"Bradbury, Ray - The Finnegan()" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bradbury Ray)
RAY BRADBURY - The Finnegan
RAY BRADBURY -
The Finnegan
To say that I
have been haunted for the rest of my life by the affair Finnegan, is to grossly
understate the events leading up to that final melancholy. Only now at three
score and ten can I write these words for an astonished constabulary who may
well run with picks and shovels to unearth my truths or bury my lies. The facts are
these: Three children
went astray and were missed. Their bodies were found in the midst of Chatham
Forest and each bore no marks of criminal assassination, but all had suffered
their life blood to be drained. Only their skin remained like that of some
discolored vineyard grapes withered by sunlight and no rain. From the
withered detritus of these innocents rose fresh rumors of vampires or similar
beasts with similar appetites. Such myths always pursue the facts to stun them
in their tracks. It could only have been a tombyard beast, it was said, that
fed on and destroyed three lives and mined three dozen more. The children
were buried in the most holy ground. Soon after, Sir Robert Merriweather,
pretender to the throne of Sherlock Holmes but modestly refusing the claim,
moved through the ten dozen doors of his antique house to come forth to search
for this terrible thief of life. With myself, I might add, to carry his brandy
and bumbershoot and warn him of underbrush pitfalls in that dark and mysterious
forest. Sir Robert
Merriweather? you say. Just that. Plus
the ten times ten plus twelve amazing doors in his shut-up house. Were the doors
used? Not one in nine. How had they appeared in Sir Robert's old manse? He had
shipped them in, as a collector of doors, from Rio, Paris, Rome, Tokyo and mid-America.
Once collected, he had stashed them, hinged, to be seen from both sides, on the
walls of his upper and lower chambers. There he conducted tours of these odd
portals for such antique fools as were ravished by the sight of the curiously
overdone, the undersimplified, the rococo, or some First Empire cast aside by
Napoleon's nephews, or seized from Hermann Goering who had in turn ransacked
the Louvre. Others, pelted by Oklahoma dust storms, were jostled home in
flatbeds cushioned by bright posters from carnivals buried in the wind-blown
desolations of 1936 America. Name your least favorite door, it was his. Name
the best quality, he owned it also, hidden and safe, true beauties behind
oblivion's portals. I had come to
see his doors, not the deaths. At his behest, that were commands, I had bought
my curiosity a steamship ticket and arrived to find Sir Robert involved not
with ten dozen doors, but some great dark door. A mysterious portal, still
un-found. And beneath? A tomb. Sir Robert
hurried the grand tour, opening and shutting panels rescued from Peking, long
buried near Etna, or filched from Nantucket. But his heart, gone sick, was not
in this what should have been delightful tour. He described
the spring rains that drenched the country to make things green, only to have
people to walk out in that fine weather and one week find the body of a boy
emptied of life through two incisions in his neck, and in the next weeks, the
bodies of the two girls. People shouted for the police and sat drinking in pubs,
their faces long and pale, while mothers locked their children home where
fathers lectured on the dooms that lay in Chatham Forest. "Will you
come with me," said Sir Robert at last, "on a very strange sad
picnic?" "I
will," I said. So we snapped
ourselves in weather-proofs, lugged a hamper of sandwiches and red wine and
plunged into the forest on a drear Sunday. There was time
as we moved down a hill into the dripping gloom of the trees, to recall what
the papers had said about the vanished children's bloodless flesh, the police
thrashing the forest ten dozen times, clueless, while the surrounding estates
slammed their doors drum-tight at sunset. "Rain.
Damn. Rain!" Sir Robert's s pale face stared up, his gray mustache
quivering over his thin mouth. He was sick and brittle and old. "Our
picnic will be ruined!" "Picnic?"
I said. "Will our killer join us for eats?" "I pray to
God he will," Sir Robert said. "Yes, pray to God he will." We walked
through a land that was now mists, now dim sunlight, now forest, now open
glade, until we came into a silent part of the woods, a silence made of the way
the trees grew wetly together and the way the green moss lay, in swards and
hillocks. Spring had not yet filled the empty trees. The sun was like an arctic
disc, withdrawn, cold and almost dead. "This is
the place," said Sir Robert at last. "Where the
children were found?" I inquired. "'Their
bodies empty as empty can be." I looked at the
glade and thought of the children and the people who had stood over them with
startled faces and the police who had come to whisper and touch and go away,
lost. "The
murderer was never apprehended?" "Not this
clever fellow. How observant are you.?" asked Sir Robert. "What do
you want observed?" "There's
the catch. The police slipped up. They were stupidly anthropomorphic about the
whole bloody mess, seeking a killer with two arms, two legs, a suit of clothes
and a knife. So hypnotized with their human concept of the killer that they
overlooked one obvious unbelievable fact about this place. So!" He gave his
cane a quick light tap on the earth. Something
happened. I stared at the ground. "Do that again," I whispered. "You saw
it?" "I thought
I saw a small trap door open and shut. May I have your cane?" He gave me the
cane. I tapped the ground. It happened
again. "A
spider!" I cried. "Gone! God, how quick!" "Finnegan,"
Sir Robert muttered. "What?"
