Researcher's insight into the Water Devil
Undated
My initial suspicions about the origins of the Water Devil
have been refuted absolutely by my latest research. I had thought the thing was
related to some species of eel. Even a Gar or a Bowfish would have seemed
logical. Or so I thought. But I'm getting ahead of myself. Let me begin with
the creature itself, as the hunters knew it.
Though it would be easy to mistake it for one many-tentacled
creature, the Water Devil is in fact a swarm of smaller aquatic animals. It
seemed to sense the presence of anything entering its home waters, and its
movements were quick and decisive. Because of its swarm-like nature, it was
hard to kill with bullets or any sort of melee attack, and often the best
recourse was simply to run for the shore.
For a long time, the waters of the bayou appeared to have
gone silent. The usual wildlife had either fled, or been killed. Or both: it is
likely that the creatures devoured whatever wildlife was not quick enough to
flee to safer waters, but several populations of alligators clearly survived
the infestation. Collins and Scognamiglio seem to agree on this point, as well
as on the creatures' appearance, though at the moment, I find all of it a bit
fantastic. No wonder, as our main surviving source on the subject of its
appearance is a fictionalized version of the tale.
Though the logic (well, the assumed logic) of these
creatures' form and function may be twisted and strange, the Water Devil feels
outside of that framework, like an experiment gone wrong. I cannot pinpoint its
purpose for the larger organism, and I imagine that, for example, a monstrous,
ravenous alligator, able to move both in water and on land, would have served
its purpose more immediately.
+++
Letter regarding the Water Devil
Author: Hayden Collins
Undated
Handwritten, 8.5" x 11"
Dearest Xavier,
I hope this letter finds you well. I was greatly saddened by
the fact that you were not, after all, able to come to New Orleans, but I
understand that business must come first. We all have to eat, especially you,
you great brute. But my crude jokes aside, I greatly respect what you are
trying to accomplish.
Thank you for taking the time to read my latest. I was
heartened to hear your positive response. Sadly however, I still cannot find a
soul who will publish it. People simply do not believe that what I describe
could have possibly have happened to two young women. It seems to me, the
people who say these things have not spoken widely with the "weaker"
sex. You remember my rejection letter from that blasted Tousey? There have only
been more of the same. I am beginning to think I will have to rewrite the thing
after all. Though for now, I do not feel up to the task. I feel a certain debt
to the facts, so for now, I will let the manuscript rest in the drawer of my
desk.
But I have not stopped working, and in fact, enclosed you
will find a copy of the first published installments! For now anyway, I will
have bread and wine. It came to me - or I should say he came to me—during an
evening spent at Finn's. I can hear you laughing even now, and no, I have not
given up any of my vices. I was drawn to the man because of his face, which was
scarred almost beyond human recognition, and I stayed at his side until dawn
listening to what he had to say. He was as eager to tell the tale as I was to
hear it, and I made sure that Sal kept us well in our cups. You may not believe
it, but I stayed true to the tale he told of the "many tentacled beast of
the swamps," though the scars on his face were the only offer of proof.
This town is awash in the strangest tales. I do not regret the move, though I
miss you dearly. There is enough inspiration on these streets to fill a
thousand novels. You will hardly believe the tale yourself. Do tell me what you
think.
Your Brother,
Hayden
+++
Serial published in the New Orleans True Crescent
Author: Hayden Collins
Date: May 4th, 1910
1/6
He might not be a Hero, but he fought the Devil in the swamps of Louisiana—and he won. But at what price? Find out this week in...
THE DEVIL YOU KNOW, Nr 1
A weekly adventure serial by H. Collins.
His face was scarred and discolored beyond all recognition.
He was a Free Man, a Black man, once a slave, but never to be again, for he had
armed himself and would fight nail and tooth, would kill and would die, before
he ever submitted to such conditions again.
His name was Jonas, and he was fond of his Winfield, like so
many before him, and felt himself as powerful as a regiment of men with it in
his hands. Should you manage to catch sight of those hands on one of the rare
occasions he was without his calf's hide gloves, you would see that they were
as soft and as smooth as a porcelain cup. Once, his face must have been the
same. But all who had ever seen his face without scars or his hands without
gloves were dead, most by his hand, with the exception of the lover he had lost
and mourned and whose memory he fought for still.
They had been partners in the Hunt, Jonas and a man called
Gator, initiated by an old Preacher who thought them both too desperate for any
other work. Correctly, it must be noted, for both felt compelled to wander, to
hunt, and to fight. Both avoided the indoors, feeling most at home with a rifle
on their backs and the stars above them, ignorant though they were of the fate
written there in their name among them.
