Authors: Evan Filipek
A dozen Mighty Wurlitzers rolled into one would have appeared as a miniature piano at the foot of this towering music-machine.
At its many consoles which, even at that distance, I could see consisted of at least half a dozen manuals each, were multi-limbed creatures—spiders or octopuses or Polilollipops—I didn't ask what Craswell called them—I was listening. The opening bars were strange enough, but innocuous. Then the multiple tones and harmonies began to swell in volume. I picked out the curious, sweet harshness of oboes and bassoons, the eldritch, rising ululation of a thousand violins, the keen shrilling of a hundred demonic flutes, the sobbing of many cellos. That's enough. Music’s my hobby, and I don't want to get carried away in describing how that crazy symphony nearly carried me away.
But if Craswell ever reads this, I'd like him to know that he missed his vocation. He should have been a musician. His dream-music showed an amazing intuitive grasp of orchestration and harmonic theory. If he could do anything like it consciously, he would be a great modern composer.
Yet not too much like it. Because it began to have the effects he had warned about. The insidious rhythm and wild melodies seemed to throb inside my head, setting up a vibration, a burning, in the brain tissue.
Imagine Puccini's “Recondita Armenia” re-orchestrated by Stravinsky then re-arranged by Honegger, played by fifty symphony orchestras in the Hollywood Bowl, and you might begin to get the idea.
I was getting too much of it. Did I say music was my hobby? Certainly—but the only instrument I play is the harmonica. Quite well, too. And with a microphone, I can make lots of nice noise.
A microphone—and plenty of amplifiers. I pulled the harmonica from my pocket, took a deep breath, and whooped into “Tiger Rag,” my favourite party-piece.
The stunning blast-wave of jubilant jazz, riffs, tiger-growls and tremolo discords from the tiny mouth organ, crashed into the vast hall from the amplifiers, completely swamping Craswell’s mad music.
I heard his agonized shout even above the din. His tastes in music were evidently not as catholic as mine. He didn't like jazz.
The music-machine quavered, the multi-limbed organists, ludicrous in their haste to escape from an unreal doom, shrank, withered to scuttling black beetles; the lighting effects that had sprayed a rich, unearthly effulgence over the consoles died away into pastel, blue gloom; then the great machine itself, caught in swirl upon wave of augmented chords complemented and reinforced by its own outpourings, shivered into fragments, poured in a chaotic stream over the floor of the hall.
I heard Craswell shout again, then the scene changed abruptly. I assumed that, in his desire to blot out the triumphant paean of jazz from his mind, and perhaps in an unconscious attempt to confuse me, he had skipped a part of his plot and, in the opposite of the flashback beloved of screen writers, shot himself forward. We were—somewhere else.
Perhaps it was the inferiority complex I was inducing, or in the transition he had forgotten how tall he was supposed to be, but he was now a mere six feet, nearer my own height.
He was so hoarse, I nearly suggested a gargle. “I . . . I left you in the Hall of Madness. Your magic caused the roof to collapse. I thought you were—killed.”
So the flash-forward wasn't just an attempt to confuse me. He'd tried to lose me, write me out of the script altogether.
I shook my head. “Wishful thinking, Craswell old man,” I said reproachfully. “You can't kill me off between chapters. You see, I'm not one of your characters at all. Haven't you grasped that yet? The only way you can get rid of me is by waking up.”
“Again you speak in riddles,” he said, but there was little confidence in his voice.
The place in which we stood was a great, high-vaulted chamber. The lighting effects—as I was coming to expect—were unusual and admirable—many coloured shafts of radiance from unseen sources, slowly moving, meeting and merging at the farther end of the chamber in a white, circular blaze which seemed to be suspended over a throne-like structure.
Craswell's size-concepts were stupendous. He'd either studied the biggest cathedrals in Europe, or he was reared inside Grand Central Station. The throne was apparently a good half-mile away, over a completely bare but softly resilient floor. Yet it was coming nearer. We were not walking. I looked at the walls, realized that the floor itself, a gigantic endless belt, was carrying us along.
The slow, inexorable movement was impressive. I was aware that Craswell was covertly glancing at me. He was anxious that I should be impressed. I replied by speeding up the belt a trifle. He didn't appear to notice.