"You know
the old saying: in again, out again, Finnegan. Here." With his
pen-knife, Sir Robert dug in the soil to lift an entire clod of earth, breaking
off bits to show me the tunnel. The spider, in panic, leaped out its small
wafer door and fell to the ground. Sir Robert
handed me the tunnel. "Like gray velvet. Feel. A model builder that small
chap. A tiny shelter, camouflaged, and him alert. He could hear a fly walk.
Then pounce out, seize, pop back, slam the lid!" "I didn't
know you loved Nature." "Loathe
it. But this wee chap, there's much we share. Doors. Hinges. Wouldn't consider
other arachnids. But my love of portals drew me to study this incredible
carpenter." Sir Robert worked the trap on its cob-web hinges. "What
craftsmanship! And it all ties to the tragedies!" "The
murdered children?" Sir Robert
nodded. "Notice any special thing about this forest?" "It's too
quiet." "Quiet!"
Sir Robert smiled weakly. "Vast quantities of silence. No familiar birds,
beetles, crickets, toads. Not a rustle or stir. The police didn't notice. Why
should they? But it was this absence of sound and motion in the glade that
prompted my wild theory about the murders." He toyed with
the amazing structure in his hands. "What
would you say if you could imagine a spider large enough, in a hideout big
enough, so that a running child might hear a vacuumed sound, be seized, and
vanish with a soft thud below. How say you?" Sir Robert stared at the
trees. "Poppycock and bilge? Yet, why not? Evolution, selection, growth,
mutations, and--pfft!" Again he tapped
with his cane. A trap door flew open, shut. "Finnegan," he said. The sky
darkened. "Rain!"
Casting a cold gray eye at the clouds, he stretched his frail hand to touch the
showers. "Damn! Arachnids hate rain. And so will our huge dark
Finnegan." "Finnegan!"
I cried, irritably. "I believe
in him, yes." "A spider
larger than a child?!" "Twice as
large!" The cold wind
blew a mizzle of rain over us. "Lord, I hate to leave. Quick, before we
go. Here." Sir Robert
raked away the old leaves with his cane, revealing two globular gray-brown
objects. "What are
they?" I bent. "Old cannonballs?" "No."
He cracked the grayish globes. "Soil, through and through." I touched the
crumbled bits. "Our
Finnegan excavates," said Sir Robert. "To make his tunnel. With his
large rake-like chelicerae he dislodges soils, works it into a ball, carries it
in his jaws and drops it beyond his hole." Sir Robert
displayed half a dozen pellets on his trembling palm. "Normal balls
evicted from a tiny trap door tunnel. Toy size." He knocked his cane on
the huge globes at our feet. "Explain those!" I laughed.
"The children must've made them with mud!" "Nonsense!"
cried Sir Robert irritably, glaring about at trees and earth. "By God,
somewhere, our dark beast lurks beneath his velvet lid. We might be standing on
it. Christ, don't stare! His door has beveled rims. Some architect, this
Finnegan. A genius at camouflage." Sir Robert
raved on and on, describing the dark earth, the arachnid, its fiddling legs,
its hungry mouth, as the wind roared and the trees shook. Suddenly, Sir
Robert flung up his cane. "No!"
he cried. I had no time
to turn. My flesh froze, my heart stopped. Something
snatched my spine. I thought I
heard a huge bottle uncorked, a lid sprung. Then this monstrous thing crawled
down my back. "Here!"
cried Sir Robert. "Now!" He struck with
his cane. I fell, dead weight. He thrust the thing from my spine. He lifted it.
The wind had
cracked the dead tree branch and knocked it on my back. Weakly, I tried
to rise, shivering. "Silly," I said, a dozen times. "Silly. Damn
awful silly!" "Silly,
no. Brandy, yes!" said Sir Robert. "Brandy?"
