Czech Hunter 10 -

THE HUNTER STAYS. THE CHILDREN GO. THE DEBT IS PAID.

He took samples and pressed on.

He dreamed of the forest—but not as it was. The trees were burning. The sky was the color of a bruise. And in the clearing stood a figure, tall and thin, with antlers branching from its skull like a crown of thorns. Its face was smooth, featureless, save for three vertical slits where a mouth should be. It did not speak. But Karel understood: You took what was mine. Bring it back before the next new moon, or I will take what is yours.

Pavel laughed bitterly. “You’re a hunter of men. But you’ve never hunted something that hunts back.”

Karel took off his jacket. He removed his pistol, his badge, his phone. He took the rowan pouch from his pocket and placed it on the ground—a small act of respect to Paní Bílková, whose warning he had ignored.

After forty minutes, he found the first marker: a dead oak with three vertical gashes in the bark, oozing a dark sap that smelled faintly of iron. Blood, he thought, but the field test came back negative. Plant matter. Something else.