“There is nothing you can do,” said Connolly, “nothing at
all. Why did you have to follow me?” He was standing with his
back to Pearson, staring out across the calm blue water that led
to Italy. On the left, behind the anchored fishing fleet, the sun
was setting in Mediterranean splendor, incarnadining land and sky.
But neither man was even remotely aware of the beauty all
around.
Pearson rose to his feet, and came forward out of the little
café's shadowed porch, into the slanting sunlight. He
joined Connolly by the cliff wall, but was careful not to come too
close to him. Even in normal times Connolly disliked being
touched. His obsession, whatever it might be, would make him
doubly sensitive now.
“Listen, Roy,” Pearson began urgently. “We've been friends
for twenty years, and you ought to know I wouldn't let you down
this time. Besides—”
“I know. You promised Ruth.”
“And why not? After all, she is your wife. She has a right to
know what's happened.” He paused, choosing his words carefully.
“She's worried, Roy. Much more worried than if it was only
another woman.” He nearly added the word “again,” but
decided against it.
Connolly stubbed out his cigarette on the flat-topped granite
wall, then flicked the white cylinder out over the sea, so that it
fell twisting and turning toward the waters a hundred feet below.
He turned to face his friend.
“I'm sorry, Jack,” he said, and for a moment there was a
glimpse of the familiar personality which, Pearson knew, must be
trapped somewhere within the stranger standing at his side. “I
know you're trying to be helpful, and I appreciate it. But I wish
you hadn't followed me. You'll only make matters worse.”
“Convince me of that, and I'll go away.”
Connolly sighed.
“I could no more convince you than that psychiatrist you
persuaded me to see. Poor Curtis! He was such a well-meaning
fellow. Give him my apologies, will you?”
“I'm not a psychiatrist, and I'm not trying to cure
you—whatever that means. If you like it the way you are,
that's your affair. But I think you ought to let us know what's
happened, so that we can make plans accordingly.”
“To get me certified?”
Pearson shrugged his shoulders. He wondered if Connolly could see
through his feigned indifference to the real concern he was trying
to hide. Now that all other approaches seemed to have failed, the
“frankly-I-don't-care” attitude was the only one left open to
him.
“I wasn't thinking of that. There are a few practical details
to worry about. Do you want to stay here indefinitely? You can't
live without money, even on Syrene.”
“I can stay at Clifford Rawnsley's villa as long as I like. He
was a friend of my father's you know. It's empty at the moment
except for the servants, and they don't bother me.”
Connolly turned away from the parapet on which he was
resting.
“I'm going up the hill before it's dark,” he said. The words
were abrupt, but Pearson knew that be was not being dismissed. He
could follow if he pleased, and the knowledge brought him the
first satisfaction he had felt since locating Connolly. It was a
small triumph, but he needed it.
They did not speak during the climb; indeed Pearson scarcely had
the breath to do so. Connolly set off at a reckless pace, as if
deliberately attempting to exhaust himself. The island fell away
beneath them, the white villas gleamed like ghosts in the shadowed
valleys, the little fishing boats, their day's work done, lay at
rest in the harbor. And all around was the darkling sea.
When Pearson caught up with his friend, Connolly was sitting in
front of the shrine which the devout islanders had built on
Syrene's highest point. In the daytime, there would be tourists
here, photographing each other or gaping at the much-advertised
beauty spread beneath them, but the place was deserted now.
Connolly was breathing heavily from his exertions, yet his
features were relaxed and for the moment he seemed almost at
peace. The shadow that lay across his mind had lifted, and he
turned to Pearson with a smile that echoed his old, infectious
grin.
“He hates exercise, Jack. It always scares him away.”
“And who is he?” said Pearson, “Remember, you haven't
introduced us yet.”
Connolly smiled at his friend's attempted humor; then his face
suddenly became grave.
“Tell me, Jack,” he began. “Would you say I have an
overdeveloped imagination?”
“No: you're about average. You're certainly less imaginative
than I am.”
Connolly nodded slowly.
“That's true enough, Jack, and it should help
you to believe me. Because I'm certain I could never have invented
the creature who's haunting me. He really exists. I'm not
suffering from paranoiac hallucinations, or whatever Dr. Curtis
would call them.
