The trek across the taiga had been a bruising one. Paved roads had run out a few hours north of Yakutsk, and the dirt tracks some hours north of that. John had prepared as best he could for this eventuality, but even with all his groundwork he found himself making the last part of the journey on foot, across game trails cut by reindeer across the lower reaches of the Verkhoyansk Range, the coldest place ever permanently inhabited by man.

By the time John had arrived in a small valley carved fromt he Range by an unnamed river, he was suffering from frostbite, saddle sores, and bites from the stinging insects that swarmed eagerly around him, desperate for blood in the short quasi-summer that was their lives. Deep within the valley, visible only from the place indicated on the map, was an old ostrog–a single-tower fortress within a mouldering palisade, erected by the earliest Russian explorers.

When he was nearer, the unmistakable resonance of Tuvan throat singing could be heard echoring through the forgotten valley. This was the place.

John found the Porok at the highest floor of the okrug, at a window that had once served as a lookout post, projecting the eerie sound into the world through dead lungs. The Porok was rotted and embalmed, like a badly preserved mummy with just enough flesh and sinew to hold together its bones and support the worn finery it sported.

“It’s beautiful,” said John. “The singing.”

The Porok did not turn to him. “It is the only sound that I can make that one might think came from something young,” it said. Its voice was raspy and choked with dust, the death rattle of an old general cut down in single combat. “And it serves as a beacon to those who, like you, have made the long trek north from Yakutsk.”

John was susprised that the Porok’s English was so intelligible, as he had extensively practiced his rusty Russian and Latin. “So I am not the first,” he said.

“Nor will you be the last.” The Porok now approached John. Its face was eyeless, its lips and gaping nasal cavity devoid of all but the most base of flesh. “To those who would seek the Porok out, the long trek is a welcome…filter. The cool climate also agrees with me, as you may imagine.”

It led John downstairs, throught the main room decorated with trinkets that others had brought in supplication. The pretty things, tapestries and china, were heaped in a corner. It was the utilitarian things that occupied a place of honor: a wind-up short-wave radio, a shake-flashlight, a water filter.

“I know why you have come,” said the Porok. “All is known to me, always, forever. It is my curse and my gift. However, I long ago made a pact with myself, and with the Ancients measured against whom I am but a zygote. I only act on that which people say, rather than what they think or what they are.”

“Very well,” said John. “I will give you your gift and tell you now, if it please you.”

“Do so,” croaked the Porok. “But be warned: once you speak, your lost is cast, words set forever in stone. You may leave now, safely, or stay an evening to fortify yourself. But once you speak, you will face the consequences. Your request may be granted, yes. Or I may tear out your throat for your insolence. In asking, you accept this. Do you understand?”

“I do.” John set his jaw. “I will proceed.”

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It is in times of war, when modern men and modern machines move into uncertain spheres, that the most such strange encounters take place. A few notable ones:

1879: South Africa
A cavalry detachment that was assigned the pursuit of broken Zulu formations after the decisive Battle of Ulundi. The number of men involved are unclear, but 12 men–British soldiers and Zulu warriors with British equipment–eventually appeared in Portuguese Mozambique and were interned there. Despite repeated requests they were never returned, and a perusal of Portuguese records suggests that all 12 were incurably insane and remitted to an asylum in Lourenço Marques. An official report was tendered to the Foriegn Office by the Overseas Ministry in Lisbon, but it was sealed by order of the Prime Minister until 2100.

1915: Egypt
A raiding party of Turkish troops penetrated the Egyptian desert during the larger assault on the Suez Canal. A British force was detailed to follow them. Only five survivors were found despite extensive searches of the high desert, far to the south of the combat near the Dashur necropolis. Reports of strange lights in the desert by Egyptians corresponded with wild tales told by survivors of vicious attacks by luminous beings that could not be driven off with gunfire.

1942: New Guinea
A detachment of Australian troops fleeing toward Port Moresby and pursued by a larger Japanese force disappeared along with their adversaries. In 1945, the remains of a joint Australian-Japanese campside was found high in the Owen Stanley range far from the combat zone. Papers recovered by the investigators reported encounters with shadowy “tribesmen” in the forest. The descriptions matched no known tribes in the Owen Stanley range or the Kokoda Trail areas. No survivors were ever found.

