Classic Audiobook Collection - The Colour Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft ~ Full Audiobook [horror]
Episode Date: July 18, 2023The Colour Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft audiobook. Genre: horror In rural New England, surveyors arrive to measure a quiet stretch of land for a new reservoir, but one place stands out as wrong: a... blasted, lifeless area the locals avoid and refuse to explain. The outsider sent to ask questions is drawn into the story of the Gardner family, farmers whose isolation only deepened after a strange meteorite fell on their property. What begins as a curiosity for the nearby scientists becomes a creeping, intimate catastrophe as the farm's soil, water, crops, and livestock begin to change in ways no one can name, and the Gardners themselves start to fray under pressures that feel both physical and uncanny. Told with Lovecraft's mounting dread and documentary-like detail, the tale explores the terror of the unknown, the fragility of human understanding, and the idea that the universe contains forces beyond language and reason. As the valley grows quieter and the evidence more disturbing, the narrator pieces together an account of an encounter with something not quite of this world - and not quite describable at all. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:46:28) Chapter 02 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Color Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft. Part 1. West of Arkham, the hills rise, wild,
and there are valleys with deep woods that no axe has ever cut. There are dark, narrow glins where the
trees slope fantastically, and where thin brooklets trickle without ever having caught the glint of
sunlight. On the gentler slopes, there are forms, ancient and rocky, with squat, mottes,
coated cottages brooding eternally over old New England secrets in the lee of great ledges.
But these are all vacant now. The wide chimneys crumbling and the shingled sides bulging
perilously beneath low, gambrel roofs. The old folk have gone away, and the foreigners do not
like to live there. French Canadians have tried it, Italians have tried it, and the Poles
have come and departed. It is not because of anything that can be seen.
seen or heard or handled, but because of something that is imagined. The place is not good for
imagination, and does not bring rustful dreams at night. It must be this which keeps the foreigners
away, for old Ami Pierce has never told him of anything he recalls from the strange days.
Ami, whose head has been a little queer for years, is the only one who still remains,
or whoever talks of the strange days, and he dares to do that.
this, because his house, is so near the open fields and the traveled roads around Orkham.
There was once a road over the hills and through the valleys that ran straight where the
blasted heath is now. But people ceased to use it, and a new road was laid curving far toward
the south. Traces of the old one can still be found amid the weed of a returning wilderness,
and some of them will doubtless linger even when half the hollows are flooded for the new reservoir.
Then the dark woods will be cut down, and the blasted heath will slumber far below blue waters,
whose surface will mirror the sky and ripple in the sun.
And the secrets of the strange days will be one with the deep secrets,
one with the hidden lore of old ocean, and all the mystery of primal earth.
When I went into the hills and veils to survey for the new reservoir,
they told me the place was evil.
They told me this in Arkham, and because that is a very old town full of witch legends,
I thought the evil must be something which grandmas had whispered to children through centuries.
The name Blasted Heath seemed to me very odd and theatrical,
and I wondered how it had come into the folklore of a Puritan people.
Then I saw that dark westward tangle of glens and slopes for myself,
and ceased to wonder at anything besides its own elder mystery.
It was morning when I saw it, but shadow lurked always there.
The trees grew too thickly, and their trunks were too big for any healthy New England would.
There was too much silence in the dim alleys between them,
and the floor was too soft with the dank moss and mattings of infinite years of decay.
In the open spaces, mostly along the line of the old road, there were little hillside farms,
sometimes with all the buildings standing, sometimes with only one or two, and sometimes with only a
lone chimney or fast-filling cellar.
Weeds and briars reigned, and furtive wild things rustled in the undergrowth.
Upon everything was a haze of restlessness and oppression, a touch of the unreal and the grotesque,
as if some vital element of perspective or Chiaroscuro were awry.
I did not wonder that the foreigners would not stay, for this is no region to sleep in.
It was too much like a landscape of Salvatore Rosa, too much like some forbidding woodcut in a tale of
of terror. But even all this was not so bad as the blasted heath.
I knew it the moment I came upon it at the bottom of a spacious valley,
for no other name could fit such a thing, or any other thing fit such a name.
It was as if the poet had coined the phrase from having seen this one particular region.
It must, I thought, as I viewed it, be the outcome of a flyer,
but why had nothing new ever grown over those five acres of gray desolation
that sprawled open to the sky like a great spot eaten by acid in the woods and fields?
It lay largely to the north of the ancient road line, but encroached a little on the other side.
I felt an odd reluctance about approaching, and did so at last, only because my business took me
through and passed it.
There was no vegetation of any kind on that broad expanse, but only a fine gray dust or ash
which no wind seemed ever to blow about.
The trees near it were sickly and stunted, and much more than.
Many dead trunks stood all a rotting at the rim.
As I walked hurriedly by I saw the tumbled bricks and stones of an old chimney and cellar on my right,
and the yawning black maw of an abandoned well whose stagnant vapors played strange tricks with the hues of the sunlight.
Even the long, dark woodland climbed beyond seemed welcome in contrast,
and I marveled no more at the frightened whispers of Arkham people.
There had been no house or ruin near, even in the old days the place must have been lonely
and remote.
And at twilight, dreading to repast that ominous spot, I walked circuitously back to the town
by the curving road on the south.
I vaguely wished some clouds would gather, for an odd timidity about the deep sky-voids above
had crept into my soul.
In the evening I asked old people in Arkham about the blasted heath, and
what was meant by that phrase strange days, which so many evasively muttered.
I could not, however, get any good answers, except that all the mystery was much more recent
than I had dreamed. It was not a matter of old legendary at all, but something within the
lifetime of those who spoke. It had happened in the eighties, and a family had disappeared
or was killed. Speakers would not be exact, and because they all told me to pay no attention,
to old Emmy Pierce's crazy tales, I sought him out the next morning, having heard that he lived
alone in the ancient tottering cottage, where the trees first began to get very thick.
It was a fearsomely ancient place, and had begun to exude the faint miasmal odor which
clings about houses that have stood too long. Only with persistent knocking could I rouse
the aged man, and when he shuffled timidly to the door, I could tell he was not glad to see me.
He was not so feeble as I had expected, but his eyes drooped in a curious way, and his unkempt
clothing and white beard made him seem very worn and dismal.
Not knowing just how he could best be launched on his tails, I feigned a matter of business,
told him of my surveying, and asked vague questions about the district.
He was far brighter and more educated than I had been led to think, and before I knew it
He grasped quite as much of the subject as any man I had talked with in Arkham.
He was not like other rustics I had known in the regions where reservoirs were to be.
From him there were no protests at the miles of old wood and farmland to be blotted out,
though perhaps there would have been had not his home lain outside the bounds of the future lake.
Relief was all that he showed,
relief at the doom of the dark ancient valleys through which he had roamed all his life.
they were better under water now better under water since the strange days and with this opening his husky voice sank low while his body leaned forward and his right forefinger began to point shakily and impressively
It was then that I heard the story, and as the rambling voice scraped and whispered on,
I shivered again and again despite the summer day.
Often I had to recall the speaker from ramblings, piece-out scientific points which he knew only
by fading parrot memory of professor's talk, or bridge over gaps where his sense of logic
and continuity broke down.
