Classic Audiobook Collection - The Man with a Thousand Legs by Frank Belknap Long ~ Full Audiobook [horror]
Episode Date: March 29, 2024The Man with a Thousand Legs by Frank Belknap Long audiobook. Genre: horror Told through a trail of letters, statements, and recovered documents, The Man with a Thousand Legs pieces together a case t...hat no single witness can explain alone. When unsettling reports begin to circulate about a brilliant but obsessive researcher, Dr. Marston, curiosity turns to dread as friends, officials, and bystanders try to make sense of what he has done behind locked doors. Marston is certain he has found a way to force the next step of human evolution, but his experiment produces something that moves wrong, grows wrong, and leaves behind a slick, horrifying evidence of its passage. As the accounts accumulate, so do the contradictions: is this a medical marvel, a cruel hoax, or proof that some boundaries should never be tested? With each new testimony, the creature at the center of the mystery becomes more vivid and more impossible, and the narrators must decide whether to expose the truth, contain it, or simply survive it. Frank Belknap Long blends mad science and mounting paranoia into a tight, claustrophobic nightmare where knowledge itself feels contagious. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:06:30) Chapter 02 (00:17:22) Chapter 03 (00:22:26) Chapter 04 (00:29:14) Chapter 05 (00:37:21) Chapter 06 (00:42:52) Chapter 07 (00:51:43) Chapter 08 (00:52:34) Chapter 09 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Chapter 1 of The Man with a Thousand Legs
By Frank Belknap Long
Chapter 1
Statement of Horace Randall, Psychoanalyst
Someone rapped loudly on the door of my bedroom
It was past midnight, but I had been unable to sleep,
and I welcomed the disturbance.
Who's there? I asked.
A young man, what insists on being admitted, sir?
replied the raucous voice of my housekeeper.
A young man, and very young man, and very,
very thin and pale he is, sir.
What says he's business, what won't wait?
He's in bed, I says, but then he says
is how you're the only doctor, what can help him now?
He says is how he hasn't slipped, or eight for a week, and he ain't...
Nothing but a boy, sir.
Tell him he can come in, I replied, as I slid into my dressing gown and reached for a cigar.
The door opened to admit a thin shaft of light,
and a young man so incredibly emaciated that I stared at him in horror.
He was six feet tall and extremely broad-shouldered, but I don't think he weighed 100 pounds.
As he approached me, he staggered and leaned against the wall for support.
His eyes fairly blazed.
It was obvious that some tremendous idea swayed him.
I gently indicated a chair, and he collapsed into it.
For a moment, he sat and surveyed me.
When I offered him a cigar, he brushed it aside with a gesture of contempt.
Why should I poison my body with such things?
He snapped.
Tobacco is for weaklings and children.
I studied him curiously.
He was apparently an extraordinary young man.
His forehead was high and broad.
His nose was curved like a scimitar,
and his lips were so tightly compressed
that only a thin line indicated his mouth.
I waited for him to speak,
but silence enveloped him like a rubber jacket.
I shall have to break the ice somehow, I reflected,
and then suddenly I heard myself asking.
You have something to tell me,
me, some confession perhaps that you wish to make to me?
My question aroused him.
His shoulders jerked, and he leaned forward, gripping both arms of his chair.
I have been robbed of my birthright, he said.
I'm a man of genius, and once, for a brief moment, I had power.
Tremendous power!
Once I projected my personality before vast multitudes of people, and every word that I uttered
increased my fame and flattered my vanity.
He was trembling and shaking.
so violently that I was obliged to rise and lay a restraining hand upon his shoulder.
Delusions of magnificence, I murmured, undoubtedly induced by a malignant inferiority complex.
It is not that, he snapped. I am a poet, an artist, and I have within me a tremendous force that must be expanded.
The world has denied me self-expression through legitimate channels, and now I am justified in hating the world.
Let society beware.
He threw back his head and laughed.
His hilarity seemed to increase the tension that had somehow crept into the room.
Call me a madman, if you will, he exclaimed.
But I crave power.
I cannot rest until my name is on a million lips.
A conservative course of treatment, I began.
I want no treatment, he shouted.
And then, in a less agitated voice, you would be surprised, perhaps if I told you my name.
What is your name?
I asked.
Arthur Saint Armand, he replied and stood up.
I was so astonished that I dropped my cigar.
I may even add that I was momentarily awed.
Arthur Saint Amand.
Arthur St. Amand, he repeated,
you are naturally amazed to discover that the pale harassed
and half-insane youth that you see before you
was once called the Pier of Newton and Leonardo da Vinci.
You are amazed to discover that the starving lad
with an inferiority complex,
was once fetid by kings
and praised by men
whose lightest words
will go thundering down time.
It is all so amazing
and so uproariously funny.
But the tragedy remains.
Like Dr. Faustus,
I once looked upon the face of God,
and now I'm less than any schoolboy.
You are still very young,
I gasped.
You can't be more than 24.
I am 23.
he said. It was precisely three years ago that I published my brochure on ethric vibrations.
For six months, I lived in a blaze of glory. I was the marvelous boy of the scientific world,
and then that Frenchman advanced his theory. I suppose you mean Monsieur Paul Rondoli, I interrupted.
I recall the sensation his startling refutation made at the time. He completely eclipsed you
in the popular mind, and later the scientific world declared,
you a fraud. Your star set very suddenly.
But it will rise again, exclaimed my young visitor.
The world will discuss me again, and this time I shall not be forgotten.
I shall prove my theory. I shall demonstrate that the effect of atheric vibration on single
cells is to change, to change.
He hesitated and then suddenly shouted, but no, I shall not tell you.
I shall tell no one. I came here tonight to.
unburden my mind to you. At first I thought of going to a priest. It is necessary that I should confess to someone.
