Bohemians of Sesqua Valley (9 page)

Read Bohemians of Sesqua Valley Online

Authors: W. H. Pugmire

Tags: #Cthulhu Mythos, #Dreamlands (Fictional Place), #Horror, #Fantasy, #Short Stories (Single Author)

Before either outsider could answer, Simon stalked away. Turning a flustered face to his friend, Akiva cried, “But I did visit it, and Manly lives! Let me share it with you.” He raised his hand to her face, but she blocked his movement with an arm.

“No, don’t touch me.” The harshness in her voice surprised her, and she winced at the painful expression in Akiva’s eyes. Taking hold of his hand, she brought it to her lips and kissed it. And then she, too, walked away from him.

V

 

Sarah was in her room, packing things into her small suitcase, when she heard the commotion in the living room. Going to investigate, she saw Akiva striving to lift the strange black statue. Seeming to sense that she was watching, he turned and grinned at her.

“It’s not very heavy, actually. I think I can do this.”

“And what exactly is it that you’re doing?”

“Manly suggested that it would be appropriate to take this to the Circle of Seven Suns, that maybe it would help to evoke the Crawling Chaos.”

The woman laughed. “Akiva, when did you become consumed with all of this esoteric nonsense? I’m beginning to agree with Simon—you need to escape this place. Come with me to Providence.”

“Manly’s book was my key, you see, and the valley is my gateway. I’ve connected with the valley’s laureate, and I think he wants to crown me with his laurel. I am destined to become the valley’s new poet, to sing her glory as it has not been expressed for decades.”

“And why can’t Manly do this himself, if he still dwells here?”

“I think he is conjoined to the second shadowland and can rarely leave it, or rarely wants to.” He noticed the expression on her face and laughed heartily. “God, you don’t understand any of this. How could you? You’re far away from Providence, dear Sarah. Look, I don’t have time to explain it all now. I need to get this eikon to the Circle of Seven Suns. We’ll talk later.”

“Let me help you. I want to see this mysterious place that has so upset Simon.”

“But—I don’t know what’s going to happen when I evoke the Crawling Chaos.”

“Then it will be a learning experience for both of us. Do you think that thing will fit into your car?”

“Only just. I managed when I brought it home from the antique shop. It’s lovely, isn’t it? So smooth and black and—potent.” He wrapped his arms around the statue and began again to try and lift it. Shaking her head, Sarah went to assist him, and together they moved the effigy out of the house and into Akiva’s motor car. Before getting into the vehicle, the poet glanced at the moonlit mountain and frowned.

“What’s wrong?”

Akiva squinted his eyes with suspicion. “It’s too quiet, like the valley is holding its breath. Usually, when something really dangerous or cool is going on, the valley sends out a signal from beneath its ground, a deadly kind of pounding that alerts the children.”

“The children?”

“The ones who have silver eyes, the local tribe, whatever they are. They often refer to themselves as the children of the valley, without ever explaining what that means. I’ve sensed a lot of things in the months that I’ve lived here, but nothing’s concrete inside my mind. Perhaps after tonight I’ll have more answers. Let’s go.”

They both entered the car, Sarah having to adjust her head so that it would not bang against the head of the statue, which was protruding over the back of her seat. She remained silent as the car bounced along rough roads, toward the mountain. The road entered a place in the woodland where the trees overhead formed a kind of tunnel through which they journeyed. And then the trees were gone, and the mortals were moving along an expanse of dirt field. The mountain, now very near, hovered over them like some slumbering behemoth. Sarah cracked her window open and cursed. “Ugh, I thought I smelled something vile. What is that stench in the air? It’s sickening.”

“It emanates from the soil, or so it seemed to on the few occasions that I’ve visited this area. It’s like the ground is cankerous. Look at how yellow the dirt is? The children shun this place. I tried to get my friend Cyrus to join me on an outing here and he freaked out, said something about it being too near the mountain. I think they shun the mountain as well. It’s nice to know that there are places in the valley where you don’t have to worry about meeting its freakish clan. I think we’re almost there.”

“You think?”

“Well, I confess that last night’s all a bit of a haze. But I’ll recognize the wooded area when we get there. I’ll remember the signposts that Manly showed me.”

