“The cold, heavy cloth hung draped about Henderson’s
shoulders. The faint odor rose mustily in his nostrils as he stepped back and
surveyed himself in the mirror. The lamp was poor, but Henderson saw that the
cloak effected a striking transformation in his appearance. His long face
seemed thinner, his eyes were accentuated in the facial pallor heightened by
the somber cloak he wore. It was a big, black shroud….
“The old man took the money, blinking, and drew the
cloak from Henderson’s shoulders. When it slid away he felt suddenly warm
again. It must be cold in the basement—the cloth was icy.”—Robert Bloch, “The
Cloak,” in American Fantastic Tales: Terror and the Uncanny from Poe to the Pulps, edited by Peter Straub
(Library of America, 2009)
Right about now would be a great time for Henderson
to high-tail it away from that cold, dusty costumer’s shop (better to buy this
at home, on eBay, where the one in the accompanying image came from) and its
shuffling, ancient, yellow-eyed owner. But this is Halloween night, and
Henderson badly wants a monster’s costume to frighten his friend Lindstrom and
his silly society friends.
More to the point, this vampire’s cloak makes
Henderson look better—a huge selling
point to a colossally arrogant narcissist.
On the other hand, most readers like myself don’t
want Henderson to run away, as it would deprive us of a chance to see a modern
master of the macabre at work, especially at his tongue-in-cheek best.
The decades immediately before and after World War
II represent a godsend for readers of genre fiction. Devotees of detective,
science, and supernatural/fantasy fiction could turn to all sorts of
magazines—especially the pulps—and find terrific short stories, turned out by
masters such as Ellery Queen, Ray Bradbury, Richard Matheson, and H.P.
Lovecraft, to name a few. The last of these was a major influence on the writer
of “The Cloak,” Robert Bloch, born
on this date in Chicago in 1917.
Bloch is known best today for the novel Psycho, which furnished Alfred Hitchcock
with the raw material for a bravura exercise in the art of pure filmmaking. But
his talent for horror hardly ended there. In a prior post, I alluded to a terrific Bloch short story, “Yours
Truly, Jack the Ripper,” which featured Sherlock Holmes on the trail of the
serial killer.
When I saw this particular story in American Fantastic Tales, I knew I had
to buy this Library of America anthology—even though it also has such classic
genre (and non-genre) authors as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allan Poe, Henry
James, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Lovecraft.
Bloch might have looked initially to Lovecraft (who
first encouraged the teenaged neophyte writer to contribute to Weird Tales) as a model, but by the time he wrote
this for Unknown, at age 22, he had
developed his own unique style.
Take, for instance, the opening of this tale: “The
sun was dying, and its blood spattered the sky as it crept into a sepulcher
behind the hills. The keening wind sent the dry, fallen leaves scurrying toward
the west, as though hastening them to the funeral of the sun.”
Henderson, seeing the change in the atmosphere, can only ask why he has to waste his time thinking about "cheap imagery." Bloch is sending up one of the conventions of the horror genre--establish a sense of atmosphere--even as he's about to reinforce it. Henderson is so concerned about his own silly errand that he ignores unmistakable signs (including that the window into the costumer's shop looks like "a fissure into hell") that he is in an environment where his very sense of self will be radically destabilized.
Forget Edward and Bella,
kids—if you really want a vampire tale to sink your teeth into, this is the
one.
(By the way, I had remembered Henderson as being an
actor, but that is never given as his profession in the story—the one reference
I found to something like this concerned college theatricals in which he appeared. I’ve since learned, however, that in his own
adaptation of the story, part of The House That Dripped Blood (1971), Bloch made the connection obvious by
turning Henderson into a horror movie actor. That could only have
accentuated the humor running throughout the tale.)
No comments:
Post a Comment