H.P. Lovecraft Literary Podcast Forums
May 22, 2013, 03:54:28 AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
News: If you encounter any unknowable eldritch forum problems, shoot Manndroid a missive at mmann(at)modsprocket(dot)com!
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register  
Pages: 1 2 3 [4] 5
  Print  
Author Topic: Unprecious Moments - Your Personal Lovecraftian Adventures  (Read 3426 times)
Bob Lovecraft
Committed for Life
******
Posts: 1339



View Profile
« Reply #45 on: June 12, 2012, 02:03:20 PM »

Jape, you have just gotten my vote for "Creepiest Moment" on this thread...

Bob
Logged

If someone ever dares you to read the Necronomicon out loud... just say no.
Higgledy
Blissfully Ignorant
*
Posts: 8



View Profile
« Reply #46 on: June 15, 2012, 04:05:59 AM »

My brother and I were fishing off a pier down in Cornwall. Our fishing equipment was a fine fishing line tied around a kite string dispenser, an enormous lead weight and beyond it a baited hook. We hadn't felt caught anything for the hour or so and neither, it seemed, had any of the other people fishing that morning. That all changed when we heard a commotion further down the pier.

People had started to gather around a boy who's cheap toy fishing rod was bent nearly double. We rushed over to see what was happening and I noticed and huge black eel writhing just below the murky surface of the water. It was probably the biggest aquatic creature I'd seen up to that point in my short life and it had that Lovecraftian quality of something enormously powerful and strange that was only partially visible. The line snapped audibly and the giant eel sank back into the sea. On man suggested it could have been a Congar eel.

Later that day we caught a fish that was barely an inch long. It may have been on the line, undetected, for quite some time thanks to our ill advised use of that large lead weight.
Logged

Herald of Piggledy 'Destroyer of Worlds.'
Inner Prop
Unhinged
***
Posts: 135


I've seen things you wouldn't imagine


View Profile WWW
« Reply #47 on: June 25, 2012, 06:17:46 PM »

My Father enlisted in the USMC in August of 1960 with the hopes of following in the family "business" of Firefighting.  Initially he was assigned to a Crash Crew and trained to fight aircraft fires and save trapped fighter pilots.  Due to a choice of twelve weeks of guard duty over six weeks on Kitchen Patrol (KP), by October, 1962 he was working as an MP at Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort, SC.

The Cuban Missile Crisis had the whole country on edge, but no one was more anxious than the military on the south east coast.  After the tensions had risen to a particularly fevered pitch, intelligence came down that all bases, and especially their Military Police patrols should be on the lookout for a known saboteur suspected of being somewhere on the east coast with a mission to damage any military facilities possible.  Especially high value targets were those bases on which nuclear weapons were housed, like MCAS Beaufort.

I've searched on Google Earth to find the exact spot of this incident and I believe the Ammo Point is located on the north part of the base.  The base is surrounded by low lands, swamps, tidal pools, and rivers.

My Father always said that the patrols to the back gate of the Ammo Point were the most difficult because you had to drive all the way around the airfield and at the furthest point you were beyond the range of the radios.  It was a single lane road with swamp on one side and water on the other.  The MPs at that time patrolled alone in pickup trucks.  At night it was a long, dark, lonely ride to a poorly lit gate.

That night Dad drove around to the gate on the edge of his seat, knowing how close they might be to actual Nuclear War.  When he reached the end of the road he tried his radio, nothing.  He put the handset down on the bench beside where he sat and exited the vehicle to inspect the gate.

When he stepped out he realized that the ground was covered in a low laying fog.  Because of the chemicals in the surrounding swamp gases the fog had taken on a violet tinge as it swirled around at boot top level.

Despite the fact that the truck was parked so that the headlights were pointed at the gate, Dad had his flashlight out to keep a watch on the surrounding area.  He easily found that the gate was secure, and he turned to return to his truck.

As he turned he could have sworn that he saw a red light blinking in the distance, somewhere off to the right of the truck.  He leaned forward and squinted; he held his flashlight out, and he saw it again.  Blink, blink.

He thought it could be a reflector of some kind, but he wasn't waving his light around.  None of the lights around him were moving, and yet the light blinked.  He knew some Morse code and he walked toward the light, trying to tell what letters were being blinked.  With his free hand he unsnapped the loop on the holster of his service .45.

He stepped cautiously through the fog, feeling the hard road change to swamp.  As he approached the light he realized that it was indeed a reflector and it was the Spanish moss hanging from a nearby tree swaying between them that made it blink.  But what had made the moss sway?  Only then did a slight breeze begin to stir.

The reflector was a red, reflective ribbon on a brand new wreath of flowers, still fresh, that had been laid on a headstone.  My Father had stumbled into a graveyard.  The headstone was leaning and overgrown, covered in tree sap and bird droppings.  As the gentle puff of wind cleared the fog, he saw the writing on the grave marker.