When my thoughts are driven in upon themselves, they become monstrous. I have an active and terrible
brain and I must speak out occasionally. I chose you because you are a man of intelligence and
discrimination, and you have heard many confessions. But I shall not discuss ethereal vibrations
with you.
When you see it, you will understand.
He turned abruptly and walked out of the room,
and out of my house without once looking back.
I never saw him again.
End of Chapter 1.
Chapter 2 of The Man with a Thousand Legs by Frank Bulknapp Long.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 2
Diary of Thomas Sheel
novelist and short story writer.
July 21st.
This is my fourth day at the beach.
I've already gained three pounds,
and I'm so sun-baked that I frightened a little girl
when I went swimming this morning.
She was building sandcastles,
and when she saw me, she dropped her shovel
and ran shrieking to her mother.
Horrible black man, she shouted.
I suppose she thought I was a genie out of the Arabian nights.
It's pleasant here.
I've almost got the evil taste of New York out of my mouth.
Elsie's coming down for the weekend
July 22nd
The little girl I frightened yesterday has disappeared
The police are searching for her
And it is generally believed that she has been kidnapped
The unfortunate occurrence has depressed everyone at the beach
All bathing parties have been abandoned
And even the children sit about sad-eyed and dejected
No footprints were found on the sands near the spot where the child was last seen
July 23rd
Another child has disappeared
and this time the abductor left a clue.
A young man's walking stick and hat were found near the scene of a violent struggle.
The sand for yards around was stained with blood.
Several mothers left the new beach hotel this morning with their children.
July 24th.
Elsie came this morning.
A new crime occurred at the very moment of her arrival,
and I scarcely had the heart to explain the situation to her.
My paleness evidently frightened her.
"'What is the matter?' she asked.
"'You look ill.'
"'I am ill,' I replied.
"'I saw something dreadful on the beach this morning.'
"'Good heavens!' she exclaimed.
"'Have they found one of the children?'
"'It was a great relief to me that she had read about the children in the New York papers.
"'No,' I said.
"'They didn't find the children, but they found the body of a man,
"'and he didn't have a drop of blood in him.
"'He had been drained dry,
and all about his body the investigators found curious little mounds of yellowish slime, of ooze.
When the sunlight struck this substance, it glittered.
Has it been examined under a microscope? asked Elsie.
They are examining it now, I explained.
We shall know the results by this evening.
God pity us all, said Elsie, and she staggered and nearly fell.
I was obliged to support her as we entered the hotel.
July 25th.
Two curious developments.
The chemist who examined the jellyfish substance found near the body on the beach
declares that it is a living protoplasm,
and he has sent it to the Department of Health for classification by one of their expert biologists.
In a deep pool, some eight yards in diameter,
has been discovered in a rock fissure, about a mile from the New Beach Hotel,
which evidently harbors some queer denizens.
The water in this pool is as black as ink, and strongly saline.
The pool is eight or ten feet from the ocean,
but it is affected by the tides and descends afoot for every night and morning.
This morning, one of the guests of the hotel,
a young lady named Clara Phillips,
had come upon the pool quite by accident,
and being fascinated by its sinister appearance had decided to sketch it.
She had seated herself on the rim of the rock fisher,
and was in the act of sketching in several large boulders in a strip of beach
when something made a curious noise beneath her.
It said.
She gave a little cry and jumped up just in time to escape a long golden tentacle
which slithered towards her over the rocks.
The tentacle protruded from the very center of the pool,
out of the black water, and it filled her with unutterable loathing.
She stepped quickly forward and stamped upon it,
and her attack was so sudden that the thing was unable to flip away from her and escape back into the water.
And Miss Phillips was an amazingly strong young woman.
She ground the end of the tentacle into a bloody pulp with her heel.
Then she turned and ran.
She ran as she had not run since her prep school days,
but as she raced across the soft beach,
she fancied she could hear a monstrous, lumbering, something pursuing her.
It is to her credit that she did not look back.
And this is the story of little hairy doughty.
I offered him a beautiful new dime, but he told it to me gratis.
I give it in his own words.
Yes, sir. I've always known about that pool.
I used to fish for crabs and sea cucumbers and big purple anemones in it, sir.
But until last week I'll us know what I'd bring up.
One or twice I used to get something a bit out of the ordinary,
such as bleeding tooth shell or a headless worm with green sucker.
in its tail and looking like the devil on a Sunday outing or a no-one-looking skate what
had glared and glare at me, sir.
But never nothing like this thing, sir.
I caught it on the top of its head, and it had the most human-looking eyes I ever saw.
They were blue and soulless, sir.
It spat at me, and I throws down my line and beats it.
I beats it, sir.
Then I hears it lumbering after me over the beach.
It made a funny gulping noise as if it was a licking.
its chops.
July 26.
Elsie and I are leaving tomorrow.
I'm on the verge of a lethal collapse.
Elsie stutters whenever she tries to talk.
I don't blame her for stuttering,
but I can't understand why she wants to talk at all
after what we've seen.
There are some things that can only be expressed by silence.
The local chemist got a report this morning,
from the Board of Health.
The stuff found on the beach consisted of
hundreds of cells very much like the cells
that compose the human body.
And yet, they weren't human cells.
The biologists were completely mystified by them,
and a small culture is now on its way to Washington,
and another is being sent to the American Museum of Natural History.
This morning, the local authorities investigated the curious black pool in the rocks.
Elsie and I and most of the other vacationists were on hand to watch operations.
Thomas Wilshire, a member of the New Jersey Constabulary,
threw a plummet line into the pool, and we all watched it.
eagerly as it paid out.
A hundred feet,
murmured Elsie as the police looked at one another in amazement.
Probably went into the sea, someone exclaimed.
