Haylo Kiss -

Her father, a man of hard hands and harder whiskey, blamed rustlers. Her mother, who read her Bible by candlelight, blamed the end of days. Haylo blamed neither. She knew what she’d seen on the third night of the disappearances: a shape that walked on two legs but bent like a broken wishbone, its skin the color of mud and moonlight. It had stopped at the edge of the hayloft’s shadow. And then it had kissed the air—a wet, smacking sound—and the nearest ewe had simply dissolved into mist.

Haylo picked up her shotgun. “Because my grandmother didn’t bargain for me. She bargained for you. You think you’ve been haunting us? We’ve been keeping you, trapped in a name, bound to this hollow. And now you’ve had your kiss.” Haylo Kiss

She didn’t raise the gun. She didn’t scream. She walked right up to the creature, stood on her toes, and pressed her lips to the slit where its mouth should be. Her father, a man of hard hands and

Haylo Kiss
La bestia no debe nacer – La llamada de Cthulhu 7ª edición
29,95