Gathered Dust and Others
Page 19
“Well,” Jonathan muttered, “how swiftly you get into the swing of things. Come, I’ve a special concoction just for you.” He led me to a serving station at which a manservant poured dark liquid from a sparkling silver coffee pot. I took the delicate cup proffered me and brought it to my nostrils, breathing in the brandy with which the coffee had been laced. Normally I had no stomach for liqueurs, but on this night I refused to be a prude. I sipped, and smooth delicious nectar spilled into my mouth, warming my face.
Time passed. After a number of coffees I fell upon a cushion and smiled idiotically at the surrounding sexual frolic. Finally, Alisha clapped her hands and the music ceased.
“Mesdames et Messieurs, the Dance of the Seven Veils.”
True decadence crept into the room. What they were, I could not fathom. I had read somewhere of a race of cannibalistic semi-human dwarves who dwelled in some plateau somewhere in Central Asia. These creatures could have hailed from such a tribe. The twisted features of the hateful faces had a sobering effect. They profoundly repulsed. I watched as the ones who carried flute instruments sat in semi-circle and placed their pipes to misshapen mouths. The room was filled with discordant piping. A diminutive figure wound in flowing veils danced into the room. Its gyrations moved in rhythm to the esoteric music, and one by one the veils gradually fell from its stunted torso. I saw the small dry breasts and the twin genitalia both male and female.
People began to hoot and applaud as Alisha slowly danced toward the nude monstrosity, holding a silver platter on upturned palms. A sheet of black silk covered the object that tilted on the platter. Ally knelt before the bestial gnome and I watched as the creature removed with knobby fingers the covering of silk. I had, of course, read Wilde’s play, and thus I expected to see a grisly replica of the head of Iokanaan. Instead, I beheld a sphere of blue metal.
Shrieking pierced the room. Rushing wildly to his sister, Jonathan took the sphere, clutched it to his heaving breast and dashed madly from the place, into night. Trembling, I arose from my cushion. Figures surged around me, shouting cries of drunken confusion. Blindly, I ran from the scene, seeking silence and solitude. Instinct led me to the lonesome library, with its soothing and familiar world of books. Ah, the wondrous scent of ancient paper bound in leather. And there was the large leather sofa, where on more than one occasion I had slept when allowed to spend late nights pouring over Jonathan’s volumes. Moaning with aching pleasure, I staggered to the sofa and fell upon it. Happily, I succumbed to dreamless slumber.
A delicate hand smoothed my hair and pulled me out of sleep. Alisha sat beside me on the edge of the sofa. “What time is it?” I asked.
“Almost dawn. Everyone’s gone.”
Swiftly, I sat up. “Jonathan!” She shrugged. “What on earth do you mean by that absurd motion?”
“He’s vanished.” Her face was pale, but her eyes very dry.
”Then we must find him! He has – that thing!”
“It can wait. You need more rest.” Her voice was soothing, calming, hypnotic. I tried to protest, but her hand – so smooth and white – pressed against my lips. “Hush.” Groaning in suitable demurral, I allowed myself to sink again into the depths of delicious somnolence. Alisha hummed a haunting melody, one that would have disturbed me were I not so fatigued.
When again I awakened, I was alone. I felt rested, yet worried. Something, some unwelcome sensation, had shaken me from slumber. And then I heard it, from outside, the sound of whistling. And my blood froze, for the dissonant din was identical to the horrid music that had been played by that gang of goblins on their evil flutes, played to the sphere of blue metal. I pushed out of the sofa, stumbled over my long scarlet robe and hurried to the library door. All was hushed. The dull light of early dawn was skulking through the high windows. Fearfully, I found my way outside. The air was cold and very still. I saw the figure who knelt within the pagoda. I went to her. How strangely she smiled as I approached. I wanted to speak to her, but some unspeakable horror kept me numb and silent. I bent my knees and joined her on the ground. Leaning toward me, she pressed her cool mouth to mine. She puckered and exhaled. Both she and Jonathan were skilled at whistling, with a tone that was sharp and forceful.
“Please,” I begged her. “Stop.”
She did not heed me, but rather gazed into the early light, her eyes suddenly rapt with wonder. The chimes above us began to sway. I turned. The thing stood just outside the pagoda. I took in the dark torn garments. It had lost its splendid cloak. The long dark hair was too caked with blood to stream in the growing gale; some of it was crudely wound around the metal hook that pushed out of the top of the human head. One crimson contact lens still covered a wide dead eyeball. The open mouth was imbued with gore, and from that orifice there came a low unearthly sound of moaning air. Here and there the flesh of the face was torn, showing the blue metal beneath the skin, the damnable blue metal that had somehow conjoined with once-living tissue.
