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256 lines
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:: :istorted
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Text File #4 :::. Az A. Thoth
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<20><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD> :: :igital <20><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>
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14 February 1994 :::' Mongoloid Telecom
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::::
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::. rection
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::::
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:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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'The Scratching'
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Elbow: A Prologue
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It entered through my right elbow; I'm quite sure of that. There
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was a tingling, a slight numbness, and then it was as though nothing had
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happened there at all. But then the scar on my left hand started to throb,
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and slowly bleed before my eyes. The old wound reopened and the blood that
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came was old and dried. It wasn't like blood should be.
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It was feeling around me, I guess, making sure it wouldn't leak out
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accidently, or maybe making sure that there was an easy escape hatch
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available. Anyway, there was no pain, just that same numbness that began
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shooting through my whole body. It wasn't long after this exploration that
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the scratching began, and I started having fits of unconsciousness, from
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which I would awaken in places not knowing where I was, where I'd been,
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how I'd gotten there.
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The scratching. It was inside, somewhere in my head, a little
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above and behind my right eye. I guess the energy had found a comfortable
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place there, or maybe there was some more significant reason, I don't know.
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Gradually, I came to accept the ever growing periods that were
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complete blanks. There were days where I never woke at all, but just lay
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low, deep, and let the scratching run its course. I began to be grateful
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for the few moments of self-awareness
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I still came across, but I found that they tired me rapidly, fighting to
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hold on to them an extra moment, retain myself for just a second longer.
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I always would sink back into the dark after a little while. It was strong,
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and when it did need to rest, it was never for very long.
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Perhaps it seems strange that I accepted my unusual fate so
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casually, but this was simply because such things were not unknown to me.
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In fact, I had been expecting something soon.
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Listen closely, and I will tell you if I can.
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I. Uncle Howard
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I had this weird old uncle, and his name was Howard Kinston. Even
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though most of the family ridiculed him, I adored him. Anyway, Uncle Howard
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would always tell me stories about some of the strange, and as I grew older,
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disturbing, things he had seen and heard and read in his days as a field
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archaeologist of some reputation.
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His most frightening stories were the ones about the things he
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called the Low Ones, which he said lived in secret places under the earth
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and in shadowy dankness.
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According to Uncle Howard, there was a place not more than half an
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hour or so drive away, down over in Mansfield, a neighboring town to my
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native Getzenberg, where strange things happened in the night-time and
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where sounds of inhuman gatherings could be heard carried in the winds.
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There were Low Ones there, my Uncle said, or something like them.
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The Low Ones were old things, older than mankind. The thing
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they worshipped was somewhere around the age of time itself, and its
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existence went against every logic and sense of order that had ever
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been given status as law. It was a thing akin to c
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haos itself, devourer of all things wholesome or likened to normalcy.It was
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an Old thing indeed, from the times before the ages of man, when the earth
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did not spin in its current cycle but hung suspended and blank in other
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places where dimension had
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less meaning and concepts of spacial occupation were rudimentary and
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unnecessary. It was a thing long relegated to the outside, but which
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never failed to search for the way back in, if only for the sake of
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reclaiming what once had been in part its own.
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It, and the other Old Ones had thrived then, in a
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discordant world of clashing reality and angular misshapenness.
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They were still around somewhere, in the places between the spaces of
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untold numbers of realities, always scratching at the doorways
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they could find but never open.
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It would be the end of man, should they ever gain re-entry.
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Then would return the times of screaming insanity and abominous intent,
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when laughing things of spiteful wonder would walk the Earth's regions
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again, terrible in their indifference.
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The last vestiges of their ancient and innumerable blasphemies
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remained in the Low Ones, and other foul things akin to them in the various
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regions of the Earth and in dreams. They had not been cast away, but had
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fled to the dark places with the coming of new ages.
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I always thought that the stories were just fairy tales, a game my
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Uncle liked to play with me, making up frightening tales to keep me wake
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at night. Then, when I was twenty-three, my uncle came to me, and
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told me that he had found proof that the Low
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Ones were real. The possibilities of such a hideous thing were far too
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much. I had to go with him. That was 1978 and my uncle was forty-seven.
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Today it is January 10, 1986. My uncle is still forty-seven, and I know
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that he is somehow still alive, or at least existing in some insane
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facsimile of life, somewhere across unthinkable gulfs of space.
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II. Mansfield, 1978
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We headed over towards the town. Uncle Howard said we
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wouldn't have to go really that near the city itself, as the places
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we were looking for weren't to be found so near that large a normal
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human population. There were some old Indian burial mounds between
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Getzenberg and Mansfield that my Uncle knew of, and there were those
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that said something still moved far below.
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It was cloudy that night when we arrived at the state park
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that had been built up around the old mounds, and so neither the
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moon nor the stars cast much light. Somewhere, I could feel a
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drumming, and horribly, inescapably, I knew it was coming from below.
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Not only from below the mounds, but from below the grounds all around
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the park. The sound was muffled by the tons of rock that must have
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surely separated us from its origin, and in fact the rhythms
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could not be heard at all, but only felt. That was enough.
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My Uncle had a pair of flashlights, and he tossed one to me.
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He knew a place in the side of the old stone hill that led down.
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We descended through an old cave in the side of a tiny stone mounta
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in that stood on the far side of the park from the mounds, but the slope
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gradually changed degree and direction so that we came to be travelling
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towards the mounds, eventually at a nearly horizontal direction.
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The drumming did not seem any stronger here, though occasionally
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we could hear a singular groaning in the earth as something shifted
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from the reverberations of the drums.
