Down on Gobler's Farm

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    Down on Goblers Farm

    a story of the Cthulhu Mythos

    2011 by Jim LaVigne

    The statement of Michael G. Handley, lately of Boston, Mass, as recorded December 3 rd, 1938, atDanvers State Hospital for the Insane, Dr. L. F. Atterburn attending physician.

    Ive been asked to write this by the doctors here at dear old Danvers. Probably they think it will

    be therapeutic or something, but I doubt it. Likely its a fat waste of time. But then who knows?Maybe somebody besides the doctors and record-keepers will read it. And maybe theyll evenbelieve it. But again, probably not. Most likely, anyone who reads this will write it off as the

    rambling of a madman. If so, the foulness we thought wed exterminated down in the bayou willgo on, polluting who knows how many innocent people, eventually infecting the entire living

    world. And Ill stay here in the empty room with the padded walls. Thats just how things usuallywork.

    Now, dont get me wrong. I know that its perfectly reasonable to think of me as insane.

    After all, people dont usually flip out like I did that day in the grocers. They dont go berserk inthe dairy section and fling foodstuffs all over the place. They dont scream and cry and gorunning out into the street and they certainly dont babble incoherently for hours on end aboutsomeone named Bessie. I know that. But then most people havent seen what Ive seen.

    So what the hell, Ill tell you the story. Maybe it is just a fantasy, some elaborate tale mydemented mind has invented out of thin air. But then again, maybe its not. Maybe its stone coldtruth. Ill let you be the judge.

    The big Packard 443 barreled along the two-lane country road through the rain-lashed night, its

    frog headlights making a tunnel through the inky, moss-hung trees and swamps of the Louisiana

    bayou country. A major storm that would eventually be called the Big Okeechobee Hurricane hadbeen ravaging Florida and the Gulf for two solid days and the levees were fit to burst. All in all, a

    rough night for traveling, but it was too late to turn back and the area was far too lonely anddepopulated to hope for a motel or even the friendly lights of a roadside diner. Just us, the car, the

    rain, the narrow black road, and miles and miles of swamp. The date was September 19, 1928.

    There were four of us in the car, all employeesAgents, the boss liked to call usof aBoston-based concern with the deliberately bland and anonymous name of the Montgomery Nash

    Professional Association. We were on our way home from a job. It had been a good one, for

    once; no one had gotten killed, no one had been forced to kill anyone or anything, no one had

    gone gibbering insane Sure, Wong still had that nervous tic, and Florence really needed to see adoctor about the six-inch gash in her leg shed had to sew up herself. But I guess it tells yousomething about the nature of our work when I say that these were acceptable, even negligible

    damages. Yeah, its that kind of work. Most people wouldnt even believe it could happen, andthose of us who know it does wish to hell it wouldnt. Crazy, huh?

    Anyway, my name is Mike Handley and Im a mechanic. Engines and motors are myspecialty, but if you need just about anything fixed or jury-rigged, Im your man. I also know alittle about how to destroy things, having done a stint in the Army as a combat engineer. As to

    why I worked for Mr. Montgomery and Dr. Nash, chasing monsters and crazy cultists and

    unspeakable things from beyond and such, lets just say that all of us there had our reasons, butmine was simple: Facing a hellacious big tab to certain gambling concerns, I needed the money.

    Real bad. It was this or get my legs broke, and mad and impossible as the work often was, no one

    could say that it didnt pay. My comrades and I earned in a month what most working stiffs

    pulled down in a year.

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    Sitting with me in the back seat was Dr. Morton Webber, a taller, distinguished-looking

    sort of older guy in his usual tweed suit. He was a doctor of what they called parapsychology, the

    study of the paranormal. You knowghosts and goblins, spooks and little men from Mars and allthat sort of nutty stuff. Me, I always wondered what kind of self-respecting university would hand

    out degrees in things like that, but then Im just a humble grease monkey. What do I know?Anyway, the Doc knew all about the occult, all the hoodoo and so-called magic these nuts at MN

    all seemed to believe in. He didnt talk much and he wasnt much help in a fight, but damned if Ihadnt seen him save the day, more than once, with his old books, gibberish chanting, and stinkychemicals.

    Engaged in a no-holds-barred wrestling match with the wheel of the Packard was Kurt

    Wong, a stocky fellow of Chinese descent with a face like a frying pan and a cynical, jaded kind

    of slant on life. I was never sure exactly what Wongs line of work actually was. He could handlejust about any kind of gun and was good in a scrap. He could drive pretty well and he knew a lot

    of folks in the criminal fraternity. Maybe he would best be described as a crook of some sort.

    There were always folks like that around the office at MN; shady characters about whom one

    didnt ask too many questions. But whatever he was, I always got along with him just fine and

    considered him a pretty good Joe.

    Our sort-of leader on this trip was one Florence Gayle, a crackerjack nurse and a real

    lookerbig blue eyes, great figure, and lips just made for kissing. Not that I knew anything abouther lipsshe tended to look at me and the rest of the men around MN as something just abovepond scumbut I wouldve been something less than an average red-blooded American boy if I

    hadnt noticed and made a few attempts at flirting. I say that she was the sort-of leader becausewe dont really have leaders at MN. Just those who stay sane (and alive) long enough to makedecisions. But designated or not, Florence tended to lead. When the chips were down and the

    guns were going off and everyone was yelling at each other and some hideous monstrosity from

    another dimension was about to bite your head off, she always managed to keep her cool. All

    told, one hell of a gal.

    We werent friends, exactly, or even acquaintances, but we were coworkers andcomrades, having gone through a lot of violent, mind-shattering experiences with each other, and

    we liked and trusted each other. And at the time, despite the hurricane and the loneliness of our

    situation, we were happy enough just to be on the way home after a job well done. I remember wehad the radio playing; Sophie Tucker doing her new one, The Man I Love, followed by a news

    report on the storm.

    Wed been on the same deserted stretch for what seemed like hours when we came to awooden bridgeone of a thousand like it wed already crossedwhere the water had risen overthe roadbed. Carefully, Wong nosed the big car across the sheets of water and the wood planking

    beneath and luckily it wasnt a long span, because just as we gained the other side, there was aterrible groaning, splintering noise and the whole shebang went splashing into the bayou.

    I was staring out theback window. Mother of God! I swore. Did you see that? The

    whole damned bridge!

    Close one, said Wong, shaking his head. The Doc looked stunned, sort of wide-eyed

    and shocked, and Florence scowled.

    Too close, she said. We might have to stop. Look for shelter.Out here? said Doc Webber. Unlikely, at best, Im afraid.Well, we aint stoppin here, I said, watching the last timbers of the bridge go

    careening into the water. Cmon Wong, get us to some higher ground!He did, driving on into even stronger sheets of driven rain, and we motored along in tense

    silence for a few more miles. I had just spotted somethinga light aheadand had opened my

    mouth to say something when the car hit a bump in the road, there were several loud bangs from

    beneath our feet, and suddenly we were fishtailing wildly down the slick road. It probably didnthelp that the rest of screamed like little kids on a playground, but Wong managed to get the big

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    sedan under control soon enough; it rolled to a grating halt and then we were all just sitting there

    looking at each other, breathing hard and listening to the pelting rain on the roof.

    What the hell was that? I finally said, clutching my chest. What happened?Hit something, said Wong, avuncular as ever. Something in the road.

    No kidding! I said. But what? That sounded like we blew all the tires!Yeah, better have a look, said Florence. She reached for her umbrella. Come on.