Alisha’s lips pressed against my ear. “It hungers for our hot mortal air.” Like a thing possessed she rose. I was too deadened with terror to try and stop her as she walked to that which had once been her brother. My blood was icy sludge, my limbs heavy with immeasurable horror. I watched as the young woman pressed her mouth to the mutation’s outrageous visage. How oddly her frail body jerked; what ghastly noise rattled from her pretty mouth. At last she fell before me. I wept to see that she was a lifeless shell, her once-lovely mouth bruised and blue.
The thing towered above me, not moving; yet somehow I felt it beckon me. I heard from beneath the dead face a noise of ravenous air, air not of this earth. Sobbing, I shut my eyes, trying to exorcise the nightmare before me. On my eyelids I could see the tendril shadows of swaying chimes, and my ears took in the music of wood on wood, metal on metal, glass on glass. Most horrible of all, I could feel the hunger of the thing that summoned.
I opened mine eyes. I stretched my sensitive limbs and rose. I lurched to that shell of dilapidated humanity that had once been my friend, but was now my awful, my inescapable doom.
A Vestige of Mirth
The thing before me shook with vulgar motion as it vomited hilarity. Its absurd mop of tangled hair fell before wide blank eyes, and its torso jiggled so violently that I expected the dummy to slip from its chair. Backing away from the large cabinet of wood and glass which housed the mammoth toy, I smiled; and then all motion ceased, the thing stood dead still. My nickel’s worth of time was up.
The round man behind the counter grinned with impious glee and softly chuckled. “My granddaddy made it ‘fore I was born, when he built this store in ’78. It was a modern wonder back then, pulled in huge crowds. Great for business. Course, back then it worked with pumps. My daddy rigged it so it’d work with ‘lectricity. Somethin’ else, ain’t it?”
“It is indeed, Walter,” I agreed, glancing at the nickel slot and fighting the temptation to watch once more. The old man gazed at me with wide eyes set deep within a rubbery face, and then he pushed buttons on an antiquated cash register and totaled my bill. Opening my wallet, I gave him money. He eyed the food and drink that I had purchased as I dropped them into my backpack.
“Gonna take in some sights, are ya?”
“Yep, I want to hike some country. Thought I’d follow the railroad tracks along the riverside and head for those distant hills.”
“You want to watch out for rattlers, Joe. It’s crawling with snakes up there. Ain’t tryin’ to put you off or nuthin’, but jest be careful.”
“Will do, Walter, thanks.” Turning to the door, I moseyed outside, squinting at pale autumn sunlight. A cool breeze was blowing from the river. Pulling on my backpack, I strolled toward the water until I came upon rusty railroad tracks. In the few days that I had been in this small town, I hadn’t heard or seen a train go by, and so I assumed that the line was not in use. Happily, I hopped onto one of the rails, balancing as I walked with arms outstretched. I had been quite adept at this when a kid, but adulthood ha
d dulled my talent. Slipping onto dirt and rocks, I bent to pick up a smooth round stone, which I tossed over the river’s surface. I walked for an about an hour, following the tracks until they turned away from the river and headed into an area of rocky hillside. Cautiously, I scanned the ground and nearest hills for snakes, but saw no living thing. The air grew still, which I found odd; surely the breeze I had experienced would sail between these hills of red rock. But nothing stirred, and I slowly sauntered through the hushed surroundings, until at last the hills were behind me and I looked out onto a great expanse of flat open land.
The curious object stood still in the distance. At first I thought that it was a derailed freight car of odd design; but as I approached it I saw that the metal wheels were not intended for railroad tracks. The wooden surface had once been painted yellow, but now a faint remnant of color covered the splintered wood. Spectral letters formed a name that was too faded to make out, large though the letters had been. This was obviously some kind of carnival car, from a sideshow that had long ceased to exist. As I neared a doorless entryway, an unpleasant meaty odor assailed my nostrils, and I wondered if an animal had somehow become trapped inside and was rotting in death. Gingerly, I leaned into the doorway and peered into a world of curious horrors. Shelves had been built into the walls, and on one long shelf I saw a series of mannequin heads covered with deteriorating rubber masks, the decaying pieces peeled and bent like the brittle leaves of a dead plant. On another shelf I saw a series of fantastic bestial forms, creatures of ludicrous combinations that looked like the work of some insane artist who had a talent for creating macabre fakes. How strangely realistic they looked, these concoctions; how brightly their black eyes beamed, reflecting the sunlight that filtered through the great holes in the compartment’s roof.
I heard no sound of movement, saw no sign of feasting vermin. Placing my hands flat on the wooden floor, I heaved myself into the car. My clumsy feet stumbled as I rose to a standing position, and my arms grabbed the nearest object in order to prevent my fall. The object before me was an old kinetoscope, such as I had seen in curio museums. I knew that this neglected and timeworn gadget couldn’t possibly work, especially as there was no source of electricity; and yet I couldn’t resist rummaging through my pants pocket for loose change. Feeling foolish, I dropped a nickel into the coin slot and gasped as the machine began to whir and creak. Hesitantly, I pressed my forehead against the padded leather of the peephole. I saw nothing but blackness, and supposed that the machine’s source of inner illumination had long expired. Yet, as I continued to watch, lulled by the mechanical purring, I detected a suggestion of moving shadow in the blackness into which I peered. Something fumbled and flowed, expanded closer to the viewing glass. It seemed, this crimson-tainted blackness, to bubble, as if hungry to leak into my eyes. Frantically, I backed away and blinked at sunbeams.