He said: “We approach the Throne of the Snake, before which, his protector and disciple, stands the female magician and sorceress, Garor. Against her, we shall need all your strange skills, Nelpar, for she stands invulnerable within an invisible shield of pure force.
“You must destroy that barrier, that I may slay her with the Sword. Without her, the Snake, though her master and self-proclaimed master of this world, is powerless, and he will be at our mercy.”
The belt came to a halt. We were at the foot of a broad stairway leading to the throne itself, a massive metal platform on which the Snake reposed beneath a brilliant ball of light.
The Snake was—a snake. Coil on coil of overgrown python, with an evil head the size of a football swaying slowly from side to side.
I spent little time looking at it. I've seen snakes before. And there was something worth much more prolonged study standing just below and slightly to one side of the throne.
Craswell's taste in feminine pulchritude was unimpeachable. I had half-expected an ancient, withered horror, but if Flo Ziegfeld had seen this baby, he'd have been scrambling up those steps waving a contract, force-shield or no force-shield, before you could get out the first glissando of a wolf-whistle.
She was a tall, oval-faced, green-eyed brunette, with everything just so, and nothing much in the way of covering—a scanty metal chest-protector and a knee-length, filmy green skirt. She had a tiny, delightful mole on her left cheek.
There was a curious touch of pride in Craswell's voice as he said, rather unnecessarily: “We are here, Garor,” and looked at me expectantly.
The girl said: “Insolent fools—you are here to die.”
Mm-m-m—that voice, as smooth and rich as a Piati-gorski cello-note. I was ready to give quite a lot of credit to Craswell's imagination, but I couldn't believe that he'd dreamed up this baby just like that. I guessed that she was modeled on life; someone he knew; someone I'd like to know—someone pulled out of the grab bag of memory in the same way as I had produced Mike O'Faolin and that grubby-chinned cab driver.
“A luscious dish,” I said. “Remind me to ask you later for a phone number of the original, Craswell.”
Then I said and did something that I have since regretted. It was not the behaviour of a gentleman. I said: “But didn't you know they were wearing skirts longer, this season?”
I looked at the skirt. The hem line shot down to her ankles, evening-gown length.
Outraged, Craswell glared at his girl-friend. The skirt became knee-length. I made it fashionable again.
Then that skirt-hem was bobbing up and down between her ankles and her knees like a crazy window blind. It was a contest of wills and imaginations, with a very pretty pair of well-covered tibiae as battleground. A fascinating sight, Garor's beautiful eyes blazed with fury. She seemed to be strangely aware of the misbecoming nature of the conflict.
Craswell suddenly uttered a ringing, petulant howl of anger and frustration—a score of lusty-lunged infants whose rattles had been simultaneously snatched from them couldn't have made more noise—and the intriguing scene was erased from view in an eruption of jet-black smoke.
When it cleared, Craswell was still in the same relative position but his sword was gone, his gladiator rig was torn and scorched, and thin trickles of blood streaked his muscular arms.
I didn't like the way he was looking at me. I'd booted his super-ego pretty hard that time.
I said: “So you couldn't take it. You've skipped a chapter again. Wise me up on what I've missed, will you?” Somehow it didn't sound as flippant as I intended.
He spoke incisively. “We have been captured and condemned to die, Nelpar. We are in the Pit of the Beast, and nothing can save us, for I have been deprived of the Sword and you of your magic.
“The ravening jaws of the Beast cannot be stayed. It is the end, Nelpar. The End—”
His eyes, large, faintly luminous, looked into mine. I tried to glance away, failed.
Irritated beyond bearing by my importunate clowning, his affronted ego had assumed the whole power of his brain, to assert itself through his will—to dominate me.
The volition may have been unconscious—he could not know why he hated me—but the effect was damnable.
And for the first time since my brash intrusion into the most private recesses of his mind, I began to doubt whether the whole business was quite—decent.
Sure, I was trying to help the guy, but . . . but dreams are sacred.
Doubt negates confidence. With confidence gone, the gateway is open to fear.
