- Book info
- Sample
- Media
- Author updates
- Lists
Synopsis
The enigmatic Carl Sanford is the master of all things occult in Arkham, until a charismatic newcomer threatens to take everything away from him in this dark mystery set in the world of Arkham Horror.
Chaos is coming to Arkham, and its herald is Randall Tillinghast. The dapper older gentleman has recently arrived in the city and his establishment of a new occult bookshop draws the ire of Carl Sanford, the head of Arkham’s secret, esoteric order, the Silver Twilight Lodge.
Sanford expects to crush the newcomer like an ant and take what he wants from the wreckage... but Randall Tillinghast isn't quite as humble and harmless as he seems. In possession of an array of magical artifacts, Tillinghast begins to consolidate his dreams of power before turning his sights on the Lodge.
Release date: July 2, 2024
Publisher: Aconyte
Print pages: 352
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Reader buzz
Author updates
Herald of Ruin
Tim Pratt
CHAPTER ONE
The Web
Carl Sanford’s ruin came to Arkham in a dapper Italian suit, with a knowing smile, and no fixed address.
The interloper named Randall Tillinghast had been walking up and down in the city for over a week before Sanford even detected his presence. That was an appalling failure of Sanford’s intelligence network, like a spider hearing secondhand about the presence of a new fly in his web. There should have been warnings. There should have been vibrations. Instead, the man had nearly ten days to lay his traps and set his snares without interference before word finally reached Sanford about the “humble antiquarian and enthusiast of the esoteric” who’d set up shop somewhere south of the river, peddling his wares, which supposedly included objects of real power.
Either this Tillinghast was a fraud dealing in worthless trinkets, in which case, Sanford would chase him out of the city, or he was a genuine occultist with access to worthwhile relics, whereupon Sanford would acquire everything he possessed of value and then see what further use could be made of him.
Arkham was Sanford’s city. You couldn’t just move in here and join the game without asking permission and paying tribute. Someone had tried to usurp Sanford’s place as the preeminent master of the magical arts in Arkham last year, and that person had ended up blasted with a shotgun, blown up with dynamite, buried in rocks, and drowned in the icy Atlantic.
“You’re quieter than your brother was, Brother Altman,” Sanford said from the back seat of the Bentley, where he gazed out the window at the slow river bleeding silver beneath the bridge.
His driver, bodyguard, and – increasingly – confidant was the slightly younger sibling of one of Sanford’s former lieutenants. The first Altman had died in a hotel room, murdered by cultists… and a bit later, the twisted doppelganger those cultists had created to take Altman’s place had died in a temple devoted to their dead deity beneath the sea.
The new Altman was broadly similar to his brother in terms of expertise, experience, and discretion, but he lacked the original’s sardonic sense of humor. He did still possess both his ears, while his predecessor had lost one in some overseas unpleasantness, which Sanford supposed was a sort of cosmic balance.
“Our mother used to say Reggie wouldn’t say boo to a goose,” Altman replied, “but that I wouldn’t say shit if I had a mouthful.”
“How charming.” Sanford sniffed. The new Altman had come to Arkham last year from a sojourn in Africa, where he’d been doing unspeakable things for some colonial government or another, to attend the funerals of his brother and his niece, who’d also been lost in the unpleasantness last year, when the Lodge was assaulted. Altman the younger had agreed to stay on as Sanford’s new personal assistant for a hefty salary and the opportunity to vent some of his rage on the Lodge’s enemies. “If you’re going to be my batsman and bodyguard and amanuensis, I’ll need you to indulge in the occasional conversation. I do some of my best thinking aloud, and without a partner in dialogue, it would just be… ranting.”
“Am I all those things, then? All right. I’ll try to hold my end up.” Altman guided the Bentley slowly into the narrow streets of Rivertown. “No actual address, eh?”
“Frustratingly, no,” Sanford said. “Each of my two informants gave me a different location, which means one of them was confused. Both placed this new shop near the graveyard, though. It’s called Tillinghast Esoterica and Exotics. How gauche. You might see my name on a building at the university someday, but I’d hardly emblazon it above a mercantile concern.”
