October 31st,
1934
I arrived at Floyd Bennett Airfield just before 9, surprised when my name alone got me waved through the security gates. I was directed to hangar number 15, a huge nondescript building, one of many within the compound. When I pulled up in front of the large closed door I could see a dim light coming from within, but I was early, so lit up a cigarette and waited.
FLOYD BENNETT AIRFIELD |
Shortly I was rewarded when head lights appeared on the road leading in. I put out my smoke and straightened myself up, but I needn’t had bothered. It was only a cab and I knew Janet Winston-Rogers didn’t slum it.
Out of the cab stepped a priest, marked clearly by his white clerical collar. As the taxi cab left, the priest walked over and introduced himself as Father Marcus Black. I shook his hand and introduced myself, admitting that I was a little confused. I checked the hangar number again. Yup, number 15. The Father said he was here to see Mrs Winston-Rogers too.
Suddenly the large hangar door slid noisily open and light spilled
THE HANGAR |
She welcomed us both in and shook our hands, invited us to take a seat and offered us drinks from a well-stocked bar. I accepted a whiskey and took a moment to look over the shelves of books that surrounded me. There were some poetry books, stuff on folklore and the occult, but most of it was road maps, atlases and such.
The Father and me sat, and Winston-Rogers talked. She talked a lot, said a lot, mostly about her old man, Walter Winston. She told us how he had travelled the world studying folklore, which had led him to develop an interest in the occult. “When my father wasn’t traveling, he was having meetings — secret meetings — with people he wasn’t in business with” she told us. “Other dabblers in the occult, I think. My mother didn’t like them. That was when she started drinking.”
She said her father was bent on battling something, but Walter wouldn’t tell them exactly what it was. In ‘24 he spent most of the year away from home, where, nobody knew, but he said he was on the trail of some “bad people”, as he called them.
She went on, “Something happened in August of 1924. Something that sent him back to us rattled and unravelling. He didn’t have any more secret meetings after that. He stopped traveling. But he wasn’t well. He saw a psychiatrist for a few years. He burned his books. He hardly ate. He jumped at shadows, insisted he was being watched. He was… never the same. He forbade us from asking about his travels and said more than once that ‘nothing mattered anymore.’ When mother died, in ‘32, he hardly grieved. After that, he became only more paranoid and frustrated, until he finally passed away, earlier this year, as a shadow of himself.”
She was saying things that made me feel uneasy, things I wasn’t sure I quite understood. The Father seemed to know just what she was hinting at. He was here because of what the old man was into; the occult, the supernatural. A lot of humbo jumbo, if you asked me, or so I told myself. I wanted her to cut to the chase, tell us what she wanted, but she had a story to tell, a story she had held on to for a long time.
She had found a stack of letters from a man called Douglas Henslowe, who had apparently worked for Walter Winston up until ’24. She thought Henslowe must have been one of the people her father met with at the house, time and again. He wrote a few times, always asking Walter to write down what had happened, what he had seen, but the old man never did, never answered the letters. He kept them though, and it looked to me like he studied them carefully and had scribbled on a couple, having circled some words and letters, and listed a set of random numbers.
She finally came out with it, the reason she had summoned both me and the priest. “I want to know what my father was mixed up in” she said, “and whether I should be apologising for him or defending him. Whether he left work unfinished. Whether I’m in any danger. I think this Henslowe must know what happened to my father in 1924.”
Mrs Winston-Rogers was offering us money, good money, along with a retainer up front, even access to a bank account and the use of her plane. Frank Kearns, the pilot was there for us to employ; he’d take us anywhere we needed to be. She mentioned my boy Carl, and how she would see him through University. University. That meant a lot to me.
Of course, we both agreed to take on the job and to see it through to the end, and although I was over the moon about what she promised, of how this job would change my life, I think I would have done it either way. Just like the dozen other cases I’ve taken on for nought but a kick in the button and a splitting migraine.
