Category Archives: Journal

Le journal de Borel ( 8ème session) pendant le voyage au Caire .

Cher journal

Nous avons finalement quitté morne Londres avec sa nourriture infecte et la météo encore pire. Les événements de nos dernières semaines ont laissé beaucoup d’entre nous secoué et un repos bien mérité a été nécessaire . Quel meilleur endroit que Paris gay!
Malheureusement, notre joyeuse troupe est en baisse un garçon comme Shane notre partenaire irlandais ne rejoignez-nous sur le train , aussi nos explosifs semblent avoir disparu. Plus tard seulement avons-nous entendu des nouvelles de son terrible destin.

Le voyage lui-même via Douvres et Calais se déroule sans incident . Après notre arrivée à Paris monsieur moneybag a décidé d’embaucher un homme du nom de Oberon Troxler pour prendre soin de la santé mentale de certains de nos nutjobs . En particulier Billy Walker et Paynesworth étaient leurs rockers . Les blessures de William étaient de la nature plus traditionnelle . Nous avons également entendu parler d’ une calamité à Londres, où le monolithe de pierre avait inexplicablement explosé. A Paris, nous avons traduit de nombreux textes que nous avions récupérés et les avons étudiés dans notre loisir.

Nous avons passé plus d’un mois à Paris en convalescence avant de partir pour les Alpes et le lac de Côme . Il nous nous sommes retrouvés dans la Villa del Sol . Il nous avons finalement appris le sort ultime de Shane lorsque l’inspecteur Barrington est arrivé inopinément là. Il nous a informé des derniers événements en Angleterre . Misr House a été soigneusement recherché mais monsieur Gavigan est évidemment toujours en liberté ( il est recherché par Interpol ) . L’explosion du monolithe était le chant du cygne de Shane et il périt dans un hôpital de Londres. Quel que soit le poussait à faire sauter la statue en morceaux me échappe . Certains de nos bookworms avaient prévu de l’étudier en détail . Barrington a pris un congé et veut étudier toute cette conspiration avec nous . Nous avons également reçu un message de Johan Kensington avec les détails des patients de Roger Carlyle inclus.
Après un mois de repos , nous avons finalement décidé d’un plan d’ action. Onward au Caire ! Sur notre chemin nous nous sommes arrêtés à Milan et à Venise avant de se retrouver à Constantinople . De là, nous avons pris HMS Perle en Egypte . Au Caire, nous avons réservé l’hébergement à l’Hôtel Semiramis le long du Nil . La ville est assez chaud , sale et les odeurs d’agression les sens .

Au Caire , nous avons commencé nos investigations presque instantanément. Paynesworth et Stafford ont visité le professeur Ali Kafour dans le Musée égyptien et il leur a dit de nombreux détails intéressants du Pharaon Noir et la reine Nitocris . Stafford et Paynesworth pensaient de l’homme en tant que source d’information fiable . Inspecteur Barrington et William visitent le Caire Bulletin où ils ont rencontré Nigel Wassif , un rédacteur en chef . Wassif les a aidés avec les archives de journaux et ils ont trouvé quelques informations sur l’expédition Clive et la momie qu’ils avaient volé récemment. Je me suis rendu visite à Faraz Najir , qui a finalement révélé qu’il avait volé des articles de Omar Shakti et les a vendus à l’agent de Carlyle Warren Besart . La boutique de Faraz Najir avait été brûlé et il était peur de Omar Shakti encore . Omar Shakti était un riche propriétaire de plantation et mélangé dans le vol de momie Clive Expedition . Lui et ses cohortes se sont aussi intéressés à certains éléments d’une mosquée locale .

Fois passionnants attendent!

Night of Horrors

(From the journal of Dr. Lawrence Wentworth Stafford, dated February 7. 1925)

I… I can’t get the images… the sounds.. out of my head. I – I think… I’m not sure what to think. I can’t do this now. I need to sleep.

The sleep won’t come. I can still hear the crunching sounds in my ears… bones? Was the girl eaten above me? The blood… Shower after shower, but I still am covered in blood. I try to scrub it off, but it won’t disappear. I… I need a drink.