The sky was
very black now. The rain swarmed over us. Door after door
after door, and at last into Sir Robert's country house study. A warm rich room
where a fire smoldered on a drafty hearth. We devoured our sandwiches, waiting
for the rain to cease. Sir Robert estimated that it would stop by eight o'clock
when, by moonlight, we might return, ever so reluctantly, to Chatham Forest. I
remembered the fallen branch, its spidering touch, and drank both wine and
brandy. "The
silence in the forest," said Sir Robert, finishing his meal. "What
murderer could achieve such a silence?" "An
insanely clever man with a series of baited, poisoned traps, with liberal
quantities of insecticide, might kill off every bird, every rabbit, every
insect," I said. "Why
should he do that?" "To
convince us that there is a large spider nearby. To perfect his act." "We are
the only ones who have noticed this silence, the police did not. Why should a
murderer go to all that trouble for nothing?" "Why is a
murderer? you might well ask." "I am not
convinced." Sir Robert topped his food with wine. "This creature,
with a voracious mouth, has cleansed the forest. With nothing left, he seized
the children. The Silence, the murders, the prevalence of trap door spiders,
the large earth balls, it all fits." Sir Robert's
fingers crawled about the desk top, quite like a washed, manicured spider in
itself. He made a cup of his frail hands, held them up. "At the
bottom of a spider's burrow is a dust-bin into which drop insect remnants which
the spider has dined. Imagine the dust-bin of our Grand Finnegan!" I imagined. I
visioned a Great Legged thing fastened to its dark lid under the forest and a
child running, singing in the half light. A brisk insucked whisk of air, the
song cut short, then nothing but an empty glade and the echo of a softly
dropped lid, and beneath the dark earth the spider, fiddling, cabling, spinning
the stunned child in its silently orchestrating legs. What could the
dust-bin of such an incredible spider resemble? What the remnants of many
banquets? I shuddered. "Rain's
letting up." Sir Robert nodded his approval. "Back to the forest.
I've mapped the damned place for weeks. All the bodies were found in one
half-open glade. That's where the assassin, if it was a man, arrives! Or where
the unnatural silk-spinning, earth tunneling, architect of special doors,
abides his tomb." "Must I
hear all this?" I protested. "Listen
more." Sir Robert downed the last of his burgundy. "The poor
children's prolapsed corpses were found at thirteen day intervals. Which means
that every two weeks our loathsome eight-legged hide and seeker must feed.
Tonight is the 14th night after the last child was found, nothing but skin.
Tonight our hidden friend must hunger afresh. So! Within the hour, I shall
introduce you to Finnegan the great and horrible!" "All of
which," I said, "makes me want to drink." "Here I
go." Sir Robert stepped through one of his Louis the Fourteenth portals.
"To find the last and final and most awful door in all my life. You will
follow." Damn, yes! I
followed. The sun had
set, the rain was gone and the clouds cleared off to show a cold and troubled
moon. We moved in our own silence and the silence of the exhausted paths and
glades while Sir Robert handed me a small silver pistol. "Not that
that would help. Killing an outsize arachnid is sticky. Hard to know where to
fire the first shot. If you miss there'll be no time for a second. Damned
things, large or small, move in the instant!" "Thanks."
I took the weapon. 'I need a drink.". "Done."
Sir Robert handed me a silver brandy flask. "Drink as needed." I drank.
"What about you?" "I have my
own special flask." Sir Robert lifted it. "For the right time." "Why
wait?" "I must
surprise the beast and mustn't be drunk at the encounter. Four seconds before
the thing grabs me, I will imbibe of this dear Napoleon stuff, spiced with a
rude surprise." "Surprise?"
"Ah, wait.
You'll see. So will this dark thief of life. Now, dear sir, here we part
company. I this way, you yonder. Do you mind?" "Mind when
I'm scared gutless? What's that?" "Here. If
I should vanish." He handed me a sealed letter. "Read it aloud to the
constabulary. It will help them locate me and Finnegan, lost and found." "Please,
no details. I feel like a damned fool following you while Finnegan, if he
exists, is underfoot snug and warm, saying, 'ah, those idiots above run about,
freezing. I think I'll let them freeze." "One hopes
not. Get away now. If we walk together, he won't jump up. Alone, he'll peer out
the merest crack, glom the scene with a huge bright eye, flip down again, ssst,
and one of us gone to darkness." "Not me,
please. Not me." We walked on
about sixty feet apart and beginning to lose one another in the half moon
light. "Are you
there?" called Sir Robert, from half the world away in leafy dark. "I wish I
weren't," I yelled back. "Onward!"
