All posts by greydogtales

John Linwood Grant writes occult detective and dark fantasy stories, in between running his beloved lurchers and baking far too many kinds of bread. Apart from that, he enjoys growing unusual fruit and reading rejection slips. He is six foot tall, ageing at an alarming rate, and has his own beard.

Bad Love: The St Valentine’s Day Mascarpone Pt 2

The story so far: Is in Part One, surprisingly.

The big day was here, and Sandra was ready. She slipped into her usual combat trousers and slung a pump-action Remington 870 over her shoulder. A pair of sensible shoes and a light cotton blouse completed her outfit. With her long blonde hair twisted out of the way, she tip-toed downstairs, avoiding her mother who had passed out on the top step.

Let her sleep, thought Sandra, and she pulled the blanket higher over her mother’s shoulders. There were three more pregnant ewes in the dining room, and it would be a busy day.

Sandra and her mother looked after an unfeasibly large collection of livestock considering they grew carrots and turnips. Last year they had been forced to convert the large barn into an impromptu milking shed. The increasingly Marxist-Leninist regime at Bilewater Farm down the road had caused splits in Mr Turvey’s herd, with serious dissent from the more anarcho-syndicalist cows. It was all rather vexing.

Mr Bubbles was waiting by the farm gate.

“Stupid day.” he said, but whinnied softly when she tied an extra large red ribbon around his neck.

“Good boy.” She kissed his nose. “Let’s go and do our best.”

The village was decked out in bunting and looked the picture of Yorkshire country life at its best. Henry Ndoah, the local charcoal burner, was selling some unusual meat-based cakes from a stall by the church. His sign “A Taste of Lagos” was fooling no-one, though. Even the vicar knew that Goat Sponge was Henry’s own invention, even if it was disguised with marzipan and royal icing.

The older men of the area had come in their Sunday best, which was like their usual clothes but with less chicken manure, and the Children of the Empty Furrow had turned out in force as well. A local non-conformist sect, they came to every event in order to share the sort of folk songs which made your ears bleed. If one of the singers had his hand up to his ear, it was usually to stem the flow until that verse was over. “My Love Lies Choking Slowly to Death in a Celeriac Field” was always a favourite on Valentine’s Day.

Mr Quilling, the village pervert, had been locked in his attic for a while, to avoid him getting over-excited, and everything was ready. Sandra could see the traditional procession coming along the main street – the Women’s Institute members in their neat two-pieces and jaunty bonnets, and the Esoteric Order of Dagon clad in long robes and bowler hats. It was not a good sign that the two groups were keeping to opposite sides of the street.

“Got that gun ready?” Mr Bubbles examined his hooves, affecting a nonchalant air.

She had, but hoped not to use it. All the shells were filed with salt today, and sea-salt at that, which had been expensive. The Dagonites could call on some fairly unpleasant support if riled, and as for the WI… they had rites which got even the local witches worried. Even now Miss Hildagrim, the coven leader, was planting ash-stakes around the village green in case of trouble.

As the two processions came onto the green itself, carrying their baked or concocted offerings, the Children of the Empty Furrow launched into “My God is Dead but so is Yours”, a rousing song which always had everyone tapping along to it.

Scones always came first. Courting couples were offered the first batches – with cream and strawberry jam – as most of them usually wandered off after a while to do dubious Valentine-related things beyond the cricket field. The next batches were the ones used for competitive purposes. Laid out on the judging tables, the scones awaited their fate.

“Here we go.” muttered Sandra.

There was only one judge this year, thanks to a spate of drugged chocolates, mysterious phone calls from dying relatives, and blackmail letters.

Herbert Marsh, thirteen and half years old, stumbled out of the marquee, watched anxiously by his parents. Mr and Mrs Marsh managed to combine a look of pride with that of a couple who might soon be childless. Lanky Herbert, as he was inevitably known, was a troubled boy who was utterly terrified of what lay in Whateley Wood, hated the moors and wished only to be living somewhere safe and quiet, like the middle of a busy motorway.

“Let us welcome our judge – for today.” said the vicar’s wife, making an unfortunate pause between the two halves of her sentence.

“The church warden threatened his parents.” whispered Adelaide, who had told the girl guides to settle down and keep away from trouble for once. “Said someone had to judge the blooming thing, and how did they feel about mowing the churchyard every week for the next ten years?”

Sandra nodded. Her attention was on the thin teenager himself who was leaning over the WI display of sultana scones, each one of them perfectly heart-shaped as demanded in the rules.

“V-v-very nice.” Herbert managed to choke out between tentative bites. “Soft, but firm. Good use of bitter almonds…”

His eyes widened as he realised what he’d said, but Miss Cockridge, one of the WI contestants, held up a small bottle. “Essence only, everyone. No need to panic.”

Sandra was called away as Herbert moved on to the scones of the Esoteric Order. Mr Bubbles was having trouble separating Mr and Mrs Gayamurthi, who were hitting each other with ethnically-appropriate cooking utensils by the village pond. Onlookers provided the information that Mr Gayamurthi had spent the contents of the shop till on illicit domino games, and Valentine’s Day had brought it all to crisis point.

The pony had remembered Sandra’s comments about not kicking people in the head. Instead he had his teeth in the collar of Mr Gayamurthi’s jacket, but was having trouble with Mrs Gayamurthi and her well-oiled cast iron tawa. The small woman seemed to be trying to turn her husband’s face into a flatbread.

Sandra put the shotgun to her shoulder and fired a blast between the two combatants. Grains of sea-salt spanged off the tawa, shocking the Gayamurthis out of their duel.

“Oh, do stop it, you two!” she said sternly, breaking open the Remington and replacing the spent shell.

With order restored, she rejoined Adelaide in time to hear Herbert Marsh declaring the Dagonites as winners in the scone competition. Cheerful cries of “Cthulhu ftaghn!” from one side of the green; unhappy mutterings from the other.

Sandra shivered. Was it getting colder? There were definitely clouds in the sky now – low, worrying clouds which seemed to match the changing mood on the green.

“Sponge cakes will be next,” announced the vicar’s wife. “And then fancy desserts in about an hour.”