If I had read this following passage a year, a month ago, I wouldn’t have given it further thought, just some ramblings of a deranged person, trying to catch attention in any way possible. Nevertheless, I cannot deny what I have seen, heard and experienced – as a man of science, especially one with experience in empirical sciences, cannot disregard my observations completely. I think I’d better start from the beginning.

It was tuesday, when we were ambushed in a cowardly way by that lowly man, al-Sayed, in the Blue Pyramid club. We did, however, emerge victorious, despite the odds stacked against us. Beaten and bloody, we arrived at the Waldorf, and luckily our friend, Mr. Griswold, summoned a doctor immediately. After seeing to our wounds, he left with a hefty wad of pounds and a promise not to talk to anyone. The man deserved his reward, my side is feeling much better – perhaps the injury was not that bad to begin with.

Shane O’Flannagan arrived shortly with news – sadly for us, too late – about the Blue Pyramid and its human deliveries to the countryside. The Penhew Foundation’s mansion, Misr House (Egypt in arabic, mind you) in Essex was their final destination. The Foundation also has a ship, Ivory Wind, whose norwegian captain does enjoy the company of the bottle. The ship is docked in seedy Limehouse, where only middle-eastern stevedores can work on it. The harbourmaster is called Punji Chabout, an indian fellow, as seedy, criminal and evil bastard as the dock he works on.

On the next morning, wednesday February 4th, Griswold tells us that he wants to report our ambush to the police. Me and Dr. Jusupov, or Jones, as he likes to call himself here, hastily convince him otherwise. We might be pulled into the investigation too, and not entirely without a reason. Our departure from London might be delayed, and we might even be detained – it’s better to give the police a thorough investigation notes, when we’re done. We talk about starting the investigation about the obelisk in Bannister Park, and I use my contacts to recruit a few like-minded individuals from the academic world. William and Dr. Paynesworth use the day for resting and healing injuries, while pouring over the pages of Elias’ books. They both finish their own in the evening, and look nauseous. That’s the power of literature!

Mr. O’Flannagan continues to make enquiries, and arrives later with a few crates containing shotguns, explosives and shells. After this delivery, he and Mr. Walker leave to keep an eye on the Ivory Wind, but the ship seems almost deserted – only people there are the three men on guard.

Thursday, February 5th. Dr. Paynesworth left to the library, his goals were to search the local newspapers for information and news about the Penhew Foundation. While he was gone, we started the travel arrangements to our trip to the country, and ordered some supplies for the travel to Egypt too. Later, Dr. Paynesworth arrives, but sadly, his search was in vain and without results. Mr. Griswold had a surprise for us – he had rented two Rolls Royce Silver Ghosts for our excursion. Dr. Jones’ associate, Ivan, comes with us, while the other surly man, Boris, stays behind to keep guard to our things and the safe. William is also left at the hotel, resting and healing his injuries.

rolls royce silver ghost

Friday, February 6th. We start towards Essex, and the automobiles are an absolute pleasure to travel in. The english countryside shows its beauty to us, while the wind tries to snatch away our hats. Brilliant fun! We arrive at Maidon, a small rural town near the Misr house, and sign ourselves in to the Gilded Hen. We rent double rooms in the first floor, all four of them. Misters O’Flannagan and Walker go on a walk to get themselves used to the surroundings, and even pass the road to the mansion. Both times it is being guarded by three men, the road leading to a small island half a mile across. There is only one way to the island, and it’s cut by a swing bridge.

We decide, that our best approach is by a boat, but it has to be in dark, or we’ll be seen far away. There’s an old man Jones by the beach, who rents his boat, equipped with a small outboard motor too – it can fit 8 people in it! Perfect for us. Our cartographer, Dr. Jones, comes up with a cover – we’re mapping the shore and islands here. We leave by nightfall, while Mr. Griswold and Boris stay at the inn – there will be a singalong later on, and Mr. Griswold wouldn’t want to miss it. While we’re rowing towards the island, we see and count six cars driving towards the house during four minutes.

