MY NAME is Pharpetron,
among those who have known me in Poseidonis; but even I, the
last and most forward pupil of the wise Avyctes, know not the name of that
which I am fated to become ere to-morrow. There- fore, by the ebbing silver
lamps, in my master's marble house above the loud, ever-ravening sea, I
write this tale with a hasty hand, scrawling an ink of wizard virtue on
the grey, priceless, antique parchment of dragons. And having written,
I shall enclose the pages in a sealed cylinder of orichalchum, and shall
cast the cylinder from a high window into the sea, lest that which I am
doomed to become should haply destroy the writing. And it may be that mariners
from Lephara, passing to Umb and Pneor in their tall triremes, will find
the cylinder; or fishers will draw it from the wave in their seines of
byssus; and having read my story, men will learn the truth and take warning;
and no man's feet, henceforward, will approach the pale and demon- haunted
house of Avyctes.
For six years, I have dwelt apart with the aged
master, forgetting youth and its wonted desires in the study of arcanic
things. Together, we have delved more deeply than all others before us
in an interdicted lore; we have solved the keyless hieroglyphs that guard
ante-human formulae; we have talked with the prehis- toric dead; we have
called up the dwellers in sealed crypts, in fearful abysses beyond space.
Few are the sons of mankind who have cared to seek us out among the desolate,
wind-worn crags; and many, but nameless, are the visitants who have come
to us from further bourns of place and time.
Stern and white as a tomb, older than the memory
of the dead, and built by men or devils beyond the recording of myth, is
the mansion in which we dwell. Far below, on black, naked reefs, the northern
sea climbs and roars indomitably, or ebbs with a ceaseless murmur as of
armies of baffled demons; and the house is filled evermore, like a hollow-sounding
sepulcher, with the drear echo of its tumultuous voices; and the winds
wail in dismal wrath around the high towers, but shake them not. On the
seaward side, the man- sion rises sheerly from the straight-falling cliff;
but on the other sides there are narrow terraces, grown with dwarfish,
crooked cedars that bow always beneath the gale. Giant marble monsters
guard the landward por- tals; and huge marble women ward the strait porticoes
above the sea; and mighty statues and mummies stand everywhere in the chambers
and along the halls. But, saving these, and the spirits we have summoned,
there is none to companion us; and liches and shadows have been the servitors
of our daily needs.
All men have heard the fame of Avyctes, the sole surviving
pupil of that Malygris who tyrannized in his necromancy over Susran from
a tower of sable stone; Malygris, who lay dead for years while men believed
him living; who, lying thus, still uttered potent spells and dire oracles
with decaying lips. But Avyctes lusted not for temporal power in the manner
of Maly- gris; and having learned all that the elder sorcerer could teach
him, withdrew from the cities of Poseidonis to seek another and vaster
dominion; and I, the youth Pharpetron, in the latter years of Avyctes,
was per- mitted to join him in this solitude; and since then, I have shared
his austerities and vigils and evocations . . . and now, likewise, I must
share the weird doom that has come in answer to his summoning.
Not without terror (since man is but mortal) did
I, the neophyte, behold at first the abhorrent and tre- mendous faces of
them that obeyed Avyctes: the genii of the sea and earth, of the stars
and the heavens, who passed to and fro in his marmorean halls. I shud-
dered at the black writhing of submundane things from the many-volumed
smoke of the braziers; I cried in horror at the grey foulnesses, colossal,
without form, that crowded malignly about the drawn circle of seven colors,
threatening unspeakable trespass on us that stood at the center. Not without
revulsion did I drink wine that was poured by cadavers, and eat bread that
was purveyed by phantoms. But use and custom dulled the strangeness, destroyed
the fear; and in time I believed implicitly that Avyctes was the lord of
all incantations and exorcisms, with infallible power to dismiss the beings
he evoked.