####

Sandra and Mr Bubbles left the main gathering. Sponges were a guaranteed win for the WI, which would even the score. A pineapple upside-down cake which might have done well had been confiscated from the Esoteric Order, primarily because the pineapple chunks had too many legs. And because they had legs at all, come to think of it. That would clinch it for little Emily’s mother to win it with her triple-chocolate sponge on behalf of the Women’s Institute.

At the village pond the ducks had gathered in the bull-rushes – either they were sick of having scones thrown at them or they had sensed trouble. It was also possible that various other ‘things’ which used the pond had been disturbed. They considered a few methane-tinged ripples, and hoped that nothing was on its way up from the depths.

“Why do Mrs Peaslee and Mr Pickman hate each other so much?” Sandra tugged on her hair thoughtfully. “That’s the mystery here. I mean, last year I had to take sharpened spoons off both of them before they went for each other’s jugulars.”

“They were at it.” said Mr Bubbles.

“At what?”

Sandra was at a loss to think of anything in St Botolph-on-the-Wolds which explained the intense hatred between the two otherwise respectable leaders. Mr Bubbles was, at time, annoyingly short on conversation.

The pony whinnied in annoyance. “Years ago. Going out. Kissy kissy.”

“Oh, I see.”
They walked away from the green, towards the tall, tasteless outline of St Botolph’s. It was possibly Saxon, probably added to by the Normans, and most certainly completely ruined by the Gothic designer Hemsley Baring-Gould. Baring-Gould had considered the many examples of church architecture noted by a relative of his, and decided to try them all at once, with additional Gothic spires for fun. The only safe way to approach St Botolph’s was to concentrate on the main doors and try not to see the rest of the building.

“How do you know about this, boy?” Sandra winced as she accidentally caught sight of a flying buttress.

“That cow.”

“Celandine told you?”

He stared at her as if she were an especially dim foal. “Cows can’t talk. That would be mad.”

“Then…”

“That cow Mrs Pettifer. Asked her for polo mints. Told me a story instead.”

Sandra frowned. “That’s not very nice.”

“I know. Wanted polo.”

“No, I mean what you called her. Don’t be mean. So I suppose they fell out?”

“She liked golf. He liked Chris de Burgh. Doomed.”

“Yes, that would be hard.” She shuddered at the thought of ‘Lady in Red’, which was on a list of banned songs and texts across most of the Wolds. “Gosh, that explains an awful lot.”

“Cold.” said the pony.

“Yes, OK. It is getting a bit nippy. Let’s get back to the contest.”

####

It was no warmer on the green. Clouds the colour of dead fish moved across the low sun, and the place now had an adversarial air. The WI had clumped to the east side, surrounded by their supporters, who sported a range of umbrellas, shooting-sticks and other pointed implements. To the west, nearer the church, Dagonites and a few bad-tempered old men stood jeering and spitting tobacco onto the trampled grass.

Sandra noticed that the local coven was in the middle with the vicar’s wife. It was typical of village politics that both the Church and the Triple Goddess were trying to remain neutral. The witches and the Anglicans shared many interests, including the concept of ‘anything for a quiet life’ and a distrust of Jesuits. And the vicar’s wife was quite keen on going ‘sky-clad’ especially when the vicar was away at his brother’s place in Selby. Many a charcoal smudge could be seen on her shoulders after she had helped Henry Ndoah to lay out the hymn books.

“Listen.” said Mr Bubbles.

She tilted her head. The Children of the Empty Furrow were humming “Our Grain Swells with the Liberal Addition of English Corpses”, but that was only a traditional song from the Jacobite rebellion, which had been quite popular in these parts. What else was on the wind?

Then she heard the whip-poor-wills calling in Whateley Wood.

“Something coming?” she asked.

The pony shook his head. “Not the woods. Checked them.”
The ethereal song of birds rose and fell, as if they were not entirely sure if tragic and indiscriminate slaughter was bearing down upon the village. Perhaps it could go either way, thought Sandra. She liked to be positive at times like these. Tragic and indiscriminate slaughter always made her mother drink more, which played havoc with the ploughing.

“Why are they singing during the day-time?” asked Adelaide, tucking a dented bottle of Brasso into her skirt-band. Sandra pretended not to notice.

“I think they’re bored.”

Adelaide grinned, giving the impression of a shark who had scented a collection of unattended toddlers in her part of the ocean.

“Not for long.” She pointed to the main judging table, where Mrs Peaslee’s rose-petal and mascarpone cannoli were being placed next to Mr Pickman’s model of a Valentine heart constructed entirely out of tiramisu. He had even added arteries made out of strands of red liquorice.

The onlookers oohed and aahed appropriately while Herbert Marsh took a deep breath of asthma inhaler. Fortunately Sandra had taken the precaution of having the girl guides check Herbert’s inhalers beforehand. Two canisters of amyl nitrite and one of an unknown psychedelic had been found, though there was no clue as to which faction was behind the substitution.

Strengthened, the nervous teenage boy cut a slice from the tiramisu heart. His parents watched anxiously as he tasted it, but he remained standing.

“V-v-very nice. D-d-delicious.” he said, wiping his mouth on his sleeve. Mrs Marsh was too excited to reprimand him.

He dug a spoon into one of the cannoli, breaking the fried shell of sweet dough and scooping out some of the creamy filling.

“M-m-my goodness. That’s yummy, as well.”

Many of the crowd obviously hoped that a draw would be declared – their last, best chance for peace until the next year…

“Let me taste that!” said Mrs Peaslee, pushing her short, tweedy form up to the table. Before the vicar’s wife could intervene, she spooned out a left ventricle of tiramisu and slid it into her mouth.

“Aha! This isn’t marsala or a traditional Venetian sweet wine. You fraud.” She pointed triumphantly at Mr Pickman. “British fortified sherry!”

“But they were out of–” The hierach was interrupted by a loud jeering from the WI. Face contorted in anger, he picked up a cannoli and sucked out the filling from one end. “So. And this isn’t mascarpone, is it?”

Whirling on Mrs Peaslee, he pointed the empty cannoli at her.
“Tesco’s Budget-range cream cheese, with butter whipped into it! You see!”

Before Sandra could reach the centre of the green, concealed cake-knives were being drawn on every side.

“I had mascarpone, but it went off!” Mrs Peaslee wailed, mascara running down her face.

Clouds covered the sun, and a storm broke among the villagers, at first a storm of threats and invocations and then one of cutlery, umbrellas and sundry items to hand, even at one point a passing mallard.

