Showing posts with label Nyarlathotep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nyarlathotep. Show all posts

Saturday, December 31, 2016

THE WHISPERER IN DARKNESS (NYARLATHOTEP)

THE WHISPERER IN DARKNESS (NYARLATHOTEP)
"To Nyarlathotep, Mighty Messenger, must all things be told. And He shall put on the semblance of men, the waxen mask and the robe that hides, and come down from the world of Seven Suns to mock. . . ."

"With Akeley’s permission I lighted a small oil lamp, turned it low, and set it on a distant bookcase beside the ghostly bust of Milton; but afterward I was sorry I had done so, for it made my host’s strained, immobile face and listless hands look damnably abnormal and corpse-like. He seemed half-incapable of motion, though I saw him nod stiffly once in a while."

"For the things in the chair, perfect to the last, subtle detail of microscopic resemblance—or identity—were the face and hands of Henry Wentworth Akeley."
H.P. Lovecraft, The Whisperer In Darkeness

 

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

MINISTER OF THE MONOLITHS (NYARLATHOTEP)

MINISTER OF THE MONOLITHS (NYARLATHOTEP)
"The monoliths shook in the soil like the prongs of a tuning fork. As they vibrated they began to sway back and forth, each swing wider than the last until the dirt spewed up at the base of each in a small explosion. It was the legs. Each one had four crustacean-like legs covered in rough shell armor and pointed at the end. Then, as they lifted themselves out of the loam the stone in the center of each cracked revealing a glowing red eye. "

"But the real horror was the center column. The same as the other but larger and engraved with indecipherable glyphs. It loomed over Nick and Denise as the sat in shocked horror. Their mouths agape as their brains tried to catch up with what their eyes were seeing. This was supposed to be a fun trip to see a local oddity. They never would have believed that the legends of living stones were true. Then the largest one opened it's eye. Different than the rest, it was tri-lobed, orange, and horrible." 


Friday, August 7, 2015

THE INSATIABLE ONE II (NYARLATHOTEP)


THE INSATIABLE ONE II (NYARLATHOTEP)
"They gaped at it. That was all they could do: stare past the horrible bacchanal of dismemberment to the statue itself, as it began to move."

"The blood that had trickled down the front of the idol boiled and steamed, and the head that had been placed atop the neck began to swell. The sockets widened until the nasion popped, revealing a single eye, monstrous and three-lobed. The mouth melted and drooped, sabre-like fangs sprouting from the gums while a livid tongue unrolled down to the statue's chest."

"With a clang, the idol cracked down the middle and each half fell to the side. What was coiled beneath was far too large to have been housed in the shell from which it erupted."

"As the forked tail uncoiled, the head elongated and tapered to match that lower appendage. Membranous wings spread out from its back as its arms stretched forth. A spray of acidic slime spattered the cavorters as they writhed in ecstasy or pain, it was impossible to tell which. What was left where the statue had once stood now resembled an enormous winged worm, with a face and arms."

"Wilenski could not look away from it. He stared into its great eye, and as he did so he felt as if something was being planted in the base of his skull. Then he felt it twitch."
Michael Bukowski & Jason McKittrick, The Bronze God Awakens
Edited by Orrin Grey


Thursday, August 6, 2015

THE INSATIABLE ONE I (NYARLATHOTEP)

THE INSATIABLE ONE I (NYARLATHOTEP)
"McConnel and Wilenski peered over the ledge as a pandemoniac scene unfolded before them. A dozen men and women cavorted naked around a fire before a six foot high bronze statue on an equally tall stone base. The statue depicted a man with his arms out, palms up, as if in waiting. The sculptors had taken great care in depicting the statue's Scythian attire, even carving the intricate patterns of the tunic and boots in relief. A bow hung over its shoulder and a quiver at its side. The statue's features were perfect, except in one detail; where there should have been a head, there was none."

"The men and women seemed out of place, and not merely because they were trespassing on an active excavation site. Their features were Caucasian, their skin so white it had a bluish translucent hue."
"In the flickering light of the pyre the two archaeologists were able to make out the grotesque features of the worshipers in their revelry. What they had originally taken to be sensational rumors were proved true; the cultists had tried to emulate their headless god as best they could. To varying degrees they had removed parts of their heads. For some it was as simple as a shaved head, while others had taken off ears and noses. A select few had removed teeth."

