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Authors: Brian Lumley

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BOOK: The Source
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Lacking space it was literally nowhere; but by the same token lacking time it was every-where and -when. It was both core and boundary, the interior
and
the exterior. From here one might go anywhere if one knew the route—or go nowhere forever, which would be Clarke's fate if Harry Keogh deserted him. And to be lost here would
mean
lost forever; for in this timeless, spaceless non-environment nothing ever aged or changed except by force of will; and there was no will here, unless it were brought here by someone who strayed into this place, or someone who came here and knew how to manipulate it—someone like Harry Keogh. Harry was only a man, and yet the things he could achieve through the Möbius Continuum were amazing! And if a superman—or god—should come here?
Again Clarke thought of The God, who had wrought a Great Change out of a formless void and willed a universe. And the thought also occurred to Clarke:
Harry, we shouldn't be here. This isn't our place …
His unspoken words dinned like gongs in his brain, deafeningly loud! And apparently in Harry's, too.
Take it easy,
said the Necroscope.
No need to shout here.
Of course not, for in the total absence of everything else, even thoughts had extraordinary mass.
We're not
meant to be here,
Clarke insisted.
And Harry, I'm scared witless! For God's sake, don't let go of me!
Of course not,
came the answer.
And no need to feel afraid.
Harry's mental voice was calm.
But I can feel and I understand what it's like for you. Still, can't you also feel the magic of it? Doesn't it thrill you to your soul?
And as his panic began to subside, Clarke had to admit that it did. Slowly the tension went out of him and he began a gradual relaxation; in another moment he believed he could sense matterless forces working on him.
I feel … a pull, like the wash of a tide,
he said.
Not a pull, a push,
Harry corrected him.
The Möbius Continuum doesn't want us. We're like motes in its immaterial eyes. It would expel us if it could, but we won't be here that long. If we stayed still for long enough, it would try to eject us—or maybe ingest us! There are a million million doors it could push us through; any one of them could be fatal to us, I fear, in one way or another. Or we could simply be subsumed, made to conform—which in this place means eradicated! I discovered long ago that you either master the Möbius Continuum, or it masters you! But of course that would mean us standing still for an awfully long time—forever, by mundane terms.
Harry's statement didn't improve Clarke's anxiety.
How long are we staying here?
he wanted to know.
Hell, how long have we been here?
A minute or a mile,
Harry answered,
to both of your questions! A light-year or a second. Listen, I'm sorry, we won't be here long. But to me, when I'm here, questions like that don't have much meaning. This is a different continuum; the old constants don't apply. This place is the DNA of space and time, the building-blocks of physical reality. But … it's difficult stuff, Darcy. I've had lots of “time” to think about it, and even I don't have all the answers. All of them? Hah! I have only a
handful! But the things I can do here, I do them well. And now I want to show you something.
Wait!
said Clarke.
It's just dawned on me: what we're doing here is telepathy. So this is how it feels for the telepaths back at HQ!
Not exactly,
Harry answered
. Even the best of them aren't as good as this. In the Möbius Continuum, he explained, thoughts have matter, weight. That's because they are in fact physical things in an immaterial place. Consider a tiny meteorite in space—which can punch a hole through the skin of a space-probe! There's something of a similarity. Issue a thought here and it goes on forever, just as light and matter go on forever in our universe. A star is born, and we see it blink into life billions of years later, because that's how long it took its light to reach us. That's what thought is like here: long after we're gone, our thoughts will still exist here. But you're right to a degree—about telepathy, I mean. Perhaps telepaths have a way of tapping in—a mental system which they themselves don't understand—to the Möbius Continuum!
And Harry chuckled.
There's “a thought” for you! But if that's the case, how about seers, eh? What about your prognosticators?
Clarke didn't immediately grasp his meaning.
I'm sorry—?
Well, if the telepaths are using the Möbius Continuum, however unconsciously, what of the forecasters? Are they also “tapping in,” to scry into the future?
Clarke was apprehensive again.
Of course, he said, I'd forgotten that. You can see into the future, can't you?
Something of it,
Harry answered.
In fact I can go there! In my incorporeal days I could even manifest myself in past and future time, but now that I have a body again that's beyond me—so far, anyway. But I can still follow past and future time-streams, so long as I stick to the Möbius Continuum. And I can see you've guessed it: yes, that's what I want to show you—the future and the past.
Harry I don't know if I'm ready for this. I—
We're not actually going there
, Harry calmed him.
We'll just take a peek, that's all.
