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    Image of the Beast and Blown

    Page 32
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      nudity, indecent exposure and, probably, would be sub-

      jected to a psychiatric examination.

      One of the passengers in the car said that they must

      have been dazed. He knew them well, they were re-

      sponsible citizens, and they would never leave the scene

      of an accident unless they had been rendered half-

      conscious in a state of shock.

      "Maybe so," the policeman said. "But you have to ad-

      mit it's rather peculiar that all three should take off their

      clothes—slide out of them the way it looks to me—and

      run away. We were right behind you, and we didn't even

      see them leave."

      "It was raining very heavily," the passenger said.

      "Not that heavily."

      "What a night," the other policeman said.

      Childe tried to talk to the others in the accident, but

      only Forrest J (no period) Ackerman would reply. He

      seemed very concerned about a painting in the rear seat

      of Pao's car. He had removed it shortly after the police

      had arrived and put it in the back seat of his Cadillac.

      If the police observed this, they did not say anything.

      Now he wanted to get it back to his house.

      "I'll take you as soon as they let us go," Childe said.

      "Your house isn't far from here; it won't be any bother."

      He did not know what Ackerman's part in this was.

      He seemed to be an innocent victim, but then there was

      the transfer of the painting from Pao's car. How had

      Pao gotten hold of it? Also, there seemed to be two

      Paos. Were they twins?

      Forry Ackerman told him something of what had hap-

      pened on the way to his house. Childe became excited,

      because he had met Woolston Heepish when he was in-

      vestigating the disappearance of his partner, Colben.

      Childe decided that he would appear to go along with

      Ackerman's story. The man seemed to be sincere and

      genuinely upset and puzzled by what had happened.

      But it was possible that he was one of the Ogs, as

      Hindarf called them. It was also possible that he was one

      of the Tocs.

      When he drove up before Ackerman's house, he

      looked at it through the dark and the rain, and he said,

      "If I didn't know better, I would think Heepish lived

      here."

      "That man deliberately fixed his house to look like

      mine,'' Forry said. "That's why he's called 'the poor

      man's Forry Ackerman,' though I don't think he's so

      poor."

      They went inside and, while Ackerman hung the

      painting, Childe looked around. The layout of the

      house was the same, but the paintings and the other

      items were different. And this place was brighter and

      more inclined to science-fiction subjects than Heep-

      ish's.

      When Forry stepped down off the sofa with a sat-

      isfied smile, Childe said, "There's something wrong about

      this accident, other than the disappearance of Pao. I

      mean, I was chasing Pao in one car and the three

      men with him in the other. Yet you say you were chasing

      Pao, too."

      "That's right," Forry said. "It is puzzling. The whole

      evening has been puzzling and extremely upsetting. I

      have to get the latest issue of my comic book out to my

      publisher in New York, and I'm far behind. I'll have to

      work twice as fast to catch up."

      Childe interpreted this as meaning that he should

      leave at once. The man must really be dedicated to

      his work. How many could go back to their desk and

      work on a piece of fiction about vampires when they

      might have been associating with genuine vampires, not

      to mention genuine werefoxes and werewolves?

      "When you get your work done, and you're ready to

      talk," Childe said, "we'll get together. I have many

      questions, and I also have some information you might

      find interesting, though I don't know that you'll believe

      it."

      "I'm too tired to believe in anything but a good

      night's sleep, which I'm not going to get," Forry said.

      "I hate to be inhospitable, but …"

      Childe hesitated. Should he take up more of this man's

      time by warning him? He decided that it would be bet-

      ter not to. If he knew what danger he was really in,

      he would not be able to concentrate on his work. And

      knowing the danger would not help him in the least un-

      less he believed in it and fled from this area. That

      did not seem likely. Childe would not have believed

      such a story if he had not experienced it.

      He gave Forry his phone number and address and

      said, "Call me when you're ready to talk this over. I have

      a lot to tell you. Maybe together we can get a more

      complete picture."

      Forry said he would do so. He conducted Childe to the

      door but before he let him through, he said, "I think I'll

      take that painting into my office with me. I wouldn't

      put it past Heepish to try again."

      Childe did not ask why he did not call the police. Ob-

      viously, if he did, he would be held up even more in

      getting out Vampirella.

      30

      Herald Childe did not get home until seven in the

      morning. The rain had stopped by four-thirty, but

      the canyons were roaring streams. He was stopped by

      the police, but when he explained that he lived off the

      main road, he was permitted to go ton. Only residents

      could use this section of Topanga Canyon, and they

      were warned that it would be better if they stayed away.