Sarah could not take her eyes from the bulk of Mount Selta, and something in the shape of the mountain increased her sense of unease. “This place is creepy,” she mumbled; but Akiva ignored her, seemingly intent on locating their destination. And then he stopped the car. “This is the place. It’s not a long walk. Are you sure you want to help me haul that statue down there?”

“I am not yet decrepit,” she scolded, and then bent to pick up the bottom portion of the statue. She felt extremely silly as they entered the woods, and smiled broadly at what a sight they made. Sarah noted that the vile stench in the air had dissipated and was replaced with a new scent, subtle and uncharacteristic of what she had thus experienced in the valley. There were spaces between the trees and thus bright moonlight illuminated their way. Then she noticed what she thought was an extremely freakish tree.

“Ah, there’s the totem. This is the right path,” the poet assured her. Sarah gawked at the towering thing as they passed it, having never seen its like before. The thing seemed skeletal and albinic, and the misshapen faces that it wore seemed composed of rotting mold and resembled no living creatures with which she was familiar. From some place beyond the totem she heard the sound of rushing water, and then she had to watch her step as the path began to incline downward and became a series of large stone steps, beside which a wide stream fell over rocks and boulders. Sarah could not understand why the woodland grew no darker as they descended—indeed, the moon, when she glanced up at it, seemed nearer to earth than it had at any other time. She could see the face in the moon, and the sight of it chilled her blood.

At last they reached the end of sloping earth. Although the statue was not very heavy, Sarah was tiring. When her eyes met Akiva’s, however, she saw that his burned with an almost preternatural ignition. Looking at her, he laughed joyously and showed his shining teeth. “Right over there. Watch your step, there’s a bunch of ferns just here. Can you feel the spray from the waterfall? It’s like drinking liquid aether. Okay, let’s lift him over these sculpted figures and set him in the center of the Circle.”

Trying to study the dwarfish figurines as they lifted the black statue over them, Sarah lost her footing, stumbled and fell onto soft ground. Her end of the statue pressed against the earth, and she let go of it as Akiva wrestled with the thing and put it into place in the center of the ring of stone effigies. The seven sculpted gnomes were grotesque in the extreme and filled Sarah with disquiet. Each creature held a pale white sphere over its dome, globes that caught the weird moonlight and appeared to drink in its luminosity.

“He’s here, I think.” Before Sarah could respond, she felt a beating beneath her hands, a pulsing from some place beneath the earth on which she knelt. The air grew chilly, and a mist began to rise from distant places in the woodland, a mauve-tinted mist that grew opaque. Sarah sensed the presence before she saw its silhouette moving toward them through the gathered haze. He was tall and lean, and he exuded a sense of energy and influence. As his features became clearer she thought it might be Simon without his characteristic hat; but then she noticed the distinction between this being and the beast. The gentleman before her was not quite as grotesque as Simon, although his features were just as animalistic. His eyes shimmered like glossy nickel.

“Greetings, Miss Paget-Lowe,” the stranger said, bowing his head to her. “Welcome to my realm. Please remain silent as we summon forth the Crawling Chaos. Akiva has been chosen to be the bard of the Old Ones.” Turning to the poet, the fellow took Akiva’s hand and smoothed its palm with taloned fingers. He then pierced that palm with one nail and began to etch into the poet’s flesh. Sarah thought that she could smell the blood that dripped from her friend’s hand onto the earth. She watched the tall fellow smooth her friend’s hand with his own, until the drops of blood ceased. Akiva showed her his hand, whereon the sigil that had been carved onto the black statue’s hand had been replicated. Moving out of the Circle, the strange one reached into a jacket pocket and produced a red flute, which he pressed against his mouth. Unearthly music filled the air, as did an unearthly reek. Looking up, Sarah observed the darker mist that was falling toward them through the other vapor, the greenish-yellow mist that churned unspeakably as it ceased its descent and billowed above them. From behind that rancid miasma she thought that she could just make out the circles of blistering globes of fire, and she saw the two winged things that sailed to them through the fog, beings that had been replicated in stone in the Circle of Seven Suns. The creatures settled near the base of the black statue, against which they huddled as they brought weird flute-like instruments to their misshapen mouths.

