A Story of
Woe and Destruction in Seven Parts
Dedicated to Robert Louis Stevenson, in
the hope that some of his talent rubbed off on me.
Prologue
On
July 19th, 1783, in a small village not far from Brighton, in the
unending undulations of the South Downs, a man wearing a black suit, his hair
slicked back and black, a thin wisp of moustache resting salacious upon his top
lip, suddenly appeared. From the first moment this man slunk upon the scene of
this small village, the locals thought, yes,
this man indeed might be the Devil. His dress, quite remarkable and
blasphemous to the uncivilised, prudent country mind, was considered most
extraordinary.
He entered the Fox and Hound, the local haunt of traders, travellers, and
carriagemen, now ominously bereft of life, ordered a gin, and stood stock-still
staring down at his drink. The few villagers sat, watching the man silently.
The stranger then clicked his fingers suddenly, jarring the nerves of one old
fellow sitting immediately near him, and then, quite shaken up, as if sediment
dispossessed in some unknown vessel, the men about him watched as this
dark-eyed figure downed his tipple, now aflame, a purple glow shrouding the
glass.
He
then smashed down the glass, turned to the men sitting about their drinks,
seeking out the lifeless eyes of each one of them, raised his head, extended
his arms upwards and out, and said, ‘Praise be to Jesus! Forgiver of sins! Great
Redeemer! His words be empty, his blood bad vin! A dreamer! I am a
foreigner to these shores; my sins
are yours! Gentlemen, farewell!’
And with that he smiled, his teeth seeming infinite in number, pointed like
bleached thorns, faced the barkeep, turned on his heel, and walked briskly from
the inn, a harsh wind seeming to scowl out through the wide-open doors after
him.
Yes, it could indeed be said that the Devil was roaming the lonely, windswept
hills of the South Downs, but, as of yet, nobody could be quite certain of the
dark perspective that was slowly casting itself down upon this place of
endlessly verdant desolation.
Part I:
The White Curse of Mrs Mary Parsons Eldridge
In
1783, in the months leading up to the episode I am to document, a great boon
smiled itself upon the people of Elmsley Village, East Sussex. A wonderful
Christian renaissance had begun in miniature, thanks to the charming, and yet
evangelically terrifying, figure of Mrs Mary Parsons Eldridge.
Mrs Eldridge, a strict Calvinist, had spent her youth in Scotland, in a country
home peopled by the pale figures of silent and dutiful servants. Mrs Parson’s
governess, Rebecca Hawthorne, was a most vicious figure, from whom Mrs Parsons
herself sought much guidance and development. Mrs Hawthorne saw the Whore of
Babylon spread-eagled out everywhere about her, the world a shameful and
blighted place, craven, and populated by innumerable godless heathen. ‘Wait
till it burns, wee Mary: you’ll see tha good Lord shall smite most of his sheep
– bad lambs, all e’ them.’
From roots tangled in epithets of prostration and fear, Mrs Mary Eldridge had
become a woman whose breath could be made to become as fire, her benign
appearance and modest dress disguising the shimmering scales of a vast and
angry dragon.
In the years leading up to the moment of my story, Mrs Eldridge had scorned
Father Peters, the vicar of Elmsley Parish Church, for being far too green;
she’d rebuffed him in church, spread vicious rumours about him amongst her
devout circle of religious talking heads, and had even gone as far as
denouncing him as a charlatan, a religious fraud, a demon in Christian garb. In
April of 1782, his constitution weakening, his health now cracked like the
foundations of a condemned building, he became an outcast and fled the little
village of Elmsley.
Banished
from the community, unwelcomed by the church, he died a gaunt and defeated man:
on June 28th of 1782, in his sister’s house on the outskirts of
Hove, at 7.12 pm, he had been pronounced dead by a private doctor. The reason
for his death seemed mysterious, but the blood that had been lost from his
bodily orifices (let us be euphemistic about it) could only mean that he had
succumbed to a painful, drawn-out death caused by internal ulcers.
