26.11.16

An illustration from the book

Gévaudan Beast mask inspired by the film Le Pacte des loups

Here is an illustration from our book by co-author Gustavo Sánchez Romero. It depicts the mask of the Beast of the Gévaudan from the 2001 Christophe Gans film Le Pacte des loups (Brotherhood of the Wolf)

Says Sánchez, “I drew this piece in pencil with water-soluble graphite, using a small, soft paintbrush for moistening certain areas. It took approximately nine hours. I used watercolor paper, 370 g/m2. Format A3. I choose to make this drawing mainly because in Gans’s film, we never get a good look at the Beast, a huge armored African carnivore (a lion or similar) trained to kill. The drawing is based on film images and scale models. I also drew the skull of the big cat with skin and hair, so readers could have a better understanding of the animal within the armor/mask.” 

You can find this drawing at the end of Chapter 20.



25.11.16

The end of 1766


A snowy ridge in the land of the Beast

A twelve-year-old boy was killed on September 12, 1766, in Paulhac, France, another on November 1. 

According to Pourcher, “Jean Pierre Ollier of La Soucheyre, aged about twelve years, was devoured . . . by La Bête Féroce, which is eating everybody, . . .”

The Beast then seemed to be on hiatus from November 2, 1766, until March 2, 1767, as far as records show. 

But then it returned for what would be a final killing spree.

28.8.16

August 1766






The summer sun washed over the Massif Central. Granite peaks and limestone plateaus baked beneath the crystalline sky. The wind moved through the grasses in which a flock of goats grazed. Their mistress, a fourteen-year-old girl from Auvers, France, lay in the grass watching the clouds. She stroked her youngest charge’s head. The baby goat butted her hand and twitched its tail. 

Then it stopped.

“What?” asked the girl, sitting up. The little creature was gazing at something behind her.

A family member, come to check on her?

A boy from the village, up to no good?

She turned.

A strange animal was sprinting toward her. The girl stood up, staring, her hand on the little goat’s head.

A dog? Too big.

A wolf? In the day?

Her heart began to pound.

The animal was strange—scrawny, bony, with a rough coat and a long tail. It leered at her with a snaggletooth grin.

And ran faster.

La Bête, she gasped. The Beast.

The shepherdess scrambled to a rock outcropping nearby, where there was a small cave in which she played while the goats grazed. She flung herself through the small opening into the cool darkness.

Snarling, the Beast rushed in behind her. Pebbles scattered, striking the girl. The Beast thrust a misshapen muzzle within the opening, snapping its jaws. She felt its hot breath.

The smell. She clapped her hands to her face and shrank back.

Outside, the Beast paced. The baby goat bleated. There was a pause. The girl’s heart pounded. The Beast seized the kid in its jaws and shook. The little goat cried out piteously for its mistress.

My baby!” shouted the girl. “Let him alone!” Without thinking, she lunged from the cave. “Get away, you devil!” she exclaimed, hurling a stone. The Beast dropped the goat.

Then—according to the 1889 chronicle of Abbé Pierre Pourcher—the Beast, “quick as lightning, jumped on the girl and ate her almost completely.”

And so Madeleine Paschal, a fourteen-year-old shepherdess from Auvers, became the sixty-sixth victim of the Beast of the Gévaudan.