Read The Cthulhu Encryption Online

Authors: Brian Stableford

Tags: #mythos, #cthulhu, #horror, #lovecraft, #shoggoths

The Cthulhu Encryption (29 page)

The ship seemed to be fully crewed, with a captain and a mate—or perhaps two captains. Although one seemed to be a wraith compounded out of unnaturally sturdy mist, the other apparently still owned his flesh, albeit that he was as thin as a rake, seemingly on the brink of starvation, and clad only in a loincloth.

“Not such a bad man, after all,” I said to Ysolde, who was staring at the wraithlike ghost, trying to remember who he was.

Jack Taylor was looking back at her, with eyes of mist that held more expression than any eyes of flesh and fluid I had ever seen. He had been dead a long time, but something of him still survived, perhaps by courtesy of Indian magic. Having been born into a Protestant family before lapsing into agnosticism, I had never believed in the Roman notion of purgatory and posthumous repentance, but this, I knew, was a penitent soul—not under the pressure of any repentance forced by torture or divine bullying, but of his own free will.

Ysolde had called for help, but I think he would have come anyway, had he been able to do so.

That he was able to do so was surely due to Angria, the captain of the ship—who was, I suspect, not dead yet, and still endeavouring to find his way in life, through a treacherous labyrinth of negotiation and deception. While his henchman looked at Ysolde, he kept his eyes on a different prize—save for one belief glance in my direction.

I only imagined that I could read minds, taking the gift for granted as one can in a dream, but I still think, even at a long removed, that my intuition regarding John Taylor’s thoughts was accurate. Angria’s dark eyes were far more opaque, and even though they actually met mine, for a split second, there was still a mystery behind them. He too had come of his own free will, though, glad to have been summoned, glad to be able to make a small payment on a debt that he had carelessly incurred when he was a younger and more reckless man. He, I think, probably did believe in metempsychosis, and in
karma
too, and knew that there were moral accounts to be balanced before it would be safe to die.

Then I got to my feet, steadied myself on the cluttered deck, and turned to Dupin. “For a moment there,” I said, “I almost believed that this was not a dream, and that I was actually going to die.”

“This is most certainly a dream,” he told me, grimly, “but that does not mean that we have an automatic entitlement to wake up. I suspect that better men than us have died in dreams of this dire sort.”

It was Angria, not John Taylor, who screeched orders at the crew and brought the ghost-ship around—headed, not for the island of the megaliths, which seemed more distant now than it had been while we were still making progress toward it, but for the remainder of the house, which now seemed an island itself, consisting of nothing but the second storey, the mansards and the crumbling roof. I could see the heads of people in the mansards through gaps in the tiles. I tried to count them but could not be sure that there were five.

The principal intention of our rescuers, I was convinced, was to save the man they had known as Edward England. They had been direly treacherous men in their time—pirates as bloodthirsty as any that had ever committed mass murder—but they were working on the side of the angels now. They wanted to save England, his servants, and perhaps the books too.

Oberon Breisz did not see matters that way. He undoubtedly thought that Angria and John Taylor both had old scores held against him, and were coming to settle them while Cthulhu had weakened him. It was Taylor who shouted out to him, trying to reassure him, but it would not have made a difference even if his old mentor John Dee had instructed him to be calm and trusting. As Dupin had observed, there comes a time when broken composure turns entirely to emotion—usually to uncontrollable wrath.

Breisz paused in the tiresome work of keeping Cthulhu’s agents at bay long enough to curse the ship, and everyone sailing in her. Perhaps, in that reckless action, the shoggoths lent him a little of their own force, but I doubt it. Cthulhu’s agents were not really agents, in a pedantic sense, because Cthulhu was not the kind of entity that was possessed of agency, in a pedantic sense. At any rate, the core malevolence of the curse was Edward England’s, and his alone. A storm wind ripped through the sails and rigging of the ghost, and might have shattered her masts and hull had it not been for the glaring cross, which soaked up much of the blast.

