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The Color of Evil - The Dark Descent V1 (1991)

Page 38

by David G. Hartwell (Ed. )


  between cortical integration of input and the consequent neu­

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  ral output shaping response. It had interposed its brain between, sharing consciousness while solely commanding the pathways of reaction. The host, the bottled personality, was

  mute and limbless for any least expression of its own will,

  while hellishly articulate and agile in the service of the parasite’s. It was the host’s own hands that bound and wrenched the life half out of his prey, his own loins that experienced

  the repeated orgasms crowning his other despoliations of their

  bodies. And when they lay, bound and shrieking still, ready

  for the consummation, it was his own strength that hauled

  the smoking entrails from them, and his own intimate tongue

  and guzzling mouth he plunged into the rank, palpitating

  feast.

  And the doctor had glimpses of the history behind this

  predation, that of a race so far advanced in the essential-

  izing, the inexorable abstraction of their own mental fabric

  that through scientific commitment and genetic self-

  cultivation they had come to embody their own model of

  perfected consciousness, streamlined to permit the entry of

  other beings and the direct acquisition of their experiential

  worlds. All strictest scholarship at first, until there matured

  in the disembodied scholars their long-germinal and now

  blazing, jealous hatred for all “ lesser” minds rooted and

  clothed in the soil and sunlight of solid, particular worlds.

  The parasite spoke of the “ cerebral music,” the “ symphonies of agonized paradox” that were its invasions’ chief plunder. The doctor felt the truth behind this grandiloquence: its actual harvest from the systematic violation of encoffined personalities was the experience of a barren supremacy of means over lives more primitive, perhaps, but vastly wealthier in the

  vividness and passionate concern with which life for them

  was imbued.

  Joe Allen’s hands had scooped up the bunched skeins of

  alien nerve, with the wrinkled brain-node couched admidst

  them, and for some time had waited the slow retraction of a

  last major trunkline which seemingly had followed the spine’s

  axis. At last, when only a slender subfiber of this remained

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  Michael Shea

  implanted, the corpse, smiling once more, held up for him

  to view its reconcatenated master. The doctor looked into its

  eyes then and spoke—not to their controller, but to the cap-

  ,tive who shared them with it, and who now, the doctor knew,

  neared his final death.

  “ Goodbye, Joe Allen. Eddie Sykes. You are guiltless.

  Peace be with you at last.”

  The demon smile remained fixed, the right hand reached

  its viscid cargo across the gap and over the doctor’s groin.

  He watched the hand set the glittering medusa’s head—his

  new self—upon his fiesh, return to the table, take up the

  scalpel, and reach back to cut in his groin a four-inch incision—all in eerie absence of tactile stimulus. The line that had remained plunged into the corpse suddenly whipped free

  of the mediastinal crevice, retracted across the gap and shortened to a taut stub on the seething organism atop the doctor.

  Joe Allen’s body collapsed, emptied, all slack. He was a

  corpse again entirely, but with one anomalous feature to his

  posture. His right arm had not dropped to the nearly vertical

  hang that would have been natural. At the instant of the

  alien’s unplugging, the shoulder had given a fierce shrug and

  wrenching of its angle, flinging the arm upward as it died so

  that it now lay in the orientation of an arm that reaches up

  for a ladder’s next rung. The slightest tremor would unfix the

  joints and dump the arm back into the gravitational bias; it

  would also serve to dump the scalpel from the proferred,

  upturned palm that implement still precariously occupied.

  The man had repossessed himself one microsecond before

  his end. The doctor’s heart stirred, woke, and sang within

  him, for he saw that the scalpel was just in reach of his

  fingers at his forearm’s fullest stretch from the bound elbow.

  The horror crouched on him and, even now slowly feeding

  its trunkline into his groin incision, at first stopped the doctor’s hand with a pang of terror. Then he reminded himself that, until implanted, the enemy was a senseless mass, bristling with plugs, with input jacks for senses, but, until installed in the physical amplifiers of eyes and ears, an utterly

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  deaf, blind monad that waited in a perfect solipsism between

  two captive sensory envelopes.

  He saw his straining fingers above the bright tool of freedom, thought with an insane smile of God and Adam on the Sistine ceiling, and then, with a lifespan of surgeon’s fine

  control, plucked up the scalpel. The arm fell and hung.

  “ Sleep,” the doctor said. “ Sleep revenged.”

  But he found his retaliation harshly reined-in by the alien’s

  careful provisions. His elbow had been fixed with his upper

  arm almost at right angles to his body’s long axis; his forearm

  could reach his hand inward and present it closely to the face,

  suiting the parasite’s need of an eye-hand coordinative check,

  but could not, even with the scalpel’s added reach, bring its

  point within four inches of his groin. Steadily the parasite

  fed in its tapline. It would usurp motor control in three or

  four minutes at most, to judge by the time its extrication from

  Allen had taken.