cried Sir Robert. "Don't lose sight of me. Move closer. We're near on the
site. I can intuit, I almost feel --" As a final
cloud shifted, moonlight glowed brilliantly to show Sir Robert waving his arms
about like antennae, eyes half shut, gasping with expectation. "Closer,
closer," I heard him exhale. "Near on. Be still. Perhaps . . . "
He froze in
place. There was something in his aspect that made me want to leap, race, and
yank him off the turf he had chosen. "Sir
Robert, oh, God!" I cried. "Run!" He froze. One
hand and arm orchestrated the air, feeling, probing, while his other hand
delved, brought forth his silver-coated flask of brandy. He held it high in the
moonlight, a toast to doom. Then, afflicted with need, he took one, two, three,
my God, four incredible swigs! Arms out,
balancing the wind, tilting his head back, laughing like a boy, he swigged the
last of his mysterious drink. "All
right, Finnegan, below and beneath!" he cried. "Come get me!" He stomped his
foot. Cried out
victorious. And vanished. It was all over
in a second. A flicker, a
blur, a dark bush had grown up from the earth with a whisper, a suction, and
the thud of a body dropped and a door shut. The glade was
empty. "Sir
Robert. Quick!" But there was
no one to quicken. Not thinking that
I might be snatched and vanished, I lurched to the spot where Sir Robert had
drunk his wild toast. I stood staring
down at earth and leaves with not a sound save my heart beating while the
leaves blew away to reveal only pebbles, dry grass, and earth. I must have
lifted my head and bayed to the moon like a dog, then fell to my knees,
fearless, to dig for lids, for tunneled tombs where a voiceless tangle of legs
wove themselves, binding and mummifying a thing that had been my friend. This
is his final door, I thought, insanely, crying the name of my friend. I found only
his pipe, cane, and empty brandy flask, flung down when he had escaped night,
life, everything. Swaying up, I
fired the pistol six times here into the unanswering earth, a dumb thing gone
stupid as I finished and staggered over his instant graveyard, his locked-in
tomb, listening for muffled screams, shrieks, cries, but heard none. I ran in
circles, with no ammunition save my weeping shouts. I would have stayed all
night but a downpour of leaves, a great spidering flourish of broken branches
fell to panic and suffer my heart. I fled, still calling his name to a silence
lidded by clouds that hid the moon. At his estate I
beat on the door, wailing, yanking, until I recalled: it opened inward, it was
unlocked. Alone in the
library, with only liquor to help me live, I read the letter that Sir Robert
had left behind: My dear
Douglas: I am old and
have seen much but am not mad. Finnegan exists. My chemist had provided me with
a sure poison that I will mix in my brandy for our walk. I will drink all.
Finnegan, not knowing me as a poisoned morsel, will give me a swift invite. Now
you see me, now you don't. I will then be the weapon of his death, minutes
after my own. I do not think there is another outsize nightmare like him on
Earth. Once gone, that's the end. Being old, I am
immensely curious. I fear not death, for my physicians tell me that if no
accidents kill me, cancer will. I thought of
giving a poisoned rabbit to our nightmare assassin. But then I'd never know
where he was or if he really existed. Finnegan would die unseen in his
monstrous closet, and I never the wiser. This way, for one victorious moment, I
will know. Fear for me. Envy me. Pray for me. Sorry to abandon you without farewells.
Dear friend, carry on. I folded the
letter and wept. No more was
ever heard of him. Some say Sir
Robert killed himself, an actor in his own melodrama and that one day we shall
unearth his brooding, lost and Gothic body and that it was he who killed the
children and that his preoccupation with doors and hinges, and more doors that
led him, crazed, to study this one species of spider, and wildly plan and build
the most amazing door in history, an insane burrow into which he popped to die,
before my eyes, thus hoping to perpetuate the incredible Finnegan. But I have
found no burrow. I do not believe a man could construct such a pit, even given
Sir Robert's overwhelming passion for doors. I can only ask,
would a man murder, draw his victims' blood, build an earthen vault? For what
motive? Create the finest secret exit in all time? Madness. And what of those
large grayish balls of earth supposedly tossed forth from the spider's lair? Somewhere,
Finnegan and Sir Robert lie clasped in a velvet lined unmarked crypt, deep
under. Whether one is the paranoiac alter ego of the other, I cannot say. But
the murders have ceased. The rabbits once more rush in Chatham Glade and its
bushes teem with butterflies and birds. It is another spring, and the children run
again through a loud forest, no longer silent. Finnegan and
Sir Robert, requiescat in pace.