Another voice, sibilant. Steve Blakiston saying “. . . unless you let your mind go under. “My own voice “ . . . wake up as a candidate for a bed in the next ward—” No, not—”. . . not unless you let your mind go under—” And Steve had been scared to do it himself, hadn't he? I’d have something to say to that guy when I got out. If i got out . . . if—
The whole thing just wasn't amusing any more.
“Quit it, Craswell,” I said harshly. “Quit making goo-goo eyes, or I'll bat you one—and you'll feel it, coma or no coma.”
He said: “What foolish words are these, when we are both so near to death?”
Steve’s voice: “. . . sympathetic magic . . . imagination. If he imagines that one of his fantastic creations kills the hero—himself—he just won't wake up again.”
That was it. A situation in which the hero must die. And he wanted to envisage my death, too. But he couldn't kill me. Or could he? How could Blakiston know what powers might be unleashed by the concept of death during this ultramundane communion of minds?
Didn't psychiatrists say that the death-urge, the will to die, was buried deep, but potent, in the subconscious minds of men? It was not buried deep here. It was glaring, exultant, starkly displayed in the eyes of Marsham Craswell.
He had escaped from reality into a dream, but it was not far enough. Death was the only full escape—
Perhaps Craswell sensed the confusion of thought and speculation that laid my mind wide open to the suggestions of his rioting, perfervid, death-intent imagination. He waved an arm with the grandiloquent gesture of a Shakespearean Chorus introducing a last act, and brought on his monster.
In detail and vividness it excelled everything that he had dreamed up previously. It was his swan-song as a creator of fantastic forms, and he had wrought well.
I saw, briefly, that we were in the centre of an enormous, steep-banked amphitheatre. There were no spectators. No crowd scenes for Craswell. He preferred that strange, timeless emptiness which comes from using a minimum number of characters.
Just the two of us, under the blazing rays of great, red suns swinging in a molten sky. I couldn't count them.
I became visually aware only of the Beast.
An ant in the bottom of a washbowl with a dog snuffling at it might feel the same way. If the Beast had been anything like a dog. If it had been anything like
anything.
It was a mass the size of several elephants. An obscene hulking gob of
animated, semi-transparent purple flesh, with a gaping, circular mouth or vent, ringed inside with pointed beslimed tusks, and outside with—eyes.
As a static thing, it would have been a filthy envenomed horror, a thing of surpassing dread in its mere aspect; but the most fearsome thing was its nightmarish mode of progression.
Limbless, it jerked its prodigious bulk forward in a series of heaves—and lubricated its lath with a glaucous, viscid fluid which slopped from its mouth with every jerk.
It was heading for us at an incredible pace. Thirty yards—Twenty—
The rigidity of utter fear gripped my limbs. This was true nightmare. I tried desperately to think . . . flame-thrower . . . how . . . I couldn't remember . . . my mind was slipping away from me in face of the onward surging of that protoplasmic juggernaut . . . the slime first, then the mouth, closing . . . my thoughts were a screaming turmoil—
Another voice, a deep, drawling, kindly voice, from an unforgettable hour in childhood— “There's nothing in the whole wide world or out of it that a slug from Billy here won't stop. There's nothing you can meet in dreams that Billy here won't stop. He'll come into your dreams with you from now on. There's no call to be scared of anything. “ Then the cool, hard butt in my hand, the recoil, the whining irresistible chunk of hot, heavy metal—deep in my subconscious.
“Pop!” I gasped. “Thanks, Pop.”
The Beast was looming over me. But Billy was in my hand, pointing into the mouth. I fired.
The Beast jerked back on its slimy trail, began to dwindle, fold it on itself. I fired again and again.
I became aware once more of Craswell beside me. He looked at the dying Beast, still huge, but rapidly diminishing, then at the dull metal of the old Colt in my hand, the wisp of blue smoke from its uptilted barrel.
And then he began to laugh.
Great, gusty laughter, but with a touch of hysteria.
And as he laughed, he began to fade from view. The red suns sped away into the sky, became pin points; and the sky was white and clean and blank—like a ceiling.
In fact—what beautiful words are “in fact”—in fact, in sweet reality, it
was
a ceiling.
Then Steve Blakiston was peering down, easing the chromium bowl off the rubber pads round my head.
“Thanks, Pete,” he said. “Half an hour to the minute. You worked on him quicker than an insulin shock.”