The Dark Boatman: Tales of Horror and the Cthulhu Mythos (13 page)

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Authors: John Glasby

Tags: #Fiction, #Horror, #horror stories, #dark fantasy stsories, #Cthulhu Mythos stories

BOOK: The Dark Boatman: Tales of Horror and the Cthulhu Mythos
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Who can be sure of what actually takes place under such circumstances as these? I saw that whirling column pause then move as though sightlessly, yet with a terrible singleness of design, drifting in my direction. I have tried to hint at my feelings during those fearful moments, although even now I cannot be certain what was fact and what was sheer fantasy. Madly I stumbled back, my legs quivering under me, unable to tear my gaze away from that horrendous, soul-destroying demon. Vaguely, I remember emptying all six chambers of the revolver at it, then flinging the empty, useless weapon away. That my uncle was dead, or nearly so, I did not doubt and I knew that the same fate awaited me unless I could get away from that terrible place. Arms held in front of me, I retreated towards the windows that looked out upon the grounds and in doing so, my shoulder caught some obstruction immediately at my back. What occurred next was so sudden, so startlingly unexpected, that I could scarcely take it in.

There came an explosive crack, a vivid blinding flash of actinic light that blinded me temporarily; and close on its heels a demonical roar of sheer fury which drowned out every other sound. When I could see again, there was only the diabolical carpet of grey dust on the floor and on the stairs and at the very top of the stairway something virtually unrecognisable that crawled and moaned and tried to stand upright.

Shrieking madly, I turned and ran, half-falling through the broken panes of the windows. Madly, I knew what must have happened. In my clumsiness I had ignited the flashbulb on the camera, and that savage, eye-searing glare had somehow been sufficient to stop that monstrosity intent on my destruction.

But coherent thought did not come until much later. What blind instinct guided me through the clinging fungus-like growths, past skeletal-armed trees that writhed and clawed at the star-ridden sky, I do not know. Somehow, I reached the car parked by the side of the narrow lane, dropped into the seat behind the wheel, and drove back into the village, where I aroused the local police sergeant with my frenzied hammering on his door. My distraught condition and the oddly rambling tale that I managed to stammer out prompted quick action on his part. Within ten minutes he had gathered together a small party of men, and although I dreaded what I knew I might see, I agreed to lead them back to that accursed house on the cliff.

There is no doubt now in my mind of the identity of that nameless horror I encountered in the Carter place. Since that terrible night I have spent many hours going through my uncle’s books, gathering the scattered clues together into a mad and terrifying whole. The old legends, distorted perhaps over the centuries, were still very close to the truth. The dark, malignant entities from the primaeval chaos had come to Earth long before the first men had evolved. They were old when the pyramids were young and the first Sumerian tablets still wet clay. Fortunately, they manifested themselves only to an unlucky few throughout the whole of the long millennia, but these occasional brushes with humanity were enough to bring into being the loathsome faiths that have existed since the beginnings of civilisation. There had been long, ageless aeons when they had ruled supreme on Earth and those who knew of them both dreaded and worshipped them.

This, I knew, was one of these elder things, deathless and utterly opposed to men whom they regarded as interlopers on the planet. To their chosen few they made their plans and wishes known in apocryphal dreams and visions while they waited in the dark and hidden places for the time when, as the books all said, the signs would be right and they would take over the world for themselves once more.

During that frantic, nightmare drive back to the village and the return journey to that house on the cliffs, I had found myself wishing with a terrible intensity that we would find nothing there. My uncle, I believed, was dead and gone into realms I could not even imagine, as had at least six poor devils within the memory of the people still living in the village, and had it remained that way, I might have somehow found it possible to force my mind to ignore, to forget, that hideous abomination I thought I had seen.

Yet after all, the supreme horror was still to come, and the fact that it was witnessed not only by myself, but by the six stalwart and unimaginative men who accompanied me back to the house, means that never again shall I be able to sleep peacefully in my bed, or stand in the faintly shimmering starlight of a summer’s night and feel easy in my mind. Perhaps Trelawney is the lucky one, living in a blank emptiness, staring at the walls of the small room in which he is kept at the Newcastle Mental Hospital, since his mind has now retreated behind a mental barrier through which nothing can penetrate.

I will try to set down as concisely and accurately as possible what confronted us as we entered that lower chamber, through the splintered doorway with its sagging lintel and mouldering boards, but here I must choose my words carefully. The men had all brought powerful torches with them and in their combined light the undisturbed grey dust threw back a malevolent glimmer that brought the uncontrolled shivering back into my body. The camera and tripod lay smashed on the floor where I had knocked them over in my heedless fight. My empty revolver lay half-buried in the dust at the bottom of the stairs. In the muffling silence nothing moved as I opened my mouth to call my uncle’s name, I thought that perhaps I had imagined or dreamed it all.

But even before I could call, one of the men cried out, pointed a shaking arm and as one man we turned and stared at the unnameable horror that was slowly coming down the stairs to meet us. In the torchlight, the shape and features were barely recognisable, yet we all knew who—
or rather what—
it was!

Only a bubbling, inarticulate sound came through the lips of that which had once been James Oliver, my revered uncle, and, even as it crawled, the limbs crumbled into a grey dust, the body collapsing and sagging hideously,
flowing
as it swayed and slithered forward. For a moment, I thought I saw the eyes turned with a look of hopeless pleading in my direction, thought it tried to lift itself upright as a man should walk, but on feet that were no longer flesh and blood, but something infinitely horrible. Then it dropped, dripping into a powder, which had neither shape nor form, joining its substance irretrievably with the rest of the dust that lay thickly over the floors and stairs.