When he was done, I did not wonder that his mind had snapped a trifle, or that the
The folk of Arkham would not speak much of the blasted heath.
I hurried back before sunset to my hotel, unwilling to have the stars come out above me in the open,
and the next day returned to Boston to give up my position.
I could not go into that dim chaos of old forest and slope again,
or face another time that gray blasted heath where the black well yawned deep beside the tumbled bricks and stones.
The reservoir will soon be built now, and all those elder secrets will lie safe forever under
watery fathoms.
But even then, I do not believe I would like to visit that country by night, at least
not when the sinister stars are out, and nothing could bribe me to drink the new city
water of Arkham.
It all began, old Ami said, with the meteorite.
Before that time there had been no wild legends at all since the witch trials, and even then
these western woods were not feared half so much as a small island in the Miscotonic,
where the devil held court beside a curious stone altar older than the Indians.
These were not haunted woods, and their fantastic dusk was never terrible till the strange days.
Then there had come that white noontide cloud.
that string of explosions in the air, and that pillar of smoke from the valley far in the wood.
And by night all Arkham had heard of the great rock that fell out of the sky,
and bedded itself in the ground beside the well at the Nahum Gardner Place.
That was the house which had stood where the blasted heath was to come.
The trim white Nahum Gardner House amidst its fertile gardens and orchards.
Nahum had come to town to tell people about the stone, and had dropped in at Ami Pearses on the way.
Ami was forty then, and all the queer things were fixed very strongly in his mind.
He and his wife had gone with the three professors from Miss Catonic University, who hastened
out the next morning to see the weird visitor from unknown stellar space, and had wondered why
Nahom had called it so large the day before.
It had shrunk, Nahum said, as he pointed out the big brownish mound above the ripped earth
and charred grass near the archaic well-sweep in his front yard.
But the wise men answered that stones do not shrink.
Its heat lingered persistently, and Nahum declared it had glowed faintly in the night.
The professors tried it with a geologist's hammer, and found it to be oddly soft.
It was, in truth, so soft as to be almost part.
plastic, and they gouged rather than chipped a specimen to take back to the college for testing.
They took it in an old pail borrowed from Nahum's kitchen, or even the small piece refused to grow cool.
On the trip back they stopped at Amis to rest, and seemed thoughtful when Mrs. Pierce remarked
that the fragment was growing smaller and burning the bottom of the pail.
Truly it was not large, but perhaps they had taken less than they thought.
The day after that, all this was in June of 82, the professors had trooped out again in great excitement.
As they passed to Amis, they told him what queer things the specimen had done,
and how it had faded wholly away when they put it in a glass speaker.
The beaker was gone, too, and the wise men talked of the strange stones affinity for silicon.
It had acted quite unbelievably in that well-ordered laboratory,
doing nothing at all, and showing no occluded gases when heated on charcoal,
being wholly negative in the barack speed,
and soon proving itself absolutely none volatile at any producible temperature,
including that of the oxy-hydrogen blowpipe.
On an anvil, it appeared highly malleable,
and in the dark its luminosity was very marked.
Stubbornly refusing to grow cool,
it soon had the college in a state of real excitement.
And when, upon heating before the spectroscope, it displayed shining bands, unlike any known
colors of the normal spectrum, there was much breathless talk of new elements, bizarre optical
properties, and other things which puzzled men of science are wont to say when faced
by the unknown.
Hot as it was, they tested it in a crucible, with all the proper reagents.
Water did nothing, hydrochloric acid was the same, nitric acid, and even, and even, and even
an aqua regia merely hissed and spattered against its tarred invulnerability.
Ami had difficulty in recalling all these things, but recognized some solvents, as I mentioned
them in the usual order of use. There were ammonia and caustic soda, alcohol and ether,
nauseous carbon disulfide, and a dozen others. But although the weight grew steadily less
as time passed, and the fragment seemed to be slightly cooling, there was a lot of the
no change in the solvents to show that they had attacked the substance at all.
It was metal, though, beyond a doubt. It was magnetic, for one thing, and after its immersion
in the acid solvents there seemed to be faint traces of the Widmastotten figures found on
meteoric iron. When the cooling had grown very considerable, the testing was carried on in glass,
and it was in a glass speaker that they left all the chips made of the original fragment during
the work. The next morning, both chips and Beaker were gone without trace, and only a charred
spot marked the place on the wooden shelf where they had been. All this the professors told
Ami as they paused at his door, and once more he went with them to see the stony messenger
from the stars, though this time his wife did not accompany him. It had now most certainly
shrunk, and even the sober professors could not doubt the truth of what they saw.
All around the dwindling brown lump near the well was a vacant space, except where the earth had caved in, and whereas it had been a good seven feet across the day before, it was now scarcely five.
It was still hot, and the sages studied its surface curiously, as they detached another and larger piece with hammer and chisel.
They gouged deeply this time, and as they pried away the smaller mass, they saw that the core of the thing was done.
not quite homogeneous.
They had uncovered what seemed to be the side of a large colored globule embedded in the
substance.
The color, which resembled some of the bands in the meteor's strange spectrum, was almost
impossible to describe, and it was only by analogy that they called it color at all.
Its texture was glossy, and upon tapping, it appeared to promise both brittleness and
hollowness.
One of the professors gave it a small.
a smart blow with the hammer, and it burst with a nervous little pup.
Nothing was emitted, and all trace of the thing vanished with the puncturing.
It left a small, hollow, spherical space about three inches across, and all thought it probable
that others would be discovered as the enclosing substance wasted away.
Conjecture was vain, so, after a futile attempt to find additional globules by drilling,
the seekers left again with their new specimen, which proved, however, as baffling in the laboratory
as its predecessor. Aside from being almost plastic, having heat, magnetism, and slight luminosity,
cooling slightly in powerful acids, possessing an unknown spectrum, wasting away in air,
and attacking silicon compounds with mutual destruction as a result, it presented no identifying
features whatsoever.
And at the end of the tests, the college scientists were forced to own that they could not
place it.
It was nothing of this earth but a piece of the great outside, and as such dowered with
outside properties and obedient to outside laws.
That night there was a thunderstorm, and when the professors went out to Nahomes the next
day, they met with bitter disappointment.
The stone, magnetic as it had been, must have had some purpose.
peculiar electrical property, for it had drawn the lightning, as Nahum said, with a singular
persistence. Six times within an hour the former saw the lightning strike the furrow in the
front yard, and when the storm was over, nothing remained but a ragged pit by the ancient
well-sweep, half-choked with caved in earth. Digging had borne no fruit, and the scientists
verified the fact of the utter vanishment. The failure was total.
so that nothing was left to do but go back to the laboratory and test again the disappearing fragment left carefully cased in lead.
That fragment lasted a week, at the end of which nothing of value had been learned of it.
When it had gone, no residue was left behind, and in time the professors felt scarcely sure they had indeed seen with waking eyes
that cryptic vestige of the fathomless gulfs outside.
that lone, weird message from other universes and other realms of matter, force, and entity.
