THE FOG HORN
by Ray Bradbury
Out there in
the cold water, far from land, we waited every night for the coming of the fog,
and it came, and we oiled the brass machinery and lit the fog light up in the
stone tower. Feeling like two birds in the grey sky, McDunn and I sent the
light touching out, red, then white, then red again, to eye the lonely ships. And
if they did not see our light, then there was always our Voice, the great deep
cry of our Fog Horn shuddering through the rags of mist to startle the gulls
away like decks of scattered cards and make the waves turn high and foam.
"It's
a lonely life, but you're used to it now, aren't you?" asked McDunn.
"Yes,"
I said. You're a good talker, thank the Lord."
"Well,
it's your turn on land tomorrow," he said, smiling, "to dance the
ladies and drink gin."
"What
do you think McDunn, when I leave you out here alone?"
"On
the mysteries of the sea." McDunn lit his pipe. It was a quarter past
seven of a cold November evening, the heat on, the light switching it's tail in
two hundred directions, the Fog Horn bumbling in the high throat of the tower. There
wasn't a town for a hundred miles down the coast, just a road, which came
lonely through the dead country to the sea, with few cars on it, a stretch of
two miles of cold water out to our rock, and rare few ships.
The
mysteries of the sea," said McDunn thoughtfully. "You know, the
ocean's the biggest damned snowflake ever? It rolls and swells a thousand
shapes and colours, no two alike. Strange. One night, years ago, I was here
alone, when all of the fish of the sea surfaced out there. Something made them
swim in and lie in the bay, sort of trembling and staring up at the tower light
going red, white, red, white across them so I could see their funny eyes. I
turned cold. They were like a big peacock's tail, moving out there until
midnight. Then, without so much as a sound, they slipped away, the million of
them was gone. I kind of think maybe, in some sort of way, they came all those
miles to worship, Strange, But think how
the tower must look to them, standing seventy feet above the water, the
God-light flashing out from it, and the tower declaring itself with a monster
voice. They never came back, those fish, but don't you think for a while they
thought they were in the Presence?"
I
shivered. I looked out at the long grey lawn of the sea stretching away into
nothing and nowhere.
"Oh,
the sea's full." McDunn puffed his pipe nervously, blinking. He had been
nervous all day and hadn't said why. "For all our engines and so-called
submarines, it'll be ten thousand centuries before we set foot on the real
bottom of the sunken lands, in the fairy kingdoms there, and know real terror.
Think of it, it's still the year 300,000 Before Christ down under there. While
we've paraded around with trumpets, lopping off each other's countries and
heads, they have been living beneath the sea twelve miles deep and cold in a
time as old as the beard on a comet.
"Yes
it's an old world."
"Come
on. I got something special I've been saving up to tell you."
We
ascended the eighty steps, talking and taking our time. At the top, McDunn
switched off the room lights so there'd be no reflection in the plate glass. The
great eye of the light was humming, turning easily in its oiled socket. the Fog
Horn was blowing steadily, once every fifteen seconds.
"Sounds
like an animal, don't it?" McDunn nodded to himself. "A big lonely
animal crying in the night. Sitting here on the edge of ten million years
calling out to the deeps. I'm here, I'm here, I'm here. And the Deeps do
answer, yes, they do. You been here now for three months Johnny, so I better
prepare you. About this time of year," he said, studying the murk and fog,
"something comes to visit the lighthouse."
"The
swarms of fish like you said?'
"No,
this is something else. I've put off telling you because you might think I'm
daft. But tonight's the latest I can put it off, for if my calendar's marked
right from last year, tonight's the night it comes. I won't go into detail,
you'll have to see it for yourself. Just sit down there. If you want, tomorrow
you can pack your duffel and take the motorboat into land and get your car
parked there at the dinghy pier on the cape and drive on back to some little
inland town and keep your lights burning nights. I won't question or blame you.
It's happened three years now, and this is the only time anyone's been here
with me to verify it. You wait and watch."
Half
an hour passed with only a few whispers between us. When we grew tired waiting,
McDunn began describing some of his ideas to me. He had some theories about the
Fog Horn itself.
"One
day many years ago a man walked along and stood in the sound of the ocean on a
cold sunless shore and said "We need a voice to call across the water, to
warn ships; I'll make one. I'll make a voice that is like an empty bed beside
you all night long, and like an empty house when you open the door, and like
the trees in autumn with no leaves. A sound like the birds flying south,
crying, and a sound like November wind and the sea on the hard, cold shore. I'll
make a sound that's so alone that no one can miss it, that whoever hears it
will weep in their souls, and to all who hear it in the distant towns. I'll
make me a sound and an apparatus and they'll call it a Fog Horn and whoever
hears it will know the sadness of eternity and the briefness of
life.""
The
Fog Horn blew.