And so, the figure of a humble and helpful servant of the Lord absent, fear and
dejection rife, a small religious orgy began to surface like a boil on the
flesh of this village, growing ever larger with time. Soon, stories began to
circulate in nearby villages, eventually reaching Brighton within a few weeks.
And
then, one month after the death of Father Peters, a small, modestly dressed
woman appeared at the front door of some quiet soul’s house the next village
over, saying, ‘Good morning, kind sir. I call on behalf of the Eldridge
Evangelical Church of Elmsley, and I bring good tidings: I have come to save
your soul from eternal damnation.’ As the man went to close his door, the woman
said, ‘Brother, do not close your door on me – I will not go so quietly.’ And,
flanked by two solemnly dressed men, she entered this poor soul’s abode.
Part II:
The Case of the Travelling Man
Strange
goings-on in the little village were widely talked about. The village, it was
said, had become much more insular, much less welcoming of strangers and
travelling folk. Sometime in November, 1782, a nobleman, one P. R. Longfellow,
a landowner with a tobacco plantation in Virginia, was making his way from his
London address to his second home in Brighton; he had been ordered to
convalesce in the midst of that sweet air by his personal physician, Dr
Ruthers.
A curious man with a keen wit, he decided to stop by Elmsley to rest, take up a
brief board, and examine the minutiae of this village, his aim to investigate
whether the fanciful tales he’d heard about this accursed place had any
validity to them.
Except for the small tavern there, the appropriately named Fox and Hound, he’d
found the place to have the air of some forsaken hole, a deserted and unpeopled
place, dark and chill. Upon enquiring with the local men who frequented the Fox
and Hound, he had been met with rebuff.
‘What’s going on here?’ he’d asked the innkeeper. ‘It’s awful quiet here.’ He
took a sip of his ale. ‘Is that usual?’
‘Nothing out of the ordinary, good sir,’ he said. ‘Now we’d kindly ask sir if
he’d keep his nose out of our business.’ The innkeeper then leaned in closer to
the man, the bar seeming an insufficient barrier, and muttered, ‘If sir knows
what’s good for him.’
The man stared ‘round at the men in puzzlement.
‘You heard ‘im,’ one man piped up. ‘Now go: we don’t like your sort ‘round
here.’
‘My sort?’ he said. ‘I’ll have you know I’m a respectable man! I –’
‘We don’t care what sort of man you
are,’ said the innkeeper. He pointed to the door. ‘Now go!’
The
man stormed out, going straight to the boarding-house where he’d booked his
lodging. He was met by the landlady, a curt old woman by the name of Miriam
Weathers, greying, with a weak smile like a defeated old dog.
‘Good evening, Mrs Weathers,’ he said. ‘I’m sorry to announce this, but I shall
no longer require the services of this boarding-house. I leave for Brighton at
once. Please have my things readied immediately.’
‘Well, my goodness, whatever’s got into you!’ she’d said.
‘A scene,’ he began. ‘A most illuminating and humiliating scene at your local
public house. I have never before been treated as such, in such a coarse and
ungodly manner! Chased! Chased from the scene! Forced to flee like some
pestilent scuttling beast!’
The woman looked at him silently. ‘Ungodly?’ she muttered to herself. Her gaze
became sharper. ‘Ungodly?’ Her blank expression suddenly broke into a vicious
snarl. ‘Ungodly! Ungodly! Get out! Get out at once!’
‘But what of my bags?’ he’d said in desperation.
‘I shall have them sent out to you at once! Now, be gone with you, vile
malingerer!’ she said, and as she shooed him out she spat.
The gentlemen could see that gloaming was descending, and the greying sky,
bruised like dead flesh, looked ready to rid itself of its heavy burden. His
things were sent out to him, the coachman came from the Fox and Hound, and they
left once his things were stowed away.
