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Hunter in the mist

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Hunter in the mist
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Chapter 1 - HUNTER IN THE MIST

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Transylvania, 1923

The engine of the weathered BSA motorcycle roared 

like a wounded beast as it crossed 

the muddy trails of the Carpathians. 

Viktor Aldrich adjusted his aviator goggles 

and pressed the brass throttle, 

feeling the vibrations of the four-stroke engine 

coursing through his weary bones.

"Damn it," he growled through gritted teeth, 

observing the deep tracks in the mud. 

The horse had galloped with desperation, 

leaving marks that any tracker 

would recognize as those of a terrified beast.

Viktor had arrived at this remote village 

three days ago, following whispers 

that traveled through the taverns of Bucharest: 

missing children, livestock found drained of blood, 

shadows dancing where there should be none. 

The locals spoke in archaic Romanian, 

crossing themselves when mentioning "strigoi".

"One hour head start, bastard," 

Viktor muttered, mentally calculating the distance 

while the icy October wind 

lashed his face, weathered by years 

of pursuing the impossible.

His grandfather had taught him that no horse, 

however strong, could maintain 

a frenzied gallop for more than a few kilometers. 

"After an hour, it'll be trotting 

like a tired old man," he remembered the words 

of the old hunter while adjusting 

the carburetor of his BSA.

At 80 kilometers per hour, 

the ancient English motorcycle 

trembled dangerously over the cobblestones, 

but Viktor had modified the engine 

with parts from Great War aircraft. 

Every passing minute, 

he shortened the distance to his prey.

In the inner pocket of his leather coat, 

familiar instruments brushed against his chest: 

ash wood stakes carved by Orthodox monks, 

holy water in crystal vials, 

and the silver cross that had belonged 

to his great-grandfather, another shadow hunter.

At exactly fourteen minutes 

—Viktor always timed his hunts—, 

the silhouette of the horse appeared 

through the mist rising 

from the Mureș river valley. 

The beast had stopped 

on a rocky hill, 

the vapor of its labored breathing 

mixing with the nocturnal fog.

Viktor reduced the engine revolutions, 

the mechanical roar giving way 

to the supernatural silence of the forest. 

Not an owl, not a cricket. 

Only the wind whistling through the pines.

Then, under the yellowish light 

of the October full moon, 

happened what Viktor both feared and expected.

The horse reared on its hind legs, 

but its form began to twist 

like red-hot metal. 

The muscles elongated grotesquely, 

the skin became translucent and pale, 

and the eyes ignited 

with the deep red of fresh blood. 

Bones that cracked like dry branches, 

flesh that molded following 

an impossible anatomy.

From the four-legged beast 

emerged something that walked upright, 

something that had been human 

long, long ago.

Viktor smiled with that grimace he had inherited 

from three generations of hunters. 

A smile without humor, without joy, 

only the cold satisfaction 

of the predator confirming 

he had found his prey.

"Strigoi," he murmured in Romanian, 

the word familiar on his tongue 

like a prayer known by heart.

The creature let out a howl 

that echoed throughout the valley, 

a sound that seemed to emerge 

from the depths of the earth itself. 

Viktor didn't flinch. 

He had heard that cry before, 

in Moldavia, in the forests of Wallachia, 

in the tunnels beneath Prague.

He turned off the BSA engine 

and dismounted with calculated movements, 

his leather boots crunching 

over the dead leaves. 

From inside his coat he extracted 

an ash wood stake 

—carved by the monks of Putna— 

and the silver cross that had gleamed 

in his great-grandfather's hands 

during the Wallachia massacre.

"So you finally abandon the disguise," 

Viktor said in archaic Romanian, 

slowly advancing toward the abomination. 

"The village children can rest in peace."

The strigoi lunged with the speed 

of desperation and ancestral hunger, 

its claws extended like rusted blades 

and fangs gleaming 

under the spectral moonlight.

Viktor had awaited this moment 

his entire adult life. 

He dodged the attack with the agility 

of one who has danced this mortal dance 

dozens of times, spinning his body 

while the stake found 

the putrid flesh of the creature's side.

The creature's howl of pain 

awakened all the ravens in the forest, 

but Viktor already had the cross raised high. 

The sacred light emanating from the symbol 

—blessed at the Snagov monastery— 

made the monster recoil 

as if it had touched white-hot iron.

The combat lasted exactly 

three minutes and forty-seven seconds. 

Viktor knew because he always 

timed his confrontations. 

With a surgeon's precision 

and the determination of one who 

carries hunter's blood 

in his veins, he finally drove 

the stake into the black heart.

The creature collapsed 

with a sigh that sounded 

almost... grateful. 

Its form slowly disintegrated, 

becoming ashes 

that the autumn wind 

scattered among the trees.

Viktor remained motionless on the hill, 

breathing the cold mountain air 

while storing his tools 

in the worn pockets of his coat. 

The children of Sighișoara 

could sleep peacefully tonight. 

One less threat 

lurked in the shadows of Transylvania.

He started the BSA with a kick 

to the starter pedal. 

The engine coughed before roaring again, 

like an old soldier 

awakening for another battle. 

The road back to Brașov 

would be long and lonely, 

but Viktor knew that somewhere, 

in some lost village 

among the folds of the Carpathians, 

another creature of the ancient night 

would be awakening with thirst.

And he would be waiting.

As his father had done, 

his grandfather, and his grandfather's father. 

Because the Aldrichs 

were not simply hunters.

They were the last line of defense 

between the world of the living 

and the nightmares that crawled 

from the times 

when Romans 

feared to cross the Danube.

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THE END

*Viktor Aldrich would return in "The Monastery of the Dead"*

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