Authors: David Gerrold
He was silent too.
We returned to the great chamber on the main floor of the castle. A crystal jumble there gives off a vague flickering glowâreds and yellows, pinks and oranges. It is my pseudofireplace. I dare not have a real one because the castle cannot be opened at night even the width of a chimney.
“My pressure suit,” he said. “That had a radio in it. Perhapsâ”
I knew what he was about to say. “I'm sorry. I should have thought of it sooner, but it's too late now. The servants will have already destroyed it. It was contaminated, you know. Night-fungus spores. If something is neither alive nor made out of crystal, the servants will see it only as waste and they'll destroy it.”
“But you could have stopped them?” He was almost accusing.
I shook my head. “I could have
tried,
but I think it would have been useless. They don't understand anything but simple commands. They're not here to obey me, only to provide for my needs. Only my needsâ”
I stopped in sudden realization. He looked at me. Waiting for me to go on.
“âPerhaps that's why you're here....” I said slowly.
“Huh?” He frowned.
“Perhaps that's why they rescued youâbecauseâbecause I
need
companionship.” The words were difficult to say.
“Go onâ” In spite of himself, he had to hear it.
“They're keyed only to meâyou saw that this morning. They respond to what I need physicallyâand emotionally too. They ignore everything elseâmaybe everybody else. If I hadn't
needed
youâthey might have left you there in the wreck of your shipâ”
He sat down slowly. His knuckles were white where they gripped the edge of the chair. He looked up at me. “Then in order for me to survive, I have to help protect your life. If you dieâ”
I sat down too. Not knowing what to say.
Our eyes were locked. “Controlâ” he breathed. “The ultimate controlâ”
“Noâ” I said. “No!” But even as I tried to reject it, I knew it was true. “It's
trust!
We have to trustâ”
He shook his head. Refusal. I stared at him while he picked at the arm of his chair, as if troubled by its crystal feel. He was painfully aware of my presence, though his glance was downward; the tumbled light cast flickering shadows across his face.
How could I say it? What wordsâ? He glanced up, our eyes metâ
“Whatâwhat can I do?” I managed to ask.
“Who are you?” is his reply. His voice has the intensity of the insane.
“.... Do you trust me?”
“How can I?”
“You have no choice.”
A nod, he lowers his head in assent. Then, “Do
you
trust
me?”
A pause. “I don't know. I don't know....”
“Do you want to?” There was pleading in his voice, a fearânot of the castle, nor of this world, but of me, of perhaps the thought that I might reject him, might refuse to feed him and shelter him, might even now at this very moment throw him out into the hungry night. “All right. I'll tell you.”
“Your name?”
“Everything. Anything.” Who I am. Why this castle is here.
Just three syllables.
It is a slap across the face.
His eyes widened, first in shock, then in disbelief, in realization, at last in fear. “Oh noâyou can't be. You can't be.” He tries to deny what he already knows is true. “No, not youâyour crime, it was...it wasâ¦.”
My
crime! It is always
my
crime!
Men believed me. They believed
in
me. They worshipped me. They called me a God! What kind of a crime is that?
They did it of their own free will!
And yet, still they persist in calling it
my
crime,
my
crimeâbecause it was
I
who tried to control
them.
It was I, they claim, who forced
my
beliefs upon
their
world. I tried to regulate
their
actions. That was my crime.
It made no difference, the thousands, the millions of other crimes that were committed in my name. The dark murders, the fiery genocides, the thundering wars, the exploitations and the countless soul-destroying enslavements of man upon manâthese were all as nothing, as grains of sand compared to a granite mountain. These crimes were unimportant, hardly crimes at all. Mine was the worst. Mine was the initial offense. I had begun it;
I
was the source. I had tried to
control
the lives of others.
Hypocrisy piled upon hypocrisy. Not only did I try to influence the course of their actionsâbut I dared to do it in the name of GodâI tried to save their souls! I tried to save them from themselves!
Is that so horrible?
Ah, yes. It is the worst of all possible crimes.
It made no difference whether I was right or notânor does it make any difference that they gave their souls willinglyâthe crime was still mine because I let them do so.
I do not remember any more if I even believed in what I did.
They called me master, messiah, savior, God, and for that I must pay.
So I am cut out of the body humanâisolated, separated, placed apart. I am safe here; and they are safe too, protected from me, a shriveled wisp of a man who rots alone on a mountain.
Here in my castle I am protected from all temptations; not a warm-blooded creature in my world to seduce my attentions. Not a soul. Not a
soul!
I am surrounded by soulless servants. I will never taint again.
Or have I already tainted?
This pale and gibbering young man before meâhave I defiled him merely by existing?
“Oh no! Oh no!” He repeats it over and over and over again, trying to deny what cannot be denied. This crystal castle, my prison, bears mute witness to the reality of my name, my horrible, horrible name.
“Trust me,
please!
Trust me!”
But his fear is too great; he backs away, arms in front of him as if to ward me off, as if my very glance will steal and suck the essence of his life. “Please, oh please, let it not be true. Oh, please God...please...” He blubbers in meaningless words. “Oh, God, let me out. Let me out, dear God, dear God, rescue me, rescue me! Oh my God, my God, why me? Why? Why? Why
me?!!”
