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“Why do you need so many men, Sergeant?” the captain of Greymouth Police Station.

“We have reason to believe that the attackers are armed and dangerous, Henry,” Sgt. Anaru explained. “And the land area we have to cover to find Mr. Harding is substantial enough to merit more than a four-man search team.”

“Alright, I can send you three men,” the captain announced. “What is this all about, Mick?”

Sgt. Anaru took a breath. “It is a missing farmer, sir. The man vanished on his own farm.”

“I do understand that, Mick, but since when do you care that much about one missing farmer?” he asked Sgt. Anaru again.

“Because this is the new owner of… Nekenhalle,” Sgt. Anaru revealed.

There was a long pause before the police captain from Greymouth spoke again. “Nekenhalle. Holy shit, mate.”

“I know. So you see why I need men to search and men to keep their eyes on those men. Buddy system. But they don’t have to know, you know?” the sergeant warned. He was exhausted, propping himself up on his elbow while holding the phone. In his other hand was a lit smoke, hanging dangerously over his cold black coffee. Under a bland ceiling light above his desk, the Maori cop struggled to stay awake, succeeding only by the mercy of his adrenaline drive and a bit of bad caffeine.

“There are some blokes coming from as far as Christchurch, so I reckon we will soon have the bloody media on our asses too,” Anaru moaned. “But we hope to get some answers as soon as we get up there. Constable Ballin and me, we chased down a big son of a bitch, but these bastards are so fast. It would be good to know that we have the manpower to pull this off, sir.”

“Nah, you’re welcome, Mick,” the captain said. “Just make sure you don’t get swallowed up by the mountain, you hear me? That ranch is rancid, mate. Something made the mountain wake up again, and now we are up to our balls in guardians.”

“Christ, Captain Waikoto, don’t you go talking like that, please,” Anaru implored. “I don’t need that kind of talk before the search.”

“Don’t worry, mate,” the captain scoffed, “that palangi and his family will never believe the stories of the hungry mountain and all the Guardians. Most they would do is laugh it off.”

“But I don’t have only palangi on my team of rescue workers. I have Samoan and Maori men too, so we need to keep the Guardian talk between us,” Sgt. Anaru insisted.

“Alright, alright, Sergeant, relax,” the captain calmed him. “I will send my boys as soon as they arrive for tomorrow’s shift. Now you take care and for God’s sake, get some sleep, Mick.”

“Thanks, Captain,” Sgt. Anaru replied.

Only the constable and two desk officers were still at the small, informal station. They were muttering under their breath as he emerged from his office. “Have the brothers left yet, Const. Ballin?” he asked, stretching his back.

“Yes, sir. They just left, about five minutes ago,” she replied, still looking like a puppy’s chew toy.

“You had best get home too, Constable,” he said firmly. “We have had one intense day and we have to be fresh on our feet tomorrow.”

“Are we going back to Nekenhalle, sir?” she asked reluctantly. He could see her eyes begging him to negate her suspicion, but he could not please her with the answer she wanted.

“Yes, we are all going back,” he said.

“Oh Jesus,” she whimpered softly.

“We have at least 11 men so far willing to go with us,” he attempted to comfort her. The desk officers looked worried for them, but grateful that they would not have to join in the excursion to the wretched patch of black soiled land. After all, small as the division was, there had to be someone manning the station. From screening the calls and taking down details, to delegating basic duties to the officers left to deal with the usual police matters on call-outs.

“Well, I’ll be off home then, sir,” she ask-told her superior.

“Good night, Constable,” he nodded and returned to his office to finish up before going home as well.

* * *

When the Harding brothers arrived at the Cockran farm, they found the barn light on and its doors ajar. It was well past 10pm, which was an odd hour for the old man to still be up. As they pulled up to the barn, Nigel’s wife, Sally, appeared in the headlights. She was carrying a mug and held something in her fist.

“Hey, Sally,” Cecil greeted. “Did Nigel tell you that I took him up on the offer to stay another night?”

She smiled. “Of course he did.”

“And… would you mind much if my brother, Gary, stayed over too?” he asked carefully. “We found him alive today, thank God.”

“Oh my God! Is he alright?” she asked in her typically mothering manner. “Where is he?”

Gary stepped out of the SUV and gave the lady a courteous wave. “Nice to officially meet you, Mrs. Cockran,” he smiled. “May I say your shepherd’s pie is fucking epic.”

“Gary!” his brother shrieked.

Gary did not even realize at first, but quickly apologized. “I’m so sorry, Mrs. Cockran. I don’t mean to be such a pig, but I have not exactly been feeling very human these past few days.”

“Oh, come on, it’s alright,” she soothed. “I think when it comes to cussing we are all half pig anyway. As soon as I have given Nige his coffee, I will go and make you boys some hot chocolate and dish up some beef stew we have left over from tonight.”

She came to shake Gary’s hand, and Cecil saw what she had kept in her fist. A small, white pill changed hands as she took his brother’s hand. She gave the young man a wink and whispered, “You’ll love my beef stew, Gary. May I say that it is fucking delicious.”

Gary laughed in a loud cackle and his usually rigid brother even chuckled along as Sally led them into the barn. Nigel, on the other hand, felt no cheer whatsoever. His normally loud mouth was silent and he busied himself with wrapping up another sheep. Sally gave him a kiss on the top of his head when she gave him his coffee and painkiller. Before she walked out, she gave the Harding brothers a sorry look to warn them of Nigel’s dismay.

“Hello, Nigel,” Cecil started uncomfortably. “Please don’t tell me that that is a fresh kill.”

“Yup,” the old man replied slowly. His back was turned to them and he did not bother to face them. “I found this one a few hours ago. Just like the dogs.”

“Your dogs were poisoned too?” Gary gasped. At the sound of the alien voice behind him, the old man swung around and saw Gary standing there. He vaguely remembered briefly speaking with the young man and his father when they disturbed his sheep with their noisy furniture truck.

“I see you found your brother, Cecil,” the old man said without much amity toward the younger brother.

“Yes! I am so glad he is alright, but there is still no trace of my father,” Cecil reported to the distraught farmer. The old man looked furious and defeated. He did not really care to impress on Cecil his dislike for Gary. According to him, the boy was insignificant in the light of what was happening to his livestock.

In all this, Gary did not care what the old farmer thought of him. What he just heard was familiar and he instantly reckoned that there was some sort of corroboration. “Listen, Mr. Cockran, were your dogs poisoned?”

“What is it to you, son?” Nigel whined. “I have lost another sheep right under my fucking nose and I could not see the bastard that did this!”

Cecil caught on to what his brother was trying to get at. He jumped in too. “Nigel, we found the same thing on Nekenhalle! Our dogs have been poisoned and one of them had its head wrung like your first sheep the other day.”