Autopsy of an Eldritch City: Ten Tales of Strange and Unproductive Thinking (15 page)

BOOK: Autopsy of an Eldritch City: Ten Tales of Strange and Unproductive Thinking
8.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Floating in the center of these asteroids was a very large rock with a hollow center. Within this hollow center there was a large cavern, in the heart of which was a big crater filled with some sort of bubbling amniotic glue that seemed to be a lake, and hovering above this ‘lake’ was a being that I will now do my best to describe: it resembled a gigantic and strangely proportioned fetus, with a gargantuan head that was vastly bigger than the body beneath it. This being’s brain cavity seemed to account for most of its body weight, that’s how out of proportion the head was to the rest of the body. Its legs were miniscule and largely vestigial, while its arms were unusually long, with bloated hands and webbing in between its fingers. Its face consisted of two small black holes, while its mouth was a vertical fleshy slit, looking very much like a vagina. Its skin was of an unhealthy whitish-gray hue, and it was perched atop a large biomechanical surgical table (that was also levitating above the lake). Overall, the being had an extremely sickly and withered appearance, bringing to my mind the image of a witch’s abortion that had, through some hideous transubstantiation, metamorphed into a sadistic demiurge, a stillborn
Spiritus Mundi
.

“Jutting out from the bubbling liquid below this being were four pointed towers that resembled the sinking steeples of drowned churches. The pointy tips of these towers were generating some kind of unholy electricity, with this electricity arcing from the tip of one tower to the others. Somehow or other, I perceived that these four towers were infernal desire machines, the reality generators that the enormous-headed fetal being before me used to create our own reality. I watched in amazement as the individual Entropiors used their fragile-looking wings to fly themselves towards the top of the floating being’s head, which proceeded to peel open like the blooming petals of some flowers of evil. The Entropiors flew into the being’s brain cavity and vanished from my sight, though after a few moments they emerged from the being’s vaginal mouth and flew down towards the four pointed towers, where they then vanished into the electrical storm.

“It was at that moment that I realized I had uncovered a stratum of reality that even the ancient Atlanteans, with all their wisdom, had been unable to penetrate. As I’ve already pointed out, they assumed that our reality was created by the Entropiors, and that our sole purpose in life was to function as a food source for them. But now I saw that the Entropiors were more like aphids, and that their true purpose was to drain energy from matter and ‘feed’ it to the being before me. The four towers, then, served as a gateway into the dream world generated by the mind of this being, the dream world being what we perceived as reality. The Entropiors used this ‘gate’ to enter our universe of matter, drain energy from anything they could find (be it human beings, animals, plant life, buildings, even the stars themselves), and then return to the higher reality, the void behind the rim of existence, to give the energy to their dark god. The Entropiors, when not engaged in this vampiric activity, would cluster on rocky platforms beneath the floating being, where they would then prostate themselves, heads lowered to the ground, and in this position they would wail prayers to the floating being, chanting its name over and over again. Because my ears were blocked up I couldn’t hear the word they were chanting, but I could
feel
it in my bones: and that mantra was ‘Abbalath.’

“I was now so overwhelmed by all of these alien sensations that I began screaming out for Igor, instructing him to bring the infernal experiment to a halt. I’m not sure what happened next as I quickly lost consciousness. When I awoke, I found myself in a straitjacket in a padded room at Butler Hospital, being administered to by a Matsu-Gravas GV-4 “Nightingale” medical bot, with no idea as to how I had ended up there. Later on I found out that Igor had delivered me there upon the termination of the White Room experiment, where he had found me ‘raving mad.’ And thus began a period of lengthy convalescence.

“I know what you’re probably thinking at this point of my narrative: that my vision of the Entropiors and my glimpse into the infernal realm of Abbalath was a mere hallucination, that in my isolated state, deprived of all external stimuli, my mind had filled the void with its own eldritch content. And that’s what I had thought at first myself, during my time of recovery. I had gone into the White Room with the intention of ‘seeing’ the Entropiors, and I
had
seen them… but what if what I had seen was nothing more than a figment of my own deranged imagination, an illusion generated by my subconscious?