We row to the shore, and Mr. Borel is left there to turn it around for fast departure and to guard it. Sneaking closer we discover seven cars at the front of the house. Dr. Paynesworth spots an obelisk on the other side of the house with his keen eyes, and we sneak along the shore to the other side, in the cover of some woods. Me and Dr. Jones approach the obelisk, as slowly and silently as we can, and discover a brazier some 30 yards from the obelisk. Looking around, there are eight of these at regular intervals, and a ring of torch holders similarly in a ring, but closer to the stone. At the stone we spot chains and manacles on the stone, placed at heights to hold people fast there. I feel my stomach churning while I realise the previous occupants have been clawing at the manacles there. The obelisk is covered in hieroglyphs, but we can’t decipher them.

New cars arrive at the house, a few at a time, until 12 cars are parked out front. We can hear their chatter, their accents and clothes reveal them to be of the higher social circles of London. All the arrivers enter the house. Just after we return to the others, two men come from the house towards the obelisk, plant 8 torches in the holders and light them. In a moment later, they arrive with a wheelbarrow and fill and light the braziers as well. After they’re gone, new cars arrive, now a lorry too – filled with women, who are led inside.

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Some moments later, we hear the sound of gong from the house – on the third ring, the front doors are opened, and men in dark robes emerge from the house – around thirty of them. The gong rings once more, and the men start to walk towards the obelisk. More men emerge from the house, again dressed in dark robes, but these ones have instruments on their hands. At the braziers, the men start their strange chant, play their instruments and sing. At last, our old enemy, al-Sayed walks out of the house, with a decorated sceptre in both hands. Their chant is at least partly arabic, singing for the black pharaoh. Dr. Paynesworth is ready to fire at al-Sayed, but we talk him out of it, for the fear of being discovered immediately. While arguing about this in hushed voices, a woman steps out of the house – completely naked, in some sort of trance, slowly walking towards the obelisk, along the path lined with dark robed men. Then another, and another, four in total.

At the obelisk, the women are chained to the stone with manacles. The braziers burst into larger flames, and suddenly Edward Gavigan walks out of the house, holding a chalice, walking towards the monolith. The guards at the door follow him, while the chanting of the other men quicken. As per our earlier plan, we sneak towards the house, while Dr. Paynesworth stays behind to watch Gavigan and al-Sayed through the scope of his rifle. The house is dark and silent, some rooms filled with the clothes of the now robed people outside. Going through the house we arrive in a great hall at the end, and just as we turn to leave, I realise the fireplace can be moved – there’s a short, messy tunnel leading down underneath the house, to a tunnel where we can hear the crying of women still locked there. We free five prisoners, in various health, some catatonic, but all tired and scared. Four of them are women, one is a man. We bring their out of the tunnel into the house and give them clothes.

abandoned-manor-inside

Our plan is the following: Mr. Walker lights the coal in the basement in fire, and fetches Dr. Paynesworth next, they escape with the boat with Mr. Borel. Others of us sneak out of the house, steal the lorry and escape with it with the prisoners. We drive over the bridge, plant explosives there and blow it up, leaving the cultists on their island in their robes. The plan is solid, but it did not take into consideration the things that happened outside the house, while we were inside. I’ve been only able to collect bits and pieces from Dr. Paynesworth about this, but here’s all I know.

Some large, leathery-winged, four-legged bats, the size of cars, flew down from the skies, to the monolith and chanting men. They start devouring the women chained to the obelisk, while the men go crazy around it. There’s chanting, screaming and obscene acts of sex. Dr. Paynesworth fires his rifle without actually hitting anything, and nobody even notices this. We get to the lorry, horrified but somehow able to act, Mr. O’Flannagan climbs to the driver’s seat, Dr. Jones next to him, while I help the prisoners climb to the back. Shane is able to start the engine, but then one of the women starts screaming ear-piercingly loud after wincing and shedding her trance. I try to silence her by covering her mouth, but the horrified woman bites down on my fingers, hard, and bites a piece of my little finger off! Somehow I get her silenced, as the lorry lurches on towards the bridge.

Mr. Walker finds the catatonic Dr. Paynesworth in the forest, and part carries him towards the boat. He’s met halfway by Mr. Borel, and they escape without incident. Meanwhile Mr. O’Flannagan slowly drives towards the gate and its guards. One of them moves to open the gate, and Shane floors the pedal and drives through the gate. We escape!