"I
made up that story," said McDunn quietly, "to try to explain why this
thing keeps coming back to the lighthouse every year. The fog horn calls, I
think, it comes..."
"But-"
I said.
"Sssst!" said McDunn. "There!" He nodded out
to the Deeps.
Something
was swimming towards the lighthouse tower.
It
was a cold night, as I said; the high tower was cold, the light coming and
going, and the Fog Horn calling and calling through the ravelling mist. You
couldn't see far and you couldn't see plain, but there was the deep sea moving
on it's way about the night earth, flat and quiet, to colour of grey mud, and
here were the two of us alone in the high tower, and there, far out at first,
was a ripple, followed by a wave, a rising, a bubble, a bit of froth/ And then,
from the surface of the cold sea came a head, a large head, dark-coloured, with
immense eyes, and then a neck And then-not a body-but more neck and more! The
head rose a full forty feet above the water ona slender and beautiful neck. Only
then did the body, like a little island of black coral and shells and crayfish,
drip up from the subterranean. There was a flicker of tail. In all, from head
to tip of tail, I estimated the monster at ninety or a hundred feet.
I
don't know what I said. I said something.
"Steady,
bot, steady," whispered McDunn.
"It's
impossible!" I said.
"No,
Johnny, we're impossible. It's like it always was ten million years ago. It
hasn't changed. It's us and the land that've changed, become impossible.
Us!"
It
swam slowly and with a great majesty out in the icy waters, far away. The fog
came and went about it, momentarily erasing its shape. One of the monster eyes
caught and held and flashed back our immense light, red, white, red, white,
like a disc held high and sending a message in primaeval code. It was as silent
as the fog through which it swam.
"It's
a dinosaur of some sort!" I crouched down, holding to the stair rail.
"Yes,
one of the tribe."
"But
they died out!"
"No,
only hid away in the Deeps, Deep, deep down in the deepest Deeps. Isn't that a
word now, Johnny, a real word, it says so much: the Deeps. There's all the coldness
and darkness and deepness in the world in a word like that."
"What'
we do?"
"Do?
We got our job, we can't leave. Besides, we're safer here than in any boat
trying to get to land. That thing's as big as a destroyer and almost as
swift."
"But
here, why does it come here?"
The
next moment I had my answer.
The
Fog Horn blew.
And
the monster answered.
A
cry came across a million years of water and mist. A cry so anguished and alone
it shuddered in my head and my body. The monster cried out at the tower. The
Fog Horn blew. The monster roared again. The Fog Horn blew. The monster opened
its great toothed mouth and the sound that came from it was the sound of the
Fog Horn itself. Lonely and vast and far away. The sound of isolation, a
viewless sea, a cold night, apartness. That was the sound.
"Now,"
whispered McDunn, "do you know why it comes here?"
I
nodded.
"All
year long, Johnny, that poor monster there lying far out, a thousand miles at
sea, and twenty miles deep maybe, biding its time, perhaps a million years old,
this one creature. Think of it, waiting a million years; could you wait that
long? Maybe it's the last of its kind. I sort of think that's true. Anyway,
here come men on land and build this lighthouse, five years ago. And set up
their Fog Horn and sound it and sound it out towards the place where you bury
yourself in sleep and sea memories of a world where there were thousands like
yourself, but now you're alone, all alone in a world that's not made for you, a
world where you have to hide.
"But
the sound of the Fog Horn comes and goes, comes and goes, and you stir from the
muddy bottom of the Deeps, and your eyes open like the lenses of two-foot
cameras and you move, slow, slow, for you have the ocean sea on your shoulders,
heavy. But that Fog Horn comes through a thousand miles of water, faint and
familiar, and the furnace in your belly stokes up, and you begin to rise, slow,
slow. You feed yourself on minnows, on rivers of jellyfish, and you rise slow
through the autumn months, through September when the fogs started, through
October with more fog and the horn still calling you on, and then, late in
November, after pressurizing yourself day by day, a few feet higher every hour,
you are near the surface and still alive. You've got to go slow; if you
surfaced all at once you'd explode. So it takes you all of three months to
surface, and then a number of days to swim through the cold waters to the
lighthouse. And there you are, out there, in the night, Johnny, the biggest damned
monster in creation. And here's the lighthouse calling to you, with a long neck
like your neck sticking way up out of the water, and a body like your body, and
most important of all, a voice like your voice. Do you understand now, Johnny,
do you understand?"
The
Fog Horn blew.
The
monster answered.
I
saw it all, I knew it all-the million years of waiting alone, for someone to
come back who never came back. The million years of isolation at the bottom of
the sea, the insanity of time there, while the skies cleared of reptile-birds,
the swamps fried on the continental lands, the sloths and sabre-tooths had
there day and sank in tar pits, and men ran like white ants upon the hills.