"Two of the figures approached the statue, each of them pulling a severed human head from a worn and bloody sack. As one, they placed their grisly prizes in each of the statue's upturned hands. When they had finished, a woman whose face was covered with a long and gauzy scarf--the only piece of clothing among the throng--approached the back of the statue. As she climbed the pedestal, she removed the covering from her face. Her head was shaved, her ears and nose gone, and so were her eyes. This, however, was not the worst part. She had somehow removed her own lower jaw. A raw hole pulsed open and closed where not even a tongue dangled. She crawled up the back of the statue, moving unerringly in spite of her blindness, and placed a third severed head atop the statue's neck."

"Wilenski stifled a wretch and turned his head, but try as he might, McConnel could not look away. And so he saw the head atop the statue's neck open its gleaming eyes, 
and look back at him."
Michael Bukowski & Jason McKittrick, The Bronze God Awakens
Edited by Orrin Grey

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

THE HARBINGER OF THE ABYSSAL MAW (NYARLATHOTEP)

THE HARBINGER OF THE ABYSSAL MAW (NYARLATHOTEP)
"You've had about enough. It’s all so tiresome — the late nights at work, the growing silences between you, the old passions grown cold. Even more than the loneliness all of that engenders, what bothers you is the dull predictability of the whole sorry mess. He’s made you into a cliche, and that’s something you can’t abide."

   " He’s sitting there eating his goddamned breakfast without a single word to you, without a grunt of acknowledgement, and you’re scrubbing the pan you used to fry his eggs, watching the dirty water spiral its way into the drain. He’s masticating his food with his mouth open like a feral child. It’s the little things that break you in the end. "

    “'This isn’t going to work anymore,' you say. You feel the rampant power of the statement, and the fear it drags behind.

    'What do you mean?'

    “'This whole thing. Us.' You can’t bear to look at him while you say it. Easier to watch the spiraling water, the black hole that sucks it all in.

  "He stops gobbling his food. 'I don’t understand.'”
   
“'I don’t know you anymore. I look at you and it’s like someone else staring back at me. All we ever do anymore is talk past each other. What happened to the man I married?'”

    “'I ate him.'”

    "You turn around. He has no head. In its place is a dark, swirling gyre, a buckling-inward of space. It is like looking into a black hole, you think, or down the throat of the Beast. Parts of your mind dislodge and float into it: your ability to apprehend color; your memory of your father. Something — a cold antagonism, a radiant evil — regards you from within the turning chaos."

    “'I slipped into his eye ate his brain from the inside out. Now I wear him like a suit. He’s a little snug, but I’m nothing if not adaptable. I am the harbinger of the waking of the abyssal maw. I’ve built a mound of blood-greased bones in the basement and in a week’s time I will light it afire, using the marrow of your own children and the rendered flesh of the Collinses down the block. This will act as one of the Black Lanterns which will summon Azathoth, the eater of worlds. There are many others. I’m surprised you haven’t smelled it! It’s pretty rank.'”

    "You can only shake your head."

    “'What I’m saying is, I need another week.'”

    "You find a way around your dismay, enough to use your voice again. 'Oh my God. Did you even hear me? I’m telling you I want a divorce.'”

    "He sighs, and sits back down. You turn away from him. He starts slurping up his food again. It feels as though nothing has changed. You turn off the water, dry the pan, and get on with your day. "
Nathan Ballingrud, What We Talk About When We Talk About Nyarlathotep
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration


 

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

THE CROOKED SPECTRE (NYARLATHOTEP)


THE CROOKED SPECTRE (NYARLATHOTEP)
"I hesitantly descend the staircase, my eyes never leaving the door of the house. The noise beyond is so faint I can hardly be sure it’s there, and the windows that flank the door show only the hint of shadows moving across them in the night. I have Stella’s strongly-worded assurance she is coming, but her attempt at relieving my anxiety only sparks a thousand thoughts in my mind. Is that her now, safe and sound, on my stoop? Is she lying there injured, trying desperately to gather my attention before something more tragic befalls her? Or is it something else entirely? Something worse than my 
sleep-addled mind can imagine?"