And before Clarke could protest, he opened a door on future time.
Clarke stood with Harry on the threshold of the future-time door and his mind was almost paralysed by the wonder and awe of it. All was a chaos of millions —no, billions—of lines of pure blue light etched against an otherwise impenetrable background eternity of black velvet. It was like some incredible meteor shower, where all of the meteors raced away from him into unimaginable deeps of space, except their trails didn't dim but remained brilliantly printed on the sky—printed, in fact, on time! And the most awesome thing was this: that one of these twining, twisting streamers of blue light issued outwards from himself, extending or extruding from him and plummeting away into the future. Beside Clarke, Harry produced another blue thread. It ribboned out of him and shot away on its own neon course into tomorrow.
What are they?
Clarke's question was a whisper in the metaphysical Möbius. ether.
Harry was also moved by the sight.
The life-threads of humanity,
he answered.
That's all of Mankind—of which these two here, yours and mine, make up the smallest possible fraction. This one of mine used to be Alec Kyle's, but at the end it had grown very dim, almost to the point of expiring. Right now, though—
It's one of the brightest!
And suddenly Clarke found himself completely unafraid. Even when Harry said:
Only pass through this door, and you'd follow your life-thread to its conclusion. I can do it and return—indeed I have done it—but not to the very end. That's something I don't want to know about. I'd like to think there isn't an end, that Man goes on forever.
He closed the door, opened another. And this time he didn't have to say anything.
It was a door to the past, to the very beginning of
human life on Earth. The myriad blue life-threads were there as before; but this time, instead of expanding into the distance, they contracted and narrowed down, targetting on a far-away dazzling blue origin.
Before Harry could close that door, too, Clarke let the scene sear itself into his memory. If from this time forward he got nothing else out of life, this adventure in the Möbius Continuum was something he wanted to remember to his dying day.
But finally the door on the past was closed, there was sudden swift motion, and—
We're home!
said Harry …
Through the Gate
A FOURTH AND FINAL DOOR WAS OPENED AND CLARKE felt himself urged through it. But the abrupt sensation of speed in motion had alarmed and shaken him, and as yet he hadn't recovered.
Harry?
he said, the thought trembling like a leaf in the immaterial void of the Möbius Continuum. “Harry?”
Except the second time it was his voice he heard not just his thoughts. He stood with Harry Keogh in his office at E-Branch HQ, in London. Stood there for a moment, stumbled, and reeled!
The real, physical world—of gravity, light, all human sensation and especially sound, most
definitely
sound—impressed themselves forcefully on Clarke's unprepared person. It was signing-off time for most of the staff; many had already left, but the Duty Officer and a handful of others were still here. And of course the security system was in operation as always. Bleepers had started to go off all over the top-floor complex as soon as Clarke and Keogh appeared, quietly at first but gradually increasing in pitch and frequency until they would soon become unbearable. A monitor screen in the wall close to Clarke's desk stuttered into life and printed up:
MR. DARCY CLARKE IS NOT AVAILABLE AT PRESENT. THIS IS A SECURE AREA. PLEASE IDENTIFY YOURSELF IN YOUR NORMAL SPEAKING VOICE, OR LEAVE IMMEDIATELY. IF YOU FAIL TO—
But Clarke had already regained partial control of himself. “Darcy Clarke,” he said. “I'm back.” And in case the machine hadn't recognized his shaky voice—not waiting for it to print up its cold mechanical threats—he staggered to his desk keyboard and punched in the current security override.
The screen cleared, printed up: DO NOT FORGET TO RE-SET BEFORE YOU LEAVE, and switched itself and the alarm off.
Clarke flopped into his chair—in time to give a great start as the intercom began to buzz insistently. He pressed the receive button and a breathless Duty Officer's voice said: “Either there's someone in there, or this is a malfunction …?” A second voice behind the first growled:
“You'd better
believe
there's somebody in there!” One of the espers obviously.
Harry Keogh pulled a wry face and nodded. “This place was no great loss,” he said. “None at all!”
Clarke pressed the command button and held it down. “Clarke here,” he said, talking to the entire HQ. “I'm back—and I've brought Harry with me. Or he's brought me! But don't all rush; I'll see the Duty Officer, please, and that'll be all for now.” Then he looked at Harry. “Sorry, but you can't just—well,
arrive
—in a place like this without people noticing.”
Harry smiled his understanding—but there was something of his strangeness in that smile, too. “Before they gang up on us,” he said, “tell me: how long did you say it was since Jazz Simmons disappeared? I mean, when did David Chung first notice his absence?”
