Read The Dark Boatman: Tales of Horror and the Cthulhu Mythos Online

Authors: John Glasby

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

The Dark Boatman: Tales of Horror and the Cthulhu Mythos (8 page)

BOOK: The Dark Boatman: Tales of Horror and the Cthulhu Mythos
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Then, on October 3, 1932, I moved into the manor. Three servants had been found who were agreeable to remain there with me, all of them from Truro, far enough afield for them not to have been affected by any of the wild rumours that were still rife concerning the place. William Pengarden had been a seaman for most of his fifty-three years, was a solid and very intense man, strong and obedient and dependable. Mary Ventnor, who combined the duties of cook and maid, was a tall girl of twenty-six, not given to listening to these tales of wild fancy, as also was Carfax, a man in his late thirties, sullen by nature, but robust and unimaginative. None of the three appeared concerned by the isolated nature of the manor, and if any of them had heard the curious stories which circulated in the district, they either ignored them, or kept them to themselves.

For almost two weeks, the general routine at Faxted Manor proceeded evenly and with a quite placidity, my own time being spent mainly in pouring through the old, moth-eaten documents which filled the shelves of the library in the West Wing. It may well be imagined how powerfully I was affected by these records when I discovered that many of them had been preserved from the earliest days of the house, were possibly priceless volumes, giving a graphic account of the happenings of those distant days. The picture provided by these writings, adding much to that which I had learnt from Carrington, was not one designed to set my mind at rest concerning the evil reputation the place possessed.

Before, the vague tales had been extremely picturesque and fanciful, most of them based on hearsay carried down and embellished through the long centuries. But the records here were of a different kind altogether, giving a consistent and onerously continual record of the house from the Eighth Century when a stone building had been erected on the site by an order of monks who had flourished there until their diabolical rites had forced the king, Edgar, to put an end to their heathen practices in 966. The monastery had been razed to the ground and after a short trial, the members of the order, without exception, had been hurled off the top of the cliff into the sea. There were dark hints in the documents of the relics which had been found buried in narrow passages beneath the site, of human and inhuman remains discovered in the lower chambers hewn out of the solid rock; and there was a general feeling of relief in the neighbourhood, and a belief that a terrible evil which had overshadowed them had been destroyed forever.

The area was apparently shunned, or at least disregarded, until the lands were given to William de Warr Hoppe in 1124 by Henry I, who built the forerunner of the present manor on the cliff top. For close on a hundred and fifty years there was no record of any trace of evil associated with the place, nor anything sinister about the family, who occupied. Then, in 1271, John Warr Hoppe extended the building by erecting the West Wing, covering the site of the ancient monastery, and the first inkling of the impending calamity that was to follow the family for more than six hundred years showed itself. Having married in the previous year, his first child, a girl, died five months after birth of a sickly malady which defied all analysis. Of the four other children of this union, two were stillborn, both girls, while the sons apparently thrived.

But the family seemed cursed after that. There were attestations of strange ailments which afflicted the Warr Hoppes, of mutant children born into the family, shut away in the curious stone cells which had been hollowed out under the foundations some hundreds of years earlier, of frightening
inhuman
cries heard in the night, of nocturnal excursions made to the shore during the moonless eldritch hours, blue-green lights which flickered behind untapestried windows, horrific black shapes outlined therein, and a return of the old and half-forgotten pestilences to the district, with evil shrouding the area and abounding a hundredfold.

In 1797, Cecil Warhope, in his fiftieth year, went inexplicably mad and wandered into the village of Morganswode, as it was known then, giving voice to strange dreams and visions of the most terrible sort, which sent a band of men back to the manor bearing flaming torches and carrying any weapons they could lay their hands on. They had found little amiss in the house itself, but down on the narrow stretch of beach at the foot of the cliffs were odd tracks in the sand which had not been washed away by the encroaching sea, although for the sanity of one or two members of the band of men it would have been better by far if the tide had obliterated them entirely before they had been found.

