Necroscope n-1

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Necroscope n-1 Page 21

by Brian Lumley


  ‘Harry, Harry! It’s only me. You were nightmaring.’ Brenda cradled him in her arms and he let her, curling up and throwing his arms about her. ‘It was about your Mam, Harry. Listen, you’re all right now. Let me go and make some coffee.’

  She hugged him tighter for a moment, then gently released herself and stood up. His eyes, still wide open, followed her as she moved to the alcove where he had his rudimentary kitchen. ‘About my mother?’ he said.

  Spooning instant coffee into mugs, she nodded. She filled the electric kettle and switched it on. ‘You called her “Ma”, and you were talking to her.’

  He uncurled himself and sat up, brushing his fingers dazedly through his hair. ‘What did I say?’

  She shook her head. ‘Nothing much. Mainly mumbo-jumbo. You told her you were grown up now, and that she should rest easy. It was just a nightmare, Harry.’

  By the time the coffee was ready he had dressed himself. They said no more about his nightmare but drank their coffees; then he walked her down to the bus-stop for Harden, where they waited in silence until the bus came. At the last, before she boarded, he kissed her lightly on the cheek. ‘See you soon’ he said.

  Tomorrow?’ Tomorrow was Sunday.

  ‘No, during the week. I’ll come up for you. ‘Bye, love.’

  She got a seat at the back of the bus and watched Harry through the rear window where he stood alone at the stop. As the bus began to round a bend he turned on his heel and walked along the pavement away from his flat. Wondering where he was headed, Brenda kept watching him as long as she could. The last she saw of him was when he turned in through the gates of the cemetery, with the sun’s last rays burning in his hair.

  Then the bus was round the bend and Harry was out of sight.

  Harry did not come to see her during the week, and Brenda’s work began to suffer at the ladies’ hairdressing salon in Harden. By Thursday she was thoroughly worried about him; on Friday night she cried and her father said she was a fool for him. ‘That lad’s bloody weird!’ he declared. ‘Our Brenda, you must be soft!’ And he wouldn’t hear of her going down to Hartlepool that night. ‘Not on a Friday night, my girl, when all the lads have their beer money. You can go and see your daft Harry tomorrow!’

  Tomorrow seemed ages coming and Brenda hardly slept at all, but Saturday morning bright and early she took a bus in to town and went up to Harry’s flat. She had her own key and let herself in but he wasn’t to be found. In the typewriter was a sheet of paper with yesterday’s date and a simple message:

  Brenda -

  I’ve gone up to Edinburgh for the weekend. I’ve people to see up there. I’ll be back Monday at the latest and I’ll see you then — promise. Sorry I didn’t see you during the week — I had a lot on my mind and wouldn’t have been much fun.

  Love, Harry

  The last two words meant a lot to her and so she forgave him the rest. Anyway, Monday wasn’t so very far away — but who could he possibly have to see in Edinburgh? He had a stepfather up there, who hadn’t once seen him since he was a child, but who else? No one that Brenda knew of. Other relatives that she didn’t know of? Maybe. And then there had been his mother, except she had been drowned when he was little more than a baby.

  Drowned, yes, but Harry had been talking to her in his sleep…

  Brenda shook herself. Why, some of her ideas were almost as morbid as Harry’s! All graveyards and death and maggots. No, of course he wouldn’t be going to see his mother, for they’d never found her body. There would be no grave for him to visit.

  The thought didn’t improve Brenda’s state of mind. Instead it drove her to do something she would never normally consider. She carefully went through Harry’s file of manuscripts, checking every story whether it was complete or barely started. She didn’t really know what she was looking for, but by the

  time she was through she knew what she had failed to find.

  Nowhere in all his work had she come across a story about a necroscope.

  So, either Harry hadn’t started the story yet -

  Or he was a liar -

  Or -

  Or what was bothering her was something entirely different.