He had gone on shift at midnight and this couldn't have been two hours into the patrol, and the day, yet the date on the headstone was one hundred years earlier, to the day.  My Father had stumbled into an all but forgotten Civil War cemetery.

He looked around for other evidence of the recent visitor.  He found it in the shape of a right boot print.  He leaned down to get a better look and realized that it was a full inch all around bigger than his own sizable 13.

He looked for the next print and found it; a left boot print at least six feet away from the first one and leading up out of the nearby creek.  This creek had no name but it crisscrossed with countless others until it emptied into the Atlantic.  He did a quick calculation and estimated that at six feet tall he could take a three foot stride when he was running.  A man who took a six foot stride would have to be closer to twelve feet tall.

Just then his flashlight failed.  It died slowly, dimming at first and turning yellow until it was barely a trickle of light.  He felt the hair on the back of his head and made his way back to the truck at a range walk.

The headlights of the truck seemed to flutter or dim for a moment as he approached.  He couldn't see in the bed of the truck so he threw his now useless flashlight back there with a clatter.  As he did so he drew his pistol and chambered a round.

He moved around to the driver side and opened the door.

The cab was empty except for the radio handset sitting on his clipboard.  He jumped in and put his pistol down next to the mic.

He put the clutch in, put the truck in gear and let out the clutch.  Nothing happened.  The back tires slid but didn't seem to catch.

It was a dry night and he had stopped solidly on the road.  There was no reason for his wheels to spin. He tried again, trying to give it more gas, with the same result.  It was like something or someone was holding the back bumper.

He looked in the rearview mirror and saw only black.

Heart racing he kicked in the clutch, jammed it into reverse and popped the clutch.  The truck jumped back a few feet.  He reversed the procedure and popped it into first.

The wheels squealed but moved him forward.  As he peeled around in the sharp turn he needed to get going back down the road, he felt a heavy thump as if someone had jumped into the bed of his truck.

At the same time in that sharp, hard turn, his clipboard, with the radio hand set and his Colt M1911 .45 caliber pistol slide across the bench seat and dumped into the space between the seat and the passenger side door.

He slammed on the gas and raced through the gears.  He figured that if a twelve foot tall man were in the back of his truck he would have a hell of a time getting around to open his door and if he wanted to jump out of the bed of the truck at 60 mph, then more power to him.

As he raced around back onto the main part of the base he was too frightened to look in the rearview mirror, even when the lights of the base would have made the bed visible.

He sped through the front gate, right past the guard without slowing down at all.  The horrified look on the guard's face confirmed that he had a tiger by the tail in the back of his truck.

He needed a plan to get stopped and out of the truck without running into his passenger.  He decide to make directly for the guard shack, where there would be other men and many more weapons.  He would put drive right up to a space and let the concrete bumper stop the truck.  The sudden stop would kill the truck so suddenly that someone without a proper hand hold in the back would be tossed about.  My Father would have steadying hands on the wheel.  As his passenger tried to regain his balance my Father would be out his door and make a mad dash for the shack door.

That was exactly what he did.  As soon as the truck slammed into the barrier he threw the door open and bolted inside shouting, "Sergeant of the Guard!  Sergeant of the Guard!"

He ran right past the desk and grabbed a shotgun out of the rack.  He pumped it and put it up to his shoulder aimed at the still swinging double doors.

"What's going on?"

"Giant saboteur, walked out of the water, held my truck, twelve feet tall, flowers, out there!"

Eventually others joined him and they walked out to find his empty truck.  It was exactly as he had left it, and there was no one in it.

"But the guard saw it, ask him," my Father protested.  "He had a look of pure terror."

The guard had indeed had a terrified look on his face, but he hadn't seen anything except a runaway truck and the look on my Father's face.  They were what had scared him so.

In the end my Father had to admit that there was no evidence that anything untoward had happened at all.  There was no evidence that anyone had done anything except careless laid a wreath.  Nothing except that when my Dad went to get his dead flashlight out of the truck bed he found that it was all wet and there was an old metal milk bottle back there.

The bed had been clean and empty when he had checked it out earlier that night.
Logged
Inner Prop
Unhinged
***
Posts: 135


I've seen things you wouldn't imagine


View Profile WWW
« Reply #48 on: July 05, 2012, 07:08:28 AM »

So, did my Dad's story kill this thread?
Logged
starblazie
Unhinged
***
Posts: 125



View Profile
« Reply #49 on: July 05, 2012, 10:55:29 PM »

So, did my Dad's story kill this thread?

oh probably, but it was worth it.  Smiley
Logged

"...prayers without sacrifices are only words." - Sallustius
Graf von Altenberg Ehrenstein
Shaken
**
Posts: 87



View Profile
« Reply #50 on: July 06, 2012, 11:05:47 AM »

