Abdul Alhazrad was pleased with the spot he
had chosen to perform the Black Lotus Ritual. It was a one room hut on the edge of the
wastelands. Once the home of a madman who wandered the hills talking to shadows
and oddly formed rocks, that hermit had disappeared one night during a
sandstorm and the place had been shunned since. The hut had a single window
facing south and that too was a good omen; for as a boy Alhazrad had glimpsed an
ice bound mountain in the grip a fever dream and had known it was in the
southern most reaches of earth. Perhaps the visions that the Black Lotus
granted would allow him to see that mountain again or even the things that
slumbered beneath it.
Alhazrad seated himself in the midst of a
complex series of circles and mystic symbols drawn in white chalk on the floor. He chanted the
Dho-Na formulae as he lit the brazier. The dried Black Lotus began to
smolder and lazily the blue smoke rose, tendrils coiling and twisting like
serpents. As the smoke drew near his face, Alhazrad inhaled deeply.
The lotus fumes struck his brain like
thunder, he had brief but terrible sensation of falling down an endless tunnel, then he was standing, staring
at his still chanting body, Alhazrad's astral form had been freed from the cage of flesh. He turned toward
the window and could see countless paths leading from it. Alhazrad stepped
through and began to travel.
He flew through nearer astral realms and
beheld spirits of the dead, some lost in
false bliss and others lost in equally false torment. Those realms could
not hold him and he probed beyond the nearer realms and glimpsed the maelstrom
of time itself. Lean and hungry Hounds of Tindalos stalked the edge of the
maelstrom, he spoke to those things, telling them the time and place to slay his
earthly enemies. That vague scent was enough for the tindalosi, they leaped into
the vortex to find their prey.
Alhazrad guided his spirit sideways into
the lands of dream. There he marveled at great shantaks on the wing and was
briefly entertained by the antics of playful zoogs. Then he watched as the
zoogs devoured a lone traveler and his amusement became revulsion.
He left the dreamlands and returned to the
plane of earth. He sent his spirit to the very bottom of the sea where he stood
with Mother Hydra and her daughters before the sunken tomb of Great Cthulhu. He
felt a call from the sepulchre and he entered within, his spirit passing
through the stone like mist. There he beheld the corpse of Great Cthulhu, a
mountain of alien flesh that was dead but still dreaming. That dreaming essence
of Cthulhu flowed out to touch him and something attached itself to Alhazrad,
pain ripped through both his astral and corporeal forms.
The agony shattered the spell and sent the
sorcerer's soul crashing back to his body. Alhazrad came to his senses with the morning light,
the black lotus had long since burnt out, the sigils and diagrams on the floor
were smudged from the convulsions that had wracked his body through the night.
But something had changed in Alhazrad, as though a veil had been lifted from
his eyes, he perceived certain angles were corridors leading to other worlds
where other things gazed hatefully upon mankind. The were also changes in his
physical form, but Alhazrad decided it would be best to hide those from curious
eyes and bound himself with rags as though he were a leper. For those new parts
of himself fought for control and they were so very hungry.
1 comment:
AIEEEEE!
My sanity is thoroughly blasted!
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