1970: Cambodia
South Vietnamese and American troops moving into the dense jungles of Cambodia reported the discovery of an unknown temple complex from the late Angkor period via radio. There was no subsequent contact aside from a garbled request for close air support that could not be fulfilled. Subsequent searches failed to locate either the temple or the soldiers, with 10 Americans in one squad and a further 50 South Vietnamese troops being listed as missing in action. Examination of North Vietnamese records from the period indicates that an opposing force of 150 troops was also officially unaccounted for.

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“No sign of anyone,” said John. He set down his Hawken rifle, muzzle to the sky, and rolled a lump of tobacco meditatively in and out of a hollow tooth. “Saw a dog, but it ran away. Might have been a stray, might not.”

“Same.” Samuel, though technically the leader of the party, tended to defer to John in military matters. The bullet that still rattled around in his side from the Black Hawk War was enough to see to that. “I haven’t seen anyone but tied-up horses. Turned ’em loose so they wouldn’t starve.”

“What do you suppose,” John said, “happened to upend a town of 100 souls such that we can’t find even one outside the graveyard?”

Samual looked back toward the party they were guiding–15 near-starving souls for whom the settlement of Eldridge had represented salvation. “I don’t know, and I don’t care,” said he. “We take what’s left and bed down here for a few days. If they come back, we’ll pay. If not…” he let the sentence trail off into the raw fall air.

“The tables were set for dinner, flies in the food,” said John. “I’m not sure anything I have could help us against whatever Injun or otherwise takes a man before he’s finished eating his dinner.”

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The maid showed Burgess into Forrestal’s sitting room. A servant tottered in with steaming tea and biscuits, though Burgess could tell at a glance that both were poor quality and quite old, quite stale.

Mr. John Forrestal arrived a moment later, an impressive barrel of a man in pince-nez held betwixt hearty muttonchops. “Mr. James Burgess, is it?” he said. “Solicitor with Hamilton & Burr?”

“Quite right,” said Burgess, offering his hand. Forrestal declined to take it. “I assume you’ve had the opportunity to look over the papers I left with my calling card?”

“Quite.” Forrestal walked to the sitting room window and gazed out it. “My brother and I had not spoken for over two decades,” he said. “You’ll forgive me if I am not as visibly bereaved as seems proper. I have, in the interim, thrown myself into charitable works in an attempt to make amends for Peter’s…indiscretions.”

Burgess set down his case and began leafing through it. “Yes, I’ve seen the papers on file. The Charitable Association, the Workhouse Improvement League, the Liberal Party…it is quite the basket of bleeding hearts you have allowed to suckle from the proverbial teat.” Ordinarily Burgess would not have spoken so, but the man’s chilly and rather rude welcome had him in a testy mood.

“More than suckle,” snapped Forrestal. “I involve myself as a volunteer as well as a benefactor, and donate of my time and expertise as an accountant to the financial nitwits who run these sucklers.”

“As you say,” Burgess agreed. “Very kind, I’m sure.”

“And as an accountant, I have an…offer…for you, should you care to consider it.” Forrestal did a military about-face, his spectacles opaque and white with reflected sunlight. “Peter was a barrister specializing in fraud, so when it came to committing the act himself, he covered his tracks well. It was prudent for him to take leave, but the sum he left upon his death must have been substantial.”

Burgess pursed his lips. “It’s all in the papers, Mr. Forrestal.”

“Indeed. And I also see from the papers that the whole is to be awarded to…her…should you ajudge her competent of recieving it.”

“And if not, it will be awarded to the only other living next-of-kin,” said Burgess drily.

“She…is a carbunkle on my family,” Forrestal said. “Our great shame, an idiot and a cripple, scarcely capable of seeing to her own day-to-day needs, let alone a substantial estate. There are charities that could use that money for the benefit of mankind, solicitor. And there are many loopholes that can see Hamilton & Burr amply…rewarded…for their services in seeing that the monies are dispersed properly.”

“In that case,” said Burgess evenly. “You ought to suggest as much to your niece and, as of now, only living relative. If she is as much an idiot as you say she is, no doubt the suggestion will be taken up quite readily.”

Burgess and Forrestal glared at each other a moment, all that was unsaid between them hanging thick and dusty in the air. “So be it, then,” growled Forrestal. “Mary! Show the solicitor to Melindas chambers. And make up a room for him in case his business with that creature demands more than an afternoon’s time.”

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William Partizan, of the Chicago Partizans, was born into that meat-packing dynasty in 1840. The family’s only heir and scion, he sold the plant to Layton and Plankinton after his parents’ death in a rail accident in 1863 and devoted himself to spiritual pursuits thereafter.