  As Brenda Cowell stood in a shaft of morning sunlight in Harry’s flat, pondering the strangeness of the man she was involved with, one hundred and twenty miles away Harry Keogh himself stood in the same sunlight on the banks of a drowsy river in Scotland and looked across it at the big house where it stood at the head of a large, overgrown garden. There had been a time when the place was well maintained, but that was a long time ago and Harry couldn’t remember it. He had been too young, an infant, and there were many things he couldn’t remember. But he remembered his mother. Somewhere, deep in his subconscious mind, he had never forgotten about her — and she had never forgotten about him. And she still worried about him.

  Harry stared at the house for a long time, then at the river. Its waters moved slowly, swirling, cool and inviting. Or inviting to most. A grassy bank with a few reeds; deep green water, and just here, a pebbly bottom; and somewhere down there, lodged in the slime-slick pebbles where it had lain for most of Harry’s years -

  A ring. A man’s ring. A cat’s-eye stone set in thick gold. Harry staggered at the river’s edge. He deliberately flopped down to save himself from falling. The sun shone on him but he was cold. The blue sky reeled, became the grey, liquid flurry of slushy water.

  He was under the water, trying to fight his way up through a hole in the ice.

  Then the face seen through the ice, its trembling jelly lips turning up at their corners in a grimace — or a smile! The hands coming down into the water, holding him under and on one of them that ring. The cat’s-eye ring, on the second finger of the right hand! And Harry tearing at those hands, clawing at them, ripping the strong flesh in his frenzy. The gold ring coming loose, spiralling down past him into the murk and the icy deeps. Blood from the torn hands turning the swirling water red — red against the black of Harry’s dying.

  No, not his dying, hers! His mother’s!

  Waterlogged, he/she sank; and the current dragging them along under the ice, turning and tumbling them; and who’ll look after Harry now? Poor little Harry…

  The nightmare receded, its rush and gurgle diminishing in his mind, leaving him gasping for air where he clawed at the grassy bank. Then he curled on his side and was violently ill. This was it; it was here. This was where it had happened. This was where she had died. Where she had been murdered. Right here!

  But -

  Where was she now?

  Harry allowed his feet to lead him, following the course of the river downstream. Where the channel narrowed a little, he crossed a small wooden bridge and continued on down the bank. Garden hedges came down close to the river’s edge here, so that he walked a narrow, often overgrown path between fences on the one hand and reeds and water on the other. And in a little while he came to a place where the bank had been worn away, forming an overhanging bite not ten feet across. Above the still water in the pool, the path ended where the fence leaned dangerously riverward, but Harry knew he need look no further. This was where she lay.

  Anyone watching him from the bank opposite would have seen the beginning of a strange thing then. Harry sat down with his feet dangling over the shallow, muddy pool, put his chin in his hands, stared deep into the water. And minutes later, if anyone had been closer, he would have been witness to something stranger still: tears from this young man’s staring, unblinking eyes which dripped from the tip of his nose in a steady stream to add their substance to the river’s.

  And for the first time in his adult life Harry Keogh met his mother, talked to her ‘face to face’, and was able to verify the terrible things his dreams and her restless messages had caused him to more than suspect for so many years. And while they talked he cried — tears of sadness, and some of gladness at first; then of remorse and frustration, that he’d had to wait so long for this day; then of white anger as things began to ma
ke more sense to him. Finally he told her what he intended to do.

  Upon which the wondering observer, had there been one, would have seen the strangest thing of all. For when Mary Keogh knew her son’s plans she became even more afraid for him and voiced her fears, and she made Harry promise that he would do nothing rash. He couldn’t deny her pleading, answered with a nod of his head. She didn’t believe him, cried out after him as he stood up and moved away. And for a moment — the merest second — it seemed the bottom of the pool shuddered, shaking the water and sending ripples coursing outward from its centre. Then the pool was still again.

  Harry didn’t see this for already he was making for the bridge, returning to the spot where it had happened all those years ago. The place where his gentle mother had been murdered.

  He found a place where the reeds grew tall, checked that he was completely alone, stripped down to his shorts and stepped to the river’s edge. A moment later he was in the water, diving deep, then making for the middle where the current ran swiftest. Even there the river’s pull was barely noticeable, and after twenty minutes of diving and delving amongst the pebbles of the bottom he found what he was looking for. It lay within a few inches of the spot where he’d first thought it might be, tarnished and a little slimy, but unmistakably a ring. The gold gleamed through on the instant he rubbed it, and the cat’s-eye stone held its cold, unwinking stare as of old. Harry had never actually seen the ring before that moment when his groping fingers found it — not consciously, anyway — but he knew it at once. It was that familiar. Nor did it seem odd to him that he’d known where to look. Stranger far if the ring had not been there.