    Out in the rain, umbrella or no umbrella, it was like jumping fully clothed into a lake.Within seconds we were all soaked to the skin. I walked around the car to see what the trouble

    was, but a blind man could have spotted the fact that all four of the thick white wall tires were

    shredded like Swiss cheese. Whatever wed hit or run over had turned them into scrap rubber.Scanning the road and wiping rain from my face, I walked back a few yards and found

    the source of the trouble, a length of thick chain that had been studded every six inches or so with

    long, thick, ten-penny nails and lain across the road. A trap. Gathered around in the rain in a little

    group, we all looked at each other.

    Who would do this? Florence asked, saying what we were all thinking. And why?I looked around and then pointed. Dont know, I said, raising my voice over the rain

    and wind. But look over theretheres a light!They all saw it too, but nobody set off that way. Instead we all piled back into the car,

    squeezed some of the water from our clothes, and talked it over.Well? asked Doc Webber, looking a lot less scholarly all soaking wet. What are we

    going to do?

    We could keep going, I said. Run on the rims. Be slow and itd ruin the wheels, butwed keep moving

    Or, said Florence, we can go see what that light is. Of course, theres always the

    possibility she trailed off.Possibility of what? asked the Doc.

    That whoevers got the light over there, I explained, is the same one who put thatchain in the road.

    Maybe more than one, said Wong.

    Good point, Florence said. But the gist is the same: Whoevers out there could very

    well be the one who did it.But why? wondered Doc Webber. To what end?I shrugged. Rob us, maybe. Steal the car. Who knows? Lots of crazy, lawless hillbillies

    down here, Doc. Beat you up and rob you for a greenback dollar.

    I suppose so, he said, scratching his chin like he always did when he was thinking.Seems a bit extreme, though

    I say, said Wong, drawing his .45 from beneath his coat, we should go pay em a visit.Find out soon enough whats what.

    We all thought it over for a little while. Finally I spoke up.

    I vote we go see whos got the light. If they didnt set the trap, fine. And if they did?Well, then well just do like Wong said and have a little chat with em. Either way, they mighthave a car or a truckeven a horsewe can use to get out of here. At least somewhere in out of

    the rain! Anyway, thats my vote.Wong patted his pistol and nodded in agreement and the Doc shrugged apathetically, but

    Florence shook her head.

    I dont know, she said. This whole setup is like something out of those pulpmagazines you always read. The lonely house in the middle of nowhere, the dark and stormy

    night Just a little too pat for me.

    I shrugged at her. I dont like it much either, I said. But what can we do? Its gotta betwenty miles to the nearest town. We cant make that on rims. And if we stay here, Id say theresa good chance well get washed away, car and all, by all that water. Remember that washed-out

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    bridge? Now, that light is up on a rise. Its not a big rise, not a hill, even, but its higher than here!Looks like at least one building, too, something we could climb up on I say we got no choice.

    We gave the issue some more chin music, talking it over, but it boiled down to the same

    two unpleasant choices: Stay here and drown or go visit the kind of person or people who would

    weld ten-pennies to a logging chain and then sling it across the road at night. Finally, though,

    spurred along by the noticeably rising water around the ruined wheels of the Packard, we decided.

    Grabbing our gearas much as we could comfortably carry, anywaywe climbed back out intothe downpour and started toward the light.

    As we discovered soon enough, there was a sort of road, an overgrown but raised

    causeway sort of thing that led straight toward the light and what turned out to be three buildings

    and some rangy mangroves and willows. We hadnt gone ten steps along this raised path whenDoc Webber stopped us and pointed to something next to the road. A mailbox, rusted with spots

    of peeled white paint, sat there on a wooden pole. The little flag on the side was bent sideways,

    the door on the front was ripped half off, and the whole thing leaned crazily to one side. A single

    word was written in crude block capitals: Gobler. There was no mail in it.

    After a wet slog of about a quarter mile the place came into better view and we could see

    that indeed, there were three buildings, a house, a barn, and another one-story shed. The whole

    joint looked overgrown, with vines and moss on the roofs and eaves and tall weeds in the yard

    and between the drooping willows. Almost deserted. But there was the light, a single bright bulbon a tall pole in the middle of the yard, and somehow I got the feeling that it wasnt nearly asuninhabited as it looked.

    The nearest structure was the barn and since the wide swinging doors were already open

    we headed for it and got in out of the rain. Like any barn, it smelled of animal crap and hay andold machines. It was dark in there, too, even darker than outside, and we all stopped to break out

    our battery-powered hand lamps before looking around.

    Golly, what a mess! said Florence, shining her light about. She wasnt exaggerating;

    there were piles of junk everywhere, thick cobwebs in all the corners, and a dense coat of dust

    over everything. Plus, now that wed had some time to notice it, there was another smell to theplace, like a lizard or a snake.

    Looks abandoned, I said. Like it hasnt been used in years.

    Maybe, said Webber, leaning to peer at something on the dirt floor, but then look atthis.

    We crowded around and had a look in the glow of our lights and saw right away what he

    was talking about. There were normal, human tracks, a confusion of them, but also a rather

    different pair of footprints in the dust. Recent, from the look of them, they were strangely shaped

    and thin, like the tracks of some large bird or reptile. Decidedly not human, and not left by any

    farm animal we could imagine.

    What made those? asked Wong bluntly. Huh, Doc? Can you tell?Not sure, said the Doc. Could be aBut then he was interrupted, as there came an ear-splitting scream and the flap of

    something leathery and suddenly a big dark shape with an abnormally large head and massive

    wings was swooping down on us from the rafters.

    Byakhee! yelled Doc Webber, fumbling for something in his pockets. Look out!I had a glimpse of something big and ragged and toothy, something like a giant bug with

    fur and bats wings, before both Wong and I opened up with our gunshe with his .45, me withmy shotgunand the place exploded in noise and flame. The creature, all seven feet of it, less thewings, was very fast and very hard to make out in the murky barn, causing our shots to go wild.

    For a moment we lost sight of it, somewhere up in the cobwebbed rafters, but then Florence gave

    a scream and we wheeled to see that the monster had come down from the shadows and now had

    her cornered, off to one side, and looked about ready to pounce on her like a dog on raw meat.

    She let out another scream, her eyes wild with terror, as the thing moved in for the kill.

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    Wong and I rushed to get a bead on the horrible critter, but it was too close to Florence to

    risk it; any shot we took might just as likely hit her as the monster. Madly, we jockeyed for

    position, but it was no use; the creature had her dead to rights and there was doodley squat we

    could do about it.

    Just then, as I was about to give up and just smack the things semblance of a head withthe butt of my shotgun as a last resort, Doc Webber stepped up and, brandishing (as well as he

    could) some little thing like a piece of rock, gave a shout.Hey! he yelled at the beast. Over here!For whatever reason (maybe just Webbers voice, which was quite deep and what they

    call authoritative), the thing turned from Florence and faced the Doc. In the light of our lamps it

    was truly, profoundly horrible: Eyes like glowing embers, a mouth full of jagged, irregular teeth,

    skin like a rotting elephant, and several profusions of cilia or hair or antennae that stood out from

    its sinewy body like plant growth. The Doc had given it a name, but I was more than ready to

    settle for plain old monster. The real question was: Could we kill it before it killed us?

    Wong and I were about to unload on the thing again, it having moved away from

    Florence enough for a clear shot, but the Doc was too quick for us. Raising his hand with the rock

    in it, he shouted some stuff I didnt catch, something about Nodens and the Plain of UltimateChaos, and the monster suddenly cringed, like it had been smacked by an invisible backhand.

    Then it gathered itself up before leaping and flying right out the barn doors. Off into the night. Ina matter of seconds and a batty flourish, the old barn was quiet again. We reeled in the sudden

    calm for a moment, then I swallowed the cotton in my mouth.

    Christ, what wasthat? I asked, going to Florences side. Some kind of giant rottenbat?

