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PseudoPod 569: The Black Stone

Show Notes

Andrew is one of the founders and proprietors of the H. P. Lovecraft Historical Society, and has produced and appeared in films, radio dramas, games, music and audiobook projects based on or inspired by Lovecraft’s work, most notably the motion picture of “The Call of Cthulhu” and the Dark Adventure Radio Theatre series.

An audiobook of the Complete Fiction of H.P. Lovecraft has been released and is available through the H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society website. If you’ve listened to any of Andrew’s narrations over on the H.P. Lovecraft Literary Podcast, you owe it to yourself to grab this collection. The newest episode of the Dark Adventure Radio Theatre — “The Rats in the Walls” — should be released by Thanksgiving in time for some wholesome family dining experiences.

Also, check out the Cromcast, which is working through Howard’s impressive catalog of fiction.


The Black Stone

by Robert E. Howard


“They say foul things of Old Times still lurk In dark forgotten corners of the world. And Gates still gape to loose, on certain nights. Shapes pent in Hell.” –Justin Geoffrey

I read of it first in the strange book of Von Junzt, the German eccentric who lived so curiously and died in such grisly and mysterious fashion. It was my fortune to have access to his Nameless Cults in the original edition, the so-called Black Book, published in Dusseldorf in 1839, shortly before a hounding doom overtook the author. Collectors of rare literature were familiar with Nameless Cults mainly through the cheap and faulty translation which was pirated in London by Bridewall in 1845, and the carefully expurgated edition put out by the Golden Goblin Press of New York, 1909. But the volume I stumbled upon was one of the unexpurgated German copies, with heavy black leather covers and rusty iron hasps. I doubt if there are more than half a dozen such volumes in the entire world today, for the quantity issued was not great, and when the manner of the author’s demise was bruited about, many possessors of the book burned their volumes in panic.

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PseudoPod 568: The Room in the Other House


The Room in the Other House

by Kristi DeMeester


I’ve counted the moments we once had over and over. Tried to hold them in my hands as if they were solid, but in the end, there is nothing except for the dark scar tracing against my palm. If I squint, it looks like a worm. If I squint, it’s almost like you’re still here.

We found the house when we weren’t looking. Driving along back roads because there was nothing else to do. We’d had too much to drink the night before and needed coffee and open air that tasted of rainwater and the cloying scent of rotting wood. You took the turns too fast, and I squealed and pretended to be angry, but you grinned through all of it, and it was the kind of dangerous smile I loved.

“What if we just never went back?” you said, but it was a conversation we were always having. There was the house we’d just moved into. The one with the extra two-stall garage and bonus room. Space for your workshop. Space for all of that scrapped metal you called a “project.” There was the dog we adopted together when we decided this thing we were doing was more forever than not. There were Monday mornings and paychecks and doctor’s appointments and phone calls. We were not the kind of people to disappear.

And then you did.

(Continue Reading…)

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PseudoPod 567: Passover


Passover

by Caspian Gray


One day there came a body that didn’t burn.  Tomek found her, because he was young, and because it was his job only to clean the ovens, not to fill them.  The body was covered in ash, streaked with it, but the hair wasn’t even singed.  Worse, it was a naked woman.  She would have been beautiful if he had found her anywhere else.

Tomek screamed.

The two men nearest him–friends of his father, both of them–came running.  No one from the pens ever escaped, but there was always that threat.  Even working in the rooms that held the ovens, you couldn’t forget the threat of them.

“I’m sorry,” said Tomek, when the men looked at him.  “It’s nothing.”

“Nothing,” Waclaw repeated.  “So don’t scream about it.”

Tomek nodded, trying to block their view into the oven with his body.  The men paid him no attention.  They had work to do of a more difficult, complicated nature than merely cleaning up. (Continue Reading…)

Halloween Street

PseudoPod 566: Flash On The Borderlands XL: Halloween Street

Show Notes

The music accompanying the Halloween Parade is “Creeper” from the album “Necrophiliac Among the Living Dead” by Terrortron, a side project of Anders Manga.


The 2017 Halloween Parade

by Alasdair Stuart

 

At the top of the parade, as is always the case, comes the Controller. And as is always the case, your churros in one hand, your coffee in the other, you never actually see her appear. There’s a sense of her stepping up from somewhere, even though nothing is beneath us to step up from. Then, she walks to the center of the road, stops, and waits for the attention she knows she is due and she knows will come.

She claps her gloved hands once. And then she begins to walk.