Well had it had been for Avyctes-- and for me--
if the master had contented himself with the lore pre- served from Atlantis
and Thule, or brought over from Mu and Mayapan. Surely this should have
been enough: for in the ivory-sheeted books of Thule there were blood-writ
runes that would call the demons of the fifth and seventh planets, if spoken
aloud at the hour of their ascent; and the sorcerers of Mu had left record
of a process whereby the doors of far-future time could be unlocked; and
our fathers, the Atlanteans, had known the road between the atoms and the
path into far stars, and had held speech with the spirits of the sun. But
Avyctes thirsted for a darker knowledge, a deeper empery; and into his
hands, in the third year of my novitiate, there came the mirror-bright
tablet of the lost serpent-people.
Strange, and apparently fortuitous, was our finding
of the tablet. At certain hours, when the tide had fallen from the steep
rocks, we were wont to descend by cavern-hidden stairs to a cliff-walled
crescent beach be- hind the promontory on which stood the house of Avyctes.
There, on the dun, wet sands, beyond the foamy tongues of the surf, would
lie the worn and curious driftage of alien shores, and trove that hur-
ricanes had cast up from unsounded deeps. And there we had found the purple
and sanguine volutes of great shells, and rude lumps of ambergris, and
white flowers of perpetually blooming coral; and once, the barbaric idol
of green brass that had been the figurehead of a galley from far hyperboreal
isles.
There had been a great storm, such as must have
riven the sea to its nethermost profound; but the tem- pest had gone by
with morning, and the heavens were cloudless on that fatal day when we
found the tablet, and the demon winds were hushed among the high crags
and chasms; and the sea lisped with a low whisper, like the rustle of gowns
of samite trailed by fleeing maidens on the sand. And just beyond the ebbing
wave, in a tangle of russet sea-weed, we beheld a thing that glittered
with blinding sun-like brilliance. And running forward, I plucked it from
the wrack before the wave's return, and bore it to Avyctes.
The tablet was wrought of some nameless metal, like
never-rusting iron, but heavier. It had the form of a triangle and was
broader at the widest than a man's heart. On one side it was wholly blank;
and Avyctes and I, in turn, beheld our features mirrored strangely, like
the drawn, pallid features of the dead, in its burnished surface. On the
other side many rows of small crooked ciphers were incised deeply in the
metal, as if by the action of some mordant acid; and these ciphers were
not the pictorial symbols or alpha- betic characters of any language known
to the master or to me.
Of the tablet's age and origin, likewise, we could
form no conjecture; and our erudition was altogether baffled. For many
days thereafter we studied the writing and held argument that came to no
issue. And night by night, in a high chamber closed against the perennial
winds, we pondered over the dazzling triangle by the tall straight flames
of silver lamps. For Avyctes deemed that knowledge of rare value (or haply
some secret of an alien or elder magic) was holden by the clueless crooked
ciphers. Then, since all our scholarship was in vain, the master sought
another divination, and had recourse to wizardy and necromancy. But at
first, among the devils and phantoms that answered our in- terrogation,
none could tell us aught concerning the tablet. And any other than Avyctes
would have despaired in the end . . . and well would it have been if he
had despaired, and had sought no longer to decipher the writing ....
The months and years went by with a slow thunder-
ing of seas on the dark rocks, and a headlong clamor of winds around the
white towers. Still we continued our delvings and evocations; and further,
always fur- ther we went into lampless realms of space and spirit; learning,
perchance, to unlock the hithermost of the manifold infinities. And at
whiles, Avyctes would resume his pondering of the sea-found tablet; or
would question some visitant from other spheres of time and place regarding
its interpretation.
At last, by the use of a chance formula, in idle
experiment, he summoned up the dim, tenuous ghost of a sorcerer from prehistoric
years; and the ghost, in a thin whisper of uncouth, forgotten speech, informed
us that the letters on the tablet were those of a lan- guage of the serpent-men,
whose primordial continent had sunk aeons before the lifting of Hyperborea
from the ooze. But the ghost could tell us naught of their significance;
for, even in his time, the serpent-people had become a dubious legend;
and their deep, ante- human lore and sorcery were things irretrievable
by man.
Now, in all the books of conjuration owned by Avyctes,
there was no spell whereby we could call the lost serpent-men from their
fabulous epoch. But there was an old Lemurian formula, recondite and uncertain,
by which the shadow of a dead man could be sent into years posterior to
those of his own life-time, and could be recalled after an interim by the
wizard. And the shade, being wholly insubstantial, would suffer no harm
from the temporal transition, and would remem- ber, for the information
of the wizard, that which he had been instructed to learn during the journey.