THE KEEPER OF DARK POINT

There was a thick, white sea mist obscuring the edges of the hills that morning when I stepped down from the ancient coach which had brought me along the endless, twisting roads to this godforsaken spot on the South Devon coast. The muscles of my legs and body were stiff from the long, overnight journey on the train from London, and the shorter, though equally wearying ride on the bus which had brought me south from Kingsbridge. The sleep which I had missed lay heavy behind my eyes, and the impact of that first glimpse of the country that lay before me struck me with the force of a physical blow; and although there may have been a sun somewhere beyond that thick veil of darkening fog which hung heavy and impenetrable over the shoreline, the chill of the night and darkness still touched me, still hung in the air, and I shivered as I drew in my first breaths of it.

Standing there, listening to the wheezy rattle of the bus as it began to move away from me between the dew-gleaming hedgerows, I felt oddly bewildered and out of place. I had entered this unfamiliar landscape too abruptly for me to be able to take it all in at once. Indeed, as the sound of the bus faded into the muffling distance, I felt a sudden urge to run after it, to climb back on board and leave this place. It was an overpowering impulse, and now, looking back over the events that had led up to my being there, I am certain there was some strange foreboding of evil, some presentiment that had something oddly prophetic about it. The bus had vanished around a bend in the road, the groan of its engine fading swiftly into silence, and the opportunity was gone.

Not that I recognised it then as an opportunity. As I began to trudge along the road, I felt a sense of surprise at myself, and there was a morbid fascination that was disturbing, something I found difficult to analyse or classify. At first, I decided that it was the unworldly aspect of that stretch of rugged coastline, seen at intervals through the writhing tendrils of mist, which brought the feeling of alarm to my mind, and made me uneasy. And then I recollected the letter, which reposed in my breast pocket, the prime reason for my being there, and I knew that my uneasiness had a secondary and possibly more potent cause.

Somewhere in this desolate part of the country, I hoped to discover what had happened to my brother. It was almost six months since I had heard anything from him. When he had first come to Devon, two years before, he had written every month, his letters filled with news of ancient folklore of the place, the old legends and myths which he had been investigating for the book he was writing. Then, abruptly, and without any warning whatsoever, all word had ceased. My letters to him had gone unanswered, and in the end, I had grown so concerned that I had put an advertisement in the local newspapers asking for any information as to his whereabouts.

Even then, several weeks had passed before I had received a reply, in the shape of the letter that brought me hurrying to Devon by the first train, for there was something about it that had alarmed me intensely. It was not so much that my correspondent had written, as what he had implied in half-veiled tones that had aroused me to my present state of uneasiness.

Taking it out of my pocket, I read it through again, striving to see in that rough, oddly archaic scrawl, the reason for the stirring of fear in my mind:

Traganmawes,
Tor Mount,
South Devon.
William S. Meredith, Esq.
12 St. Mary’s Court,
London S.E.1.
September 23, 1934
My Dear Sir,
Your advertisement asking for details of the whereabouts of Philip Meredith appeared recently in the
Tor Mount Gazette.
I believe I am in a position to supply you with news of him which I am sure will prove of interest. I might say that since he came here two years ago, he has been engaged in a study of the most peculiar type, one that has aroused a definite antagonism towards him on the part of the more superstitious people in the neighbourhood. As you may imagine, there are many old legends whispered in this part of the world, queer tales one hears from the local farmers and fisherfolk.
I am afraid your brother was a little too persistent in tracking down the sources of these myths, came a little too close to the truth for his own good. There are things which I cannot put down on paper, and for this reason it is essential you should come here with all speed so that we may meet and discuss the matter.
As for myself, I have both seen and heard things in the hills and in particular in the area near Dark Point, which appears to be the focal point for most of these manifestations. I suppose all of this will seem strange to a city man, but I must point out that here we see things far differently to most, as you may find if you decide to come. There is a bus that connects with the overnight train to Plymouth at Kingsbridge, getting you here early in the morning. If I cannot meet you, my house is at the far end of the street overlooking the cliffs, some distance from the others and almost halfway towards Dark Point lighthouse.
Yours very sincerely,
Hedley Lindennan

My feelings concerning the contents of this letter were not such as to ease the disturbing uneasiness in my mind. I did not, for one moment, believe that there was anything real or sinister in the odd happenings which Lindennan mentioned in such obviously veiled terms, but the fact that he had somehow omitted to give any details as to what had happened to Philip was sufficient to arouse the utmost apprehension in my being. Now, as I made my way through the shrouding mist, I felt a strange sense of fright mingled with the nearness to malevolent and forbidden things, and it was easy for me to recognise how unhallowed superstitions might grow out of all proportion in a place such as this. Old beliefs would die hard here, shut away from the tempering effects of the outside world. Perhaps, after all, there were oddly inexplicable happenings taking place in this part of the country, which could have been magnified until they had assumed a dominant role in the lives of these simple-minded people.

Occasionally, as the wind freshened in gusts from the sea, the wall of ocean fog thinned and gave me brief, tantalising glimpses of the village which lay a few hundred yards ahead of me, the solitary road winding through it before it went sharply inland and vanished over the brow of a beetling hill to my right; and there, perhaps a mile distant, the white, spectral tower of a lighthouse standing lonely and desolate on a narrow peninsula of rock thrusting out into the beating surf. This, no doubt, was Dark Point.

The village was obviously of wide extent in spite of the small number of dwellings, since it stretched in a single line of cottages along the seafront; but here and there, I noticed a deserted and decayed building, mouldering in the mist, a sagging thatched roof, walls crumbling in amid a shamble of wood and bricks in overgrown gardens. It was not a sight calculated to ease the growing apprehension in my mind. Set a little to the rear of the street, just showing above the roofs, I observed the spire of a small church and halfway through the village, a small jetty thrust its way into the sea with a handful of fishing boats drawn up alongside it.

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