“You remember Maude White? It all began with her. I met her at
one of David Trescott's parties, about six weeks ago. I'd just
quarreled with Ruth and was rather fed up. We were both pretty
tight, and as I was staying in town she came back to the flat with
me.”
Pearson smiled inwardly. Poor Roy! It was always the same
pattern, though he never seemed to realize it. Each affair was
different to him, but to no one else. The eternal Don Juan, always
seeking—always disappointed, because what he sought could
be found only in the cradle or the grave, but never between the
two.
“I guess you'll laugh at what knocked me out—it seems so
trivial, though it frightened me more than anything that's ever
happened in my life. I simply went over to the cocktail cabinet
and poured out the drinks, as I've done a hundred times before. It
wasn't until I'd handed one to Maude that I realized I'd filled
three glasses. The act was so perfectly natural that at
first I didn't recognize what it meant. Then I looked wildly
around the room to see where the other man was—even then I
knew, somehow, that it wasn't a man. But, of course, he wasn't
there. He was nowhere at all in the outside world: he was hiding
deep down inside my own brain….”
The night was very still, the only sound a thin ribbon of music
winding up to the stars from some café in the village
below. The light of the rising moon sparkled on the sea; overhead,
the arms of the crucifix were silhouetted against the darkness. A
brilliant beacon on the frontiers of twilight, Venus was following
the sun into the west.
Pearson waited, letting Connolly take his time. He seemed lucid
and rational enough, however strange the story he was telling. His
face was quite calm in the moonlight, though it might be the
calmness that comes after acceptance of defeat.
“The next thing I remember is lying in bed while
Maude sponged my face. She was pretty frightened: I'd passed out
and cut my forehead badly as I fell. There was a lot of blood
around the place, but that didn't matter. The thing that really
scared me was the thought that I'd gone crazy. That seems funny,
now that I'm much more scared of being sane.
“He was still there when I woke up; he's been there
ever since. Somehow I got rid of Maude—it wasn't
easy—and tried to work out what had happened. Tell me,
Jack, do you believe in telepathy?”
The abrupt challenge caught Pearson off his guard.
“I've never given it much thought, but the evidence seems
rather convincing. Do you suggest that someone else is reading
your mind?”
“It's not as simple as that. What I'm telling you now I've
discovered slowly—usually when I've been dreaming or
slightly drunk. You may say that invalidates the evidence, but I
don't think so. At first it was the only way I could break through
the barrier that separates me from Omega—I'll tell you
later why I've called him that. But now there aren't any
obstacles: I know he's there all the time, waiting for me to let
down my guard. Night and day, drunk or sober, I'm conscious of his
presence. At times like this he's quiescent, watching me out of
the corner of his eye. My only hope is that he'll grow tired of
waiting, and go in search of some other victim.”
Connolly's voice, calm until now, suddenly came near to
breaking.
“Try and imagine the horror of that discovery: the effect of
learning that every act, every thought or desire that flitted
through your mind was being watched and shared by another being.
It meant, of course, the end of all normal life for me. I had to
leave Ruth and I couldn't tell her why. Then, to make matters
worse, Maude came chasing after me. She wouldn't leave me alone,
and bombarded me with letters and phone calls. It was hell. I
couldn't fight both of them, so I ran away. And I thought that on
Syrene, of all places, he would find enough to interest him
without bothering me.”
“Now I understand,” said Pearson softly. “So
that's what he's after. A kind of telepathic Peeping
Tom—no longer content with mere watching….”
“I suppose you're humoring me,” said Connolly, without
resentment. “But I don't mind, and you've summed
it up pretty accurately, as you usually do. It was quite a while
before I realized what his game was. Once the first shock had worn
off, I tried to analyze the position logically. I thought backward
from that first moment of recognition and in the end I knew that
it wasn't a sudden invasion of my mind. He'd been with me for
years, so well hidden that I'd never guessed it. I expect you'll
laugh at this, knowing me as you do. But I've never been
altogether at ease with a woman, even when I've been making love
to her, and now I know the reason. Omega has always been there,
sharing my emotions, gloating over the passions he can no longer
experience in his body.
“The only way I kept any control was by fighting
back, trying to come to grips with him and to understand what he
was. And in the end I succeeded. He's a long way away and there
must be some limit to his powers. Perhaps that first contact was
an accident, though I'm not sure.