    No, it was a Byakhee, said Doc Webber weakly, pale and sweating. A summoned

    creature from Outside.Checking her over, I saw that Florence was unharmed, but there was still a wild look in

    her eyes I didnt like and she didnt seem to hear me when I asked if she was OK. Gently, I tookher by the shoulders and forced her to look into my eyes.

    Listen to me, I told her, trying to sound a lot calmer than I felt. The thing is gone.

    Hear me? Its gone now, youre OK.

    With what looked like a supreme effort, she shook herself and gave a big, all-over sigh.Her eyes refocused, losing some of their panicky gleam. She looked at me and shuddered.

    Im alright, she said, not very convincingly. Just rattled there for a second.Small wonder, I said, patting her arm. That thing wouldve scared anybody! But like I

    said, its gone.

    Thanks to the Doc, said Wong. I turned to Webber myself and nodded gratefully.

    Yeah, Doc, I grinned at him, that was a fancy piece of work! Whatd you use on it,anyway?

    Webber held up his hand and showed us his secret weapon, a rock about the size of a

    silver dollar. I almost laughed.

    A rock? I said. That did it? A damn piece of rock?

    Much more than that, Webber said gravely. And much more effective. This is an

    Elder Sign.Oh, one ofthose, I said. Id heard about these things before; some kind of rock not

    native to planet Earth, kind of like soapstone, and carved with a weird symbol like a flaming eye.

    Personally I hadnt imagined that they were good for much, just more mumbo jumbo, but I hadjust come a long way toward becoming a believer. I clapped Webber on the back.

    Whatever it is, I told him, it saved our butts. Especially Florences. Wouldnt want

    anything to happen to thatShe smiled, kind of half-heartedly, at my lame attempt at whatever it was I was

    attempting, and nodded to the Doc.

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    Yes, thanks, she said. But wont it come back? I mean, it isnt dead, is it?

    No, only banished, Webber said. And it will probably return. But not for at least a fewhours, I should think.

    Good, Florence nodded. Wong and I nodded, too. Good riddance, for Petes sake! But

    then something occurred to me and I must have kind of slumped or looked worried, because

    Florence asked what was wrong.

    Well, I said, trying to put it right, its just that this kinda creature, monster, what haveyou, it isnt gonna just be hanging around in an old abandoned barn in the middle of nowhere forno reason, now is it? You said yourself it was summoned, right?

    Webber nodded in agreement. Florence went sort of pale and Wong got busy reloading

    his gun. Me, I just had to keep flapping my gums

    Its all something, like a plot, I said, groping. They laid the trap, they had this thing

    here in the barnThey who? asked Wong.

    I shrugged and looked at the others. These people who live here. The Goblers. Its theirplace, right? What the mailbox said. And besides, with all this noise, its a cinch they know were

    here.We all shuddered. Or shivered. Me, I got this feeling like Id just been punched in the

    belly. This did not look good. These Goblers were obviously no friend to the waylaid traveler. Infact, anyone who would do this kind of thing and have some kind of otherworldly monster in their

    barn was more than likely something worse than unfriendly; more likely, they were violently

    insane. But then, wed faced more than our share of madmen and fanatical cultists. Of course, thiswas their home turf. They--whoever and however many of them there were--would have all theadvantages of surprise and stealth. We could be about to blunder into God only knew what kind

    of a trap I was about to tell the others about this train of thought, however unnerving, whenfinally Florence, who now looked a lot better, squared her shoulders, straightened her clothes, and

    took control.

    Whoever they are, she said, steel in her voice, theyre not going to mess with us. Westopped a summoning of Nyogtha, for Gods sake! We killed that thing in Bridgeport, and webusted up that whole smuggling ring in Miami. We are not some dumb, fat tourists on our way

    from the Gulf. We are agents of Montgomery Nash. Whoever these Goblers are, they dont standa chance.

    It was a good speech. I almost let out a yell. But the gloom all around us, the latent stink

    from the monster, the slashing rain outside the wide barn doors It did nothing to help. I shookoff the gloom as best I could and nodded, enthusiastic-like.

    Youre right! I said. Then some sort of better judgment, the feeling that maybe wed bebetter off as far from this place as we could get, and right away, took over and I couldnt help butsay something.

    Of course, we couldjust go back to the car and try to get out of here in the car. Or wait it

    out in the car. Or try walking out I trailed off. They were having none of it. Their faces said

    that we were in for the whole stake. I gave a grin I didnt feel.

    But were not gonna do that! I managed, mock-heroically. So? I guess lets go see

    whos at home at the old Gobler place, shall we?Webber, his tweed suit spider-webbed, nodded hesitantly. Wong gave a frying pan grin

    and patted his .45, and Florence smiled grimly and waved for me to lead.

    After you, mechanic, she said. And keep your eyes peeled.The house was worse than the barn, in a way, because you could see where once it had

    been a fine old place. Built in the classic Saltbox style, with a few modifications, it sported a

    large veranda porch, overhung with moss and vines, lots of curlicue trim, also overhung, and

    above that the straight, pocked clapboard walls and narrow windows, all unlit, of a classic

    American farmhouse. There was a path beaten down through the weeds, leading right to the front

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    door, and thats where Florence went, up and onto the veranda and up to the glass-paned,fan-lighted, un-illuminated front door. I swallowed the knot in my throat and stepped up, too. In a

    show of bravado I in no way felt, I was about to reach out my stupid fist and rap on the door

    when Wong stopped me dead with a hiss.

    Stop, he whispered. Trap.I looked down. He was right; just before our feet was a tripwire, almost hidden in the

    foliage. Only the merest glint of its shadowand our pals sharp eyesstood between us andwhat was probably not a cheery welcome. Carefully, Wong traced the wire, a filament that looked

    to me like a piano string, as it went along and then up and connected to a firemans axe which had

    been artfully arranged in the foliage above the door. Anyone who came up too close to the door

    would have been chopped.

    Nice, I said, eyeing thesetup. Keeps away the salesmen real good!

    Nobody laughed. I couldnt blame them. Wordlessly, Wong bent down and, with a fewcareful movements, disarmed the thing. For a moment we stood on the ramshackle porch. No one

    said anything or made a move. The houses front door, weathered gray and faintly green, as if itwas diseased, stood there taunting us, its rusted knob daring us to enter.

    Think we should knock? I said, my voice only cracking a little. Or just let ourselvesin?

    Again, nobody laughed.No, Im serious, I said. Should we knock or not?Go ahead, Florence said, withdrawing a .32 Police Special from her coat pocket. See

    what happens.I swallowed a knot the size of an apple, nodded, and then reached out with one fist and

    gave the sick-looking door a hearty shave-and-a-haircut. But the door was made of wood long

    degraded by weather and time, like knocking on cork, and the rain made such a racket on the

    ground and roof that there seemed little chance of anyone noticing my effort.

    Maybe no ones home, I said. You know--maybe they went out or were evacuated orsomething.

    Maybe, said Florence. Only one way to find out.I grimaced; to me, this whole setup looked like a big fat disaster just waiting to happen.

    Suddenly I felt a lot less courageous and the decrepit old house seemed a lot more spooky. Allthose dark windows, a few with broken panes, most half-obscured by vines and moss, staring at

    us I wont lie: The cold shivers down my back had nothing to do with the rain.Hey, look, I said, standing between them and the door, maybe we should re-think this.

    You know? After all, what are we doing here? All we want is some new tires or a tow truck,

    right? So we can get back in the car and get the hell out of this God-awful swamp.

    They all nodded. Of course, said Florence. Whats your point?Well, I said, rubbing the back of my neck, its just that so far I havent seen either of

    those things around here. No tires or truck--not even a car or a tractor. And wouldnt stuff like

    that be in the barn? They arent gonna keep stuff like that in the house, are they?

