The Werewolf of Bamberg
cartloads of grain to the town market. More than once, a little lost goat or calf scurried by.
    Finally they reached the ford, where the water, roiled by the rain and the many people passing through, was brown and muddy. A large group of wagon drivers and farmers had gathered there, standing in a half circle and staring down at something lying on the ground in front of them. Curious, Magdalena and Barbara pushed their way forward until they reached the shore.
    Magdalena held her breath in astonishment.
    “For heaven’s sake,” she finally gasped. “What in the world happened here?”
    Lying in the mud in front of them was a severed human arm with shreds of what must have once been a white shirt. A few of the fingertips showed little bite marks, presumably from fish, and some strands of torn muscles hung from the forearm, but otherwise the arm was still in relatively good condition. Magdalena surmised that it had been lying in the water for a few days, but certainly no longer than two weeks.
    “And I’m telling you again, it was this beast,” one of the wagon drivers in the group was heard to say. “This arm is a warning. It eats anyone trying to cross the river.”
    “A . . . a beast?” Barbara asked, wide-eyed. “What kind of beast?” She had difficulty diverting her eyes from the grisly discovery.
    “You haven’t heard of it?” Another wagon driver, with a slouch hat and torn jacket, spat in the muddy water alongside the two young women. “They say a monster is loose here in the Bamberg Forest and has already killed a large number of people. We can count ourselves lucky if we manage to get to town unscathed.”
    The first wagon driver, a tall, broad-built man of about fifty, resignedly shook his head. “In the city you’re not safe, either,” he growled. “My brother-in-law lives in Bamberg. He saw with his own eyes how the bailiffs fished an arm and a foot from the Regnitz, next to the Great Bridge. And now this. By all the saints, God protect us and our children!” He crossed himself, and an old woman next to him hastily began to pray her rosary.
    “Ah, that is surely very bad,” Magdalena began cautiously, “but all the more reason we should move on before it gets dark.” She looked over at the treetops, which were already in the shadows. Her thoughts turned to Simon and their two sons, who were undoubtedly still back in the forest. “So what are we waiting for?”
    The tall wagon driver looked at her and explained slowly, as if speaking to a small child. “Don’t you understand? We cannot cross the ford.” He trembled as he pointed at the severed arm. “Can’t you see the hand is pointing in our direction, as if trying to warn us? Anyone crossing the river here is marked for death.”
    “Near Munich there was once a hand alongside the bridge,” the other driver said, pointing with his slouch hat and rubbing his unshaved chin pensively. “It was attached with a lead coffin-nail to the railing, and a few men made fun of it. They tore the hand off, threw it in the river, then started across the bridge. It collapsed, the river carried the men away, and they were never seen again.”
    “But . . . but we can’t all just stand here simply because of an arm!” Magdalena said, shaking her head. “The wagons are backed up behind us.” Nevertheless, she, too, began to tremble when she looked down again at the severed arm, already decaying, lying in the mud. What in God’s name had happened to the man?
    “We are all lost,” murmured an old woman standing next to Magdalena and Barbara. “This is the only place for miles around where you can cross the river. If we have to spend the night here, then God help us. The beast will come to fetch us all.” She crossed herself again and looked across to the forest, which in the meantime had grown somewhat darker. The pouring rain showed no sign of stopping.
    “Maybe you should go and look for Simon and the children,” Barbara whispered to her
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