The ship survived the maleficent formula. Had I ducked, I would have stayed safely on her deck. As it was, however, I was tumbled backwards into the bottom of a small, shallow jolly-boat tucked into a covert between the foredeck and the bridge. As the ship lurched, the angry wind snatched the jolly-boat into the air, and dropped it overboard.

Fortunately, it landed bottom down, and floated. Unfortunately, I had no oars—no means of propulsion, or of steering.

The jolly-boat was whipped away from the ship by a wayward current, and tentacles immediately began reaching up from a surface that now seemed much less viscous, groping for me and forcing me to flatten myself out in the bottom of the boat. I took my gun out of my pocket again, intending to blast any tentacle that contrived to wind itself around me, but none did while I stayed low, even though bulky shadows rose up and fell back to either side of the boat.

I had given up all hope of saving myself from the nightmare by waking up, but I told myself that it could not last forever, and that I was far from being alone in the conflict.

If the tentacles could not quite contrive to grasp me, though, they could certainly grasp the boat, and they had strength enough to crack and splinter the hull. I could almost feel the little craft coming apart, and risked raising my head to see where the ship was, in the hope that some further rescue might be possible from that direction.

It was not. I could see the shining cross and the skull-and-crossbones lit from below, but they were a long way off now. I could also see Oberon Breisz’s lighted window behind it, but the voices that carried to me over the tortured surface were distorted in passing, and bore more resemblance to he muttering of demons that human beings engaged in urgent but constructive negotiation.

By way of compensation, however—and I felt entitled to a measure of compensation, by now—the hectic flight of the boat from Angria’s ship and Breisz’s unsteady island had bought me a great deal closer to the megaliths, where Madame Lacuzon and the Comte de Saint-Germain were still waiting, eager to help if their assistance ever became practicable. I could not hope that the seething and swarming sea would deliver me to within their arms’ reach of its own accord, but now that the liquid was indeed authentically liquid, I wondered whether I might be able to swim through it in spite of its deadly infestation.

I had no time to reflect at length; if the boat split open beneath me I would surely be doomed, so I pocketed my revolver yet again, leapt to my feet, ran the length of the jolly-boat—which was not, alas very far—and dived into the water, poised to swim as fast as I could as soon as I surfaced.

Tentacles and eel-like entities immediately tried to capture me, but they were clumsy as well as blind, and the greater danger came from the mathematical omnipresence beyond those crude artefacts, which was ambitious to get inside me again. Once more, I felt the algebraic worms invading my flesh—but this time, instead of starting at the legs and working their way up, they struck directly at the head, and dug into my defenceless brain.

As soon as they made contact with my thoughts, they seemed to metamorphose into something even less imaginatively graspable, but far more inimical. There had been a moment during my second encounter with the shoggoths when the most distant aspect of them had seemed to be musical as well as mathematical, and now that aspect became foremost in its insistence, mounting a full frontal attack on reason itself—but I had heard demonic music more than once, and my reflexive reaction had been educated, at least to a degree. It hurt me, but it did not damn me.

In was on the very brink of madness and annihilation—but then, in addition to my own resistance, I heard shouting of a peculiarly rhythmic kind, and I realized that there were two voices nearby, howling in unison. It was not mellifluous, by any means, but it was virtuous music, not merely to my ears but—more importantly—to my fugitive consciousness. As another castaway might have clung to a spar of driftwood with all his might, I clung to that barbarous shanty with all the force of my sanity—and I truly believe that it literally pulled me to the shore, where the two singers seized me avidly and dragged me from the glutinous waves on to the solid ground within the ancient circle.

Saint-Germain howled with triumph—not so much because he thought my life worth saving but simply because the victory really had been a triumph of his magic over malign circumstance, of which he might be proud, even if he had been forced to join forces with the wise woman to achieve it.

Madame Lacuzon said nothing; I was not Dupin. Saint-Germain, on the other hand, pulled me to my feet and demanded: “What in Heaven’s name is going on over here?”

