Showing posts with label paranormal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paranormal. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Weird Fiction and the Occult Detective

The occult detective can be found in all the various categories of horror. Although, I think he is most prominent in ghost stories, creature features, and weird fiction.


We know what ghost stories are, and creature features are pretty much self-explanatory. The story features a monster that must be disposed of.


But what exactly is weird fiction? Recently, I received a story bundle email in which Robert Jeschonek provided an excellent description of weird fiction. He wrote:


Something doesn’t feel quite right. The world around you seems a little…off. Things turn strange and fluid, as if you’re trapped inside a dream…but you aren’t. Something about you might have changed in a fundamental way that you sense but can’t understand.


This is what weird fiction at its best feels like. It’s more about unsettling dread than outright terror. It’s more about the mysterious influence than the in-your-face threat. It’s more about questioning the nature of reality than wondering what’s about to jump out of the shadows at you.


Two occult detectives come to mind who primarily investigate the weird: Flaxman Low and Aylmer Vance.




Flaxman Low was the pseudonym for one of the leading psychologists of the Victorian era, so the story goes, and became the chief occult psychologist of his day. Writing as H. Heron and E. Heron, Hesketh Hesketh-Prichard and his mother, Kate O’Brien Ryall Prichard, chronicled a dozen of Flaxman Low’s occult investigations.


The stories are filled with unsettling dread. Things are a little off. Nothing is as it should be. There’s no out and out terror. There’s no gruesome gore splattering your face. You just feel uncomfortable as you follow Low. And when he uncovers the cause of our discomfort, we feel immense relief.


I very much enjoy the Flaxman Low stories. And even though they date from 1898 and 1899, they read well and will definitely make you feel uncomfortable.


The first 6 stories you can get for free from Project Gutenberg Australia. If you want all 12, you can pick them up from Amazon for $1.39, as of this writing. IMO, they are definitely worth reading. And the price is right.




Aylmer Vance was the creation of Alice and Claude Askew. He appeared in 8 spooky occult investigations back in 1914. The tales ooze that feeling of uneasiness, and subtle dread that give a story the spooky creepiness we readers of weird fiction so desire.


I very much like the Aylmer Vance stories, and regret that the Askews only wrote 8 of them. They ended up dying in the war to end all wars, as did so many writers.


The stories are not thrillers. No monsters jump out at you. Their pacing is gentle: the epitome of slowburn storytelling. They are, however, told so well you may find yourself binge reading them.


You can get all the stories in the Black Heath edition on Amazon for only 99¢. Truly a deal.


Weird fiction and the occult detective. A very spooky and unsettling combination indeed.


Comments are always welcome. And until next time, happy reading!

Friday, October 30, 2020

For the Weekend 9

This weekend is Halloween and I thought it appropriate to recommend something horribly spooky for your entertainment.


Crispian Thurlborn


Crispian is one of my favorite authors. If he writes it, I’ll read it. For this weekend, I recommend:


Exit. This is a slow burn chiller. Something like the twilight zone. Mysterious, with a shocking revelation at the end. Get the book at Amazon!


01134. We’ve never been so connected, yet we’ve never been so alone. We crave companionship and when we get it we’re on top of the world. When we lose it… A superb tale of psychological horror. On Amazon!


Cinder. Jill is a college student, and like all college students she needs money. Which means she takes the occasional babysitting job. And the job of watching the Comptons’s kid seems to be like any other. That is until those things desiring to ward of the chill of the coming winter make themselves known. Get it on Amazon!


Sign up for Crispian’s mailing list and get the terrifying short story “Wednesday’s Girl”.


Richard Schwindt


Richard is another author who writes outstanding fiction. If he writes it, I buy it. For this weekend, I want to draw your attention to:


Herkimer’s Nose. This was the first book I read by Richard and it’s still my favorite. A fabulous cast of characters, with lots of humor, terror, monsters, ghosts, and spies. A delightfully spooky tale, that’s at Amazon!


Tony Price: Confidential. Tony is a social worker and an amateur occult detective. If you like mysteries and monsters, this trilogy is for you. I loved it. Get it at Amazon!