So, having catled again the ghost of the prehistoric
sorcerer, wnose name was Ybith, Avyctes made a singular use of several
very ardent gums and com- bustible fragments of fossil wood; and he and
I, re- citing the responses to the formula, sent the thin spirit of Ybith
into the far ages of the serpent-men. And after a time which the master
deemed sufficient, we performed the curious rites of incantation that would
recall Ybith from his alienage. And the rites were successful; and Ybith
stood before us again, like a blown vapor that is nigh to vanishing. And
in words that were faint as the last echo of perishing memories, the specter
told us the key to the meaning of the letters, which he had learned in
the primeval past; and after this, we questioned Ybith no more, but suffered
him to return unto slumber and oblivion.
Then, knowing the import of the tiny, twisted ciph-
ers, we read the writing on the tablet and made thereof a transliteration,
though not without labor and difficulty, since the very phonetics of the
serpent tongue, and the symbols and ideas expressed in the writing, were
somewhat alien to those of mankind. And when we had mastered the inscription,
we found that it con- tained the formula for a certain evocation which,
no doubt, had been used by the serpent sorcerers. But the object of the
evocation was not named; nor was there any clue to the nature or identity
of that which would come in answer to the rites. And moreover there was
no corresponding rite of exorcism nor spell of dismissal.
Great was the jubilation of Avyctes, deeming that
we had learned a lore beyond the memory or pre- vision of man. And though
I sought to dissuade him, he resolved to employ the evocation, arguing
that our discovery was no chance thing but was fatefully pre- destined
from the beginning. And he seemed to think lightly of the menace that might
be brought upon us by the conjuration of things whose nativity and at-
tributes were wholly obscure. "For," said Avyctes, "I have
called up, in all the years of my sorcery, no god or devil, no demon or
lich or shadow, which I could not control and dismiss at will. And I am
loath to believe that any power or spirit beyond the subversion of my spells
could have been summoned by a race of serpents, whatever their skill in
demonism and necro- mancy.
So, seeing that he was obstinate, and aeknowledging
him for my master in all ways, I consented to aid Avyctes in the experiment,
though not without dire misgivings. And then we gathered together, in the
cham- ber of conjuration, at the specified hour and configura- tion of
the stars, the equivalents of sundry rare materials that the tablet had
instructed us to use in the ritual.
Of much that we did, and of certain agents that
we employed, it were better not to tell; nor shall I record the shrill,
sibilant words, difficult for beings not born of serpents to articulate,
whose intonation formed a signal part of the ceremony. Toward the last,
we drew a triangle on the marble floor with the fresh blood of birds; and
Avyctes stood at one angle, and I at another; and the gaunt umber mummy
of an Atlantean warrior, whose name had been Oigos, was stationed at the
third angle. And standing thus, Avyctes and I held tapers of corpse-tallow
in our hands, till the tapers had burned down between our fingers as into
a socket. And in the outstretched palms of the mummy of Oigos, as if in
shallow thuribles, talc and asbestos burned, ignited by a strange fire
whereof we knew the secret. At one side we had traced on the floor an in-
frangible ellipse, made by an endless linked repetition of the twelve unspeakable
Signs of Oumor, to which we could retire if the visitant should prove inimical
or rebellious. We waited while the pole-circling stars went over, as had
been prescribed. Then, when the tapers had gone out between our seared
fingers, and the talc and asbestos were wholly consumed in the mummy's
eaten palms, Avyctes uttered a single word whose sense was obscure to us;
and Oigos, being ani- mated by sorcery and subject to our will, repeated
the word after a given interval, in tones that were hollow as a tomb-born
echo; and I in my turn also repeated it.
Now, in the chamber of evocation, before beginning
the ritual, we had opened a small window giving upon the sea, and had likewise
left open a high door on the hall to landward, lest that which came in
answer to us should require a spatial mode of entrance. And during the
ceremony, the sea became still and there was no wind, and it seemed that
all things were hushed in awful expectation of the nameless visitor. But
after all was done, and the last word had been repeated by Oigos and me,
we stood and waited vainly for a visible sign or other manifestation. The
lamps burned stilly in the midnight room; and no shadows fell, other than
were cast by ourselves and Oigos and by the great marble women along the
walls. And in the magic mirrors we had placed cunningly, to reflect those
that were otherwise unseen, we beheld no breath or trace of any image.