"The drawing in the book is crude, yet it clearly etches out a shape amid the dark scribbles and scrawl. A body of twisting lines intersecting, ganglinous and knotted; an eyeless face full of row upon row of teeth. Multitudinous digits protruding from backward-bending arms. The drawing is of pure nightmare, and yet I sense attitude in the line, as though the artist is not fearful of the beast but envious, or perhaps enamored. It exceeds reason that such a thing should be real, let alone stalking me for something so simple as disturbing a pile of stones and taking the old black book on which they sat; yet Lunen is dead and gone and Marguite no longer has eyes with which to see or a mouth which can speak of what has happened. One by one my friends have been taken; taken by that crooked spectre in its relentless pursuit of me."

"Stella is all that remains of my life; my poor, disbelieving, intractable Stella. If it is not her there on my stoop, if she has yet to arrive, it will only be a matter of time. Do I dare open the door to greet her? Or should I let her face alone what is intended for me, allowing me to prolong my life that much longer?"

"My hand is on the doorknob for an eternity as I wonder what I will do."
Simon Strantzas, The Crooked Spectre
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration

 

Monday, August 3, 2015

THE BONE MASON (NYARLATHOTEP)

 
THE BONE MASON (NYARLATHOTEP)
"He’s a walking bone; smooth and yellow, his teeth all one and sharp, like the edge of a chisel."

"You’d think he’d walk stiff but he moves smooth as a ball joint."

"You’d think he’d be weak but when he chisel-smiles your bones turn to rubber and your blood to jelly and all you want is for him to rub you stiff with his long, hard fingers. All you want is for your bones to knit together so you can join him on his long, slick walk."

"When he leaves you he takes the tiniest bones with him, the ones he says you won’t need (the stapes, the incus and the malleus). Even so, you call after him, 'Thank You,' because you love him and want him to return. He turns and says something, his face full of love and affection, but you cannot hear his response."
Kaaron Warren, The Bone Mason
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration


Friday, February 6, 2015

TLOQUENAHUAQUE/TEZCATLIPOCA/IPALNEMOAN (NYARLATHOTEP)

TLOQUENAHUAQUE/TEZCATLIPOCA/IPALNEMOAN (NYARLATHOTEP)
'“Iä! Iä! Tloquenahuaque, Thou Who Art All In Thyself!  
Thou too, Ipalnemoan, By Whom We Live!"'
 H.P. Lovecraft & Adolphe de Castro, The Electric Executioner

"The figure's robes and ornaments mark it as an ahua, or godking, but the Maya never drew or depicted figures with multiple arms. The two headed snake is the double-headed serpent bar, borne by Mayan kinds as a symbol of their authority. The blood-red tentacle in place of a head is very unconventional, but seems likely to be a blood scroll (a symbolic representation of a stream of blood), implying that this is a decapitated captive king."

"Then he was a tall, limping man, with bright plumed headdress and a shining black mirror at his ankle. The Crawling Chaos said that in this mask he did rule at Tenoshititlan, and did drink the blood of thousands spilled to vilify him."
Sam Johnson, A Resection Of Time


"In some cases, the highest source of life seems to transcend the polytheistic pantheon, and it can be addressed with singular or dual names: One striking name is Ipalnemoa(ni), "the one through whom one is living" (Life Giver), or Tloque Nauaque, "omnipresent one."'
 Andreas Grünschloß, Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature 

"The complex and conflicted character of Tezcatlipoca seen by their different names and
attributes. In Book VI of the Florentine Codex, 360 names or ways to address Tezcatipoca
are found. Some of the names are:
Tloque Nahuaque: The Lord Of the Near and Nigh"
Doris Heyden, Tezcatlipoca En el Mundo Náhuatl


"During the Late Postclassic period, Tezcatlipoca may appear with a serpent foot, although in this case the serpent usually appears emerging from the smoking mirror that typically replaces his foot. The mirror or serpent foot probably aludes to the creation myth in which Tezcatlipoca loses his foot while battling with the earth monster. Aside from the smoking obsidian mirror marking his foot, the Late Postclassic Tezcatlipoca tends to have broad alternating bands of yellow and black across the face. The nocturnal jaguar, the most powerful animal of Mesoamerica, was the animal counterpart of Tezcatlipoca."
Mary Miller & Karl Taube, The Gods and Symbols Of Ancient Mexico and the Maya

 "There are small bells on his legs, pear-shaped and round bells."
"He was, from the top of his arms down to his hands, painted black with gypsum, which is a sort of shining metal...His legs, from half of his thighs all the way down, were dyed in the same manner."
Guilhem Olivier, 
Mockeries and Metomorphoses Of An Aztec God: Tezcatlipoca, Lord Of the Smoking Mirror
  