In the flickering yellow candlelight, seated in the high-backed chair, before the blazing fire, I read through the tattered and fading parchments backed by peeling leather that was cracked and worn, reading of the finding of William Warhope, Cecil’s brother, on the beach, his body and features curiously deformed, oddly grotesque, mindless horror mirrored in the wide-open eyes that stared up at the moon-flooded heavens. Rather than allow such an obviously unhallowed soul rest in peace in the quiet ground of the small churchyard, his body had been hastily buried in the sand of the beach, and on that same morning, the worst storm in the history of that stretch of coastline broke over the cliffs, seemingly centred on Faxted Manor. Certainly it was unlike anything known in living memory. Most vivid of all, apparently, in the eyes of the unknown chronicler, was a belief, rife at the time among the superstitious peasants on the beach, that after the storm had died down late the following afternoon, another set of prints as bizarre and unbelievable as the first had appeared in the sand, running almost parallel with the others which had, by that time, been almost washed away; but in this case the prints led up out of the sea and up the sheer wall of the cliff towards Faxted Manor.

The horror had returned with a vengeance.

* * * *

Such was the history which assailed me and which I absorbed during the first few days at the manor. It must not, however, be imagined that I spent all my waking hours in the library, reading among these ancient, musty tomes of a bygone age. The weather at that time proved to be exceedingly clement even for early October, and I spent much time out of doors, taking as much of the fresh air as possible. Several times I wandered to the edge of the rocks and stared down their almost vertical depths to where the sea crashed onto the boulders in a spuming of white, wind-tossed spray. There was, I noticed, a small promontory where a ridge of cliff thrust itself out into the sea for perhaps fifty yards, forming a natural breakwater there, enclosing a tiny bay where the water seemed calmer than further out, or even a little way along the coast.

Towards late evening during the second week of my stay there, I often stood on top of the cliffs looking out to the west where some of the most unusual and colourful sunsets I had ever known occurred with an almost clockwork regularity. One particular evening proved no exception. The entire sky to the west was a mass of pinks and scarlet, blending imperceptibly into apple green, blue, and finally purple directly overhead. Lowering my glance from the flaming wonders of the sunset, I chanced to look down at the water immediately below me, and felt an odd edge of surprise to notice that on this occasion, the surface within that the tiny bay was not smooth and unruffled as it normally was. There was something thrusting itself up above the water. From where I stood, in the fading light, it looked rather like a black stone monolith, its lower half hidden by the waves. I wished I had brought my binoculars with me so that I might have examined it more closely, for there seemed to be strange carvings on it, but with the night falling, I had to reluctantly give up any attempt to discover the exact nature of the object.

That night I retired early. I had not yet fully recovered from my long illness and the long walk along the cliffs, coupled with the hours spent during the past week pouring over the old manuscripts into the early hours of the morning, had tired me more than I had realised.

My room was in the west wing of the house, high in one turreted tower, the solitary window looking out directly over the small bay alongside the narrow headland. It was reached by a winding stairway of stone, between walls that still ran with dripping moisture in spite of the fires that had been lit.

I fell asleep as soon as my head touched the pillow, but was soon haunted by dreams of the most hideous kind. I was standing alone on the windswept cliffs looking down into the twilight sea. The water heaved with a sullen, oily swell, black and fathomless; yet there was something in those dark depths and vasty deeps, something which was straining to the surface, unutterably evil, a thing which was not of Earth, had no part in anything that was sane and normal. There was the vaguest suspicion of moonlight in the sky, and as I turned in my dream to where the house should have stood, I discovered myself staring at a circle of crudely-hewn stones of the most terrifying aspect, lit by the grotesque paleness of the moonlight. There were presences in among the stones, queer, half-visible things that hovered and flitted on the edge of my vision, never coming close enough, nor staying still long enough, to be seen clearly, and all the more frightening because of this abnormal, spectral elusiveness.