The antique gizmo shuddered and died. My panic subsided. Again, I became aware of a rancid stench, and when I looked behind me its source was discovered. There, on a long low table, was a grouping of large glass jars. The pulpy objects inside them gently swirled in thick ruddy liquid. As if on cue, one of the soft spongy things paused in circulating and bumped against its glass prison. I thought at first that it was a variation of the weird rubber masks, albeit one of more lifelike rendition. I didn’t like its wide liquid eyes, and I felt peculiarly nonplussed by its idiotic smile. As I gazed at the wretched thing, its carrion smell seemed to increase, filling my mouth with bile. Hurriedly, I rushed to the doorway and jumped onto solid ground, heaving spit and air.
Beneath my retching I heard another sound, a curious kind of music. It brought to mind a damaged jack-in-the-box from my poverty-stricken childhood. The tune that played as I gently turned the crank was distorted, seemingly incomplete. The mindless music that fumbled from the other side of the car was of a similar nature. Beguiled, I sought the source of sound, feeling again the sense of fear I knew as a child that turned a little crank and waited for the macabre jester to pop out of its box. What I suddenly beheld was no less clownish. I could not fathom what the figure was supposed to be. At first glance it suggested a sad-faced hobo clown I had once delighted in while attending a circus; and although the creature before me now was dressed in hobo fashion, it certainly was not melancholy. Rather, this darkly dressed buffoon joyfully pranced to the warped music, clapping large white hands as it shook with jocundity.
The thing that squatted near to the farceur was inexplicable. It might have been a kind of deformed monkey, or a dwarf costumed very badly as a beast. Just as peculiar was the instrument that was cradled at its crotch, a kind of makeshift hurdy-gurdy from which the staccato noised issued. I did not like the way the creature obscenely turned the crank that produced sound, nor the way its partner wagged in time to the outlandish rumpus. Foolishly, the clown waved at me, then bent to a wooden wash basket into which it dipped its large pale hands. I stared as those hands emerged, now defiled with dripping gore. Happily, the funny gentleman tossed the globes of filth into the air, juggling them as crimson drops splashed all around. The creature watched expectantly as the balls of blood floated for one moment and then fell onto his gleeful face. The music stopped as the jester turned his eyes to me. The wet red fluid entirely covered his face, and I helplessly witnessed as the thick lips of that face pursed and blew. A bubble of blood began to expand from the wide inhuman mouth.
I stood transfixed as the liquid ball separated from the monstrous maw and rolled in the air toward me. The vagabond jiggled with joy, and his familiar jerked spasmodically as it ferociously turned its crank. A cacophony of awful pandemonium assailed my ears as the bubble of blood collided with my face. All was instantly silenced. I blinked but could not see clearly. A ghastly scarlet fog swirled all around me. Slowly, I began to make out nebulous forms. I saw a buffoonish figure hopping toward me, while scuttling at its feet was a shaggy figure that held a large and empty glass jar. Huge discolored hands reached for my face. Instantly, I was sightless. But, oh, I could feel. My legs seemed to slip from me, and the heavy pack no longer pressed against my back. Hot liquid baptized my flesh as flabby fingers worked that fabric into a kind of sphere. Then the hands were gone, but not the warm red mist. I floated in a carnal pond, and pushing forward I bumped into a wall of glass. Through that glass, darkly, I saw the jolly man lift his bestial companion to the shelf of rotting masks. The wee creature clasped one of the shredding heads and pulled the floppy rubber over its pate. Winking, the masked one pointed a talon at me. I watched as the wicked member began to circulate, and as I watched I too began to gyrate. Dimly, as I turned, I beheld my squashy crony in the jar next to my own. Something in the sardonic curl of his too soft lips proved intoxicating, and stupidly I smiled.
The caravan began to thump with rhythm. I could hear no sound, but I saw the twin grotesqueries flailing playfully about the room. The dwarfish thing leaped into its master’s arms, and together they approached my prison. The shattered visage of the masked one peered into my jar. Perversely, its jaws parted and a twin-tipped tongue snaked forth and touched the glass. How it was possible that I could feel the pressure of that purple porous appendage against my flesh I do not know; but the touch of it so titillated that, god help me, I laughed until I split.
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Table of Contents
Copyright
Gathered Dust
Your Kiss of Corruption
Yon Baleful God
Time of Twilight
These Deities of Rarest Air
The Boy with the Bloodstained Mouth
The Woven Offspring
The Tangled Muse
Let Us Wash This Thing