Show Notes
From the author: “The works of Robert W. Chambers were some of the first horror shorts to get me back into the genre as an adult, so I set out to write a story that elicited that period and atmosphere—cosmic, decadent, and yet decaying. When a group of my friends came together to form the Future Dead Collective and release Collage Macabre: An Exhibition Of Art Horror, it allowed me to explore the darker side of artistic obsession through this lens.
I thoroughly recommend any horror fan check out the full collection, there are a number of stories within I’d consider highlights of this year in horror.
Many thanks to the editors and narrators at Pseudopod for all the work put into their audio adaptation and for giving the story the chance to appear in this format.”
The Red Lady
by Mob
Twelfth bell’s chime,
fairest song, and poppy dew.
For the Red Lady,
‘ fore the Red Lady,
stand anew.
Light flowed through the shutters for many hours, its pale fingers raking the room, yet it was an unexpected delivery that finally roused me.
“Parcel for the young Masters.” A faint voice trickled up from the street.
Henri lolled his head towards me from the chaise-longue. His words tumbled out in a drawl. “I do not possess much by way of mastery this morning, might you get the door?”
“Henri, it is the afternoon already,” I said, but went anyway, trailed by his laughter.
Henri never changed, his languid temperament punctuated by spells of artistic frenzy. Skilled before the canvas, and at a multitude of musical instruments, he formed the beating heart of our little group. Indeed, this master’s house in Montmartre was his.
He promised us a retreat, and retreat we did. From the hustle and bustle of the Academy. From our usual haunts in fair Paris’ cafes and bars. Though we’d met through our music, the quiet decadence of the house let loose our greater pursuits. Henri’s painting, Alec and his never-realised path into sculpture, my own writings. What the Academy instilled in skill and rigour, it stole from us in time and breadth of spirit.
Here, we would steal it back. (Continue Reading…)