiots with their fatal bout of stupidity, Bidwell. Nothing more, nothing less, and I'll not have it said otherwise. Not in my house. Do you understand?"
Bidwell bowed slightly at the waist. "Naturally, sire, and my humblest apologies if I give you any other impression. I merely meant that the...crazed rumors spread by the villagers have made it somewhat difficult to acquire staff. They believe it to be...unlucky...to be a member of the household on the nights of the full moon."
"Frankly," Carl Cromwell, heir to the estate, said as he slouched into the room, "I find it unlucky to be a member of the household any other night. Father, you simply must do something about the staff. How am I supposed to find a bedwarmer if all the maids keep leaving?" Carl chuckled at his own double entendre. The entire household knew that Carl enraged his father on a daily basis with his dalliances with the female staff, but none of his father's fury seemed to hold him back. With saturnine good looks and what seemed to be an insatiable sexual appetite, Carl spent whatever time he wasn't spending hunting or drinking with fucking.
"Take a lesson in self-reliance, boy. Warm yourself up for a change." Lord Carstairs scowled. "There's your answer, Bidwell. I can believe that the women of this house are scared of a wolf in their midst, but I think he's sitting at my table scarfing down sausages."
Bidwell managed to diplomatically indicate appreciation for Lord Carstairs' joke without implying moral sanction on the part of his son, a maneuver that required careful arrangement of his facial features. "In any event, sire, should the draining of the household staff continue, we shall have to look further afield to replace them. Especially should any...idiots...find themselves suffering a...fatal bout of stupidity...tonight, Sire." Lord Carstairs' face took on a thundery expression, and he was about to blast Bidwell with another tirade about superstitious idiots and the full moon, when a footman entered. "Excuse me, Sire. It appears my attention is needed." Bidwell strode over to the footman with an efficient gait, and conversed with him for a long moment.
Carl poured himself a cup of hot coffee and stared out the window at the moors outside, still shrouded by fog. "Wild dog or werewolf, father, it's certainly made hunting dashed difficult. Six months now, and I haven't bagged a single pheasant. It's as though something's scared off every bit of edible game on the estate."
"Werewolf. Next you'll be telling me the estate is under a gypsy curse."
"Well, Father, you did turn away those gypsies seeking to pitch their tents on the estate for the night."
"I also turned away the Temperance League, the parish priest, and those idiot friends of yours who wanted to spend a week out here 'fox-hunting'. That doesn't mean I've got the first ever sober, blue-blooded Protestant werewolf out there stalking me!"
"Excuse me, sire," Bidwell said, returning from his consultation with the footman, "but you have a visitor. Captain Horace Arkwright, the explorer, and his ward, Emma. He claims to have heard something about the recent...difficulties with wild dogs...out on the moor, and offers his services as a tracker and big game hunter to find and kill whatever it is that has caused the recent spate of deaths."
Carl stood up, suddenly white with anger. "Now see here!" he said. "I've been out there every day the last six months, and I assure you, if I can't find whatever killed those poor men and women, I'll be deuced if I'm going to let some jumped-up cowboy wander in here from Darkest Africa with his pet strumpet and give it a try. Father, tell these people to leave."
Lord Carstairs smiled coldly. "Bring them in. I could do with a laugh."
"Very good, sire." Bidwell departed soundlessly.
"Oh, look, Father, we've been through this. The ground is such a wet mess at this time of year that no 'big game hunter' could track prey in it. I looked myself. Just a mess of big paw-prints and human footprints, girls being chased down and struggling with a..." he ended lamely, remembering the tracks that must have belonged to an animal the size of a person, "...wild dog. Just send the fool home, tell everyone to stay inside tonight on penalty of gruesome death, and that will be that."
"That most certainly will not be that," an imperious voice rang out through the massive dining room. A broadly-built, tall man with penetrating gray eyes, dark hair, and a carefully-waxed mustache strode across the room, with a slim, doe-eyed beauty with honey-colored hair trailing in his wake. Behind them, Bidwell struggled to keep up.
"Er...Captain Arkwright, sire," Bidwell said, putting on a last burst of speed.
"A pleasure, Lord Carstairs. This is my ward, Emma Masters. Her parents were dear friends of mine, died in the Congo. I pledged to look after the girl. Now, I must say, your young son is wrong. This 'beast of the moors' has tasted blood. Six times now, from all I hear. Ask any of the Tutsi tribe, they'd tell you that on the veldt, when a lion eats the flesh of a man...or woman...it gets a taste for it. Becomes a man-eater. An animal like that, it gets bolder. More cunning, more fearless. I think you'll find that this has happened before. Ever hear of Basingstoke Hall? Seven months, that beast preyed on the household. Luckily for them, they retained my services. The next month, I lay in wait for the creature, shot it through the heart, and Lord Basingstoke and I watched its lifeblood pour out onto the hearth. It slunk off to die, never to be seen again."
"And were we in the veldt, being menaced by a lion," said Carl, "I would no doubt suggest to Father that we call upon your expertise. But this is England, and apart from enhancing the scenery," he drank in a long look at Emma's delicate features, "I fail to see why you are here instead of rounding the Cape of Good Hope."
"I am here, sir, to warn you that the creature that hunts you will grow bolder as the months pass. The last murder in Basingstoke was within the Hall itself. The creature broke through a window, lunged in, and dragged one of the maids out by the throat. This thing will grow bolder, crueler. Do you wish to wake up one morning to find your son dead?"
Lord Carstairs scowled. "I suppose that should I contact Basingstoke Hall, I would find that you saw this beast off out of the kindness of your heart and the nobility of your spirit, with no thought of recompense and reward?"
"Not at all. But a drowning man can scarcely choose which offer of help he accepts. I tell you, I can kill this beast which menaces you. Can and will."
"And what of Lord Bromsley?" Lord Carstairs asked. "Do you offer him as a reference?"
Captain Arkwright seemed taken aback. "I..."
"He called you a rogue and a scoundrel, a mercenary, a brute and a confidence trickster to boot. Said you came to him some ten years ago, raising money for an expedition to Africa. It turned out to be a fraud. The ship you mentioned turned out to be a derelict, and the money was never seen again."
Captain Arkwright lowered his head. "That was a long time ago, sir, and a young fool can change."
"Yes," Lord Carstairs said, a cold glint in his eyes. "He can become an older fool. Your reputation precedes you, Arkwright, despite all your attempts to get ahead of it, but I think you'll find a very different reception here at Carstairs Manor. My household has more than enough protection without whatever dubious help you can offer. Bidwell, get this man and his 'ward' out of my sight." Carl smiled triumphantly.
Captain Arkwright held up a hand. "Just let me stay for one evening, my lord. One night, and we'll see if you feel any differently about my advice or the beast the morning after the full moon."