Ottawa Confidential. This story is the Tony Price prequel. And very appropriate for Halloween. It’s about dogs. Well, not really. More like wolves. Well, not really that either. Just read it. You won’t regret it. At Amazon.


A Killing in Samana. Murder mystery meets occult detective. And we discover Richard’s other amateur sleuth, Chris Allard, knows Tony. Together, they solve an eerie murder case. Pick it up at Amazon.


R.H. Hale. Hale’s Church Mouse duo is an incredible work of fiction. The writing is literary, and some of the finest I’ve read. I don’t care for a lot of description, yet Hale’s descriptions mesmerize me. They set the mood and atmosphere, and establish the eerie Gothic quality that makes these books work so well.


Rona, the main character and narrator of the story, is exceedingly well-drawn. She is truly lifelike.


Sergei, the vampire and antagonist, is also very well-drawn. His character is richly complex. We hate him and we love him.


The Church Mouse duo easily makes my top ten list of recommended horror reads. They are novels you truly do want to read before you die.


Get Church Mouse: Memoir of a vampire’s servant at Amazon, along with Church Mouse - Book 2: The Change, also at Amazon.



Lastly, a bit of shameless self-promotion. Aside from my Pierce Mostyn Paranormal Investigations series, I’ve published the following stories:


Do One Thing For Me. George is old and going senile. Beth isn’t what she appears to be, but George isn’t sure she’s even real. And then she makes him an offer he can’t refuse. Or can he? Get it at the Zon.


Ancient History. Two brothers with a history, and not a good history at that. But they’re getting older and maybe it’s time to mend things. Put things right. But the ghosts think otherwise. And as one reviewer wrote: “…the ending was a shocking twist I never saw coming!” On Amazon.


Metamorphosis. I love vampire stories. And this is my contribution, to date. Devon is sick and having a mid-life crisis. His solution? Become a vampire and leave the problems behind. But his minister, who is a vampire, convinces him otherwise. Or does he? At Amazon!


What the Next Day Brings. A tale of the Cthulhu Mythos, set in 1920s Vienna. Everyone of us makes choices. Sometimes out of desperation. And starving to death, that’s what Franz does. However, as we all know, such choices often hand us more than we bargained for. Also at Amazon.


Plenty of good reading for your Halloween weekend. Enjoy!

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Riffing on The X-Files



Since his debut in Nightmare In Agate Bay (January 2018), Pierce Mostyn and his paranormal investigations has been my bestselling series.

The genesis for the series was The X-Files. And while the overarching story arc of the TV series was about space aliens (a storyline very similar to the earlier TV series The Invaders), it was the “monster of the week” episodes that I found most interesting. I liked the concept of a government agent investigating those things that go bump in the night.

The biggest things that go bump in the night, IMO, are Cthulhu and his ilk. So it was only natural for me to mash up The X-Files concept with The Cthulhu Mythos, with the “monster of the week” idea finding its way into the sub-series with diabolical mastermind Valdis Damien van Dyne.

Van Dyne lets me play with the whole cryptid menagerie, much as the producers and writers did with The X-Files. Let’s face it — we like monsters. We like weird, paranormal critters and beings. And while the cosmic horror of Cthulhu and his fellow Old Ones is terrifying, there is nothing immediately scarier than a good old-fashioned monster. Hence, the perennial popularity of the “creature feature”.

On Monday, the 20th of July, you will be treated to a rare and unusual cryptid: the zuvembie. The creation of Robert E Howard, drawn from the spooky stories his grandmother told him. 

The zuvembie is a top-drawer creation, yet to my knowledge it only appeared once in the Howard oeuvre in the story “Pigeons from Hell”. I’m pleased that arch-villain Valdis Damien van Dyne learned the secret of the Black Brew and planned his zuvembie apocalypse. It will make COVID look like the common cold.

Make sure your hearing protection works, because you’re going to need it in two weeks.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy monster hunting!