    Guess not, said Florence. But still

    So why do we wanna go bustin in here? I asked. Especially when they have little

    surprises like that axe just layin around!Florence frowned, thinking this over. Doc Webber seemed to agree with me, as he was

    nodding and eyeing the door like it was a poisonous snake, while Wong just gave his usual small

    shrug and waited. I was about to add some more weight to my argument, point out some more

    reasons why we shouldnt go into the house, but then something caught my eye and I stopped andwaved the others to silence.

    What is it? hissed Florence.I shaded my eyes from the rain spray and peered into the darkness of the weed-grown

    yard. Not sure, I said. Something moving, over there by that shed.

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    It had been just a glimpse, maybe just a trick of the light I was about to say somethingto this effect when suddenly two men, armed with an axe and an axe handle, bounded from

    shadows and onto the porch. Dressed in patched, filthy overalls with no shirts, they were of a

    grotesque pair; Tall and lanky but doughy-looking, with long, greasy hair of a nondescript dark

    color, faces like rotten fruit now contorted in rage, eyes unevenly sized and located, like

    independent creatures, and liver-lipped mouths clustered with cracked yellow teeth. Human, of

    course, or something like it, but horribly deformed by disease or congenital defects to the point ofmonstrosity. At the time, though, we didnt have much time to think about it, as, deformed or not,they were obviously more than eager to kill us all.

    Before I could raise my twelve gauge, Wong got off a pair of shots at the first freak, the

    one with the axe, but the man was quick and neither shot hit home. Then Florence let loose,

    aiming at the other freak. One of her two quick shots struck the maniac in the shoulder, spinning

    him sideways and stopping him for the moment as he reacted to the piece of lead that had just

    entered his body. Behind us, Doc Webber was fumbling with something in his coat pockets, but I

    didnt really notice. Getting the shotgun up and aimed, I was about to give the axe-wielder bothbarrels when he let out a bestial kind of shout and brought the axe down, straight for my head.

    Giving a shout of my own, I dodged the blow, but the axe blade connected squarely with

    the barrels of my gun and knocked it from my hands. It thumped to the porch and I was now face

    to face, unarmed, with an axe-wielding madman. Suddenly it looked like what my sainted oldmother always used to say was true: I really wouldcome to a bad end

    But then there were more gunshots, a whole flurry of them, and amid the flashes and

    bangs, the crazy man with the axe suddenly sprang a whole bunch of leaks. At least four bullets

    tore into him, punching out bits of meat and bone and spurts of blood, and in a fog of gun smokeand ear-splitting noise, he fell to the porch in a quivering, bloody heap.

    This had a most definitely pronounced effect on the other freak. Holding his upper arm,

    where blood oozed from the bullet wound, his axe handle hanging uselessly at his side, his mad,

    mismatched eyes glared at his fallen comrade (a brother?) for an instant in apparent disbelief and

    shock. Then, with a final hateful glare at us, he gave a weird, ululating yell and leapt over the

    porchs rotten balustrade. As quickly as hed appeared, he vanished back into the rain anddarkness.

    For a moment we all kind of jittered in place, ready and waiting for any more deformedman-beasts to come at us from the shadows, but they didnt and after a few minutes we relaxed abit, lowered our weapons, and took stock. I went over and looked down at the dead man.

    Jesus, Doc, I said over my shoulder. Whats the story on thisdamn guy?

    Looks inbred, said Florence, at my side, reloading her .32.Doc Webber came over, kind of unsteadily, and peered down at the bullet-riddled,

    blood-splattered corpse while Wong kept watch.

    I would say, Webber intoned, that this individual--and the other gentleman who wasjust here--are deformed due to a combination of factors. Although its hard to say which is theprimary cause, I would say that this is a result of inbreeding, poor medical care and prevention,

    plain old backwoods ignorance, and something else.

    Something else what? I had to ask. Huh?

    Webber sniffed. Im not sure, he frowned. He knelt down next to the body, careful notto step in the pool of blood, and peered at it some more. Then he took a pocket knife from his hip

    pocket and opened it. With a couple of quick strokes, he slashed through what was left of the

    straps on the mans overalls. Then--shockingly, to me at least--he yanked the overalls down, all

    the way to the mans ankles. What was under the dead maniacs clothing made the rest of himseem almost normal. All of us took a quick, involuntary step backward. Personally, I about lost

    my lunch.

    Like slimy snakes or eels, a dozen or so tentacles sprouted from the mans crotch andentwined around his upper legs. Colored a horrible greenish-purple, like a bad bruise, they

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    twitched slightly in the open air, as with a life of their own, and then went limp and lay still on

    the soggy planks.

    Just above this profusion of nastiness was an eye, a big, glassy eyeball set into a greasy

    socket, right in the middle of the creatures abdomen. In the open air, it swiveled a little, the

    six-inch wide surface going milky and white. Slowly the lids came together, showing nasty pink

    eyelashes, and then the eye lay still and apparently dead. From the corpse there came a horrible,

    acrid stink, like burning hair and something rotten, and from the tentacles a seepage of somemilky white fluid.

    Sweet Jesus! I cursed, one hand over my mouth and nose. We all took another step

    back. What the holy hell is that?The Taint, said Webber. The result of contact with That Which Must Not Be Named.Florence muttered something, her words lost in the handkerchief shed pressed to her

    face. I looked at the Doc and shook my head.

    That Which who? I asked, feeling light-headed and sort of disconnected. Come

    again?A Great Old One, said the Doc, his face stony, serious. And a very powerful one at

    thatI held up my other hand. Id heard enough. Doc and the other magic-believers at the

    Company talked about these things sometimes: Giant monsters from Outer Space, some kind ofgod-like beings just waiting around to bust loose and kill everything and everybody All in all,some mighty unsettling stuff. Usually when they talk about it, I just get up and leave the room.

    But I couldnt do that, not at the moment, anyway, so I just got the Doc to put a lid on it andchanged the subject.

    OK, whatever, I said, still staring at the abomination. It doesnt matter, does it? Westill need a tow or a set of new tires. And like I said, Im pretty sure we arent gonna find eminside this house.

    Florence waved us a few steps across the porch, away from the stink and the sight of the

    thing, and nodded grimly at me.

    So what are our options? she asked. We can just leave, try walking out or driving the

    car with no tires. Or we can stay and keep looking.

    I nodded, peering into the bushes and weeds and shadows. Sounds about right, I had toagree. And of the two, I favor the first option. Just turn our backs on this creepy joint and hoof it.To hell with them.

    We hashed it over some more but between the foul dead thing lying there and the house

    itself looming over us, it didnt take long and soon enough we were retracing our steps, throughthe sheets of rain, across the weedy yard toward the road.

    If we felt relief at leaving the place behind (I know I did), it was quickly replaced by

    bitter disappointment, because when we got back to the road the car was no longer there. In fact,

    the road wasnt strictly speaking there, either. Black water, shot with white in the faster spots, hadswept up and over the blacktop. From the look of it, it was at least waist deep and rising fast.

    Of the car there was no sign whatsoever. Either the murderous hicks had pushed it

    somewhere--or into the flood--or the water had simply picked it up and washed it away, out there

    in the rain-beaten landscape. Either way, it was gone.Our reactions varied, but nobody was any too happy about it. But after some swearing

    and stomping around, we more or less got a grip on ourselves and, with nowhere else to go, ran

    back to the farmstead, to the barn and into its dusty, cob-webbed confines.

    Son of a bitch! I cursed, shaking about a gallon of water from my coat. Now what arewe gonna do?