“Three days ago in—” Clarke glanced at his watch,
“—just six hours time. Around midnight. Why do you ask?”
Harry shrugged. “I have to have some place to start,” he said. “And what was his address here in London?”
Clarke gave him the address, by which time the Duty Officer was knocking at the door. The door was locked and Clarke had the key. He got up, unsteadily crossed the room to let in a tall, gangling, nervous-looking man in a lightweight grey suit. The Duty Officer had a gun in his hand which he returned to its shoulder-holster as soon as he saw his boss standing there.
“Fred,” said Clarke, closing and locking the door against other curious faces where they peered along the corridor, “I don't believe you've ever met Harry Keogh? Harry, this is Fred Madison. He—” But here he noticed the look of astonishment on Madison's face. “Fred?” he said; and then they both looked back into the room. Which apart from themselves was quite empty!
Clarke took out a handkerchief and dabbed at his brow. And in the next moment Madison was steadying him where he suddenly slumped against the wall. Clarke looked slightly unwell. “I'm alright, it's OK,” he said, propping himself up. “As for Harry—” he glanced again all around the office, shook his head.
“Darcy?” said Madison.
“Well, maybe you'll get to meet him some other time. He … he never was desperately fond of this place …”
 
Something less than four days earlier, inside the Perchorsk Projekt: Chingiz Khuv, Karl Vyotsky and the Projekt Director, Viktor Luchov, stood at the hospital bedside of Vasily Agursky. Agursky had been here for four days, during which time his doctors had recognized certain symptoms and had started to wean him off alcohol. More than that: already they believed they had succeeded. It had been remarkably easy, all considered; but from the moment Agursky had been freed from the
responsibility of tending the thing in the tank, so his dependency on local vodka and cheap slivovitz had fallen off. He had asked for a drink only once, when he regained consciousness on the first day, since when he'd not mentioned alcohol and seemed hardly the worse for the lack of it.
“You're feeling better then, Vasily?” Luchov sat on the edge of Agursky's bed.
“As well as can be expected,” the patient replied. “I had been on the verge of a breakdown for some time, I think. It was the work, of course.”
“Work?” Vyotsky seemed unconvinced. “The thing about work—any kind of work—is that it produces results. On the strength of that, it's rather difficult to see how you could be exhausted, Comrade!” His bearded face scowled down on the man in the bed.
“Come now, Karl,” Khuv tut-tutted. “You know well enough that there are different sorts of work exerting different pressures. Would you have liked to be the keeper of that thing? I hardly think so! And Comrade Agursky's condition was not strictly exhaustion, or if it was then it was nervous exhaustion, brought on by proximity to the creature.”
Luchov, who carried maximum responsibility in the Perchorsk complex and therefore wielded maximum authority, looked up at Vyotsky and frowned. Physically, Luchov would not have made half of the KGB man, but in the Projekt's pecking order he stood head and shoulders over him, even over Khuv. The contempt he felt for the bully was obvious in his tone of voice when he said to Khuv:
“You are absolutely correct, Major. Anyone who thinks Vasily Agursky's duties were light should try them and see. Do I see a volunteer here, perhaps? Is your man telling us he'd make a better job of it?”
KGB Major and Projekt Direktor looked in unison, pointedly at Vyotsky. Khuv smiled his dark, deceptive smile but Luchov's scarred face showed no emotion at
all and certainly not amusement. Evidence of his annoyance was apparent, however, in the throbbing of the veins on the hairless left half of his seared skull. The quickening of his pulse was a sure sign that he disapproved of someone or something, in this case Karl Vyotsky.
“Well then?” said Khuv, who had been at odds recently with his underling's boorishness and bad temper. “Perhaps I was wrong and you would like the job after all, Karl?”
Vyotsky swallowed his pride. Khuv was just perverse enough to let it happen. “I …” he said. “I mean, I—”
“No, no!” Agursky himself saved Vyotsky from further embarrassment. He propped himself up on his pillows. “It is quite out of the question that anyone else takes over my job, and ridiculous even to suggest that an unqualified person should assume such duties. This is not stated in any way to slight you personally, Comrade,” he glanced indifferently at Vyotsky, “but there are qualifications and there are qualifications. Now that I've overcome two problems—my breakdown, and my absurd …
obsession
, for I refuse to call it an addiction, with drink—the third will not be difficult, I promise you. Given the same amount of time as I've already spent, that creature
will
give up its secrets to me, be sure. I know that so far my results have not been promising, but from now on—”
“Take it
easy
, Vasily!” Luchov put a hand on his shoulder, stemming an outburst which was quite out of character for the hitherto retiring Agursky. Obviously he was not yet fully recovered. For all his doctors' assurances that he was fit enough to be up and about again, his nerves were still on the mend.