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Van Dyne’s Zuvembies

“When hate makes life worth living…”



Cryptozoology is the study of cryptids: those creatures of myth, folklore, legend, and imagination that science sniffs at, and yet may in fact exist. Much like the coelacanth, thought extinct for 65 million years, only to be found alive and well in 1938. Seems science doesn’t know everything.

Writers of the paranormal love cryptids. They are their stock in trade, their bread and butter. Yet, of the hundreds of cryptids available, relatively few find their way into the tales of the paranormal writers.

Way back in 1934, Robert E Howard wrote a story titled, “Pigeons from Hell”, which was published in the May 1938 issue of Weird Tales, two years after Howard’s death.

The story is a superb example of Southern Gothic horror, and features a creature of Howard’s invention, although drawn from Voodoo myth — the zuvembie.

Given the current zombie craze, I would’ve thought someone would’ve made use of the zuvembie before now. To my knowledge, no one has.

So you may be asking, “What the heck is a zuvembie?” That’s a good question, and I’m glad you asked. Let me satisfy your curiosity with a scene from Van Dyne’s Zuvembies:

“Can someone please tell me what the hell a zuvembie is?” NicAskill asked.
Dr Heber cleared his throat. “A zuvembie is a creature that is often classed as one of the undead.”
“You mean like zombies and vampires?” NicAskill asked.
“Yes. Although technically speaking, a zuvembie is not dead. Simply changed.” Heber paused a moment to clean his glasses. He put them back on and continued.
“In traditional voodoo, a bokor, that is, a magician, creates a zombie from someone who is already dead. A zombie is a re-animated corpse that does the bidding of the bokor. A zombie is essentially a slave.”
“So there’s no zombie virus?” Jones asked.
“No. That is the stuff of cheap pulp fiction and B-rated movies.”
“So no zombie apocalypse,” Jones said.
Heber shook his head. “I’m afraid not.”
“So if a zombie is a slave, what’s a zuvembie?” NicAskill asked.
“As I said,” Heber explained, “a zombie is a slave of the bokor, created by powerful spells that are cast by the bokor. A zuvembie, on the other hand, has never died. The creator of a zuvembie may or may not be a bokor. However, the creator of the zuvembie has gone through the necessary rituals and been taught the secret of making the Black Brew, which, when drunk, will turn a woman into a zuvembie.”
“Only women can become zuvembies?” Jones asked.
“That is correct,” Heber replied. “Only women.”
“Why?” The question came from NicAskill.
“Because hate and revenge are the motivators and the required emotions to become a zuvembie.” Heber shrugged. “It seems women, as a sex, have so often been viewed as inferior that they and they alone possess the necessary hatred and desire for revenge to become a zuvembie.”
NicAskill sat back in her seat. “Wow.”
Heber, a smile on his face, continued. “For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. The zuvembie is the personification of female hate and revenge.”
“So what’s this thing like?” Jones asked.
Heber explained, “According to the lore, ancient lore that predates voodoo and goes back to West African snake religions, once a woman drinks the Black Brew she ceases to be a human. She becomes one with the denizens of the Black World. Friends and family cease to exist. A zuvembie has command over some aspects of nature. It can control owls, snakes, bats, and werewolves to do its bidding. The creature can summon darkness in order to blot out a small amount of light.
“Unless killed by lead or steel, it lives forever. Time means nothing to the zuvembie; it exists, as it were, outside of time. It no longer eats human food, and dwells in a house or a cave much as a bat does.
“The zuvembie cannot speak, at least not as humans do, and it does not think as humans think. However, by the sound of its voice it can hypnotize the living and summon a person to his or her death. And once the thing has killed a person, it can control the lifeless corpse until the corpse grows cold and the blood ceases to flow. The corpse becomes the slave, as it were, of the zuvembie and will do whatever the zuvembie commands it to do.”
“Good night,” Jones said. “It’s a good thing women don’t know about this zuvembie thing.”
“Shut up, Jones,” NicAskill said.
“One more thing,” Dr Heber said. “The zuvembie has but one pleasure in life.”
“What’s that?” Mostyn asked.
“To kill human beings.”