As the coven and the vicar’s wife tried to shield Herbert Marsh, Sandra felt that deep prickle at her temples which meant trouble.

“There.” said Mr Bubbles, pointing with one hoof.

Near the village shop, a group of Dagonites were chanting loudly, their robes whipping about in a wind which hadn’t yet arrived. She could only catch one word, repeated again and again.

Tsathoggua.

“Oh dear.” she said.

The wind came, a sharp stink upon it, and Mr Pickman’s tiramisu began to move. Ridding themselves of cream, the dark coffee-flavoured layers became darker and developed tendrils which lashed out, crushing cannoli and almost reaching Mrs Peaslee’s tweed skirt.

“I say, look out. Formless Spawn!” cried Sandra.

Tendrils of black-brown goo flailed higher, their acidic touch dissolving the tablecloth. The blasphemous children of the toad-headed god Tsathoggua, shapeless and malevolent, began to flow over the trestles, eating their way into anything they encountered.

From the ranks of the Women’s Institute members rose the voices of the Ladies Book Club, in counterpoint to the ab-human Dagonite chanting.

Obsessed with Swedish thrillers and Nordic Noir in general, not a few of the book club were versed in skaldic charms. Wielding copies of Henning Mankel novels, they advanced towards the Esoteric Order, their runic utterances making the Formless Spawn waver in the air. A Stig Larsson book hit Mr Mildrew in the face; in return a small, toad-shaped statue caught one of the book club members in mid-utterance.

Skaldic charms were not enough, though. Tsathoggua, while extremely slothful as hideously deformed gods went, had lively children. Mr Marsh’s left boot dissolved in acidic spray, and Mrs Marsh shrieked as she realised that her husband had a hole in one sock.

Mr Bubbles reared and charged the thrashing things in the centre of the village green. Iron-clad hooves slammed down, while his powerful body twisted to avoid their tendrils. Reeking of coffee and cheap sherry, the Formless Spawn writhed across the grass, heading slowly but certainly for the WI.

Sandra fired her shotgun, but the salt-shot made no difference. She grabbed Adelaide and shouted hurried instructions. Within seconds the guides were off, dodging tentacles and confused villagers, like a herd of sociopathic gazelles.

“Swing Low, Sweet Valkyrie.” sang the Children of the Empty Furrow, feeling some sympathy now with the Women’s Institute, especially as a couple of tendrils were heading their way.

Grabbing a discarded cricket bat, Sandra hit out at the Formless Spawn, which were shifting shape as they crawled along, adding the odd hand or claw to their tendrils. Her pony had acid spots on his coat, but he was keeping most of them worried. There was something about Mr Bubbles’ hooves which was unpopular with anything eldritch, and shifting into other, unheard of dimensions was not always an escape. Sandra tried not to think about that too much.

Wielding the bat, which had some protection from years of being rubbed with linseed oil, she managed to reach Mr Pickman and Mrs Peaslee, who were trying to drive cake-knives into each other under the remaining table.

“Stop it.” she yelled at them. “Mr Bubbles!”

The pony was very angry. One of his better ribbons had been eaten away with acid, his nose was sore, and a tendril had seared his fetlocks. He bellowed and advanced on the two contestants, ignoring Tsathoggua’s vile emissaries. He kicked the table aside.

“Kill them now.” he said, eyes wild.

“No, no!” Sandra hung onto his mane. “Just stop them, boy. Make them stop.”

His adrenaline-charged breath swept over her face, his teeth bared.

“Please, boy? For me.”

“Nggh!” With an angry snort, he brought a great hoof down on each of the two struggling figures, pinning them to the grass – and possibly breaking a rib or two in the process.

“Enough.” Sandra looked down at them, noticing also that her nice Mary-Jane shoes had been ruined by spawn-spit. “If you don’t cut this out right now, I can’t say what Mr Bubbles will do next.”

The truth was she could say exactly what her pony would do next, but she was hoping to avoid that option. Mr Pickman and Mrs Peaslee stopped struggling.

“It’s over!” shouted Sandra. Dropping the remains of the cricket bat, she pumped the shotgun again and again, firing into the air. Dagonites, WI members and even Formless Spawn paused to see what was happening. The Children of the Empty Furrow trailed off in mid-verse.

“I’ve had enough.” Sandra glared, breathless, at everyone around her. “This is my village too. You’ve spoiled my shoes, and this blouse will have to go for rags.”

She gestured for the pony to let Mr Pickman and Mrs Peaslee up.

“Call these off.” she said, and pointed at the Formless Spawn, which were still burning their way towards the WI.

“I can’t.” said the hierarch, spitting out cannoli. “We never practiced that bit.”

The coven was doing its best, but oak, ash and thorn were somewhat susceptible to the spitting acid, and most of their nature-based attempts were only slowing the spawn down.

“Right.” Sandra. “Chemistry Grade C, then. Adelaide?”

The head guide came forward, her pack behind her. “Yes, boss… I mean, Sandra.” The twelve year old had lost her usual cynical expression and was looking on the older girl with some admiration.

“Do it.”

Adelaide signalled, and dozens of little hands launched paper bags of baking powder at Tsathoggua’s children. The guides had raided every shop and kitchen in the village on Sandra’s orders.

The black, coffee-stained masses hissed and bubbled as their acid reacted with the bicarbonate, sinking back with a mindless shriek. Without the chanting of the Dagonites to guide them, they flailed their tendrils and subsided. In five minutes, all that was left of them was seared grass and dollops of mascarpone.

“Alkali versus acid.” said Sandra, rather pleased with herself for remembering that. “Now, as for you two…”

They might have argued. They might have ignored the remonstrations of a teenage girl with tangled hair and red cheeks. The possibly-insane, foam-flecked black pony with great yellow teeth and iron-shod hooves was, however, something else. The presence of an angry Mr Bubbles may well have affected their next decision.

“Sorry, Sandra.” said Mrs Peaslee.

“And what did you do?” pressed Sandra.

Mrs Peaslee glanced at the pony. “I… I cheated.”

The hierarch of the Esoteric Order sniggered, and Sandra rounded on him.

“And you, Mr Pickman?”

“Ulp. Er… I cheated?”