"The mask of the god Tezcatlipoca was made from shell, turquoise, lignite and human skull."
Anita Ganeri, Mesoamerican Myth
 
"A protean wizard, Tezcatlipoca caused the death of many Toltecs by his black magic and induced the virtuous Quetzalcóatl to sin, drunkenness, and carnal love, thus putting an end to the Toltec golden age. Under his influence the practice of human sacrifice was introduced into central Mexico."
Encyclopedia Britannica


Tuesday, August 19, 2014

JACK O'LANTERN (NYARLATHOTEP)

 JACK O'LANTERN (NYARLATHOTEP)
"Jack O'Lantern is a figure from early Irish folklore. Originally, Jack was a mean, drunken man who was forsaken by both heaven and hell and cursed to restlessly wander the earth for all of eternity. He was given a magical coal by the devil which he used to light his way through the night."

"In reality, this forlorn figure is one of the many masks of Nyarlathotep. He may appear either as the misshapen, bug-eyed, wide-mouthed man or as a man with a grinning jack o'lantern for a head. He sometimes is seen in rags and sometimes in elegant dress clothes complete with tuxedo with tails."

"He was known to and feared by Druids, witches and other pagan peoples, but not worshiped. In the modern world his carved pumpkin lantern has become a symbol of Halloween."
Scott David Aniolowski, Malleus Monstrorum



Thursday, August 14, 2014

THE QUEEN IN RED (NYARLATHOTEP)

 
THE QUEEN IN RED (NYARLATHOTEP)
"The Queen In Red usually appears as a very beautiful and powerful woman. She is always dressed in regal crimson and lavishly adorned with gems and jewelry. At times she may appear as a horrible bat-winged, serpent haired, clawed woman with vicious fangs. In this form she wears filthy red robes and wields a gleaming scythe crimson with blood."
 Scott David Aniolowski, Malleus Monstrorum


Friday, May 16, 2014

SISTERS OF THE DARKSOME NIGHT (NYARLATHOTEP)

SISTERS OF THE DARKSOME NIGHT (NYARLATHOTEP)
"Manhattan is as far away from your God as you ever imagined you could be. It's why you moved three thousand miles from home."

"Your mother died before you were old enough to remember her, and your father was a stranger to you and your younger sister both--a stone-faced, religious figure who watched and controlled your every move. For love, you used to tell yourself. For love. You were baptized and raised in St. Mark's Lutheran Church, a three-storied, multi-basemented labyrinth of cement and stone overlooking a sliver of the San Juan Straits: it was a second home, but no different than the first. Prayers and scripture at meals and gatherings, evenings of moral lectures and study, lengthy church sermons in the candlelit nave as you squiggled against hard granite pews like a pinned worm. Escape took the form of public school classrooms and part-time jobs in musty fabric stores--but as you transformed over the years into a young woman, the leash grew as taut as your father's palpable, unspoken fear. For what, of what, you never asked and he never said."

"When it became clear that there would be no college in your future, no future in your future except church and church and church, you excused yourself from scripture study one lovely afternoon in your eighteenth year, taking a purse packed with a single maxi-pad and many small bills, leaving your coat behind. The hallways were bright with summer sun and chalkboard dust, and the overhead lights shook slightly from repair work in the basement--a sixty-year old foundation problem that had yet to be fixed. You walked down the stairs, past the restrooms and outside, through the gravel parking lot into the leafy suburbs of Tacoma. Shivering with ice-blooded fear, you walked swiftly without looking behind you, anticipating the squeal of tires, the blare of horns. No one came. Then again, why would they? Every year the church bled members faster than it sank into the damaged ground. You made it to the bus stop, then the train station, and then you were gone."

"Twenty-two years later, you twist into sleep every night with all the lamps switched on, and wake every morning in a room suspended by twenty-five stories of concrete and steel girders. As pale and colorless as your skin is, it is always with relief that you greet the cancer-bright sun pouring through curtainless windows. Surprise, as well: sleep reminds you of home, of church, of some subterranean chapel of your soul. Every night you fight against falling back down again. Every morning you arise, above ground and alive. Outside, a constant drone of machinery and metal surrounds Manhattan like an archangel's invincible shield: the night terrors of your childhood fade and you are safe for twelve hours more. Most of those hours, like today, are spent at the reception desk of the company you work for, encased in the comforting artificial hum of air conditioners, the electric clicks and purrs of the phone, the rip of the letter openers through tape and envelope flaps. You reach for a battered box with the word morgenstern scrawled in black marker on the side, and stab it open like an infected wound as you think about what you'll have for lunch."