“What I've told you already, Jack, must be hard
enough for you to believe, but it's nothing to what I've got to
say now. Yet remember—you agreed that I'm not an
imaginative man, and see if you can find a flaw anywhere in this
story.
“I don't know if you've read any of the evidence
suggesting that telepathy is somehow independent of time. I
know that it is. Omega doesn't belong to our age: he's
somewhere in the future, immensely far ahead of us. For a while I
thought he must be one of the last men—that's why I gave
him his name. But now I'm not sure; perhaps he belongs to an age
when there are a myriad different races of man, scattered all over
the universe—some still ascending, others sinking into
decay. His people, wherever and whenever they may be, have reached
the heights and fallen from them into the depths the beasts can
never know. There's a sense of evil about him, Jack—the
real evil that most of us never meet in all our lives. Yet
sometimes I feel almost sorry for him, because I know what has
made him the thing he is.
“Have you ever wondered, Jack, what the human
race will do when science has discovered everything, when there
are no more worlds to be explored, when all the stars have given
up their secrets? Omega is one of the answers. I hope he's not the
only one, for if so everything we've striven for is in vain. I
hope that he and his race are an isolated cancer in a still
healthy universe, but I can never be sure.
“They have pampered their bodies until they are
useless, and too late they have discovered their mistake. Perhaps
they have thought, as some men have thought, that they could live
by intellect alone. And perhaps they are immortal, and that must
be their real damnation. Through the ages their minds have been
corroding in their feeble bodies, seeking some release from their
intolerable boredom. They have found it at last in the only way
they can, by sending back their minds to an earlier, more virile
age, and becoming parasites on the emotions of others.
“I wonder how many of them there are? Perhaps
they explain all cases of what used to be called possession. How
they must have ransacked the past to assuage their hunger! Can't
you picture them, flocking like carrion crows around the decaying
Roman Empire, jostling one another for the minds of Nero and
Caligula and Tiberius? Perhaps Omega failed to get those richer
prizes. Or perhaps he hasn't much choice and must take whatever
mind he can contact in any age, transferring from that to the next
whenever he has the chance.
“It was only slowly, of course, that I worked all this out. I
think it adds to his enjoyment to know that I'm aware of his
presence. I think he's deliberately helping—breaking down
his side of the barrier. For in the end, I was able to see
him.”
Connolly broke off. Looking around, Pearson saw that they were no
longer alone on the hilltop. A young couple hand in hand, were
coming up the road toward the crucifix. Each had the physical
beauty so common and so cheap among the islanders. They were
oblivious to the night around them and to any spectators, and went
past without the least sign of recognition. There was a bitter
smile on Connolly's lips as he watched them go.
“I suppose I should be ashamed of this, but I was wishing then
that he'd leave me and go after that boy. But he won't; though
I've refused to play his game any more, he's staying to see what
happens.”
“You were going to tell me what he's like,” said Pearson,
annoyed at the interruption. Connolly lit a cigarette and inhaled
deeply before replying.
“Can you imagine a room without walls? He's in a
kind of hollow, egg-shaped space—surrounded by blue mist
that always seems to be twisting and turning, but never changes
its position. There's no entrance or exit—and no gravity,
unless he's learned to defy it. Because he floats in the center,
and around him is a circle of short, fluted cylinders, turning
slowly in the air. I think they must be machines of some kind,
obeying his will. And once there was a large oval banging beside
him, with perfectly human, beautifully formed arms coming from it.
It could only have been a robot, yet those hands and fingers
seemed alive. They were feeding and massaging him, treating him
like a baby. It was horrible….
“Have you ever seen a lemur or a spectral
tarsier? He's rather like that—a nightmare travesty of
mankind, with huge malevolent eyes. And this is
strange—it's not the way one had imagined evolution
going—he's covered with a fine layer of fur, as blue as the
room in which be lives. Every time I've seen him he's been in the
same position, half curled up like a sleeping baby. I think his
legs have completely atrophied; perhaps his arms as well. Only his
brain is still active, hunting up and down the ages for its
prey.
“And now you know why there was nothing you or anyone else
could do. Your psychiatrists might cure me if I was insane, but
the science that can deal with Omega hasn't been invented
yet.”
Connolly paused, then smiled wryly.
“Just because I'm sane, I realize that you can't be expected to
believe me. So there's no common ground on which we can
meet.”