“Exactly.” Sandra clenched her fists. “You both cheated. And because of that, you will both go to the Buttercup Tearooms next Thursday and have a nice pot of tea together. With some of those little iced cakes. Bought ones.” she added. “And if I hear that you argue, there’ll be trouble.”

The hierarch drew himself up, wincing. “I would never–”

A pride of lions could not have matched the rumble from Mr Bubbles’ throat.

“… ignore such a kind suggestion.” he managed to finish.

Mrs Peaslee dropped her cake-knife and nodded her reluctant assent.

“Good.” Sandra shouldered her shotgun and looked around, smiling grimly at the vicar’s wife. “Time to clear up, I think.”

As the villagers began to pick through the debris, avoiding patches of grass which were still smoking, Sandra leaned against her pony’s heavy flank and took a long, deep breath.

“Thank goodness that’s over.”

Mr Bubbles was silent, his rage beginning to ebb and leaving him with a distinct need for a pile of slightly mouldy turnips.

“Brasso, anyone?” asked Adelaide.

THE END

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Next week: Back to weird fiction features, lurchers and jolly nice interviews. Gosh.

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Bad Love: The Return of Sandra’s First Pony!

The story so far: Plucky young Sandra and her prizewinning pony Mr Bubbles have survived the mostly unspeakable horrors of the winter solstice with the help of her cousin Mary (and his dog Bottles). But the shadow of Whateley Wood still lies over the area, and ancient folk customs now threaten the village’s stability in…

The St Valentine’s Day Mascarpone

PART ONE

(Posted for the Bad Love/Bloody Valentine fb Event)

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Sandra was nervous. February already, and soon it would be… That Day.

In the weak morning sunshine, she toiled alone in the barn, cleaning out after Mr Bubbles. Her beloved pony had been put out to pasture on Frenchman’s Meadow, where the grass was too lazy to grow straight and even the corncrakes sat around looking exhausted. A few hours up there usually calmed Mr Bubbles down.

Dutifully she shovelled straw, dung and other things into a heap by the barn door. Attempts to sell the pony’s droppings for garden manure had been disappointing. Daisy Frobisher had bought a bag last August, and now her front garden was overgrown with a particularly vicious type of ground-elder which bit back when you took the secateurs to it. Sandra kicked a couple of bleached penguin beaks into the corner.

February the fourteenth tomorrow, then. She always made Valentine cards, of course. One for Mr Bubbles, and one for her mother, which was supposedly from Father. He never remembered, and besides, he was currently exploring the Great Western Desert in Australia. The Whimereroo Mound People had invited him to go walkabout with them, partly in the hope that he could find out where they left their mounds. The Whimereroo were notoriously bad trackers. Their full aboriginal name meant “Where the hell are we now, and didn’t we just come this way?” in seventeen different languages.

This wasn’t about her, though. It was about the impact of St Valentine’s Day on the village. The day when passions rose, lovers did things which Sandra didn’t quite understand, and a lot of people got sick eating too much chocolate. The day when things got, well, a bit messy.

She put down her shovel and went into the farmhouse to clean herself up. Her mother, who was scrubbing a lamb in the kitchen sink, smiled at her.

“Hello, dear. Look, this one has four legs.”

The lamb coughed up soap bubbles and gave a malevolent bleat.

“Super. Mother, is it true, about Mr Pickman?”

Sandra’s mother wrapped the lamb in an old newpaper and put it on the floor next to the others, who eyed it suspiciously. Four legs and all your own ears in the right place was just showing off, as far as they were concerned.

“Ah. Yes, he and Agnes Peaslee are going head-to-head again.” She took a swig from the bottle by the sink, realised that it was milk for the lambs, and spat it out. Sandra handed her the Old Suzy, which was half-empty anyway.

“Thank you, darling. Oh, that’s better.”

“Do you think it will get… nasty?”

“I imagine so, dear.” Her mother threw a Wellington boot at a passing rat, but gin and exhaustion saved the rat for another day. “They say that Mr Pickman’s determined to win with his special tiramisu recipe this year.”

“I suppose I’ll have to be prepared.”

“Yes, dear. Very wise.”

Sandra sighed. It was time to check the gun cabinet. Again.

####

That afternoon she went down to the village green to watch the erection of the trestle tables and marquees. Mr Bubbles clopped along behind her, looking fine in his ribbons. His coat gleamed after an hour of brushing, and the psychotic look had gone from his big dark eyes. For now, anyway.

“Feeling better?” asked Sandra.

The pony had been involved in a fracas above the moor, fighting something tenuous and vile which moved among the crags there. The Tenuous Vile Thing in the Crags, the villagers called it, having run out of interesting adjectives around the time that it appeared.

“Wasn’t as tenuous as it thought.” said Mr Bubbles. “If it had balls once, it doesn’t now.”

Sandra laughed. Mr Bubbles was such fun, even though he did get a touch aggressive at times.

“It’ll be the usual disaster, you know.” He glanced at two members of the Women’s Institute, who had tangled themselves up in a folding chair.

“Probably.”

No-one quite knew when the Valentine’s Day baking competition had begun. The oldest person in the area, Mrs Pettifer (who claimed to have thrown a tomato at Disraeli), said that it went back into the mists of time, possibly even as far back as the early nineteen seventies. This observation always drew hooded glances, and a general muttering in the background. The villagers did not like to think of the seventies.

That was the decade when you could be put in the stocks for using Fablon or listening to Joni Mitchell. An extensive witch-hunt, organised with enthusiasm by the local witches, had finally purged the village of tangerine patterned wall-paper, and anything else deemed culturally unacceptable, but many families had lost loved ones. Sandra’s grandfather himself had avoided being staked out on Grimspike Moor only by surrendering his flared trousers before trial.

Every year since then, the Women’s Institute and the Esoteric Order of Dagon had competed to win Best Scones and Best Fancy Dessert on Valentine’s Day. Throughout the village and the scattered hamlets around Whateley Wood, the sound of Jerusalem sung in a minor chord competed with the pre-human chanting of the Esoteric Order.

It had originally been a friendly bit of rivalry, but the current hierarch of the Dagonites and the chairwoman of the WI hated each other. Sandra could see Mrs Peaslee over by the duck pond, warning the ducks about their behaviour.

“You take one cake, one scone, and you’re pate.” she hissed, pointing at one of the more aggressive members of the flock. The duck in question shuffled his feet, and decided that he would explore the far side of the pond. Mrs Peaslee, though small and round, was just a bit too much for him.