But upon leaving the scene, he heard a most terrifying and blood-curdling
scream. Upon looking back, he could see a pale, ghostly face, its
expressionless eyes peering out of a seeming dark void, from a window above the
arched door of the Eldridge Evangelical Church. Not a religious man, he
nonetheless crossed himself, wishing the miles to Brighton few, and the memory
of the despicable place forgotten.
Many
more tales of woe reached people outside of Elmsley. It was said that a special
Christmas Mass was held, at which all manner of horror and debauchery was on
display. The child of a young girl by the name of Sarah Miles was baptised in
blood on the orders of Mrs Eldridge, her reason being that only a baptism of
blood could save this poor bastard child’s soul. Tales of crucifixion, murder
and torture also wound their way into the mouths of those living outside the
village – stories of castration, forced abortion, rape, and incest, the likes
of which outsiders could scarce believe.
But one especially strange tale involved the proceedings that culminated on
that bloody day, the birth date of our Lord, AD 1782. After this bloody mass, a
book burning took place. Copies of Principia Mathematica, Leviathan, treatises
by Galileo, and Huygens’ Cosmothereos were burned. But one strange addition was
a beautiful, green bound volume of verse by William Wordsworth.
Strangely, Mrs Eldridge saved all of her venom and vindictiveness for this
text. ‘Wordsworth,’ she began, ‘tells us that nature is sensuous, that nature
encourages us to think romantically - but Wordsworth has debauched nature!
Nature is not ever-changing and mysterious; nature is fixed and immutable!
God’s law! Nature does not encourage us to be sensuous; he has sexualised it!
Nature is a seething and vile pit, and He shows us, in his plan, how we must
live! Nature is a fearsome example of His will! Nature is sensuality and death!
If we do not abstain, we shall go the way of the myriad creatures that leap to
the grave! Abstain, ye heathen! Abstain, abstain, abstain!’
With these finishing words, Mrs Eldridge was said to have nearly passed out,
her vehement admonitions almost causing her to break into tears of
proselytising passion. The deafening sound of clapping and wild applause filled
the scene, seeming more some sickly pagan display than a religious celebration,
and as the flames rose violently from the mountain of smouldering words,
whipping and flicking the air, they were said to have almost licked the sky.
Part III:
The Curious Life of Jonathan Holt
Jonathan
Holt was a simple man. He lived with his mother on her small farm, left to her
after the death of her late husband, and worked himself drear for her, tilling
the land, tending the animals, and maintaining their small cottage. To earn his
keep, he also worked as a woodcutter for a local timber trader called Phineas
MacManus, who lived in a small woodcutter’s lodge three miles east of Elmsley.
Their farm was nestled in the total blackness of those undulating hills, nights
darker than dark, swallowed into the leviathan landscape as if nothing could
overpower its monotone immensity.
His mother, worried about her son’s journey from the woodcutter’s lodge, would
leave a single candle in the front window of their cottage. The building was
crested on the brow of a hill, known as Holt’s Bluff, after his great
grandfather, overlooking farmland and the seeming infinity of those verdant
green hills. And, far off, appearing like some heavy load sinking into a mire,
was the little village of Elmsley, tucked away in a small valley, but still
visible by the steeple of the now darkling and tainted church.
One day in late February, the season now on winter’s edge, nestling like a
solitary bird on a snow-specked branch, naked before the judgement of winter,
Jonathan had got home, guided by that single candle so affectionately placed,
to find his mother sitting by the fire hearth. When he stepped in, hanging up
his jacket and removing his heavy boots, he said, ‘Mother, you seem odd, your
air like one who has cracked before the visage of a ghost!’
After a few moments, his mother stirred: ‘Sorry? Oh, you’re back.’
‘Yes, mother,’ said Jonathan. ‘Are you okay?’ He paused. ‘Shall I make some
tea?’
‘Oh, that’d be nice.’ She seemed unable to focus on anything, her mind
possessed by some terrible thought.
‘Mother, what’s wrong?’