  Frantically the doctor bent his wrist inwards to its limit,

  trying to pick through the strap where it crossed his inner

  elbow. Sufficient pressure was impossible, and the hold so

  awkward that even feeble attempts threatened the loss of the

  scalpel. Smoothly the root of alien control sank into him. It

  was a defenseless thing of jelly against which he lay lethally

  armed, and he was still doomed—a preview of all his thrall’s

  impotence-to-be.

  But of course there was a way. Not to survive. But to escape, and to have vengeance. For a moment he stared at his captor, hardening his mettle in the blaze of hate it lit in him.

  Then, swiftly, he determined the order of his moves, and

  began.

  He reached the scalpel to his neck and opened his superior

  thyroid vein—his inkwell. He laid the scalpel by his ear,

  dipped his finger in his blood, and began to write on the

  metal surface of the gurney, beginning by his thigh and moving towards his armpit. Oddly, the incision of his neck, though this was musculariy awake, had been painless, which

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  Michael Shea

  gave him hopes that raised his courage for what remained to

  do. His neat, sparing strokes scribed with ghastly legibility.

  When he had done the message read:

  MIND PARASITE

  FM ALLEN IN ME

  CUT dll TILL FIND

  1500 GM MASS

  NERVE FIBRE

  He wanted to write goodbye to his friend, but the alien had

  begun to pay out smaller, auxiliary filaments collaterally with

  the main one, and all now lay in speed.

  He took up the scalpel, rolled his head to the left, and

  plunged the blade deep
in his ear.

  Miracle! Last, accidental mercy! It was painless. Some

  procedural, highly specific anesthetic was in effect. With

  careful plunges, he obliterated the right inner ear and then

  thrust silence, with equal thoroughness, into the left. The

  slashing of the vocal cords followed, then the tendons in the

  back of the neck that hold it erect. He wished he were free

  to unstring knees and elbows too, but it could not be. But

  blinded, with centers of balance lost, with only rough motor

  control—all these conditions should fetter the alien’s escape,

  should it in the first place manage the reanimation of a bloodless corpse in which it had not yet achieved a fine-tuned interweave. Before he extinguished his eyes, he paused, the scalpel poised above his face, and blinked them to clear his

  aim of tears. The right, then the left, both retinas meticulously carved away, the yolk of vision quite scooped out of them. The scalpel’s last task, once it had tilted the head sideways to guide the bloodflow absolutely clear of possible ef-facement of the message, was to slash the external carotid

  artery.

  When this was done the old man sighed with relief and

  laid his scalpel down. Even as he did so, he felt the deep,

  inward prickle of an alien energy—something that flared,

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  307

  crackled, flared, groped fo r but did not quite find its purchase. And inwardly, as the doctor sank towards sleep—

  cerebrally, as a voiceless man must speak—he spoke to the

  parasite these carefully chosen words:

  “ Welcome to your new house. I ’m afraid there’s been some

  vandalism—the lights don’t work, and the plumbing has a

  very bad leak. There are some other things wrong as well—

  the neighborhood is perhaps a little too quiet, and you may

  find it hard to get around very easily. But it’s been a lovely

  home for me for fifty-seven years, and somehow I think you’ll

  stay. . . . ”

  The face, turned towards the body of Joe Allen, seemed

  to weep scarlet tears, but its last movement before death was

  to smile.

  E. Nesbit

  J ohn Charringtons Wedding

  Edith Nesbit is a dominant figure in children’s literature,

  but her horror and supernatural fiction is less well known.

  ‘‘John Charrington’s W edding” seems at first just a little

  romantic fantasy about love conquering all, but there is

  more than a touch of Le Fanu’s "Schalken the Painter”

  and Ivan Turgenev’s "Clara Militch” in this short piece

  by a woman who was at the center of the intellectual

  movements of her era.

  I J o one ever thought that May Forster would marry John

  1 a Charrington; but he thought differently, and things

  which John Charrington intended had a queer way of coming

  to pass. He asked her to marry him before he went up to

  Oxford. She laughed and refused him. He asked her again

  next time he came home. Again she laughed, tossed her

  dainty blonde head, and again refused. A third time he asked

  her; she said it was becoming a confirmed bad habit, and

  laughed at him more than ever.

  John was not the only man who wanted to marry her. She

  was the belle of our village coterie, and we were all in love

  with her more or less; it was a sort of fashion, like heliotrope

  ties or Inverness capes. Therefore we were as much annoyed

  as surprised when John Charrington walked into our little

  local Club—we held it in a loft over the saddler’s, I remember—and invited us all to his wedding.

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  John Charrington’s Wedding

  309

  “ Your wedding?”

  “ You don’t mean it?”

  “ Who’s the happy fair? When’s it to be?”