“It was around the time I was entertaining these skepticisms that I happened upon a most interesting article in a back issue of
Fortean Times
magazine. Contrary to what one may expect from watching movies, life in a mental hospital can be exceedingly dull, and I passed a lot of time by reading. This article to which I now refer to concerned itself with a mysterious individual known as Dr. Leroy Jekyll, who vanished under very odd circumstances in 1973. Little is known of Dr. Jekyll’s past, other than that he served aboard the U.S. Navy destroyer escort
USS Eldridge
in 1943, when he had been around 20 years of age. That’s the ship that the U.S. military supposedly used in an experiment to render it invisible to enemy radar via a cloaking device created by giant electrical generators, but I’m sure you already know about the Philadelphia Experiment and Project Rainbow so I won’t bore you with the details. Dr. Jekyll had some sort of nervous breakdown in late October of 1943 which saw him discharged from the military. Following this incident he began to display a peculiar fascination with the subject of Time. According to papers left behind after his disappearance, he believed that we’re surrounded by particles of time, which constantly eat away at everything, breaking down matter with toxins. He didn’t view time as some abstract concept, but as an almost vampire-like parasite that was invisible to the naked eye. It appears that like me he too stumbled upon the existence of the Entropiors without even realizing it!

“In the years preceding his disappearance, he became obsessed with the idea of stepping outside of what he referred to as ‘the Circles of Time,’ as a way of escaping from the captivity of the time parasites, which he was by then classifying as ‘the Time Vampires.’ When Dr. Jekyll disappeared in 1973, his family discovered hundreds of notebooks in his home, notebooks that were filled up with bizarre-looking illustrations and alien equations that, to date, no mathematician has been able to solve: it would seem that Dr. Jekyll’s notebooks are the 20th century equivalent of the Voynich Manuscript. A few weeks ago I managed to track down one of Dr. Jekyll’s old friends, who described the man thusly: ‘I recall him being tall and thin, kind of a bookish-looking fellow, with horn-rimmed glasses and all that. But he dressed like a street tough. When I knew him, he often sported a leather jacket with the Black Panthers logo on the back: sometimes he wore a beret. He used to always wear this white t-shirt, and on the front of it was a message he had spray-painted in black letters: ‘Osiris is a Black God.’ He never really explained to me what that meant. His apartment at the Hotel Chelsea was one of the most far-out places I’ve ever seen: the space was filled with hundreds of clocks and watches of all shapes and sizes, some very old and some very new: it was almost like a museum of clocks, really. Heck, he even owned a few sundials and hourglasses. It was quite a collection, though the constant ticking coming from the clocks drove me crazy… I don’t know how Leroy could stand it. He had quite a book collection as well: he was really into the New Wave science fiction movement, a fan of writers like J.G. Ballard, Samuel R. Delany, Michael Moorcock… he was even a subscriber to
New Worlds
magazine. I believe he once said that Frank Herbert’s
Dune
and Olaf Stapledon’s
Star Maker
were his two favorite novels. He was always lending me these weird-ass books to read: there was one he lent me, Ballard’s
The Crystal World
, which I quite liked. And his record collection! So strange: he was really into avant-garde classical music. Cats like Robert Ashley, Alvin Lucier, Tangerine Dream, John Cage, Stockhausen, Philip Glass, Terry Riley… Riley’s ‘A Rainbow in Curved Air’ was one of his favorites.’ But this friend of Dr. Jekyll was just as clueless as to what fate had ultimately befallen the man as I was.

“Perhaps Dr. Jekyll had found a way to escape from the shackles of time, the bondage of Kali… who knows? That doesn’t concern me. What
did
capture my attention was that the article included several photographs of some of the content of his notebooks. In one picture was an illustration of what he claimed the Time Vampires looked like: I’ve included a photocopy of this picture at the end of this letter so that you can see it for yourself. And Frederick, here’s the thing: it looked
exactly
like the creatures I had seen during my White Room experiment!

“It can’t be a coincidence… prior to reading that article, I had never heard of Dr. Jekyll and his time vampires theory, and I had certainly never seen that illustration before. It was at that moment that I became convinced in the existence of the Entropiors, or the Time Vampires, or whatever the hell they’re actually called, assuming they even have an official name. Their names are not important, what matters is that they
do
exist… that what I saw in that isolation chamber wasn’t just some mere hallucination.