“Daft old cow.” said Mr Bubbles.

Sandra had to agree. There, a few yards behind Mrs Peaslee, was Celandine, the village bake-off mascot. Celandine was to other cattle what watered-down cordial was to an aged burgundy. Far too thin and not quite right, that is.

“She is forty seven.” Sandra pointed out. “Jolly good age for a cow.”
Mr Bubbles snorted and wandered off, muttering “corned beef” to himself.

Sandra decided to face up to tomorrow’s problems. She walked across the green and stood next to the hierarch, who was arranging plastic plates on a table. It was a mild, sunny day and she could see his scalp through a rather unsuccessful comb-over.

“Mr Pickman?”

Tall, austere, and with no hint whatsoever of forbidden inbreeding or sunken reefs, Arthur Pickman glanced around and smiled.

“Ah, Sandra, my dear. Looking forward to tomorrow?”

She bit at her lower lip. “Will it be… like last year?”

His smile faded. “If That Woman seeks to outdo my Italian desserts, then…”

Other Dagonites, clad in an assortment of outfits stolen from the church vestry, edged closer. Some of them had patches sewn on their robes, displaying various abominations of the Esoteric Order, though it was hard to ignore the fact that Ernest Willis’s largest patch was actually a cub scout badge for home-shopping. Mr Willis had drawn tentacles coming out of the cross-stitched carrier-bag, but it still didn’t work. She shook her head sadly.

“I can’t let it get out of hand, Mr Pickman. Not this time.”

“You’re too young to understand. Making tiramisu is an art, and…” The hierarch paused as a blast of hay-heavy breath rustled his robes.

“Bored now.” said Mr Bubbles from behind him. The Dagonites instinctively moved back a few paces. Sandra herself could be quite a handful, but she was still a teenage girl. Mr Bubbles, however, was an unpredictable force of nature. Or ab-nature. None of them were sure.

Mr Pickman tried to look taller and more austere, which was difficult.

“I, for my part, shall endeavour to be a model citizen, young lady. If That Woman starts something, however…”

After further exchanges of a similar nature, and a quiet talk with some of the less dedicated Dagonites, Sandra could see that this was the best she was going to get. Despondent, she and Mr Bubbles watched the rest of the tables and stalls being prepared.

What was she going to do?

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####

Preliminary discussions with Mrs Peaslee during the afternoon proved just as fruitless as the discussion with the hierarch.  The WI were as determined as the Esoteric Order to pursue their feud . Desperate times called for somewhat unsavoury measures. After a hurried tea at home, when her mother gave one of the lambs a steak pie and Sandra was left with milk-formula in a grubby bottle, she went out again.

With Mr Bubbles out on his nightly rounds, patrolling the borders of Whateley Wood, Sandra took a lantern and made her way to the other side of the village, where the Girl Guides had their meeting hut. Although they were an odd lot, it would not be the first time she had sought an alliance with them. More than one cthonian horror had altered the route of its burrow away from the village as a result of the guides’ playful experiments with steam-hammers, steel rods and battery acid.

Sandra entered the large wooden hut quietly and stood by the door. Emily Pethwick, almost nine years old, stood in the circle of guides, reciting her good deeds for the day.

“An’ then I did not shooted Mr Bulstrode’s cat. An’ then I did not tell thems police officers about what is under my brother’s bed.”

Flushed and pleased with herself, she ended her recital. The seated guides clapped unenthusiastically and went back to playing dice, cutting out letters from newspapers (usually for ransom demands) and heating up enamel mugs full of Old Suzy gin. Sandra coughed. Thirteen pairs of eyes, most of them set firmly in little heads, turned to stare at her.

“About tomorrow.” she said.

The guides looked uncomfortable.

“We doesn’t mess with the WI. Them’s mean.” said a small girl with camouflage paint across her face.

“All I want you to do is to come out tonight and cut down on the cheating.”

Murmurs of interest met this suggestion. Adelaide Cleggins, the oldest guide, stood up. She was a big girl, with three badges for unarmed combat and one for advanced police driving, which was unusual for a twelve year old.

“We could manage that.” she said, a note of caution in her voice. “What’s in it for us?”

Sandra thought of her mother’s secret stash of Old Suzy. Gin was always a reliable currency in the area. It was also good for shining uniform buttons.

“Two full bottles…”

“Three.” said Adelaide.

Sandra nodded. There was no way she could cover the whole village on her own, after all.

When all the guides had been equipped with torches, flareguns or lanterns, Sandra despatched her patrols into the darkness. One to keep an eye on the main east road, others to watch the alleys for illicit cake-swopping, and one to guard the doors of the Gayamurthi All-Night Wholefoods store. Mrs Gayamurthi was notorious for profiteering at this time of year. Some of those lentils had never seen the Punjab, Sandra was sure about that.

She and Adelaide shared a ginger beer in the doorway of the hut. Adelaide’s ginger beer smelled slightly of Brasso, but Sandra was not a snob. The guides were a cut-throat organisation, and everyone had their own way of relaxing.

Emily was the first back, with news that a Tesco delivery van had been halted by caltrops on the east road. The driver was being held for questioning by the Murphy twins.

“An’ he had them delucks range scones, what is s’pposed to be like an farmhouseses is. An’ he were going to go to Mr Mildrew’s place.”

Sandra doubted that the supermarket buyers had ever tasted her mother’s scones. They were ‘farmhouse’ only in the sense that there was quite a lot of whitewash, straw and plaster in them. So, a prominent Dagonite was trying to introduce bought-in baking. That would have to be held back in case she needed to use it later in court.

“Thanks, Emily. Good show.”

Not long after that, Mary-Sue Perkins arrived breathlessly to say that two of the WI members had been trying to exchange stuffed cannoli across their garden fences. Mary-Sue, who had been brought up to believe she was American, drawled out a list of suspect ingredients, including the use of tinned custard for the fillings. Sandra wrote it all down in the back of her Pony Club diary. The bloodier the confrontation at the bake-off, the more evidence she would need for threatening the combatants.

At half-past eleven, she decided they had done what they could, and let the guides wander off. She would have to go home herself. Mr Bubbles would be back around midnight, and usually needed a good brush down after his encounters in the woods. You didn’t win second prize at the Knaresborough Spring Pony Show by having bits of dismembered monstrosity in your mane.