RAY BRADBURY - The Finnegan
RAY BRADBURY -
The Finnegan
To say that I
have been haunted for the rest of my life by the affair Finnegan, is to grossly
understate the events leading up to that final melancholy. Only now at three
score and ten can I write these words for an astonished constabulary who may
well run with picks and shovels to unearth my truths or bury my lies. The facts are
these: Three children
went astray and were missed. Their bodies were found in the midst of Chatham
Forest and each bore no marks of criminal assassination, but all had suffered
their life blood to be drained. Only their skin remained like that of some
discolored vineyard grapes withered by sunlight and no rain. From the
withered detritus of these innocents rose fresh rumors of vampires or similar
beasts with similar appetites. Such myths always pursue the facts to stun them
in their tracks. It could only have been a tombyard beast, it was said, that
fed on and destroyed three lives and mined three dozen more. The children
were buried in the most holy ground. Soon after, Sir Robert Merriweather,
pretender to the throne of Sherlock Holmes but modestly refusing the claim,
moved through the ten dozen doors of his antique house to come forth to search
for this terrible thief of life. With myself, I might add, to carry his brandy
and bumbershoot and warn him of underbrush pitfalls in that dark and mysterious
forest. Sir Robert
Merriweather? you say. Just that. Plus
the ten times ten plus twelve amazing doors in his shut-up house. Were the doors
used? Not one in nine. How had they appeared in Sir Robert's old manse? He had
shipped them in, as a collector of doors, from Rio, Paris, Rome, Tokyo and mid-America.
Once collected, he had stashed them, hinged, to be seen from both sides, on the
walls of his upper and lower chambers. There he conducted tours of these odd
portals for such antique fools as were ravished by the sight of the curiously
overdone, the undersimplified, the rococo, or some First Empire cast aside by
Napoleon's nephews, or seized from Hermann Goering who had in turn ransacked
the Louvre. Others, pelted by Oklahoma dust storms, were jostled home in
flatbeds cushioned by bright posters from carnivals buried in the wind-blown
desolations of 1936 America. Name your least favorite door, it was his. Name
the best quality, he owned it also, hidden and safe, true beauties behind
oblivion's portals. I had come to
see his doors, not the deaths. At his behest, that were commands, I had bought
my curiosity a steamship ticket and arrived to find Sir Robert involved not
with ten dozen doors, but some great dark door. A mysterious portal, still
un-found. And beneath? A tomb. Sir Robert
hurried the grand tour, opening and shutting panels rescued from Peking, long
buried near Etna, or filched from Nantucket. But his heart, gone sick, was not
in this what should have been delightful tour. He described
the spring rains that drenched the country to make things green, only to have
people to walk out in that fine weather and one week find the body of a boy
emptied of life through two incisions in his neck, and in the next weeks, the
bodies of the two girls. People shouted for the police and sat drinking in pubs,
their faces long and pale, while mothers locked their children home where
fathers lectured on the dooms that lay in Chatham Forest. "Will you
come with me," said Sir Robert at last, "on a very strange sad
picnic?" "I
will," I said. So we snapped
ourselves in weather-proofs, lugged a hamper of sandwiches and red wine and
plunged into the forest on a drear Sunday. There was time
as we moved down a hill into the dripping gloom of the trees, to recall what
the papers had said about the vanished children's bloodless flesh, the police
thrashing the forest ten dozen times, clueless, while the surrounding estates
slammed their doors drum-tight at sunset. "Rain.
Damn. Rain!" Sir Robert's s pale face stared up, his gray mustache
quivering over his thin mouth. He was sick and brittle and old. "Our
picnic will be ruined!" "Picnic?"
I said. "Will our killer join us for eats?" "I pray to
God he will," Sir Robert said. "Yes, pray to God he will." We walked
through a land that was now mists, now dim sunlight, now forest, now open
glade, until we came into a silent part of the woods, a silence made of the way
the trees grew wetly together and the way the green moss lay, in swards and
hillocks. Spring had not yet filled the empty trees. The sun was like an arctic
disc, withdrawn, cold and almost dead. "This is
the place," said Sir Robert at last. "Where the
children were found?" I inquired. "'Their
bodies empty as empty can be." I looked at the
glade and thought of the children and the people who had stood over them with
startled faces and the police who had come to whisper and touch and go away,
lost. "The
murderer was never apprehended?" "Not this
clever fellow. How observant are you.?" asked Sir Robert. "What do
you want observed?" "There's
the catch. The police slipped up. They were stupidly anthropomorphic about the
whole bloody mess, seeking a killer with two arms, two legs, a suit of clothes
and a knife. So hypnotized with their human concept of the killer that they
overlooked one obvious unbelievable fact about this place. So!" He gave his
cane a quick light tap on the earth. Something
happened. I stared at the ground. "Do that again," I whispered. "You saw
it?" "I thought
I saw a small trap door open and shut. May I have your cane?" He gave me the
cane. I tapped the ground. It happened
again. "A
spider!" I cried. "Gone! God, how quick!" "Finnegan,"
Sir Robert muttered. "What?"