    Doc Webber, shivering and sour-faced, just shrugged and walked around in aimless

    circles. Wong, his normally flat features creased in what looked like anger, said nothing. He took

    a rolled-up packet from his pocket, squatted down on the ground, unrolled the kit, and began

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    cleaning his pistol. Florence, shaking out her coat, looked around the old barn and frowned.

    Well, she said, it narrows down our options, doesnt it? Now we have no choice.

    I hung my head but then nodded. Yeah, I said. Were stuck here. For a moment Ipaced back and forth, thinking, before the old brain box clanked into motion and I turned to my

    coworkers.

    What about the shed? I said. That other building. We havent even looked at that.

    Nobody perked up exactly, but they did all look at me and nod. I went with it.It looks pretty big, I said. Who knows what might be in thereThey all nodded, but kind of vaguely, like they agreed on principle but were still not all

    that thrilled about exploring anything around here. Then Doc Webber, off to one side, brought our

    attention to something hed spotted among the junk. We clustered around, shining our lights, andfound a pile of wooden crates, the kind used to ship vegetables and such, fairly neatly stacked and

    ready to use. On the end of each was a label, pasted on the splintery wooden slats, depicting a

    pastoral scene of rolling fields, and printed atop that, bold letters spelling Gobler Farm Real

    Cheese. I looked at the crates and scratched my head.Huh, so they make cheese here, I said. So what? Big deal.

    Hmm, yes, said the Doc, in that annoying, scholarly way. But then where are thelivestock? The cows or goats?

    No one said anything. I finally shrugged. Out in the fields somewhere? I tried, groping.Maybe in that shed?

    Doc shook his head slowly. I dont think so, he said. There is no sign of cows or goats

    anywhere. If they had livestock, they would need a barn. Or barns, not to mention milking

    equipment, stalls and feed andI cut him off, a nasty headache starting up behind my eyebrows. OK, I get it, I said.

    But then I dont really care, either. I looked at Florence. She had a thoughtful look on her facebut gave a scowl and nodded at me.

    Youre right, she said. Its not important. At least, not insofar as were concerned.Now. Lets go have a look at that shed.

    And so, after some preparation--reloading guns, mainly--we headed back out into the

    deluge. If anything, it was raining even harder and I could only imagine what the road looked like

    now; likely more like a river. When we got up close to it, we soon saw that the building was a lotbigger than it had looked at first blush; most of it was buried, dug into a small berm, with only

    about the front quarter showing above ground. A single door, thick wood with rusted metal

    strapping and handle, represented the only egress and there were no windows.

    I reached the door first. After a seconds hesitation, I looked at the others, all drippingand stone-faced, and then grabbed the handle and opened it.

    It was utterly dark within and I jabbed my light into the doorway and shone it about.

    There were objects, shadowy crates and big jugs and tools and implements of some kind, but

    nothing moving, so I stepped inside and pulled my shotgun out from under my coat. Moving

    nervously, the others followed and we all took a moment to dry off as best we could and shine our

    lights into the shadows.

    We were in a dank, stone-walled chamber of about fifteen square feet with one other door

    leading farther into the building. Most of it was taken up with the jugs and crates, but there werealso a couple of work benches, some other junk It was all pretty normal-looking, at least to me,the kind of stuff you might expect in a cheese-works, but there were two things that didnt seemnormal at all: One, the terrible stink to the place, like rotten meat mixed with sour milk, and two,

    the weird, bubbling, slurping noise that came from somewhere deeper in the building.

    We all looked at each other. Florence was pale but stern-faced, and Webber was likewise

    obviously shaken but still steady. Wong, however, was off to one side of the room, over by some

    crates with his back to us, and now gave a little giggle of a laugh. Now, Id never heard Wonglaugh, so maybe that was how he always sounded. Who knows? But in that place, with what

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    were were facing, it was about the worst thing Id ever heard. Not a ha-ha, thats a good one,happy sort of laugh at all. No, more like one born of hysteria. A vicious cold shudder went down

    my back, all the way down to my knees, where it took hold and set my legs to shaking like the

    flu. I looked at Florence. She looked back and gave me that look that said Uh oh, this is not

    good. We turned to Wong.Uh, hey buddy, I said to his back. You OK over there?

    He let out that giggle again and then turned around slowly. In the glare of our lamps, hisface was ghastly--strained and wet--and his eyes were like crazy dark pits with little dots of

    reflected light at the bottom. In one hand he held his pistol, loosely, as if hed forgotten it, and in

    the other a big wedge of yellowish, sweaty stuff that I took for cheese.

    Cheese, said Wong, drawing out the word. Cheeeeese.I patted the air in that useless, universal sign for hey, take iteasy, there, fella and tried

    to sound calm and reasonable.

    Yeah, sure looks like cheese, alright, I said. Now, why dont you just put it back and

    well all justBut then, whether hed heard me or not, he raised the wedge of pale, moist stuff and took

    a great big bite. Around the gooey mass, he grinned madly and smacked his lips.

    Mmmm, cheese he said. Gobler Farm. Real Cheese.

    I admit, at that point I was at a loss. Oh, Id seen comrades lose it before. In our line ofwork, facing creatures and phenomenon that most people dont even know or believe exist, itkind of came with the territory. Id seen strong men reduced to blubbering children and others

    transformed into blood-crazed maniacs. One time in Pittsburgh we even had an agent who totally

    flipped his lid and thought he was the Duke of Wellington. But this, Wong giggling and actually

    eating something that hed found just lying around in this God-forsaken, horrible place? I just

    didnt know what to do. Reflexively, I tightened my grip on my shotgun; Id also seen agents gocrazy paranoid and shoot at the people theyd thought of as friends just a minute earlier.

    Hey, Wong I said softly, trying to ignore the smell and the bizarre slurping noise.And the terrible grin on the mans face and the gun in his hand. You dont wanna eat that! Imean, if youre hungry, we got some stuff here I sort of trailed off.

    Wong chewed and swallowed, nodding at the wedge in his hand. If he was listening to

    me, there was no sign. Then he gave a sort of shudder, from head to toe, and slowly replaced thecheese on the bench where hed found it. He shuddered like that again and then just stood therewith his back to us.

    Uh, Wong? said Florence. Are you alright? Can we help?Slowly, Wong turned back to us and to our great relief we saw that the mad glint was

    gone from his eyes and that he looked his usual stoic, pan-faced self. Oh, he would bear watching

    from now on, but at least he wasnt overtly loony With a mechanical kind of motion, he wipedthe back of his hand over his mouth and gave another, less violent shudder.

    Just wondered, he said thickly. You know?

    I shook my head. No, what? I said, eyeing him closely. Whatdid you wonder?

    How it tasted.

    I felt a shudder of my own and my stomach did a somersault, but some sense of

    treacherous curiosity in me just had to ask.So? How was it?Kind of gamey, he said, frowning. Not so good.We all waited for a little while, letting Wong get himself together. No one said anything;

    we didnt really want to know why hed done that. Outside, the rain beat down in a steady roar,the individual drops no longer discernible, while inside, from beyond the metal door that led

    further into the building, came that incessant gloopy, suckling sound unlike anything Id everheard.

    I looked over at Florence to see what we should do, but she gave me a just wait look

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    and I nodded and waited. Doc Webber was still poking around in the corners with his lamp. After

    a moment he came over to the three of us.

    This appears, he said quietly, as anticipated, to be a cheese-producing concern. Thereare drying racks, vats for fermentation, cheesecloth in which to wrap the stuff, labels and crates

    for shipping In short, all things one would need to produce and market cheese. All that its, saveone.