“It’s a ghost-ship,” I said, “come to redeem a little of the debt its crewmen owe to human kindness. The repentant pirates will save everyone if they can—but I’m not sure that Oberon Breisz, alias Edward England, alias Edward Kelley, will consent to be saved. When I was blown overboard, he still seemed very intent on going down with his library. Dupin will save the books if he can, though—you may depend on that.”

“What about the gold?” the Comte demanded, intemperately. “Is that the Flaming Cross of Goa on the ghost-ship’s mast?”

“Very likely,” I said, “since Angria is the ghost-ship’s master, and Olivier Levasseur had to return the cross to him—but I doubt that you’ll ever get your hands on it, or even the meager fraction of the treasure that is still somewhere in the house…unless, of course, you volunteer to join the ghost-ship’s crew. Mind you, they might refuse to take you, as you’re no mariner. There are conventions to be observed, after all.”

“Damn it!” he said. “Hell’s bells and buckets of blood!” He seemed to be practising what passes for pirate parlance on the Parisian stage, but if he was momentarily tempted to pursue the golden cross even on to a ghost-ship, he rapidly abandoned the idea. “So the treasure
was
still here, after all,” he murmured. “To get so close and then to have to stand and watch…what exactly am I watching?”

“Don’t worry,” I said. “It’s just a hallucination: a stray madness that was wandering the winds of the world in search of victims, and found us. It will all be gone in the morning…if we live that long, and can contrive to wake up. And you didn’t really get close—I’ll wager you only got this far because Madame Lacuzon was desperate for whatever help she could find, in the hope of pulling Dupin from the quagmire.”

“She certainly didn’t try to keep me out, for once,” Saint-Germain admitted. “If that ship doesn’t turn away soon, you know, the monsters in the sea will have them all. Can ghost-ships perish, do you suppose, or will it simply reappear in some distant ocean if it founders here?”

“In this arena,” I said, “I suspect that it can go down with all hands…except perhaps for Angria, who might still be alive and asleep, somewhere else in the great wide world, still capable of finding his way home if he loses his dream-vessel.”

The ship did not turn away. I saw the shadows, at least, leap from the windows of the mansards on to her deck—but so far as I could tell, Oberon Breisz’s window was still firmly closed. I think he was still chanting—but he was alone, with no one to form a chorus.

And the remains of the house did eventually
go down
, dragged into a vast whirlpool.

The ghost-ship immediately began circling the vortex, whirled helplessly around by the furious water. Silently, I began counting the seconds while it battled against the avid mouth, and had reached thirteen before Angria’s loyal crewmen contrived to steer it clear of the rotating funnel, with the aid of a seemingly-haphazard gust of wind.

Then the ship set a course for us—and seemed to be skimming over the waves, with all the speed expectable of an artful pirate. The monsters were helpless now, or seemingly so. The ghost-ship had the upper hand, even though its pickings had been thinner than its captain hoped.

It reached us within minutes, and crewmen threw ropes by which we were able to make it fast to the megaliths. Then people began leaping down from the deck on to the solid ground.

I was there beside Madame Lacuzon to catch Dupin when he landed, and prevent him sprawling on the ground in an ungainly fashion. He was overjoyed to find me. “We thought you were lost!” he said

“Did you get Breisz away before his house finally sank?” I asked, in case my impression had been mistaken.

“No,” said Dupin, “and he took the books with him, alas. We saved his servants, though. That’s something, I suppose.” It was an unusually generous concession on his part. I knew how devastated he must be by the thought of the lost treasure, far beyond the price of gold and diamonds in his eyes.

We found Chapelain then, and checked that he was uninjured—but he was looking up at the deck of the pirate ship, and had no time for us. He was looking at Ysolde Leonys, who was poised on the balustrade of the forecastle.

“Don’t jump!” he yelled. “Stay aboard!”

John Taylor’s ghost was clambering up on to the forecastle, evidently with the same thought in mind—but Ysolde took no notice. She jumped—perhaps because she was foolish, and perhaps because she felt that she had no choice. She had summoned help for us, because we were under her protection; she had not summoned it for herself, because she did not believe that she had any entitlement to rescue.

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