I don't think the pool itself is that deep,
Thomas Wilshire shook his head.
There's queer things in that pool, he said.
I don't like the looks of it.
The diver was a bristling, bravo little man
with some obscure nervous affliction
that made him tremble violently.
You'll have to go down at once, said Wilshire.
The diver shook his head and shuffled his feet.
Get him into his suit, boys, ordered Wilshire,
and the poor wretch was lifted bodily upon strong shoulders
and transformed into a loathsome goggle-eyed monster.
In a moment he had advanced to the pool
and vanished into its sinister black depths.
Two men worked valiantly at the pumps
while Wilshire nodded sleepily and scratched his chin.
I wonder what he'll find, he mused.
Personally, I don't think he's got much chance of ever coming.
up. I wouldn't be in his shoes for all the money in the United States men.
After several minutes, the rubber tubing began to jerk violently.
The poor lad, muttered Wilshire.
I knew he didn't have a chance. Pull, boys, pull.
The tubing was rapidly pulled in. There was nothing attached to it, but the lower portion was
covered, with glittering golden slime. Willshire picked up the severed end and examined it
casually.
Neatly clipped, he said.
The poor devil.
The rest of us looked at one another in horror.
Elsie grew so pale that I thought she was about to faint.
Wilshire was speaking again.
We've made one momentous discovery, he said.
We crammed eagerly forward.
Willshire paused for the fraction of a second.
And a faint smile of triumph curled his lips.
There's something in that pool.
He finished.
Our friend's life has not been given in vain.
I had an absurd desire to punch his fat, triumphant face.
It might have done so, but a scream from the others quelled the impulse.
Look!
cried Elsie.
She was pointing at the black surface of the pool.
It was changing color.
Slowly it was assuming a reddish hue,
and then a hellish something shot up and bobbed for a moment on its surface.
A human eye!
arm, groaned Elsie and hid her face in her hands.
Wilshire whistled softly.
Two more objects joined the first, and then something round,
which made Elsie stare and stare through the spaces between her fingers.
Come away, I commanded.
Come away at once.
I seized her by the arm and was in the act of forcefully leading her from the edge of that dreadful charnel.
For charnel it had become, when I was arrested by a shout from Wilshire.
Look at it!
Look at it!
He yelled.
That's the horrid thing.
God, it isn't human.
We turned back and stared.
There are blasphemies of creation
that cannot be described,
and the thing which rose up to claim
the escaping fragments of its dismantled prey
was of that order.
I remember vaguely as in a nightmare of tartarus,
that it had long golden arms
which shone and sparkled in the sunlight,
and a monstrous curved beak
below two piercing black eyes in which I saw nothing but unutterable malice.
The idea of standing there and watching it munch the fragmentary remains of the poor little diver
was intolerable to me.
And in spite of the loud protests of Wilshire, who wanted us, I supposed, to try and do something
about it, I turned and ran, literally dragging Elsie with me.
This was, as it turned out, the wisest thing I could have done,
because the thing later emerged from the pool and nearly got several of the vacationists.
Wilshire fired at it twice with a pistol, but the thing flopped back into the water,
apparently unharmed and submerged triumphantly.
End of Chapter 2.
Chapter 3 of The Man with a Thousand Legs by Frank Boke-Nap-Long.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 3
Statement of Henry Greb
Prescription Drugist
I usually shut up shop at 10 o'clock
But at closing time that evening
I was leaning over the counter
Reading a ghost story
And it was so extremely interesting
That I couldn't walk out on it
My nose was very close to the page
And I didn't notice anything that was going on about me
When suddenly I happened to look up
And there he was standing and watching me
I've seen some pale people in my time
most people that come with prescriptions are pale,
and I've seen some skinny people,
but I never have seen anyone as thin and pale as the young man that stood before me.
Good heavens, I said, and shut the book.
The young man's lips were twisted into a sickly smile.
Sorry to bother you, he says,
but I'm in a bad way. I'm in desperate need of medical attention.
What can I do to help you, I says.
He looked at me very solemnly, as if he were making up his mind whether he could trust me.
This is really a case for a physician, he says.
It's against the law for us to handle such cases, I told him.
Suddenly he held out his hand. I gasped.
The fingers were smashed into a bloody pulp and blood was running down his wrist.
Do something to stop the bleeding, he says.
I'll see a physician later.
Well, I got out some gauze and bound the chest.
the hand up as best I could.
See a doctor at once, I told him.
Blood poisoning will set in if you're not careful.
Luckily, none of the bones are fractured.
He nodded, and for a moment his eyes flashed.
Damn that woman, he muttered.
Damn her.
What's that? I asked, but he had got himself together again and merely smiled.
I'm all upset, he said.
Didn't know just what I was saying.
You must pardon me.
By the way, I've got a little gash on my scalp, which you might look at.
He removed his cap, and I noticed that his hair was dripping wet.
He parted it with his hand and revealed a nasty abrasion about an inch wide.
I examined it carefully.
Your friend wasn't very careful when he cast that plug, I says at length.
I never believe in fly fishing when there's two in the boat.
A friend of mine lost an eye that way.
It was made by a fish hook, he confessed.
You're something of a Sherlock Holmes, aren't you?
I brushed aside his compliment with a careless gesture and turned for the bottle of carbolic acid,
which rested on the shelf behind me.
It was then that I heard something between a growl and a gulp from the young man.
I wheeled abruptly and caught him in the act of springing upon me.
He was foaming at the mouth and his eyes bulged.
I reached forward and seized him by the shoulders,
and in a moment we engaged in a desperate struggle upon the floor.
He bit and scratched and kicked at me, and I was obliged to silence him by pummeling his face.
It was at that moment that I noticed a peculiar fishy odor in the room, as if a breeze from the sea had entered through the open door.