    It made my headache worse thinking about it, but I knew what he meant and nodded.The cows, I said. Right? No cows or goats.He nodded, glancing at Wong. Indeed. To make cheese, one must have milk. And in lieu

    of cows or goats he let that peter out and shrugged.We all looked at Wong, but he seemed alright; if the idea that hed just eaten something

    like that, maybe something produced from who knew what, animal, vegetable, or mineral, upset

    him, he didnt show it. In fact, he even gave a little smile and patted his gun.Only one way to find out, he said, and looked over at the metal door. Right?

    I looked at Florence again. She was obviously thinking, taking this all in, and now

    seemed to decide. She nodded and dug her .32 from her pocket.

    Hes right, she said. And whatevers behind that door, Ill bet its the source, one wayor another.

    What, uh I stammered, glancing from the door to Doc Webber. What do you thinkit is? I mean, it could just be some, you know, machine of some kind, couldnt it? Maybe somekind of animal?

    But even I wasnt buying it. Disgusting, nauseating, the noise was not caused by anymachine or animal and we all knew it. I sighed and brought up my gun.

    OK, OK, I said, feeling tired and scared and angry, all at once. Lets just see what it

    is. Shall we?They all nodded, none too enthusiastically, and clustered behind me as I went to the door.

    Up close, I saw that the handle was a simple lever mechanism and I could also feel a warmth

    radiating from its rust-pitted surface. Gingerly, I reached out and laid a hand on it. It was warm to

    the touch but not hot, like a greenhouse or a mild steam room. And then I had to go and turn the

    handle, pull the door open, and expose us all to something so vile and utterly repugnant that none

    of us would ever be the same.Wallowing in a huge, sticky vat of some congealing pink fluid was a nightmare made

    real, a great blob--ten feet wide, at least--of ever-shifting flesh, mottled pink and gray and purple,

    with several large, flabby tentacle-like pseudo-pods that flopped and convulsed over the vatsedges and onto the filthy dirt floor. A score of eyes, none of which matched or were coordinated,

    blinked and rotated and withdrew into the greater mass of flesh under our lamp light. Puckered,

    sphincter-like orifices served for mouths, also misaligned and uncoordinated, and other, less

    identifiable protrusions--ears, noses, hands?--oozed in and out of the greater blob fluidly, like

    wax under a blowtorch. A stink, so foul and strong that it was almost unimaginable, hit us like a

    fist and our heads and stomachs reeled in protest. Maybe worst of all, a modern milking

    apparatus, about a dozen cup-like things with tubes running away, was attached to a row of

    bloated teats along its front side, some white fluid spasmodically pumping from its loathsome

    bulk. On the side of the vat, someone had scrawled, using thick yellow paint, the word Bessie.Im pretty sure we all screamed. I know I did, and I remember hearing other people

    screaming too, so its a distinct possibility. At any rate, once wed all screamed (or not), we eachreacted differently. Doc Webber gave a weird groan, doubled over at the waist, and vomited on

    the ground at his feet. Florence babbled something about God, her eyes wide and wild. Her gun

    fell from limp fingers and her hands sort of fluttered up toward her mouth. Personally, I just stood

    there and shook like a leaf in a high wind, wanting nothing more than to simply run away and

    hide somewhere.

    It was Wong who finally shut out the horrible slurping, if not the sight of the thing, as he

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    let loose with every shell in his pistol, six in a row in quick succession, straight into the monstersslimy flanks. The noise was deafening in the enclosed space, and there was a sudden cloud of

    acrid smoke, but beyond that it didnt seem to make much of an impression on the thing in thevat. All Bessie did was hoot a little, like a big broken pipe organ, and quiver its rounded, slimy

    tentacles. Other than that, the bullets might as well have been jellybeans.

    Then we were all blasting away at the thing, yelling and shouting in a haze of smoke and

    fear and everything became kind of a blur, all mashed together and fuzzy like it was moving toofast. Suddenly Wong was screaming, digging in his duffel bag. Florence, having recovered it,

    kept squeezing the trigger of her .32, long after there were any bullets, and Doc Webber fell to his

    knees and clamped his hands over his eyes. As for yours truly, I tried my best to reload my twelve

    gauge but it felt like my hands were made of wood and the little circuits that connected my brain

    to my body had all but given up and headed south for the winter. In other words, I froze, stunned

    dumb and paralyzed at the whole foul scene. And the white stuff just kept pumping from the

    obscene breasts--slurp, burp, squish, splash. Im not sure, but Im fairly certain that at that point I

    was about two inches away from complete and utter, straitjacket-style insanity.

    Then a bright glare, a flower of orange flame, leapt up to my right and I saw that Wong

    had produced and ignited one of our standard little toys, a good old fashioned gasoline bomb.

    What the Bolsheviks over in Russia called a Molotov Cocktail, a glass bottle filled with gasoline

    and a rag stuffed in the top.With a savage, hoarse yell, Wong reared back and threw the flaming bottle at Bessie

    and was rewarded with a great, whooshing roar of flame as the bottle broke on some less mushy

    part of the monster, the rag ignited the gas within, and the whole room seemed to explode in an

    orange and yellow inferno. Out of sheer necessity--that of not being roasted alive--we allretreated from the chamber, back into the first room, coughing and weeping, and I managed to

    preserve enough of what was left of my mind to slam the metal door shut behind us. If wedthought the noise from in there had been bad before, now, made up of nerve-shredding screams

    and shrieks, it was much, much worse.

    Finally, though, the terrible screams tapered off and then dwindled to nothing. I took the

    fingers out of my ears and looked at the others. We were all more or less singed, with eyebrows

    and hair partly scorched and clothes grimed with soot, but otherwise the others looked as well as

    could be expected. All that is, but Wong. At first he just looked very pale, kind of sick, and thenhe fell to his knees, weeping and gagging, and obviously trying to make himself throw up.

    I didnt know what to say, let alone do. After all, what was I going to tell the poor guy?Its OK, all you did was eat some cheese made out of monster milk? Dont worry, its probablynot going to kill you? Hell, I was still in shock myself! After a moment, I found myself standing

    over him.

    Hey, Wong, I was saying, its gonna be alright. Hear me? Were gonna get out of this,you just watch and more along the same lines, none of it too convincing.

    Wong looked up, his face contorted and drool hanging from his chin. His eyes were wild

    all over again, wide and almost spinning with dread, as he spat out the words.

    I atesome of it! he said, gagging again. Some ofthat!

    Again, I was at a loss. Luckily, Florence stepped up and took over.

    Wong, get a grip on yourself, she said, in a lot steadier voice than I would have thoughtpossible. Hear me? Dont let it get to you!

    But Wong didnt seem to hear her. His face going slack, like a balloon deflating, he justsort of slumped over onto his side, and then curled up into himself, finally ending up in a tight

    ball on the filthy ground. To make a long story short, hed finally lost it. Gone around the bend,snapped his cap, however you said it, he was no longer sane. Not that I blamed him; who

    wouldnt be shook up after what wed just seen? But it wasnt going to make things any easier forus. Helplessly, I looked up from Wong and over to the Doc and Florence.

    I think, I said numbly, that Mr. Wong has taken a little vacation

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    The others nodded, just as numbly. Wong just balled himself up tighter and rocked back

    and forth a little.

    Yeah, breathed Florence. I think youre right. Well, at least he doesnt seem violent.What do you think, Doc? Is he going to get worse, maybe attack one of us?

    Webber scowled and wiped soot (and one of his eyebrows) from his face. I cant say forcertain. Im not that sort of doctor. But if you want my opinion, Id say that hes probably

    harmless. Catatonic paralysis. All the same though, we might want to take his gunWell, after some hemming and hawing (discussion, you might have called it were we not

    all half-hysterical and thoroughly rattled), we finally left Wong there, disarmed, tied up good and

    tight but as comfortable as we could make him. We would, assuming that we survived, come

    back for him when we left.