“But my work is important!” Agursky protested. “We have to know what lies beyond that Gate, and this creature may carry the answers. I can't find them if I'm to be kept on my back in here.”
“Another day won't hurt,” Luchov stood up, “and I'll also see to it that from now on you have an assistant. It can't be good for a man to have to deal with a creature like that on his own. Some of us—” he glanced meaningfully at Vyotsky, “—would have broken long ago, I'm sure …”
“Another day, then,” Agursky lay down again. “But then I really
must
get back to my work. Believe me, what lies between me and that creature has now become a very personal thing, and I won't give in until I've beaten it.”
“Get your rest then,” Luchov told him, “and come and see me when you're up and about. I'll look forward to that.”
Agursky's visitors left the ward and at last he was on his own. Now he could stop acting. He smiled a sly and yet bitter smile—a smile composed in part of success, in that he'd deceived everyone who'd seen him, and partly of his terror of the unknown, and the fact that he was now on his own—which died on his face as quickly as it was born. It was replaced by a nervous anxiety which showed in his pale, trembling lips, and in the tic that jerked the flesh at the corner of his mouth. He had fooled his doctors and visitors, yes, but there was no fooling himself.
His doctors had examined him thoroughly and found nothing except a little stress and maybe physical weariness—not even Vyotsky's “exhaustion”—and yet Agursky
knew
that there was a lot more than that wrong with him. The thing in the tank had put something into him, something which had hidden itself away for now. But wheels were turning and time ticking away, and the question was: how long would it remain hidden?
How long did he have to find the answer and reverse the process, whatever the process was? And if he couldn't find the answer, what would it do to him, physically, while it lived and grew in him? What would it be
like
when it finally surfaced? So far no one knew about it
but him, and from now on he must watch himself closely, must know before anyone else knew if … if anything strange were to happen. Because if they knew first—if they discovered that he nurtured within himself something from beyond that Gate—if they even suspected it …
Agursky began to shudder uncontrollably, gritted his teeth and clenched his fists in a spasm of absolute terror. They
burned
those things from the Gate, hosed them down with fire until they were little heaps of congealed glue. And would they burn him, too, if … if—
What would he be like after those slowly turning inner wheels had turned full circle? That was the worst of it, not knowing …
 
Out on the perimeter and having separated from Luchov who had gone his own way, Khuv and Vyotsky were making for their own place of duty with the Projekt's esper squad when one of the latter came panting to meet them. He was a fat and especially oily man called Paul Savinkov, who prior to Perchorsk had worked in the embassies in Moscow. An unnatural predilection for male, junior members of foreign embassy staff had made him something of a risk in that employment. His transfer to Perchorsk had been swift; he was still trying to ooze his way out of the place, primarily by doing his very best to keep Khuv happy. He was sure he could convince his KGB watchdog that there were places where his talent could be far more effectively and productively employed. His talent was telepathy, in which he was occasionally very proficient.
Savinkov's fat, shiny baby-face was worried now as he bumped into Khuv and Vyotsky in the sweeping outer corridor. “Ah, Comrades—the very men I seek! I was on my way to report …” He paused to lean against the wall and catch his breath.
“What is it, Paul?” said Khuv.
“I was on duty, keeping an eye—so to speak—on Simmons. Ten minutes ago they tried to get through to him! I cannot be mistaken: a strong telepathic probe was aimed directly at him. I sensed it and managed to scramble it—certainly I interfered with it—and when I could no longer detect it, then I came to find you. Of course I left two of the squad there in my place in case there should be a recurrence. Oh, and on my way here I was given this to relay to you” He handed Khuv a message from Communications Centre.
Khuv glanced at it—and his forehead at once wrinkled into a frown. He read it again, his dark eyes darting over the printed page. “
Damn!
” he said, softly—which from him meant more than any explosion. And to Vyotsky: “Come, Karl. I think we should go at once and talk to Mr. Simmons. Also, I intend to bring our plans for him forward a little. Doubtless you'll be sad to learn that from tonight you'll no longer be able to taunt him, for he won't be here.” He tucked the message from Comcen into his pocket, dismissing the fawning Savinkov with a wave of his hand.
BOOK: The Source
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