And she would have to throw a blanket over her mother and pick up the empty gin bottles. Lambing was a difficult time, particularly when you weren’t actually sheep farmers. With the moors being rather hostile this winter, the animals would keep collecting at the farmhouse for protection. That last ewe really was too large for the coal shed…

Sandra finished her ginger beer, said goodnight to a semi-conscious Adelaide and headed back to the farmhouse.

It was a clear, sharp night, and the stars shone down coldly like specks of vodka-infused frosting. Almost absent-mindedly she walked by the southern edge of Whateley Wood and renewed some of the warding signs there. There would enough trouble in the village soon without something trying out its non-Euclidean geometry on the locals.

A few whip-poor-wills called out, hopeful that some innocent soul was about to enter the woods and be dragged screaming from this plane of existence. They shut up when they saw it was Sandra. No point in asking for it.

Somewhere in the darkness a badger threw up noisily. As usual.

At least all was normal here. She had done her best.

Tomorrow would no doubt do its worst.

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Next Time: The St Valentine’s Day Mascarpone Part Two!

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Whale-road, Widow-maker

A bit of personal history today.

I grew up by the North Sea. It’s a cruel one, known for its cold, treacherous waters and its storm tides. It watches you, from Thule and the narrow fjords in the north, all the way down to those low English coastlines being dragged back into the deeps with every tide.

“The northern Ocean, it seemed to the Romans, stood at a forbidding remove from everything that made life bearable: sunshine, wine, olive oil. Its slate-grey waters, icy and teeming with monsters, marked the boundaries of the world itself”. (writer Tom Holland)

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The North Sea strand reeks of fishing-boats and longships, storm-tossed kelp and bladderwrack. It is littered with the dead and the abandoned. And it defines you as a child, gives you a mythology from which to start a long journey into fantasy literature, horror and anything basically weird. It’s a repository of the strange, from the Danes driving their ships into Yorkshire rivermouths to the far-off threat of finfolk from the Orkneys and Shetlands.

My great-grandfather was master of a Hull packet, taking passenger and mail ships up the Humber or out to the Belgian and Dutch ports. I still have his captain’s chair. His wife smuggled tobacco in pouches sewn inside her crinoline dress. They say that the custom-officers would smile and help her off the ship before they checked elsewhere for contraband.

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whitby, marny

My father was a lighthouse keeper, mostly at Flamborough or Longstone Rock. The two lighthouses couldn’t be more different. The first is on the headland, easily accessible by road. He could do a shift and drive home – when you could see the road.

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flamborough light with the fog closing in, by our editor-in-chief, sarah

The second is in the North Sea on one of the Outer Farne Islands. At Longstone the waves could overwhelm the living quarters and drive the keepers into the upper tower, hoping their supplies would hold out. The regime there was a month on, a month off – thirty days stuck on Longstone Rock with one other man for company. As he loved the sea, it didn’t bother my father at all.

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longstone, copyright by hold-steady, deviantart

It was a good start to life for me. That coast is famous for its fishing cobles, clinker-built like longships from oak and larch, high-bowed to deal with the rough seas and flat-bottomed so they can be dragged up the landings in the coves. Small ships going a-viking with every high tide.

The coble-men traditionally wore ganseys (probably a corruption of the word guernsey), garments made with tightly-spun wool and closely knitted to turn water. Weatherproof, though not waterproof. It used to be said that each village had its own pattern so that if there were an accident at sea, the bodies could be sent back to the correct village. Thus there was a Staithes pattern, a Flamborough pattern and a Filey one. If the face was gone, no longer recognisable, then the gansey was witness as to who exactly had passed.

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staithes, copyright by chris harland

There was always that question when my father went away to the Farnes or the fishermen went out. Would they come back? The sound of the rescue helicopter was part of my childhood soundtrack, and because I was an impressionable pup, my favourite piece of verse was from Rudyard Kipling:

The Harp Song of the Dane Women

What is a woman that you forsake her,
And the hearth-fire and the home-acre,
To go with the old grey Widow-maker?

She has no house to lay a guest in —
But one chill bed for all to rest in,
That the pale suns and the stray bergs nest in.

She has no strong white arms to fold you,
But the ten-times-fingering weed to hold you —
Out on the rocks where the tide has rolled you.

The old grey Widow-maker. The North Sea. Also called the Whale-road, where leviathans as slatey-dark as the sea surged up to blow and peer at the thin sunlight.

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For a different feel of the power in these words, try this performance by Sedayne, from Peter Bellamy‘s setting of the poem to music.

(Bellamy produced two albums, Oak Ash and Thorn and Merlyn’s Isle of Gramarye, based on Kipling’s verse from Puck of Pook’s Hill, a very evocative tale of early England, and Rewards and Fairies. Bellamy was a founder member of the Young Tradition folk group, but sadly committed suidice in 1991.)

And even if the sword-point and the waves missed you, you never knew about the finfolk. Remember them? We’re not talking pretty, long-haired mermaids here, or selkies. I don’t remember a single mermaid story from my youth, only suggestions of much darker things. Cold and fey, the finfolk dwell in their city of Finfolkaheem. Their boats are driven by sorcery, and they are a gloomy people, given to collecting silver and long grudges.

Sunken Finfolkaheem is their winter city, for when when the storms rage, and in these days it’s all that’s left to them. Once upon a time they rose from there in the summer and dwelled on the island of Eynhallow, but no more – it it said to have been taken from them in the end by Christians. As the Orcadian rhyme goes:

Eynhallow fair, Eynhallow free
Eynhallow sits in the middle o’ the sea
A roaring roost on every side,
Eynhallow sits in the middle o’ the tide.

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eynhallow sound

The finfolk don’t have massive fish tails to encumber them. They are masters of sea or land, able to live on both with ease, and sail better than any human. I say masters, because the finmen are dominant and cruel. Only the Gospel and the mark of the True Cross are certain to stop them. Humans are taken as slaves – finwifes are used for drudgery or to entrap further mortals. If a finwife can find no normal man to marry, she is forced into the service of a finman and degenerates into a hag, gnarled and ugly.