"Bits of moldering paper spill onto your neat desk, flecked with stony grey grit that catches in your lashes and bites your eyes. Old photographs, memorandums, bulletin drafts and personal notes--six decades of the history of St. Mark's, a secret saga that no one driving past the pretty building and clipped lawns could ever have imagined or known. A faded Polaroid flips out onto your palm. Two ancient women in the sunlight church basement, naked, hairless, blind. The teeth of their lipless mouths have fused into monstrous smiles, the ribbed walls of calcium growing over their chins and down, joining their exposed ribs. The lower halves of their bodies have grown together, legs and hips joined in an Escher configuration of impossible curves doubling back into themselves, as if the women are birthing a colossal vertebra, barely contained beneath the radiant translucence of their porcelain skin. You turn the photo over. Two names, written in your dead mother's spindly cursive, ten years before you were born: Margo and Ruthie Johansson, church potluck, 1964. The first!"

"Some sticky birth plug of memory squeezes and pops out of your soul: all you've done to create this clean adult life bleeds away, leaving behind the young woman you used to be, more naked and alone than when you were first born. You push back from your desk, and the papers slither over the edge and down, whispering a language you never thought you'd hear again. Liese: say nothing about what's in this box to anyone, an unsigned note by your foot reads in neat print. Erika, your older sister, is the only one who knows where you are. Father passed last week. I need you. Come home."

"Ten hours later, engines rush you across a country gripped in autumn gold and brown. America undulates below, shimmying in the long shadows of mountains and clouds, as if the manmade layers of city and suburb are recoiling from the touch of the feral lands upon which they rest. You watch ice cubes rings melt in the plastic cup, and slip them one by one onto the tip of your tongue, sucking away every last drop of cheap white wine. Boozy, irrational daydreams set your heart galloping--visions of linoleum-lined underground classrooms crumbling inward, sucking you into the sunless grottos of the earth. As the plane crosses the ridge of the High Cascades, you see how the land has ossified under the thin skin of forest and soil. Mount Rainier is a clavicle crowned in frost and snow; all the bones tumble together as they descend in jagged foothills to the pelvic shores of the Puget Sound; and then they sink into the Pacific."

"Words bubble out of you like magma, tuneless snippets of a long-forgotten hymn. "Morningstar in darksome night, who the sad earth makest bright--" You whisper the phrase in an endless loop, staring out the window, watching the world rush by."

"Where the skeleton ends, you cannot see. But you know where it began. You know when."
Livia Llewellyn, Excerpt from Morgenstern der finstern Nacht
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration 


Thursday, May 15, 2014

THE STRANGE DARK ONE (NYARLATHOTEP)

 THE STRANGE DARK ONE (NYARLATHOTEP)
"He stood on a slightly raised platform, the shrouded one. Swarthy, slender, sinister, he was robed in scarlet silk. On a table beside him was a device similar to a child's magic lantern. Its diseased illumination cast obscene shapes that moved along the walls."

"Weakly, I raised my agonizing head. He stood before me-grim, austere, merciless. My hungry mouth kissed his chilly feet."

"Boldly, I clung to Nyarlathotep's garment and pulled myself to my feet. Swirling light and blackness played upon his regal visage. Fantastically, he smiled' and as he did so his face slipped, as though he wore some tight-fitting mask that had momentarily lost its hold. He lifted a hand and I saw upon his palm a living symbol. Tilting to it, I licked the pulsing insignia. It was sharp and ripped the tongue that touched it."
W.H. Pugmire, The Hands That Reek and Smoke
From a story provided exclusively for an Illustro Obscurum collaboration

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

THE RED GIRL OF CHATOUYE (NYARLATHOTEP)

THE RED GIRL OF CHATOUYE (NYARLATHOTEP)
"During the Hundred Years' War, when God and His saints slept, there were many towns cleared by plague and recruitment, amongst these the town of Chatouye, which lay in the dead land between France and Flanders. By the time of Guillaume Cornîche, foremost witch-finder of his age, Chatouye was well-known to be mainly occupied by women of all ages and some few men, mostly very old or very young, and that since their lands were fallow and had been burnt many times over, it was not immediately apparent how they managed to sustain themselves. Yet every army which had marched through the area during the previous four decades had somehow failed to loot, occupy or otherwise molest Chatouye, and the town itself remained sound, its occupants well-fed."