‘I’ll tell you presently. Some tea would be nice.’
He brought the tea, placing it on the small oak table between the two
brown-leather armchairs sat before the broad fire. They sat, and Jonathan
looked down at the right arm of his chair, the leather peeled away, revealing
the soft down beneath it.
His mother began, telling him about the strange man who’s suddenly appeared in
Elmsley Village, the way he’d comported himself so strangely and debauched
their faith. ‘These are dark time’s, son,’ she’d said. ‘First the coming of
this Christian resurgence, the way those cackling beasts had scorned Father
Peters, that horrible, wench, Mrs… Mrs –’
‘– Eldridge?’
‘Yes, Mrs Eldridge – the way she’d stirred up such hateful sentiment. She
professes to be a good Christian; a good
Christian, no less!’ She paused, taking the hand of her only son. ‘And now
this. I tell you, things are bad. I don’t know what’s to be done, but I tell
you the good Lord must be soon to intervene. It’s a godless situation! Only the
Devil could’ve conjured it up, Jonathan!’
Perplexed, Jonathan asked his mother to better explain what’d happened. She’d
mentioned a strange man making an appearance in Elmsley Village, and, after
she’d calmed down, Jonathan asked her to tell him the entire story.
He’d sat there, horrified and confused. It seemed like he’d been sat there
hours, because the twilight that loomed on his way home had now given way to
total darkness. He stepped out of the house briefly, scanning the hills in the
distance, and he could make out a single light coming from Elmsley Village, and
it came from the Eldridge Church. The wind seemed harsh and strange, and he
could almost make out faint words floating upon it. He stepped back into the
house, wished his dear mother good night, and went to bed, barely sleeping at
all, but rather imagining the menacing figure which seemed to haunt this quiet
corner of nowhere.
Part IV:
A Strange Meeting
The
next morning, a Saturday, Jonathan awoke to find the weather outside a rainy
sort of bland. The irregular cottage windows, aslant and warped, were clouded
by rain, and the air outside was hazy, the sky a barren grey.
Jonathan found his mother in the kitchen preparing their supper, a roast
chicken dinner, followed by an apple pie. She’d peeled the vegetables, put the
chicken in their small oven, and was now peeling and coring some bramley
apples, later to make the pastry crust which would embalm the apple in its hot
grave.
‘Jonathan, dear, would you fetch some more wood from the pantry?’
‘Won’t it be damp?’ asked Jonathan.
‘No, no, I shouldn’t think so.’
He put on his shoes and Jacket and stepped out into the drizzle and mist which
seemed to overpower the hills. He walked ‘round the side of the house to their
pantry, opened the door, but then paused. He could hear some faint noise on the
wind. I’ll be, he thought. It seemed
to be a human voice. In fact it almost sounded like someone singing. He looked
out over the Downs but couldn’t make a thing out. He grabbed some wood, shut
the pantry door, and took it into his mother.
‘There you are,’ he said, and he placed the wood down on the kitchen side.
‘Mother, I’m just popping out,’ he said. ‘I won’t be long – I think
there’s someone out there, on the Downs. I heard this strange sound yesterday
evening, and I just heard it again as I went to fetch the firewood.’
‘Oh, Jonathan, I think I know what you mean. I fancy I heard the very same
thing yesterday evening. But it’s probably just some silly soul out taking a
walk or something – I wouldn’t fret over it.’
‘No, mother,’ said Jonathan. ‘I must be sure. It could be anyone out there. If
it’s someone in peril, I’ll aid them; if not, then I’ll chase them away, I’ll
threaten them with the promise of several large dogs giving chase.’
‘But we haven’t got any dogs, you green thing!’
‘I know that, mother,’ he said, ‘but they don’t, do they?’
‘Oh, now that you put it that way....’ She paused. ‘Okay, but don’t be long,
dear. Don’t make your old mother worry – I’ve enough to deal with without the
aid and love of your father.’