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arch, by sarah

But back to home. There were stories all around in those days. The North York Moors behind us, and the sea before us. Flamborough Head is cut by a huge earthwork known as Dane’s Dyke, though it’s far earlier than the Danes, and God knows how so few people go over the cliffs. I’ve been there on days where it was impossible to see where the land stopped and a sheer drop began, mornings when the sea fret was so thick that you were lucky if your hands were visible. Caves have been eaten into the chalk of the headland, wondrous dripping caves in which your imagination can get quite lost.

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thornwick, by sarah

Out on the headland is an old chalk-pit, though some call it a well. It was here where a young woman called Jenny Gallows killed herself, throwing herself into its depths. It is said that if you run around it a certain number of times, her ghost will come to taunt and haunt you.

The most famous story surrounding Jenny tells of a farmer who rode around the well nine times on his horse. On the last round, the girl’s spirit appeared and chased him mercilessly to the village, biting a piece out of the horse’s flank and leaving a white patch that didn’t fade until the animal died. In other versions, eight circuits raises Jenny, but nine circuits brings the fey themselves to speak with you.

We even found a song about her by folk-singer David Swann:

Below the chalk headland, the tides have eroded the sweep of the coastline down to the Humber, and many villages lie under the sea now. Many, not just the odd one. Believe it or not, the following had all gone by the time Thomas Sheppard wrote his book The Lost Towns of the Yorkshire Coast, published in 1912:

Wilsthorpe, Auburn, Hartburn, Hyde, Withow, Cleton, Northorpe, Hornsea Burton, Hornsea Beck, Southorpe, Great Colden, Colden Parva, Old Aldborough, Ringborough, Monkwell, Monkwike, Sand-le-Mere, Waxhole, Owthorne by Sisterkirk, Newsome, Old Withernsea, Out Newton, Dimlington, Turmarr, Northorp, Hoton, Old Kilnsea, Ravenspurn, Ravenser Odd.

We still go to Auburn now and then, where a farm or two remains. We run the dogs on the sands, and stare out, wondering if anything lies down there under the lead-coloured waves.

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searching for auburn, by sarah

Flamborough Head and the village where I grew up lie within the Wold Newton Triangle. With its drowned villages, haunts, barrows, Ley Lines and the Gypsey Race river, which rises from dry earth to prophesy doom, the area has everything – and it points towards the North Sea.

A grand place to be a child.

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Sigurd Towrie‘s site Orkneyjar has some more wonderful legends and tales from the north for those who want to know more:

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We are the Lords of Trivia here, so for those of you wanting a book for the evening, it would be unfair not to point out that Whale Road is also the title of the first in a set of historical Viking novels by Robert Low. But we haven’t read it. So it’s up to you.

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There are too many editions of Puck of Pook’s Hill to recommend a particular one, but if you are interested in English lore, it’s a fascinating read.

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More Stranger Seas and lighthouses later in the month. On and around Valentines Day, we join up with sundry other writers for Anita Stewart’s Bad Love event on Facebook. Which means that we’d better write something quick.  So we’ll see you on the fourteenth…

 

 

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Nautical Horror Ahoy! It’s Stranger Seas At Last

Not strange seas, not strangest seas, but Stranger Seas. Yes, our Nautical Weird Theme leaves port, sailing cheerfully towards the Iceberg of Exhaustion over the next five or six weeks. What’s on board this wondrous vessel? Let us give you a taste, before we get short of really bad sea-based similes and metaphors, like a sailor who’s run out of tar for his jolly jacks:

  • Brand new interviews with authors such as Steve Vernon, Ray Cluley, Matt Willis and Cameron Trost.
  • Classic supernatural fiction set on and under the briny – ghost ships and things which come through the porthole.
  • Dagon and his denizens of the Deep, for the H P Lovecraft folk, plus graphic Phoenician-0n-Phoenician action as they complain about their god being nicked.
  • Lurchers for Beginners all at sea (or pretty damned wet, anyway).
  • Sea-faring fantasy novels.
  • Sea monsters! We have to have them. And sea-peoples. Not everyone with a tail is a monster.
  • Writer on the BorderlandWilliam Hope Hodgson, the master of the maritime, returns.
  • And maybe even aquatic superhero comics – Prince Namor and Aquaman dry out together in a seedy Arizona clinic?

If we get desperate, we’ll add pictures of fish who look stupid. We have no pride, as you learned long ago. If you are oceanophobic, there will be non-wet articles in between these, by the way.

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More launch-time adventures at the end of the week, but for now we go straight to Steve Vernon, Nova Scotian and author of, amongst other things, the Sea Tales series of strange  stories. Here’s the man himself to tell you all about it…

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greydog: Welcome to greydogtales, Steve, and thanks for joining us. Let’s start with what brought us together, our nautical horror theme, Stranger Seas. We saw you as an ideal guest for this theme – despite your wide range, you’ve returned to maritime myth and horror many times. Is this because of your personal roots in Nova Scotia, or did something else draw you in this direction?

steve: About forty years ago I came to Nova Scotia to visit my mother. I fell in love with the ocean and I have stayed here ever since. I’ve hitchhiked right across this country and stood in the Pacific Ocean, but my heart has always belonged here in Nova Scotia – here by the strong deep water of the Atlantic Ocean.

greydog: Do you sail, scuba or anything like that?

steve: Nope. I am a land-lubber. All of my sailing and deep-sea adventures take place in the imagination.

greydog: That is the safest, and driest, way. Tell us a little about the mythic side of our theme, and your 2006 book Haunted Harbours: Ghost Stories from Nova Scotia. These are traditional ghostly legends which you collected, and in some cases re-told, is that right?

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steve: I’ve been writing short fiction for about thirty-five years. In 2004 I attended the VERY first “Pitch the Publisher” event at Halifax’s annual Word On The Street festival. Pitch the Publisher is a little bit like Dragon’s Den or Shark Tank in that a group of want-to-be authors stand up and pitch a novel submission to a trio of local publishers. That first year over thirty books were pitched and Haunted Harbours: Ghost Stories From Nova Scotia was the ONLY book to actually be published. Each of the stories in the book are tales that I have taken from Nova Scotia folklore. I painstakingly tracked them down in the archives and in the pages of old newspapers and I wrote them with a strong storyteller voice.

greydog: And because we are grey-dog-tales, after all, what was the Black Dog of Antigonish Harbour?

steve: The Black Dog of Antigonish Harbour is also known as Old Shug or Old Shuck. He is a legend that spans all the way back to the highlands of Scotland. The Black Dog is said to be able to foretell death. When you see the Black Dog you know without a trace of doubt that there is going to be a death in your family. The Black Dog is basically a tone-deaf banshee in dog tags.