As was natural, the Arkham Papers made much of the incident with its collegial sponsoring,
and sent reporters to talk with Nahum Gardner and his family.
At least one Boston daily also sent a scribe, and Nahum quickly became a kind of local celebrity.
He was a lean, genial person of about fifty, living with his wife and three sons,
on the pleasant farmstead in the valley.
He and Ami exchanged visits frequently, as did their wives, and Ami had nothing but praise
for him after all these years.
He seemed slightly proud of the notice his place had attracted, and talked often of the meteorite
in the succeeding weeks.
That July and August were hot, and Nahum worked hard at his haying in the ten-acre pasture
across Chapham's brook, his rattling wane wearing deep ruts in the shadowy lanes between.
The labor tired him more than it had in other years, and he felt that age was beginning
to tell on him.
Then fell the time of fruit and harvest.
The pears and apples slowly ripened, and Nahum vowed that his archets were prospering as never
before.
The fruit was growing to phenomenal size and unwanted gloss, and in such abundance that extra
barrels were ordered to handle the future crop.
But with the ripening came sore disappointment.
for of all that gorgeous array of specious lusciousness,
but a single jot was fit to eat.
Into the fine flavor of the pears and apples
had crept a stealthy bitterness and sickishness,
so that even the smallest of bites induced a lasting disgust.
It was the same with the melons and tomatoes,
and Nahom sadly saw that his entire crop was lost.
Quick to connect events,
He declared that the meteorite had poisoned the soil
and thanked heaven that most of the other crops were in the upland lot along the road.
Winter came early and was very cold.
Ami saw Nahum less often than usual and observed that he had begun to look worried.
The rest of his family too seemed to have grown taciturn
and were far from steady in their churchgoing or their attendance
at the various social events of the countryside.
For this reserve or melancholy no cause could be found, though all the household confessed
now and then to poorer health and a feeling of vague disquiet.
Nahom himself gave the most definite statement of anyone when he said he was disturbed
about certain footprints in the snow.
They were the usual winter prints of red squirrels, white rabbits, and foxes, but the
brooding farmer professed to see something not quite right about their nature and arrangement.
He was never specific, but appeared to think that they were not as characteristic of the
anatomy and habits of squirrels and rabbits and foxes as they ought to be.
Ami listened without interest to this talk until one night when he drove past Nahum's house
in the sleigh on the way back from Clark's corners.
There had been a moon, and a rabbit had run across the road, and the leaps of the rabbit
were longer than either Ami or his horse liked.
The ladder, indeed, had almost run away when brought up by a firm
rain. Thereafter, Ami gave Nahum's tales more respect and wondered why the gardener's dogs
seemed so cowed and quivering every morning. They had, it developed, nearly lost the spirit to bark.
In February, the McGregor boys from Meadow Hill were out shooting woodchucks, and not far from
the gardener place bagged a very peculiar specimen. The proportions of its body seemed slightly altered in a
queer way, impossible to describe, while its face had taken on an expression which no one ever
saw in a woodchuck before. The boys were genuinely frightened and threw the thing away at once,
so that only their grotesque tales of it ever reached the people of the countryside.
But the shying of horses near Nahum's house had now become an acknowledged thing, and all the
basis for a cycle of whispered legend was fast-taking form.
People vowed that the snow melted faster around Nahum's than it did anywhere else.
And early in March there was an odd discussion in Potter's General Store at Clark's Corners.
Stephen Rice had driven past gardeners in the morning and had noticed the skunk cabbages coming up through the mud by the woods across the road.
Never were things of such size seen before, and they held strange colors that could not be put into any words.
Their shapes were monstrous, and the horse had snorted at an odor which struck Stephen as
wholly unprecedented.
That afternoon several persons drove past to see the abnormal growth, and all agreed that
plants of that kind are never to sprout in a healthy world.
The bad fruit of the fall before was freely mentioned, and it went from mouth to mouth that
there was poison in Nahum's ground.
Of course it was the meteorite, and remembering how much.
how strange the men from the college had found that stone to be. Several farmers spoke about
the matter to them. One day they paid Nahum a visit, and having no love of wild tales and folklore
were very conservative in what they inferred. The plants were certainly odd, but all skunk
cabbages are more or less odd in shape and hue. Perhaps some mineral element from the stone
had entered the soil, but it would soon be washed away. And as for the footprints and frightened horses,
Of course, that was mere country talk, which such a phenomenon as the Aerolyte would be certain
to start.
There was really nothing for serious men to do, in cases of wild gossip, for superstitious rustics
will say and believe anything.
And so, all through the strange days, the professors stayed away in contempt.
Only one of them, when given two files of dust for analysis in a police job over a year and a half
later, recalled that the queer color of that skunk cabbage had been very like one of the
anomalous bands of light shown by the meteor fragment in the college spectroscope, and like
the brittle globule found embedded in the stone from the abyss. The samples in this analysis
case gave the same odd bands at first, though later they lost the property. The trees budded
prematurely around Nahum's, and in night they swayed ominously in the wind.
Nahum's second son, Thaddeus, a lad of fifteen, swore that they swayed also when there was no wind.
But even the gossips would not credit this.
Certainly, however, restlessness was in the air.
The entire Gardner family developed the habit of stealthy listening, though not for any sound which they could consciously name.
The listening was, indeed, rather a product of moments when consciousness seemed half to slip away.
Unfortunately, such moments increased week by week, till it became common speech that something
was wrong with all Nahum folks.
When the early saxifrage came out, it had another strange color, not quite like that
of the skunk cabbage, but plainly related and equally unknown to anyone who saw it.
Nehom took some blossoms to Arkham and showed them to the editor of the Gazette, but that
dignitary did no more than write a humorous article about that.
them, in which the dark fears of rustics were held up to polite ridicule.
It was a mistake of Nahams to tell a stolid city man about the way the great overgrown
morning-cloak butterflies behaved in connection with the sexifrages.
April brought a kind of madness to the country folk, and began that disuse of the road past
Nahom's, which led to its ultimate abandonment.
It was next the vegetation.
All the archery trees blossomed forth in strange colors, and through the stony soil of the yard
and adjacent pasturage there sprang up a bizarre growth which only a botanist could connect with the
proper flora of the region. No sane, wholesome colors were anywhere to be seen, except in the
green grass and leafage, but everywhere were those hectic and prismatic variants of some
diseased underlying primary tone without a place among the nethered.
known tints of earth.
The Dutchman's breeches became a thing of sinister menace, and the blood roots grew insolent
in their chromatic perversion.
Ami and the gardeners thought that most of the colors had a sort of haunting familiarity,
and decided that they reminded one of the brittle globule in the meteor.
Nahum plowed and sowed the ten-acre pasture and the upland lot, but did nothing with the
land around the house.
He knew it would be of no use, and hoped that the summer's strange growth would draw all the poison from the soil.
He was prepared for almost anything now, and had grown used to the sense of something near him waiting to be heard.
The shunning of his house by neighbors told on him, of course, but it told on his wife more.
The boys were better off being at school each day, but they could not help being frightened by the gossip.
Thaddeus, and especially sensitive youth, suffered the most.
In May the insects came, and Nahum's place became a nightmare of buzzing and crawling.
