Death's Cold Arms - Arthur Leo Zagat - E-Book

Death's Cold Arms E-Book

Arthur Leo Zagat

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Beschreibung

Death's Cold Arms by Arthur Leo Zagat is a riveting journey into the heart of fear and darkness. When a series of gruesome deaths shakes a once-peaceful town, the sinister connection between the victims seems to point to a chilling, supernatural force. As investigators dig deeper, they find themselves ensnared in a web of terror woven by a malevolent entity with a penchant for death and destruction. With each clue leading to more horrific revelations, can they uncover the truth behind the cold arms of death before it's too late? Dive into this spine-tingling thriller where every page brings you closer to the edge of your seat.

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Seitenzahl: 44

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2024

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Table of Contents

Death's Cold Arms

PROLOGUE

I. — FOOTPRINTS OF THE DEMON

II. — THE HANGING CORPSE

III. — THE GHOUL COMES FOR HIS BRIDE

IV. — MACHINERY OF MADNESS

Landmarks

Table of Contents

Cover

Death's Cold Arms

       Terror Tales
By: Arthur Leo Zagat
Edited by: Rafat Allam
Copyright © 2024 by Al-Mashreq Bookstore
First published in Terror Tales, June 1936
No part of this publication may be reproduced whole or in part in any form without the prior written permission of the author

PROLOGUE

MARY DEAN saw the red flag sweep down, signaling that everyone was well clear of danger from the blast.

"All clear," she said. "Let it go."

With a single heave of his muscular shoulders Paul Faston thrust the plunger down into the little black box from which long wires trailed away. Muffled thunder pounded across the desert plateau. A tiny smoke-puff, grotesquely out of proportion to the sound, spurted out of the summit of the high cliff that from time immemorial had walled the far side of the alkali flat. The towering grey rock-face leaned away from the mesa with slow majesty. Then it arced down, faster and faster, crashed into a myriad fragments.

A shrill, piercing wail sliced through the deafening detonation of that gigantic collapse. It jerked Mary's startled look to the Indian powder-monkey who had been crouched alongside Paul. The overalled aborigine's coppery countenance was a writhing mask of abysmal terror. His arm, outflung and rigid, stabbed pointing fingers at the dust-cloud billowing above the fallen precipice.

The cloud was a vast, demoniac face, blotting out the mesa, the sky itself, with swirling darkness. Staring at it, a sudden freezing panic ran quivering through the girl's veins.

Wanoo's gibbering scream formed words.

"He wake!" the Indian squealed. "Nahmeto wake again. Thunder- sticks hurt Nahmeto and he wake to punish us. We all dead. When Nahmeto come in night we all dead!"

Somehow Mary's fingers were digging into Wanoo's shoulder. "Nahmeto! Who—who is...?"

"Nahmeto evil spirit of my people. Half man, half rock. When dark of moon come steal people and eat, make himself all man. Nahmeto go to sleep in mesa when paleface comes, now wake up again."

For a terrible instant the frenzy of ancestral fear in the Ute's voice swept Mary into his terror. An icy shudder ran through her, and then Paul's strong arm caught her away from the gibbering Indian.

"He's full of tequila, hon. Forget him."

Her lover's vibrant strength throbbed against her trembling, slim form, and the fear seeped away. The cloud was no longer a sinister face. It was just swirling dust that thinned rapidly to let her see hazily the knot of laborers far to one side and the familiar low roofs of the mining camp.

"How was that for placing shots?" Paul's deep-chested voice ran on. "Look! The cliff front's cut off as clean as if I'd sliced it with a big knife, and there's the vein of silver ore your dad insisted must be there."

"It is. Paul, it's there!" Mary saw the dark splotch to which he pointed. "Dad's made his big strike at last. The strike he's hunted for all his life. Now he—"

"Hell!" the exclamation jolted across her jubilance. "I'll be—"

"What—?"

"I'm not so good after all. See that spur sticking out like a sore thumb, twenty feet up? That should have come away with the rest. I'll swear I put a shot right there. The fulminate must have? Good Lord!"

Paul jerked away from her, abruptly, was running toward the blasted cliff-face, toward a khaki-clad figure clambering the riven, white-glaring granite. Mary was running too, her high- pitched cry flinging out before her, joining itself to Paul's almost incoherent shout.

"Ned! Don't! Stop, Ned. Stop!"

Ned Thiel knew as well as they the peril toward which he climbed, the peril lurking behind that outjut of weathered stone. Dynamite is tricky stuff and often a dud shot goes off minutes after it should by all rights be dead and harmless. But he was climbing swiftly, unheeding their shouts of warning. Ned was like that, swaggering, reckless. That was what had finally decided her against him, what had finally made her choose Paul instead of him in their fierce rivalry for her. Only minutes ago she had told Paul—

"Ned," Paul shouted again. "Ned, you ass!"

Thiel didn't hear him, or else didn't want to hear him. He got a brown hand on the rocky protuberance, another, swung free from the cliff face. For a moment his sturdy frame hung, penduluming, and then he had chinned up, was hidden...

Mary caught up with Paul. "Why is he doing that?" she panted.

A dark film of wrath underlay the anxiety in the hard-rock man's broad-boned face. "He's trying to show me up," he gritted. "Beating me to the dud to prove I didn't make the right connections."

A spurt of yellow flame from above checked him, and the flat pound of a dynamite blast. Paul's shoulder thrust Mary backwards. The rock was falling was bounding down the cliff. A piece split off from it, smaller, blacker, hit some vagrant inequality and took its own errant course.