Mute I stand, my mouth working over and over, forming words for which there are no sounds. “I won't hurt you, I won't. Just trust me!
Trust me!”
But it is a useless protest. Men trusted me once before. And I trusted them.
He continues to retreat, back, ever back, until he comes up against the great bronze doors, the doors of death. He is startled by their sudden presence behind him; he puts his hand back, reaching eager and desperate. He catches at the clasp.
“No!” It is a shout from me, fear and trembling. “Don't open that door!” I take quick steps toward him, but heâ
MY GOD, WHY DO THEY ALWAYS MISINTERPRET?!!âthinks I
am coming after him.
Oh, God, I will not hurt you! Will you please let me help you!
The plea is ignored. The bolt is pulled back even before the words have left my lips, and he is out into the night. I am running, running now, to the door, calling him to return. Screaming, I am screaming. Hoarse rage. Things batter at the bronzeâblack and leathery, with lidless eyes; red hate and desireâand I am pushing, pushing back the night. The vampires are shrieking; already some of them have gained entrance, whirling and flapping in the light, careening off the walls. And then, a final shove and the door is closed. Shut again to the night.
A vampire dives at me, hits the door with a thump, and slides weakly to the floor, still flapping. The light drains it of its fury. Trembling, I hang against the door, arms stretched out along the bolt. I must save him and I can't; I can't; I know I can't.
We are separated by more than just the door. The gulf is too big. I can no more save him than I could save those myriads of others who wouldn't believe in me. I can no more save him than I could save those who
did.
Again, failure is the bitter taste of ashes. Were I what I once believed I was, what others believed I was, I would throw back these doors and go after that lost innocent. Instead, I tremble in fear, spread-eagled on a great crystal bolt.
I dare not go into the night. I can open neither the castle nor myself. I must and I cannot.
He is out there. I can hear him screaming. Oh my God. His screams go on for hours.
MY GOD, MY GOD! IS MY CRIME TRULY SO HORRIBLE THAT I MUST PAY FOR IT LIKE THIS? HOW MUCH MUST I ENDURE?!
FATHER, FORGIVE ME!
AFTERWORD:
Anything I might say here would be redundant.
Saturday, April 2, 1966.
I was working the graveyard shift at the post office, going from there to school, and then coming home to sleep in the afternoon. Summer arrived two months early and my metabolism was as messed up as the weather. Weekends were the only respite.
I came home at eight in the morning, exhausted, never so glad to see my bed. Saturday and Sunday were for sleeping. And then, just as I collapsed into bed and closed my eyes and began the blissful dive into unconsciousnessâthe hospital called. Their timing was flawless.
My dad had nicked his thumb with a power saw two weeks before. Not serious. He'd gone back to work. But the anti-coagulants had loosened a blood-clot in his leg. And one of them had apparently gone into his lungs, so he'd gone back into the hospital on Thursday, nothing to worry about, of courseâ
âand then the phone rang Saturday morning. Can you come to the hospital RIGHT NOW?
My mother panicked, of course. I pulled my clothes back on, we rushed to the hospitalâthe doctors were working on my dad, they didn't say what the problem was, just that they were working on him. Maybe another clot had broken loose and gone to his heartâ
I went out to move the car out of the red zone and when I came back in, my mom and sister were sobbing. After that, everything was an anguished montage.
Back home, the house started filling up with relatives almost immediately. (My great-grandmother had twelve children. By the time it reached my generation, there were over 300 of us in Southern California, with more on the way.)
At some point in the afternoon, somebody sent me to bed. I'd gone more than thirty hours without sleep. Did I say my metabolism was messed up? Now it was upside down.
I don't know how long I slept, I fell in and out of a strange disturbing dream of a dry and empty landscape. When I awoke, I wanted to capture that feeling on paper. It was that anti-twilight just before dawn. I sat and typed the words that evoked the feelingâthe dry emptiness of a place beyond life. Seven pages. I put them in the drawer and then went back to bed.
Later, the next time I awoke, I was coherent enough to begin writing my father's eulogy, but over the next few days and weeks I kept coming back to that strange fever dream. That desolate space kept calling me back to the keyboard. Seven pages grew to twenty-seven, then sixty-seven.
Whatever it was, it wasn't a story; it wasn't a poem. Maybe it was a two-dimensional sculpture. The words weren't words; they were musical beats. The empty spaces were shaping the narrative with visual silence. I wasn't typing as much as I was discovering.
I went as deep into the deadlands as I dared.
And then, I could go no further.
In the Deadlands
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Step...
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Twenty-three men.
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And twenty-three uniforms
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of coarse brown wool.
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Step...
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Walking,
              Â
in step,
              Â
into the deadlands.
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i don't like the deadlands. i never have.
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Step...
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Step...
But i guess i'm not alone. Nobody likes the deadlands.
i don't think i've ever met anybody who
likes
the deadlands.
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Step...
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The floor of the deadlands is
   Â
different.
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It's like hollow brick. Walking into the deadlands is
   Â
like walking into an empty tomb.
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Step...
They say that the deadlands floor has been baked solid, but i don't see how. The temperature in the deadlands hardly ever goes above 80°.