Most of the creatures seemed not quite usual in their aspects and motions, and their nocturnal
habits contradicted all former experience.
The gardeners took to watching at night, watching in all directions at random for something
they could not tell what.
It was then that they all owned that Thaddeus had been right about the trees.
Mrs. Gardner was the next to see it from the window as she watched the swollen boughs of a maple
against a moonlit sky.
The boughs surely moved, and there was no wind.
It must be the sap.
Strangeness had come into everything growing now.
Yet it was none of Nahum's family at all who made the next time.
discovery. Familiarity had dulled them, and what they could not see was glimpsed by a timid
windmill salesman from Bolton, who drove by one night in ignorance of the country legends.
What he told in Arkham was given a short paragraph in the Gazette, and it was there that all
the farmers, Nahum included, saw it first. The night had been dark, and the buggy lamps faint,
But around a farm in the valley, which everyone knew from the account must be Nahums,
the darkness had been less thick.
A dim, though distinct luminosity, seemed to inherit in all the vegetation, grass, leaves,
and blossoms alike, while at one moment a detached piece of the phosphorescence
appeared to stir furtively in the yard near the barn.
The grass had so far seemed untouched, and the cows were freely pastured in the lot near
the house. But toward the end of May the milk began to be bad. Then Nahum had the cows driven to
the uplands, after which this trouble ceased. Not long after this the changing grass and leaves
became apparent to the eye. All the verdure was going gray, and was developing a highly singular
quality of brittleness. Ami was now the only person who ever visited the place, and his visits were
becoming fewer and fewer. When school closed, the gardeners were virtually cut off from the world
and sometimes let Ami do their errands in town. They were failing curiously, both physically and mentally,
and no one was surprised when the news of Mr. Gardner's madness stole around. It happened in June
about the anniversary of the meteor's fall, and the poor woman screamed about things in the air which
she could not describe. In her ravings there was not a single specific noun, but only verbs and
pronouns. Things moved and changed and fluttered, and ears tangled to impulses, which were not
wholly sounds. Something was taken away. She was being drained of something. Something was
fastening itself on her that ought not to be. Someone must make it keep off. Nothing was ever still
in the night, the walls and the windows shifted. Nahum did not send her to the country asylum,
but let her wonder about the house as long as she was harmless to herself and others.
Even when her expression changed, he did nothing. But when the boys grew afraid of her,
and Thaddeus nearly fainted at the way she made faces at him, he decided to keep her locked in the attic.
By July she had ceased to speak and crawled on all fours, and before,
Before that month was over, Nahum got the mad notion that she was slightly luminous in the dark,
as he now clearly saw was the case with the nearby vegetation.
It was a little before this that the horses had stampeded.
Something had aroused them in the night, and the neighing and kicking in their stalls
had been terrible.
There seemed virtually nothing to do to calm them, and when Nahum opened the stable door,
they all bolted out like frightened woodland deer.
It took a week to track all four, and when found they were seen to be quite useless and unmanageable.
Something had snapped in their brains, and each one had to be shot for its own good.
Nahum borrowed a horse from Ami for his haying, but found it would not approach the barn.
It shied, balked, and winned, and in the end he could do nothing but drive it into the yard,
while the men used their own strength to get the heavy wagon near enough
the hayloft for convenient pitching. And all the while, the vegetation was turning gray and brittle.
Even the flowers whose hues had been so strange were graying now, and the fruit was coming out gray
and dwarfed and tasteless. The asters and goldenrod bloomed gray and distorted, and the roses
and zineas and hollyhocks in the front yard were such blasphemous looking things that Naham's oldest boy,
Xenus cut them down. The strangely puffed insects died about that time, even the bees that had left
their hives and taken to the woods. By September all the vegetation was fast crumbling to a grayish
powder, and Nahum feared that the trees would die before the poison was out of the soil. His wife now
had spells of terrific screaming, and he and the boys were in a constant state of nervous tension.
They shunned people now, and when school opened, the boys did not go.
But it was Ami, on one of his rare visits, who first realized that the well water was no longer good.
It had an evil taste that was not exactly fetid, nor exactly salty, and Amit advised his friend
to dig another well on higher ground to use till the soil was good again.
Naham, however, ignored the warning, for he had by that time,
and become callous to strange and unpleasant things.
He and the boys continue to use the tainted supply,
drinking it as listlessly and mechanically as they ate the meager and ill-cooked meals,
and did their thankless and monotonous chores through the aimless days.
There was something of stolid resignation about them all,
as if they walked half in another world between lines of nameless guards
to a certain and familiar doom.
Thaddeus went mad in September after a visit to the well.
He had gone with the pale and had come back empty-handed,
shrieking and waving his arms,
and sometimes lapsing into an inane titter or a whisper about the moving colors down there.
Two-in-one family was pretty bad,
but Naham was very brave about it.
He let the boy run about for a week until he began stumbling and hurting himself,
and then he shut him in an attic room across the hall from his mothers.
The way they screamed at each other from behind their locked doors was very terrible,
especially to little Merwin, who fancied they talked in some terrible language that was not of
earth.
Merwin was getting frightfully imaginative, and his restlessness was worse after the shutting away of the
brother who had been his greatest playmate.
Almost at the same time the mortality among the livestock commenced.
Poultry turned grayish and died very quickly,
their meat being found dry and noisome upon cutting.
Hogs grew inordinately fat,
then suddenly began to undergo loathsome changes which no one could explain.
Their meat was of course useless,
and Nahum was at his wits' end.
No rural veterinary would approach his place,
and the city veterinary from Arkin was openly baffled.
The swine began growing gray and brittle and falling to pieces before they died,
and their eyes and muzzles developed singular alterations.
It was very inexplicable, for they had never been fed from the tainted vegetation.
Then something struck the cows.
Certain areas or sometimes the whole body would be uncannily shriveled or compressed,
and atrocious collapses or disintegrations were common.
In the last stages, and death was always the result,
there would be a graying and turning brittle like that which beset the hogs.
There could be no question of poison,
for all the cases occurred in a locked and undisturbed barn.
No bites of prowling things could have brought the virus
for what live beast of earth can pass through solid obstacles.
It must be only natural disease,
Yet what disease could wreck such results was beyond any minds guessing.
When the harvest came there was not an animal surviving on the place,
for the stock and poultry were dead, and the dogs had run away.
These dogs, three in number, had all vanished one night and were never heard of again.
The five cats had left some time before,
but their going was scarcely noticed since there now seemed to be no mice,
and only Mrs. Gardner had made pets of the great-steads.
felines. On the 19th of October, Nehom staggered into Ami's house with hideous news.
The death had come to poor Thaddeus in his attic room, and it had come in a way which could
not be told. Nehom had dug a grave in the railed family plot behind the farm, and had put
therein what he found. There could have been nothing from outside, for the small, barred window
and locked door were intact.
but it was much as it had been in the barn.
Ami and his wife consoled the stricken man as best they could,
but shuddered as they did so.
Stark terror seemed to cling round the gardeners and all they touched,
and the very presence of one in the house was a breath from regions unnamed and unnameable.