      Childe pushed on—literally—and eventually got to

      his driveway. He saw three houses that had slipped

      their moorings and moved downhill anywhere from six

      to twenty feet. Two of the houses must have been

      deserted, but outside the third a family was moving some

      furniture and clothes into the back of a pickup truck.

      Childe thought momentarily about helping them and

      then decided that they could handle their own affairs.

      The pickup truck was certainly more equipped to move

      through the high water than his low-slung car, and if

      they wanted to break their backs moving their sofa,

      that was their foolish decision.

      Another car of the same year and model as the others

      was parked under the branches of the oak tree. The

      water flowing down the street was up past the hubs of

      the wheels. So strong was the force of the current, it

      sometimes lifted Childe's car a fraction of an inch.

      But at no time was more than one wheel off the ground.

      He parked the car in the driveway. The garage floor

      was flooded and, besides, he wanted the car to be avail-

      able for a quick takeoff. He was not sure that the water

      pouring off the cliff and drowning his backyard would

      not lift the garage eventually. Or, if the cliff did col-

      lapse, it might move far enough to smash the garage,

      which was closer to the cliff than the house.

      He unlocked the door and locked it behind him.

      He started to cross the room when, in the pale day-

      light, a shapeless form rose from the sofa. He thought

    &nbs
    p; his heart would stop.

      The shapelessness fell off the figure. It was a blanket

      which had disguised it.

      For a moment, he could not grasp who was standing

      before him. Then he cried, "Sybil!"

      It was his ex-wife.

      She ran to him and threw her arms around him, put

      her face against his chest, and sobbed. He held her and

      whispered, over and over, "Sybil! Sybil! I thought you

      were dead! My God, where have you been?"

      After a while she quit crying and raised her face to

      kiss him. She was thirty-four now, her birthday had

      been six days ago, but she looked as if she had aged

      five years. There were large dark circles under her eyes

      and the lines from nose to mouth had gotten deeper. She

      also seemed thinner.

      He led her to the sofa and sat her down and then said,

      "Are you all right?"

      She started to cry again, but after a minute she

      looked up at him and said, "I am and I'm not."

      "Is there anything I can do for you?" he asked.

      "Yes, you can get me a cup of coffee. And a joint,

      if you have one."

      He waved his hand as if to indicate a complete change

      of character. "I don't have any pot. I've gone back to

      drinking."

      She looked alarmed, and he said, hastily, "Only a

      shot very infrequently. I'm going to school again. UCLA.

      History major."

      Then, "How did you find this house? How did you

      get here? Is that your car out in front?"

      "I was brought, up here by somebody—somebodies—

      and let into the house. I took off the blindfold and looked

      around, I found my photograph on your bedside table, so

      I knew where I was. I decided to wait for you, and I fell

      asleep."

      "Just a minute," he said. "This is going to be a long

      story, I can see that. I'll make some coffee and some

      sandwiches, too, in case we get hungry."

      He did not like to put off hearing what had happened,

      but he knew that he would not want to be interrupted

      after she got started. He did everything that had to be

      done very swiftly and brought in a tray with a big pot

      of coffee, food, and some rather dried-out cigarettes he

      found in the pantry. He no longer smoked, but he had

      gotten cigarettes for women he had brought into the

      house.

      Sybil said, "Oh, good!" and reached for the cigarettes.

      Then she withdrew her hand and said, wearily, "I haven't

      smoked for six months, and my lungs feel much better.

      I won't start up again."

      She had said this before and sounded as if she

      meant it. But this time her voice had a thread of steel in

      it. Something had happened to change her.

      "All right," he said. "You left for your mother's

      funeral in San Francisco. I called your sister, and she

      said you'd phoned her and told her you couldn't get a

      plane out and your car wouldn't start. You told her

      you were coming up with a friend, but you hung up

      without saying who the friend was. And that was the

      last I heard of you. Now, over a year later, you show

      up in my house."

      She took a deep breath and said, "I don't expect you

      to believe this, Herald."

      "I'll believe anything. With good reason."

      "I couldn't get hold of you, and, anyway, after that

      horrible quarrel, I didn't think you'd want to ever see

      me again. I had to get to San Francisco, but I didn't

      know how. Then I thought of a friend of mine, and I

      walked over to his apartment. He only lived a block

      from me."

      "He?"

      "Bob Guilder. You don't know him."

      "A lover?" he said, feeling a pinprick of jealousy.

      Thank God that emotion was dying out, in regard to

      her, anyway.

