The hound was a beast of science, not of hell. But science, Mortimer now knew, could forge monsters just as terrible as any curse.
When he opened his eyes, the hound had not moved. But something had changed. Behind it, barely visible in the fog, stood a figure—a tall man in a dark coat, holding a silver whistle on a chain.
And the man with the whistle? Mortimer had seen his face. Briefly. Long enough to recognize the sharp jaw and cold smile of a man who had been declared dead in a train accident six years ago—a man whose inheritance had passed directly to Sir Henry upon his supposed demise.
Mortimer was suddenly a boy again, watching his father die of a seizure on the library floor. Then he was a young surgeon, losing his first patient on the table, the man’s blood pooling around his shoes. Then he was a husband, receiving a telegram about a carriage accident. Every fear, every failure, every buried shame rose like bile in his throat. Il Mastino Dei Baskerville
Mortimer had nodded, prescribing brandy and rest. Then he had walked to the edge of the moor and waited.
The moon was a sliver, barely enough to silhouette the granite tors. But he saw it—a shape larger than any wolf, larger than any mastiff he had ever dissected. Its shoulders cleared the gorse bushes by a foot. Its fur was not black, but a deep, molten red, like cooled lava. And its eyes—yes, Sir Henry had been right about the eyes. They burned with a phosphorescent amber, the color of sulfur flames.
The letter began: Dear Mr. Holmes, the hound is real. But it is not what the legend claims. It is worse. The hound was a beast of science, not of hell
He did not chase the hound. He did not chase the man. Instead, he walked back to Baskerville Hall, sat down in Sir Charles’s study, and began to write a letter to a detective he had once met in London—a thin, hawk-nosed man with a mind like a steel trap.
Not in words. In memory.
The fog rolled off the Dartmoor like the breath of a dying beast, cold and thick with the scent of peat and decay. Dr. James Mortimer tugged his collar tighter, his boots sinking into the saturated earth. He had walked these moors for twenty years, but never like this—never with the weight of a legend pressing against his ribs. But something had changed
He was not a superstitious man. He was a man of science, of scalpels and sutures, of pathology and proof. Yet the bite marks on Sir Charles Baskerville’s neck told a story no textbook could explain. Four parallel punctures, deep and clean, spaced exactly as a wolf’s fangs would be. But wolves had been extinct in Devonshire for three centuries.
The locals called it Il Mastino Dei Baskerville —the Hound of the Baskervilles. An Italian name for an ancient English curse, carried back by a Crusader knight who had crossed the wrong nobleman in the Apennines. The story went that the hound was no mere dog, but a segugio infernale —a hellhound bred from the shadows of Vesuvius and the blood of traitors.
As dawn bled over the moor, he sealed the letter and added a postscript: Bring the largest revolver you own. And a veterinarian.
Mortimer stood shaking, his hand reaching for the revolver he had forgotten to load.