"When Cornîche made inquiries, he uncovered rumours that Chatouye was home to a notorious and remarkable compliment of witches, a coven of covens whose roots went back far further than most historical record, perhaps even before the Romans founded Lutece, which eventually became Paris."

"Chief amongst these at the time was a woman named Sépultrice Filette-du-Raum, a noted voulteuse or doll-maker, who claimed descent from fallen angels. Described as “seemingly young and fresh, small and well-made, with odd eyes of two different colours and an exceeedingly wicked smile,” she was of unknown age and origins, but was said to have settled in Chatouye sometime before the Great Death began. At her behest, the demoiselles of Chatouye met at the intersection of two local plague-pits, a graveyard crossroads, to distil a sure and certain poison from mushrooms bred out of rotting flesh which they then sold to outsiders, especially rich or nobly-born widows-to-be.

"During these sessions, the Red Girl of Chatouye—as she was sometimes called—would wear a cloak made from uncured hides and covered in needles she had used either to torment wax images until those they represented died, or kill unwanted babies she midwived by slipping them through the fontanelles of the children in question. She would also read from a heretical book called the Testament of Carnamagos, thus allying herself with both the Carnean mystery cult which sprang up under Emperor Elegabalus, its originators, and the notorious Red Sisterhood of Coptic Alexandria, who preserved it by guile into Christian times. Transcribed while in a trance in ink brewed from her own blood, this text allowed Filette-du-Raum to open the doors those cults had been designed to keep closed, calling up “Those Outside, Those Others, the Knockers and Intruders, who poison and degrade all they touch,” who the pre-Etruscan Goddess Carna, as demarcator of sacred spaces, had previously struggled to keep out, banished beyond “the walls around the world.” 

"After the Red Girl had been taken up, tortured and burned alive by Cornîche and his helpers, the town Chatouye was likewise cleansed with fire and salt: it became a grave folded inside two graves, a threefold plague-pit. Yet some survivors managed the flee nonetheless, and prospered: les Chatouyennes turned up again and again under different yet easily-decoded names in Belgium, Germany, England, the United States, Canada, even parts of Asia and Africa—became Chadwents, Chatwins, Shadwins, Shotwands, Schatzvendes, Schendewaerts, and so on. Everywhere they remained doll-makers, witches who formed matrilineal covens in rural areas from which to worship their evil angels and dead gods undisturbed, all-but-impossible to entirely root out. For the Red Girl's blood writes our fate, as their saying goes; we shall not entirely die from this world, so the covenant with our progenitor Raum Goetim states, not so long as one of us lives on to remember, and set the book of our power down afresh."

"As for Cornîche, his relatives also survived, becoming monster-hunters in their turn, often pursuing the same line of witchery he had uncovered. But he himself died after ill-advisedly taking the Testament into his library, possessed by a demonic impulse which led him to slaughter first his own wife and children, then himself, after finally burning the ill-fated tome. He who lived a witch-hunter was thus reckoned a warlock, his memory defamed and shunned, and the Red Girl had her revenge."
Gemma Files, The Red Girl Of Chatouye
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration


Tuesday, May 13, 2014

RICHARD M. NIXON (NYARLATHOTEP)

 
RICHARD M. NIXON (NYARLATHOTEP)
BEGIN TAPE.
… [inaudible]... Hunt was always drinking. Always drunk. Sometimes pills. Sometimes just Scotch. But the big man loved drinking Scotch so that was fine. He loved any kind of [inaudible]...


The night, the night in question, he wanted to talk about FUBELT. Things in South America were well you’ll find out about that at some point I’m sure. International machinations were always a source of  [garbled]…and for once, we’re not here to talk about politics. No...We’re here to talk about his eyes. That was the first night I saw it happen. Later, other things
happened. We can talk about later later, yes, later we can talk about everything else. Liddy, the ratfucks, the [redacted], and the [redacted] and…

[two minutes of silence]
 
Sorry. Sorry. My mind drifts, y’know. Like Haight Ashbury or something.

He never looked good, y’know, always stubbly in the evenings, and by then his skin was baggy. Big jowls. Ever wonder why he had such jowls? I know why. It was that night that his face slipped. Only time I saw it happen. It just slipped like... like it wasn’t his face at all, everything just moved a little bit off and I could see the cracks. I caught a glimpse of his true face. And it was… All I can say is his eyes were made of thousands of eyes. Eyes of thousands of eye.

