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    The Terror by Night By Charles Willard Diffin

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      almost to the ceiling! That and only that was

      tiny metallic clang, and, as the drapes fell of

      all his straining eyes could see.

      their own weight and adjusted themselves

      It had been light with a light of its

      from the slight confusion into which he had

      own, like fox-fire in the woods, this drawn them, they opened to make one narrow unnamable thing in the corner of the room.

      crack, that a band of moonlight might throw

      Now, suddenly, it was dark, and still itself softly across the middle of the room.

      Whitmore knew that it was there.

      Just one narrow line of light, one

      single band of silver against the dull red of the HE forced his laggard muscles to raise one

      rug—against that and on something else that

      heavy hand to the holster under his arm. That

      caused Whitmore’s breath to stop.

      hand held a .45 automatic when it dropped

      heavily back to his lap.

      A HEAD, of mottled green and brown. It must

      “This throws a heavy enough slug to

      have been a foot across; flat and triangular

      Strange Tales

      6

      like that of a venomous snake. There were

      glass had raked it. He paid no heed but

      leathery lips, wet and dripping; and curved

      struggled to fling open the window, lean out,

      teeth that shone yellow against the dark and let the nausea that had swept him have its wetness of the jaws. There were fleshy way for, with the first touch of that soft tendrils like thick hair hanging from flabby-moonlight, there had come to him again that

      pouched cheeks, and above all this nameless

      intolerable scent of decay.

      horror were two eyes that the band of silvery

      light brought suddenly to life. Eyes of fire,

      “I’M through!” Whitmore admitted. “Don’t

      eyes so full of hatred, of blood-lust, of say another word, Betty dear, nor give it demoniac fury that Whitmore’s own eyes another thought. I know when I have had came to them in irresistible fascination.

      enough.”

      One instant only—one instant of utter

      But he was evasive when his wife

      horror, of a terrible conviction that here was

      questioned him as to the happenings of the

      nothing of earth; nothing, even, of hell. This

      night before. Nor could he have had any

      was something that could have been nurtured

      slightest knowledge of the terrible forces he

      only amid the dark recesses of some half-

      had put into motion; for he smiled happily into

      world!

      the violet eyes that smiled back as he said:

      One instant only while Whitmore’s “Never again, angel-child! There’ll be no brain raced like an engine gone wild as if to

      more of that deviltry in this house.... Now,

      make up for his deadened, helpless body. what show do you want to see to-night? I’ll Then even that instant ended, and, where the

      phone Jim and Sally to join us. I want to talk

      moonlight had disclosed a thing of frightful

      with Jim anyway—tell him about last night.”

      visage, there -was only a viscous pool ... and

      They returned well after midnight.

      still the moonlight shone wanly while that,

      Whitmore’s man was waiting for him; he

      too, vanished to blue-white mist and was handed his employer a packet of papers.

      gone.

      “They were left for you, sir,” he said.

      Forgotten was the gun as it thudded

      Jack Whitmore swore softly under his

      upon the floor. Forgotten was all but one

      breath as he hurriedly inspected the

      recollection—the remembrance of the brilliant

      documents. “It’s that confounded subway

      light that would come with the opening of the

      extension matter,” he explained to his wife.

      door ... and somehow Whitmore lashed those

      “You run along to bed, Betty; I’ll follow after

      reluctant muscles and forced them to carry

      a while. I’ve got to go over an unholy mess of

      him across the room in one drunken, figures; got to be ready for a directors’

      stumbling run until he crashed heavily against

      meeting to-morrow.”

      the door, flung it open, and clung weakly to

      He threw off hat and coat, switched on

      the paneled wood.

      a shaded lamp at the table in his big living

      The blinding glare of light was about

      room, and, instead of taking the papers to his

      him; he felt that he was safe, yet there was that study, he dropped unthinkingly into the same

      which drove him on. And his last blind rush

      chair he had occupied the night before.

      across the room ended in a crashing of glass

      The lamp made a circle of light upon

      where he thrust his bare fist through a window

      the table where Whitmore scanned endless

      that he might fill his lungs with air pure figures and estimates. He was not aware of the enough to wash them clean of the foulness

      darkness that filled the rest of the room; he

      they contained.

      was not aware of his own solitude; and his

      One wrist was bleeding where the mind was entirely engaged with the engineers’

      The Terror by Night

      7

      report and what their test borings had was brighter than the impenetrable darkness of disclosed.... The first sound that reached his

      those other nights ... and Whitmore realized

      ears went unheard.

      that light, the only weapon he knew, was

      losing its effectiveness.