And the nightmares come after her. The old faithfuls first. The blonde mage and the cheerful goth woman with eyes darker and deeper than time. The Monk with his chained book. The vegetable god and his sometime allies, sometime foes. And joining them, carefully positioned at the back, a small, stocky man in his late ‘60s. He is immaculately dressed, and has mischief in one eye and rage in another. Walking next to him is the living embodiment of human confusion, all muscle and pain and a facial expression that says ‘WHAT?’ He walks to the small man’s right. On the other side, a woman keeps pace with them whose form changes with every step. Lucille Ball becomes Marilyn Monroe. Marilyn becomes Mary Tyler Moore. Mary Tyler Moore becomes Dana Scully and back around they go.

And then come the podcasters. Clusters of people, deep in discussion, using their shared true stories like others use flashlights. Light the way, see what’s coming, fight it or get out of it’s way. The Archivist is deep in conversation with most of them, eyes flicking between skeptical and worryingly, desperately convinced. Nearby, a tall, stern man whose every aspect screams ‘I do not believe you’ is being talked at by the blonde mage. He doesn’t look happy. The blonde mage on the other hand, is having the time of his life. Off his right shoulder, shadow puppets and figures that move like old, restless film move through their own personal patch of darkness. At the center of it, a studious looking man makes notes, records their stories. Nearby, the two radio DJs argue with their friend the deputy.

Truth seekers, Runners, journalists, archivists, narrators, engineers, tech support, hosts. Not one of them look the same, not one of them look well rested and they’re all clearly having the time of their lives. The float is huge, much larger than any previous year and just as crowded as ever. Blank cabinet arcade machines, a shed deep in the woods, a lighthouse, countless Archives. A castle, on a hill, wrapped in tentacles that look much shinier than they did last year. True stories all.

AC/DC blares from the speakers and the Impala rounds the corner. This year’s passengers, the female sherriff and the new, worried looking young man are sitting in the back. The brothers in the front, as always. The angel, his coat wrapped around him, on the bonnet. The devil walking behind them. Always smiling. Behind him come their legion. The people they saved. The people they killed. The ones they lost along the way and the ever-increasing amount of people they found.

Behind the Impala, the woman with the impossibly old gun walks. She’s arm in arm with her sister, the cowboy off their right flank, the Marshal off their left. The sister? She is INTO this, smiling and waving. The cowboy too, smiles and doffs his hat. The woman and the Marshal? Their eyes only see targets and escape routes.

Behind them comes a dirty green Ford so clearly law enforcement in employment that it’s practically wearing an FBI badge. The younger man in the passenger seat, is staring intently at everything and everyone with a mixture of enthusiasm and total, surgical focus. The bigger, older man driving is staring straight ahead. The women in the back are looking anywhere but at each other.

The mass that follows them is an idea with a single voice and a hundred thousand faces. The Herd, because this IS a herd, of the dead move with the singular, insect-like purpose of non-sentience. Their eyes glazed, their rotted jaws clacking on imagined flesh. In amongst them, you spot a young man with long hair. he’s covered in blood not his and he’s smiling. Not because he’s survived but because he is, at last, alone.

Bringing up the rear of the Herd are the other zombies. The smart ones, the urbane ones, the ones with jobs and beef tacos where the beef is grey and used to have a name and memories. The young woman with the shock of white hair leads them, careful not to make eye contact with the soldiers on her right flank. Next to her, the tall bearded scientist smiles and scratches at his arm.

Behind them come the survivors. The man who used to be a sheriff and who learned how to be a leader, The farmer’s daughter turned commander of an army. The feral tracker whose family is now so much more than his bike, his bow and his brother. The King. The King’s tiger. The king’s aide. Most of them are walking point, weapons ready but safeties on. The King’s tiger roars good-naturedly. The King’s aide? He high fives every single one of the people on the rail.

The doctors follow them. Two groups, one a little faded in the colour scheme with hair that screams 1990’s. They don’t make eye contact with anyone, least of all each other.

Well, aside from one. He’s deep in conversation with a gentleman who looks very like him. A little older, hopefully wiser. Although the terrified group of medical students he’s shepherding may disagree with that.

The clown comes last, dancing and capering around the two sets of children. Neither of them are frightened, back to back as they walk the streets. Some in Ghostbusters outfits, some in 90’s clothes. At their center, the only two who aren’t white stand back to back, weapons raised. One has a catapult, the other a book. The only two girls stand with them. Silver glitters in one’s palm. The other is staring at the clown, her nose starting to bleed. She’s smiling.