THE SILVER SABER |
Marcus, the priest, wanted a minute to speak with Mrs Winston-Rogers, alone, and something told me I didn’t really want to hear what he had to say to her. Frank thankfully offered to show me the plane. Not the one I’d seen when we had first entered but a sleek and silver Douglas DC-2, some twin prop prototype called the Silver Saber, which was parked in the darkness of the hangar. He showed me on board and it was fantastic. I’d never been on a plane before.
We left the airfield, Marcus in the seat beside me. It appeared that we were to be an unlikely pair of partners in all this. I pushed him about his role in the case and he started talking about things that “normal people” didn’t know about, things that were out there in the dark, things that he did know something about. I let him talk, but tried to ignore what he was saying. I had heard enough strange things that night.
We ended up at Joe’s and he let us use one of the back rooms, so we could get some privacy. I needed a drink and to my surprise so did Marcus. We both poured through Douglas Henslowe’s letters to old man Winston. There was a stack of them. He had written to him intermittently for the ten years that had separated the incident in ’24 up until Winston’s death earlier this year. To me they were the thoughts of a man slowly consumed by insanity, shot through with brief moments of clarity. They hinted at the “event” that had occurred in 1924, like it was some distant dream, and of the deaths of people, maybe their mutual friends. Henslowe had begged Winston to confirm the details of the event, but the old man had not replied. In a torn up letter, Henslowe mentioned that he had written his account of the events in a book, that he had secreted away somewhere. We tried to decipher the scribblings on two of the missives, but even Marcus couldn’t make heads or tails of any of it and we decided to call it a night. I offered Marcus the couch in my office and he accepted, but was less than impressed.
November 1st, 1934
Marcus left early to attend to some matters and I took the opportunity to get some shut eye on the couch, as I had spent the night in my chair. When I eventually got up and out, I used my usual sources to check what I could find on Douglas Henslowe. He had no public record and definitely wasn’t a celebrity like Winston – a bit of a dead end. We had two addresses to follow up on in Savannah, Georgia, from where Douglas had sent the letters. The first address was 23 Old Hope Road. Douglas had sent only two letters from this address, one of which when he had written about secreting a book of the events as he remembered them. The address pointed to a private estate about 13 miles southeast of Savannah. The second address, 513 West Henry Street, where Douglas had sent the majority of his letters from, was not a house at all, but an asylum, the Joy Grove Sanatorium.
Marcus was waiting for me when I returned to the office. He had a duffle bag with him and had been copying Douglas’ letters out. He told me he had spoken to his mentor, some Father Gregory, who believed that a man Marcus knew, a Cormac Kullman, had been present with Winston and Henslowe in ’24. That stood out as a pretty strange coincident to me.
We both agreed that our first move had to be Savannah, and so we phoned Frank Kearns and arranged for the plane to be ready. I got my stuff together and rang Betty and Dunn, to let them both know what was happening. Betty would continue to take care of things at the office, while I was away and I promised to check in with Dunn now and again.
We left New York that afternoon and Kearns let me sit in the cockpit for both the take-off and landing. That plane was amazing, but I’m not actually sure whether I liked flying. We landed in Savannah, Georgia, well after dark. Stepping onto the tarmac, the warmth and humidity surprised me. I’d never been this far south of anywhere.
THE HOTEL ROOM |
We took a cab to a modest hotel in the centre of town. Everything was big here and a little rundown. Savannah was a waning city, it seemed, that was losing her industry. Well everything except the cotton trade. The hotel was opulent and spacious, sparsely dressed, with heavy furnishings. I’d never slept in a place like that my whole life, but I was dead tired.
November 2nd,
1934
I flipped through some local books on the area over breakfast, to see if the Henslowe name appeared anywhere. It didn’t. I was waiting for Marcus as he had headed out early to visit a local church. When he returned he had information about Douglas’ mother, Virginia Henslowe, who was in her 80’s and still alive, living at the Old Hope Road address.