He kissed his mother on the cheek and left the cottage.
Jonathan
started over the hills in the direction of this sweet and sonorous melody, but
as he progressed he found the rain to increase, seeming to cut inwards like
glass thrown aslant as it swept over the barren landscape. As he walked, the
voice seemed to grow louder, and now, the rain throwing itself violently across
the landscape, he couldn’t make out anything farther than a few hundred metres.
He had walked into a slight valley, when he heard the voice more clearly. In
front of him, the rain still thick, he could make out barely the visage of a
man, and he could hear the sound of earth being moved. He approached quietly,
not disturbing the man, and he could make out his song:
Moustachioed
in a ribbon of black,
Dark secrets
up my sleeve,
Mephistopheles I am, a being of tack:
The Devil
takes not his annual leave.
And
then the strange man noticed Jonathan: ‘Oh, helloa, young chap!’ said the man,
his entire body soaked with rain; he seemed barely able to see through the
thick watery lens which rolled down and off his face.
Helloa? Thought Jonathan. What an odd turn of phrase this man has. ‘Excuse
me,’ said Jonathan nervously, ‘but what are you doing?’
‘The man propped himself up on his shovel: ‘Digging!’
‘Digging?’ said Jonathan.
‘Yes! Are you deaf, lad?’
‘What? No, no. What are you digging for?’ he asked.
‘Damnation!’ replied the man, cackling, his
grin wide like the grate of an old well.
Jonathan seemed unfazed by this strange concession,
and instead said, ‘But it’s raining. Aren’t you afraid you’ll catch something?’
He maintained a caring and passionate air, but wondered at the mental sanctity
of this poor fellow.
‘Rain? A bit of rain? Ho-ho-ho! That won’t stop me!’
Jonathan
thought about this. ‘Just then, I heard you saying that you’re digging for
damnation – what do you mean?’
‘I’m digging for your damnation, dear
boy! Or, more specifically, the damnation of the villagers of Elmsley. Although
I hear it maintained in various places that they dig for themselves!’ He
paused. ‘Does the name Eldridge
ring any bells, young man?’
‘Yes,’ said Jonathan. ‘She’s a crazed
old bat who’s taken to warping the minds of her flock.’
‘Very well done!’ sneered the man.
‘She’s got right up my nose, so the old bat has! And what can one do when
something gets up one’s nose? Well, the natural reaction is to sneeze.’ He
laughed, obviously appreciating some hidden joke lost on Jonathan.
‘I heard you say your name’s
Mephistopheles,’ said Jonathan, ‘like the character from Goethe’s masterpiece.
Is that your real name?’
The man looked him over carefully.
‘You think I’m mad, don’t you? You think I’m a madman!’ Jonathan’s silence
provided the answer to his question. ‘I’m not a madman! No, I’m much worse than
that.’ He paused, ready to instruct Jonathan. ‘I go by many names: Lucifer,
Satan, Beelzebub, Mephistopheles, the
Devil... but I prefer Megiddo. Do you know what that means, young man?’
Jonathan
thought carefully, knowing the word from some hidden refuge in his past. Yes,
he’d heard it in Sunday school as a young boy: ‘It’s the final battling place
between good and evil – in Christian lore, that is.’
‘Very good!’ sneered the Devil.
Jonathan looked the Devil over. ‘And
are you here to do battle, then?’
The Devil stood very still. ‘In a
word, yes. But my battles never end.’ He looked Jonathan over. ‘Are you
frightened, young man?’
Jonathan’s countenance alone answered
that question, but he took in a large breath of air, and replied, ‘No, sir.’
‘Ah! Please,’ replied the Devil, ‘call
me Megiddo. And you are?’
‘Jonathan,’ he said. ‘And I said I am not afraid.’
‘Good,’ he replied. ‘And tell me, what do you know of my work? Do you think me
an evil thing?’
‘Well, I’m led to that answer,’ said Jonathan. ‘You are a figure of death,
temptation, fear – in every culture upon the scarred face of this world.’