For several moments, I struggled and fought and strained, and then something seemed to give suddenly beneath me.
The young man slipped from my grasp and made for the door.
I endeavored to follow, but I stumbled over something slippery and fell flat upon my face.
When I got up, the young man was gone, and in my hand I held something so weird that I could scarcely believe that it was real.
And later I flung it from me, with a cry of disgust.
It was a reddish-rubbery substance, about five inches long, and its under-edge was lined with little golden suckers that opened and closed while I stared at them.
I was still laboring under a fearful strain when Harry Morton entered the shop.
He was trembling violently, and I noticed that he gazed fearfully behind him as he approached the
counter. What's the best thing you have for highfalutinactin?
nerves, he asks.
Bromides, I says. I can mix you some, but what's the trouble with your nerves, Harry?
Hallucinations!
He groans?
Them and other things.
Well, tell me about it, I says.
I was leaning against a lint post, he says.
And I sees a big lumbering, yellowish thing walking along the street like a man.
It wasn't natural, Henry. I'm not.
superstitious, but that their thing wasn't natural.
And then it flops into the gutter and runs like a streak of lightning.
It made a funny noise, too.
It said, gulp.
I mixed the bromides and handed him the glass over the counter.
I understand, Harry, I says,
but don't go about blowing your head off.
No one wouldn't believe you.
End of chapter three.
Chapter four of the man with a thousand legs by Frank Belknap Long.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 4
Statement of Helen Bowen
I was sitting on the porch knitting
when a young man with a bag
stops in front of the house
and looks up at me.
Good morning, madam, he says,
Have you a room with bath?
Look at the sign, young man, I says to him,
I have a nice light room on the second floor
that should just suit you.
"'Up he comes and smiles at me, but as soon as I saw him close, I didn't like him.
"'He was so terribly thin and his hand was bandaged, and he looked as if he had been in a fight.
"'How much do you want for the room?' he asks.
"'Twelve dollars,' I told him.
"'I wanted to get rid of him, and I thought the high rate would scare him off.
"'But his hand goes suddenly into his pocket and he brings out a roll of bills and begins counting them.
"'I get up very quickly and bowes politely to him.
him and takes his grip away from him and rushes into the hall with it.
I didn't want to lose a prospect like that.
Cousin Hiram has a game which he plays with shells,
and I knew that the young man would be Cousin Hiram's oyster.
I takes him upstairs and shows him the room, and he seems quite pleased with it.
But when he sees the bathtub, he begins jumping up and down like a schoolboy and clapping his
hands and acting so odd that I begins to suspect that he is going out of his mind.
"'It's just the right size,' he shouts.
"'I hope you won't mind my keeping it filled all day.
"'I bathe quite often, but I must have some salt to put into it.
"'I can't bathe in fresh water.'
"'He's certainly a queer one,' I thought, but I ain't complaining.
"'It isn't off in Hiram and I land a fish as rich as this one.'
"'Finally he calms down and pushes me out of the room.
"'Everything's all right,' he says.
"'But I don't want to be disturbed.
When you get the salt, put it down in the hall and knock on the door.
Under no circumstances must anyone enter this room.
He closed the door in my face, and I heard the key great in the lock.
I didn't like it, and I didn't like the sounds that began to come from behind that door.
First, I heard a great sighs if somehow he had got something disagreeable off his chest.
And then I heard a funny gulping sound I didn't like.
He didn't waste any time in turning on the water either.
I heard a great splashing and wallowing, and then after about 15 minutes everything became quiet as death.
We didn't hear anything more from him until that evening, when I sent Lizzie up with a salt.
At first she tried the door, but it was locked, and she was obliged to put the bag down in the hall,
but she didn't go away. She squeezed up close against the wall and waited.
After about ten minutes the door opened slowly in a long, thin arm, shot out and took in the bag.
Lizzie said that the arm was yellow and dripping wet,
and the thinest arm she'd ever seen.
But he's a thin young man, Lizzie, I explains to her.
Well, that may be, she says.
But I never saw a human being with an arm like that before.
Later, along about ten o'clock, I should say,
I was sitting in the parlor,
sewing when I felt something wet land on my hand.
I look up and the ceiling was dripping red.
I mean just what I say.
ceiling was all moist and dripping red. I jumped up and ran out into the hall. I wanted to
scream, but I bit my lips until the blood begins running down my chin, and that makes me sober
and determined. That young man must go. I says to myself, I can't have anything that isn't proper
going on in this house. I climbs the stairs, looking as grim as death, and pounds on the young
man's door. I won't stand for whatever's going on in there, I shouted. Open that door. I heard something
"'flopping about inside, and then the young man
"'speak into himself in a very low voice.
"'This demands are insatiable.
"'The vile, hungry beast.
"'Why doesn't it think of something besides its stomach?
"'I didn't want it to come then,
"'but it doesn't need the ray now.
"'When its appetite is aroused, it changes without the ray.
"'God, but had a hard time getting back,
"'longer and longer between.'
"'Suddenly, he seemed to hear the pounding.
"'His queer chattering stops,
"'and I hear the key turn in the line.
lock. The door opens ever so slightly, and his face looks out at me. He is horrible to look at. His
cheeks are sunken, and there are big horrid rings under his eyes. There is a bandage tied
about his head. I want you to leave at once, I tells him, there's queer things going on in here,
and I can't stand for queer things. You've got to leave. He sighed and nodded. That's just as well,
perhaps, he says. I was thinking of going anyway.
there are rats here rats i gasped but i wasn't really surprised i knew there were rats in the house they made life miserable for me i was never able to get rid of them even the cats feared them i can't stand rats he continues i'm packing up clearing out now
he shuts the door in my face and i hears him throwing his things into a bag then the door opens again and he comes out on the landing he is terribly pale and he leans against the wall to catch himself and then he starts
descending the stairs. I watch him as he goes down, and when he reaches the first landing,
he staggers and leans against the wall. Then he seems to grow shorter, and he goes down the last
flight, three steps at a time. Then he makes a running leap toward the door. I never saw anyone get
through a door so quick, and I begins to suspect that he's done something that he's ashamed of.