I flipped through some local books on the area over breakfast, to see if the Henslowe name appeared anywhere. It didn’t. I was waiting for Marcus as he had headed out early to visit a local church. When he returned he had information about Douglas’ mother, Virginia Henslowe, who was in her 80’s and still alive, living at the Old Hope Road address.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA |
We opted to hire a car because the weather made walking too far, unpleasant, and headed for the asylum. It was warm out and men were getting around without jackets, so I chose to leave my piece in the glove box. The city looked even more decrepit in the daylight and the whole place seemed shrouded in that God forsaken hanging moss. We drove the short distance to Joy Grove Sanatorium, which squatted up on a hill, in the Victorian District.
Joy Grove Sanatorium was a hulking red-brick Victorian building with tall, narrow windows and Gothic features. It could have been anything really and didn’t shout asylum to me. Kudzu vines crawled over half the building, choking out windows and holding the place like a green fist, pulling it down into the earth. Before we went in we discussed how’d we tackle this and we decided to pose as agents of the Henslowe estate.
DOWNTOWN SAVANNAH |
At the front desk we were greeted by a pretty nurse named Bethany Hampton. We asked about Douglas Henslowe and she was forthcoming enough. A bookish man quickly interrupted by sticking his head out from a room in back and introduced himself as Dr Keaton.
We told the doctor why we were here and that we wanted to speak with Douglas Henslowe. He agreed easily enough and said he’d arrange us to talk to him. He revealed that Douglas Henslowe had been a patient at Joy Grove since 1924, in one capacity or another. We asked to see Henslowe's records too, but Keaton said we'd need his mother's written authorization.
Dr Keaton was quick to reveal to us that Edgar Job, another survivor of “the incident with Henslowe in 1924” was also a patient at Joy Grove. “He was one of the ‘criminals’ that Henslowe and his people were after — part of the cult that was attacked that night. Mr Job suffers the exact same symptoms as Mr Henslowe, down to the elaborate stories. Edgar had been moved here so that I could treat both patients.” We asked if we could talk to this Edgar Job too, and Dr Keaton agreed, “But only for a little while,” he said. “I don’t want Mr. Job getting too excited.”
JOY GROVE INMATE |
When they were out
of sight I returned to the desk, a newspaper from the car tucked under my arm.
Nurse Bethany was filing her nails and looking bored. I commented how pretty
she looked and offered her a cigarette. “Dr Keaton said I should wait back
there for him”, I said, motioning to the filing room that the doctor had come
from. Bethany replied fairly calmly “Did he?” and she asked what it was worth
to me. I handed her a ten dollar bill. She took it, smiled, and motioned to the
room. “Help yourself”.
It didn’t take long
for me to find Henslowe’s records. Everything was fairly well organized. I
grabbed the stack of documents and placed them within my folded newspaper. At
random I grabbed a wad of other documents and replaced them in Henslowe’s empty
folder. I left the room, smiled at Bethany and went straight out to the car,
where I quickly scanned the records. There was some interesting information about Henslowe's medication, primarily, the fact that his pills had been doubled in dosage since he was admitted in 1924. Another puzzling piece was a receipt for large payments made to Joy Grove by Virginia Henslowe, not for her son Douglas, but for Edgar Job. I put the records into the boot of the car to show Marcus.
I was waiting,
smoking by the entrance, and it took some time for an orderly to fetch me. He
said the doctor was ready to show us to Henslowe and I followed him through the
administrative wing. It was clear that the building was under-maintained and
had suffered some severe water-damage.
I caught up to
Marcus and Dr Keaton making their way to the interview room as well. When I
looked at Marcus he seemed pale and a little shaken. “Are you OK Father?” I
asked him quietly and he just turned to me and nodded slightly.
The interview exam
room was a simple, cold space with three chairs, a table, and a barred window
looking out into the hallway. It smelled like chlorine in there, probably piss.
We saw Douglas Henslowe from behind, a large man sitting in a chair. The doctor
introduced us to Henslowe, and then took to standing at the rear of the room,
within earshot of our interview.
Douglas was happy to
talk about what happened in ’24, relieved almost. “We were travelling the
country, hot on the trail of the cult that started all of this. We questioned
people, gathered evidence, took pictures, travelled all over. We were like
detectives, armed with our secret knowledge in the occult. It was an exciting
time.”