They drove up and down
the streets of the Rivertown district but saw no sign of a new shop. “It has a green door, apparently, with a sort of eye painted on the window,” Sanford said, though Altman knew that already. “A cheap ploy to appear mystical and draw in the credulous, no doubt.” They traversed the densely packed blocks of the Merchant District and passed the former site of Huntress Fashions, a “For Let” sign in the dusty window, and Sanford felt a twinge in his guts he chose not to investigate. A Lodge member named Diana Stanley had operated that shop for a time, but she’d left town after betraying Sanford’s trust… and then saving his life. That last part probably made them even, or maybe put Sanford very slightly in her debt. Better for all involved that she’d left town with her beau. Sanford had resisted the urge to deploy agents to track her down. Let her do as she would, as long as she wasn’t doing it in his territory.
Sanford drew much of his strength from the past, of course, but he preferred to look forward to the future whenever possible.
“Dash it, just go to the general store,” Sanford commanded, and Altman obeyed without complaint. They parked near the ramshackle structure, a neighborhood institution despite its decrepit aspect, and Sanford said, “You may as well wait here. No reason to scare the plebeians.” Altman chuckled, where he normally would have stayed silent. Sanford appreciated the man’s efforts.
The magus of Arkham slid out of the car and walked up the warped board steps, nodding to a couple of old-timers who sat in rockers on the drooping front porch. They nodded back, eyeing him with open suspicion. They might recognize him – Sanford was well known in town, of course, and those of his social class weren’t very welcome here – or they might simply be reacting to the presence of a man who was wearing a suit instead of stained dungarees or overalls.
He pushed through the door, a bell clanging discordantly overhead to herald his arrival. The musty general store was crowded with wooden shelves holding everything from tinned foodstuffs to used hand tools, arranged in no discernible order. A sullen, bearded man slouched on a stool behind the wooden counter, seated next to an immense jar of pickled eggs suspended in a suspicious greenish fluid. They reminded Sanford of the peculiar biological specimens preserved in the laboratories deep beneath the Silver Twilight Lodge house.
The shopkeeper – Sanford could never remember the man’s name – looked right through Sanford, as if he were a pane of window glass with nothing much of interest on the other side.
Sanford wished he’d brought his walking stick. Smashing that jar of eggs would get a reaction, wouldn’t it? Instead, he smiled, strolled to the counter, and rapped his knuckles on the wood briskly. “Hello, my good man. I wonder if you might be able to assist me.”
The shopkeeper grunted. “First time for everything.”
“I’m looking for a shop that I understand has recently opened in the area.”
Now the man barked a laugh, showing off yellowed teeth. “Now why would I send a customer off to one of my competitors?”
Sanford looked around at the dusty bags of flour, the chipped glass jars, and rust-edged shovels,
and sniffed. “I don’t think your business and his have much overlap in terms of inventory. It’s called Tillinghast Esoterica and Exotics–”
When Sanford spoke those words, it was as if the shopkeeper had downed a revitalizing tonic. He stood straighter, his eyes brightened, and his smile went from sly and knowing to wide and genuine. “Mr Tillinghast! Why, of course. He’s a true gentleman! You can look at him and tell he’s a man of quality, but he doesn’t go around putting on airs like some people do. He even brought me a little gift, did you know that, like he was welcoming me to the neighborhood when it should have been the other way around.”
“How very hospitable of him,” Sanford said. “Now, where exactly–”
“I’ll show you!” The shopkeeper bent down and reached beneath the counter, drawing out…
A snow globe. A perfectly unremarkable example of the form, as far as Sanford could tell. The shopkeeper shook it vigorously, filling the glass sphere atop the rounded stone pedestal with a flurry of white flecks. The artificial snowflakes were usually made of wax, or meerschaum, Sanford understood, but as he leaned obligingly forward and peered at this one, he wondered. This looked very much like actual snow. Even after the shopkeeper put the globe down on the counter, the snowstorm inside didn’t abate, the fragments not settling as gravity should have dictated, but continuing to fly about in all directions, obscuring the contents. Sanford only caught glimpses of the shape inside, but where he would have expected a snowman or a white deer or a country church, he saw… was it a man, bundled up, bent forward as if walking against the wind?
“The snow just flurries around all by itself in there, though it goes faster when you give it a shake,” the shopkeeper said proudly. “Mr Tillinghast told me it’s on account of, what was it… ‘a complex chemical interaction among incompatible material elements.’”