At this, after a reasonable interim, Avyctes was
sorely disappointed, deeming that the evocation had failed of its purpose;
and I, having the same thought, was secretly relieved. And we questioned
the mummy of Oigos, to learn if he had perceived in the room, with such
senses as are peculiar to the dead, the sure token or doubtful proof of
a presence undescried by us the living. And the mummy gave a necromantic
answer, saying that there was nothing.
"Verily," said Avyctes, "it were
useless to wait longer. For surely in some way we have misunderstood the
purport of the writing, or have failed to duplicate the matters used in
the evocation, or the correct in- tonement of the words. Or it may be that
in the lapse of so many aeons, the thing that was formerly wont to respond
has long ceased to exist, or has altered in its attributes so that the
spell is now void and valueless." To this I assented readily, hoping
that the matter was at an end. So, after erasing the blood-marked triangle
and the sacred ellipse of the linked Signs of Oumor, and after dismissing
Oigos to his wonted place among other mummies, we retired to sleep. And
in the days that followed, we resumed our habitual studies, but made no
mention to each other of the strange triangular tablet or the vain formula.
Even as before, our days went on; and the sea climbed
and roared in white fury on the cliffs, and the winds wailed by in their
unseen, sullen wrath, bowing the dark cedars as witches are bowed by the
breath of Taaran, god of evil. Almost, in the marvel of new tests and cantraips,
I forgot the ineffectual conjura- tion, and I deemed that Avyctes had also
forgotten it.
All things were as of yore, to our sorcerous per-
ception; and there was naught to trouble us in our wisdom and power and
serenity, which we deemed secure above the sovereignty of kings. Reading
the horoscopic stars, we found no future ill in their as- pect; nor was
any shadow of bale foreshown to us through geomancy, or other modes of
divination such as we employed. And our familiars, though grisly and dreadful
to mortal gaze, were wholly obedient to us the masters.
Then, on a clear summer afternoon, we walked, as
was often our custom, on the marble terrace behind the house. In robes
of ocean-purple, we paced among the windy trees with their blown, crooked
shadows; and there, following us as we went to and fro, I saw the blue
shadow of Avyctes and my own shadow on the marble; and between them, an
adumbration that was not wrought by any of the cedars. And I was greatly
startled, but spoke not of the matter to Avyctes, and observed the unknown
shadow with covert care.
I saw that it followed closely the shadow of Avyctes,
keeping ever the same distance. And it fluttered not in the wind, but moved
with a flowing as of some heavy, thick, putrescent liquid; and its color
was not blue nor purple nor black, nor any other hue to which man's eyes
are habituated, but a hue as of some unearthly purulence; and its form
was altogether monstrous, hav- ing a squat head and a long, undulant body,
without similitude to beast or devil.
Avyctes heeded not the shadow; and still I feared
to speak, though I thought it an ill thing for the master to be companioned
thus. And I moved closer to him, in order to detect by touch or other perception
the invisible presence that had cast the adumbration. But the air was void
to sunward of the shadow; and I found nothing opposite the sun nor in any
oblique di- rection, though I searched closely, knowing that certain beings
cast their shadows thus.
After a while, at the customary hour, we returned
by the coiling stairs and monster-flanked portals into the high house.
And I saw that the strange adumbra- tion moved ever behind the shadow of
Avyctes, falling horrible and unbroken on the steps and passing clearly
separate and distinct amid the long umbrages of the towering monsters.
And in the dim halls beyond the sun, where shadows should not have been,
I beheld with terror the distorted loathly blot, having a pestilent, unnamable
hue, that followed Avyctes as if in lieu of his own extinguished shadow.
And all that day, every- where that we went, at the table served by specters,
or in the mummy-warded room of volumes and books, the thing pursued Avyctes,
clinging to him even as leprosy to the leper. And still the master had
perceived it not; and still I forbore to warn him, hoping that the visitant
would withdraw in its own time, going obscurely as it had come.