So now you know what a zuvembie is. Pretty scary stuff, coming as it did from the stories REH’s grandmother told him. Nothing like folklore to scare the bejeezus out of you.

Van Dyne’s Zuvembies is at the beta readers, and I’m looking to publish it late June or early July.

In the meantime check out the other Pierce Mostyn adventures. They’re filled with monsters, daring-do, and will convince you to keep the lights on at night.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

Original illustration from Weird Tales for Pigeons from Hell

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Pierce Mostyn Continues



In two weeks, the sixth Pierce Mostyn Paranormal Investigation, Demons in the Dunes, will hit the virtual bookshelves. And the word is that it’s the best Pierce Mostyn thus far. Which has me quite jazzed. I enjoy writing the Pierce Mostyn books and it’s good to know they are getting better and better.

I follow the school of thought that says don’t fully define your characters. Just start with a brief sketch and let them grow from story to story.

In practice, this means the characters may not come across as fully developed in the first book or two. Personally, I’m okay with that. I like to see a series character grow. And if what my advance readers are telling me is true, the characters are growing. Which means I am becoming more and more comfortable with them. And that is a very good thing.

Demons in the Dunes is also a bit different from the other books in the series in that the setting is not in the United States, but in the Empty Quarter of the Arabian Peninsula. There is nothing like an exotic location to spice a read!

For me, one of the most interesting things to watch in the series is the development of Dr. Rafe Bardon. And Demons reveals yet another side of the good doctor that we haven’t seen before. He is truly one enigmatic fellow!

You can find the entire series here. If you become a VIP reader, you’ll get the novelette “The Feeder” as a gift. It’s another rousing paranormal tale of adventure, and it’s not available in stores.

I’ll have more next week, so stay tuned!

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

Friday, May 17, 2019

The Medusa Ritual - Installment 16




The Medusa Ritual
A Pierce Mostyn Paranormal Investigation
by
CW Hawes


Lizard people in the tunnels beneath Los Angeles. Two fates await Dotty Kemper — and she doesn’t get to choose. And Pierce Mostyn is running out of time, lost in the subterranean world under the City of Angels.
The adventure continues!


Chapter 20


The man with the mask sat in a chair that had been carried in by the same two beautiful young women who had carried it in to Dotty’s prison suite. They stood behind him.
“I have decided,” the ancient softly sibilant voice said, “that you would not make a good daughter-in-law. Nor would you make a good mother for my great-grandchildren. Therefore there will be no marriage. Nor do I wish to simply extract information and then kill you. That would be a waste of a very useful human life.”
He looked at Dotty, and she looked back at him. She looked straight at the eyes behind the mask, and said nothing.
The masked man shifted his gaze away from Dotty. “That leaves me with two alternatives: extract the information you have and then either turn you into a zuvembie and use you to foil those who seek to learn of me, or use you to unlock the gate. The question that must be answered is whether or not now is the best time to open the gate.”
“And what happens if you open the gate?” Dotty asked.
“You cannot see, Dr Kemper, but you have made me smile.”
“How nice.”
“Do you remember the statues of Mr. Cortado?”
“Yes.”
“They came from me. You might say I’m the agent for the true artist.”
“And who or I should say what is the true artist?”
“You are a fast learner, Dr Kemper. The true artist is not of this universe, or even of this dimension. Many millennia ago they came to this world, the Terrible Ones, for that is what Gorgon means in ancient Greek. They were deemed immortal because the ancients did not possess the means to slay them. Eventually they passed into Greek myth. The infamous Medusa and her sisters.”
“As I remember the story, Medusa got her head cut off.”
“True. That was only after her Achilles heel, as it were, was discovered. Up until then, the Gorgons were invincible.”
“So they’re mortal just like you and me.”
“I’m smiling again. More like you, than me. However, that is all by the by. Now, thanks to Die unaussprechlichen Riten von dem dessen Name nicht genannt werden Kann, I have been able to bring one of the Gorgons to this world. Sacrificing you, for you are physically not unlike the ancient Greeks, will let me summon a whole host of these beings, who are part of the vanguard of the Great Old Ones themselves. The dawning of this universe’s night is nigh!”
“And what’s in it for you? Why are you excluded from being lunch meat?”
“Because the book also gives me the incantation that grants me protection. I will be the only human and to rule over my puny race with Azathoth, Nyarlathotep, Shub-Niggurath, Chaugnar Faugn, and Cthulhu Himself!”
“You’re deluded. And because of you, we’re all — including you — going to end up being appetizers at the most hideous banquet of all time.”
“I know one thing, Dr Kemper, if I decide to open the gate, you will not be on the menu.”