It’s a simple magical charm, Sanford thought. But such trifles are sufficient to amaze a simpleton. The flakes had probably been enchanted to abhor the fluid they floated in, and the glass that surrounded them, and one another, and flurried incessantly in a fruitless bid to escape. Still, it seemed a lot of effort to go to, for a child’s toy…
He saw a flicker of darkness, a black speck among the flurrying white, and peered closer, almost putting his nose on the glass. Was that glimpse of a humanoid figure… moving? Actually trudging through the snow? Why bother with such a detail?
The shopkeeper snatched the globe back, and when Sanford looked up at him, he saw naked hate and avarice in the man’s gaze. “This is mine,” the shopkeeper said. “You don’t need to go touching it.”
“I wouldn’t dream,” Sanford said smoothly. “It’s a beautiful piece. I can see why you’re so fond of
it. Might you direct me to Mr Tillinghast’s establishment? Perhaps I could procure a slightly less wondrous item for my own enjoyment.”
The shopkeeper squinted, suspicious, then shrugged his bony shoulders. “I’m not sure. I never been there myself. Mr Tillinghast just stopped in to introduce himself a few days ago and had himself a pickled egg – best he’d ever had, he said, I make them myself – and went on his way. I heard he’s got a place not far from the graveyard, but beyond that, I couldn’t say.”
“Capital.” Sanford removed a slim white card from his jacket pocket and slid it across the counter. “Perhaps if Mr Tillinghast returns you might give him my card? I’d love to discuss certain business opportunities with him.”
The shopkeeper picked up the card – Sanford imagined the edges were instantly discolored, though that might have been mere fancy – and squinted at it with a grunt. “I suppose I could do that. For a loyal customer. A loyal paying customer.”
Sanford sighed.
Back in the car, he passed Altman a damp, bundled handkerchief. “What’s that?” the man asked.
“The best pickled egg Randall Tillinghast ever had,” Sanford replied. “Enjoy it with my compliments.”
Altman grunted and, to Sanford’s surprise, devoured the thing rather than dropping it out the window. The man grunted again and said, “I’ve had worse.”
“Have you really? Remind me never to ask you for a restaurant recommendation.”
“Where to now?” Altman asked.
Sanford settled into the back seat and glowered at nothing. Why had Tillinghast wasted any magic, even a paltry charm, to ingratiate himself with the proprietor of the general store? What could he possibly offer? Although… the shop was frequented by a variegated cross section of Arkham inhabitants and was something of a central point for the dissemination of gossip. Maybe Sanford should have cultivated an informant there. He had numerous connections among the city’s elite, and in the Underworld, but dash it, he’d never really had the common touch. “We’ve wasted enough time. I’m supposed to have lunch with Miss Standish soon, so let’s hie ourselves back across the river.”
“Visiting all the finest people today, aren’t we?” Altman chuckled.
“On second thought, I think I liked you better when you were silent,” Sanford said. “Forget I said anything.”
“Too late now, sir. You’ve gone and opened up my floodgates.”
•••
Ruby had set their meeting place, phoning the Lodge with the location early this morning, as she always did. The young woman had a profoundly suspicious turn
of mind, but then, she’d earned it.
Thus, Sanford found himself on the doorstep of the Songbird’s Perch, a lively enough place at night, when there was live music playing and, undoubtedly, a general disdain for the constraints of Prohibition. During the day, however, the Perch’s carved wooden panels seemed shabby and the red-shaded lamps a bit sad. There were one or two people dining in plush booths, but not much of a lunchtime crowd compared to the more conventional eateries in the area. Sanford made his way to the back, waving off the hostess with a murmured, “I’m meeting someone,” and found Ruby in the most distant booth, sucking an olive off a toothpick.
He slid into the seat across from her, nodding toward the martini glass on the table. “A bit early for that, isn’t it?”
Ruby smiled at him sunnily. Her hair was dark, lately, and even in her presence, it was hard to pin down her age or extraction – late twenties, early thirties? Some hint of the Spaniard or even Central American in her ancestry, perhaps?
“If I’m awake, it’s not too early, Sanford, darling.” She wasn’t at her most glamorous just now – no fascinator in her hair, and no jewels around her neck, dressed neither for speakeasy nor garden party – but her makeup was immaculate, her hair perfectly curled, and her day dress effortlessly à la mode, a dark pink with a big black ribbon bow tied at the neck, the trailing ends spilling down her front. Ruby was capable of making herself up to look like the dowdiest hausfrau, or an innocent farmgirl in the city for the first time, or a silver screen vamp to put Theda Bara to shame, depending on which appearance best suited her stratagems. He was tempted to think this version was the “real” Ruby, shorn of all disguises, but Sanford knew better than that. If there even was a real Ruby, he didn’t think this woman shared her with anyone but herself.