  John Charrington filled his pipe and lighted it before he

  replied. Then he said, “ I ’m sorry to deprive you fellows of

  your only joke—but Miss Forster and I are to be married in

  September.”

  “ You don’t meant it?”

  “ He’s got the boot again, and it’s turned his head.”

  “ No,” I said, rising, “ I see it’s true. Lend me a pistol

  someone—or a first-class fare to the other end of Nowhere.

  Charrington has bewitched the only pretty girl in our twenty-

  mile radius. Was it mesmerism, or a love potion, Jack?”

  “ Neither, sir, but a gift you’ll never have—perseverance—

  and the best luck a man ever had in this world.”

  There was something in his voice that silenced me, and all

  the chaff of the other fellows failed to draw him further.

  The queer thing about it was that when we congratulated

  Miss Forster, she blushed and smiled and dimpled, for all

  the world as though she were in love with him, and had been

  in love with him all the time. Upon my word, I think she

  had. Women are strange creatures.

  We were all asked to the wedding. In Brixham everyone

  who was anybody knew everybody else who was anyone. My

  sisters were, I truly believe, more interested in the trousseau

  than the bride herself, and I was to be best man. The coming

  marriage was much canvassed at afternoon tea-tables, and at

  our little Club over the saddler’s, and the question was always

  asked: “ Does she care for him?”

  I used to ask that question myself in the early days of their

  engagement, but after a certain evening in August I never

  asked it again. I was coming home from the Club through

  the churchyard. Our church is on a thyme-grown hill, and

  the turf about it is so thick and soft that one’s footsteps are

  noiseless.

  I made no sound as I vaulted the low lichened wall and

  threaded my way between the tombstones. It was at the same

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  E. Nesbit

  instant that I heard John Charrington’s voice, and saw her.

  May was sitting on a low flat gravestone, her face turned

  towards the full splendor of the western sun. Its expression

  ended, at once and for ever, any question of love for him; it

  was transfigured to a beauty I should not have believed possible, even to that beautiful little face.

  John lay at her feet, and it was his voice that broke the

  stillness of the golden August evening. “ My dear, my dear,

  I believe I should come back from the dead if you wanted

  me!”

  I coughed at once to indicate my presence, and passed on

  into the shadow, fully enlightened.

  The wedding was to be early in September. Two days before I had to run up to town on business. The train was late, of course, for we are on the South-eastern, and as I stood

  grumbling with my watch in my hand, whom should I see

  but John Charrington and May Forster. They were walking

  up and down the unfrequented end of the platform, arm in

  arm, looking into each other’s eyes, careless of the sympathetic interest of the porters.

  Of course I knew better than to hesitate a moment before

  burying myself in the booking-office, and it was not till the

  train drew up at the platform, that I obtrusively passed the

  pair with my suitcase and took the comer in a first-class

  smoking-carriage. I did this with as good an air of not
seeing

  them as I could assume. I pride myself on my discretion, but

  if John was travelling alone I wanted his company. I had it.

  “ Hullo, old m an,” came his cheery voice as he swung his

  bag into my carriage. “ Here’s luck; I was expecting a dull

  journey!”

  “ Where are you off to?” I asked, discretion still bidding

  me turn my eyes away, though I felt, without looking, that

  hers were red-rimmed.

  “ To old Branbridge’s ,” he answered, shutting the door and

  leaning out for a last word with his sweetheart.

  John Charrington’s Wedding

  311

  “ Oh, I wish you wouldn’t go, John,” she was saying in a

  low, earnest voice. “ I feel certain something will happen.”

  “ Do you think I should let anything happen to keep me,

  and the day after tomorrow our wedding-day?”

  “ Don’t go,” she answered, with a pleading intensity which

  would have sent my suitcase onto the platform and me after

  it. But she wasn’t speaking to me. John Charrington was made

  differently; he rarely changed his opinions, never his resolutions.

  _

  He only stroked the little ungloved hands that lay on the

  carriage door.

  “ I must, May. The old boy’s been awfully good to me,

  and now he’s dying I must go and see him, but I shall come

  home in time for—” The rest of the parting was lost in a

  whisper and in the rattling lurch of the starting train.

  She spoke as the train moved: “ You’re sure to come?”

  “ Nothing shall keep m e,” he answered; and we steamed

  out. After he had seen the last of the little figure on the

  platform, he leaned back in his comer and kept silence for a

  minute.

  When he spoke it was to explain to me that his godfather,

  whose heir he was, lay dying at Peasmarsh Place, some fifty

  miles away, and had sent for John, and John had felt bound

  to go.

  “ I shall surely be back tomorrow,” he said, “ or, if not,

  the day after, in heaps of time. Thank Heaven, one hasn’t to

  get up in the middle of the night to get married nowadays!”

  “ And suppose Mr. Branbridge dies?”

  “ Alive or dead I mean to be married on Thursday!” John

 

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