***

The scene was like a tableau in a wax museum. Mostyn and NicAskill on one side and the two humanoid creatures on the other. All four standing stock still. And then Mostyn and NicAskill drew their pistols, at the same time the creatures emitted a high-pitched sound that shattered the helmet lamps plunging the tunnel into darkness. By the time Mostyn found his flashlight and turned it on, the creatures were gone.
“My God, Boss, the Lizard People. We’ve seen the Lizard People!”
“Looks that way, NicAskill.” Mostyn took out of his backpack a wrist flashlight. “Get your on,” he said to NicAskill, “and let’s keep moving.”
NicAskill put the flashlight on her wrist and, once again the two OUP agents took off running down the tunnel. After a couple thousand feet, the tunnel they were in emptied into a larger tunnel, which still had rails embedded into the floor. Mostyn noticed up above, the wire for the power to the electric train.
He consulted the compass. “If we go left, that should take us into Chinatown.”
“Where’s this Medusa creature?” NicAskill asked.
“Don’t know. However, now that you mention it…” Mostyn rummaged in his backpack, and pulled out a mirror.
“Bardon thinks of everything,” NicAskill said, as she took out her mirror. “They’re not very big.”
“They aren’t. We’ll have to make do.”
“I guess so. Otherwise we’ll be decorations in someone’s foyer.”
“If we’re that lucky. Come on.” And Mostyn took off running down the tunnel, with NicAskill following.
“Are bullets going to kill this thing?” NicAskill asked.
“Perseus used a sword. The trick is doing so without looking at the monster. Perseus was lucky. Medusa was asleep and he had a hat that made him invisible.”
“I think Bardon forgot that part.”
“Maybe he has more confidence in us than the gods had in Perseus.”
“That’s one way to look at it,” NicAskill said, although her face wasn’t so optimistic.
The two OUP agents ran down the tunnel, by Mostyn’s guess moving deeper into Chinatown, when after half mile they stopped. Before them the tunnel divided into three branches.
“Now what, Boss?”
“Good question. And I don’t have a good answer.” Mostyn thought a moment, shrugged, and pointed to the left tunnel. “Let’s see where that one goes.”
They entered and jogged for about a hundred feet before the floor began to angle upwards.
Mostyn came to a stop. “This one’s going to the surface, let’s go back.”
They retraced their steps and returned to the spot where the four tunnels came together.
“Okay, NicAskill, fifty-fifty. Which one?”
“Let’s take the center tunnel.”
“The center one it is.”
They jogged down the center tunnel and after a couple hundred feet, the passage began to descend.
“Remind me not to play poker with you.”
NicAskill let out a laugh. “I don’t gamble, sir.”
“You’re in the OUP, what do you call that?”
“A calculated risk, sir.”
Mostyn laughed. “That it is, NicAskill. That it is.”
After another couple hundred feet, the tunnel walls changed from concrete to stone, The curved ceiling became flat. The stone was rough hewn, except for the floor, which was fairly smooth. Mostyn noted the walls were dry, and the air was hot and stale. There was also no indication there had ever been electric wiring in the tunnel.
“This must be very old, Boss.”
“Looks that way.”
“I wonder if the lizard people made this.”
“Possibly. May have been Native Americans.”
“What for?”
“Who knows? Maybe someplace to hide from us.”
“Why did you decide to continue following this tunnel, sir?”
“Just a guess. The other was going up. This one isn’t. As I said before, if I was the masked man, I’d take Dr Kemper lower, not higher. To keep her from being found.”
“Makes sense, sir. Just hope we find her.”
“Me, too, NicAskill. Me too.”