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But then something large and heavy lands on the top of the lorry. Startled Mr. O’Flannagan steers the lorry into ditch, and the thing is thrown off us, flashing in the headlights as it flies off.  While Shane backs up to the road, suddenly there’s heavy breathing at the back of the car – one of the bats out of hell is there, pushing its ugly head into the car, its heavy breathing hot and smelling disgusting. The women scream, as it snatches something into its jaws – I don’t know what, since I’m laying flat on the floor, eyes closed, trying not to be a target, trying not to move, not to make a sound, fearing for my life. The thing bites down on its prey, and there’s a spray of warm blood. I hear bones crunching, crunching, as someone is chewed and killed within feets of me. The thing stays behind, eating the carcass of its prey, as we finally drive forward and escape the madness and horror.

We stop at the inn, Dr. Jones, who is not soaked with blood like I am, walks quickly in, tells Ivan and Mr. Griswold to pack their things and leave as fast as they can, heading towards London and Waldorf Astoria still tonight. Then Dr. Jones returns to the lorry, and we drive away. We stopped somewhere on the way, leaving the freed prisoners there, mumbling something about an accident, and leaving as fast as we arrived. The others escape with their boat, grab their belongings from the inn and leave for London.

Dr. Paynesworth is in a very bad shape, which is saying quite a lot, since all of us are thoroughly shaken. We only realise how bad the situation is in the morning, when only a handful of us participates in breakfast. Neither Mr. O’Flannagan or Dr. Paynesworth wake up, they only shiver and tremble in their beds.

Griswold diary entry in London (5th and 6th session)

Matthew Griswoldin päiväkirjasta:

3.2.1925 – yöllä

Kirjoitan tätä Williamin huoneen eteisen pöydällä. Hän oksentelee välillä ja vaikka saisin tänne hotellin palvelijan huomaan tyhjentäväni roska-astian mielummin itse kuin ottaen tänne tuntemattomia. Ivan ja Boris vartioivat ovella. Minulla on turvaton mutta päättäväinen olo.

Viime päivät ovat olleet tapahtumarikkaita ja olemme edistyneet merkittävästi Jacksonin tutkimusten jatkamisessa. Tapahtumat repesivät käsiin tänä iltana kun Staffordin, Paynesworthin, Jonesin ja Williamin kimppuun tehtiin väijytys. He olivat menossa tapaamaan Tewfik Al-Sayedia koskien tavaroiden salakuljetusta Egyptistä pääsyynä saada tietoa Al-Sayedin järjestämistä kuljetuksista. Tuo kunniaton rikollinen oli päättänyt joko uhkailla tai julmasti pahoinpidellä ja murhata työntekijäni. Onneksi ystävilläni oli rautaiset hermot ja he onnistuivat nujertamaan päällekarkaajansa. Williamia lyötiin erittäin vakavasti kylkeen ja kasvoihin – olen kutsunut huoneeseen lääkärin jonka pitäisi olla täällä piakkoin. Huomenna menen tapaamaan konstaapeli Barringtonia ja teen rikosilmoituksen Al-Sayedista. Varsinkin kun Shane kertoi kuulleensa Sohossa, että ihmisiä lähtee Blue Pyramid -klubilta Al-Sayedin järjestämien kuljetusten matkaan ja ne samat henkilöt päätyvät ruumiiksi Thamesiin! Mietin aluksi, että otetaanko asiassa turhia riskejä sillä tovereillani oli aseet mukana, mutta luottaisin tässä tilanteessa Barringtonin rehellisyyteen. Sitäpaitsi avustihan herra Paynesworth saamaan sen kammottavan sarjamurhaajan kiinni.

Paynesworth lähti eilen herra Borrelin ja Billyn kanssa Shipleyn luokse toiveenaan päästä katsomaan tauluja. Hän meni yksin yläkertaan ja palasi vakuuttuneena tuon kuvottavan taiteilijan mielisairaudesta. Shipley oli omien sanojensa mukaan tappanut lapsia ja haudannut heidät talonsa kellariin. Ehkä hänen omatuntonsa kolkutti jollain tuntemattomalla tavalla kun hän tunnusti Abrahamille, tai ehkä hän oli vain eläin joka halusi kerskua teoillaan. Tämä jää luultavasti selvittämättä, sillä Barringtonin miehet veivät hänet vankimielisairaalaan.

William ja Stafford tekivät vahingossa mielenkiintoisen löydön Bannickerpuiston muistomerkistä. Kivi vetää puoleensa liekkejä. Tämä sai ajatukseni laukkaamaan mahdollisten teollisten sovellusten kannalta! Jones ei tiennyt minkään kiven moisista ominaisuuksista ja lähti Williamin ja Staffordin kanssa tekemään alustavia kenttäkokeita. Mikäli ne osoittavat oletuksemme todeksi, tulee muistomerkin ympärille pystyttää perusteellisempi tutkimuslaboratorio. Pyrimme myös selvittämään miltä alueelta kivi on Egyptissä louhittu. Kaivoksen valtaus ensimmäisenä olisi merkittävä taloudellinen teko, josta isäkin olisi varmasti tyytyväinen.

Jonesin hankkimat turvamiehet näyttävät olevan enemmän kuin tarpeen, samoin kuin uudet matkustusjärjestelyt. Kassakaapin siirto tulee olemaan mielenkiintoinen, mutta välttämätön spektaakkeli.

Kääröistä ja Bannickerpuiston obeliskista saatiin vihjeitä jostain egyptiläisestä lahkosta, joka ollut kiellettynä suurimman osan tuon alueen historiaa. Kivessä on myös astronomisia merkintöjä, nimenomaan Fomalhaut-nimisen tähden liikkeistä eri vuodenaikoina. Tämä on mielenkiintoista? Kuinka tarkasti he osasivatkaan laskea jonkin tähden liikkeen. Haluan ehdottomasti syventyä tähän asiaan! Kukaan joukossamme ei sitäpaitsi osaa tähtitiedettä, joten voisin hyvin aloittaa harrastuksen. Lääkäri taitaa olla ovella, toivottavasti Williamilla on kaikki kunnossa.

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Matthew Griswold’s notes from London

(Notes made by Matthew Griswold in London on the 30th January 1925:)

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A funeral, travel arrangements and a visit to a shop

(From the journal of Dr. Lawrence Wentworth Stafford, dated 23.1.1925)

I had received a telegram from Edward Gavigan, the head of the Penhew Foundation. He wrote, that he had only met Jackson Elias once, but had a wealth of material from him at his possession, including artifacts and notes about the Carlyle expedition. The material was in London, so Matthew Griswold  asked Billy to acquire us tickets to the next ship over. In the evening, we came to a conclusion about publishing rights about the journey and all it uncovered. Griswold retained rights to popular culture publishing, while Dr. Paynesworth, Dr. Jusupov and me held the rights to academic papers. We also decided that because of him being the eldest of us, professor Paynesworth would act as our spokesperson toward the press as well as the leader of our own expedition. I was to be his second because of my field and traveling experience.

graveyard

The funeral of late Mr. Jackson was held the next day, wednesday 21.1.1925. It was a short, but a warm occasion. Reverend Lawrence T. O’Dell from the Seamen’s Mission held the service, and some of Jackson’s friends were there too – Jonah Kensington, his publisher; Colonel Fawcett; Harkov, an antiquarian; Brinden, a reporter; Exton, a watchmaker. During the service a scruffy man in his twenties sat down in the back row. While Mr. Calvin Borel asked him to join our conversation after the service, he stuttered that he was waiting for the next funeral – though there weren’t any coming that day – and walked out. Mr. Borel followed him, and he ran away, to a car with two men waiting, and it sped away from the church. A most peculiar incident, I dare say.

The wake was held at Griswold’s aparment, and some sandwich cakes were served, with beverages. After the wake, we signed our formal work contracts, and settled on our wages ($2000 to the expedition leader, $1800 to me, and $200 to the gentlemen Borel, O’Flannagan and Walker). Our deal on the publishing was revisited and signed, and we agreed on publishing our findings at the same time – if there were no publications from the other party, there would be a waiting period of three years after the expedition conclusion, after which the other party could freely publish their work.

I was bothered by the story of visiting the Juju House, where Mr. O’Flannagan, Walker and Borel had visited, and told us they thought there was still something amiss there. I tried to talk Dr. Paynesworth into coming there with me, but he was too occupied with one of the books from Carlyle’s safe, and declined. Dr. Jusupov had disappeared somewhere, but at least Mr. Borel, Walker and O’Flannagan accompanied me to the store, though they stayed outside the shop.

Juju house

Inside, I bought a wooden Kenyan mask for a fair price of $1.80 from Mr. Silas N’Kwane, while two black men were measuring me up, trying to decide if I was worth mugging. Outside, Mr. Walker suddenly spotted the scruffy young man from the church, and dashed after him – the baffled Mr. O’Flannagan shortly followed him, unsure of why he was running in the first place. When I exited the shop, Mr. Borel informed me of the events, and we too hurried after the men.

O’Flannagan and Walker had managed to stop the man, and explained that he had tripped and hurt his head. I was a bit suspicious of this fortunate flow of events seeing a bloody brass knuckes on O’Flannagan’s fists, but after hearing the man, Justin Ashbrook, talk, I forgot about them quickly. The man told us that he and a man named Adale had received orders from a man named Mugugga to spy on the church and inform him about the people attending poor Mr. Jackson’s funeral. He also confessed his guilt to murders and even knew about the dark group called Bloody Tongue, who were guilty of carving their victims forehead with strange markings. Ashbrook told us taht Mugagga was a priest of some sort, and guilty of murdering Eliah Johnson in lieu of others. He told us, that they were capturing men to be sent to the basement of the JuJu House, into the pit.

We hailed a taxi, and drove to an acquaintance of Mr. O’Flannagan, who was a doctor of sorts, and could take care of Ashbrook. Or at least that’s what I was told, and left outside with my pipe, while the other gentlemen escorted the poor man inside the building. We returned to our residence to find Dr. Paynesworth seemingly distraught after having finished his book, Life as a God. He had nothing good to be said about the book, and had even tried to calm his nerves with a glass of cognac, a clear sign that he was visibly shaken.

Together, we decided to wait a few hours, then visit the JuJu House again. Billy joined us as our chauffeur, and the gentlemen took some equipment with them, and armed themselves. The locks on the back door were helpless against the brawn of Mr. Walker and O’Flannagan, as well as the lock on the hatch found inside the shop, behind the counter. Dr. Paynesworth discovered the missing book, Dark Sects of Africa, under the counter too – the book that was stolen from Harvard University! We were clearly catching up on our killers!

The basement.

What followed next is not something I have a clear picture of, and cannot explain it in any logical or rational manner. We walked down a ladder, then some stone steps, to find a room built for some kind of sacrifices, with occult markings on the walls and floor, drums strewn about, a carved stone lid on a well on the floor and a curtain separating a smaller alcove from the room. There were winches to raise and lower the stone slab, and Mr. Walker and Mr. O’Flannagan manned these. Dr. Paynesworth drew the curtains aside and saw an altar of sorts, with book and daggers and what not on it. There were two corpses of men, chained to the wall on both sides of the altar.

I’m not sure if the next happened for real of if it was just my feverish imagination or a waking nightmare – while raising the stone slab, something started to whine and moan in the pit, the corpses came alive and bit Dr. Paynesworth, and someone threw the body of Billy down the steps at us in the corridor. Soon the room was a mess of melee, shots fired and horrified yelling. I think I shot a negro or two, saving the life of Mr. Borel; Dr.Paynesworth escaped the undead corpses intent on feeding on him and not stopping on his remarkable display of swordsmanship, until the fists of Mr. Walker and Mr. O’Flannagan stopped them. Billy waked up to the sounds of gunfire, beaten but otherwise unharmed.

This did not stop the thing within the pit though. It threw itself towards the stone slab, which must’ve weighed a metric ton or more, almost able to move it aside and escape. That’s what we decided to do, grabbed our flashlights and ran to our car, and drove away. Billy said he would tip the police anonymously about the shop and the shots fired in there, while the rest of us were allowed to take a bath and a stiff drink to calm our nerves. The sleep did not come easy, and we all woke up to the friday morning after a night of nightmares behind us.