DOUGLAS HENSLOWE |
He spoke with a bit
of a Southern accent and used long, drawn-out sentences. “We’d followed the
drugs all the way across the country until we got to Los Angeles. That’s where
the bulk of our investigation took place. That’s where everything terrible
happened.” He paused for a moment and picked at his cuticles.
He went on detailing
the members of the group. “There was Walter Winston of course, he was our
leader. It was he who gathered us together to battle the perversity in the
world that this cult represented. He funded us, too. Good man. A good man.”
“Vince Stack was a
tough fellow. Walter called him a “fixer.” Good with a gun, good with his
hands, always down to business, always ready with a drink. He’s the one who
waded right in there, that night, and brought hell to some of those cultists
with his shotgun.”
“Katherine Clark,
such a sharp girl. She was our archivist, camerawoman, and record keeper. She
hated that something like that cult could operate in secret, that people would
cover up something so vile instead of revealing it for what it was, I think.
Yet she’s the one who got close enough to it all to get us photographs. And
she’s the one who caught wind of what was happening that night in ‘24. She died
that night.”
“And, of course,
F.C. Kullman was Walter’s expert in the occult. Apparently he was known far and
wide for his expertise, back in the day. Walter had to pay him quite a bit to
come with us out to Los Angeles, as I recall. A bit of a stick in the mud, that
fellow, but bright as can be. Stuck in a wheelchair, too, but a can-do attitude.”
“Walter was the
brains of our little band. He and F.C. did the research into what that cult was
planning — into the summoning — and determined that they were using drug monies
to fund their operation. It was they who figured out that the cult was already
in contact with that dreadful thing, the Thing With a Thousand Mouths, and were
planning to summon it, or an incarnation of it, to that barn outside Los
Angeles.”
He continued then,
telling us the events of the night of ’24 and we could see it caused him some anguish.
“We rushed out to the barn as soon as we got word that so many of the cultists
were meeting up out there. Walter said that the stars were right that night,
too. Whatever that means. So we rushed out there with guns and homemade
firebombs to put a stop to it. To save the world.”
“And a lot of people
died that night.” He paused, picking at his cuticles again. “It was a horrific
fire. And there was a shootout. When that Thing began tearing people apart,
people were running and screaming and throwing themselves into the fire and into
our line of fire. I know I shot some people that night. Probably killed them.
I…”
“Then the Thing came
for us and I saw Walter panic — I’d never seen him panic — and then all I know
is that I was bolting through the high grasses with the fire behind me. Like a
coward. Like a damned coward.” We tried to console him, tell him he had done
the right thing, but he wasn’t really listening to us.
“It was the cult’s
fault. They were depraved. They were fornicating in the name of their wicked
god, in groups. They did drugs I’ve never even heard of and hurt each other for
sport. They were monsters.”
“I hid my notebook
away with a secret key to understanding more of what was going on back then.
And what is almost certainly still going on, since we failed. You want to know
where it is? Ask Frank Hickering, back at my estate.”
He asked for a pen
and tore a page from the Father’s notebook. “Take this note and give it to the
groundskeeper at the house on Old Hope road. He’ll let you look around.”
We asked Henslowe why
he thought they had failed that night to stop what ever had been going on. He
said he knew they had for sure. He had seen the “mouths” here in the hospital,
the Thing was here, and it was coming for him. To my shock and surprise, Marcus
agreed that he had seen it too. A mouth in the wall!? I looked at Marcus and
could see it in his face that he believed the words he was saying. I didn’t
like what Douglas was telling us, not one bit. I could believe he was insane,
but now that Marcus was agreeing with him, Hell was I insane?