And then the controller again, as ever, rounding the parade out as she starts it. But this time she’s not alone. The woman walking with her wears a single glove, something medical to its cut. She has shades on, a fabulous dress and the walk of someone getting used to not being bowed down anymore. She is the last person we see this year and, just as the Director started so specifically, she closes the parade with certainty, a bow and a smile.

She survived. We survived. Again.

See you next year folks, and Happy Halloween.

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PseudoPod 565: Cuckoo


Cuckoo

by Angela Slatter


The child was dead by the time I found her, but she suited my purposes perfectly. 

Tiny delicate skin suit, meat sack, air thief. 

The flesh was still warm, which is best—too hard to shrug on something in full rigor—and I crammed my bulk into the small body much as one might climb into a box or trunk to hide. A fold here, a dislocation there, a twinge of discomfort and curses when something tore, stretched just too far. 

The rent was in the webbing of the right hand. Only a little rip, no matter. The sinister manus was my favoured choice of weapon anyway. I sat up, rolled my new shoulders—gently, carefully—then stood, rocking back slightly on legs too tender, too young to support my leviathan weight. I took a step, felt the world tilt, caught my balance before I fell and risked another tear; looked down at the single pink shoe, with its bows and glitter detail; took in the strange white cat face that ran around the hem of the pink and white dress; rubbed my miniature fingers against the dried brown stains that blotched the insides of my thighs. 

The child had died hard. 

The sliver of me that retained empathy ached, just a bit. But I could smell the scent of the one who’d done this and I would follow that scent. The hunt was on, my blood was up. Time was of the essence—my presence will speed decay. I pitched my head up so my nostrils caught the evening breeze and breathed deeply, filling my borrowed lungs, so the memory would remain. 

Again, I took a step, more, all steady. 

Determined. 

Forward.

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PseudoPod 564: Hello, Handsome

Show Notes

MUSIC USED – This week’s music is from “Orgy of the Vampires” by TERRORTRON: a posthumous electronic orb that splatters the ears of the living with a flood of brain-washing sound waves. This is a side project of Anders Manga which involves scoring cult horror movies you’ve never seen. Pray that you only get to hear them.

 


 

Our sisters and us we whisper beneath the glass. There are so many of them, in and out, stopping to look at the case, shaking their heads and walking. Some of them hear. Some of them bend an ear or take a closer look. Some of them we reject. We are perfect and thus, we are vain. A gangly thing with a pockmarked face wants to touch us, wants to bring us home, but we hiss and I know he hears us hiss. So he keeps walking. The girl behind the counter, she looks sad, robbed of her commission. Callous bitch.
Then we see him, then we smell him, the right one. We coo to him inaudibly soft but we know that he can hear it. His face is weathered some but not displeasing, unblemished, not browned by the sun but age and a great deal of smiling. He looks smart in his grey hat and his raincoat, so very smart. The sort of man who would shop at a store like this one, where the finest is sold to the finest. The finest, that’s the sort. We cannot help but notice his hands. It is in our nature to notice someone’s hands of course.
The hands are strong, the fingers slim and exquisite. His wrists are slender, the bones of his knuckles hard. These are not the beaten hands of a man his age. These are not the hands of a working man but nonetheless hands with purpose. I barely need to let him know I’m here or to talk over our sisters. He is deep but is wonderfully legible. Wonderfully, wonderfully legible. He approaches the salesgirl and points into the case.
“I’d like to see that pair.”
Oh, yes, oh yes, you would. You would like to get to know us and let us know you. You would like to take us home. There are stories we read in the people that come and go about the things that happen when we’re taken home, the exquisite warm sensations, the adventure and delight. Some of his secrets are legible but there is so much more to know.
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PseudoPod 563: Flash On The Borderlands XXXIX: Teratology


Kiss, Don’t Tell

by Cassandra Khaw


You never told me she’d be so human, so sweet. Marzipan bones and caramel hair, latte skin stretched taut over a face still new to wanting. Just a mouthful, really, a morsel, her eyes brittle as she watches us flit by, heartbeats sliding between the ribs of time.

In Europe, no one believes in kismet, but who needs faith to author fact?

Later, you joke about serendipity. I nod in silence, my fingers still glazed with her cells and her atoms, the taste of her bitter with ghosts of Sunday afternoon pasts. How many street corners have you kissed on? How many does she remember? How many times has she sat coiled by her phone, waiting, waiting, thumbing through pictures of you together, a patchwork of possibilities that should have spelled out a future?

(Continue Reading…)