      CONCLUSIVE proof, this, of how far from

      He did not turn at once; that chill that

      his mind was anything more supernatural than

      was gripping his heart was spreading in ever-

      the modern magic of the machine age in widening waves throughout his body.

      which he lived. The sound was repeated twice

      In all the high-ceilinged room there

      before he realized that he was hearing was but one sound: the whistling intake of that something like the whistling intake of an horrible breath through a tight throat, and a asthmatic breath. Then his head snapped up

      softer, deeper-toned huff! as the breath was sharply, and, for a moment, he stared released. This eery combination of sounds was incredulously about him.

      repeating itself with gruesome regularity....

      “Absurd!” he said half aloud; “I’ve

      In that instant the mind of Jack

      seen men go to pieces—get the shakes—but,

      Whitmore split sharply into two halves; he

      by the gods, I thought I was immune!”

      was two selves, and one of those selves swore

      His eyes had gone unconsciously and cursed at the other: toward that place where, one night earlier,

      “Coward! Fool! Turn around, you poor

      they had stared into eyes of flaming red. He

      damned idiot. There’s nothing there—nothing

      found nothing, although that same strange to be afraid of! And if there is anything there, chill sensation along his spine had half you’re man enough to wring its ugly neck!”

      prepared him to see a gray-green whirl of mist

      But that other self stood in frozen,

      in the darkness. By sheer will power he terror-stricken immobility. Not until the brought his gaze back to the papers and the

      rasping breath grew perceptibly louder did

      circle of li
    ght, and he forced his mind once

      Whitmore move. Then there clamored in his

      more to concentrate upon the figures there.

      brain one thought, repeating itself over and

      “... And it is the recommendation of

      over: “It’s coming! It’s coming nearer. In

      our Mr. Donnelly that further borings should

      another minute it will touch you!” It was the

      be made at the points indicated on the attached

      thought of that touch that gave the man

      layout—” He pushed the papers quietly aside;

      strength to turn slowly about.

      his mind refused to be coerced when, in his

      ears, there sounded again the labored AT first there was nothing! Then half-way breathing. And the same mysterious between him and the far corner of the room, something that had spoken to him on that

      amid the heavy shadows, was something

      other occasion told him again that here was

      darker even than darkness itself. Those white

      the loathsome, nameless thing, returned this

      papers gleaming in the bright light had been

      time unbidden.

      blinding; there was time needed for

      Whitmore’s eyes to adjust themselves—time

      AND again there came to the stout heart of

      in which every second seemed like a lagging

      Whitmore that gripping fear, for, though he

      hour.

      had not yet turned to look, he knew that this

      Dimly in that darkened room he saw

      time the thing had come to him in the light.

      first only the outline of a body, a stooped,

      Dim, that light in the big room where it shrunken body it seemed. The figure of a man, reflected and was diffused from the lighted

      standing motionless. Then, while Whitmore

      circle of the table, but even this subdued glow

      watched, that creature of the shadows took

      Strange Tales

      8

      one halting, forward step, and even in the dim

      the waxen pallor nor, more horrible yet, the

      light Whitmore could see the sunken cheeks,

      discoloration that spread across half the face.

      the long, matted, gray hair that hung in a

      Only the flashing hatred of those eyes gave

      bedraggled fringe half over the face, as ragged

      visible manifestation of the fearful light that

      seemingly as the tattered fragments of cloth

      had forced itself into this body.

      that clung to the gaunt frame below.

      And for Jack Whitmore, standing there

      Then one hand was slowly raised, a

      unmoving, hardly breathing, time lost all

      hand more like a claw of some carrion bird

      meaning and measure; all comprehension of

      than anything resembling a human hand. But

      normal things, all memories of the every-day

      it come tremblingly upward to the face and

      world were lost. They were erased from his

      brushed aside the hanging hair, and, with that,

      mind as if they had never been, and in all the

      Whitmore for the first time saw the eyes!

      great universe there was nothing but this

      They were cavernous eyes, deeply nameless horror, nothing but two eyes that sunken in their sockets, which, in that blazed redly with malevolent menace meant emaciated face, were like the two black unmistakably for him.

      openings in a skull; yet from their shadowed

      One slow step; another as dreadful, as

      depths they blazed as Whitmore watched, inexorable; and another— and, with that slow blazed redly with the same menacing look he

      measured approach of something which had

      had seen in the reptilian eyes that had stared at no right to existence in the world of living

      him the night before.