So I turns about and goes into the room. When I looks at the floor, I nearly faints. It's all slippery and
wet and seven dead rats are lined on their backs in the center of the room, and they are the
palest-looking rats I've ever seen. Their noses and tails are pure white, and they looks as if they
didn't have a drop of blood in them. And then I goes into the alcove and looks at the bathtub.
I won't tell you what I see there, but you remember what I says about the ceiling downstairs?
Says it was dripping red, and the alcove wasn't so very different. I gets out of that room as
quick as I can.
And I shuts and locks the door.
And then I goes downstairs and telephones to Cousin Hiram.
Come right over, Hiram.
I says, something terrible has been here.
End of Chapter 4.
Chapter 5 of The Man with a Thousand Legs by Frank Belk Knapp Long.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 5.
Statement of Walter Noyes, Lighthouse Keeper.
I was pretty well done up. I'd been polishing the lamps all afternoon, and there were calluses on my hands as big as hens eggs.
I went up into the tower and shut myself in and got out a book that I'd been reading off and on for a week.
It was the translation of the Arabian Nights by a fellow named Lang.
Imaginative stuff like that is a great comfort to a chap when he's shut up by himself away off on the rim of the world.
that I always enjoyed reading about Shimsulnir and Daria bar and the young king of the Black Isles.
I was reading the first part of the King of the Black Isles and had reached the sentence,
and then the youth drew away his rope, and the Sultan perceived with horror that he was a man only to his waist,
and from thence to his feet he had changed into marble, when I happened to look toward the window.
An icy south wind was driving the rain furiously against the panes,
and at first I saw nothing but a translucent glitter on the wet glass,
and vaguely beyond that the gleaming turmoil of dark enormous waves.
Then a dazzling and indescribable shape flattened itself against the window
and blotted out the black sea and sky.
I gasped and jumped up.
A monstrous squid! I muttered.
The storm must have blown it ashore.
That tentacle will smash the glass if I don't do something.
I reached for my slicker in hat, and in a moment I was
descend in the spiral stairway three steps at a time.
Before merging into the storm, I awed myself with a revolver and the contents of a tumbler of strong Jamaican rum.
I paused for a moment in the doorway and stared about me.
But from where I stood I could see nothing but the tall gray boulders,
fringing the southern extremity of the island,
and a stretch of heaving and rolling water.
The rain beat against my face and nearly blinded me,
and a deep murmur arose from the intolerable wash of the waves.
before me lay only a furious and tortured immensity.
Behind my back was the warmth and security of my miniature castle,
a mellow pipe and a book of valiant movies,
but I couldn't ignore the menace of the loathsome shape
that had pressed itself against the glass.
I descended three short steps to the rocks
and made my way rapidly toward the rear of the lighthouse.
Drops of rain more acrid than tears ran down my cheeks and into my mouth
and dripped from the corners of my mustache.
The overpowering darkness clung like a leech to my clothes.
I hadn't gone twenty paces before I came upon a motionless figure.
At first I saw nothing but the head and shoulders of a well-shaped man.
But as I drew cautiously nearer,
I collided with something that made me cry out in terror.
A hideous tentacle shot out and wound itself about my leg.
With a startled cry I turned and attempted to run,
but out of the macrocarpus darkness leaped in another slimy arm in another.
My fingers tightened on the revolver.
in my pocket, I whipped it out and opened fire on the writhing brutes. The report of my gun echoed
from the surrounding boulders. A sudden shrill scream of agony broke the comparative quiet that followed.
Then there came a voluble, passionate pleading.
Don't shoot again. Please don't. I'm done up. I was done up when I came here, and I wanted
help. I didn't intend to harm you. Before God, I didn't intend that they should attack you,
but I can't control them now. They're too much for me. It's too much for me. Pitying.
me. For a moment
I was two days to think, I stared
stupidly at the smoking revolver in my
hand, and then my eyes sought the cataclysmic
ocean. The enormous waves
calmed me. Slowly I brought
my eyes to bear on the thing before me.
But even as I stared
at it, my brain reeled again and a deadly
nausea came upon me.
And then the youth drew away
his robe, and the sultan perceived
that he was a man only to his waist.
Several feet from where
I stood a monstrous jelly.
spread itself loathomely over the dripping rocks, and from its vained central mass a thousand tentacles depended and writhed like the serpents on the head of Medusa, and growing from the middle of this obscenity was the torso and head of a naked young man.
His hair was matted and covered with seaweed, and there were bloodstains upon his high white forehead.
His nose was so sharp that it reminded me of a sword, and I'm momentarily expected to see it glitter in the dim mysterious.
light. His teeth chattered so loudly that I could hear them from where I stood, and as I stared and stared at me, he coughed violently and foamed at the lips.
Whiskey, he muttered. I'm all done up. I ran into a ship. I was unable to speak, but I believe I made some strange noises in my throat. The young man nodded hysterically.
I knew you'd understand, he muttered. I'm up against it, but I knew you'd help me pull through. A glass of whiskey.
"'How did that thing get you?' I shrieked.
I'd found my voice at last and was determined to fight my way back to sanity.
How did that thing get its loathsome coils on you?'
"'It didn't get me,' groaned the young man.
"'I'm it.'
"'You're what?'
"'A part of it,' replied the young man.
"'Is it that thing swallowing you?'
I screamed at him.