"You know
the old saying: in again, out again, Finnegan. Here." With his
pen-knife, Sir Robert dug in the soil to lift an entire clod of earth, breaking
off bits to show me the tunnel. The spider, in panic, leaped out its small
wafer door and fell to the ground. Sir Robert
handed me the tunnel. "Like gray velvet. Feel. A model builder that small
chap. A tiny shelter, camouflaged, and him alert. He could hear a fly walk.
Then pounce out, seize, pop back, slam the lid!" "I didn't
know you loved Nature." "Loathe
it. But this wee chap, there's much we share. Doors. Hinges. Wouldn't consider
other arachnids. But my love of portals drew me to study this incredible
carpenter." Sir Robert worked the trap on its cob-web hinges. "What
craftsmanship! And it all ties to the tragedies!" "The
murdered children?" Sir Robert
nodded. "Notice any special thing about this forest?" "It's too
quiet." "Quiet!"
Sir Robert smiled weakly. "Vast quantities of silence. No familiar birds,
beetles, crickets, toads. Not a rustle or stir. The police didn't notice. Why
should they? But it was this absence of sound and motion in the glade that
prompted my wild theory about the murders." He toyed with
the amazing structure in his hands. "What
would you say if you could imagine a spider large enough, in a hideout big
enough, so that a running child might hear a vacuumed sound, be seized, and
vanish with a soft thud below. How say you?" Sir Robert stared at the
trees. "Poppycock and bilge? Yet, why not? Evolution, selection, growth,
mutations, and--pfft!" Again he tapped
with his cane. A trap door flew open, shut. "Finnegan," he said. The sky
darkened. "Rain!"
Casting a cold gray eye at the clouds, he stretched his frail hand to touch the
showers. "Damn! Arachnids hate rain. And so will our huge dark
Finnegan." "Finnegan!"
I cried, irritably. "I believe
in him, yes." "A spider
larger than a child?!" "Twice as
large!" The cold wind
blew a mizzle of rain over us. "Lord, I hate to leave. Quick, before we
go. Here." Sir Robert
raked away the old leaves with his cane, revealing two globular gray-brown
objects. "What are
they?" I bent. "Old cannonballs?" "No."
He cracked the grayish globes. "Soil, through and through." I touched the
crumbled bits. "Our
Finnegan excavates," said Sir Robert. "To make his tunnel. With his
large rake-like chelicerae he dislodges soils, works it into a ball, carries it
in his jaws and drops it beyond his hole." Sir Robert
displayed half a dozen pellets on his trembling palm. "Normal balls
evicted from a tiny trap door tunnel. Toy size." He knocked his cane on
the huge globes at our feet. "Explain those!" I laughed.
"The children must've made them with mud!" "Nonsense!"
cried Sir Robert irritably, glaring about at trees and earth. "By God,
somewhere, our dark beast lurks beneath his velvet lid. We might be standing on
it. Christ, don't stare! His door has beveled rims. Some architect, this
Finnegan. A genius at camouflage." Sir Robert
raved on and on, describing the dark earth, the arachnid, its fiddling legs,
its hungry mouth, as the wind roared and the trees shook. Suddenly, Sir
Robert flung up his cane. "No!"
he cried. I had no time
to turn. My flesh froze, my heart stopped. Something
snatched my spine. I thought I
heard a huge bottle uncorked, a lid sprung. Then this monstrous thing crawled
down my back. "Here!"
cried Sir Robert. "Now!" He struck with
his cane. I fell, dead weight. He thrust the thing from my spine. He lifted it.