“This left me in quite a bind. Even though I could no longer ‘see’ the Entropiors with my naked eye, I still knew that they were all around me, on me, even
inside
of me, going about their devil’s work. How could I possibly go on, knowing that existence was nothing more than a nightmare dreamed up by that dreadful and sickly being known only as Abbalath? Once again I was in the same existential quandary that had led me to conduct the isolation experiment in the first place, only now I had come to a dead end. Although I am an intelligent enough individual, I lack the sheer abstract genius of a Dr. Jekyll, who perhaps really did find a way to step out of the hallucination. I decided my only recourse was suicide. Once I complete the writing of this letter and mail it out to you, I intend to kill myself, perhaps by jumping off of a very large bridge, or sticking my head in a gas oven. Though here’s a thought: my uncle Aaron, who was something of a Japanophile, bequeathed to me an antique samurai sword when he passed away a couple of years ago, so maybe I can kill myself with that. I guess that killing one’s self with a samurai sword is way more badass than jumping off a bridge, but then, I’ve never been a very good judge as to what’s considered badass and what isn’t. Truth be told, I feel silly just using the word ‘badass.’

“I’m stalling. Maybe because I know that this letter has almost reached its inevitable zenith. Anyway, that’s my story. As for the Yellow Notebook, I just couldn’t bring myself to destroy my life’s work, even though that life’s work has now led me to death’s door. So I give it to you: do to it what you wish. There’s a small part of me that feels a little guilty about telling you all of this, as I wish that I myself had never learnt about it. Though the more I think it over, the more I realize that it’s thanks to your insight about the ‘Flaw’ that led me to uncover these awful secrets, which led to my own dark awakening. So maybe this is my way of paying you back, old boy. Hope you’ll be able to deal with this knowledge better than I could. Well, it’s been fun, but if you’ll excuse me, I have a date with a sword.

-Sincerely,

Bruce Kadmon”

 

And there the letter came to an end. True to Bruce’s word, at the end of the letter there was a photocopy of one of the photographs from the
Fortean Times
article that Bruce had read. The photograph was a snapshot of one of the pages of Dr. Jekyll’s notebooks, and it contained a detailed illustration done by Dr. Jekyll of one of the “Time Vampires.” The creature had a gecko-like body, with green and black scales, while four wings sprouted from its back. Its head was notable in that it resembled the prostomium of the earthworm, utterly featureless save for a shrew-like mouth lined with extremely sharp and pointy teeth.

IV

Yet, like Bruce, there was a part of me that was still skeptical. I wondered if this Bruce Kadmon guy was just some mentally disturbed individual who was trying to mess with my head. Maybe this
Fortean Times
article he mentioned didn’t even exist. Maybe he hadn’t even committed suicide and was still alive and well. For my own peace of mind, I decided to look into the matter. After all, when has blind trust been anything other than an intangible Pied Piper that leads young men and women to pointless deaths and early graves?

It didn’t take a lot of effort to find out that the
Fortean Times
article was authentic. And I just as quickly found out that Bruce Kadmon had, in fact, killed himself recently. His death had been big news in the local newspapers, on account of his unusual manner of suicide: he had impaled himself with an antique samurai sword. I must have missed this story when it first appeared in the
Thundermist Times
, though how that was possible I don’t know: perhaps it was because at the time I was paying more attention to a national news story involving another local man, a pilot who had made an emergency landing in the middle of a cornfield in Nebraska after being frightened by, of all things, a rainbow. I tracked down these articles and learned some more details about Bruce’s life: how he had been born in Seattle, but how his family had moved to the New England area when he had been just a boy; how his father had been a Roman Catholic theologian while his mother was a professor of quantum mechanics; how he had graduated from MIT with a PhD in Theoretical Physics; how he had worked for many years at the Cedar Banks facility in Pittsburgh before he had suffered a nervous breakdown and was forced to resign, and so on and so forth. Apparently after this latter event he had begun devoting his life to filling up the Yellow Notebook with his researches into the lost religion of Atlantis.

BOOK: Autopsy of an Eldritch City: Ten Tales of Strange and Unproductive Thinking
8.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Wild Country by Dean Ing
Violins of Hope by James A. Grymes
Anything but Love by Beth Ciotta
Project Enterprise by Pauline Baird Jones
GargoylesEmbrace by Lisa Carlisle
Personae by Sergio De La Pava
Whimper by McFadden, Erin
The Yellow Rose by Gilbert Morris