      men, the fear which had been born in Jack

      It was the same thing! Whitmore knew

      Whitmore’s heart that other night seemed to

      in one intuitive flash that these horrible bodies have reached its full stature. Had one of those

      were so many disguises for a still more dreadful claw-like hands reached within his horrible, more venomous and loathsome breast to close about his heart, that deathly creature that was using them for some terrible

      clutch could have been no colder than the grip

      purpose. And as before it announced its of the fear that seized upon him now. Dimly coming in a manner unmistakable.

      he felt his whole body shiver; there were

      The charnel-house odor which assailed

      spasms of trembling that jerked and twitched

      the senses of the helpless man was almost

      at his deadened muscles.

      more than human nerves could bear; and still

      Whitmore stood, not moving, beside that big

      SOME part of Whitmore’s mind was reaching

      table with its single light where a scattered

      deep among buried memories for phrases half

      litter of papers shone whitely. And the thing

      forgotten. His lips were moving stiffly.

      came on.

      “Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror

      by night nor for the pestilence that walketh in

      THAT single light shed a mellow glow; it

      darkness ...” he murmured. But Whitmore was

      reflected softly throughout the room; shone

      afraid, and the ghoulish visitant came slowly,

      dully here and there on polished mahogany

      haltingly forward; inch by inch it forced the

      and lost itself at last in the neutral tints of the helpless, dead body to drag itself along in the

      textured walls. And with equal delicacy it

      dim light.

      illumined the face from which Jack Whitmore

      Closer! And now one bony, claw-like

      could not remove his horrified gaze.

      hand rested upon the table....

      Not one single muscle of that face

      Closer yet it came, and the hand at the

      moved; and, rigidly set in the cold grip of

      end of an arm whose thinness was apparent

      death, there was no mistaking the meaning of

      through the half-rotted cloth came slowly up

      The Terror by Night

      9

      and out— out toward Whitmore’s face!

      expressionless face. “Ah,” she said softly,

      Reaching and straining it hung there

      without waiting for Whitmore to announce his

      until the dreadful body took one last forward

      errand. “It is zat you have done as you say.

      step ... and with the first touch of long You would have your own way about this.

      fingernails to his cheek, that other half of

      And now....” She shrugged her broad

      Whitmore’s mind, that self which had never

      shoulders disdainfully and waited for

      yielded, took quick command. The response

      Whitmore to complete the sentence.

      of his muscles might have followed a

      “For God’s sake—” began Whitmore.

      tremendous electric shock.

      There seemed no words by which he might

      One hand which had hung limply at his

      convey to another human even a faint

      side shot up and out. It contracted into a hard

      understanding of this dreadful truth.

      fist, and that fist came up from below carrying

      “Oui” said the Madame softly. “Pour

      all the force and driving power that le ban Dieu—and for the sake of your little Whitmore’s heavy body could Impart.

      lady who was
    ’fraid. Now tell me,” she

      Where or how he struck the thing demanded sharply, “is it that you have done—

      Whitmore never knew. That other self which

      what?”

      was in control was shouting frantically to him,

      And Jack Whitmore told—not as Mr.

      driving him in one backward spring towards

      Whitmore, capitalist and builder of subways

      the drawer in the end of the table, and his

      might have spoken condescendingly to a

      searching hand found the long flashlight that

      disreputable charlatan; this was another

      he sought, and pressed the switch.

      Whitmore who spoke contritely and humbly

      No dim light then; Whitmore had had

      and who implored the fat, ill-dressed woman

      this lamp made for his own use underground.

      before him to come to his aid.

      The beam which he directed toward a huddled

      “It is,” she said at last, “zat you have

      mass on the floor seemed in that dark room

      left ze door open, and there has walked in a

      like a blazing headlight of a locomotive. It

      somesing that seizes any dead body it can for

      was like a solid bar of light, like a torrent of to make it live. You have left it open, that

      liquid force that battered and poured upon that

      door, and once open, it is hard to close. It may huddled heap of rags and flesh ... and the thing be I can help, but, of a truth, it is dificile! ”

      which had maintained a semblance of

      wholeness in the dim light lost all form, WITH this promise of help another thought became a pool of utter horror, and then was

      came uppermost in Whitmore’s questioning

      gone. And only the strangling air of the room

      mind. “This thing,” he stated abruptly, “it was

     

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