She tapped the rim of her glass with one of the rings on her fingers, making it chime. “Would you like something?”
He settled back into the booth, which was actually quite comfortable, the better to entice visitors to sit and drink awhile. “I’m quite all right. We could simply meet at the Lodge, you know. I don’t like talking business in public.” Not that anyone was paying them the least bit of attention here.
“They know I like my privacy here. And you know why I don’t like to go to the Lodge.”
“Tut, tut,”
Sanford said. “You were hardly locked up in the basements for any length of time at all. You escaped almost immediately.”
“My brief imprisonment aside, I was pursued through those basements by a monster. I have unpleasant associations with the place.” She made a face, which was, in fact, less revolting than the monster in question.
You should see the creature now, Sanford thought. “‘Monster’ is a bit much,” he said. “It was merely a guardian, and you were trespassing. But, yes, I take your point.” Sanford’s relationship with Ruby was, historically, rather fraught. She was a professional thief who’d robbed his vault below the Lodge of priceless relics some years ago, and he’d even arranged a trap to lure her back to Arkham so he could take his revenge on her. But she’d become entangled in all that business with the Cult of Asterias, and in the process, the two of them had become necessary allies, fighting back-to-back against a common enemy. He’d agreed to forget her transgressions in light of her service, and they now had a reliable (if never totally comfortable) working relationship. She was very good at what she did. She must be, if she’d managed to steal something from him.
“Why did you want to see me?” she asked.
Right to business. She seldom spent any of her charm on him, which was fine since he was immune to such blandishments. “Oh, I have a job for you. But before we get into all that… have you heard of a man named Randall Tillinghast?” Sanford had myriad connections all over Arkham, since many of the city’s most prominent and influential citizens were members of the Order of the Silver Twilight (known universally, informally, and erroneously as the Silver Twilight Lodge), the social organization and esoteric order that he ruled absolutely. But Ruby had a different set of connections: bartenders, small-time thugs, dock workers, housemaids. The little people who kept the city humming along. Sometimes she knew things he didn’t.
He wasn’t expecting a reaction like this, though. “Tillinghast?” She put her glass down, carefully, but her hand was shaking, and gin sloshed over the rim. “You don’t mean… Tall, thin, white hair, in his sixties? Likes to wear expensive Italian suits?”
Sanford cocked his head. “I haven’t met the man myself, but that fits the descriptions I’ve received. You mean to say you know the man? Personally?”
Ruby stared at the tabletop. “I can’t… he was… I did some work for him. A while back. I shouldn’t talk about it. I have to be discreet, in my business, you know.” A tremble crept into her voice.
“You needn’t give me details about your business relationship,” Sanford said. “I mainly want to know: is he the genuine article, in terms of his association with the occult? There are a lot of charlatans in his business–”
She laughed, the sound as short and harsh as a crow’s caw. “Tillinghast is the real thing. The… item… I procured for him… It belonged to very serious people, and they wanted it back. Badly. There was this policeman, too, who came after the relic afterward, and it was a lot of work to shake him. To be honest, I still look over my shoulder sometimes.” Ruby narrowed her eyes. “Is Tillinghast here? In Arkham?”
“That is the rumor, yes. You hadn’t heard anything about a newcomer?”
“No! And you’d think I
would have…” She chewed her lip, clearly vexed. “Do you know what he’s doing here?”
“Business,” Sanford said. “He’s opened a curio shop, though I’ve had trouble finding out exactly where it’s located. He should fire whoever does his advertisements. Miss Standish… Ruby… does this man frighten you?” He’d seldom seen her react so strongly, even in the face of imminent peril.
“Frighten?” She seemed to take the question seriously, rolling the glass between her hands as she pondered. “No, that’s not quite right. He unsettles me. Tillinghast can be very friendly, solicitous even, and he paid me fairly, plus extra to make up for the trouble I encountered down in the swamps. But… I can’t explain it. Have you ever stood on a bridge at night, looking down at the water all dark beneath you, and for a moment it feels like you’re just suspended in the void? Like you’re surrounded by nothing? A kind of… active nothing?”
Sanford nodded. He’d glimpsed the emptiness at the heart of reality on more than one occasion.
She nodded back. “That’s how I felt, sometimes, when he’d look into my eyes. Like I was staring into the abyss… and the abyss was staring back at me.”
“The thief who quoted Nietzsche!” Sanford scoffed.
Ruby managed half a smile. “I’m an educated woman, Sanford. It just wasn’t a typical education.” She turned serious, her eyes fixed on his. “What do you want with Tillinghast?”
“I want to meet him, first of all,” Sanford said. “I want to peruse his wares and see if there’s anything worth acquiring, especially now that you’ve told me he might have objects of real value. I wish to take the measure of the man and see if he could be useful to me.” Or dangerous to me, but he’d hardly admit that concern out loud. Sanford leaned forward. “Can you give me any other impressions of him, apart from his voidlike gaze?”
“Not really,” Ruby said. “He hired me, I did the job, he paid me, we parted ways. I only met him face-to-face a few times. He definitely has the manners of a gentleman, and he probably has the soul of a shark.”
It was Sanford’s turn to grin. “I’ve been told I can be a trifle sharklike myself. I’m sure in my presence this Tillinghast will become like unto a minnow. Would you please make some inquiries for me, and see if you can find the location of his shop? A surprise visit could be in order.”
She shrugged. “I’ll see what I can do.”
“Excellent. Once you’ve
found him, perhaps you could offer to… renew your association? I’m sure he could use someone with your skills, whatever his precise intentions are. And in the process, if you pick up any useful tidbits of information about his plans here in Arkham, you can pass them on to me.”
“You want me to be your spy, Sanford?” Ruby shook her head. “That’s going to cost you.”
“I would expect nothing less. You know the depths of my purse. I’m sure we can reach a satisfactory arrangement.”
“I’ll see what I can do,” she repeated. “No promises, but if the opportunity to renew my acquaintance with Tillinghast comes up, I won’t let it pass me by.”
Sanford nodded. “Fair enough. On to our main business, then. There’s a certain shipment arriving from South America this week, bound for the university, and I’d appreciate it if you could intercept something for me.”
CHAPTER TWO
Dark Deeds on the Docks
The Arkham River Docks were never a particularly cheerful place to visit, even in the bright morning with the birds singing and the sun shining, and so much less so deep into the evening with the mists rising and the only songs the swearing of the toiling stevedores.
Skulking around this area in skirts at night wasn’t a safe proposition, so Ruby was in one of her more seldom-used disguises, wearing patched trousers and battered boots, with a baggy old shirt to hide her figure, and her hair bundled up under a newsboy cap. A few smudges on her face in lieu of makeup made her resemble a boy prowling the docks in search of work or amusement or both. She was hardly immune to trouble in this guise, but it was a less troublesome sort of trouble than she could expect if she prowled around wearing a dress and kitten heels.
The docks rambled along a lengthy stretch of the river near the Merchant District, home to crumbling piers, rambling warehouses, unsteady stacks of cargo, cheap accommodations, booze that would blind you in time, and people desperate enough to drink it anyway. She saw Abner Weems, a local drunk who was occasionally lucid enough to pass messages or provide a useful tip, but not tonight; he was sprawled on his back beside a bottle at the mouth of a narrow alley, even his coat and shoes too worn for anyone to bother stealing.
A little farther along, Joey the Rat skulked past her, shoulders in a perpetual hunch, eyes darting everywhere; he was a small-time crook with an encyclopedic knowledge of the comings and goings of every ship, and she’d paid him for information before (and dislocated a couple of his fingers when he patted her bottom once). His peripatetic gaze didn’t even pause when it reached her, which meant her disguise was solid.
Still, she kept to the shadows, staying close to the warehouses and heaps of crates, trying not to catch the eye of any of the big-shouldered men shifting cargo. Walking near the water was, theoretically, more pleasant, since you could look at the river, but while the Miskatonic had a certain beauty in the daytime, at night, the river just made her uneasy: those murky depths could hide anything, and nowadays she knew too much about the foul things that sometimes lurked beneath the surface. Of the water, and of everything else.
The river docks never entirely shut down, though they were a lot busier in the afternoon than they were in the dark of night. ...
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...