Not really, but we `re all puzzled by the fact you forgot to mention the most crucial fact about that milk bottle. That it was in every respect an ordinary milk bottle, just as everybody knows it from everyday live. Only that it had 1O GALLONS!!!
No. I `m not dismissing this as sailor `s yarn (or Marine `s yarn) but like that it is an almost perfect modern myth. It has all the elements and style (nice writing I think, you should do some fiction) of the famous killer-in-the-backseat-stories we all know so well. By posting this you have added a new one and soon all kinds of variations will pop up. Since the original takes place in a swamp we can even hope for a bunch of nice slimy lagoon-monsters about which you will eventually be able to hear in a sceptoid podcast episode...
Of course one could track down all these things to boring explanations, I mean measuring footprints in a swamp at night and so on... But who wants that? Deep in our souls lies hidden the whish to live in a world that has giant milkmen honoring the fallen of bygone wars.
Logged
Bob Lovecraft
Committed for Life
******
Posts: 1339



View Profile
« Reply #51 on: July 11, 2012, 08:26:09 AM »

So, did my Dad's story kill this thread?

No, but considering this is your final version of a tale we discussed at the very beginning of this thread, I would say that you may have resurrected it. Wink

Bob
Logged

If someone ever dares you to read the Necronomicon out loud... just say no.
old book
Committed for Life
******
Posts: 1347


View Profile
« Reply #52 on: July 15, 2012, 01:49:16 PM »

But could there really be PURPLE fog? What made it purple? Cows passing gas?
Logged

We live on a placid Rhode Island and Providence Plantations of ignorance in the midst of the black seas of an infinity of dark foreigners, and it was not meant that we should voyage too far.
Inner Prop
Unhinged
***
Posts: 135


I've seen things you wouldn't imagine


View Profile WWW
« Reply #53 on: July 15, 2012, 10:18:18 PM »

But could there really be PURPLE fog? What made it purple? Cows passing gas?
IDK.
Logged
Bob Lovecraft
Committed for Life
******
Posts: 1339



View Profile
« Reply #54 on: July 16, 2012, 02:07:20 PM »

That is Yog-Sothoth's morning breath.

Bob
Logged

If someone ever dares you to read the Necronomicon out loud... just say no.
old book
Committed for Life
******
Posts: 1347


View Profile
« Reply #55 on: July 19, 2012, 02:21:02 PM »

A few days ago I would have dismissed the purple haze as an element not lending credibility to an otherwise very excellent tale. I have since learned that the purple haze does exist, both as some sort of chemical reaction in swampgas, and as a feature of the Point Pleasant Mothman/UFO events. I have never seen a purple cow, and I hope I never do.

Logged

We live on a placid Rhode Island and Providence Plantations of ignorance in the midst of the black seas of an infinity of dark foreigners, and it was not meant that we should voyage too far.
Bob Lovecraft
Committed for Life
******
Posts: 1339



View Profile
« Reply #56 on: July 20, 2012, 02:33:03 PM »

You know, you mention Point Pleasant and the Mothman. I was researching that whole thing a while back and found that Point Pleasant's infamous dynamite factory (the area the Mothman was supposed to hide out at) is on a government list as one of the most contaminated regions in the country. Apparently so much toxic gunk seeped into the ground that it will have effects for the next several centuries. I'm sure it leads to some strange-looking phenomena in the area from time to time.

Bob
Logged

If someone ever dares you to read the Necronomicon out loud... just say no.
old book
Committed for Life
******
Posts: 1347


View Profile
« Reply #57 on: July 20, 2012, 02:50:48 PM »

Great ahem Point, Bob! I didn't pick up on that, although Keel consistently refers to that site as "TNT" while describing the purple blobs hovering over it.
Logged

We live on a placid Rhode Island and Providence Plantations of ignorance in the midst of the black seas of an infinity of dark foreigners, and it was not meant that we should voyage too far.
Lambda
Unhinged
***
Posts: 164

Mythos Addict


View Profile WWW Email
« Reply #58 on: July 22, 2012, 05:03:52 PM »

I have never seen a purple cow, and I hope I never do.

I see them every time I go shopping. ... Com'on. They make delicious chocolate. Tongue
Logged
Bob Lovecraft
Committed for Life
******
Posts: 1339



View Profile
« Reply #59 on: July 23, 2012, 09:38:30 AM »

Great ahem Point, Bob! I didn't pick up on that, although Keel consistently refers to that site as "TNT" while describing the purple blobs hovering over it.

When I first started doing my admittedly minimal research into the Mothman/Cornstalk Curse/Point Pleasant story, I was doing it with the intention of writing an adventure for Shadowrun 3rd Edition, and I needed real-world background to adapt to a game with both magic and high technology. So the idea of the cursed land (which I think is really tenuous, even if you assumed that curses were real and could be placed on entire areas) combined with man's voluntary corruption of the land, really captured my interest. At this point in my life, I would love to go tour the area, but since it is so polluted and toxic, I'm pretty sure that's not going to happen.

Of course, no that I have gotten into all things Lovecraftian, I can totally see Point Pleasant as an epicenter of cultist activities and pan-dimensional conflict.

Bob
Logged

If someone ever dares you to read the Necronomicon out loud... just say no.
Pages: 1 2 3 [4] 5
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.16 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!