"'Aren't you going down into its
belly at this moment.
The young man sadly shook his head.
It's part of me, he said again, and then more wildly,
I must have something to brace me up.
I'm all in. I was swimming on the surface, and a ship came and cut off six of my legs.
I'm weak from loss of blood, and I can't stand.
A laid hand went up and brushed the water from battered eyes.
A few of them are still lively, he said, and I can't control him.
"'They nearly got you, but the others are all in.
"'I can't walk on them.'
"'Well, as much boldness as I could muster,
"'I raised my revolver and advanced upon the thing.
"'I don't know what you're talking about,'
"'I cried, but I'm going to blow this monster to Adams.
"'For heaven's sake, don't!'
"'He shrieked.
"'That would be murder. We're a human being.'
"'A flash of scarlet fire answered him.
"'Almost unconsciously I had pressed upon the trigger,
and now my weapon was speaking again.
I'll blow it to tatters,
I muttered between my teeth.
The vile crawling devil!
Don't, don't!
Shriek the young man,
and then an unearthly yell made the night obscene.
I saw the thing before me quiver in all its folds,
and then it suddenly rose up and towered above me.
Blood spurted from its huge bloated body,
and a crimson shower descended upon me.
High above me a hundred feet in the air,
I saw the pale agonized face of the young man.
He was screaming blasphemies.
He appeared to be walking on stilts.
You can't kill me, he yelled.
I'm stronger than I thought.
I'll win out yet.
I raised my revolver to fire again, but before I could take aim,
the thing swept by me and plunged into the sea.
It was perhaps fortunate for me that I did not attempt to follow it.
My knees gave way beneath me, and I fell flat upon my face.
When I came to so far as to be able to speak, I found myself between clean white sheets and staring into the puzzle blue eyes of a government inspector.
You've had a nasty time of it, lad.
He said, we had to give you stimulants.
Did you have a shock of a sort?
Of a sort, yes, I replied.
But it came out of the Arabian Nights.
End of Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Of the man with a thousand legs by Frank Belk-Nepern.
long. This
Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 6. The Marvelous
Boy
Curious manuscript found in a bottle.
I was the marvelous boy.
My genius amazed the world.
A magnificent mind. A sublime destiny.
My enemies. Combined to
ruin me. A punctured
balloon.
A little bit of a little
box and I put a dog under it. He changed. Jelly!
Ethyric vibration generates curious changes in living cells. Process starts and nothing can stop it.
Growth, enormous growth. Keeps sending out shoots. Legs, arms, marvelous growth. Human being next.
Put a little girl under it. She changed. Beautiful jellyfish. It kept getting larger.
Fet it mice. Then I destroyed it.
So interesting. Must try it on myself. I know how to get back. Willpower. A child's will is too weak, but a man can get it back. No actual change in cell content.
A tremendous experience. I picked out a deep pool where I could hide. Hunger saw man on beach.
The police suspect I must be more careful. Why didn't I take the bar?
out to sea.
Horrible incident.
Young lady artist.
I almost caught her, but she stamped on a leg, smashed it.
Horrible pain.
I certainly must be more careful.
Great humiliation.
Little boy hooked me.
But I gave him a scare.
The varmint.
I glared and glared at him.
I tried to catch him, but he ran too fast.
I wanted to eat him.
He had very red cheeks.
I hate women and children.
Of course, they suspect.
Little boy is always babble.
I wanted to eat.
him but I gave them all a good scare and I got a man he came down after me in a diver's suit
but I got him I took him to pieces I mean that literally to pieces then I let the
fragments float up I wanted to scare them I think I did they ran for their lives the
authorities are fools I got back but it wasn't easy the thing fought and fought
I'm master I said and it gulped
gulped and gulped and gulped and then I got back
but my hand was smashed and bleeding
that fool clerk why did he take so long
but he didn't know how hungry his red face made me
the thing came back without the ray
I was standing before the counter
and it came back
I sprang at him I was lucky to get away
terrible trouble I can't keep it from coming back
I wake up in the night and find it spread out on the bed
and all over the floor
Its arms writhe and writhe, and its demands are insatiable.
Every waking moment it demands food.
Sometimes it completely absorbs me.
But now as I write, the upper portion of my body is human.
This afternoon I moved to furnished room near beach.
Salt water has become a necessity.
Change comes on more rapidly now.
I can't keep it off.
My will is powerless.
I filled the tub with water and put in some salt.
Then I wallowed in it.
Great comfort, great relief.
Hunger.
Dreadful, insatiable hunger.
I am all beast.
All animal.
Rats.
I've caught six rats.
Delicious.
Great comfort.
But I've messed up the room.
What if the old idiot downstairs should suspect?
She does suspect.
Wants me to get out.
I shall get out.
There is only one refuge for me.
now. The sea. I shall go to the sea. I can't pretend I'm human any longer. I'm all animal, all
beast. What a shock I must have given the old hag. I could hear her teeth chattering as she came
up the stairs. All I could do to keep from springing at her. Into the sea at last. Great relief,
great joy, freedom at last. A ship. I ran head on into it. Six arms gone. Terrible agony. Flopped
about for hours.
Land. I climbed over the rocks and collapsed. Then I managed to get back. Part of me got back. I called for help. A crazy fool came out of the lighthouse and stared at me. Five of my tentacles sprang at him. I couldn't control them. They got him about the leg. He lost his head, got out a revolver, and shot at them. I got them under control. Tremendous effort. Pleaded with him, tried to explain. He would not listen. Shots.
Many shots. White, hot, fire in my body, and my arms and legs.
Strength returned to me. I rose up and went back into the sea. I hate human beings.
I am growing larger, and I shall make myself felt in the world.