One thing in particular I noticed in my dream. A creature that stood hooded and gowned, on the cliff edge, arms raised as if in supplication. Then it turned, and it was as if I screamed aloud in my dream. It would be wrong to say that this monstrosity, visible as the hood which covered its face fell back at that instant, could not be described in terms understandable by anyone who had knowledge of these black abominations from pits unimaginable and unnameable. There was something human about, it but if anything it was this merest hint of
humanness
that brought the sense of terror crowding into my sleeping mind. The protruding forehead was ridged and furrowed, and the two bony protuberances gave an unmistakable sense of witnessing some fiendish creature from the lowest pit of Hell. Some instinct warned me, even in the dream, that I was witnessing here had no connection with the present day.

The being began to mumble and mutter and there was nothing English in the mouthings; indeed, the disjointed phrases seemed to have no earthly connotation, and as they trailed off into nothingness, something stirred deep within the black water below the cliff. There was a swirling as if a whirlpool was forming; a surging, leprous gleaming of spectral whiteness, indistinct at first, then growing clearer as it came up to the surface. I felt my gaze drawn hypnotically to the sea where the waves, whipped to a sudden frenzy, hammered on the belt of sand that fronted the rocks. Then it emerged, dripping, from the sea and whatever horror, whatever frenzy of nightmarish terror I had experienced before, faded into insignificance before the soul-searing fear which took a hold of my sleeping mind.

Shivering intolerably, with the clammy sweat lying cold on my body, I woke with a start, my heart palpitating wildly in my chest. Hands clutching at my body, I opened my eyes, peered about me.

The most terrible, the most unbelievable of all mental shocks is that of the totally unexpected. The nightmare was still strong in my mind, the shaking still lay on my limbs from the sheer terror of it, but nothing in that dream could compare with the fear I now felt as I saw what lay about me; not the simple furnishings of my room high in the turreted tower, nor even the long, winding stairway which led up to it—but the rocky, moss-turfed cliffs with the dark silhouette of the manor more than a hundred yards away; and the dull booming in my ears, blending with the tortuous beating of my heart, was the sound of the sea breaking on the rocks.

I cannot even begin to hint at the thoughts that went through my mind as I stumbled back to the manor. The main door opened creakingly at my touch, and this was evidently the means by which I had earlier left the house. How long had passed since I had left my room and gone wandering forth into the night, I could not tell, but I knew that if I did not get warm at once. I would, in my weakened state, run a distinct risk of catching pneumonia. Throwing a handful of logs on to the fire, which had burned down to mere glowing embers, I sat in front of it until the wood caught and blazed up slowly, very slowly, as the heat permeated into my chilled body. Gradually, the fear in my shocked, numbed mind subsided.

It had been nothing more than a dream, of course, a highly vivid dream possibly the result of the excitement which had been building up inside me over the past few days, and the general malaise had brought about our recurrence of the sleep-walking which had once afflicted me as a child.

Further sleep that night was utterly out of the question, so lighting the long candle, I sat in the high-backed chair by the fire, threw a heavy wrap over my legs, and waited for the dawn. As I sat there, I became aware of the noises in the house. It was the first time I had really noticed them. Before, they had been mere background sounds. Now there was an oddly menacing tone to them; a moaning, droning whisper, which built up from some inconceivable depth beneath the structure of the manor, an ululation that sent shivers along my taut-strung nerves. The sound persisted until the first greys and blues of the dawn showed through the windows, then it subsided to a soft, hideous murmur that never quite faded into nothingness.

That morning, I summoned the two men and asked them to bring lanterns, so that I might examine the vaults and cellars of the house. At the bottom of a score of stone steps which led down into an abysmal darkness was a small cellar, the floor slime-covered to a depth of almost two inches, walls glistening in the lantern light, the cracks in the stone filled with horrible fungoid growths, pale and sickly, which had never seen the light of day. The stench that rose around us was full of rottenness and decay, and here and there, ranged on narrow shelves around the walls, were oddly shaped wooden boxes whose contents I dared not imagine. Was this a part of the old house, built innumerable ages before the manor itself? What I saw there forced me to the inescapable conclusion that it was—and yet, towards the far end of the cellar, we came upon a heavy stone slab set in the wall, around the edges of which a faint stirring of air flickered the lantern flames and gave a hint of something more which lay beyond.

BOOK: The Dark Boatman: Tales of Horror and the Cthulhu Mythos
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