A dedicated follower of and correspondent with the Fox Sisters,
Cora Hatch, and other spiritualists during the movement’s nascent days, Partizan eventually came to the conclusion that the old morals that had informed human religion were morally bankrupt and irredeemable. He preached on this thesis throughout a series of self-finacned lecture tours throughout the midwest in 1870-1875, gradually selling off more and more of the Partizan estate and collections to fund his efforts.

Eventually, Partizan distanced himself from the Foxes and Hatch and claimed that their brand of spiritualism did not go far enough. What the world needed, he claimed, was a revolutionary fucion of spirits and science to provide a “New Moral Power” to replace that of (to him) discredited faiths. Partizan preached that, through the combined sciences of magnetism, electricity, and spiritualism, humanity could create a being of perfect morality, imbued with the wisdom of spirits from spheres beyond the grave, to which the species could turn for guidance.

The massive success of the Armour meat packing company, which had acquired Layton and Plankinton, provided Partizan with the funds needed to realize his vision. He sold all of his remaining stock and gathered the small group of devoted followers he had been able to amass. They retired to Beaver Island in Lake Michigan, which had a reputation for both lawlessness and friendliness to unorthodox religious ideas. There, Partizan established himself a settlement abandoned by the Mormon Strangites after the murder of their king. It appears that this was not lost on him, as several items of religious significance to the departed Strangites were incorporated into his construction plans.

Over the period from 1877 to 1885, Partizan and perhaps a dozen followers worked on the construction of their “New Moral Power.” They sent out the specifications for precision components to firms all over the world and had the manufactured components delivered for assembly on site. Magnets from Germany, electrical components made to order by the Westinghouse Air Brake Company, and more were acquired. The plans do not survive in whole, but contemporary sources indicate that the “New Moral Power” had two components: a large central dynamo unit that was sunk into a subterranean chamber once used as a cistern by the Strangites, and a motile anthropomorphic automaton. Apparently Parizan intended the stationary Power to control the motile one, connected by a “spiritual-magneto tether.”

Alarmed by reports of Partizan’s activities, and wary of another incident like that with the Strangites, the Michigan authorities banned postal shipments to the island in 1885. They were further alarmed by a letter, held at Muskegon due to the order, that called for a female follower of Partizan to “birth” the New Moral Power. Though some have argued that this was a purely symbolic Spiritualist ritual, the authorities were sufficiently inflamed to raid Partizan’s settlement.

The Michigan State Police arrived on June 6, 1885, apparently interrupting the ritual that Partizan’s letter had mentioned. The spiritualist and his followers were taken into custody, while his New Moral Power was photographed but left in place, being too unweieldy to move or disassemble. The authorities sealed the cistern, destroyed the aboveground buildings, and deported Partizan and his few reamining disciples to the maintland.

William Partizan lived out the remaining six years of his life engagning in increasingly far-fetched attempts to return in secret to Beaver Island. Eventually, his funds exhausted, he attempted a solo crossing by rowboat from Wisconsin, drowning in a September squall on the lake. He left behind a massive body of work on the occult, which was rediscovered and eventually celebrated as outsider art in the 20th century.

Notably, though, no trace of the automaton portion of the New Moral Power was ever found.

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Installed in 1974, the concrete viaduct replaced an older steel model and helped Arizona State Route 601 cross over a dry arroyo that was occasionally flooded in very wet weather. One of hundreds of infrastructure projects Governor Williams put in place, the viaduct was so unimportant and ignored that it was not even given a name.

It would have remained such if not for a maintenence crew dispatched to conduct a routine structural examination 18 months later. On one of the large, smooth concrete pilings beneath, the workers found a discoloration that strongly resembled a human face. They took a snapshot of the phenomenon and mailed it to the Arizona Republic, which carried it as a local color piece.

When a curiosity seeker visited the site a week later, after the article had been published, they found that the initial “face” had vanished. Instead, a similar discoloration on a different piling was present. Returning the next day, this second face was found to have been replaced by a third.

A media frenzy followed, with the “601 Faces” being intensely studied and photographed. A total of 79 different “faces” were recorded during the period, though no formal scientific inquiry was conducted. Frustrated with the traffic blockages that resulted, the county arranged for the viaduct to be demolished and replaced by a new structure.