    So now what? I wondered aloud, once Wong was trussed. Should we see if that

    thing in there is still alive? It looks like the fires out.No one seemed too keen on that notion.

    I say leave it, said Florence, shuddering. Theres nothing in there we can use.Webber nodded eagerly. I agree. Good riddance!

    Any idea what that thing is? I asked--that old morbid curiosity again. Or was?With a frown, Doc looked at the still-smoking door. Most likely a shoggoth. Its not of a

    typical kind, if thats even possible, but its probably been adapted to its purpose specially.So I said, struggling. I felt stupid, like Id been hit on the head, and thinking was

    tough. These Gobler freaks createdthat thing? Just to give milk? To make cheese?

    Apparently, yes, said Webber.Then the big question.

    Why? I asked, fully aware of the answer. Why would they do that?

    But neither of them said anything. I might as well have asked why people did anything

    like this; why would people kill each other? Why do we make war or commit heinous crimes like

    rape and torture? Why did evil people commit evil? It was a question with no answer, a

    philosophical question, and as far as we were concerned, at that time and place, it mattered not a

    whit. After a moments realizing this, I nodded at them, shouldered my gun, and tried for a smile.

    Well, we arent licked yet, I said. And we just killed their cash cow, right? No more

    cheese is comin out of this place for a while!Florence smiled, sort of, more like a grimace, but nodded resolutely. Webber, looking

    worried, mumbled something affirmative.

    Yeah, said Florence. And now lets get out of here. The smell from that thing is

    starting to get to me.And so, leaving Wong with a lamp, we pushed open the heavy wooden outer door and

    looked out into the night.

    The rain had let up some, only steady at the moment, and it was lighter out, but this was

    only because the angry clouds overhead had begun to send down great forked bolts of lightning.

    With earth-shaking booms of thunder, they stabbed down in brilliant white-blue streaks, lighting

    up the farmstead around us in brief flashes like photographs. As we peered out into this, smoke

    drifting past us into the wind, I concentrated on the house, just across the way, and in one of the

    brighter flashes, spotted something about it we hadnt noticed, a sort of lean-to attached to therear of the building. Like the rest of the house, it was covered in vines and moss and needed a

    coat of paint, but it seemed sturdy enough. I pointed it out to the others.

    What do you think? I said, shielding my eyes. Could be a car in there

    They more or less shrugged, as if to say why not, and I led the way through the weedsand brambles to the back of the house. The lean-to was, as hoped, a carport. And an apparently

    occupied one, at that; muddy tracks, definitely those of an automobile, led up to a closed garage

    door. Unfortunately, it was also locked up tight, with a stout padlock on the swing-out door and

    no windows or other doors. Even the unpainted clapboards were a little stouter, as if this was the

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    one place kept at least partially maintained.

    We have to get in there! I said, shouting, interrupted only a little by the crashing booms

    of thunder. Im going to shoot the lock off!The others nodded and stepped back a few paces. I took aim with my twelve gauge,

    squeezed both triggers, and blew the lock and a chunk of the door into shreds. Quickly, I reloaded

    with two new shells from my hip pocket. Then I reached down and pulled the door out, up, and

    open.Inside, it was dark, of course, but our lights showed that, as hoped, there was a car. It was

    a Ford Model T, manufactured in 1911 most likely, one of the originals, and in fairly beat-up

    condition; evidently the Goblers didnt take any better care of their vehicles than they did the restof their farm. Leaving Florence on guard at the door, staring out into the flash-photo lightning and

    rain for any sign of trouble, Doc Webber and I went in and had a look.

    As noted, the Ford was beat-up, with lots of dents in the quaint old chassis and barbed

    wire and baling twine holding other parts together, but it seemed intact, at least, and as if it had

    been used in the not too distant past. Setting my shotgun against a wall, I went around to the front

    of the car and found what I d expected, an old-fashioned hand crank starter, set just under the

    radiator grill. I looked at Webber.

    Should I start it? I asked. As in right now?

    He considered and then frowned. I suppose so, he said. We have to see if it runs, afterall. And from the look of it, it might not

    Huh, yeah, I said. I grabbed the crank with both hands and gritted my teeth; from

    experience I knew that these things were a bugger to start and dangerous to boot. Later models

    had a magneto starter, but with these old boys if you werent careful the crank could backlash andeither break your wrists or tear your thumbs off.

    OK, here goes, I said, and gave it a good hard turn, but nothing happened. I tried again,and again nothing happened. Twice more, with the same result, and I swore and gave up.

    Whats the matter? asked Doc. Whats wrong with it?I resisted the urge to glare at him or say something sarcastic and instead went around to

    the engine compartment, undid some baling wire fasteners, and raised the sliding tin engine

    cover. Playing my light over the engine, a very simple old four cylinder version, my gut fell as I

    immediately saw the source of the trouble. I swore again and let the lid fall back.What is it? hissed Doc Webber. Is it wrecked?No, I said bitterly. But it might as well be. Its got no spark plugs.So You cant fix it? Jury-rig it somehow?

    I looked at him. Its not a matter of fixing it, I said. There are no spark plugs. And itwont run without em. Get me?

    Hmm, yes, he said, professor-like. He looked around with his lamp at the rest of theinterior of the lean-to garage. But what if theyre here somewhere?

    We had a look, but it was a small space and in a matter of a minute we could see that

    there were no spare plugs just lying around. There were three fifty-gallon drums of

    kerosene--those old Models Ts ran just fine on the stuff--and some rusty tools on a oil-spattered

    workbench, but not much else.

    No soap, Doc, I said dejectedly. He scowled that scowl of his and nodded. After amoment, we went over to Florence and told her about the car.

    Nuts! she said, about her strongest oath. Wouldnt you know it? Well, give me aminute to think

    I guess we all thought about things. I cant speak for the others, but personally I waspondering a hot meal, a cold drink, and a warm bed and not a whole hell of a lot else. Anyway, I

    was standing there wool-gathering when I started to notice that I wasnt feeling all that well. Infact, now that I started to pay attention to it, I was feeling downright rotten. Feverish, nauseous,

    weak-kneed and bone-deep tired, it was like Id suddenly contracted a nasty flu bug. That, or Id

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    been hit by a truck.

    I wiped my forehead and looked at the others, and it wasnt just the eerie artificial lightfrom our lamps that made them look sick. It was obvious that they felt as bad as I did. I

    swallowed bile and gave a helpless shrug that turned into a shiver.

    Is it just me, I said, or do you two feel kind of sick?They nodded and shivered. Yes, it just came on, said Florence, feeling her own throat.

    Like a virus, some kind of bacteriaNo, said Webber harshly. Its not illness, its the Taint. Only conjecture, of course, but

    I would say that somehow this whole place is infused with it. Perhaps through years of arcane

    summonings, it has built up here. I cant be sure, but I have read of such things.My stomach clenched like a catchers mitt and I groaned. Oh, great, I said acidly.

    Thats all we need! But can you tell me this, Doc? Is this it, as bad as it gets? Or is it, you know,

    gonna get worse?I would say, he said darkly, that the longer we stay here, the worse it will get. What

    the end result would be, whether or not it could kill us, I cannot say.Wonderful, said Florence, white as a sheet and sweating. Were being slowly

    poisoned. Just wonderful And we cant stay here and we cant get away. Think about it: Evenif we could get this old jalopy running, we cant go anywhere. The roads out!

    It was as near to losing her head as Id ever seen and it kind of sobered me up. Trying mybest to get a grip on the shakes and the churning in my guts, I patted her on the shoulder.

    Hey, dont lose hope, I said, trying for a smile that probably looked more like a sneer.

