Creepy - The Number of Darkness
Episode Date: August 2, 2021Don't give in...***Written by Humboltlycanthrope***See how you can support the show at patreon.com/creepypod***You can also subscribe to us on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/creepypod***Produced by S...teve Blizin***Title music by Alex Aldea***Intro/Outro Narration by Joe Stofko Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Now, this is creepy.
A podcast dedicated to sharing the most famous chilling and disturbing creepypastas
and urban legends in the world.
Whether these stories truly happened or,
well, simply, fabrications is for you to decide.
These stories may contain graphic depictions of violence
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Listener discretion is advised.
Creepy presents
The Number of Darkness
Written by Humboldt Lichenthrope
and produced by Steve Blisen
The Journal of Charles Cooperton
February 9th, 1860
I begin this journal as a testament
to the trials and tribulations my family has endured.
May God have mercy on our souls.
I feel that we are truly cursed.
To think it has only been six years since we left our ancestral home in Prince Edward Island,
to come to this so-called promised land of California.
It feels like an eternity.
I have become a widower.
My left leg has been amputated and replaced with an uncomfortable length of wood
so that I must limp and lean upon a crutch.
I have watched, as our family fortune is dribbled away to nearly nothing.
And now I have had to send for a priest,
for the condition with the girl's has grown worse.
Much worse, little twin daughters, Bethany and Josephine.
They've committed acts of desecration and fornication
in the likes of which I can hardly stand to think,
much less commit to paper.
It does in fact seem that my dear twins,
Only 14 years old, have succumbed to some sort of demonic infestation and are in fact possessed by devils.
Even now as I sit hunched over paper with my quill, turning this pale parchment black with my words,
I can hear them screaming from their back bedroom where we have had to bind them to their beds.
Their howls and cries, animal-like screeching, filling the void of the house.
The situation with the natives has grown steadily worse,
though we have taken pity on their outcasts
and brought in their sick and elderly, a widow, and her children,
and treat them with nothing but dignity and respect,
as was the custom back in Prince Edward Island.
They view us as evil and hate our pastures and fields,
our barns and fences, and most of all our mill.
The attacks have grown so grievous,
though we've constructed a fence of sharpened law,
eight feet in height, or on the perimeter of the mill, and whenever possible keep
armed guards at its gate.
It matters at hand the worse.
A cold front is blown in from the north in snow begins to fall thick and heavy, covering
the fields and forests and a blanket of ice.
When we left Prince Edward Island for the promised land of California, our greatest fear was
a journey by boat around the horn.
For 230 days, we experienced nothing but auspicious sailing.
And when we at last made dock in San Francisco, it appeared that the Lord smiled down on us
with blessings, for the trip was mild and without any of the disasters that have plagued
so many others who have made the same journey.
All 40 of us were hearty and in good health, and my wife Margaret had grown large with
child. Being the eldest, it was my responsibility to go forth and find us land to farm and a
heavy mountain stream where we could build our mill. I brought with me my brother Adolphus,
born only one year after me. It was we, to whom our father had imparted his wisdom and
instructions in the business of men and the teachings of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
The younger three, George, David, and John, were too young to even remember our dear patriarch.
much less be taught in his firm beliefs in the ideals of tolerance,
participatory democracy, and diligence of improvement.
Gold had been found in the hills some four years earlier.
Our great migration had already spread its way before us in all directions from San Francisco.
And we were forced to travel far up the coast to find land for lease and sale.
We entertained the idea of Oregon,
but in the southern region of the county of Humboldt,
On the outskirts of a small town by the name of Hidesville,
we discovered what appeared to be a paradise.
The soil was rich, black and fertile.
The game abundant with elk and deer, geese and ducks,
and streams filled with the finest salmon.
There was open prairie ripe for tilling and steep hills
with running water perfect for the hydrolyics necessary for a mill.
After consulting with the local farmers and ranchers,
it was determined this would be a most excellent location to establish our mill and dairy.
We secured promises for their wheat and corn to be ground in our mill, and we gave them oaths
that we would proceed to build stout roads over the neighboring Trinity Alps and into Sacramento
where we could run cattle. We made quick passage back to our family and friends in San Francisco.
I being very eager to return, wishing to make it in time for the birth of my next child,
hoping my wife had not already given birth.
Leaving that pastoral setting,
our aspirations buoyed and dreams appearing a reality.
Little could we guess the horror that awaited our arrival.
A cholera epidemic had swept through San Francisco.
Aene from our party of 40 had succumbed to the dreaded disease and perished.
My wife was dead.
My sweet lovely Margaret.
forever gone to me, as were the wives of all my brothers. Nearly all are women folk dead.
That fairer sex, it appears, did not have the strength and wherewithal to fight the disease like the men.
My child, I asked my younger brother David, who was left in charge in the absence of Adolphus and myself.
The doctor cut it from her after she perished. A boy. He lived for a few moments but died before the day was
out. I am so sorry, brother, an heir. All I could think of was that life struggling within the
corpse of my beloved wife, a spark of hope that was extinguished in a day. I was bereft and crestfallen.
I struggled hard with these facts, but such is life, and who are we to question the ways of the
Lord? I knew I must proceed with forbearance. I had Bethany and Josephine to think of, my sweet
honey-haired twin girls.
Now I would be their only parent.
For them, I must put aside my lackermost nature.
Also, as the eldest, I must make a strong and stoic face as an example, and to show respect
for all the others in our party who had lost loved ones as well.
I shed my doleful composure and made haste together our compatriots together for travel.
Quickly we made our way north, eager to put the city that acclaimed so many of our party behind us.
I was now a widower, with two twin girls to account for, leaving behind me a wife and newborn son in the cold, fog-shrouted earth of San Francisco.
We are an industrious and hard-working clan, and within several years we had built barns and established a ranch with 60 dairy cows, 200 head of cattle, and 300 hogs.
We harvested 1,100 bushels of wheat our first year alone.
Our dairy was the first in the region we sold butter to the Trinity mines for $1 a pound
and packed pork to Eureka for 50 cents a pound.
And on the outskirts of the settlement, on the edge of a dense redwood forest,
we built our mill.
The freight for the machinery, as well as the cost of labor, was immense,
and took a large portion of our funds, leaving us in the end with little of our family fortune
which my father had worked so hard and struggled for.
But our enterprises appeared to be thriving, and we had great hope that we would soon have
our initial investment back and be seeing a tidy profit.
In fact, our courage and enterprise brought other settlers to the area for whom we milked
redwood for their barns and houses, as well as grinding their harvests into flour and meal,
We saw little of the natives those first years, and what interactions we did have were of a peaceable nature.
We even befriended a few of the elderly and infirm, as well as a widow with several children, and let them abide with us, giving them shelter and food for what labor they could provide.
Little did we know that a flood of European settlers was crowding the various tribes from the coast out into timber country where they were hard-pressed to survive.
Conflict, it seems, was inevitable, though we in our ignorance were blissfully unaware of it.
The troubles began when Adolphus and I ventured out over the Trinity Alps to Sacramento,
where we could secure a herd of cattle.
The trip there was uneventful, however, on return we were attacked by a fierce band of Aborigines.
We were forced to abandon the cattle at the hay fork of the Trinity River.
I was shot with an arrow in the thigh.
It went deep into the muscle on its tip embedded itself in my femur.
When we at last found ourselves back at our settlement,
the wound was discovered to have grown septic.
My entire left leg was amputated.
An awful procedure.
Held down by my brothers as the doctor diligently performed his duty.
A leather belt clamped between my teeth.
The feel of that saw ripping.
into my flesh before it had bone, the sound and vibration of it as it worked its way through
my femur.
Never before had I wished for death with such whole-hearted fervor.
Afterwards, as I lay there in torment and suffering, leeches affixed to the wound to draw
out the bad blood, Adolphus left with a team of men to reclaim the cattle.
None of them returned.
I would never see my cherished brother Adolphus again, nor would scouting parties ever find a corpse which we could bury and mourn over properly and give a Christian burial too.
Indians were blamed, and I doubted it not.
But I knew that not all tribes were violent outlaws, and many were quite peaceful.
I wished justice for the killers of my brothers, but I would not blame nor slander all of the native people.
people as a whole for this crime.
Then the attacks on the mill began.
Because of the pressure needed for the hydraulics to turn the water wheel, we were forced to locate the mill in the cusp of the mountains, as secluded spot far from the farms and settlements.
This left the mill vulnerable.
Evidently, marauding tribes viewed its being at the headwaters of the redwoods and the river a sacrilege to what they considered a holy site, in the fields to the north,
Now fenced and cultivated, were once prairie where they hunted.
Twice they tried to burn the mill down.
We hired our men to guard, but this provided too costly.
Our funds were down to a pittance, and losing that large herd of Cadill had further weakened
our savings.
We then built the fortifications around the mill, a tall fence with sharpened tops, turning it into a fortress.
This was also when the troubles with Bethany and Josephine began, because of my infirmary.
I was deemed too crippled to be of much use in the dairy or farms, so I was left to oversee the labor of the mill and tend to the books.
At some point there was a change with the girls.
They began to sleepwalk.
We would find them wandering the halls at night holding hands, mumbling incoherently about the devil and the sulfurous flames of hell.
one night to tuck them into bed, as was my custom each evening.
They were behaving in an especially playful manner,
leaping from bed to bed, laughing boisterously.
I thought nothing of it.
There were fourteen nearing womanhood,
their bodies growing plump and curved, their cheeks rosy,
and, while I knew silly games were all the norm for girls their age.
"'Girls, time for bed now.
"'Stop this rumpus and get into your beds.'
"'But we aren't your little girls anymore,' they said in eerie unison.
"'Come now, my sweets, whatever do you mean?
"'Why would you say a thing such as that?'
"'Because you aren't our father any longer,' Bethany giggled.
"'We have a new daddy now.'
Josephine stated before she two burst into a fit of laughter, her face going flush.
But when I shouted, here, hear!
And loudly slapped my hands together, they stopped their antics and crawled obediently into their beds.
Silly girls, I said smoothing the blankets over them.
You shouldn't say such thing.
It pains your poor old father.
They snickered.
I assumed it was just the follies of Adelieu.
lessons and left them, taking the lantern with me so the room fell into darkness.
They'd changed so much these last six years, gone from children to young ladies, and in that
moment, limping down the long hall away from their room, my wooden leg dragging across the floor.
I ached so hard for my lost Margaret that I felt a snap within my chest and broke down weeping.
It wasn't just sorrow and pity for my own sake, but out of a deep concern for my girls.
How could I, a man, raise them to be upstanding ladies in this savage land?
Without a single lady of refinement or standing within a hundred miles.
I resolved I would send them to boarding school.
I would look into the matter and find a suitable place on the morrow.
That night, long after midnight, a complete.
motion was heard in the sheep's pen.
The one who's butchered sheep knows the sound of a dying lamb.
An almost human whale.
It awoke me and several mill workers were sleeping in the house,
grabbing lanterns and our rifles we ventured out into this small pen behind the house
to find several of the animals slaughtered most savagely.
One with its head clean, decapitated.
Girls had done this.
We discovered them laying unrowed.
in the visor of the gutted animals, drenched crimson in blood, and writhing in the gore.
What's the worse is that they appeared to have done this brutality with their own bare hands and teeth.
How? I don't know, but no knives were ever found.
They were insensible and babbled nonsense as I and a few servants brought them back to our home.
I bathed them that night.
bathe them as if they were but babies again, sat them in the tub and poured hot water over them,
soothing and cleansing them, washing the bloody clumps from their hair, telling them it was all right,
while they quietly drowned on in a trance-like state, unclean.
Fearing for their odd incidents of sleepwalking, I put a bolt on the outside of their door
and took to locking them in at night.
Then it appeared a strange sickness befell the same.
them. They lay in their bed, sweating and shaking. They began to bleed from out of their ears
and nose, and a petulant blue slime leaked from their eyes. No longer did they appear as my lovely
twin daughters brimming with womanhood ready to bloom as a rosebud may grow plump before it unfurls.
They began to take on the look of monsters, their eyes often rolling back into their heads so that all
Only the whites shone gleaming against dark rings.
Their lips took on a rotten appearance and grew black and ragged.
A doctor was called.
He could ascertain no ailment.
They had no fever nor swollen glands.
They began to curse most vilely and blasphemously
and spoken strange languages of which we knew not the words.
This is when the doctor first opined.
that this was maybe a sickness of a supernatural order and recommended a priest.
At first I scoffed at this and was determined to patiently ride the strange course out,
hoping daily for some improvement.
There was none.
They refused food and began to waste and wither their eyes sunken and haunted in the emaciated skin
from which their skulls began to preside.
Their beautiful and thick honeysuckle hair,
when limp and tufts began to fall out.
The workers around the mill began to grow uneasy and several quit.
They could hear the cries of the girls, the abhorrent blasphemies they would scream long
into the night.
The remaining workers began to shun me as well.
And when I went to oversee the milling of grain and lumber and check on the weights and
quality, an uneasy silence would fall upon the mill, punctuated by guarded whispers
and furtive glances.
Then came that awful harrowing night when I found myself with no choice but to call for a priest.
I awoke to the sounds of giggling and moaning.
It was very late.
I crept into the hall and ascertain the sounds were coming from the girl's bedroom.
From behind the door I could hear strange, suckling sounds and girlish laughter.
I unlatch the locks swung the door open and in the pale light of the moon's.
saw a most abhorrent sight. May God have mercy on my soul for letting these foul memories
surface forth from my mind and darken this pale parchment. But my girls were naked and
entwined most wrongly. Their faces were buried between their legs, their calves, encircling their
shoulders, licking at each other, and oh, this pains me to write. They must have been menstruated.
For their lips were stained that dark red that can only be brought by blood.
They turned their faces to me eyes rolled upward in fish-belly white.
Lips, the dark crims, dripping blood, and they spoke in unison, sultry, and heavy.
Come, come and join us, Father.
T'was then, I knew I must call for a priest.
February 10th, 1860.
We've been forced to restrain the girls, bind them to their beds with rope.
They seem to grow steadily worse hour by hour.
They were wasting away.
I bring them clabber, broth tea.
I try to spoon it into their mouths.
They only turn their heads away and spit it back in me.
Call me foul names.
When they aren't screaming and cursing me, they're giggling as they did when they were toddlers.
I feel so very alone in an emptiness.
rests in my heart. My brothers are far away at work on their ranches, my wife and the grave,
and the workers here at the mill eye me with nothing but distrust and suspicion.
Only ones who smile at me at all in these dark days are the group of natives I have let into
the compound. They are eight in number. An old grizzled man that never moves from the fire.
Three old women and a young squaw I assumed to be a widow with three children.
one, only an infant.
They speak no English, and communication with them can be difficult.
But they smile and nod at me.
Mumble words I know our thanks when I offer them food.
The widow, Kakwesh, she is called, is most helpful to me.
When I lead her to any chore, such as to mop the floor in the dining room or scrub the dishes,
she quickly perceives my pantomimes and eagerly does the task.
She's the only woman in the compound besides my girls, and the silent elderly squaws,
and her presence soothes me in some way I cannot put into words.
Yes, these noble savages seem my only friends.
February 14, 1860.
The priest arrived today.
He rode through the snow to the garter gate of the mill atopas sway-backed steed of iron-gray.
A few workmen who had been guarding the fortifications from hostile Indians immediately noticed him
and swung open the heavy redwood doors.
I limped through the snow, fighting to keep my crutch from slipping on the frozen ground,
to greet him as he strode through the entrance and then dismounted from his horse which stomped its hooves on the cold, hard ground,
and snored its steamy breath.
He was a tall man, with a long black beard streaked in gray, wearing a black frock coat.
and a matching wide-brimmed hat covered in a thick layer of icy snow.
He had dark piercing eyes with a gun-metal glint that seemed to bore into me as he presented his hand.
He spoke clearly and with a deep voice.
Reverend Michael Waiton, at your service.
His grip was strong, and I felt great fortitude emanate from him.
I welcomed him and ushered him through the compound.
He led his horse along by the rube.
rains as I limped beside him.
Did you have a good journey?
I inquired.
Uneventful.
He murmured.
Along the interior wall,
Kikwesh and the other natives huddled her on a small fire while her toddler chased
a chicken through the snow.
And why do you allow these savage heathens within your walls?
He asked, gazing with disdain upon them.
They are impoverished and in need of care.
So we have given them shelter, as our Lord Christ has instructed in the parable of the Samaritan.
Jesus came to bring division to the earth, Luke 1251.
But Reverend, did our Lord and Savior not say in Mark 950, be at peace with one another?
Among the saved, yes, but he is quite clear in Matthew 1034.
I did not come to bring peace, but a sword.
And what of Matthew 2651?
They that take the sword shall perish by the sword.
The priest grew visibly agitated, his face twisted into a baleful knot.
He ran a hand over his long beard, turned to me and nearly spat the words.
Revelation 1911.
In righteousness, he doth judge and make war.
If you do not believe where you are in.
battle with unclean spirits and heathens, I suggest you reread revelations.
I respect your learning, sir, but I have not come here to debate theology, but to cast out
demons, if that is what's called for.
Now, where are these daughters of yours that I have been bidden to see?
Why, they are in the house, good reverend.
They've grown so violent and, well, strange indeed.
that we have been forced to restrain them to their beds.
I see.
Take me to them.
Would you not rather me lead you to your quarters
where you may unpack and wash up from your long journey?
There will be time for that later, my son.
First, take me to see your daughters.
I led the reverend down the dark hall to the heavy wooden door,
bolted shut with a black iron lock.
I fished the key from my pocket, unlatched the door, and slowly swung the door open.
Inside lay my two little girls, heavily bound to the bed with hemp and ropes.
They immediately sat up as far as their restraints would let them and began to hiss as a venomous viper might when disturbed.
The priest entered the room but did not even look at the twins.
Began to thrash and wail against their vines, making the bed clatter.
He held forth a large crucifix, and circling the room began to chat in Latin.
Patternoster, Kias and Salas, sanctificetor, nomin-tum.
It is the black number, Bethany began to moan.
He, with the number of darkness, I can see the blood on his hands, smell it in his mouth.
The black number, Josephine wailed.
I can taste his sins upon my tongue.
Oh, yes, he will satisfy us.
What is it you say?
I asked him.
Do you know him?
He suddenly spun about to face me his face like that of a raptor.
Silence.
Never engage with the demons.
They're full of deceit and trickery and served a father of lies.
He then turned and faced the girls for the first time.
In the name of Christ reveal to me your true names.
The power of Christ compels you, reveal your true names.
He thrust a large black crucifix before the face of Bethany.
As modius Zebulon, moaned Bethany.
He spun towards Josephine pressing the crucifix against her forehead.
Cristle Amand!
Whaleed Josephine.
The priest turned to me.
can you bring me a plate of hot coals in the liver and heart of a fish?
Why, yes, I stammered.
There are still hot coals in the earth and be a fresh fish in the ice house.
Then bring them to me with haste.
He then began to chant again and walk around the room.
I did as instructed and brought to him a metal plate laden with embers from the fire
in a parcel containing the heart and liver of a salmon.
He placed the plate on the end table,
began to blow on the coals until they glowed red hot,
then placed the organs upon them where they sizzled and smoked.
This seemed to have some queer, solomulent effect upon the girls,
for they stopped their agonized thrashing and fell into slumber.
Now you may show me to my lodgings.
said the priest, stroking his long black beard and eyeing me with orbs like shimmering shattered
coal.
I took him to his chambers where he began to unpack a large release of books.
Why did they call you black number, if I may ask good reverend?
They jest and tease.
A black number is a sin that has not been confessed nor forgiven.
A number of darkness that can bring a good man into hell in the clutches of looes.
Lucifer himself.
They call me an unatoned sinner, unrepentant.
But believe not their wickedry and lies.
For they know me not at all, I nodded.
What are these tomes you carry with you?
These are my grimoires, texts concerning the demonic underworld.
He lifted a large book bound in black leather.
Dictionaire in
By Jacques Augusta Simone Collin de Plancy.
He caressed another, this one bound in crimson cloth, with the flat of his hand,
Ledrigan Rouge, written in 1517 by Albeck the Egyptian.
He cast a glance at another, still in his bag, the Book of Abramelan.
He then turned to me and fixed me with those eyes.
as sharp and cold as black diamonds.
He furrowed his brow and brought up a hand to caress his lengthy beard of black and silver.
May I ask you, good sir, has there been any fornication?
Have they tried to tempt you to lay with them as the daughters of Lot had done?
I went to speak but found only silence.
My mouth moved up and down, but no sound came out.
My face grew flushed and I directed my gaze to the ground.
Yes, I said, feeling dread rise up in me like an ugly bile in my throat.
They have fornicated with each other and called upon me to join them.
And for the sake of Christ, man, tell me the truth now for all depends on this.
Did you answer their call with action?
Good reverend!
I beseech you.
Please do not selling my reputation by even uttering your doubt as to my chastity with my daughters.
Of course not.
They were immediately separated and bound, and I called for you at once.
Knowing only demonic influence could be responsible for such a lewd and shameful acts by my sweet girls who've shown nothing but modesty and virtue before.
Good.
You are a good man, even stronger than Lot, who gave it.
to his daughter's demonic advances.
His resolve weakened with drink.
We are clearly dealing with his modius,
the dark angel of lust and perversion,
or some of his underlings.
The truth is their legion.
Do you know what a Cambion is?
No, I do not believe I am familiar with the term.
A cambion is the child of a demon.
The demons wish to infest the earth with these vile children of theirs,
to create a hell upon this earthly plain.
But, Reverend, are not demons, ethereal beings?
How could they consort and create children here on earth?
The succubi and incubi possess a being.
They commit carnal acts, and in lustful acts,
stain the seed with their being,
so that the child created from such an unholy union is tainted.
by evil is a monster.
If the product of incest, then even more so.
Look at the savages in the hills around us.
They're all obviously Cambion.
Do they appear as whole humans to you?
I was shocked at these words.
How I talk of demons so suddenly turned to that of the natives so quickly, and I responded
to so.
Why, yes, I said, repugnesty.
They do.
And I must admit that you do offend me, dear Reverend.
I thought a holy man such as yourself would not say such things about your fellow man.
Fellow man.
They are not my fellow man.
They're sodomites.
They spend their days unclosed, naked, and engaged in demonic rituals.
They are stupid and silly.
They have no respect for love.
virginity. They flees, vermin, spiders, and worms. They have no faith in law or God. They can be on plain and
simple. They carry demons like a pestilence. They're infected with them the way a man may carry lice or
scabies. They are infested with creatures of the underworld. Is that not plain? Why, my father taught us to
treat all men as equals. Back in Prince Edward Island, the land from which we hail, the indigenous
were protected under the same rights as the white man. I've tried to practice those same ideals
of tolerance and acceptance here. And look where it has brought you! He shouted, a cripple,
your daughter is under possession by demons, your land, fortune, inheritance, and livelihood
on the brink of collapse. Let he who has eyes learn to see.
Now, good sir, if you would leave me.
I am weary from my travels and must rest.
Yes, Reverend, peace be with you.
And also with you.
I left the room, shut the door behind me,
my vision's swimming, and my thoughts are jumble.
February 15, 1860.
The priest locked himself in the room with the girls for the entire day.
I sat poised outside that heavy redwood door for many a long hour, listening, straining
to ascertain what went on within.
I heard many an awful thing.
I heard my girls try to tempt him into their beds.
Language so lascivious and foul, I dare not repeat it.
He met their seduction with cries to Christ.
I heard screams of terror that sounded more animal than human, than chandel.
Then long silence.
I grew perplexed, worried, worried for my twins, but also for this strange man.
Though the priest had warned me against it, I wrapped my knuckles against the door.
"'Revron!'
The door swung suddenly open, and there he was standing at me with wild eyes.
His beard unkempt and flecked with spit.
"'I know you told me not to disturb you.
I just grew worried with a long silence.
He held up a hand to quiet me.
It is all right.
Your girls have returned to you, but I know not for how long.
You may release their binds for now.
But in the evening, before they slumber, you must reapply them.
These forces of darkness are strong and will play tricks on you.
I looked over his shoulder and there were my little girls.
Their faces had returned to normal.
Their lips were no longer black, their eyes clear.
Daddy, they hollered.
I ran to them and loosened their binds, freed them,
and swept them up into my arms where we all wept together.
Oh, girls, how I've missed you.
I love you so.
We love you too, Daddy.
They were hungry, famished, and rightly so.
How they had persisted for so long without food and water remains a mystery to me.
I fetched them meat and broth.
Bade them to eat slowly, lest make themselves sick.
It was a glorious reunion, and I sat with them till nightfall.
I must bind you.
I warned them as I lit a lantern against the growing darkness of evening.
Oh, must you, Daddy!
My wrists are so sore!
Bethany pleaded, her emerald eyes as shine with pitifulness.
I simply must, I said, taking the ropes and preparing to strap them to their beds.
Do you miss Mother?
Josephine asked.
I paused, hearing her say that evoked many buried emotions
and I took a deep breath to steady myself.
Of course I do.
It must be so hard for you all alone.
Yes, my dear, but I have you.
Yes, you do, you have us.
I hope we can comfort you like Mother did.
Give to you what she gave you.
Give you the pleasure she gave you.
Horrified, I noticed the girls who began to lick their lips as they spoke and fondle their breasts,
lifting their nightgowns up over their legs.
I staggered back.
Girls, behave yourselves at once!
I commanded, come lay with us, Father.
We can give you what mother once gave you.
Mercifully, the Reverend was suddenly in the room.
room howling, the power of Christ compels you, down foul demons.
He turned to me, quickly mad, bind them.
And just like that, they take another monstrous forms again, faces pale and eyes gone white.
I grabbed her rope and wrapped it around the wrist of Bethany.
She hissed at me like a corner of cat.
As I went to grab her other wrist, she reached out her hand bent into a claw and brought it
across my face, for jagged nails like talons ripping painfully into my left eye.
Josephine was up off the bed, her hands clasped on the reverend's throat. For a moment, I feared
for him till he picked her up by the wrist and threw her to the bed.
Hold this one down while I finished binding the other, he shouted.
Ignoring the pain in my eye, threw myself down bodily upon Josephine, pinning her to
the bed while the Reverend finished binding Bethany.
Josephine quit struggling and looked up at me suddenly my little girl again.
Oh, Daddy, it hurts.
Why do you lay on me so? Let me go. You're hurting me, Daddy.
Then the Reverend was upon her, roughly grabbing her arms and tying them with a coarse hemp rope.
Don't let him do this to me, Daddy. How can you let him do this to me?
She squealed.
Listen not to their lies.
The Reverend commanded to me as he finished with his knots, he stood and began to make the sign of the cross with his hands mumbling in Latin.
Indominum sanctum.
They growled and spit at him.
He turned to me and uttered one word.
February 18, 1860.
My eyes badly abraded, and I now wear a patch over it.
The girls grow lucid daily, but I am wary of them.
The priest issues me this is normal, and that we may.
headway. I fervently pray he is right. I have called on my younger brothers to come from their
farms and ranches to meet this strange reverend and confer with me over what is best course of action.
February 21, 1860. Having received word that my brother shall arrive on tomorrow, I went forth
to relate this news to Reverend Michael. His door stood open a bit, and as I went to knock,
I heard odd noises emanating from within. A loud snapping.
sound followed by dull moans.
I pushed the door open ever so slightly that I might cast a look inside.
There, kneeling on the floor on wooden planks, was the priest.
Shirtless, his back to me.
In his hand was a small whip, a cat of nine tails, and he flung it over his shoulder
and scourged his back, which was flailed and torn, bleeding profusely.
Suddenly he turned with a strange quickness and caught my eye before I had time to
to duck away.
Sorry, Reverend.
I mumbled sheepishly.
I did not mean to pry.
I came to inform you of my brother's imminent arrival on the morrow, and hearing strange
noises simply inquired of their origin.
No need to apologize.
I keep no secrets.
No secrets.
A man who toils fighting the prince of darkness in his legion must be strong and atone.
I keep no secrets.
appreciate my solitude.
Yes, certainly, Reverend, pardon the intrusion.
Trusion pardoned.
He stated, as I swung the door shut,
hearing the snap of leather on flesh echo again from the room.
February 20, 1860.
My brothers arrived today.
They seem very worried about our situation with twins,
though I tell them it appears progress is being made.
"'But your eye, dear brother,' John said, pointing out what the others obviously tried to avoid.
He has always been like this.
Being the youngest, he has no modicum of reserve and blurts out whatever is on his mind.
"'Tis but a scratch,' I say, adjusting the patch.
"'It shall be better shortly.'
They bring grim news of the native problem.
A group of over a hundred Indians surround the redwood forest.
forest above our land. They are hungry and openly hostile, swooping down from the hills to boldly steal
cattle. They are also armed not only with bows and arrows, but with guns as well, brazenly firing
their weapons at any man who dares oppose them. February 22, 1860. I awoke from a horrible
nightmare. I was rowing a small skiff out to see Josephine and Bethany were at the helm.
The girls were eight years old again, as they were when we arrived in San Francisco,
sweet honeysuckle-haired angels talking quietly amongst themselves and laughing.
There was no land in sight, and the sky was filled with stars and a red, red moon.
I gazed out into the water and it reflected that deep red of the moon.
But then I saw it was not the reflection of the moon that made the sea red,
but that the sea was blood
and gazing out into the distance I saw body flailing, floundering, drowning, drowning in the blood.
It was my Margaret.
I leapt overboard to save her but found myself unable to reach her.
The blood was thick and sticky with a foul stench.
I couldn't make my way through it and began to sink.
I felt like one in quicksand.
And it wasn't Margaret struggling there.
It was the Indian widow, Kaikwaish, and her children, as well as the old man and the two elderly squaws.
They were wailing that howl that's peculiar to their people.
I turned back to the boat, hoping to gain a handhold only to see the girls standing there before me,
standing and laughing, devilish cackling, and they were now nightmare like monsters with rotten skin,
eyes as white and clear as ice.
I woke suddenly with a jolt sitting up in bad gasping for breath.
For a moment I thought I could still hear the screams of the Indians, then nothing.
Silence.
I strained to hear what sounds my lurk above the creaking of the wooden beams.
Nothing.
Then whispers from the girl's bedroom, followed by hackles and gales of laughter.
This morning, when I went out into the courtyard of the compound, there was blood in the snow.
big pools of it, and splatter marks against the walls,
flecks of bone and brain, and drag marks through the snow.
Furrows so deep they scratched into the earth and brought up clumps of mud.
There were also the footprints of many men.
All of the natives we had allowed into the walls of our fortress are gone.
Kaikwaish, or children, the old man and woman, gone.
No doubt bludgeon to death.
No guns used so as not to awaken anyone and draw attention to the slaughter on the priest and my brother's eating in the dining hall.
What have you done?
I shouted limping up to the large table where they sat over steaming plates of eggs and mutton.
You've killed them all, haven't you?
They replied with silence and icy stairs.
How could you?
They were elderly and firm children.
and women.
The priest caught my eye with a bellful glare.
They were a pestilence, a scourge, and they had to be exterminated.
You murdering, coward!
Get out!
I shouted leaning forward on my crutch so that our faces were inches apart,
looking at him with my one good eye.
Get off my land!
I growled.
George stood up.
It is not your land, William.
We are a family business, and you have no right to command him to leave.
He's right, David chimed in.
We make decisions as a family.
Make decisions as a family.
Then why was I not informed of the decision to kill our humble guests last night?
We knew how you would act.
We knew your opinion already.
You were outboated.
Out voted!
I was not even present to cast my ballot in the matter!
Your presence was not needed, for our decision was unanimous amongst ourselves.
John stated,
Do you not hunger for justice for our lost brother Adolphus?
Death of Adolphus have to do the killing of a widow and her children.
Well, what of your girls then?
George suddenly opined,
My fair nieces?
Are we to leave them in total?
torment, not try to save them?
And now you would dare to throw out the one man who can help them can save them?
Wonder at his sorcery.
Deuteronomy 1810.
Let none be found among you who practices divination.
The priest stared hard at me.
Slowly he raised the steaming cup to his lips, sipped his coffee.
Then he calmly replied,
Verily I say unto thee
Careful where you tread and spread not
Columnies
Well we have done
We have done for the sake of you and your daughters
We are at war with the devil
And you must learn to accept that
Put not your foul deeds on me
I spat and swung around on my crutch
storming away from them
We are forming a militia
William. George shouted at my back as I opened the door and a cold wind blew into the hall.
Something must be done about this situation. It is us or them? You must accept this.
I answered him not and stepped out into the snow and storm. The sky above me is gray and forlornly
dismal as the aches within my ribs, ice cascading down from the heavens. February 26, 1860.
Lurching through the deep snow that lay heavy upon the courtyard, I spied my brother George with a cluster of workers,
and limped steadfastly toward them, pulling him away covertly so we might whisper amongst ourselves in secret.
I do not trust this priest. He appears not a man of God to me.
And why is that, William? He locks himself in with my daughters.
Does strange acts he allows no one else to see.
But you yourself said you have seen improvement in their condition.
Maybe?
Maybe their infirmary leaves on its own volition.
They call him black number, say they smell blood on his breath and hands.
What of that?
Good brother, my elder, you must not listen to the words and lies of the beast.
The reverend is a good man, I know.
long have we talked into the night.
We're not so different.
He was a settler once just as we are.
He had a family and a large ranch.
He went on a cattle run and came home to discover his ranch
had been raided by a war party of Indians.
His wife, his children, they were axed into tiny pieces,
mutilated beyond recognition.
He knew only devils could do such things, demons.
So he gave him.
over to the work of God.
Work of God, killing natives.
If their murders make them demons, then pray tell what do ours make us?
How can we condemn them for acts of violence when we strive to annihilate them with our own?
Brother, you are embracing your weaker nature.
I have business to attend to.
There will be a meeting on the morrow.
All the farmers and ranchers for miles around will be there.
You may voice your concerns there.
He strode back to the workers and left me alone in the snow.
My eye ached, and I could feel a leakage of pus dripping down out of my patch.
I wiped it with a handkerchief, spun on my crutch, and shuffled out.
In the barren branches of an old oak, some ravens quarreled and their cause of avarice echoed over the frozen land.
February 27, 1860.
The meeting tonight has left me shaking.
into the core and I find myself in doubt of God and country, wondering what it even means to be a
Christian. My faith itself seems imperil, all the more so I hear my daughter's pleading and wailing
cries echoed through the darkness. The meeting was held in our large dining hall. Many presided.
My estimate would be over 60 members of our settler community. The notorious Indian killer
Henry Larrabee was present.
A man whose very existence
fills my soul with dread.
Many are the tale of how he took great pleasure
in smashing open the heads of squaws,
children, and infants.
E.L. Davis presided.
He stood at the head of the hall,
the reverend to his right,
my three brothers, to his left.
We have petitioned Governor Downey
that the humbled volunteers
be mustered into service,
and he declined our petition,
stating that the U.S. Army was sending an additional company of regulars to Fort Humboldt.
Have we seen them?
No.
Simon Wright then stood up, shouting,
Our pleas that the federal government fall on deaf ears!
Already South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas have seceded from the Union.
They are poised on the brink of civil war and can spare no troops to help us.
We are on our own.
Great clamor of agreement with cheers of here, here rose up and echoed through the chamber.
Davis began to orate once more.
This company is needed for the lives and property of our family and friends.
If we can't get our just protection from state or federal government or protection that the citizens are entitled to,
I for one oppose paying any more taxes.
We will fight our own battles in our own way, extermination.
the Indians from the face of the earth as far as this county is concerned.
This cry was met with boisterous shouts of approval and a pounding of feet and fists.
I, in the back of the hall, could hold my silence no longer and spoke up over the din.
Am I the only man amongst you who beseechest peace with the natives?
No good can come of bloodshed.
Violence only begets more violence.
We must find brotherhood, where I fear we are all doomed.
Brotherhood!
Someone shouted.
They are not our brothers.
They are no kin to me.
Another hollered as a wave of jeers and shapes descended upon me.
Think of the message of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
I regaled them.
Think of the proverb of the Good Samaritan.
Then the Reverend stood up.
We are engaged in a great spiritual war with evil here.
Do not vacuously use the words of our Savior to make this Christian army weak.
Our Lord saith in Luke 1251,
Do you suppose that I came to grant peace on earth?
I tell you no, but rather division.
May I ask who?
I yelled, good clergyman, dear reverend, are your clergy.
"'My clergy!' he shouted.
"'Are any and all men who dare to ride with me
"'against the heathens of these hills?
"'The heroes of Humboldt County who dare to face the devil.
"'Tis they whom I preach,
"'and they to whom I bestow my blessings.'
"'I went to speak but was drowned out
"'by the cries of appreciation from the raucous crowd.
The reverend went on, screaming at the top of his lungs, spittle flying from his mouth.
I did not come to bring peace, but a sword.
So saith our Savior.
What's more?
Let him who hath no sword sell his robe and buy one.
Now, as commanded, let us make war.
Suddenly everyone was upon their feet clapping and stomping,
marching out of the hall and into the night.
I noticed George in the throng streaming by me and grabbed him by the shirt sleeve.
What would our father think?
He taught us kindness to our fellow man.
On Prince Edward's Island, he struggled to make peace with the natives.
Surely no good can come from this.
We are in Canada no more,
replied to me.
Cold is a century-old tombstone.
We must manifest our destiny.
He cast a quick, disdainful look upon me.
Look at what has become of you, brother.
Feckless, a half-blind cripple.
Your duty lies with your daughters.
Go to them.
Watch over them.
We will do what must be done.
He shook himself free of my grasp and rejoined the masses.
The mob mounted their horses and took off at a gallop out of the gates of our fort
and swallowed by the night, leaving only their echoed screams for bloodshed and vengeance.
February 26, 1860.
I feel the grip of insanity tighten over my mind as the howling of my daughters fills my head
like a swarm of bees may fill the hollow of a log.
I write as penance, as confession, to find intonement and divine forgiveness for the deeds I have
done am about to do.
to rid me of the black number, to find redemption for this number of darkness that stains my soul.
What great anguish it is to write this.
Indeed, I beat my fists upon my head and weep into my hands,
my tears staining this parchment and smearing the black ink.
It appears that I too have fallen under demonic influence.
How else could what has befallen me be possible?
Last night I was tormented with the most heinous of dreams, foul visions of fornication of the most illicit manner.
With my own daughters.
My twin girls of only 14 years.
We lay together in ways I have never conceived before.
Strange and unnatural positions.
I awoke, bathed, and sweat.
The sheets of tangle about me and pushed the foul dreams from my mind, deterred.
to forget them, thinking them obviously the product of stress and exhaustion.
I dressed and went to check on Bethany and Josephine.
I opened the door to find them unbound and naked, entwined with their arms around each
other, kissing most lootly with their tongues in each other's mouths.
Back for more, father.
Bethany said as she blinked one eye in a horrid wink.
Then looking down, I saw my pants.
My work shirt and frock, there in a tangle on the floor, and with a gasp made the sudden realization that those horrid visions last night were no dream.
Suddenly I remembered creeping into their room to unbind them and lay without.
Josephine looked at me now and spoke.
I will name my son after you, father, for you will be his father too.
They threw their heads back and laughed, her foul, taunting cackles and bethers.
Anthony said, I shall name my son Michael after the Reverend.
A staverick bat crushed by the levity of their words.
What's the matter, Daddy?
Sad that we had your little priest kill, Kai Kwaish.
We saw the way you looked at her.
Noddy, naughty.
Maybe you'll see her again in hell.
And do you know what we have your Reverend and your brother's doing now?
Caving in the heads of babies on an eye.
island in the bay. They burst into laughter, then leapt to their feet in a most unnatural way,
levitating, floating off the ground as they came at me. Their fingers curled, claw-like, and predatory.
Just as they reached me, I regained my senses and slammed the door shut, pushing home the large iron bolt.
When they slammed against the door, it bulged. And for a moment, I thought it might shatter,
but it held firm. They then began to beat and bound upon it, scratching at it while they howled
man she like.
Let us out, father!
Their muffled cries from within.
Let us please you as we did last night.
As I sit and write, my hand trembling,
so that the quill can barely scratch these words out upon the page.
I only hope I can erase my black number with these confessions.
That I can escape that incestual number of darkness
which has somehow found its way upon my weak shoulders,
which are unable to bear it.
Seeing only one recourse to this abominable situation,
I go to fetch the turpentine,
the whale fat, the gear grease,
anything flammable I may find,
and cover the house in it,
cover myself in it,
and hope that the flames of this earth can appease our Lord and Savior,
and spare me from the sulfur
flames of hellfire below.
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