Henslowe was looking
pretty agitated by now and when the doctor began to approach him, he quickly
got to his feet and turned to leave. He turned abruptly and said “I remember
putting material in a safe deposit box in Los Angeles. I think it was the First
Bank of Venice Beach. No, wait. Long Beach. First Bank of Long Beach. It was in
my name. By that point, Winston had already left town. And the others…”
Mr Keaton cut him
off and the orderlies escorted Henslowe out of the room. “I don’t know exactly
what happened to Douglas out in Los Angeles,” he told us, “but whatever it was,
it involved gunplay, murder and a fire, and it was too much for him to
internalize. He’s concocted this elaborate story that externalizes his fear
into some kind of terrible monster.” He told us that he would bring in Mr Job straight
away.
We only had a moment
before Edgar Job was led into the room. I lent over to Marcus, forgot what I
really wanted to say and told him I had taken the files. I asked him again if
he was OK. Maybe I needed someone to ask me the same.
EDGAR JOB |
Edgar Job was a
pathetic figure; skinny, with stubble all over his face and scalp. He reminded
me of prisoners of war I had seen in France, but dressed in the white-scrubs
uniform of a Joy Grove Sanatorium patient. His mouth stunk of mouthwash and he smoked
throughout the entire interview.
We introduced
ourselves and asked him about what happened in ’24 and he responded “Dr. Keaton
doesn’t want me to relive those days or, uh, to, uh… externalize my fears. He
don’t like me talking about monsters unless they’re me.” We reassured him and
Keaton told him to go on. He told us he was just a mathematician, a good one,
real smart. One of his professors at UCLA, a George Ayers, introduced him to a
man called Echavarria.
“That Echavarria, if
that was his real name, had a hell of a library. Creepy books. He gave us ideas
for things to do, sex things and things to say, out of those books. He threw
damn crazy parties. Sex. Drugs. I was basically high from 1923 through August
of ‘24. So my memory is not good. I remember, you know, a lot of sex. And the
drugs Echavarria got us. Potent stuff.” I didn’t like the way Edgar talked. He irked
me and I felt an urge to punch him in the button.
“He promised us all.
Promised me power. He said that: ‘power.’ Said we’d all get whatever we wanted
in the new time, when Gol-Goroth was here. We called him the Fisher From
Outside for some reason. This isn’t what I wanted. Echavarria put spells on us.
Or on me, anyway. The night of the summoning. This spell, I guess it was kind
of a big deal. He put it on me the night of the summoning, right before the
Fisher, or, or, the Thing, showed up. I don’t know what it was supposed to do,
but I survived, so… maybe that’s something.”
He kept looking over
his shoulder at the doc, like at any moment they were gonna grab him and lock
him up. He lowered his voice and leant in closer. Job told us how things went
wrong, how these people arrived and started shooting everyone. “This one guy,
with a shotgun, just blew Echavarria away. Shot him right down. I stabbed that
guy with Echavarria’s knife, this big ugly knife, a few times. To get away. I
was so sure he was going to kill me, too, and I had to get away from there. I
know it was wrong. I see his face every night. I can’t undo it, so it’s best if
I just move on. That’s what Dr. Keaton says.”
Then he told us
about when the Thing arrived and it got even worse. “It had long, weird limbs
and no head, but mouths, lots of mouths. I couldn’t really make it out, and I
didn’t really try. I know I was screaming. Just screaming. And then I stabbed
that guy, Vincent Stack, and ran the hell out of there into the fields. Whatever
that thing was that we summoned… it wasn’t what we were promised. It wasn’t
what he said it would be. And that thing is still out there.”
Marcus asked him
about the Thing being here. Told him that it was here. I told him “we’d” seen it too, I’m
not exactly sure why, I hoped it’d distress Edgar. He said he knew, and that’s
why he put the symbols on the walls. He smiled and said “We both do that,
Henslowe and me. I know he watches us, the thing we summoned. But maybe he
can’t see us if we put up those marks. Echavarria used to have them in his
library, showed them to me. That’s how I learned that it’s sometimes called
‘the Thing With a Thousand Mouths,’ too. These old things, they have a lot of
names.”
My mind was reeling
and I felt like I wanted to throw up. Thankfully Keaton interjected, saying
that Edgar had had enough and told the orderlies to remove him from the room.
We both sat there for a while a little dumbfounded. What the Hell was happening?
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