‘Death?’ replied Megiddo flatly. ‘Temptation? Fear? No! Not I! That is your God
– the one to whom you all prostrate yourselves! The one before whom that whore
in Elmsley village flagellates herself!’ He paused. ‘I am but a cleaner, an
arbiter – the eternal maintainer of the balance!’
Fretful and panicked, Jonathan said, ‘No, I refuse to believe it. Why have you
come here? Is it because of that Eldridge woman? I’ve heard the stories, but I
assumed they were all hokum.’
Calmly, Megiddo said, ‘Yes, that is why I have come here, but that is merely
one fine detail amongst many. Young man, you might have heard it said that the
Devil is in the details.’ He stops, raising one hand from the handle of the
shovel to wipe his brow. ‘The Devil cares
not for details; he is everywhere – I
am everywhere. Much like your God, but the cause of your actions. I am both the
fire and the blanket – do you understand what I’m saying?’
‘No! It can’t be,’ said Jonathan.
‘’Tis the state of affairs,’ replied Megiddo.
‘But - but can’t things alter?’
‘No. No they can’t. You see, as long as fire courses through men’s veins rather
than blood, as long as heat rather than light is the product of thought, I
shall be there, waiting; cleaning up the mess, as it were.’
‘But you paint yourself as a necessary being! Some sort of benevolent, evil
martyr! How can that be? ‘Tis a contradiction!’
‘Evil?’ said Megiddo. ‘To whom? I am necessary! I am, in effect, the
essence of the suffering and dispossessed of this world.’
‘Really?’ said Jonathan. ‘I thought that was Jesus.’
‘Oh, no; don’t be silly!’ said Megiddo. ‘He was just some fool whom I impressed
with my cheap sorcery some two thousand years back.’
‘Never! I refuse to believe it! What about the meek, the – won’t they –’
‘–Inherit the Earth? The meek, eh? Well, there’s a lot to be said about the
meek, but they have no place in power. To them, power is something slippery and
burdensome. No, the Earth shall
inherit the meek, unfortunately. Unless, that is... no.’
‘Unless what?’ said Jonathan.
‘Unless the meek rise up, will themselves to power, as equals – or more.’ He
paused, seeming to look tenderly at Jonathan. ‘The meek are a limp horse, but
they must become the essence of
horse! Until then, the meek shall inherit only the suffering they’re given.’
Megiddo could see the blankness in Jonathan’s eyes, but he knew that blankness
was merely confusion, and did not stretch down into the pit of his soul. He
continued: ‘Allow me to expand, Jonathan, with a story. You don’t mind if I
tell you a story, do you?’ Jonathan remained silent. ‘Good. I once met a
merchant man, a nice, pious man, from the fair city of London. And I asked him,
‘Are you monied?’ And he said, ‘Yes, I have wealth.’ And I said, ‘Are you a
Christian man?’ And he said, ‘Yes, I am a most evangelical man.’ And I said,
‘That’s funny, because most Christians pay their interest in hell. I’ve seen
them,’ I told him, ‘like you, and they all deny that money burns.’ He paused,
preparing to finish his train of thought. ‘This man scurried away, more a
beetle than a human being, and I could already feel the warmth rising from him,
ensnaring him in the fires of hell.’ Then Megiddo showed a look of
consternation, not looking directly at Jonathan, and, quietly, he said: ‘But
it’s strange: I never know when to expect them. That is beyond my knowing – but
I know they will come, and I prepare
for them a warm welcome.’
‘Jonathan,’ began Megiddo, ‘I shall explain the situation to you: there are gods, but they care not for human trifles. The God to whom the Christians, Jews,
and Moslems of this world pray is elsewhere – and I am left to pick up the
pieces. It is an unfair job, but someone has
to do it.’
‘You speak lies!’ said Jonathan, fire seeming to erupt out from the bowels of
him. ‘You are a treacherous, vile creature! If you’re all there is, then why
should we go on living!’