Ami accompanied Nahum home with the greatest reluctance,
and did what he might to calm the hysterical,
sobbing of little Merwin.
Zinus needed no calming.
He had come of late to do nothing but stare into space and obey what his father told him,
and Ami thought that his fate was very merciful.
Now and then Merwin's screams were answered faintly from the attic,
and in response to an inquiring look, Nehom said that his wife was getting very feeble.
When night approached, Ami managed to get away, for not even friendship.
could make him stay in that spot when the faint glow of the vegetation began, and the trees
may or may not have swayed without wind. It was really lucky for Ami that he was not more imaginative.
Even as things were, his mind was bent ever so slightly, but had he been able to connect and reflect
upon all the portents around him, he must inevitably have turned a total maniac. In the twilight,
he hastened home, the screams of the...
of a madwoman and the nervous child ringing horrible in his ears.
Three days later, Nahum burst into Ami's kitchen in the early morning, and in the absence
of his host stammered out a desperate tale once more, while Mrs. Pierce listened in a clutching
fright.
It was little Merwin this time.
He was gone.
He had gone out late at night with a lantern and pale for water, and had never come back.
He'd been going to pieces for days and hardly knew what he was about, screamed at everything.
There had been a frantic street from the yard then, but before the father could get to the door,
the boy was gone.
There was no glow from the lantern he had taken, and of the child himself no trace.
At the time, Nahum thought the lantern and pale were gone, too, but when dawn came, and the man
had plotted back from his all-night search of the woods and fields.
He had found some very curious things near the well.
There was a crushed and apparently somewhat melted mass of iron,
which had certainly been the lantern.
While a bent pale and twisted iron hoops beside it,
both half-fused, seemed to hint at the remnants of the pale.
That was all.
Nahum was past imagining,
Mrs. Pierce was blank,
and Ami, when he had reached home and heard the tale,
could give no guess.
Merwin was gone, and there would be no use in telling the people around who shunned all gardeners now,
no use either in telling the city people at Arkham who laughed at everything.
Fad was gone, and now Merwin was gone.
Something was creeping, and creeping and waiting to be seen and heard.
Nahum would go soon, and he wanted Ami to look after his wife and Zinus if they survived him.
It must all be a judgment of some sort.
though he could not fancy what far since he had always walked uprightly in the Lord's ways so far as he knew.
For over two weeks, Sami are nothing of Nahum, and then, worried about what might have happened,
he overcame his fears and paid the gardener place a visit.
There was no smoke from the great chimney, and for a moment the visitor was apprehensive of the worst.
The aspect of the whole form was shocking.
grayish withered grass and leaves on the ground, vines falling in brittle wreckage from
archaic walls and gables, and great bare trees clawing up at the gray November sky,
with studied malevolence which Omni could not but feel had come from some subtle change
in the tilt of the branches. But Nahom was alive, after all. He was weak,
and lying in a couch in the low-sealed kitchen, but perfectly conscious and able to give
simple orders to Zenas. The room was deadly cold, and as Ami visibly shivered, the host shouted
uscally to Xenus' formal wood. Wood indeed was sorely needed, since the cavernous fireplace
was unlit and empty, with a cloud of soot blowing about in the chill wind that came down the
chimney. Presently, Nehom asked him if the extra wood had made him any more comfortable, and
then Ami saw what had happened. The stoutest cord had brought.
broken at last, and the hapless farmer's mind was proof against more sorrow.
Questioning tactfully, Ami could get no clear data at all about the missing Zenas.
In the well, he lives in the well, was all that the clouded father would say.
Then there flashed across the visitor's mind a sudden thought of the mad wife, and he changed
his line of inquiry.
"'Nabby, why here she is,' was the surprised response.
of poor Nahum, and Ami soon saw that he must search for himself. Leaving the harmless babbler
on the couch, he took the keys from their nail beside the door and climbed the creaking
stairs to the attic. It was very close and noisy him up there, and no sound could be heard
from any direction. Of the four doors in sight, only one was locked, and on this he tried
various keys on the ring he had taken. The third key proved the right one.
and after some fumbling, Ami threw open the low white door.
It was quite dark inside, for the window was small and half obscured by the crude wooden bars,
and Ami could see nothing at all on the wide planked floor.
The stench was beyond enduring, and before proceeding further,
he had to retreat to another room and return with his lungs filled with breathable air.
When he did enter, he saw something dark in the corner,
and upon seeing it more clearly he screamed outright.
While he screamed he thought a momentary cloud eclipsed the window,
and a second later he felt to himself brushed as if by some hateful current of vapor.
Strange colors danced before his eyes,
and had not a present horror numbed him,
he would have thought of the globule in the meteor that the geologist's hammer had shattered,
and of the morbid vegetation that had sprouted.
in the spring. As it was, he thought only of the blasphemous monstrosity which confronted him,
and which all too clearly had shared the nameless fate of young Thaddeus and the livestock.
But the terrible thing about the horror was that it very slowly and perceptibly moved as it
continued to crumble.
End of Part 1.
Part 2 of The Color Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft
Part 2
Ami would give me no added particulars of this scene, but the shape in the corners does not
reappear in his tail as a moving object.
There are things which cannot be mentioned, and what is done in common humanity is
sometimes cruelly judged by the law.
I gather that no moving thing was left in that attic room, and that the
leave anything capable of motion there would have been a deed so monstrous as to damn any
accountable being to eternal torment. Anyone but a stolid farmer would have fainted or gone mad.
But Ami walked conscious through that low doorway and locked the accursed secret behind him.
There would be Nahum to deal with now. He must be fed and tended and removed to some place
where he could be cared for. Commencing his descent of the dark stairs, Ami heard him.
a thud below him. He even thought a scream had been suddenly choked off, and recalled
nervously the clammy vapor which had brushed by him in that frightful room above. What presence
had his cry and entry started up? Halted by some vague fear, he heard still further sounds below.
Indubitably there was a sort of heavy dragging, and the most detestably sticky noise as of some fiendish
an unclean species of suction.
With an associative sense goaded to feverish heights,
he thought unaccountably of what he had seen upstairs.
Good God!
What Eldridge dream-world was this into which he had blundered?
He dared move neither backward nor forward,
but stood there trembling at the black curve of the box-den staircase.
Every trifle of the scene burned itself into his bed.
brain, the sounds, the sense of dread expectancy, the darkness, the steepness of the narrow stairs,
and merciful heaven, the faint but unmistakable luminosity of all the woodwork in sight,
steps, sides, exposed laths and beams alike. Then their birthed force a frantic witty
from Ami's horse outside, followed at once by a clatter which told of a frenzied runaway.
In another moment, horse and buggy had gone beyond earshot, leaving the frightened man on the dark stairs
to guess what had sent them.
But that was not all.
There had been another sound out there.
A sort of liquid splash, water.
It must have been the well.
He had left hero untied near it, and the buggy wheel must have brushed by the coping and knocked
in a stone.
and the still pale phosphorescence glowed in that detestably ancient woodwork.
God!
How old the house was!
Most of it built before 1700.
A feeble scratching on the door downstairs now sounded distinctly,
and Ami's grip tightened on a heavy stick he had picked up in the attic for some purpose.