Though the Preacher who initiated them never did manage to
convert them, Jonas and Gator would meet the Devil in the shallows of the
Stillwater Bayou, and only one of them would live to regret it.
+++
Serial published in the New Orleans True Crescent
Author: Hayden Collins
Date: May 11th, 1910
2/6
He might not be a Hero, but he fought the Devil in the swamps of Louisiana—and he won. But at what price? Find out this week in...
THE DEVIL YOU KNOW, Nr 1
A weekly adventure serial by H. Collins.
"Move your drumsticks Beefrat, we don't have a year to
get to Bully."
They'd been walking for hours and still hadn't found the
bounty they'd been sent to find.
"We're walking in circles Harpo, there ain't no way
around it. Around it. Get it? Regular poet, me."
"You would have starved to death a poet. Or a
comedian."
"Well I'm going to starve to death a Hunter, aye."
"Dark times when the Sight can't set us right."
These Hunters were rumored to have powers that led them to their quarries—and the rumors were true. A small motion of the hands and a short incantation whispered and the world became a misty grey, their targets a bouquet of blue sparks visible only to those who had been initiated.
But that day, when they moved into the Sight, the landscape
was bleak and empty, and they were unable to catch the trail of their quarry,
and they were beginning to feel a sickness come upon them. The swamps were
silent, and though the distant moans and screams of a Hive punctuated the day,
as they always did now, there were no human screams, no gunshots. They thought
themselves alone.
They were wrong.
+++
Serial published in the New Orleans True Crescent
Author: Hayden Collins
Date: May 18th, 1910
3/6
He might not be a Hero, but he fought the Devil in the swamps of Louisiana—and he won. But at what price? Find out this week in...
THE DEVIL YOU KNOW, Nr 1
A weekly adventure serial by H. Collins.
Harpo and Beefrat rested upon the shore, clutching their
stomachs.
"Might be the flu, Harpo, come for us at last. Haven't
felt right since we broke fast. We never should of ate that meat."
Somewhere beneath the layers of dirt caking his face was sickly pale white
skin, the mouth framed by a straw-brown mustache and beard. The other looked
much the same, though his beard was longer, with a touch of red.
"My insides are wailing. And with the Sight
off..." he trailed off before finishing his thought, but his meaning was
clear: it was an ill omen. He looked down at his shaking hands, where several
strange lumps were developing. "I fear the worse, Rat."
The meat they'd had had been wormy and rotten, but they had
eaten it all the same. They had drank away the money from their last bounty in
a single night and had no money left for good fruit or bread. This bounty might
have filled their stomachs with something better.
Meanwhile, from the thicket, Jonas and Gator watched.
They had been tracking the same quarry as Beefrat and Harpo
and had planned to eliminate their competition and to loot what weapons they
could from the corpses: a double bounty. But now the two men on the shore were
acting strange and having removed their hats and coats, were moaning and
scratching at their faces and arms.
It was safest to shoot from a distance.
Their aim was true.
+++
Serial published in the New Orleans True Crescent
Author: Hayden Collins
Date: May 25th, 1910
4/6
He might not be a Hero, but he fought the Devil in the swamps of Louisiana—and he won. But at what price? Find out this week in...
THE DEVIL YOU KNOW, Nr 4
A weekly adventure serial by H. Collins.
Jonas drew his knife down the length of the Harpo's body
from chin to pelvis, expecting the spill of organs and the stench of foul rot
and death. He intended to take the heart, but he was greeted with a great flow
of thick, segmented white worms, spilling from the dead man's flesh.
The worms had already devoured the organs—some still had blood smeared across the mouth cavities, opening and closing in the air as they sought after more flesh.
Jumping back, Jonas reached for his rifle and began to shoot, but landed no
hits. The stubby, writhing creatures, turning a reddish orange now that they
had been freed from the man's carcass, skimmed across the mud and slid into the
dark waters of the bayou.
The dead man's partner, Beefrat, had run towards a building
on the far side of the water at the first sound of shots. He stopped and began
to convulse. The white worms poured out of his mouth, his ears, and the gaping
sockets where they had eaten their way through his eyes. His corpse emptied of
the foul creatures at last, his body collapsed into the water.
Jonas and Gator stood on the shore, watching, but ready to run. The water began to churn—the worms had swarmed around the corpse to finish off the remaining skin.
Would they stay and fight or would they let the creature go? The men's eyes met and after a gruff nod, they waded out into the water.