‘Well, perhaps I am all there is -
and perhaps not. You see me standing here before you, plain as this cold rain,
and yet you question my power. Jonathan, you are a strong man – that will bode
you well. My quarry is not with you. I would advise you to leave this place. If
you remain, you will witness my power. You have been warned.’
At once, Jonathan ran from the scene in fear. The rain had cleared somewhat and
only a fine drizzle now descended upon the hills. He could hear Megiddo
laughing viciously into the wind behind him, some mad and barren thing. Before
he made the crest of the hill, he turned back, and what he saw shocked him: a
dyke, seemingly miles long, stretched into the distance – the valley he’d found
Megiddo in was no valley, but some immense construction which ran out for miles
upon the Downs. The fear of God was in him, night was descending, but he ran
home with such haste that he arrived before his mother had the chance to place
a candle in the window.
Part V:
Thou Shalt Reap What Thou Soweth
It
was not long before Mrs Eldridge heard about the activities of this strange and
menacing intruder, and she came to the decision of confronting him, with the
aid of her myriad followers.
Exactly two weeks after he’d first made an appearance, a gathering was held in
the Eldridge Evangelical Church of Elmsley.
‘What shall we do?’ shouted one man.
‘Will fire kill him? What if he is
the Devil!’ shouted another.
‘What does this mean for the Church, Mrs Eldridge?’ shouted a woman from the
back of the building.
‘Hush-hush!’ shouted Mrs Eldridge. ‘Hush now! We shall address all these
questions presently. But first it must be made plain what it is that we face.
Ladies and gentlemen, kind followers, it is Satan that we face! Satan has
manifested himself here because he knows we are winning! Our glorious revival
has made him weaker, and I hope upon all hope that he is now a moribund and
damned figure!
Several people applauded loudly, and then dozens more joined in.
Mrs Eldridge shouted over the top of them: ‘We must face this menace as one! We
will confront him on the Downs once and for all! Gentlemen, women, gather your
bibles, your weapons, your torches, and join me! Let us send this fiery demon
back to Hell!’
A crowd erupted from the Church, lit by myriad torches and led by Mrs Eldridge,
and slowly began their trudge up into the hills of the Downs.
As Jonathan came back from the woodcutter’s lodge, he could see a bright stream
ascending through the hills, from what looked like the village of Elmsley. The
gloaming quickening, he ran towards the crest of the hill that overlooked the
immense trench of Megiddo’s construction. In the half-light, he could see
Megiddo peer up at him, and then suddenly his eyes seemed to glow red, and a
most deathly and unnatural screech resounded from his lungs: ‘No!’ The sound
seemed to almost topple Jonathan, wind rushing up from the deep gulley he had
fashioned for himself.
Jonathan turned around, seeing the candle his mother had placed in the cottage
window in the distance cresting the hill, and he could hear the crowing of a
single cockerel. And then Jonathan saw a different glow climbing towards the
trench and spilling into it: several dozen men and women stood a few hundred metres
from him, staring down into the cavern in which Megiddo stood.
‘There he is!’ exclaimed Mrs Eldridge. As they descended towards Megiddo, he
bellowed again, but this time he seemed to grow larger. Horns erupted from his
skull, several feet long, and he seemed to metamorphose into some towering
beast, at least twelve feet tall, cloaked in a magnificent and fiery cloak that
shimmered red, filling the cavern with the brilliance of sapphire, as if it
were a lake of blood rather than an earthen hollow. Standing tall, a lengthy
staff clutched between the long, claw-like fingers of his right hand, he
approached the crowd, striking Mrs Eldridge head-on, her large Authorised Bible
brandished out at arm’s length, as she approached to confront him,
At once the villagers stopped, several women screamed, and they all tumbled out
of the cavern and advanced at speed towards Elmsley, some falling helplessly,
others seeking desperately to find shelter or cower down on the ground.
