Deadspawn by Brian Lumley

Harry wondered: Oh, really? But out loud he only said: ‘Thanks.’

‘How in hell did you do that?’ Clarke was still excited. If it was all a sham he was good at it. ‘I mean, wreck the castle that way? If we’ve got it right it was devastating! Is that how Janos died, in the explosion?’

‘Slow down,’ Harry told him, taking his arm. ‘We can talk while you take me to see this girl.’

The other’s excitement quickly ebbed. ‘Yes,’ he nodded, his tone subdued now, ‘and that’s something else, too. You won’t like it, Harry.’

‘So what’s new?’ The Necroscope seemed as calm (resigned, soulful, sardonic?) as ever. And though he tried not to show it, Clarke suspected he was wary, too. ‘Did you ever show me anything I did like?’

But Clarke had an answer to that one. ‘If everything was the way we’d like it, Harry,’ he said, ‘then we’d all be out of work. Me, I’d gladly retire tomorrow. I keep threatening to. But when I see something like . . . like I’m going to show you, then I know that someone has to do it.’

As they started up the esplanade, Harry said: ‘Now this is a castle!’ His voice was more animated now. ‘But as for the Castle Ferenczy: that was a heap long before I got started on it. You asked how I did it?’

He sighed, then continued: ‘A long time ago, toward the end of the Bodescu affair, I learned about an ammo and explosives dump in Kolomyya and used stuff from there to blow up the Chateau Bronnitsy. Well, since the easy way is often the best way, I did it again. I made two or three trips, Möbius trips, and put enough plastic explosive into the foundations of Janos’s place to blow it to hell! I’m not even going to guess what was in the guts of that place, but I’m sure there was – stuff- there which even I didn’t see and still don’t want to. You know, Darcy, even a finger-end of Semtex will blow bricks right out of a wall? So you can imagine what a couple of hundredweight will do. If there was anything there that we might call “alive”,’ he shrugged and shook his head, ‘it wasn’t when I’d finished.’

While Harry talked, the head of E-Branch studied him. But not so intently that he would notice. He seemed exactly the same man Clarke had come to Edinburgh to see just a month ago, a visit which had ended for Clarke in Rhodes and the islands of the Dodecanese, and for Harry in the mountains of Transylvania. He seemed the same, but was he? For the fact was, Darcy Clarke knew someone who said he wasn’t.

Harry Keogh was a composite. He was two men: the mind of one and the body of another. The mind was Keogh and the body was … it had once been Alec Kyle. And Clarke had known Kyle, too, in his time. The strangest thing was this: that as time progressed, so the Kyle face and form got to look more like the old Harry, whose body was dead. But that was something which always made Clarke’s brain spin. He skipped it, put the metaphysical right out of his mind and studied the purely physical.

The Necroscope was perhaps forty-three or forty-four but looked five years younger. But of course that was only the body; the mind was five years younger again. Even thinking about someone like Harry Keogh was a weird business. And again Clarke forced himself to concentrate on the physical.

Harry’s eyes were honey-brown, occasionally defensive and frequently puppy-soulful – or would be if one could see under those wedge-sided sunglasses he was wearing in the shade of his broad-brimmed 1930s hat. If there was one thing in all the world Clarke hated to see, it had to be Harry wearing those dark-lensed glasses and that hat. Anyone else, no problem. But not Harry, and not now. Especially the sunglasses. They were something Clarke had told himself to look out for; for while it was a common enough thing to wear such in the Greek islands in late April or early May, it was quite another to see them in Edinburgh at that time of year. Unless someone had weak eyes. Or different eyes . . .

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