Slowly, nerving himself, he finished his descent and walked boldly toward the kitchen.
But he did not complete the walk, because what he sought was no longer there.
It had come to meet him, and it was still alive after a fashion.
Whether it had crawled or whether it had been dragged by any external forces,
Ami could not say.
But the death had been at it.
Everything had happened in the last half-hour, but collapse, graying, and the disintegration
were already far advanced.
There was a horrible brittleness and dry fragments were scaling off.
Ami could not touch it, but looked horrifiedly into the distorted parody that had been a face.
What was it, Nehom? What was it? he whispered.
And the cleft bulging lips were just able to crackle out a final answer.
Nothing, nothing.
the color it burns, cold and wet, but it burns.
It lived in the well.
I seen it a kind of smoke, just like the flowers.
Last spring, the well shown at night.
Thad and Mervyn and Zinas, everything alive,
sucking the life out of everything.
In that stone, it must come in that stone,
pisoned the whole place.
Don't know what it wants.
That round thing, them men from the college dug out in the stone,
they smashed it.
It was that same color, just the same,
like the flowers and plants,
Must have been more of them.
Seeds.
Seeds.
They growed.
I seed it the first time this week.
I must have got strong.
And Zinus, he was a big boy full of life.
It beats down your mind and then get you, burns you up in the well water.
You was right about that?
Evil water.
Zinus never come back from the well.
Can't get away.
Droz.
You know something's coming, but taint no use.
I seen it time and again, Zinus was took.
Where's Nabi, I mean?
My head's no good.
Don't know how long since I fed her.
It'll get her if we ain't careful.
Just a collar.
Her face is getting to have that color sometimes.
Too hard night.
And it burns and sucks.
It come from some place where things ain't as they is here.
One of them professors said so.
He was right.
Look out, Ami.
It'll do something more.
Sucks the life out.
But that was all.
That which spoke could speak no more because it had completely caved in.
Ami laid a red checked tablecloth over what was left
and reeled out the back door into the fields.
He climbed the slope to the ten-acre pasture
and stumbled home by the north road and the woods.
He could not pass that well from which his horses had run away.
He had looked at it through the window
and had seen that no stone was missing from the rim.
Then the lurching buggy had not dislodged anything after all.
The splash had been something else,
something which went into the well after it had done with poor Nahum.
When Omni reached his house, the horses and buggy had arrived before him
and thrown his wife into fits of anxiety.
Reassuring her without explanations, he sat out at once for Arkham
and notified the authorities that the Gardner family was no more.
He indulged in no details but merely told of the
deaths of Nahum and Nabby, that of Thaddeus being already known, and mentioned that the cause
seemed to be the same strange ailment which had killed the livestock. He also stated that
Merwin and Xenus had disappeared. There was considerable questioning at the police station,
and in the end Ami was compelled to take three officers to the Gardener Forum, together with
the coroner, the medical examiner, and the veterinary who had treated the...
the deceased animals. He went much against his will, for the afternoon was advancing, and he feared
the fall of night over that accursed place, but it was some comfort to have so many people
with him. The six men drove out in a Democrat wagon following Ami's buggy, and arrived at the
pest-ridden farmhouse about four o'clock. Used as the officer's war to gruesome experiences,
not one remained unmoved at what was found in the attic
and under the red-checked tablecloth on the floor below.
The whole aspect of the form with its gray desolation was terrible enough,
but those two crumbling objects were beyond all bounds.
No one could long look at them,
and even the medical examiner admitted that there was very little to examine.
Specimens could be analyzed, of course,
So he busied himself in obtaining them, and here it develops that a very puzzling aftermath
occurred at the college laboratory, where the two files of dust were finally taken.
Under the spectroscope, both samples gave off an unknown spectrum in which many of the
baffling bands were precisely like those which the strange meteor had yielded in the previous
year. The property of emitting this spectrum vanished in a month, and the dust there
Thereafter consisted mainly of alkaline, phosphates and carbonates.
Ami would not have told the men about the well if he had thought they meant to do anything then and there.
It was getting towards sunset, and he was anxious to be away.
But he could not help glancing nervously at the stony curb by the great sweep,
and when a detective questioned him, he admitted that Nahom had feared something down there,
so much so that he had never even thought of something.
searching it for Merwin or Xenus.
After that, nothing would do but that they empty and explore the well immediately.
So Ami had to wait trembling while the pail after pail of rank water was hauled up and
splashed on the soaking ground outside.
The men sniffed and disgust at the fluid, and, toward the last, held their noses against
a fetter they were uncovering.
It was not so long a job as they had feared it would be, since.
the water was phenomenally low.
There is no need to speak to exactly of what they found.
Merwin and Xenus were both there, in part, though the vestiges were mainly skeletal.
There were also a small deer and a large dog in about the same state, and the number of bones
of smaller animals.
The ooze and slime at the bottom seemed inexplicably porous and bubbling, and a man who descended
on hand-holes with a long pole, found that he could sink the wooden shaft to any depth
in the mud of the floor without meeting any solid obstruction.
Twilight had now fallen, and lanterns were brought from the house.
Then, when it was seen that nothing further could be gained from the well,
everyone went indoors and conferred in the ancient sitting-room,
where the intermittent light of a spectral half-moon played wanly on the gray desolation
outside. The men were frankly noneplussed by the entire case, and could find no convincing
common element to link the strange vegetable conditions, the unknown disease of livestock in humans,
and the unaccountable death of Merwin and Xenus in the tainted well. They had heard the common
country talk, it is true, but could not believe that anything contrary to natural law had
occurred. No doubt that the meteor had poisoned the soil.
But the illness of person and animals who had eaten nothing grown in that soil was another matter.
Was it the well water?
Very possibly.
It might be a good idea to analyze it, but what peculiar madness could have made both boys jump into the well?
Their deeds were so similar, and the phragmas showed that they had both suffered from the gray-brittle death.
Why was everything so gray and brittle?
It was the coroner seated near a window overlooking the yard, who first noticed the glow about
the well.
Night had fully set in, and all the abhorrent grounds seemed faintly luminous with more than
the fitful moonbeams.
But this new glow was something definite and distinct, and appeared to shoot up from the black
pit like a softened ray from a searchlight, giving dull reflections in the little ground-pool
where the water had been emptied.
It was a very queer color,
and as all the men clustered around the window,
Ami gave a violent start.
For this strange beam of ghastly miasma
was to him of no unfamiliar hue.
He had seen that color before,
and feared to think what it might mean.
He had seen it in the nasty, brittle globule
in that aerolite two summers ago,
and had seen it in the crazy vegetation of the springtime,
and had thought he had seen it for an instant that very morning
against the small barred window of that terrible attic room
where nameless things had happened.
It had flashed there a second,
and a clammy and hateful current of vapor had brushed past him,
and then poor Nahum had been taken by something of that color.
He had said so at the last.
said it was like the globule and the plants.
After that had come the runaway in the yard and the splash in the well,
and now that well was belching forth to the night,
a pale, insidious beam of the same demoniac tent.
It does credit to the alertness of Ami's mind,
but he puzzled even at that tense moment over a point which was essentially scientific.