I can tell you don’t understand, but just try, okay?! It’s important.
[audible rustling of clothes.]

Did I mention it? Fuck no. And he just talked and drank, like nothing was weird-don’t think he even noticed-And all those eyes, they were all watching me.
[garbled tape noise. Buzzing sounds. Conversation muffled.]

… Kissinger was there of course, yeah. He was always there. But it was weird. He didn’t ever turn to look back behind the desk at the big man. Like he knew what he’d see if he did. And then, just before they sent me away with my marching orders, it was Kissinger who winked at me.
 
From deposition unnamed White House Aide, serving 19691973.
Tape Five. Minutes 4861.
Discovered in the vaults under 18001 Yorba Linda Blvd.
Philip Gelatt, Untitled
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration


Monday, May 12, 2014

THAT WHICH IS NOT A DOG (NYARLATHOTEP)

THAT WHICH IS NOT A DOG (NYARLATHOTEP)
"A dog that is not a dog. A black dog. It haunts the roads in the south of Mexico. You can stumble upon it late at night, when the moon is dim in the sky. A black dog, but not a dog. The eyes are wrong and it’s too large and it’s too black. And when you look at it close you realize it’s a man with a dog’s head, hands splayed upon the dirt. But the hands are wrong too, because it has too many fingers and the joints are bent in impossible ways. In the morning you can see where it went by the strange tracks it leaves in the ground. 
 A dog that is not a dog."
Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Untitled
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration


Friday, May 2, 2014

ZUPAN (NYARLATHOTEP)

 
ZUPAN (NYARLATHOTEP)
"His companion, on the other hand, was sober, well-dressed, slender, and mustached. His dark hair had been parted precisely down the middle; 
indeed, everything about him was precise."

"Question forgotten, Marjorie gaped, heart pounding, to see Zupan standing atop a small pyramid that had not been on stage a moment before, dressed in the robe and headdress she’d thought she’d seen at the beginning of his act. The headdress was Egyptian, of the nemes-style made famous by Tutankhamun, except that Zupan’s looked to be of no real substance, comprised instead entirely of chryselephantine electricity. As were his robes, Marjorie realized, when as he began to descend the pyramid one bolt of crackling energy moved strangely, momentarily revealing a flash of flesh that left her blushing. She kept her eyes on his face after that. He was naked under the garment—
if garment it was."
Molly Tanzer, Mysterium Tremendum
From a story provided exclusively for an Illustro Obscurum collaboration
 


Thursday, May 1, 2014

THE OBSIDIAN PHARAOH (NYARLATHOTEP)

  

THE OBSIDIAN PHARAOH (NYARLATHOTEP)
"The office was gone, replaced by a vast, dark plane.  Both the man in the shadows and the old man had remained, but behind each, an enormous black shape loomed.  The man in the shadows stood at the foot of a monument that would have put the Statue of Liberty to shame.  Struck from obsidian polished to trap what light there was within its acres of skin, the statue was of a man wearing a giant, gold mask whose design suggested the burial mask of an ancient pharaoh."

"The great, golden head of the statue was moving, tilting its blank face downwards.  At first, I thought the structure was breaking apart, but the head remained attached as its titan eyes rolled in their sockets.  I could feel its gaze churning across the plane in my direction.  It crashed over me like a wall of water."
John Langan, Irezumi
From a soon-to-be-published story provided 
exclusively for an Illustro Obscurum collaboration


Wednesday, April 30, 2014

THE IDOL OF THE HEADLESS MEN (NYARLATHOTEP)

 THE IDOL OF THE HEADLESS MEN (NYARLATHOTEP)
    "The massive crypt door fell from its hinges with a resounding clang, and they saw what the Professor had brought back with him from his expeditions. At the time he had carried it in a crate no bigger than a bread box, but it had grown in the years since. As it rolled forth from the tomb, it looked at first like a giant boulder—maybe one of the papier mache boulders that decorated Kirby's sets. But then as it came to a stop they could make out its features and they recognized it for what it was: a mummified human head, albeit one the size of a camera truck."

