"Lumley,.Brian.-.Titus.Crow.2.-.Transition.Of.Titus.Crow" - читать интересную книгу автора (Lumley Brian)But 'clock'? A misnomer that, if ever there was one. No timepiece at all but a device come down from predawn days of extradimensional magic - literally a toy of the Elder Gods themselves! As for its history:
First, tracing the clock's line as far back as possible in the light of my limited knowledge, it had belonged to one Yogi Hiamaldi, a friend of the ill-fated Carolina mystic Harley Warren. Hiamaldi had been a member, along with Warren, of a psychic-phenomenalist group in Boston about 1916-18. He had sworn that he alone of living men had been to Yian-Ho, that crumbling revenant of aeon-shrouded Leng, and that he had borne away certain things from that lost and leering necropolis. For a reason unknown, the Yogi had made a gift of the clock to my father, though I am unable to recall ever seeing the thing as a child before I was sent out of America. I can only suppose that my father kept it at his New Orleans retreat, a place that had always fascinated me but that my poor nervous mother had always done her best to keep me away from. After my father died the clock was sold, along with many of his other curiosities, to a French collector. Titus Crow had been unable to discover how the thing had suddenly turned up so many years later at an auction of antique furniture in England, but his subsequent attempts to trace the previous French owner had failed miserably; it was as though he had simply vanished off the face of the Earth! I remembered, too, a curious affair involving an East Indian mystic, one Swami Chandraputra, I believe he called himself, who had also allegedly 'disappeared' in strange circumstances connected somehow with the clock. At the time, though, I was only a lad living largely away from my father. Crow knew the story more fully, for he had researched all of these things. Even with all his research my friend had been unable to discover where or when or by whom the peculiarly ominous thing had been made, or even why. Plainly its weirdly meandering hands moved in sequences completely alien to any earthly chronological system, and at best its ungovernably aberrant ticking must drive anyone of less than iron fortitude and unbending resolution to distraction. In Crow's case, however, it was this very lack of an easily discernible purpose, and similarly the unfathomable mystery of its origin, which had served to endear the clock to him; and he had spent many years in intermittent, frustrated and invariably vain study of the thing. Then, as a guest of Professor Peaslee at Miskatonic University, Crow had finally recognized in one of the library's great old occult volumes a curious sequence of odd glyphs which he had been delighted to note bore a striking resemblance to the figures on the dial of his huge clock. Moreover, the book bore a translation of its own hiero-glyphed passage in Latin! Armed with this Rosetta Stone knowledge, my friend had returned to London where he was soon at work again uncovering many of the strange machine's previous mysteries. And he had been right, for it was indeed a vehicle - a space-time machine of sorts with principles more alien than the center of a star, whose like we can at least conjecture upon. Titus Crow, however, was never a man to be denied anything once he set his mind after it. And so he had persevered. Once he had written to me to say of his work on the clock: 'I am in the position of a Neanderthal studying the operational handbook of a passenger-carrying aircraft - except I have no handbook!' Though of course he was exaggerating, the weird device's functions were certainly obscure enough to baffle anyone. And yet when the final choice presented itself -between the clock and those hellish winds of darkness sent by Ithaqua to destroy us - full of trepidation and dread though we were, nevertheless we entered into the vehicle's strangely huge, greenly illumined interior . . . and then everything seemed to turn upside down and inside out! Amid the whirling, rushing, dizzying motion of that experience I had yet been somehow aware of the final destruction of Blowne House; while from the depths of a shrieking purple mist that rushed ever faster into a gaping hole in the fabric of the universe itself, I heard Titus Crow's distant, fading voice: 'Follow me, de Marigny - with your mind, man - with your mind!' Then he was gone and a Stygian darkness closed about me, buffeting, crushing, squeezing me like toothpaste from a tube out of that. . . that place . . . where I had no right to be. And finally, after an eternity of torture and tissue-rending pressures, there had been those sensations of falling, of water and then of strange hands tugging at me ... Then the white sheets of the hospital bed. And the flowers. And the comforting star-stone, left no doubt by Wingate Peaslee to guard me from the anciently malign horror of the CCD. Something about the professor's card bothered me, however. What had he meant by 'long lost but found again'? Didn't that imply the passing of a considerable amount of time? Well, I could always ask him when I saw him. Until then, while far from sound in body, I was at least sane . . . and safe. But what of Titus Crow? Of Dreams and Ten Years Lost (From de Marigny's notebooks) It must have been early morning before I managed to get to sleep, but even then my slumbers were not peaceful. Everything that I had chewed over in my mind before finally sleeping kept rising to the surface of my subconscious, and the result could only be called nightmarish! I dreamed - or nightmared - about the Cthonians, those monstrous subterraneans alive even now and burrowing in the Earth's secret places, threatening the very sanity of the world with a resurgence of hellish magic