Jonathan
watched as Megiddo, now a fearsome beast, sprouted wings and took Mrs Eldridge
up into the talons of his feet. He flew upwards, out of the valley, giving
chase to the crowd, raining down plumes of fire and meteors of brimstone,
people everywhere protecting themselves in vain as they puffed up into clouds
of ash.
The
stragglers barricaded themselves in their homes, but it was useless. He
approached Elmsley, dropping Mrs Eldridge from a height, and she fell
downwards, crashing though the roof of the Eldridge Evangelical Church; and
then Megiddo began circling the village, summoning a swirling cloud of black
fire that seemed to engulf it. Mrs Eldridge crawled from the church, helpless.
And then she heard a protracted thud as Megiddo landed.
The
black orb spun above the village disappeared, retracting from the darkness of
night, leaving in its wake a collection of buildings razed to smouldering
ruins. Megiddo took hold of Mrs Eldridge, and a rumbling could be heard for
miles around. The ground opened up, and a pit opened beneath Elmsley Church,
engulfing it.
Helplessly,
Mrs Eldridge was dragged by Megiddo down into the fiery chasm, screaming and
clawing at the ground in vain. Eventually, both of them consumed in the fire of
this hole, the ground closed up, and all Jonathan looked out upon was a
tinderbox, where once was the village of Elmsley.
As Jonathan stood and watched all of this, the colour seeming to drain from him
completely as disbelief filled brimmed over inside him, he heard a voice: ‘It’s
not all bad. They had it coming; don’t worry.’ He turned, and there stood
Megiddo, the fire in his eyes calming like dying embers. Megiddo explained that
he hadn’t been able to finish the Dyke, that he wanted to flood the whole area
to wipe out all traces of this despicable resurgence, that the flood would last
for a thousand years, a lake of water hiding the ruins of Elmsley from the
world. He told Jonathan that he could not be before the rising Sun – that dawn
would have killed him. That single candle in the window, and the cocking of the
crow, of his mother’s cottage had misled Megiddo. He also told him to forget
all he’d told him, to live his own life, and not to brood on what had
transpired in this small corner of East Sussex. And, with that, he disappeared
for ever.
Epilogue:
The Legend of Devil’s Dyke
After
this episode, people from miles around stayed clear of Elmsley. It burned for
several days, until all that was left was crumbled ruins and cold ash. The
place stayed abandoned for several decades, until, in the early twentieth
century, it was ploughed over, a reservoir built over the barren ground.
Some experts would tell you that the
Devil’s Dyke, as it is mysteriously known, due to such folklore as this very
story, is an Anglo-Saxon phenomenon, built over two thousand years ago. Others
would tell you that it was caused by glacial runoff and gouged into the
landscape by the action of a long-vanished river tens of thousands of years
ago. But that isn’t the whole story,
the true story.
If you ever wander the hills of the South Downs, listen to the wind - keep an
ear out for fragrant and alluring song – and watch for the visage of a lone
man, his black suit the colour of the coldest coals of hell.
Not to be picky, but Father Peters constitution weakened in 1782, and then he died 'unexpectedly' in 1872. So he weaked, at what I can only presume a weakened age and then lived an extra 90 years? (part 1)
ReplyDeleteHa, I know a Sarah Miles.
"and was now peeling and coring some bramley apples, later to make the pastry crust which would embalm the apple in its hot grave." This sentence would make sense if she were rolling pastry for example. Maybe "Later she would make the pastry which..."
Awesome, the conversation between Jonathan and Megiddo was for me the best bit. I loved the way he almost convinces Jonathan that holds the ideals of christianity in the palm of his hands, that its been a lie. Very persuasive Devil, like you'd expect. Some issues with colloquialism, such as peasants saying 'presently' etc, but thats me being picky. I the way you presented religion, showing that it can sometimes be evil, this whole thing showed a lot of role reversal which was very interesting. Nice one.
Gavin.