Pearson rose from the boulder on which he had been sitting, and
shivered slightly. The night was becoming cold, but that was
nothing to the feeling of inner helplessness that had overwhelmed
him as Connolly spoke.
“I'll be frank, Roy,” he began slowly. “Of course I don't
believe you. But insofar as you believe in Omega yourself, he's
real to you, and I'll accept him on that basis and fight him with
you.”
“It may be a dangerous game. How do we know what he can do when
he's cornered?”
“I'll take that chance,” Pearson replied, beginning to walk
down the hill. Connolly followed him without argument.
“Meanwhile, just what do you propose to do yourself?”
“Relax. Avoid emotion. Above all, keep away from
women—Ruth, Maude, and the rest of them. That's been the
hardest job. It isn't easy to break the habits of a
lifetime.”
“I can well believe that,” replied Pearson, a little dryly.
“How successful have you been so far?”
“Completely. You see his own eagerness defeats his purpose, by
filling me with a kind of nausea and self-loathing whenever I
think of sex. Lord, to think that I've laughed at the prudes all
my life, yet now I've become one myself!”
There, thought Pearson in a sudden flash of insight, was the
answer. He would never have believed it, but Connolly's past had
finally caught up with him. Omega was nothing more than a symbol
of conscience, a personification of guilt. When Connolly realized
this, he would cease to be haunted. As for the remarkably detailed
nature of the hallucination, that was yet another example of the
tricks the human mind can play in its efforts to deceive itself.
There must be some reason why the obsession had taken this form,
but that was of minor importance.
Pearson explained this to Connolly at some length as they
approached the village. The other listened so patiently that
Pearson had an uncomfortable feeling that he was the one who was
being humored, but he continued grimly to the end. When he had
finished, Connolly gave a short, mirthless laugh.
“Your story's as logical as mine, but neither of us can
convince the other. If you're right, then in time I may return to
‘normal.’ I can't disprove the possibility; I simply don't
believe it. You can't imagine how real Omega is to me. He's more
real than you are: if I close my eyes you're gone, but he's still
there. I wish I knew what he was waiting for! I've left my old
life behind; he knows I won't go back to it while he's
there. So what's he got to gain by hanging on?” He turned to
Pearson with a feverish eagerness. “That's what really frightens
me, Jack. He must know what my future is—all my life must
be like a book he can dip into where he pleases. So there must
still be some experience ahead of me that he's waiting to savor.
Sometimes—sometimes I wonder if it's my death.”
They were now among the houses at the outskirts of the village,
and ahead of them the nightlife of Syrene was getting into its
stride. Now that they were no longer alone, there came a subtle
change in Connolly's attitude. On the hilltop he had been, if not
his normal self, at least friendly and prepared to talk. But now
the sight of the happy, carefree crowds ahead seemed to make him
withdraw into himself. He lagged behind as Pearson advanced and
presently refused to come any further.
“What's the matter?” asked Pearson. “Surely you'll come
down to the hotel and have dinner with me?”
Connolly shook his head.
“I can't,” he said. “I'd meet too many people.”
It was an astonishing remark from a man who had always delighted
in crowds and parties. It showed, as nothing else had done, how
much Connolly had changed. Before Pearson could think of a
suitable reply, the other had turned on his heels and made off up
a side-street. Hurt and annoyed, Pearson started to pursue him,
then decided that it was useless.
That night he sent a long telegram to Ruth, giving what
reassurance he could. Then, tired out, he went to bed.
Yet for an hour he was unable to sleep. His body was exhausted,
but his brain was still active. He lay watching the patch of
moonlight move across the pattern on the wall, marking the passage
of time as inexorably as it must still do in the distant age that
Connolly had glimpsed. Of course, that was pure fantasy—yet
against his will Pearson was growing to accept Omega as a real and
living threat. And in a sense Omega was real—as
real as those other mental abstractions, the Ego and the
Subconscious Mind.
Pearson wondered if Connolly had been wise to come back to
Syrene. In times of emotional crisis—there had been others
though none so important as this—Connolly's reaction was
always the same. He would return again to the lovely island where
his charming, feckless parents had borne him and where he had
spent his youth. He was seeking now, Pearson knew well enough, the
contentment he had known only for one period of his life, and
which he had sought so vainly in the arms of Ruth and all those
others who had been unable to resist him.