Chapter 21


Dotty Kemper lay on the bed. The masked man had left her, left her in order to determine her fate.
“I’m going to die,” she muttered. “He is going to either sacrifice me or turn me into some kind of mindless thing to do his bidding. In either case I’ll be dead.” Dotty took a deep breath and exhaled. “I wonder if he’ll grant me a last wish?”
She had no idea of the time. No idea how long the masked man had been gone. No idea if Mostyn was looking for her.
She snorted. “Of course he’s looking for me. Probably with half an army. He loves me.” And for a moment Dotty Kemper took comfort in that thought. If she was going to die, at least she’d die knowing she was loved.
She sat up on the bed, and looked at the door. Locked. She’d tried it after the masked man had left. She got up and went to the door, trying it again. 
“Still locked,” she muttered. “Too bad I never had Helene teach me how to dematerialize. Would never have been in this situation to begin with.”
Dotty sighed and returned to the bed, where she sat facing the door. The room was clear of things she could use for weapons. She was completely on her own. She was going to die. That’s all there was to it.
She heard the click and watch the door open. Before her was the Chines woman whose eyes had turned red, the one who called herself Zi, and the masked man.
He began speaking without any preamble. “I have made my decision. Tonight the moon is full. Your sacrifice tonight will open the gate which will allow the Gorgons to enter this dimension, making straight the path for the Great Old Ones to follow. Zi will extract the information that is in your mind, and then you’ll be readied for the sacrifice. You must be prepared so you are acceptable to them.”
The masked man departed. The door closed and the tell-tale click announced the door was locked.
The two women looked at each other. Dotty spoke. “Do you actually want him to unleash a horror that will destroy this planet? Do you want to die?”
Zi, her face registering no emotion, said, “I will not die, for I am not human.”
Suddenly it all made sense. “Of course. Precautions.”
“Precisely. Precautions. Now, Dr Kemper, lie down upon the bed.”
“No.”
“Very well.”
Zi lifted her arm and pointed a finger at Dotty, and Dotty felt all the strength go out of her body, and she fell back onto the bed. Zi positioned Dotty’s body so she was lying on her back. The Chinese-looking woman got on the bed and straddled Dotty, placing her fingertips on Dotty’s head.
Unable to squirm or scream or even blink, Dotty felt as though a vacuum cleaner was running over her mind.