He could not but wonder at his gleaning of the same impression
from a vapor glimpsed in the daytime against a window opening in the morning sky,
and from a nocturnal exultation, seen as a phosphorescent mist against the black and blasted landscape.
It wasn't right. It was against nature.
And he thought of those terrible last words of his stricken friend.
It came from some place where things ain't as they is here.
One of them professors said so.
All three horses outside, tied to a pair of shriveled saplings by the road,
were now neighing and pawing frantically.
The wagon driver started for the door to do something,
but Ami laid a shaky hand on his shoulder.
"'Don't go out there,' he whispered.
"'There's more to this nor what we know.
Nayam said something lived in the well that sucks your life out.
He said it must be something that growed from a round ball
like one we all seen in the meteor stone that fell a year ago June.
Sucks and burns, he said,
and it's just a cloud of color like that light out thar now,
that ye can hardly see and can't tell what it is.
Nahum thought it feeds on everything living and gets stronger all the time.
He said he's seen it this last week.
It must be something from far off in the sky,
like the men from the college last year says the meteor-stores.
was, the way it's made and the way it works ain't like no way of God's world. It's come
at from beyond. So the men paused indecisively as the light from the well grew stronger,
and the hitched horses pawed and whinnied in increasing frenzy. It was truly an awful
moment, with terror in that ancient and accursed house itself, four monstrous sets of fragments,
two from the house and two from the well, in the woodshed behind, and that shaft of unknown
and unholy iridescence from the slimy depths in front.
Ami had restrained the driver on impulse, forgetting how uninjured he himself was after the
clammy brushing of that colored vapor in the attic room.
But perhaps it is just as well that he acted as he did.
No one will ever know what was abroad that night, and though the blasphemy from beyond,
had not so far hurt any human of unweakened mind.
There is no telling what it might not have done at that last moment,
and with its seemingly increased strength,
and the special signs of purpose it was soon to display
beneath the half-clouded moonlit sky.
All at once, one of the detectives at the window
gave a short, sharp gasp.
The others looked at him,
and then quickly followed his own gaze upward
to the point at which its idle straying had been,
suddenly arrested. There was no need for words. What had been disputed in country gossip
was disputable no longer, and it is because of the thing which every man of that party agreed
in whispering later on that strange days are never talked about in Arkham. It is necessary
to premise that there was no wind at that hour of the evening. One did arise not long
afterward, but there was absolutely none then.
Even the dry tips of the lingering hedge mustard, gray and blighted, and the fringe on the roof
of the standing Democrat wagon were unstirred.
And yet amid that tense, godless calm, the high bare boughs of all the trees in the yard
were moving.
They were twitching morbidly and basmodically, cloying in convulsive and epileptic madness at the
moonlit clouds, scratching impotently in the noxious air as if jerked by some allied and bloodless
line of linkage with subterrain horrors writhing and struggling below the black roots.
Not a man breathed for several seconds.
Then a cloud of darker depth passed over the moon, and the silhouette of clutching branches
faded out momentarily.
At this there was a general cry, muffled with awe, but husky and almost, and almost
identical from every throat. For the terror had not faded with the silhouette, and in a
fearsome instant of deeper darkness, the watchers saw wriggling at the treetop height a
thousand tiny points of faint unhallowed radiance, tipping each bow like the fire of
St. Elmo's or the flames that come down on the Apostle's heads at Pentecost.
It was a monstrous constellation of unnatural light, like a gutted
swarm of corpse-fed fireflies dancing hellish cerebans over the accursed marsh.
And its color was that same nameless intrusion which Ami had come to recognize and dread.
All the while the shaft of phosphorescence from the well was getting brighter and brighter,
bringing to the minds of the huddled men a sense of doom and abnormality,
which far outraced any image their conscious minds could form.
It was no longer shining out, it was pouring out, and as the shapeless stream of unplaceable
color left the well, it seemed to flow directly into the sky.
The veterinary shivered, and walked to the front door to drop the heavy extra bar across
it.
Ami shook no less, and had to tug and point for lack of a controllable voice when he wished
to draw notice to the growing luminosity of the trees.
The neighing and stamping of the horses had become utterly frightful, but not a soul of that
group in the old house would have ventured forth for any earthly reward.
With the moments the shining of the trees increased, while their restless branches seemed
to strain more and more toward verticality.
The wood of the well-sweep was shining now, and presently a policeman, dumbly pointed to some
wooden sheds and beehives near the stone wall on the west. They were commencing to shine,
too, though the tethered vehicles of the visitors seemed so far unaffected. Then there was a
wild commotion and clopping in the road, and as Ami quenched the lamp for better seeing,
they realized that the span of frantic grays had broken their sapling and run off with the Democrat
wagon. The shock served to loosen several tongues, and embarrassed whistening.
aspers were exchanged.
"'It spreads on everything organic that's been around here,' muttered the medical examiner.
No one replied, but the man who had been in the well gave a hint that his long pole must
have stirred up something intangible.
"'It was awful,' he added.
"'There was no bottom at all, just ooze and bubbles, and the feeling of something lurking
under there.'
Ami's horse still pawed and screamed.
deafeningly in the road outside, and nearly drowned his owner's faint quaver as he mumbled his
formless reflections.
"'It came from that stone.
It growed down there.
It got everything living.
It fed itself on them, mind and body, Thad and Merwin, Zinus and Nabi.
Nabham was the last.
They all drunk the water.
It got so strong on them.
It come from beyond where things ain't like.
like they be here. Now it's going home. At this point, as the column of unknown color flared suddenly
stronger and began to weave itself into fantastic suggestions of shape, which each spectator
later described differently, there came from the poor tethered hero such a sound as no man
before our sense ever heard from a horse. Every person in that low-pitched sitting room stopped his
ears, and Ami turned away from the window in horror and nausea.
Words could not convey it.
When Ami looked out again, the hapless beasts lay huddled inert on the moonlit ground
between the splintered chaffs of the buggy.
That was the last of hero till they buried him next day.
But the present was no time to mourn.
For almost at this instant a detective silently called attention to something terrible in
the very room with them.
In the absence of the lamplight it was clear that a faint phosphorescence had begun to pervade
the entire apartment.
It glowed on the broad planked floor where the rag carpet left it bare and shimmered over
the sashes of the small pane windows.
It ran up and down the exposed corner posts, cariscated about the shelf and mantle, and
infected the very doors and furniture.
Every minute saw it strengthen, and at last it.
It was very plain that healthy living things must leave that house.
Ami showed them the back door and the path up through the fields to the ten-acre pasture.
They walked and stumbled as in a dream and dare not look back till they were far away on the high ground.
They were glad of the path, for they could not have gone the front way by that well.
It was bad enough passing the glowing barn and sheds, and those shining orchard trees with their
gnarled fiendish contours, but thank heavens the branches did their worst twisting high up.
The moon went under some very black clouds as they crossed the rustic bridge over Chapman's brook,
and it was blind groping from there to the open meadows.
When they looked back toward the valley and the distant Gardner Place at the bottom,
they saw a fearsome sight.