Arthur Saint Amand.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of The Man with a Thousand Legs by Frank Belknap Long.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 7
The Salmon Fisherman
Statement of William Gamwell
There were five of us in the boat
Jimmy Sims, Tom Snodgrass
Harry O'Brien, Bill Sampson, and myself
Jimmy, I said, we may as well open the lunch
I'm not particularly hungry, but the salmon all have their noses
stuck in the mud.
"'They sure ain't biting,' said Jimmy.
"'I never seen such bum run of the lazy critters.'
"'Don't go complaining,' Harry piped up.
"'We've only been here five hours.'
"'We were drifting toward the east shore, and I yelled the bill to pull on the oars,
but he ignored me.
"'We'll drift in with the shipping,' I warned.
"'By the way, what's that queer-looking tug with a broken smoke stack?'
"'Came out this morning,' said Jim.
Looks like a rum runner to me.
They're taking an awful risk, Harry put in.
The revenue cutters do buy here any minute.
There she is now, said Bill, and pointed toward the flats.
Sure enough, there was the government boat, skirting the shore and looking like a lean wasp on the warpath.
She's headed the tug off as sure as you're born, said Bill.
I'll say we're in for a hot time.
Backwater! I shouted.
Do you want to get between them?
Tom and Bill pulled sturdily on the oars,
and our boat swung out in the direction of the west shore,
and then the current took us and carried us downstream.
A signal flash flashed for a moment on the deck of the cutter.
Jimmy translated it for us.
Stand to or will fire, he exclaimed.
Now let's see what the tug's got to say that.
The tug apparently decided to ignore the command.
It rose on a tremorless swell,
and plunged doggedly forward.
A vast black column ascended from its broken smokestack.
They're putting on steam, cried Bill,
but they haven't a chance in the world.
Not a chance, confirmed Tom.
One broadside'll blow them to storms.
Bell stood up and clapped his hands to his ears.
The rest of us were nearly deafened by the thunderous report.
What'd I tell you? shouted Tom.
We look at the tug.
The smoke stack was gone.
and she was wallowing in a heavy swell.
That was only a single shot across her bows, said Bill,
but it did a lot of damage, wait until they opened fire with the big guns.
We waited, expecting to see something interesting,
but we saw something that nearly frightened us out of our shoes.
Between the cutter and the tug, a gigantic, yellowish obscenity shot up from the water
and towered 30 feet in the air.
It thrashed wildly about and made a horrible gulping noise.
We could hear the frenzied shrieks of the men on the tug, and from the deck of the cutter, someone yelled,
Look at it! Look at it! Oh, my God!
Mercy in heaven! groaned Bill.
Why run for it? sobbed Tom.
For a moment the thing simply towered and vibrated between the two boats, and then it made for the cutter.
It had at least a thousand legs, and they waved loathomely in the sunlight.
It had a hooked beak and a gray mouth that opened and closed.
and gulped, and it was larger than a whale. It was horribly, hideously large. It towered to the
mounting zenith, and in its mephitic, blasphemous immensity, it dwarfed the two boats and all the
tangled shipping in the harbor. Are we alive? Shrieked Bill. And is that their shore really long
island? I don't believe it. We're in the Indian Ocean, or the Persian Gulf, or in the middle of
the Hyperborean Sea.
that their thing is a Jormengander.
Lots of Jormingander, yelled Tom.
He was at the end of his rope and clutching valiantly at the straws.
Them things what live on the bottom of the Arctic seas, groaned Bill.
They comes up for air once in a hundred years.
I'll take my oath that there's a Jormingander.
Jormingander or not, it was apparent to all of us that the monster meant business.
It was bearing down upon the cutter with incredible ferocity.
The water boiled and bubbled in its wake.
On the other boats, men rushed hysterically to the rails and stared with wide eyes.
The officers of the cutter had recovered from their momentary astonishment
and were gesticulating furiously and running back and forth on the decks.
Three guns were lowered into position and directed at the onrushing horror.
A little man with gilt braid on his sleeves danced about absurdly on his toes and shouted.
shouted out commands at the top of his voice.
Don't fire until you can look into his eyes.
He yelled.
We can't afford to miss him. We'll give him a broadside. He won't forget.
It isn't human, sir.
Someone yelled.
There never was nothing like it before in this world.
The men aboard the tug were obviously rejoicing.
Caps and pipes ascended into the air
and loud shouts a triumph issued from a hundred drunken throats.
Fire!
shouted the blue-coated midget on the cutter.
That won't do them no good, shouted Bill as the thunder of the guns smote our ears.
It won't do them a bit of good.
As it turned out, Bill was right.
The tremendous discharge failed to arrest the progress of the obscene monster.
It rose like a cloud from the water and flew at the cutter like a flying fish.
Furiously it stretched forth its enormous arms and embraced the cutter.
It wrenched the little vessel from the...
the trough of the wave in which it wallowed and lifted it violently into the air. Its great golden
sides shone like the morning star, but red blood trickled from a gaping hole in its throat. Yet it
ignored its wounds. It lifted the small steel ship into the air in its gigantic weaving arms.
I shall never forget that moment. I have but to shut my eyes and it is before me now. I see again
that brobdingnagian horror from measureless abysses,
that twisting fantastic monstrosity
from sinister depths of blackest night.
And in its colossal arms and legs I see a tiny ship,
from whose deck a hundred little men fall shrieking and screaming
into the black maelstrom beneath its churning maws.
Yards and yards it towered,
and its glittering bulk hid the sun.
It towered to the zenith.
and its weaving arms twisted the cutter into a shapeless mass of glistening steel.
"'Where next?' muttered Bill.
"'There ain't nothing can save us now.
A man ain't got a chance when he runs head on against the Jormingander.'
"'That ain't no Jormingonder,' piped Tom.
"'It's a human being, what's been out all night.