***

Mostyn had stopped. He needed a five minute rest. As fit as he was, age was beginning its little tell-tale signs. He looked at NicAskill. While she appreciated the rest, she didn’t need it. He sipped from his canteen, and his partner did likewise.
The tunnel after descending for at least half a mile had ended. Terminating into a staircase that led deeper into the earth below the city.
NicAskill peered into the blackness. Her wrist light revealed nothing but stairs. “I wonder who built these? I don’t think Native Americans would. What could possibly be their reason. On the other hand, the lizard people… Do you think they built this?”
Mostyn shrugged. “Your guess is as good as mine. I just hope these take us to Dotty.”
“Do you think the others are going to catch up?”
“Don’t know. Hopefully they will, sooner rather than later.”
Mostyn took one last swallow of water, put the canteen away, and indicated it was time to descend.
Down the stairs they went, Mostyn in the lead. The stairwell had been carved out of solid stone. The steps, carved from the same stone, were worn in the center.
“At one time these steps had a lot of use,” NicAskill said.
“Given the dust, I’d say that was a long time ago.”
“Yeah. A very long time ago. This stuff has to be at least an inch thick.”
“And no footprints. So we’re the first to come this way in a long time.”
The stairwell was free of decorations. Nothing but the chiseled rock. The temperature gradually became cooler the further they descended, and after a time the stone changed from dry to wet.
From behind him, Mostyn heard NicAskill curse.
“What the matter?”
“Ugh. I don’t like the wet and the slime.”
“Just pray we aren’t dumped into an underground lake or river when this thing ends.”
NicAskill groaned.
The stairs continued for another fifty or sixty feet and came to an end in another tunnel. The floor was wet with a film of standing water. The walls were water-slicked and slime covered.
They followed the tunnel for a hundred feet or so when Mostyn and NicAskill found themselves at an intersection. They were in a small chamber which four other tunnels fed into.
Mostyn shook his head. “Can this get any harder?” he muttered. “Alright, NicAskill, go to that tunnel and listen. Tell me if you hear anything. I’ll start with this one. We’ll meet in the middle.”
NicAskill went to her tunnel and walked in a few paces and listened. Mostyn did the same with his tunnel. Not hearing a sound, save for dripping water, he went back out to the little chamber. There he saw NicAskill, who shook her head, and went into the next tunnel. Mostyn did likewise.
Almost immediately Mostyn noticed a slight incline to the floor. The tunnel was also fairly dry. He stopped about twenty feet from the entrance and listened. Chanting! He heard chanting!
He ran out. NicAskill was waiting.
“Come! Listen!”
Mostyn pulled her to the spot where he’d been standing. “Listen,” he said.
“Sounds like some kind of singing.”
“Chanting,” Mostyn corrected. “Come on. Let’s go. Keep your weapons handy — and your mirror.”
They ran down the tunnel making as little noise as possible, the chanting gradually growing louder the further into the tunnel they progressed. After a few hundred feet, Mostyn put his hand up and stopped.
“What is it?” NicAskill whispered.
“Light. Up there.” Mostyn turned off his wrist light.
Perhaps fifty feet in front of them they saw a rectangular entryway and the dull glow of light coming from beyond.
They crept forward and passed through the opening. Mostyn looked around. They appeared to be on a balcony, carved from the solid rock. A short wall about three feet high ran around the edge of the balcony. There was a set of stairs on the one side that Mostyn assumed led down to the floor below.
He got down on all fours. The chanting was quite loud now and seemed to be building towards a climax. There was no source of light higher up in the chamber, and Mostyn assumed it must be coming from down below. He crept to the edge of the balcony and peered over the wall. About thirty feet below was a large auditorium. A group of a couple dozen men were dressed in long robes and chanting. The words were now audible and they were all too familiar to Mostyn.
C’goka fahf tgif ng ymg’uln. O n ghft ehye.
NicAskill hunkered down beside Mostyn, and whispered, “What are they singing?”
“I don’t know. But whatever it is, it can’t be good. It’s R’lyehian. And I’ve never been anywhere where that language was a good sign. Look.”
NicAskill looked to where Mostyn was pointing. On a raised semi-circular dais, four naked women were holding down another naked woman who was spread eagle on a large flat stone, which was obviously an altar. Each of the women were squatting and holding one of the limbs of the woman lying spread eagle on the stone.
A man was standing next to the altar, holding a large knife in the air, his face elevated towards the ceiling, and his mouth was moving. Perhaps in some invocation.
NicAskill gasped. “Oh, my God, Boss. That’s Dr Kemper!”



To Be Continued!




While waiting for the next installment, the entire Pierce Mostyn Paranormal series is available for your reading pleasure.

Do you hate cliffhangers? There’s none in this series. Each book stands by itself.

Do you think books are magic? That for just a little while you can be anywhere, doing anything? Then join Pierce Mostyn and experience some magic!

What people are saying about the Pierce Mostyn series:

“…a fast-paced story with lots of action, yet does not neglect the characters.”

“Hawes has a great time with this series and does a good job (too good) of leaving us wanting more.”

“This series is fun…”

“…a weird tale of adventure, humor, and horror.”




Are engaging characters your thing? Join my VIP Readers and you’ll get the Pierce Mostyn novelette, “The Feeder” — available only to my VIP Readers! 

And you’ll be the first to know when the revised book version of The Medusa Ritual comes out!



The Medusa Ritual is copyright © 2019 by CW Hawes. All rights reserved.