The
Fog Horn Blew.
"Last
year," said McDunn, "that creature swam round and round, round and
round, all night. Not coming to near, puzzled, I'd say. Afraid, maybe. And a
bit angry after coming all this way. But the next day, unexpectedly, the fog
lifted, the sun came out fresh, the sky was as blue as a painting. And the monster
swam off away from the heat and the silence and didn't come back. I suppose
it's been brooding on it for a year now, thinking it over from every which
way."
The
monster was only a hundred yards off now, it and the Fog Horn crying at each
other. As the lights hit them, the monster's eyes were fire and ice, fire and
ice.
"That's
life for you," said McDunn. "Someone always waiting for someone who
never comes home. Always someone loving something more than that thing loves
them. And after a while you want to destroy whatever that thing is, so it can
hurt you no more."
The monster was rushing at the
lighthouse.
The
Fog Horn blew.
"Let's
see what happens," said McDunn.
He
switched the Fog Horn off.
The
ensuing minute of silence was so intense that we could hear our hearts pounding
in the glassed area of the tower, could hear the slow greased turn of the
light.
The
monster stopped and froze. It's great lantern eyes blinked. Its mouth gaped. It
gave a sort of rumble, like a volcano. It twitched its head this way and that,
as if to seek the sounds now dwindled off in the fog. It peered at the
lighthouse. It rumbled again. Then its eyes caught fire. It reared up, threshed
the water, and rushed at the tower, its eyes filled with angry torment.
"McDunn!"
I cried. "Switch on the horn!"
McDunn
fumbled with the switch. But even as he switched it on, the monster was rearing
up. I had a glimpse of its gigantic paws, fishskin glittering in webs between
the finger-like projections, clawing at the tower. The huge eye on the right
side of its anguished head glittered before me like a cauldron into which I
might drop, screaming. The tower shook. The Fog Horn cried; the monster cried. It
seized the tower and gnashed at the glass, which shattered in upon us.
McDunn
seized my arm. "Downstairs!"
The
tower rocked, trembled, and started to give. The Fog Horn and the monster
roared. We stumbled and half fell down the stairs. "Quick!"
We
reached the bottom as the tower buckled down towards us. We ducked under the
stairs in the small stone cellar. There were a thousand concussions as the
rocks rained down; the Fog Horn stopped abruptly. The monster crashed upon the
tower. The tower fell. We knelt together, McDunn and I holding tight, while our
world exploded.
Then
it was over and there was nothing but darkness and the wask of the sea on the
raw stones.
That
and the other sound.
"Listen,"
said McDunn quietly. "Listen."
We
waited a moment. And then I began to hear it. First a great vacuumed sucking of
air, and then the lament, the bewilderment, the loneliness of the great
monster, folded over upon us, above us, so that the sickening reek of its body
filled the air, a stone's thickness away from our cellar. The monster gasped
and cried. The tower was gone. The light was gone. The thing that had called it
across a million years was gone. And the monster was opening its mouth and
sending out great sounds. the sounds of a Fog Horn, again and again. And ships
far at sea, not finding the light, not seeing anything, but passing and hearing
late that night must've thought: There it is, the lonely sound, the Lonesome Bay horn. All's well. We've rounded the
cape.
And
so it went for the rest of that night.
The sun was
hot and yellow the next afternoon when the rescuers came to dig us from our
stoned-under cellar.
"It
fell apart, is all," said McDunn gravely. "We had a few bad knocks
from the waves and it just crumbled." He pinched my arm.
There
was nothing to see. The ocean was calm, the sky blue. The only thing was a
great algaic stink from the green matter that covered the fallen tower stones
and the shore rocks. Flies buzzed about. The ocean washed empty on the shore.
The
next year they built a new lighthouse, but by that time I had a job in the
little town and a wife and a good small warm house that glowed yellow on autumn
nights, the doors locked, the chimney puffing smoke. As for McDunn. he was
master of the new lighthouse, built to his own specifications, out of
steel-reinforced concrete. "Just in case," he said.
The
new lighthouse was ready in November. I drove down alone one evening late and
parked my car and looked across the grey waters and listened to the new horn
sounding, once, twice, three, four times a minute far out there by itself.
The
monster?
It
never came back.
"It's
gone away," said McDunn. "It's gone back to the Deeps. It's learned
you can't love anything too much in this world. It's gone into the deepest
Deeps to wait another million years. Ah, the poor thing! Waiting out there, and waiting out there,
while man comes and goes on this pitiful little planet. Waiting and waiting.
I
sat in my car, listening. I couldn't see the lighthouse or the light standing
out in Lonesome Bay. I could only hear
the Horn, the Horn, the Horn. It sounded like the monster calling.
I
sat there wishing there was something I could say.
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