from H.P. Lovecraft’s The Lurking Fear
There was thunder in the air on the night I went to the deserted
mansion atop Tempest Mountain to find the lurking fear. I
was not alone, for foolhardiness was not then mixed with that
love of the grotesque and the terrible which has made my career
a series of quests for strange horrors in literature and in
life. With me were two faithful and muscular men for whom
I had sent when the time came; men long associated with me
in my ghastly explorations because of their peculiar fitness.
We had started quietly from the village because of the reporters
who still lingered about after the eldritch panic of a month
before - the nightmare creeping death. Later, I thought, they
might aid me; but I did not want them then. Would to God I
had let them share the search, that I might not have had to
bear the secret alone so long; to bear it alone for fear the
world would call me mad or go mad itself at the demon implications
of the thing. Now that I am telling it anyway, lest the brooding
make me a maniac, I wish I had never concealed it. For I,
and I only, know what manner of fear lurked on that spectral
and desolate mountain. In a small motor-car we covered the
miles of primeval forest and hill until the wooded ascent
checked it. The country bore an aspect more than usually sinister
as we viewed it by night and without the accustomed crowds
of investigators, so that we were often tempted to use the
acetylene headlight despite the attention it might attract.
It was not a wholesome landscape after dark, and I believe
I would have noticed its morbidity even had I been ignorant
of the terror that stalked there. Of wild creatures there
were none-they are wise when death leers close. The ancient
lightning-scarred trees seemed unnaturally large and twisted,
and the other vegetation unnaturally thick and feverish, while
curious mounds and hummocks in the weedy, fulgurite-pitted
earth reminded me of snakes and dead men’s skulls swelled
to gigantic proportions. Fear had lurked on Tempest Mountain
for more than a century. This I learned at once from newspaper
accounts of the catastrophe which first brought the region
to the world’s notice. The place is a remote, lonely
elevation in that part of the Catskills where Dutch civilization
once feebly and transiently penetrated, leaving behind as
it receded only a few mined mansions and a degenerate squatter
population inhabiting pitiful hamlets on isolated slopes.
Normal beings seldom visited the locality till the state police
were formed, and even now only infrequent troopers patrol
it. The fear, however, is an old tradition throughout the
neighboring villages; since it is a prime topic in the simple
discourse of the poor mongrels who sometimes leave their valleys
to trade handwoven baskets for such primitive necessities
as they cannot shoot, raise, or make. The lurking fear dwelt
in the shunned and deserted Martense mansion, which crowned
the high but gradual eminence whose liability to frequent
thunderstorms gave it the name of Tempest Mountain. For over
a hundred years the antique, grove-circled stone house had
been the subject of stories incredibly wild and monstrously
hideous; stories of a silent colossal creeping death which
stalked abroad in summer. With whimpering insistence the squatters
told tales of a demon which seized lone wayfarers after dark,
either carrying them off or leaving them in a frightful state
of gnawed dismemberment; while sometimes they whispered of
blood trails toward the distant mansion. Some said the thunder
called the lurking fear out of its habitation, while others
said the thunder was its voice. No one outside the backwoods
had believed these varying and conflicting stories, with their
incoherent, extravagant descriptions of the hall-glimpsed
fiend; yet not a farmer or villager doubted that the Martense
mansion was ghoulishly haunted. Local history forbade such
a doubt, although no ghostly evidence was ever found by such
investigators as had visited the building after some especially
vivid tale of the squatters. Grandmothers told strange myths
of the Martense spectre; myths concerning the Martense family
itself, its queer hereditary dissimilarity of eyes, its long,
unnatural annals, and the murder which had cursed it. The
terror which brought me to the scene was a sudden and portentous
confirmation of the mountaineers’ wildest legends. One
summer night, after a thunderstorm of unprecedented violence,
the countryside was aroused by a squatter stampede which no
mere delusion could create. The pitiful throngs of natives
shrieked and whined of the unnamable horror which had descended
upon them, and they were not doubted. They had not seen it,
but had heard such cries from one of their hamlets that they
knew a creeping death had come.