    "That would have been enough, of course. To freeze their blood, to send them running, but it wasn't the end. For a moment the grisly thing just sat there, resting on the place where its bottom jaw should have been, and they were allowed the blissful illusion that its movement had been a natural occurrence, the result of it becoming unsettled within the tomb. But then they saw one horrid eye peer at them from a gaping socket, and then retreat on some kind of stalk, as though it was not the eye of the head at all, but of some creature that dwelled within."

    "With a sound like the grinding of giant teeth, the skull began to rock back and forth, and they saw masses of human arms—of normal size, but as mummified as the head—scrabbling at the ground from beneath it. One by one, the gnarled hands found purchase, and then the head began to lurch toward them, pulled along by a tide of arms, like a hermit crab dragging its shell."
Orrin Grey, The Cult Of Headless Men
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration


Tuesday, April 29, 2014

SHE WHO LURKS BEYOND THE VEIL (NYARLATHOTEP)


SHE WHO LURKS BEYOND THE VEIL (NYARLATHOTEP)
"I found eventually a brief excerpt in a tome I will not name here. In it was mentioned a rare form of XX:

"For she was there, a woman of refinement and grace. A vessel of lust and intrigue. My heart was compelled to love [her], while my being shuddered in deep shame and revulsion.
I became obsessed with the idea of this incarnation. The search for it forced me across continents, scouring rare books and scrolls, staring at etchings on walls of temples.
There were times when I felt a fool, when I thought perhaps the mask of the Woman was merely a mistranslation. Some fever dream. Why did I want to find her so badly?"

"I was staying in Budapest, with a nobleman and scholar. He was hosting a ball for the seasonal equinox. The guests were a glittery assortment of the wealthy and local academics. I was in a dour mood. Bored. Annoyed. I kept to a shadowy corner, sipping a warm Brandy, scowl affixed to my face. When, from out of the crowd, 
a woman approached me."
 
"She was tall, with a long swan neck, and a heart shaped face. Cherubic cheeks and pouty swollen lips. Those lips were pink, shining and wet. Obscene. Her eyes glinted. Like… like sapphires. Her hair, auburn, shone like spun copper in the candlelight. She took my hand in her gloved one and led me outside toward the gardens. They were silent as a shadow and so was she. She took me into the groves, the moonlight remote and cold above us. Then she turned to me, a faint smiling curling at her puffy mouth. And without a word she undid her gown and lowered it to her waist."

"Her breasts were high set, shapely. They ignited that most base desire in me. I went to her. She was graceful as a dancer, silent as a serpent, and soft as a flower petal. My eager hands sought out the bunching fabric and pushed the gown down, down to the dirt. I knew then that I had found the creature I so desperately searched for all this time."

"Below its taut belly and swell of womanly hips, hung her sex. It was massive in scale and dangled,obscenely, swaying like a tropical fruit from between strong thighs. Layers and layers of flesh and membrane resembling the draped fabric of a ladies skirt. Glistening and amphibious. Dripping with musk. A musk, I say with a deep shame, aroused me as it repulsed me. Then and now. Beneath the folds, like a pearl in an oyster, was its massive clitoris: large as a melon. I stared transfixed as it moved, revealing to me, another face. I think now this was Its true face. No less beautiful than the one above, wreathed in silksoft nether flesh and down hair."
 
"This was the mouth that beckoned me close, onto my knees, to press my ear to its velvet contours. This was the mouth that spoke."

"They found me the next morning, naked and pale, trembling and covered in viscous fluids. I still cannot sleep, cannot dream…"

"It was two months later that I finally took the small knife to my own genitals. As I cut, the words that mouth spoke echoed in my mind. I thought I could silence them. I was wrong."
Victoria Dalpe, Excerpt from Encounters Beyond the Veil
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration


Monday, April 28, 2014

THE THING FROM THE DOLMEN (NYARLATHOTEP)

THE THING FROM THE DOLMEN (NYARLATHOTEP)
"The cold pop and crack that trees do when icicles hang from your nose, I thought that's what made the noise. Wrong, very wrong. Stars and trees glowed the same color and the milky vapor of my breath hung before me as I twisted to see what…A shape emerged from the dolmen I’d departed, bearded slick stones reflecting the black deep, and deeper black wrapped a cavity of wormy softness. The figure came onward, hitching and dipping at disjointed angles, an unsleeved mass undulating and cohering into the towering semblance of a stick man screaming soundlessly 
through a mouth of rotted birchwood."
Laird Barron, Untitled
Written Exclusively For an Illustro Obscurum Collaboration