Sarah looked to where the child of Sesqua Valley had been standing, but there was no one there any longer. Another shape stalked toward them, through the mist, and Sarah marveled at the black man’s regal beauty. She watched the figure drift to where Akiva stood and spoke something to the poet in antique Hebrew. Not rising from her kneeling position, she saw the strange dark one tilt toward her friend and kiss Akiva’s eyes, eyes that suddenly transformed, that grew black and liquid. And then the black man turned to her, drew nearer to her as he made motions to the air, the air that cleared of mist and sour fog. She saw the brilliant moon that cast its insane light onto her eyes, and then she howled as the black man raised a foot and kicked her head violently. Her vision blurred and she could see nothing but a congeries of red and black dots. The sound of insane fluting washed to her and embraced her head for but one moment, and then the sound departed, lifting skyward. When at last her sight returned, she saw that Akiva was trembling before her, his frantic fingers reaching at his black and burnished eyes.

“I am blind! Like in the dream I had when I visited the woodland and Simon found me! But this is not a dream! Oh god, I am blind. And yet, I see, beyond the blackness, beyond the dead moons. Oh, I see” he uttered, and then he began to howl like some idiotic thing. Gasping, weeping, Sarah rose and clutched the poet’s hand. Roughly, she tugged him from that place, up the rugged path and over the stone steps on which they occasionally tripped as Akiva screeched in Hebrew. When at last they reached the poet’s car, Sarah opened the passenger door and pushed the poet into the vehicle. Rummaging through his pockets, she found the car keys and rushed to the driver’s door. By the time she managed to turn the motor, Akiva had grown silent. He turned his altered eyes to her and her blood froze as she felt him peer into her paltry soul. “The seven suns,” he whispered, and then began to speak poetry of the strangest kind, poetry that contained a kind of alchemy of sound. Sarah listened, entranced, and then she put the car into gear and began to drive. She followed the roadway, away from the twin-peaked mountain, past the center of Sesqua Town, out of the valley. Finding, at last, the freeway, Sarah pushed on the gas pedal, guiding the car on its way toward Providence.

 

Unhallowed Places

A Poetic Interlude

 

 

Dedicated to Robert H. Waugh

 

 

 

I

 

I
t is the effect of night that swims within my liquid eyes as I kneel on this tainted soil and dig my fingers into unhallowed earth. Windsong moans through the cracks and crevices of a ruined church where air is no longer sanctified and sinless, and as I work my hand into the churchyard sod I pray the name of one strange god who tastes me in my deepest dreaming. It is this dread lord that has whispered to my psyche of the thing that I am destined to discover—the thing that, soon, I touch. I tighten my fingers around one of the triple spires and unearth the relic from its bed of dirt and darkness. There is no midnight moon to which I can hold up the artifact, and so I raise the thing to dimming stars and marvel at its alien beauty. I cannot ascertain what strange alloy has been combined with yellow gold so as to give the thing its platinum lustrousness. Its beauty captivates and I gaze at it for many minutes as I imagine that it was fashioned to be seen in darkness only, in this effect of night, wherein its magick spills forth and evokes wonder. I lift the relic above me and set it on my head, where the chilliness of its metal spreads through my entire tissue. I shudder as one bell from an ancient church peals its somber sound. The reverberation of that clanging floats through air toward the sea that swells before the old town below the hill on which the church stands. I turn my face toward the crumbling edifice and see that it, too, has been enhanced by the cloak of night that drapes it; and as I grimace at the rotted stone a thing from within the structure calls my mind, coaxing me to rise from bended knee and proceed in quest of sinister sensation, my diadem tilted on my dome. How solid feels the frigid earth on which I creep, how icy the starlight on my eyes that I reflect onto the rotted stones with which the church has been constructed. I lean and press my hand against the decomposing mineral and watch the reflected starlight frolic from it and pierce the essence of my eyes; and as my hand is held against that stone my mind seems to conjoin with the chilly surface so that, for one moment, I am as ancient as the granite that has formed the haunt of silenced prayers, and the hollow of my skull reverberates with a remnant of secret ceremony that was once performed beyond the wall I fondle. Ah, those echoed and unholy psalms, the deep low voices, the phantom plumes of rare incense that are sucked by nostrils. Oh, the shape that fumbles in secret festival in the corner of one eye.

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