The wind had
cracked the dead tree branch and knocked it on my back. Weakly, I tried
to rise, shivering. "Silly," I said, a dozen times. "Silly. Damn
awful silly!" "Silly,
no. Brandy, yes!" said Sir Robert. "Brandy?" The sky was
very black now. The rain swarmed over us. Door after door
after door, and at last into Sir Robert's country house study. A warm rich room
where a fire smoldered on a drafty hearth. We devoured our sandwiches, waiting
for the rain to cease. Sir Robert estimated that it would stop by eight o'clock
when, by moonlight, we might return, ever so reluctantly, to Chatham Forest. I
remembered the fallen branch, its spidering touch, and drank both wine and
brandy. "The
silence in the forest," said Sir Robert, finishing his meal. "What
murderer could achieve such a silence?" "An
insanely clever man with a series of baited, poisoned traps, with liberal
quantities of insecticide, might kill off every bird, every rabbit, every
insect," I said. "Why
should he do that?" "To
convince us that there is a large spider nearby. To perfect his act." "We are
the only ones who have noticed this silence, the police did not. Why should a
murderer go to all that trouble for nothing?" "Why is a
murderer? you might well ask." "I am not
convinced." Sir Robert topped his food with wine. "This creature,
with a voracious mouth, has cleansed the forest. With nothing left, he seized
the children. The Silence, the murders, the prevalence of trap door spiders,
the large earth balls, it all fits." Sir Robert's
fingers crawled about the desk top, quite like a washed, manicured spider in
itself. He made a cup of his frail hands, held them up. "At the
bottom of a spider's burrow is a dust-bin into which drop insect remnants which
the spider has dined. Imagine the dust-bin of our Grand Finnegan!" I imagined. I
visioned a Great Legged thing fastened to its dark lid under the forest and a
child running, singing in the half light. A brisk insucked whisk of air, the
song cut short, then nothing but an empty glade and the echo of a softly
dropped lid, and beneath the dark earth the spider, fiddling, cabling, spinning
the stunned child in its silently orchestrating legs. What could the
dust-bin of such an incredible spider resemble? What the remnants of many
banquets? I shuddered. "Rain's
letting up." Sir Robert nodded his approval. "Back to the forest.
I've mapped the damned place for weeks. All the bodies were found in one
half-open glade. That's where the assassin, if it was a man, arrives! Or where
the unnatural silk-spinning, earth tunneling, architect of special doors,
abides his tomb." "Must I
hear all this?" I protested. "Listen
more." Sir Robert downed the last of his burgundy. "The poor
children's prolapsed corpses were found at thirteen day intervals. Which means
that every two weeks our loathsome eight-legged hide and seeker must feed.
Tonight is the 14th night after the last child was found, nothing but skin.
Tonight our hidden friend must hunger afresh. So! Within the hour, I shall
introduce you to Finnegan the great and horrible!" "All of
which," I said, "makes me want to drink." "Here I
go." Sir Robert stepped through one of his Louis the Fourteenth portals.
"To find the last and final and most awful door in all my life. You will
follow." Damn, yes! I
followed. The sun had
set, the rain was gone and the clouds cleared off to show a cold and troubled
moon. We moved in our own silence and the silence of the exhausted paths and
glades while Sir Robert handed me a small silver pistol. "Not that
that would help. Killing an outsize arachnid is sticky. Hard to know where to
fire the first shot. If you miss there'll be no time for a second. Damned
things, large or small, move in the instant!" "Thanks."
I took the weapon. 'I need a drink.". "Done."
Sir Robert handed me a silver brandy flask. "Drink as needed." I drank.
"What about you?" "I have my
own special flask." Sir Robert lifted it. "For the right time." "Why
wait?" "I must
surprise the beast and mustn't be drunk at the encounter. Four seconds before
the thing grabs me, I will imbibe of this dear Napoleon stuff, spiced with a
rude surprise." "Surprise?"
"Ah, wait.
You'll see. So will this dark thief of life. Now, dear sir, here we part
company. I this way, you yonder. Do you mind?" "Mind when
I'm scared gutless? What's that?" "Here. If
I should vanish." He handed me a sealed letter. "Read it aloud to the
constabulary. It will help them locate me and Finnegan, lost and found." "Please,
no details. I feel like a damned fool following you while Finnegan, if he
exists, is underfoot snug and warm, saying, 'ah, those idiots above run about,
freezing. I think I'll let them freeze." "One hopes
not. Get away now. If we walk together, he won't jump up. Alone, he'll peer out
the merest crack, glom the scene with a huge bright eye, flip down again, ssst,
and one of us gone to darkness." "Not me,
please. Not me." We walked on
about sixty feet apart and beginning to lose one another in the half moon
light. "Are you
there?" called Sir Robert, from half the world away in leafy dark. "I wish I
weren't," I yelled back. "Onward!"
