The Rage of Cthulhu

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The Rage of Cthulhu Page 9

by Gary Fry


  “What’s this?” asked the doctor, watching eagerly as the recording drew to its frantic conclusion.

  Christine looked at the screen and at once knew what the man had referred to. Although George had vanished, swallowed by churning mist and falling rock as she’d hurried back down the mountainside, an immense column of light had lifted from the centre of the shot, near the crater to which her husband had been so eager to travel.

  Curious shapes could be observed amid the illumination, one of them resembling a bullish creature, which might even be capable of issuing the terrible cries they both now heard from the computer’s speakers. These were nothing more than stone being torn out of place, but even so, such a dramatic combination of visual and auditory information was sufficient to suggest something else entirely.

  Cthulhu, thought Christine, continuing to watch as her iPhone’s lens pulled away from a mass of distorted imagery, locating a fathomlessly dark backdrop filled with intense starlight. At that moment, all the trees and rocks down the mountain did look regimented, just as George had suggested. But she shouldn’t attach significance to that, even when another fearsome roar arose from elsewhere, its sound thunderously delayed.

  “My camera isn’t the best on the market,” she explained, holding up the device for brief inspection. “It’s prone to pixilation, as well as lens distortions in particular lights.”

  The doctor’s scientific profession might have persuaded him to accept her explanation. After hesitating for only a moment, however, he asked, “But didn’t all this happen in the evening?”

  Christine smiled a little awkwardly. “It was just the stars, Dr. Kilroy,” she said, now heading for the doorway out. “The stars that night were right.”

  Outside, beyond the room’s solitary window, the silence of the hospital grounds belied many terrible events being enacted all around the globe.

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  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Gary Fry lives in Dracula’s Whitby, literally around the corner from where Bram Stoker was staying when he was thinking about that character.

  Gary has a PhD in psychology, but his first love is literature. He is the author of many short story collections, novellas, and novels. He was the first author in PS Publishing’s Showcase series, and none other than Ramsey Campbell has described him as “a master.”

  Feel free to visit his web presence at www.gary-fry.com

  ALSO FROM HORRIFIC TALES PUBLISHING

  High Moor by Graeme Reynolds

  High Moor 2: Moonstruck by Graeme Reynolds

  High Moor 3: Blood Moon by Graeme Reynolds

  Of A Feather by Ken Goldman

  Whisper by Michael Bray

  Echoes by Michael Bray

  Voices by Michael Bray

  Angel Manor by Chantal Noordeloos

  Bottled Abyss by Benjamin Kane Ethridge

  Lucky’s Girl by William Holloway

  The Immortal Body by William Holloway

  Wasteland Gods by Jonathan Woodrow

  Dead Shift by John Llewellyn Probert

  Deadside Revolution by Terry Grimwood

  The Rot by Paul Kane

  The Veil (Testaments I and II) by Joseph D’Lacey

  COMING SOON

  Song of the Death God by William Holloway

  High Cross by Paul Melhuish

  Dark Horses by Ray Cluley

  http://www.horrifictales.co.uk

 

 

 


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