Miskatonic Expedition
B'Moth
B'Moth

B'Moth

Concepts & Phenomena

B'Moth

B'Moth — a recurring phenomenon; understanding does not restore sanity. Register ME-1922-J18/9567.

Overview

Filed under register ME-1922-J18/9567; cite `b-moth` in all outbound correspondence.

We would delete B'Moth if deletion worked; instead we classify, cross-link, and warn.

B'Moth enters the archive under protest from reason and with sponsorship from repeated evidence.

The Necronomicon is quoted too often as gossip; when a dossier cites Alhazred, demand the edition and the translator. Our English paraphrases deliberately blunt the lines that injure readers who memorise instead of understand.

What sleeps is not dead; what is catalogued here may be doing neither.

Description

Scale estimates in the files range from human to architectural, which usually means the observer was not the unit of measure.

The thing called B'Moth left no consistent footprint; it left expectations broken in the nervous system.

Those who survived description speak of surfaces that refuse matte finish — wet, reflective, or oily even in dry rooms.

Historical Record

Earliest stack mention is a photocopy of a photocopy of Latin marginalia — chain of custody unsuitable for court, sufficient for caution.

A 1931 Miskatonic committee voted to suppress photography; the vote is on file, the plates are not.

Activity increased after the Innsmouth embargo and the Antarctic expedition, as if publicity taught the countryside new vocabulary for old fears.

Field Observations

Do not engage alone; two witnesses minimum, three preferred if the name was spoken aloud.

Do not engage alone; two witnesses minimum, three preferred if the name was spoken aloud.

If the name appears in dreams three nights running, withdraw from the case and request audit.

Archive Notes

Protocol slug `b-moth`. What sleeps is not dead; what is catalogued here may be doing neither.

Cosmic HierarchyCPT-1365
Cosmic placement of B'Moth relative to indexed powers and servitors.

Citation: Miskatonic Expedition Archive. Record CPT-1365. Access subject to institutional review.