cried Sir Robert. "Don't lose sight of me. Move closer. We're near on the
site. I can intuit, I almost feel --" As a final
cloud shifted, moonlight glowed brilliantly to show Sir Robert waving his arms
about like antennae, eyes half shut, gasping with expectation. "Closer,
closer," I heard him exhale. "Near on. Be still. Perhaps . . . "
He froze in
place. There was something in his aspect that made me want to leap, race, and
yank him off the turf he had chosen. "Sir
Robert, oh, God!" I cried. "Run!" He froze. One
hand and arm orchestrated the air, feeling, probing, while his other hand
delved, brought forth his silver-coated flask of brandy. He held it high in the
moonlight, a toast to doom. Then, afflicted with need, he took one, two, three,
my God, four incredible swigs! Arms out,
balancing the wind, tilting his head back, laughing like a boy, he swigged the
last of his mysterious drink. "All
right, Finnegan, below and beneath!" he cried. "Come get me!" He stomped his
foot. Cried out
victorious. And vanished. It was all over
in a second. A flicker, a
blur, a dark bush had grown up from the earth with a whisper, a suction, and
the thud of a body dropped and a door shut. The glade was
empty. "Sir
Robert. Quick!" But there was
no one to quicken. Not thinking that
I might be snatched and vanished, I lurched to the spot where Sir Robert had
drunk his wild toast. I stood staring
down at earth and leaves with not a sound save my heart beating while the
leaves blew away to reveal only pebbles, dry grass, and earth. I must have
lifted my head and bayed to the moon like a dog, then fell to my knees,
fearless, to dig for lids, for tunneled tombs where a voiceless tangle of legs
wove themselves, binding and mummifying a thing that had been my friend. This
is his final door, I thought, insanely, crying the name of my friend. I found only
his pipe, cane, and empty brandy flask, flung down when he had escaped night,
life, everything. Swaying up, I
fired the pistol six times here into the unanswering earth, a dumb thing gone
stupid as I finished and staggered over his instant graveyard, his locked-in
tomb, listening for muffled screams, shrieks, cries, but heard none. I ran in
circles, with no ammunition save my weeping shouts. I would have stayed all
night but a downpour of leaves, a great spidering flourish of broken branches
fell to panic and suffer my heart. I fled, still calling his name to a silence
lidded by clouds that hid the moon. At his estate I
beat on the door, wailing, yanking, until I recalled: it opened inward, it was
unlocked. Alone in the
library, with only liquor to help me live, I read the letter that Sir Robert
had left behind: My dear
Douglas: I am old and
have seen much but am not mad. Finnegan exists. My chemist had provided me with
a sure poison that I will mix in my brandy for our walk. I will drink all.
Finnegan, not knowing me as a poisoned morsel, will give me a swift invite. Now
you see me, now you don't. I will then be the weapon of his death, minutes
after my own. I do not think there is another outsize nightmare like him on
Earth. Once gone, that's the end. Being old, I am
immensely curious. I fear not death, for my physicians tell me that if no
accidents kill me, cancer will. I thought of
giving a poisoned rabbit to our nightmare assassin. But then I'd never know
where he was or if he really existed. Finnegan would die unseen in his
monstrous closet, and I never the wiser. This way, for one victorious moment, I
will know. Fear for me. Envy me. Pray for me. Sorry to abandon you without farewells.
Dear friend, carry on. I folded the
letter and wept. No more was
ever heard of him. Some say Sir
Robert killed himself, an actor in his own melodrama and that one day we shall
unearth his brooding, lost and Gothic body and that it was he who killed the
children and that his preoccupation with doors and hinges, and more doors that
led him, crazed, to study this one species of spider, and wildly plan and build
the most amazing door in history, an insane burrow into which he popped to die,
before my eyes, thus hoping to perpetuate the incredible Finnegan. But I have
found no burrow. I do not believe a man could construct such a pit, even given
Sir Robert's overwhelming passion for doors. I can only ask,
would a man murder, draw his victims' blood, build an earthen vault? For what
motive? Create the finest secret exit in all time? Madness. And what of those
large grayish balls of earth supposedly tossed forth from the spider's lair? Somewhere,
Finnegan and Sir Robert lie clasped in a velvet lined unmarked crypt, deep
under. Whether one is the paranoiac alter ego of the other, I cannot say. But
the murders have ceased. The rabbits once more rush in Chatham Glade and its
bushes teem with butterflies and birds. It is another spring, and the children run
again through a loud forest, no longer silent. Finnegan and
Sir Robert, requiescat in pace.