Paula Guran - The Mammoth Book of Cthulhu

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This outstanding anthology of original stories — from both established award-winning authors and exciting new voices — collects tales of cosmic horror inspired by Lovecraft from authors who do not merely imitate, but reimagine, re-energize, and renew the best of his concepts in ways relevant to today’s readers, to create fresh new fiction that explores our modern fears and nightmares. From the depths of R’lyeh to the heights of the Mountains of Madness, some of today’s best weird fiction writers traverse terrain created by Lovecraft and create new eldritch geographies to explore . . .

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An Open Letter to Mister Edgar Allan Poe, from a Fervent Admirer

Optissime! Best of the Best!

It is with reverence and reluctant challenge I unfurl my banner to you herein. Great Poe, of all your peerless poems, it is The Conqueror Worm I’ve cherished most. I have sipped the ichor of its icy truth again and again, amid the dark business of this recent century. The Worm, you see, has long been my metier . The Worm has been my very medium, for longer ages than even your great spirit can conceive.

I write, Sir, to apprise you of my apotheosis. For I must, by the law of Majesty, proclaim and present myself a mightier Monarch than King Worm himself. Until I find you, Sir, I produce this document, that you may know Who seeks you. It is with deep regard that I unfold to you this declaration of myself, my Work, my Way.

Ever since your meteoric crossing of the skies — so bright, so brief! — like steeds your melodies, your Stygian rhapsodies have lofted me and borne me worlds away. You must forgive, oh metric Master, the imperfect measures of my fledgling songs. What grace they have, they’ve learned from you. One of these songs reports my recent rebirth and present course thus:

In Netherlands did old Van Haarme
A vasty boneyard till and farm,
Did plough and plant a funeral field
Where gnarled lich was all his yield,
And parched cadaver all the crop
That e’er the Ghoul did sow or reap.
But it’s Carnival Row in latter years
That the canny Hound now scythes and shears.
The boggy graves of his natal feif
He’s quit for the Carnival’s shadow-strife.
It’s Poortown’s streets that he seeds now, and tills,
Where the shambling shadow-folk drift without wills.

You who have rendered so well the psychic fecundity of cities will appreciate, I know, the giddy translocation I experienced, from the foggy churchyards of the Lowland, to the human Roil within a maze of pavements. And so, perhaps, you commiserate for what might have been a grave upheaval of my mode of life. But it has not been so! I have blundered upon Powers unforeseen — undreamed! I command a legion here, and have found my own wings in the wills of my living prey.

My ancient lust was to enslave the dead
And up the brittle ladders of their bones
To climb to zeniths thick with stars bestrown,
Against vast, cold Eternity to spread
My sinewy wings; to press my taloned tread
Upon the very pinnacle of Time.
But now it is quite otherwise I climb.
For, not long past, my lust did learn to know
Through living flesh a readier way to go
To oversoar the mortal phantomime.
Now I empower those who would be mine
To imbibe a deathless vintage, red as wine,
And — ever unentombed — run wild at will,
And breach Time’s very walls to make their kill!

I’ve passed scarce a century on this continent of yours, Poetissime , but the pathway I have found here has long allowed me entry to all Time. Perhaps, back when you lived, as you threaded the human herds (gathering your materials, perhaps, for “The Man in the Crowd”?) — perhaps twice or thrice, on these brooding, watchful peregrinations of yours in a younger New York, you felt the cold touch of my muzzle against your hand. Perhaps you stopped, looked back, looked around, and found no one near enough to have made that contact? And, just perhaps, the chill of that moment sent frosty reverberations through your sense of Time . . . ?

Or whilst sojourning on Brennan Farm — there pondering the ebony bird who quoth “Nevermore!” — mayhap the night wind lofted my unholy baying unto your perceptive ear. Unsure of its existence, perhaps you paused and heard instead the soft susurration of Death whispering of its inevitable approach?

Just where, in the Realm of the Dead you dwell, Sir, is not yet known to me, so vast is that shoreless realm in which you swim. But it will be known. And perhaps a soul of your scope can understand this mystery: That from the Dead, the Great can be retrieved by those who are themselves above Death’s reach. Master, vouchsafe to harken, and to weigh the wonders that I hold in gift.

Where the lich in the loam has lain mouldering long
And the maggoty minutes gnaw meat off his bones,
There Time is a monster that mows down the throng
Of once-have-been, gone-again, featureless drones.
And that lich’s coffin to me was a door
Through which I went nosing Eternity’s spoor.
But the living dead’s doorways, once opened, gape wider.
Through these you may go where the galaxies sprawl,
And up through the star-webs dance sprightly as spiders,
And dart quick as rats through Time’s ceilings and walls!
There we go feasting and rutting at will,
And Time is a wine we imbibe when we kill!

While I cannot cease to praise you, Mister Poe, it seems I can’t forbear now to exhort you. I urge, with every reverence, that you accede to my impassioned suit — for now I must be frank. I wish to crown you as the king among the poets of my retinue. How your silvery lyric will ensorcel them, my legionnaires! In short, I cannot take denial. You must be mine.

Death’s whelm is as wide as the starfield, and deep as Old Night, but my eyes are the Lamps of the Tomb, and my nose is keen. The time, Mister Poe, as we two reckon it, will not be long. You will know me when you see me, Bard.

Here, my farewell for now, this Ode and Exhortation I have penned for you alone!

Through all the human stockyards you have trod
Where your bestial brothers broil and bleed,
Beseeching brute predominance, their God,
To grant them scope to blunder, bray, and breed—
Here you have wandered, haunted by a will
To weave from words a world more rare and bright,
Outreaching death, to shed its radiance still,
When you have sunk to dust and endless night.
But I, who lay so long entombed below
That abbatoir by your brutes tenanted
(Oh how their hooves did teach my soul to know
The living deaths by which they’re tormented!)
I who now long have walked among that herd,
I am unroofed by Time. The eons sprawl
Like open fields I plunder undeterred!
My feet o’er leap the centuries’ slow crawl!
Know, wordsmith, that it is my wish to shower
This grandeur, this forever, this deathless power
On your rare kind that strive for vaster views—
You hard and hungry one whom the Abyss
Excites to try their wings. You sterner few
I lift up to the plane where I exist!

Faithfully,

Cannyharme

A. C. Wise

A. C. Wiseis the author of numerous short stories, which have appeared in publications such as Shimmer , Apex , The Year’s Best Dark Fantasy and Horror , and Year’s Best Weird Fiction . Her debut collection, The Ultra Fabulous Glitter Squadron Saves the World Again , was published by Lethe Press in 2015. In addition to her fiction, she co-edits Unlikely Story , and contributes a monthly column — “Women to Read: Where to Start” — to SF Signal .

Wise’s favorite Lovecraft story has always been “The Color Out of Space.” With “I Dress My Lover in Yellow,” she pays tribute to “the idea of color itself as a malignant, haunting force. I also wanted to salute the tradition spawned by Lovecraft’s works, of authors swapping and mashing-up mythos, and ‘playing’ in each other’s fictional worlds. To that end, I couldn’t resist throwing in references to Robert W. Chambers’ The King in Yellow , another personal favorite that lies on the periphery of Lovecraft.”

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