But at midnight, when we sat together by the silver
lamps, pondering the blood-writ runes of Hyperborea, I saw that the shadow
had drawn closer to the shadow of Avyctes, towering behind his chair on
the wall be- tween the huge sculptured women and the mummies. And the thing
was a streaming ooze of charnel pollu- tion, a foulness beyond the black
leprosies of hell; and I could bear it no more; and I cried out in my fear
and loathing, and informed the master of its presence.
Beholding now the shadow, Avyctes considered it
closesly and in silence; and there was neither fear nor awe nor abhorrence
in the deep, graven wrinkles of his visage. And he said to me at last:
"This thing is a mystery beyond my lore; but never,
in all the practice of my art, has any shadow come to me unbidden. And
since all others of our evocations have found answer ere this, I must deem
that the shad- ow is a veritable entity, or the sign of an entity, that
has come in belated response to the formula of the serpent-sorcerers, which
we thought powerless and void. And I think it well that we should now repair
to the chamber of conjuration, and interrogate the shadow in such manner
as we may, to inquire its nativity and purpose."
We went forthwith into the chamber of conjuration,
and made such preparations as were both necessary and possible. And when
we were prepared to question it, the unknown shadow had drawn closer still
to the shadow of Avyctes, so that the clear space between the two was no
wider than the thickness of a necromancer's rod.
Now, in all ways that were feasible, we interrogated
the shadow, speaking through our own lips and the lips of mummies and statues.
But there was no determin- able answer; and calling certain of the devils
and phan- toms that were our familiars, we made question through the mouths
of these, but without result. And all the while, our magic mirrors were
void of any reflection of a presence that might have cast the shadow; and
they that had been our spokesmen could detect nothing in the room. And
there was no spell, it seemed, that had power upon the visitant. So Avyctes
became troubled; and drawing on the floor with blood and ashes the ellipse
of Oumor, wherein no demon nor spirit may intrude, he retired to its center.
But still within the ellipse, like a flowing taint of liquid corruption,
the shadow followed his shadow; and the space between the two was no wider
than the thickness of a wizard's pen.
Now, on the face of Avyctes, horror had graven new
wrinkles; and his brow was beaded with a deathly sweat. For he knew, even
as I, that this was a thing beyond all laws, and foreboding naught but
disaster and evil. And he cried to me in a shaken voice, and said:
"I have no knowledge of this thing nor its
intention toward me, and no power to stay its progress. Go forth and leave
me now; for I would not that any man should witness the defeat of my sorcery
and the doom that may follow thereupon. Also, it were well to de- part
while there is time, lest you too should become the quarry of the shadow
and be compelled to share its menace."
Though terror had fastened upon my inmost soul,
I was loath to leave Avyctes. But I had sworn to obey his will at all times
and in every respect; and more- over I knew myself doubly powerless against
the adum- bration, since Avyctes himself was impotent.
So, bidding him farewell, I went forth with trem-
bling limbs from the haunted chamber; and peering back from the threshold,
I saw that the alien umbrage, creeping like a noisome blotch on the floor,
had touched the shadow of Avyctes. And at that moment the master shrieked
aloud like one in nightmare; and his face was no longer the face of Avyctes
but was contorted and convulsed like that of some helpless madman who wrestles
with an unseen incubus. And I looked no more, but fled along the dim outer
hall and through the high portals giving upon the terrace.
A red moon, ominous and gibbous, had declined above
the terrace and the crags; and the shadows of the cedars were elongated
in the moon; and they wa- vered in the gale like the blown cloaks of enchanters.
And stooping against the gale, I fled across the terrace toward the outer
stairs that led to a steep path in the riven waste of rocks and chasms
behind Avyctes' house. I neared the terrace edge, running with the speed
of fear; but I could not reach the topmost outer stair; for at every step
the marble flowed beneath me, fleeing like a pale horizon before the seeker.
And though I raced and panted without pause, I could draw no nearer to
the terrace edge.
