To my esteemed colleague, Frederic George Kenyon,
I hope this letter finds you well. Congratulations on your recent appointment. I must report to you this most exciting find! Within this parcel is a transcript of select passages of the diary of the renowned huntsman and explorer, Sir Edmund Crofts, immediately prior to his disappearance forty years ago. A local man discovered it on the bank of the Rhone approximately eight miles north of Avignon. I find both the contents and implications of this diary most disturbing. I must admit that this is not my specialty and hope that one at the British Museum might better interpret these final passages.
Your colleague in learning,
Paul Pelliout
July 12
I know I am on her trail. I investigated another thorp this morning, this one a mere dozen or so miles from Avignon. All thirty-eight men of fighting age disappeared in the night without so much a trace. A great commotion in the early hours before dawn awoke the town, drawing out the men to its defense. Scant minutes did they fight before the clamor of battle was no more. Upon the morn, not a weapon nor drop of blood betrayed what happened the night before.
Without a doubt, this town is but another like the countless before, suddenly bereft of men in the night. The trail points further south still, the disappearances more frequent and more recent as I travel. A mere four days have passed between the disappearance and my investigation. I wish I could tarry longer in aid to these people, yet my obligation is not to the victims, but those to be. The authorities, of course, blame the Prussians, a convenient excuse and scapegoat. It may be the fault of this war what bid her wake, though she is certainly no friend to the Prussians. Not a single soldier have I spoken to that does not fear the legend of the beast.
For now, the most I can do is follow the trail and wait. I have heard no news of disappearances since this last. Her hunger must be at its limit. I intend to confront her as she takes her prey next. She shall meet her end by my gun.
July 13
I stay now in another nameless thorp, the first unmarred by the beast's insatiable hunger. I prepared my shot this afternoon, a load sure to fell even so great a beast: four ounces of lead hardened with zinc and quicksilver and twenty drachms powder. I cast my shot in the wood near the river, careful to hide my purpose from the locals. A stray Englishman in the midst of this war is strange-enough, much less one preparing to hunt a beast of legend. Nonetheless I must maintain close vigil if I wish to catch her. No less than fifty-three men may perish should I fail. I eat little for fear the weight may fatigue me. Coffee is my only companion, insurance against an unexpected bout of exhaustion. The sun sets in a quarter hour by my watch. In mere hours I shall report on my success. I fear I shall not have words to write should I fail.
July 14
This cannot be. My own eyes must deceive me, for what I saw this night was no creation of God or Devil. No unholy beast of war was she, but a woman! Near to four yards she stood, at least forty stone of neither man nor beast. Where would be arms were rough, scaled limbs tipped in four vicious talons and where would be legs stood thick columns of hide and muscle like those of a reptile. A tail half as tall as she lay behind, a row of thick spines upon its crest.
My eyes looked straight through the beast, seeing naught but the woman. The night did little to hide her unnatural beauty. She stood naked in the clearing, a body surely made for sin, as though a demon born to tempt men. The light of the moon shone off her voluptuous bosom, each as large as my head, maybe more. Long dark hair spilled down her back, clinging tightly to an ample rear. Her skin, though cloaked by darkness, held the same tint and shine of the fairest women of the south of France.
For a long moment, I am ashamed to say, I gawked at the beast. She drew near, unaware of my presence until she stood no more than two rods before me. I took careful aim and fired, though in a haze, I missed my mark. I hit instead her thigh, just below the cleft of her pelvis. It was a clean shot. I saw the blood, saw her stagger with my own eyes, yet she would not fall! Instead she ran, faster than any beast I had hunted and much faster than a man. I followed the blood trail until it stopped. To my surprise I found not her corpse but a small pool of blood and scraps of wet cloth! Like her body, her mind must be more man than beast. I have never before hunted a foe with man-like cunning, much less one so superior in body. Despite my failure, I still believe a well-placed shot should fell her. For now, I can do little else but follow her spoor before it is swept away by the next rain. I only fear that I have made my intentions known to her and that I may find myself hunted.
July 15
The trail meanders without reason. Despite my better judgment, I continue in pursuit. I would guess the odds even that I have been snared in a trap. The speed of my pursuit left no time to plot and track my position and I must ruefully admit that I am quite lost. If need be, I am certain I could reach the Rhone within two days, though I would almost certainly never see her again.
What concerns me most is that I do not myself know the reason I pursue her so fervently. I tell myself she must be killed, that no such beast should be allowed to live. Yet as I sit, I find myself thinking of her, picturing her perfect body and what it must feel like. I yearn to see her once more, to touch and - dare I think it - more.