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The little cave we had descended through had become a magnificent
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grotto, and as we made our way, rather slowly, towards the place that
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would be beneath the mounds, the ceiling of the cavern became increasingly
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higher, and the walls became ever more smooth.
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It was unnatural, that polished, soap-smooth rock, which should have b
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een jagged, gradual limestone and granite. How could we have known?
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It was just one more mystery, and it diverted little of our attention from
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the now rumbling drums emanating from the cavern ahead.
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When we came to the gigantic shelf and the hideous lake
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therein, we prayed diligently that we had managed to shut our
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flashlights off in time.
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The hideous spectacle of deformities and grotesques below seemed to
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have paid us no mind. They were dancing in a frenzy before a huge stone
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idol of a monstrous worm, its head-end adorned with four vicious sets of
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mandiblous jaws working the air in screaming disunion, its tail-end
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seemingly streaming forth with obscenities represented in the stone.
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There were no drums. The rumbling came from further
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ahead, from below and behind the hideous black lake of tar that lay
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beyond the dancing abominations that writhed before their idol in
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flickering shadows of blackly radiant torches.
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The light cast from those impossible things was a radiation of sorts,
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causing everything within the hideous grotto to shine darkly with
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colors unassociated with any earthly spectrum. They cast no light but
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instead seeped into things, giving the rocks an inconsistent glow remindful
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of bio-luminescent fungi and the hideous Low things an innate light
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not unlike that found in many fishes native to the deepest of waters.
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The rumbling was getting louder, and the things below were
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quickening the tempo from its already feverish pulse to an insane
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set of impossible contortions and writhings upon the ground.
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When the thing burst from the lake, all of the mutants
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fell prostrate and motionless upon the ground.
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We saw the tip of a thing of impossible proportions.
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If this were only its head peeking out at us from the lake, then the
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rest of that gargantuan worm would have filled the earth with its
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wrapped form.
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The lake was not a lake, and I saw now for the
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first time how different the reflections in the tarrish
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substancelessness really were. All the angles were inverted
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there, and everything folded wrong.
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My Uncle began to mumble softly to himself, and then he did
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something I could never have expected or prepared for.
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He stepped off our ledge and dropped the eighteen feet
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to the surface of the opaque black "lake" below. He strode in
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a daze onwards towards the rumbling worm-like monstrosity.
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I tried to scream to him, to stop him, to go after him;
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it was futile. My lungs were as frozen as any of the other
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apparatus of my body, as I stood there and stared.
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When the thing suddenly retreated back through its hole, at
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last I did scream and take flight.
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Back through the smoothened grotto, the wide walls of
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which might have precisely accommodated the massive tongue which,
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in the worm's moment of retreat, had slipped instantly out to envelop
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my uncle.
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But it was its offspring that I ran from now. The worm-thing, that I
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would come to finally know as Os'Gthua, the eater, had gone, back
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through its impossible and insufficient gateway. The Low Ones,
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which I have found are properly known as Deep Ones amongst the small
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circle who know of such things, have gone from the cavern, my Uncle
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having ruined their gate there.
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III. Spawn
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I was able to run for a long time, once I found some of my uncle'
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s old books. I was able to hide myself from it, and throw it off my trail.
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I think it might even have feared me for a moment, some of those books
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were so insidious. They toyed with
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my will, but I overcame the temptations, shut them and finally left
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them behind me. I ran and I hid and it never found me for
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eight years. Until about nine days ago, when it found me here
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in Maine. I couldn't run any more, without the books and the insane
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verses within them.
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Now it's in my arm, in my head, scratching on my brain and
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taking my body. I've been fighting a long time now to write this
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down, nearly an hour, and I don't think I can hold it off anymore.
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I've got a twelve gauge in my hands, so I have to finish this. I hate
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to think what it has done with my hands already, without such things
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as a gun. I read the papers when I still can, and I know who or
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what it is that's been decimating the populati-
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on of late-night travellers, prostitutes and watchmen. I hate to think
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what the thing in me would do with a weapon. It has very limited
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intelligence, it seems, if any at all; its actions are random. I
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can't let things go on this way, I just can't.
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Not while there's still some piece of me left, anyway.
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They'll say I was insane, and that's fine. At least I'll have done
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what I could to stop the spreading. I only hope they notice quickly that
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some of the recently dead, the ones that made the front page with me,
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won't seem to want to stay down below. They'll be coming back.
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The spawning has begun. I only hope I haven't taken it too far
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to be stopped. I won't let myself turn into one of those things
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below the mounds.
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The scratching has started again now. I've said all I've got time to.
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If only that were the only place they could cross over to our here and now,
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I'd feel so much better about everything. But I'm afraid.
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Need more time...too much to explain...don't have it. This may be the
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last chance I get to stop it...the scratching...been harder
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lately...hard now...think it knows...I think it knows...wants out again...
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my God it can hear my brain! The rumbling's back...eight years!
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It came WITH ME...THE GATE!
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`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'
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Distorted Digital Erection February 1994 Text File #4
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DDE is fully supported on the Necropolis BBS
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216.966.8970 - subterranean telecom - All TEXT!
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vaginal yeast infections are worse, much worse..
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Submissions are accepted. Send your t-file submission to Sorc, on
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the Necropolis. If using a new account, (I)nclude the file with
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the New User Application.
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CHECK for MORE Distorted Digital Erection in the NEAR future!
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TCC in CHECK! ... and assorted tales of erect rodentia!...
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`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'`'
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-eof-
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