All the form was shining with the hideous, unknown blend of color.
trees, building, and even grass and herbage, as had not been wholly changed to lethal gray
brittleness.
The boughs were all straining skyward, tipped with tongues of foul flame, and lambent tricklings
of the same monstrous fire, were creeping about the ridge-poles of the house, barn, and sheds.
It was a scene from a vision of Fuseli, and overall the rest reigned that riot of luminous, amorphousness,
that alien and undimensioned rainbow of cryptic poison from the well, seething, feeling,
lapping, reaching, scintillating, straining, and malignly bubbling in its cosmic and unrecognizable
chromaticism.
Then, without warning, the hideous thing shot vertically up toward the sky, like a rocket or meteor,
leaving behind no trail, and disappearing through a round and curiously regular hole in the cloud,
before any man could gasp or cry out.
No watcher can ever forget that sight.
And Ami stared blankly at the stars of Cygnus,
Daneb twinkling above the others,
where the unknown color had melted into the Milky Way.
But his gaze was the next moment called swiftly to earth
by the crackling in the valley.
It was just that.
Only a wooden ripping and crackling,
and not an explosion,
as so many others of the party vowed.
Yet the outcome was the same,
for in one feverish kaleidoscopic instant
there burst up from that doomed and accursed form
a glimmeringly eruptive cataclysm of unnatural sparks and substance,
blurring the glance of the few who saw it,
and sending forth to the zenith a bombarding cloudburst
of such colored and fantastic fragments
as our universe must needs disown.
Through quickly reclosing vapour,
they followed the great morbidity that had vanished, and in another second they had vanished
too. Behind and below was only a darkness to which the men dared not return, and all about
was a mounting wind which seemed to sweep down in black foray gusts from interstellar space.
It shrieked and howled and lashed the fields and distorted woods in a mad cosmic frenzy.
till soon the trembling party realized it would be no use waiting for the moon to show what was left down there in Mayhomes.
Too odd even to hint theories, the seven shaken men trudged back toward Arkham by the North Road.
Ami was worse than his fellows and begged them to see him inside his own kitchen, instead of keeping straight on to the town.
He did not wish to cross the blighted, wind-wipped woods alone,
to his home on the main road, for he had had an added shock that the others were spared,
and was crushed forever with a brooding fear he dared not even mention for many years to come.
As the rest of the watchers on that tempestuous hill had stolidly set their faces toward the road,
Ami had looked back an instant at the shadowed valley of desolation so lately sheltering his ill-starred friend.
And from that strickened faraway spot he had seen something feebly rise only to sink down again upon the place from which the great shapeless horror had shot into the sky.
It was just a color, but not any color of our earth or heavens.
And because Omni recognized that color and knew that this last faint remnant must still lurk down there in the well,
he has never been quite right since.
Ami would never go near the place again.
It is forty-four years now since the horror happened,
but he has never been there,
and will be glad when the new reservoir blots it out.
I shall be glad, too,
for I do not like the way the sunlight changed color
around the mouth of that abandoned well I passed.
I hope the water will always be very deep,
but even so I shall never drink it.
I do not think I shall visit the Arkham country hereafter.
Three of the men who had been with Ami returned the next morning to see the ruins by daylight.
But there were not any real ruins.
Only the bricks of the chimney, the stones of the cellar, some mineral and metallic litter here and there,
and the rim of that Nefandus well,
save for Omni's dead horse which they towed away and buried,
and the buggy which they shortly returned to him,
everything that had ever been living had gone.
Five elrich acres of dusty, gray desert remained,
nor has anything ever grown there since.
To this day it sprawls open to the sky,
like a great spot eaten by acid in the woods and fields,
and the few who have ever dared glimpse it in spite of the rural tales
have named it the blasted heath.
The rural tales are queer.
They might be even queerer if citymen and college chemists could be interested enough to analyze the water from that disused well or the gray dust that no wind seems ever to disperse.
Botanist, too, ought to study the stunted flora on the borders of that spot, for they might shed light on the country notion that the blight is spreading, little by little, perhaps an inch a year.
People say the color of the neighboring herbage is not quite right in the spring, and that
wild things leave queer prints in the light winter snow. Snow never seems quite so heavy
on the blasted heat as it is elsewhere. Horses, the few that are left in this motor age,
grow skittish in the silent valley, and hunters cannot depend on their dogs too near the splotch
of grayish dust. They say the mental influences are very bad, too.
Numbers went queer in the years after Nahams taking, and always they lack the power to get away.
Then the stronger-minded folks all left the region, and only the foreigners tried to live in the crumbling old homesteads.
They could not stay, though, and one sometimes wonders what insight beyond ours their wild, weird stories of whispered magic have given them.
Their dreams at night they protest are very horrible in that grotesque country,
and surely the very look of the dark realm is enough to stir a morbid fancy.
No traveler has ever escaped a sense of strangeness in those deep ravines,
and artists shiver as they paint thick woods,
whose mystery is as much of the spirits as of the eye.
I myself am curious about the sensation I derived from my one lone walk
before Ami told me his tale.
When twilight came, I had vaguely wished some cloud,
would gather, for odd timidity about the deep skyy voids above had crept into my soul.
Do not ask me for my opinion. I do not know. That is all. There was no one but
Ami to question, for Arkham people will not talk about the strange days, and all three
professors who saw the aerolite and its colored globule are dead. There were other globules
depend upon that. One must have fed itself and escaped.
and probably there was another which was too late.
No doubt it is still down the well.
I know there was something wrong with the sunlight I saw above that miasmal brink.
The rustics say the blight creeps an inch a year.
So perhaps there is a kind of growth or nourishment even now.
But whatever demon hatchling is there,
it must be tethered to something or else it would quickly spread.
Is it fastened to the roots of those trees that
claw the air? One of the current Arkham tales is about fat oaks that shine and move as they
ought not to at night. What it is, only God knows. In terms of matter, I suppose, the thing
Ami described would be called a gas, but this gas obeyed laws that were not of our cosmos.
This was no fruit of such whirls and suns as shine on the telescopes and photographic plates of our
observatories. There was no breath from the skies whose motions and dimensions our astronomers
measure or deem too vast measure. It was just a color out of space, a frightful messenger
from unformed realms of infinity beyond all nature as we know it, from realms whose mere
existence stuns the brain and numbs us with the black extra-cosmic gulfs it throws open before our frenzied eyes.
very much if Ami consciously lied to me, and I do not think his tale was all a freak of madness,
as the townfolk had forewarned. Something terrible came to the hills and valleys on that meteor,
and something terrible, though I know not in what proportion, still remains. I shall be glad
to see the water come. Meanwhile, I hope nothing will happen to Ami. He saw so much of the thing
and its influences were so insidious, why has he never been able to move away?
How clearly he recalled those dying words of Nahams.
Can't get away. Drozh, you know some is that coming, but tain't no use.
Ami is such a good old man.
When the reservoir gang get to work, I must write the chief engineer to keep a short watch on him.
I would hate to think of him as the gray, twisted, brist,
monstrosity, which persists more and more in troubling my sleep.
End of Part 2. End of The Color Out of Space by H.P. Lovecraft.
