Sherlock Holmes (
astudyinviolet) wrote in
shellphones2025-09-01 03:13 pm
Entry tags:
[ public ] text | un: astudyinviolet
Type: Text
Sender ID: astudyinviolet (Sherlock Holmes)
To: Public
Subject: Who is familiar with this entity?
Warnings: The worst book club ever, talk of eldritch horrors, potential poking at the 4th wall for Sherlock
I made the purchase of ‘Encyclopedia Necronomica’ earlier but had not the opportunity to make a study of it until now. Having done so, I must ask: who is familiar with the entity pictured here? What do you know?
I shall include photographs from the book and of my sketches in reference to imagery related to my world.
Furthermore, if anyone else wishes to reference or compare this book with entities encountered recently, I am at your disposal.
S.H.
[ Sherlock had some sense of mind to not study this particular book while feverish and ill. He should be praised for that, honestly, because he spotted something frightening familiar when he finally did.
Wait a minute, when did Arthur Conan Doyle write about Holmes going up against Cthulhu? ]
[ photograph of a book page which claims there are Cthulhu-type entities out there that are almost squid-like but impossible to say without more research ]

[ A sketch of the painting, including the frame ]

[ A sketch of only the Cthulhu statue (no Sherlock) ]

[ A sketch version of the above image ]

[ A sketch pulled further back of a nondescript figure sinking in water with Cthulhu looking up at them from deeper below. ]
Sender ID: astudyinviolet (Sherlock Holmes)
To: Public
Subject: Who is familiar with this entity?
Warnings: The worst book club ever, talk of eldritch horrors, potential poking at the 4th wall for Sherlock
I made the purchase of ‘Encyclopedia Necronomica’ earlier but had not the opportunity to make a study of it until now. Having done so, I must ask: who is familiar with the entity pictured here? What do you know?
I shall include photographs from the book and of my sketches in reference to imagery related to my world.
Furthermore, if anyone else wishes to reference or compare this book with entities encountered recently, I am at your disposal.
S.H.
[ Sherlock had some sense of mind to not study this particular book while feverish and ill. He should be praised for that, honestly, because he spotted something frightening familiar when he finally did.
Wait a minute, when did Arthur Conan Doyle write about Holmes going up against Cthulhu? ]

[ A sketch of the painting, including the frame ]

[ A sketch of only the Cthulhu statue (no Sherlock) ]

[ A sketch version of the above image ]

[ A sketch pulled further back of a nondescript figure sinking in water with Cthulhu looking up at them from deeper below. ]

no subject
[ His own prayer-marks don't work. Not even now that he has magic. Not even now that he has water magic. He's been taking comfort in that. ]
You think he's here? With the rest of the creatures down below?
no subject
[ Blacking out whenever partially submerged in water makes that very difficult. ]
no subject
[ He supposes it would be prying to ask why, now that he thinks about it. ]
I suppose I can keep an eye out, if I know what I'm looking for.
no subject
[ That is not the main or only reason, but that should be reason enough. ]
Besides the image in the book, I can tell you something of the cultists wanting to wake the entity, but really any cultist sacrificing people should be warned about.
no subject
That's a point, but I'm still curious.
no subject
The ritual itself involved those people chanting while mesmerized by special glass lenses casting a sickening light. They would then sacrifice themselves from jumping from atop a lighthouse to their deaths in the ocean below. A terrible storm arose around the area, possibly even before the ritual fully took place as many ships had found themselves wrecked on the rock coastlines nearby.
no subject
But it answers another question, too: they don't really sound like any version of the Parish of Tide and Flesh. There's something both comforting and depressing about the idea the Trawler-man is limited to one world. That he's not that important in the grand scheme of things. ]
They don't sound exactly like anyone I've encountered, in this world or in mine.
[ Not that that says much; they still wouldn't be all that out of place if a version of them were there. ]
no subject
I cannot begin to fully comprehend how many people suffered at the hands of that cult.
[ He could estimate it to be the population of a single leviathan the likes of Eltrut. Terrifyingly large. ]
no subject
[ As much as he doesn't exactly enjoy the topic, he can't help but be curious. ]
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
[ Even if not knowing could be frustrating in its own way. It's good to be aware of the details of a threat. ]
no subject
[ Not knowing is frustrating. He wants to know, often to his detriment. ]
no subject
[ He's not quite sure what else to say about that, though. ]
Anything else of note in the book, do you think? I wouldn't mind sitting down to catch up on the thing.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
[ And the first ones to come to mind are horrible, even by the standards of his world. ]
no subject
no subject
[ This isn't even a lie. He might be an expert on one god, but only one. The rest is half-remembered secondary school essays and hearsay. Aside from a few actual close encounters.]
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
[ Mostly because it sounds like something out the sort of comics he read as a kid, but still. ]
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)