  On the bank of the river he finished cleaning it, slid it on to the index finger of his left hand which it fitted a little loosely but was not so slack that he might lose it, and turned it thoughtfully between his fingers, getting the feel of it. It felt cold even under the hot sun, cold as the day its owner had lost it.

  Then Harry dressed and headed for Bonnyrigg. From there he’d catch a bus into Edinburgh and take the first train home to Hartlepool. His work here was done — for now.

  Now that he had found his mother he would have no trouble reaching her again, no matter how far he wandered, and he would be able to calm her fears and give her a little of the peace she’d sought for so long. She would no longer need to worry about little Harry.

  Before leaving the spot by the river, however, he paused to look again at the big house where it stood well back from the opposite bank; and he stared at its old gables and wild gardens for long, long moments. His stepfather still lived and worked there, he knew. Yes, and it would not be too long before Harry paid him a visit.

  But before that there was much he would have to do. Viktor Shukshin was a dangerous man, a murderer, and Harry must be careful how he approached him. He intended that his stepfather should pay the price for his mother’s death — that he must be punished in full — but the punishment would have to fit the crime. And no use at all to simply accuse the man, for what proof was there after all these years? No, Harry must set a trap, and bait it, and Shukshin must find it irresistible. But no hurry, none at all, for Harry had time on his side. Time would allow him to become expert in many things, and indeed he had much to learn. For what good to be a necroscope if he could make no use of it? As to how he would use his talent after he had avenged his mother’s death: that remained to be seen. It would be as it would be.

  But right now his instructors were waiting for him and they were the best in the world. Yes, and they knew far more now than ever they had known when they were alive.

  Chapter Eight

  The summer of 1975…

  Three years since Dragosani’s last trip home, and only a year short of that time when the old thing in the earth had promised to deliver up his secrets to Dragosani, the secrets of the Wamphyri. In return for which, Dragosani would give him back his life — or rather, he would return him to renewed undeath, to walk the earth again.

  Three years, and the necromancer had gone from strength to strength until his position as Gregor Borowitz’s right-hand man now seemed virtually unassailable. When the old man went, Dragosani would be the one to replace him. After that, with the entire Soviet ESP organisation at his command, and with all the knowledge of the Wamphyri in his hands and mind — the possibilities were vast.

  What had once seemed an impossible dream might still come to pass, when old Wallachia would once more become a mighty nation — the mightiest nation of all. Why not, with Dragosani to lead the way? A mortal man can achieve very little in his short span of years, but an immortal man might achieve anything. And with that thought in mind, a question Dragosani had often asked himself cropped up yet again: if it was true that longevity meant power, and immortality ultimate power, why had the Wamphyri themselves failed? Why weren’t vampires the leaders and rulers of this world?

  Dragosani had long since worked out something of an answer; right or wrong he could not yet say:

  To man the concept of a vampire is abhorrent — the very concept itself! If men believed — if they were given indisputable proof of vampiric infestation — then they would seek the creatures out and destroy them. This had been the way of it since time began, since a time when men really did believe, and it had limited the vampire in his scope. He dare not reveal himself, must not be seen to be different, to be alien. He must control as best he might his passions, his lusts, his natural craving for the sheer power he knows his evil arts could bring him. For to have power, whether political or financial or of any other sort, is to be scrutinised — which is the one thing above all others that a vampire dreads! For under prolonged scrutiny he must be discovered and destroyed.

  But if a mere man could control a vampire’s arts — a living man, as opposed to an undead Thing — he would suffer no such restrictions. Having nothing to hide but his dark knowledge itself… why, he could achieve almost anything!

  That was why Dragosani had journeyed yet again to Romania; conscious of the fact that his duties had kept him away for far too long, he wished to speak once more with the old devil and offer him small favours, and learn whatever there was to be learned before next summer, when the time appointed would be at hand. The time appointed, yes — when all the vampire’s secrets would lie naked before him, open and revealing as an eviscerated corpse!