      "Yes," she said. "Earlier. We parted but not because

      we couldn't stand one another. We just didn't strike fire

      off each other, sexually. But we remained fairly good

      friends. Anyway, I got there just as he was packing to

      leave for Carmel. He couldn't stand the smog anymore,

      and even though the governor didn't want people leav-

      ing, he said he was going anyway. He was glad to drive

      me all the way into San Francisco, since he had some

      things to do there."

      They had driven out Ventura Boulevard because

      the San Diego Freeway was jammed, according to the

      radio. At a standstill. Ventura Boulevard was not

      much better, but ten miles an hour was an improve-

      ment over no miles.

      Just off the Tarzana ramp, the car overheated. Guilder

      managed to get it into Tarzana, but there was only one

      service station operating. The proprietors of the others

      were either staying home or were also attempting to get

      out of the deadly smog.

      "You won't believe this," she said, "but I stole a

      motorcycle. It was sitting by the curb, its key in the ig-

      nition. There was no one in sight, although the owner

      may have been only thirty feet away, the smog was that

      thick. I've ridden Hondas before, did you know that7

      Another friend of mine used to take me out on one for

      fun, and he taught me how to ride it."

      And other things, thought Childe without pain. The

      thought was automatic, but he was glad that it did not

      mean much now.

      There had been no use in her trying to reach 'Frisco

      on the Honda. The traffic was so thick and slow-moving

      that she did not see any chance of getting to her destin-

      ation until the funeral was over, if then. She decided

      to return to her apartment. Eyes burning, sinuses on fire,

      lungs hurting, she rode the Honda home. That took two

      hours. The cars were filling both sides of the street,

      all going in the same direction, but there was enough

      room, if she took the sidewalk now and then, to travel.

      She got to her apartment, and five minutes afterwards,

      someone knocked on her door. She thought it must be

      another tenant. Without a key, it was difficult to get

      into the building.

      But she did not recognize the two men, and before

      she could shut the door, they were on her. She felt a

      needle enter her arm, and she became unconscious.

      When she awoke, she was in a suite of three rooms, not

      including the bathroom. All were large and luxuriously

      furnished, and throughout her captivity she was given

      the best of food and liquor, cigarettes and marijuana,

      and anything she desired, except clothes. She had one

      beautiful robe and two flimsy negligees which were

      cleaned each week.

      When she first awoke, she was alone. She prowled

      around and found that there were no windows and

      the two doors were locked. There was a big color TV

      set and a radio, both of which worked. The telephone

      was not connected to the outside line. When she lifted

      it, she heard a man's voice answer, and she put the

      receiver down without saying anything. A few minutes

      later, a door swung open, and two men and a woman

      came in.

      She describe
    d them in detail. One of them could be

      one of the Paos; the woman had to be Vivienne Mab-

      crough. The second man did not sound like anyone he

      knew.

      Sybil became hysterical, and they injected her once

      more. When she woke up again, she controlled her-

      self. She was told that she would not be harmed and

      that, eventually, she would be released. When she asked

      them what, they wanted her for, she got no answers.

      Over the year's time, she concluded that her captors

      were planning on using her, somehow, as a weapon

      or lever against Childe.

      Childe, thinking of the sexual abuse he had suffered

      during his short imprisonment in the Igescu house, could

      not conceive that she was not molested in any way. He

      asked her if she had been raped.

      "Oh, many times!" she said, almost matter-of-factly.

      "Did they hurt you?" She did not seem to be affected

      by his question or any painful memories.

      "A little bit, at first," she said.

      "How do you feel now? I mean, were the experiences

      psychologically traumatic?"

      He was beginning to feel like a psychiatrist, or, perhaps,

      a prosecuting attorney.

      "Come here, sit down by me," she said. She held out

      a slim and pale hand. He came to her and put his arm

      around her and kissed her. He expected her to burst into

      tears again, but she only sighed. After a while, she said,

      "I've always been very frank with you, right?"

      "Yes. But I don't know that a compulsion to honesty

      was the main factor," he said. "That may have been your

      rationalization, but I thought that your frankness was

      more to hurt me than anything else."

      "You might be right," she said. She sipped on some

      coffee and then said, "I'll tell you what happened to me,

      but it won't be to hurt you. I don't think so, anyway."

      31

      Sybil exercised, smoked more than was good for her,

      watched TV and listened to radio, read the magazines

      and books supplied whenever she asked for them, and

      generally tried to keep from going crazy. The uncertainty

      of her position was the largest element pushing her to-

      wards insanity. However, it was not as bad as being in

      solitary. The man who answered the phone would talk

     


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