and mayhem and plotting the release of worse horrors yet, such as loathsome Lord Cthulhu and others of his Cycle. I read again, or at least was allowed shuddering glimpses of, the books and documents of an unthinkably ancient 'mythology': works such as the Pnakotic Manuscripts, supposedly a fragmentary record of a race lost before history began; and the R'lyeh Text, purporting to have been written by certain minions of Great Cthulhu himself. And dreaming still, I averted my eyes from the pages of such tomes as the Unaussprechlichen Kulten of Von Junzt, and Ludwig Prinn's 'cornerstone' De Vermis Mysteriis. All of these books, or copies of them, I handled again as. I had in reality handled them: the Comte d'Erlette's Cultes des Goules, Joachim Feery's Notes on the Necronomicon, even Titus Crow's own priceless copy of the anonymous Cthaat Aquadingen . . . In books such as these, under Crow's guidance, I had first studied the legend of the Cthulhu Mythos: of Beings seeped down from the stars in Earth's youth, and prisoned here by greater Beings yet for blasphemies of cosmic enormity. The alien names of these forces rang again in my sleeping brain - Cthulhu, Yog-Sothoth, Ithaqua, Shub-Niggurath - and I felt a fever's heat grip me as if I had uttered some demoniac invocation to open the gates of hell! Then for a moment I was back in Crow's study - in the reeling, tottering shell of Blowne House - with that ancient, madly ticking clock standing there, its door open, issuing a swirling, throbbing green and purple light - and my friend's face wax as he held me by the shoulders and shouted some instruction which was drowned in the tumult of winds! . . . But it was not Titus Crow's face, and it was not waxen. It was instead Peaslee's face, worried and drawn; Peaslee's arms reaching down to me, his veined old hands holding me firm; Peaslee's voice, calming, soothing me. 'Easy now, Henri! Easy! You're safe now. Nothing can harm you here. Easy, de Marigny.' 'Wingate! Professor!' I was barely awake, drenched in sweat, my whole body trembling and shuddering in reaction. Wildly, despite the restrictions of my various dressings, I tore loose from his restraining hands to peer fearfully about the room. 'It's all right, Henri,' he repeated. 'You're safe now.' 'Safe?' The nightmare was quickly fading; relief abruptly flooded my whole being. I let my head fall back against the damp pillows. 'Peaslee, what happened?' I stupidly asked. The frown on his face turned to a wry, wrinkled grin. 'I was hoping you could tell me that, de Marigny!' he replied. 'The last I heard of you was in Crow's letter, retrieved from the rains of Blowne House. Of course, I've never given up hope, but ten years is a long time, and-' 'What?' I cut him off. 'Did you say ten years?' I blinked the blurred edges of sleep from my eyes and at last saw Peaslee clearly where he bent over my bed, the smile fading again on his old face. And it was an old face, older by far than I remembered it and by my reckoning certainly older than it ought to have been. 'Yes, Henri, it's been ten long years since I last heard of you.' He frowned. 'But surely you know that? You must know it! Where have you been, Henri? And where is Titus Crow?' 'Ten years!' I slowly repeated it, suddenly exhausted, utterly washed out. 'My God! I remember . . . nothing. The last thing I recall is seeing - ' 'Yes?' 'The clock, Crow's great clock. We went inside the thing, Crow and I, him first, myself following immediately behind him. We were somehow separated then. I remember Crow calling to me to follow him, and then . . . nothing. But ten years! How could such a thing be?' For the first time then, I saw that my visitor was holding someone back from my bed. Finally this stranger exclaimed, 'Really, Professor, I must protest. Mr de Marigny is your friend, I understand that, but he's also my patient!' The voice was female, but so aloof as to be almost harsh; the face atop the tall figure that finally pushed itself past Peaslee was hawklike and severe. It came as a shock, then, to find that the hand whose fingers searched for my pulse was surprisingly warm and gentle. 'Madam,' Peaslee replied, his New England accent barely showing, 'my friend is here at my request, and I am paying for his treatment. You must understand that his mind is the only key to certain very important problems - problems I have waited ten years to solve.' 'All that is as it may be,' the matron answered, quite unperturbed, 'but no amount of money or pressure overrules my authority here, Professor. The only way you may do that is to take Mr de Marigny out of my nursing home, which would not be in his best interests. In the meantime his welfare is my concern, and until he is well, or until you decide to terminate his stay here, I will care for him as I see best.' She paused, then acidly added, 'You are not, I believe, a professor of medicine?' 'No, madam, I am not, but -' 'No "buts", Professor, I'm quite sure that Mr de Marigny has had enough excitement for one day. You may see him again the day after tomorrow. Now I'm afraid you must leave.' 'But -' 'No, no, noV she insisted. Peaslee turned his seamed, angry face to me. His vastly intelligent eyes flashed furiously for a moment, but then he grinned a moment later, his natural good nature showing through all his impatience. 'Very well,' he finally agreed; and then to me: 'It will all have to wait until later, Henri. But she's right, you'd better rest now. And try not to worry. You'll be perfectly safe here.' He grinned again, wickedly casting a quick glance at the matron where she stood now at the foot of my bed penciling a line on a graph, before bending over me to whisper, 'I doubt if even Cthulhu himself would dare to brave this place!' |
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