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greydog: We’ll add him to our list of spectral hounds. A couple of years later you wrote Maritime Monsters, for younger children, and then a Young Adult book Sinking Deeper. What interested you in writing for younger audiences?

steve: For many years I have worked as a Writer in the School, thanks to a local program backed by our local Writers Federation. As a Writer in the School I go to schools all over the Maritimes and I teach the kids about storytelling and the art of writing. I got tired of younger kids asking me if I had written anything for them to read – so I decided to write Maritime Monsters – a children’s picture book with fifteen individual short stories and fifteen wicked-cool kid-friendly illustrations. After that, as you say, came the young adult novel Sinking Deeper: My Questionable (sometimes heroic) Decision to Invent a Sea Monster.

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greydog: But you moved on to create maritime myths of your own with your Sea Tales series, far darker and more adult in nature. Some of these are quite brutal, not always in the sense of gore but in facing aspects of life and death without a comfy get-out clause. Was this an intentional move for the series?

steve: You have to realize that when I started writing back in the mid-80’s I wrote an awful lot of short horror stories for such magazines as Cemetery Dance, The Horror Show, Flesh & Blood, as well as horror anthologies such as Karl Edward Wagner’s Year’s Best Horror and the Hot Blood series – so I have been writing dark adult horror stories for a lot more years than I wrote for children. So Sea Tales wasn’t REALLY all that out of the ordinary for me.

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greydog: One Sea Tales story stands out both for its emotive nature and its viewpoint – I Know Why the Waters of the Sea Taste of Salt. A young kamikaze pilot of mixed-Chinese/Japanese descent flies into the hell of the Battle of Okinawa in 1945. It’s a striking, sympathetic and very original tale which we would recommend. Where on earth did this come from?

steve: My imagination is a gigantic stew pot that I have been chopping up bits of meat and vegetables for every year that I have walked upon this earth. A story like I Know Why… is just a bit of strange meat that I stirred up out of the deepest end of the stew pot. I’d say that the roots of the story lie in an early fascination of mine with World War II in general and the Pacific island campaigns in specific. There was also a touch of an article that I read a very long time ago in a Fine Woodworking magazine that dealt with the carving of netsuke. A writer is like a crazy quilt maker – somebody who gathers up scraps of rags and creates beautiful blankets from these scraps and rags.

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greydog: Will you be continuing with Sea Tales, or is that a ‘chapter’ in your career that’s largely done with?

steve: Oh I have no doubt that like the tide I will continue to return to the sea. In fact the latest novel I just completed is entitled Kelpie Dreams, involving a mermaid, a kelpie, a Sea Hag and a two hundred year old ghost. I don’t think I am ever going to get over my fascination with the ocean. You have to remember, after all, that our blood is basically nothing more than sea water.

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greydog: Let’s escape the briny. As we said earlier you have a wide range, and you’re quite prolific. We get the feeling that you admire the pulp writers of old who could turn out a story in almost any genre, an age of slamming the typewriter keyboard as long as the bourbon held out. Is that true?

steve: Well, aside from the bourbon part you have got it dead right. Unfortunately bourbon always gives me heartburn as well as making me kind of cranky. I am more of a dark beer kind of a fellow – and I never drink anything stronger than good black coffee while I am writing. But there is nothing that I like better than sitting in my writing cave banging out a good old fashioned story.

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greydog: We were interested in the Tatterdemon trilogy, all three of which are now available to buy in a single volume (see sidebar on right). Is this series inspired by actual legend, given that in the books the roots of Tatterdemon go back to the 17th century, or did you conjure this one up out of the air?

steve: Tatterdemon has to be one of my favorite novels – and definitely my best selling independent novel. I wrote the novel thinking about Stephen King’s Salems Lot. I have always loved using small towns as a setting for my horror novels. I grew up in a small town, way up in the Northern Ontario attic, about twenty miles north of Sudbury. I have always been fascinated by the isolation you can find in certain small towns. The scarecrows of Tatterdemon are definitely my own invention – although I sewed it strands of voodoo and the paranormal all through it.

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greydog: Is there any aspect of horror that you’d like to write but haven’t got round to, any secret authorial dream that you’ve still to fulfil?

steve: I have got the makings of a Nova Scotia zombie novel that has been kicking around my workspace for an awfully time now. One of these days I am going to have to sit down and write it out.

greydog: Sounds fun. Finally, we like to keep in touch with anyone who appears on greydogtales to see what happens next, so what can we expect to see from you in 2016?

steve: As I mentioned, I have just completed a novel that I am intending will be the first in a series of at least three books, entitled Kelpie Dreams. It is a kind of a paranormal action-packed shoot-em-up-supernatural romance novel written for folks who truly hate reading romance. I have submitted that book to the Kindle Scout publishing program and over the month of February I will be actively campaigning and seeking out Kindle Scout nominations to hopefully get that book selected by Kindle Scout. I really feel that if I can get Kelpie Dreams picked up by Kindle Scout and get the weight of the mighty Amazon promotional team behind it that I will raise my indie author profile in a way that helps a lot more people find out what a truly mind-warping experience a Steve Vernon novel can actually be.

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greydog: Many thanks again, Steve Vernon.

As it would be churlish to have Steve here and not support his Kindle Scout campaign, here’s the link where you can back him:

kelpie dreams kindle scout bid

You can find out lots more about his writing at his site here:

steve vernon – yours in storytelling

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As we’re heading back into William Hope Hodgson territory later on, this would also be a good time to remind listeners of Sam Gafford‘s great site on Hodgson. We say this because greydogtales is a compendium of weird things but an authority on none. Sam is the most dedicated scholar and collector of Hodgsoniana we’ve ever encountered, and there’s loads of interesting stuff there. Go browse.

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And don’t forget that the new Carnacki audio from Big Finish should now be available. Six of Hodgson’s original stories, lovingly and faithfully rendered for your ears in a high quality production:

carnacki on audio

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That’s it for today, we fear. Back to hauling longdogs and writing for a living. More greydogtales on Friday, if we remember where we put the fishing spears…

 

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