To date, no “faces” have been observed on the new structure, and the extant “faces,” existing only as grainy photographs, continue to be discussed in occult circles to this day.

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“Hey,” the text said. “I’m running a little late. I should be at Wok of Ages in about 10-15.”

It wasn’t the fact that I didn’t know the number that worried me; I get the occasional wrong text. It’s no big deal.

But I was actually already at Wok of Ages for their Saturday lunch special, and there was no way anyone could have known that–I had only just decided to come in and sit down on a whim, five minutes after the text had arrived with a bleep that I’d ignored.

That was worrisome, but it could easily have been a coincidence. Wok of Ages is a popular joint. No, what really concerned me was the next text:

“What we discussed is in the trunk.”

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Hans Glück, the former SS Obergruppenführer known in some circles as the Beast of Schliedenburg, retired to the colony of Nuevo Nurembergo after the war. Intending to spend his twilight years in comfortable retirement, he returned to his former profession, that of a baker, supported by a modest pension.

With weekly deliveries of ingredients, Glück made small batches of sweets in his home for sale but invested most of his energy into a different project: gingerbread. He painstakingly mixed, baked, and cut the materials to build a gingerbread Schliedenburg, complete with little gingerbread men and gingerbread women. It was an orderly town, in which every cornice and inhabitant was carefully judged and measured–Glück’s thwarted vision for the town recreated in sweet miniature.

Naturally, baking is not an exact science, and often the gingerbread people or the buttresses of their dwellings would not turn out. In this case, Glück would ruthlessly cull them and feed the rejects to his beloved schnauzer, Strudel. Strudel would always take the treats outside through his doggie door; Glück, confined to a wheelchair after taking a bullet to the knee during his escape from the Siege of Königsburg, never knew or cared what secret hollow the dog retreated to with his prizes.

One night, while rigging the edible Schliedenburg with lights, Glück caught a glimpse of similar lights in the trees not far from the edge of his small yard. The next morning, curious, he took his old field glasses down and peered into the distance.

It was another gingerbread town, this one far less orderly and well-formed. The baker recognized his rejects, and realized that Strudel had simply been playing with and then discarding his castoffs. Unable to go outside to investigate, Glück assumed that the neighborhood children, perhaps the Hoffenstadter twins, were responsible. He made a telephone call to his milkman offering a gold Reichsmark if he would stomp the rogue settlement out.

The next day, the milkman failed to make his appointed rounds. And the gingerbread settlement had moved in the night: it was now less than ten feet from Glück’s door.

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To Whom It May Concern,

I’ve long been known as a collector of fine miniatures, especially dolls. My day job as an investment banker has only ever been a means to look after my collection and its myriad needs, grateful as I am for my success.

I suppose a psychologist would have a lot to say about what my love of my doll collection says about me, about my relationship with my parents, about Annie and Christine in each others’ arms in that coffin built for two where I laid them to rest after the stillbirth. But I have found clarity and peace in my dolls, so who is anyone to judge?

While my collection is as broad and as deep as I have been able to make it, a few items have long since stood out. The ’03 Bechenbacker, Melodie. The ’17 wartime Umberto, Francesca. My 1897 handmade Gauche-Stillwell, Jessica, the absolute gem of my collection. Who could forget the porcelain beauty of Agatha, my Krinkov from the last pre-revolution batch in December 1916? And of course, the three dolls who are of such rarity and quality that I have never publically disclosed any of their details?

They have spoken soft words to me on lonely rainy nights, kept me company from dusk until dawn. They are my true family, my true friends, the only ones who ever have or ever will understand me.

Therefore, I hope you will understand why I have had to remove myself from all other spheres. I hope you will understand why there are seven gaps on the shelves of my collection. And I hope you will understand why, even after the passing of a thousand thousand years, we will never be parted.

Sincerely,
V. Dolen Loveless

Inspired by the song ‘Love of Seven Dolls’ by Hiroki Kikuta, released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

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The police found the tire tracks. That was easy enough; the area was still crunchy with fresh-strewn snow, and the perp had skidded all over the place in his haste to get away.

They found the spot where the car had idled for a while, melting the snow beneath it and leaving a quartet of tire impressions in the night’s heavy snowfall.

That was the easy part. And it was easy to see that they hadn’t missed anything. There were no tracks leading away, no footprints, and no trace of the $5000 stashed in a garbage bag from the holdup.

The problems arose when they had to ask where, exactly, the truck and its occupant had gone.

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