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Synopsis
Once David Hero was an ordinary man living in the real world. Now he is trapped in the Dreamlands, cut off from the waking world. David Hero's dreams and nightmares have become his own reality.
Swollen, glowing oddly in the gloom of night, the moon hangs lower and lower over the Dreamlands. Its weird, unearthly light transforms beautiful landscapes into twisted nightmares and imperils the sanity of any who walk abroad after sunset.
Beams of terrible power stab the unsuspecting earth, destroying the land, shattering buildings, and dragging people into the shrieking sky, straight toward the hellish moon!
David Hero, once a man of the waking world, finds himself fighting side by side with his worst enemies--Zura and her zombie armies, the Eidolon Lathi and her termite men--against the slimy, many-tentacled moon monsters.
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Release date:
February 15, 1994
Publisher:
Tom Doherty Associates
Print pages:
256
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PART 1
The Quest
CHAPTER I
Mad Moon Rising
"In the waking world," said David Hero that weird night (Hero of Dreams, as he was sometimes known) to his friend and constant companion Eldin the Wanderer, "--if indeed the waking world truly exists--"
"Oh, it does, it does," Eldin rumblingly cut in. "I lived there once, and so did you; but I can't remember much about it, and you seem to remember even less."
"Well, then," Hero continued, a little miffed at being interrupted, "since your memory is so superior to mine, perhaps you'll recall the waking world's moon?"
"Its moon?"
"I mean, did it really have a moon?" Hero fumbled the question out, frustration plain in his tone as he struggled to plumb the murky deeps of memory. "Was there such a thing as a moon--in the waking world, I mean?"
They sat with their backs to the trunk of a massive cedar on the banks of the Skai, embers of a small fire glowing at their feet and sputtering acridly on the bones of a pair of trout tickled to death by Eldin's practiced fingers some hours earlier in the perfumed twilight. Hero's question, for all that it may have sounded trivial, naive and hardly typical of his usual patter (though certainly he was a romantic in his own way), was pertinent indeed in this particular place and on this particular night. Why, the pair had walked down the riverbank fromUlthar just to be out in the open night air for the moon's rising; which must say something for its pertinence! That two such as these should be out here to witness a moonrise when they could easily be boozing or wenching or both ... ?
"Was there a moon?" Eldin musingly repeated, frowning up into cloudless indigo heavens aglow with all the stars of night. "Why, of course there was! I remember it well, because ..."
"Because?"
Eldin stirred himself reluctantly and shrugged. "Because it rhymes with June and spoon," he answered, however vaguely.
"Spoon?" Hero too sat up straighter. "Are you pulling my leg, old lad?"
"Of course not," the other sighed. "It's just that I remember how the moon featured in almost every love song. Moon over this or that--moonlight bay--silvery moon and blue moon--and so on." He shrugged again, somewhat self-consciously. "All very mushy, I know, but that's how I remember it."
After a little while Hero said: "Perhaps I do remember it. Blue moon and silvery moon, yes. But how about bloated moon!"
"What?" Eldin cried, aghast. "In a love song?"
"No, I suppose not," Hero was forced to agree; and his eyes suddenly narrowed as they stared across the star-strewn river. "After all, how in all the dreamlands could anyone write a love song around a monster like that, eh?" And he pointed toward a spine of distant mountains where even now a scabby, silvery-yellow rim floated up into view.
Spectral light flooded the valley of the Skai, paling the scattered lights of lanthorns in the towers of near-distant Ulthar and driving some of the lesser stars from the heavens. The moon rose higher, like the pitted pate of some luminous monster peering over the edge of the world, with shadowed craters for eyes. The dreamers climbed to their feet and absently dusted themselves down, then stood silently, in a sortof lunar awe, gleamingly illumined by the vastness rising up into the night sky of dreamland.
"Why, the damn thing's bigger than ever!" said Eldin, and Hero detected a shuddering note in the unusually hushed voice of his companion. "No," the Wanderer continued, steady once more. "No, I certainly wouldn't consider writing that moon into a love song! What do you make of it, lad? A moon that grows bigger and bigger each night--like a huge balloon, bloated beyond belief. Almost as if--"
"As if it were about to pop and fall in tatters!" Hero muttered, giving substance to Eldin's unspoken thought.
At that very moment, invoked it seemed by Hero's words, something did fall: a fluttering something that stilled the voices of the river frogs with its clapping and thrumming as it dropped to Hero's shoulder and clung there, rubbing its downy head against his cheek. Momentarily frozen in shock, he quickly recovered and put up a still trembling hand to carefully catch the bird about its slender body, drawing it down unprotestingly.
"A pink pigeon!" cried Eldin.
"A bird from the Temple of the Elder Ones in Ulthar," added Hero in a quieter tone, frowning as he took from the aerial messenger's leg a tiny cylinder, unscrewing its end and drawing out a tight wad of extremely thin paper. Eldin took a brand from the fire, holding it up to the paper which Hero now spread against the cedar's rough trunk. Written in the clean, clear glyphs of dream, they could read a message. It said simply this:
"Hero, Eldin--
Come at once to Ilek-Vad. Waste no time--there is none to waste. The dreamlands are threatened, and in your hands the power to save us all. A sky-floating ship awaits you in Ulthar, to bring you to Ilek-Vad. If you want a sign, only look at the moon!
All speed-- Randolph Carter."
As if satisfied with a job well done, the pigeon now flapped aloft and drew the eyes of the adventurers skyward. Moonlight streamed across the land, but not the healthy moonlight that Hero and Eldin were used to. No, it was a diseased, creeping moonlight, undulating down from a bulging monster moon which already filled slightly less than a third of the entire horizon. Sickly that moon, its evil power oppressive--and not alone over human beings. From far away came the baying howl of a wolf, a sound seldom heard in the dreamlands and a powerful omen, which was answered by a vicious and concerted feline spitting and yowling along the riverbank.
"The cats of Ulthar are restless tonight," said Hero, his own voice ashiver.
"Little wonder," answered Eldin, and added a low curse as the guttering firebrand burned his fingers. "This moonlight clings like a film of yellow sweat! What does it all mean, d'you think? What trouble brews?"
Hero shook his head. "At this rate we'll never know," he said. "But there's a quest in it for sure, on that you can bet. And the note said to hasten."
"Then let's hasten," grunted Eldin. "We've been idle for too long, lad, since our last adventure. We could use a little exercise."
"Oh?" answered Hero as he stepped out beside his friend along the river path. "A little exercise, you say? Well, if it's exercise you're after, I can feel it in my water that we're in for a lot!" And with that the pair grew silent as their pace quickened and their ill-lit strides stretched out ...