    Well get out of this.How? she almost wailed. I had to admit, nothing came to mind. Things looked pretty

    grim and at the moment all I wanted to do was to lay down somewhere and quietly expire, but I

    bucked up one more time and thrashed my brain into gear. Think, I told myself. Theres got to besome way out of this horrible place! Then it hit me.

    The cheese vat! I said. They looked at me like Id just spoken in Swahili. I shook myhead and tried again. That big tub thing in the shed! The one Bessie was sitting in.

    What about it? Florence asked indulgently.

    We could use it as a boat, I explained, holding myself with both arms against the waves

    of shivering. Flip it over, find something to use as paddles, and just float away from here.They seemed to think it over, none too avidly. Taken with the notion as I was, though, I

    forged ahead.

    No, it could work, I said. After all, its that or we stay here, right? Ask me, we havegot to get out of here, and now, before we get so sick we cant anymore! And since we cant walkout or drive out, we need a boat. What do you think?

    Well, that started another round of what you might call discussion, each of us with a

    different idea about what we should do, until finally, getting sicker every minute, we decided that

    wed better do something while we still could. To this end, we first went to check on the road,

    just to make sure that the water hadnt receded, but found that, to the contrary, it had risen, all theway up to the Goblers mailbox. So that was out. Then we trooped back up to the farm and overto the shed.

    There was still some lingering smoke in the cellar-like building, but the smell haddissipated quite a bit. Wong was still there, of course, and seemed about the same: Totally

    incoherent. I had to wonder if he wasnt the lucky one. Then we girded our loins, so to speak, andopened the door to the milking room.

    A fresh blast of stink and wisps of smoke greeted us, but nothing stirred under the beams

    of our lamps. Bessie was still in its vat and it was obviously dead. Motionless, it had been charred

    in places and in others appeared to have burst from internal pressure. I have to admit, I didnt giveit a lot of thought. As long as it was dead.

    OK, I said, gagging a little, both from the Taint and the smell, first we have to get that

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    thing out of there. Dump it out.They agreed, in theory, but no one rushed to the task. Finally, though, after some more

    figurative loin-girdling, we did what we had to do. I wont go into the actual deed, the sounds andsmells that came from the thing as we lifted one side of the vat and slid it onto the floor, but

    believe me, it was nasty. When we were done, though, having lugged the vat outside and flipped

    it over, we had just what Id hoped for, a serviceable (if not exactly seaworthy) boat. Some old

    boards and a shovel from the shed would serve as paddles. Now all we had to do was shove itdown the drive and into the water.

    Well? I said, once we were done. What about it? I say we grab Wong from in there

    and get the hell out of here!They agreed, but Florence was staring at the house. I went to her and gave her a nudge.

    Hey, beautiful, I said, lamely jocular. What say we blow this popsicle stand?She nodded stiffly, but kept staring at the house. Yeah, she said, a hint of steel in her

    voice. But not quite yet.

    I didnt argue with her and neither did Doc Webber; something in her tone told us that itwould have been useless, anyway. Instead, we followed her as she splashed across the yard

    toward the house.

    Here, she went into the carport lean-to and straight to the drums of kerosene and it

    dawned on me what she had in mind. Sure, the rain would slow it down some, but there was alot of kerosene here, and the old house must be dry as tinder I gave Florence a grin and helpedher open the first drum.

    Well, to be brief, we doused the whole place. Barn, shed, house, we werent taking anychances. Then we moved our vat boat down to the edge of the water (even closer now) and madeit secure to a tree. Next, we went and got Wong and carried him down to the vat and lowered him

    in.

    Finally, we went back to the farm buildings and, with three simple kitchen matches,

    torched the whole rotten place. As anticipated, the rain kept the fires from getting really big, at

    least on the outside, but it was plain from the smoke and flickering light that the interiors were

    going up like kindle sticks. Sick as I felt, I couldnt help but cheer a little.

    Yeah, take that! I yelled at the house. Burn, you god-damn maniacs!

    Doc Webber and Florence chimed in, shaking fists and looking just a little less sick andbeat-up and shell-shocked. Yeah, nauseous and dead tired as we were, it felt damned good.

    Finally we were fighting back, for real! But then we heard the voice and, like a slap to the face, it

    shut us right the hell up. And then sent us running for our lives.

    It was a human voice, or at least it was speaking English, but it was so distorted and

    bizarre that even now Im hard put to say that it wasnt something lessor morethan that.

    Clotted, choked, wet and shrill at the same time, emanating from the house, it cut through the

    night like a siren, plain to hear. To this day, the mere memory of it makes me want to puke, and I

    hope very much to never know the true form of its foul source.

    After em boys! the voice shrieked and bubbled. They done kilt Bessie an Clyde, antheys tryin to burn us out! But oh, no! We Goblers is tough! We survived the War o Northern

    Aggression, an wegot the Great One on our side! Aint no Yankees gonna shift us from our land

    an our livelihood, not no how! Now! Go get em boys! Make your mama proud an show themYankees what they get for tanglin with the Goblers!

    There was more along the same lines, but by that time we were down to the waters edgeand not paying attention. All we knew was that shewhatever she waswas exhorting someoneto get us. And we most certainly did not want to be got.

    Frantically, the light from the smoldering house lending an eerie orange glow to the

    waters surface, we climbed into the vat and shoved off into the roiling black torrent. The currentwas strong, but aimless, turning in eddies and waves against itself, and we soon had to use our

    makeshift paddles to make headway. It was hard work, especially in our condition, but we were

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    half-crazed with fear and went at it like Odysseus fleeing the Cyclops. And then they came for us.

    At first I thought they were snakes. Big water moccasins maybe, the biggest ever, dozens

    of them all splashing up out of the black water, curling over the sides of the vat, grasping at our

    paddles, but then I saw that they had neither eyes nor mouths. No, not snakes. Tentacles. Slimy,

    constantly writhing, three-inch wide tentacles, all groping and grasping at the vat, at the paddles.

    At us.

    Well, maybe its a blessing that I dont remember anything much after that. Id probablybe even more crazy. At any rate, they tell me that I pretty much lost it that point. Apparently I just

    curled up in the bottom of the vat, down next to Wong, and, for the next couple of hours was

    about as aware of my surroundings as your average house plant.

    It was Doc Webber who saved us, him and his Elder Sign. He and Florence have never

    gotten too specific about how it all played out, understandably, but I gather that the

    tentacleswhether individual creatures or part of some larger monstrosityreacted to the Docslittle hunk of rock in the best possible way: They quit trying to grab us, slithered back into the

    water, and vanished. And didnt come back.The next thing I knew, it was daytime, we were long gone from the farm, and the rain

    was down to a sprinkle. After a long walk and a rescue by some kindly sheriffs deputies in a realboat, we eventually made it back to civilization. And from there, the rest of our lives. Even Wong

    went on to have a relatively normal existence, at least until the Taint set in and he started to decayfrom the inside out But even those of us who didnt eat any of the cheese--that nasty, sweaty,peculiarly non-specific cheese (was it Cheddar? Colby? Swiss? the Goblers never specified)--

    well, none of us would ever be anything close to the same.

    So thats about it. Sorry if Im not the best writer, but I was trained in the use of wrenches and

    dynamite, not verbs and punctuation. But at least now, learned doctors and dear readers, you

    know why this guy named Mike Handley ended up as a guest here at august, noble Danvers

    Asylum. You now know why I went screaming from the grocery that day, ten years after the fact.

    And why you--all of you--might want to check for yourself the next time you casually

    buy some cheese for your larder.

    Because there, in the bright lights of the store, amid the mundane shoppers and clerks and

    gaudy, banal displays, was a round of white cheese, emblazoned with a label of an idyllic farmscene, reading Gobler Farm Real Cheese.