At length I desisted, seeing that an unknown spell
had altered the very space about the house of Avyctes, so that none could
escape therefrom to landward. So, resigning myself in despair to whatever
might befall, I returned toward the house. And climbing the white stairs
in the low, level beams of the crag-caught moon, I saw a figure that awaited
me in the portals. And I knew by the trailing robe of sea-purple, but by
no other token, that the figure was Avyctes. For the face was no longer
in its entirety the face of man, but was become a loathly fluid amalgam
of human features with a thing not to be identified on earth. The transfiguration
was ghastlier than death or the changes of decay; and the face was already
hued with the nameless, corrupt and purulent color of the strange shadow,
and had taken on, in respect to its outlines, a partial likeness to the
squat profile of the shadow. The hands of the figure were not those of
any terrene being; and the shape beneath the robe had lengthened with a
nauseous undulant pliancy; and the face and fingers seemed to drip in the
moon- light with a deliquescent corruption. And the pursuing umbrage, like
a thickly flowing blight, had corroded and distorted the very shadow of
Avyctes, which was now double in a manner not to be narrated here.
Fain would I have cried or spoken aloud; but horror
had dried up the fount of speech. And the thing that had been Avyctes beckoned
me in silence, uttering no word from its living and putrescent lips. And
with eyes that were no longer eyes, but had become an oozing abomination,
it peered steadily upon me. And it clutched my shoulder closely with the
soft leprosy of its fingers, and led me half-swooning with revulsion along
the hall, and into that room where the mummy of Oigos, who had assisted
us in the threefold incantation of the serpent-men, was stationed with
several of his fellows.
By the lamps which illumed the chamber, burning
with pale, still, perpetual flames, I saw that the mum- mies stood erect
along the wall in their exanimate re- pose, each in his wonted place with
his tall shadow beside him. But the great, gaunt shadow of Oigos on the
marble wall was companioned by an adumbration similar in all respects to
the evil thing that had fol- lowed the master and was now incorporate with
him. I remembered that Oigos had performed his share of the ritual, and
had repeated an unknown stated word in turn after Avyctes; and so I knew
that the horror had come to Oigos in turn, and would wreak itself upon
the dead even as on the living. For the foul, anony- mous thing that we
had called in our presumption could manifest itself to mortal ken in no
other way than this. We had drawn it from unfathomable depths of tim and
space, using ignorantly a dire formula; and the thing had come at its own
chosen hour, to stamp itself in abomination uttermost on the evocators.
Since then, the night has ebbed away, and a second
day has gone by like a sluggish ooze of horror. . . . I have seen the complete
identification of the shadow with the flesh and the shadow of Avyctes .
. . and also I have seen the slow encroachment of that other um- brage,
mingling itself with the lank shadow and the sere, bituminous body of Oigos,
and turning them to a similitude of the thing which Avyctes has become.
And I have heard the mummy cry out like a living man in great pain and
fear, as with the throes of a second dissolution, at the impingement of
the shadow. And long since it has grown silent, like the other horror,
and I know not its thoughts or its intent. . . . And verily I know not
if the thing that has come to us be one or several; nor if its avatar will
rest complete with the three that summoned it forth into time, or be extended
to others.
But these things, and much else, I shall soon know;
for now, in turn, there is a shadow that follows mine, drawing ever closer.
The air congeals and curdles with an unseen fear; and they that were our
familiars have fled from the mansion; and the great marble women seem to
tremble where they stand along the walls. But the horror that was Avyctes,
and the second horror that was Oigos, have left me not, and neither do
they tremble. And with eyes that are not eyes, they seem to brood and watch,
waiting till I too shall become as they. And their stillness is more terrible
than if they had rended me limb from limb. And there are strange voices
in the wind, and alien roarings upon the sea; and the walls quiver like
a thin veil in the black breath of remote abysses.
So, knowing that the time is brief, I have shut
my- self in the room of volumes and books and have written this account.
And I have taken the bright tri- angular tablet, whose solution was our
undoing, and have cast it from the window into the sea, hoping that none
will find it after us. And now I must make an end, and enclose this writing
in the sealed cylinder of orichalchum, and fling it forth to drift upon
the wave. For the space between my shadow and the shadow of the horror
is straitened momently. . . . and the space is no wider than the thickness
of a wizard's pen.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .