What do you think of my Cthulhu Mythos short story?
Shadows Over The Santa Ana Mountains
There are in the Santa Ana Mountains of California some prehistorical survivals only vaguely hinted at by Indian legends or later accounts by wild-eyed settlers. However it is not only in California but elsewhere in the dim dark domed hills of Vermont, the snowy Alps, the harsh Andes, and the towering Himalayas that these things survive and lurk. I have had the terror of discovering this truth. Yet I have somehow managed to keep my sanity, in desperation I tell you so you so you may investigate and deal with these horrors properly-and keep those secrets away from those evil and malignant. I will mail this account to officials of the Federal Government specifically President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Attorney General Homer Stille Cummings, and the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation John Edgar Hoover and also three copies to Miskatonic University where many colleagues pursuing the truth work along with each a copy of my journal, certain drawings and photographs, and the translated excerpts from Beyond Space and Time and various periodicals to have them fully realize the truth. I believe, though, that the Federal Government has partially realized this truth of prehistoric survivals probably since that raid on dark, brooding, evil, eldritch, blasphemous, crumbling, Innsmouth in the winter of 1927-1928 but I hope with this account they will get the full revelation. Even now, I shudder remembering what I found out on that cold May night in 1935 in the bleak, brooding, and dark Santa Ana Mountains.
Before I tell the tale, I will relate my background for readers to make sure that I am not merely delusional due to my heritage and the legends that surround it. My name is William Derby Eaton and through most of my forty-one years, I have lived in the city of my birth, ancient, historic Arkham, Massachusetts. I was influenced greatly by that old witch-haunted legend-filled town with its dark brooding spires and twisted gambrel roofs. Perhaps I was quite morbidly influenced since one of my first memories was of going to a funeral of my uncle and aunt who died in a fire and their daughter had gone missing and I remember my parents being involved in her search. I was born in an old aristocratic and distinguished New England family line that had resided in America since 1636 on my paternal side and was an only child. My ancestors were quite involved in early American history. My ancestors participated in the Salem Witch Trials, were members of the Sons of Liberty, fought in the Revolution at Lexington, Concord, Saratoga, and Yorktown and funded trading ships to the East Indies. My father, Charles Eaton was a Professor of English at Miskatonic University until his death in 1932 and my mother, Martha Eaton nee Derby, was a simple homemaker till her death in 1930. I myself was born in on August 20th 1895 at my parents’ home on Waterford St in a pleasant white house of the Federal Era. I was a gifted student at school and at only the age of 17 I entered Miskatonic University, majoring in History. At this time, I became interested in and took part in occult studies with my cousin Edward Pickman Derby, a poet and “Bohemian” and I gave him much advice on his writings of weird and horrific poetry and also edited it. When the Great War came, I did not serve because I had failed my physical exams. Afterwards, I entered the Graduate School at Miskatonic until in 1926 I became a Professor of History at Miskatonic University.
During that time, I continued to be a close companion with my cousin Edward Pickman Derby. So for eight years I teached at Miskatonic University and became a young but respected and competent professor publishing various articles of note in respected journals and in 1929 my great triumph, the history book Politics and Society in New England of the Early Republic came out which in general acclaimed an excellent survey and remains to this day the definitive work on that subject. However, the last three of these years were nearly unbearable, crushing with a series of three tragedies. As stated above both of my parents died in this period. Then the year after my father’s death my cousin Edward, who was almost a brother to me went mad. I still remember than with Edward ranting and raving about how his wife who had left was trying to steal his mind and so on. Finally, he had become insane enough to be sent to the Arkham Sanatorium. Then Daniel Upton, his best friend in a case of what I believe to be collective madness ended up believing Edward’s stories, and thus shot, and killed Edward, convinced in his insane mind it was not Edward’s soul that was in Edward’s body. I felt like I was going mad like my cousin Edward and his best friend Daniel Upton due to the fact I lived in darkening Arkham clustering with horrifying legends, which had driven Edward and Daniel mad. Also despite my love of historic Arkham, I decided I could bear New England’s winters no longer especially, as I was always sensitive to the cold and caught the flu almost every winter and when I was seven I had almost died from the flu. So when the small University of California Los Angeles offered me a teaching post in June 1934 I accepted with little hesitation, agreeing to teach at the university starting the next school year.
I transported my belongings on a Southern Pacific freight train and I myself had a comfortable Boston-to-Los Angeles ride. When I arrived at the train station in Los Angeles, California on August 26th 1934 I had already purchased in advance a house in Whittier, a small town near Los Angeles. For some local insight and food that day, I went to a local grocery store owned by one Frank Nixon as soon as I had moved into my home. He told me in our discussion that one of his sons, Richard had gone to Duke University in North Carolina. I said to him that I had teached at Miskatonic, a far more distinguished institution than Duke and we had a lively and good-natured debate about which university was better. In September when I began teaching I was displeased that the University of California Los Angeles did not even offer Doctorates and only had offered Masters since last year. But still I found the warm Mediterranean California climate resembling that of the French Riviera, Italy, or Greece vastly better than the bleak cold New England weather. However during fall I missed the beautiful New England fall foliage and sometimes I woke up at night having dreamt of New England’s fair green lanes and whitewashed steeples in quaint villages.
My discovery of the truth was the connection of various factors. Being an avid antiquarian, I had begun in my spare time studying the history and antiquities of Southern California. I had on several trips travelled to Santa Barbara, San Juan Capistrano, and other sites of the Franciscan Missions of California. I also constantly visited the Huntington Library in San Marino and became a regular there. Then one day at Huntington Library I came upon a curious document written by Father Jose Munoz Alvarez of the San Juan Capistrano Mission in 1802 who was nicknamed “the Mad Monk of San Juan Capistrano” for this document. It was written in Spanish of course and my friend Timothy Askew, Professor of Anthropology at University of California Los Angeles helped me translate it since I had barely begun learning Spanish. Father Alvarez seemed to rant in his writing about some blasphemous horrors in the Santa Ana Mountains. He had also written down some curious Indian legends relating to these things. I listened, somewhat frightened and amazed, to Johnson for these legends were similar to the folklore and legends of New England which I had studied with Albert Wilmarth a professor of English at Miskatonic and an amateur student of New England folklore. The document basically stated that some horrible daemon-like creatures lived in the Santa Ana Mountains and they were the cause of the disappearance of several Spanish soldiers who had gone there to explore. Father Munoz had seen these creatures and he had nearly gone mad trying to describe these things. I asked Professor Askew to translate the document for me so I could correlate it with New England legends. He did so and gave me the English version nine days later. I have put some relevant excerpts here:
“In my talk with the Indians, they have told me many curious legends. They have stated that there are beings in the Santa Ana Mountains, which are not from Earth. They say these beings came from the stars to and the beings are extremely secretive. Indeed, the Indians say many tribesmen over the years have disappeared because they have gotten too near these beings from the stars… “
“ On April 14th 1802 7 soldiers, and 22 Indians left San Juan Capistrano to explore the depths of the Santa Ana Mountains. After 3 weeks they still did not come. Finally almost a month later a bereaved, maddened soldier stumbled upon us screaming and ranting about the beings from Indian legends. The soldier said that the others had made a deal with demons to leave Earth and go to their planet, Yuggoth, which he says is the smallest planet in the system and beyond Uranus…”
“On the morning of April 26th 1802 10 soldiers, 26 Indians, Father Herrero, and I left San Juan Capistrano to investigate once and for all the goings on in the Santa Ana Mountains. By mid-afternoon we had arrived and marched more slowly. We suddenly stumbled upon 3 soldiers in the previous expedition who had disappeared. They declared that the beings were not evil and that they were good. They said Yuggoth was a paradise and the beings would detach their brains from their bodies to take them there and they carried cylinders saying that was where the brain was going to be.”
“It was then I realized that the soldiers were not humans but the beings and that the cylinders contained the real soldiers’ detached brains…”
Then I began the studying this document on all spare times. I had brought a book on New England folklore and several documents also relating to it and I compared the manuscript with those materials. I was astonished by the similarity of the legends and resolved to visit the Santa Ana Mountains.
I first visited the Santa Ana Mountains on October 22nd 1934. For the whole day I hiked through the mountains and investigated hoping to shed light on the folktales but I did not find anything strange or horrific and returned to my home. Then I found the truth about a horrific historical event. In Tustin, a town near the Santa Ana Mountains, I had met a man named Henry Walker, a storeowner who was fifty-six and who had lived during the days of Tustin’s founding and I befriended him. One day soon after my investigations into California folklore began when he and I were discussing local history he brought up a horrifying topic.
Walker said “Well back in the 80’s and the 90’s there were lots of minin goin on up in the Red Hills. There was a small town up there. It was the usual western mining town with saloons, hotels, an’ all that. But in 96’ the mines closed down. And d’ you know why? They’ve been trying t’ cover it up fer forty years.” He grabbed a bottle of whisky on the table, took a swig from it, and then sat down again. “It was in April. I was in town doing my usual work as a clerk at the general store. Than the miners started running screaming and looking crazily. Those crazy bastards! They came down by the dozens and began slaughtering the townspeople. They went mad from the mercury I guess. They beat people to death with their shovels and picks. They killed the blacksmith, Mr.Smythe, and Ms.Holliday from what I saw. Finally the Sherriff, Bill Cooper and his Deputy restored order. They hanged the only surviving miner and the Deputy went to the mines to investigate but he never came back. I don’ know whatever happened to him and I don’ wanna know. Most of the townspeople were dead, hundreds of men, women, and children. As I’ve said they’ve trying t’ cover it up. They’ve simply buried it.” I sat there stunned by his story. And I thought about his story about the cause of the miners’ madness. Walker had blamed mercury. But I wondered could only mercury blame their psychotic madness?
With the Munoz document and the transcribed interview with Walker I thought there truly was a fascinating folklore in California. I constantly visited the mountains looking for something that would give me more evidence than just 2 curious documents and interviews but I failed in my searches. Finally in May 1935 I achieved a breakthrough. It seemed there was a queer cult in Los Angeles worshipping some strange primordial gods, which were related to the folktales. This cult was related to the Theosophists, which were quite numerous in California. Their chief deity was Cthulhu, which I had heard of in the feared Necronomicon, and they often visited the Santa Ana Mountains for their rites. I had first heard of this cult when I was reading the Los Angeles Times. One of its articles stated about a police raid on this cult because about accusations of human sacrifice and murder. I soon resolved to learn more about this cult and their practices since they too seemed interested in the mysterious findings in the Santa Ana Mountains.
So with Askew we investigated the cult. We met several members of the cult; however they refused to talk with us at all. I wrote a letter to various professors at Miskatonic inquiring for more information on the Cthulhu Cult and the New England folklore which were so similar to the one here in California. I had a long exchange of letters with Professor Wilmarth who sent me this postcard in haste:
Albert N. Wilmarth
118 Saltonstall St.
Arkham, Mass.
December 2nd 1934
William Derby Eaton
264 Cleveland Ave.
Whittier, Ca
My Dear Sir:
I have known you for a long time as a fellow colleague and a good friend at Miskatonic University and have heard of your investigation into California folklore and Cthulhu Cult. I beg you please do not investigate anymore. More investigation will result in your madness. I myself seven years ago investigated these matters and I have regretted it ever since. It was in the dim hills of Vermont. And it is the same here in the mountains of California for they are everywhere in distant maddening eldritch places. If you value your sanity I beg you to stop the investigation for there are things men should not know and knowledge of this will come at the price of your sanity. I will continue writing these letters till you stop your investigation.
Yours Very Truly,
Albert N. Wilmarth
This letter merely made me more curious as I wondered what primordial secrets of knowledge of would be the cause of madness.
The cult, as we learned more about it, was quite widespread than we originally thought. It had at least 2,000 members in the Los Angeles area. Members included an eccentric millionaire and a score of movie actors and actresses. It seemed that on May Day, Hallowmas, and Candlemass the cultists would go to the Santa Ana Mountains for strange rites that locals reported quite surprised and shocked.
Before the investigation went any further Professor Askew died in mysterious circumstances. He had left Newport Beach on December 23rd at eight o’clock in the morning on his yacht to go on a brief cruise and promised to return by noon. Yet he did not return and an investigation by police and other authorities began. Then on December 26th his yacht was found floating in the Pacific Ocean with his dead body inside the boat. An autopsy determined that he had died of a heart attack but some thought there were struggles of violence as there was a wound in his arm. But the coroners declared that it was unrelated and probably due to an accident unrelated to his death. Most curiously however an another yachter had reported that he had passed Askew’s boat and saw that there was another boat right next to it. However the investigators dismissed this, for there was no other evidence reinforcing the witness.