Pearson was not attempting to criticize his unhappy friend. He
never passed judgments; he merely observed with a bright-eyed,
sympathetic interest that was hardly tolerance, since tolerance
implied the relaxation of standards which he had never
possessed….
After a restless night, Pearson finally dropped into a sleep so
sound that he awoke an hour later than usual. He had breakfast in
his room, then went down to the reception desk to see if there was
any reply from Ruth. Someone else had arrived in the night: two
traveling cases, obviously English, were stacked in a corner of
the hall, waiting for the porter to move them. Idly curious,
Pearson glanced at the labels to see who his compatriot might he.
Then he stiffened, looked hastily around, and hurried across to
the receptionist.
“This Englishwoman,” he said anxiously. “When did she
arrive?”
“An hour ago, Signor, on the morning boat.”
“Is she in now?”
The receptionist looked a little undecided, then capitulated
gracefully.
“No, Signor. She was in a great hurry, and asked me where she
could find Mr. Connolly. So I told her. I hope it was all
right.”
Pearson cursed under his breath. It was an incredible stroke of
bad luck, something he would never have dreamed of guarding
against. Maude White was a woman of even greater determination
than Connolly had hinted. Somehow she had discovered where he had
fled, and pride or desire or both had driven her to follow. That
she had come to this hotel was not surprising; it was an almost
inevitable choice for English visitors to Syrene.
As he climbed the road to the villa, Pearson fought against an
increasing sense of futility and uselessness. He had no idea what
he should do when he met Connolly and Maude. He merely felt a
vague yet urgent impulse to be helpful. If he could catch Maude
before she reached the villa, he might be able to convince her
that Connolly was a sick man and that her intervention could only
do harm. Yet was this true? It was perfectly possible that a
touching reconciliation had already taken place, and that neither
party had the least desire to see him.
They were talking together on the beautifully laid-out lawn in
front of the villa when Pearson turned through the gates and
paused for breath. Connolly was resting on a wrought-iron seat
beneath a palm tree, while Maude was pacing up and down a few
yards away. She was speaking swiftly; Pearson could not hear her
words, but from the intonation of her voice she was obviously
pleading with Connolly. It was an embarrassing situation. While
Pearson was still wondering whether to go forward, Connolly looked
up and caught sight of him. His face was a completely
expressionless mask; it showed neither welcome nor resentment.
At the interruption, Maude spun round to see who the intruder
was, and for the first time Pearson glimpsed her face. She was a
beautiful woman, but despair and anger had so twisted her features
that she looked like a figure from some Greek tragedy. She was
suffering not only the bitterness of being scorned, but the agony
of not knowing why.
Pearson's arrival must have acted as a trigger to her pent-up
emotions. She suddenly whirled away from him and turned toward
Connolly, who continued to watch her with lack-lustre eyes. For a
moment Pearson could not see what she was doing; then he cried in
horror: “Look out, Roy!”
Connolly moved with surprising speed, as if he had suddenly
emerged from a trance. He caught Maude's wrist, there was a brief
struggle, and then he was backing away from her, looking with
fascination at something in the palm of his hand. The woman stood
motionless, paralyzed with fear and shame, knuckles pressed
against her mouth.
Connolly gripped the pistol with his right hand and stroked it
lovingly with his left. There was a low moan from Maude.
“I only meant to frighten you, Roy! I swear it!”
“That's all right, my dear,” said Connolly softly. “I
believe you. There's nothing to worry about.” His voice was
perfectly natural. He turned toward Pearson, and gave him his old,
boyish smile.
“So this is what he was waiting for, Jack,” he
said. “I'm not going to disappoint him.”
“No!” gasped Pearson, white with terror. “Don't, Roy, for
God's sake!”
But Connolly was beyond the reach of his friend's entreaties as
he turned the pistol to his head. In that same moment Pearson knew
at last, with an awful clarity, that Omega was real and that Omega
would now be seeking for a new abode.
He never saw the flash of the gun or heard the feeble but
adequate explosion. The world he knew had faded from his sight,
and around him now were the fixed yet crawling mists of the blue
room. Staring from its center—as they had stared down the
ages at how many others?—were two vast and lidless eyes.
They were satiated for the moment, but for the moment only.