But I ain't saying we're not in for it.'
My other companions fell upon their knees and little Harry O'Brien turned yellow.
under the gills. But the thing did not attack us. Instead, with a heartbreaking scream that seemed
outrageously human, it sank beneath the waves, carrying with it the flattened absurd remains of
the valiant little cutter in the crushed and battered bodies of innumerable men. And as it
sink, loathsomely from sight, the water about it flattened out into a tremorless plateau
and turned the color of blood. Bill was at the oars now, shouting and cursing to encourage the
rest of us.
Pull boys, he commanded.
Let's try to make the south shore before that their fish comes up for breath.
There ain't one of us here what wants to live for the rest of his life on the bottom of the sea.
There ain't one of us here what had cared to have it out with a German gander.
In a moment we had swung the boat about and were making for the shore.
Men on the other ships were crying and waving to us, but we didn't stop to hand in any reports.
We weren't thinking of anything but a huge monstrosity.
that we would see towering and towering into the sky,
as long as our brains hung together in our foolish little heads.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of the Man with a Thousand Legs by Frank Belknaplong.
This Libervox recordings in the public domain, read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 8
News Item in the Long Island Gazette
The body of a young man about 25 years old was found
this morning on a deserted beach near Northport.
The body was horribly emaciated,
and the coroner Mr. E. Thomas Bogart
discovered three small wounds on the young man's thigh.
The edges of the wounds were stained as though from gunpowder.
The body scarcely weighed 100 pounds.
It is thought that the youth was the victim of foul play
and inquiries are being made in the vicinity.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9 of the man with a thousand legs
by Frank Belknapp Long.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 9, The Box of Horror
Statement of Harry Olson
I hadn't had a thing to eat for three days
and I was driven to the cans.
Sometimes you find something valuable in the cans
and sometimes you don't.
But anyhow, I was working them systematically.
I'd gone up the street and down the street
and hadn't found a thing for my pains
except an old pair of suspenders and a tin of salmon.
But when I came to the last house, I stopped and stared.
Then I stretched out a lean arm and picked up the box.
It was a funny-looking box with queer glass sides and little peek holes in the side of it
and a metal compartment about three inches square in back of it,
and a slide underneath, large enough to hold a man's hand.
I looked up at the windows of the house,
but there wasn't anyone watching me, and so I slipped a box under my coat
and made off down the street.
It's something expensive.
You can bet your life on that, I thought.
Probably some old doctors croaked and his widow
threw the thing away without consulting anyone.
This is a real scientific affair this is,
and I ought to get a week's board out of it.
I wanted to examine the thing better,
and so I made for a vacant lot where I wouldn't be interrupted.
Once there, I sat myself down behind a signboard
and took the contraption from under my coat and looked at it.
Well, sir, it interesting.
interested me. There was a little lever on top of it. You pressed and the slide fell down and
something clicked in the metal box in back of it and the thing lighted up. I realized at once that
something was meant to go on the slide. I didn't know just what, but my curiosity was aroused.
That light isn't there for nothing, I thought. This box means business. I began to wonder what
would happen if something alive were put on the slide. There was a clump of bushes near where I was sitting,
and I got up and made for it.
It took me some time to get what I was after,
but when I caught it, I held it firmly between my thumb and forefinger,
so it couldn't escape, and then I talked to it.
Grasshopper, I said.
I haven't any grudge against you personally,
but the scientific mind is no respecter of persons.
The infernal varmint wriggled and wriggled
and covered my thumb with molasses,
but I didn't let up on him.
I held him firmly and pushed him onto the slide.
Then I turned on the lever and peeped through the holes.
The poor devil squirmed and fluttered for several minutes, and then he began to dissolve.
He got flabbier and flabbier, and soon I could see right through him.
When he was nothing but ooze, he began to wriggle.
I dumped him on the ground, and he scurried away faster than a centipede.
I'm deluding myself, I thought.
I'm seeing things that never happened.
Then I did a very foolish thing.
I thrust my hand into the box and turned on the lever.
For several moments, nothing happened, and then my hand began to be able to.
to get cold. I peeped through the holes and what I saw made me scream and scream and draw my hand out
and go running about the lot like a madman. My hand was a mass of writhing, twisting snakes.
Leasewise, they looked like snakes at first, but later I saw they were soft and yellow and rubber
and much worse than snakes. But even then, I didn't altogether lose my head. Leasewise, I didn't
lose it for long. This is a sheer hallucination, I said to myself, and I'm going to be a little bit of
to argue myself out of it.
I sat down on a big boulder and held my hand up and looked at it.
It had a thousand fingers, and they dripped, but I made myself look at them.
I did some tall arguing.
Snap out of it. I said, you're imagining things.
I thought the fingers began to shorten and stiffen a little.
You're imagining all this, I continued.
It's the sheerest bunk.
That box isn't anything out of the ordinary.
Well, sir, you may not believe it, but I argued myself back into sanity.
I argued my hand back to normal.
The wriggling, twisting things got shorter and fatter and joined together,
and before very long I had a hand with fingers.
Then I stood up and shouted.
Luckily, no one heard me,
and there wasn't anyone to watch me dancing about on my toes either.
When I got out of breath, I picked the infernal box up and walked away with it.
I made directly for the river.
You've had your day, I said.
You won't turn any more poor Chris.
than the jellyfish.
Well, sir, I threw the vile thing into the river,
but first I smashed it against the planks on the wharf
until it looked like nothing on earth under the stars.
And that's the end of you, I shouted, is it sank?
I ought to have got a medal for that,
but I ain't complaining.
It isn't every man has the pleasure
of calling himself a disinterested benefactor of humanity.
End of Chapter 9.
End of the man with a thousand legs by Frank Belk.
nap long.