  Three years had flown by since last he was here, and they had been busy years. Busy for Dragosani because over that entire period Gregor Borowitz had driven all of his ESPers, including the necromancer, to the limits of their capabilities. Of course he had: to ensure that in the four years Leonid Brezhnev had allowed him, in which he must turn a profit, his branch would become so firmly entrenched as to be indispensable. And now the Premier had seen that it was indeed utterly indispensable. What’s more, it was the most secret of all his secret services and by far the most independent — which was the way Gregor Borowitz wanted it.

  Through Bbrowitz’s advance warning, Brezhnev had been fully prepared for the fall from grace of his one-time political pal Richard Nixon in the USA. And where Watergate might have hindered or even ruined many another Russian premier, Brezhnev had actually managed to reap some benefits from it — but only by virtue of Borowitz’s (or more properly Igor Vlady’s) predictions. ‘A pity,’ Brezhnev had told Borowitz at the time, ‘that Nixon didn’t have you working for him, eh, Gregor?’

  Similarly, and also as predicted, the Premier now found himself advantageously placed in his dealings with the presidential ‘standin’, at best a bumbler; and before Nixon’s fall, as early as 1972, knowing in advance that there were American hard-liners still to come, Brezhnev had taken Borowitz’s advice and signed satellite agreements with the USA. Moreover, and especially since America was so far advanced in space technology, he had also been quick to put his signature to the ultimate ‘détente’ coup of his career: a joint Skylab space venture, which even now was coming to fruition.

  Indeed, the Soviet premier had taken the
initiative on these and many other ESP-Branch suggestions or prognoses — including the expulsion of many dissidents and the ‘repatriation’ of Jews — and every step he had taken so far had been completely successful in bolstering his already awesome position as Leader. And much if not all of the credit due directly to Borowitz and his branch, so that Brezhnev had been pleased to honour his and Borowitz’s agreement of 1971.

  Thus, as Brezhnev and his regime prospered, so prospered Gregor Borowitz; likewise Boris Dragosani, whose loyalty to the branch seemed unquestionable. And in fact it was unquestionable — for the moment…

  While Gregor Borowitz had secured the permanence of his branch and climbed in Leonid Brezhnev’s esteem, however, his relationship with Yuri Andropov had deteriorated at a directly proportionate rate; there was no overt hostility, but behind the scenes Andropov was as jealous and scheming as ever. Dragosani knew that Borowitz continued to watch Andropov closely. What the necromancer did not know was that Borowitz also watched him! Oh, Dragosani was not under any sort of surveillance, but there was that in his attitude which had been worrying his boss for quite some time. Dragosani had always been arrogant, even insubordinate, and Borowitz had accepted that and even enjoyed it — but this was something else. Borowitz suspected it was ambition; which was fine, as long as the necromancer didn’t become too ambitious.

  Dragosani too had noticed the change in himself, Despite the fact that one of his oldest inhibitions, his greatest ‘hangup’, was now extinct, he had grown if anything colder still towards members of the opposite sex. When he took a woman it was invariably brutally, with little or nothing of love in it but purely as a release for his own pent-up emotional and physical needs. And as for ambition: at times he had difficulty controlling his frustration and could hardly wait for the day when Borowitz would be out of his way. The old man was past it, a dodderer, his usefulness was on the wane. This was not in fact the case, but such was Dragosani’s own energy — the rapid acceleration and growth of his drive and character — that it seemed that way to him. And that was another reason why he had returned this time to Romania: so that he might obtain the counselling of the Thing in the ground. For like it or not, Dragosani had begun to accept the vampire as a sort of father-figure. Who else could he talk to, in absolute confidence, of his ambitions and his frustrations? Who else if not the old dragon? No one. In a way the vampire was like an oracle… but in another way he was not. Unlike an oracle, Dragosani could never be sure of the validity of any of his statements. Which meant that while he had felt himself drawn back here, to Romania, still he must be careful of his dealings with the Thing in the ground.

 

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