Necroscope by Brian Lumley

The DO had been standing at the window, white-faced, trembling; but now he snatched up a machine-pistol and rushed through to Galenski where he backed away from the outer door to the landing. On his way he grabbed blast grenades from Dragosani’s desk. At least he is a man! thought Dragosani, grudgingly.

Then came the DO’s yelp of horror, his cursing, the chatter of his machine-pistol, finally the tearing explosion of grenades where he armed them and dropped them down the stairwell. And coming immediately after the thunder of the explosives, the last message from the unknown call-sign:

‘No! No! Mother in heaven! My gunner has shot himself and now they’re coming through the gun slits! Hands without arms! Heads without bodies! I think I shall have to follow my gunner, for he is out of all this now. But these . . . remains! They crawl among the grenades! No -stop that!’ There came the distinct ch-ching of a grenade armed, more screaming and gibbering and sounds of chaos, and finally a massive burst of static following which – nothing.

The radio sat and hissed background static at itself. And suddenly the Chateau Bronnitsy seemed very quiet . . .

It was a quiet which couldn’t last. As the DO backed into Galenski’s office from the landing, where smoke and cordite stench curled up acridly from below, so Harry Keogh and his Tartar companions emerged from the Mobius continuum. They were there, in the anteroom, as if someone had suddenly switched them on.

The DO heard Galenski’s wail of abject terror and disbelief, whirled in a half-circle – and saw what Galenski had seen: a grim, smoke-grimed young man flanked by menacing mummy-things of black leather and gleaming white bone. The sight of them alone – right here, in this room with him – was almost sufficient to freeze him, unman him. But not quite. Life was dear.

Lips drawn back in a rictus of desperation and fear, the DO gurgled something meaningless and swung up his machine-pistol . . . only to be lifted off his feet and thrown back out onto the landing, his face turning to raw pulp as Harry discharged his last cartridge at point-blank range.

In another moment Harry’s companions had turned their attention to Galenski where he gibbered and gro­velled in a corner behind his desk, and Harry had stepped through into what was once Gregor Borowitz’s inner sanctum. Dragosani, in the act of hurling the extinct radio from its table, turned and saw him. His great jaws gaped his surprise; pointing an unsteady hand, he hissed like a snake, his red eyes blazing. And for the merest moment the two faced each other.

There had been dramatic changes in both men, but in Dragosani the differences could only be likened to a complete metamorphosis. Harry recognised him, yes, but in any other situation he could hardly have known him. As for Harry himself: little of his former personality or identity remained. He had inherited a great sum of talents and now surely transcended Homo sapiens. Indeed, both men were alien beings, and in that frozen moment as they stared at each other they knew it. Then –

Dragosani saw the shotgun in Harry’s hands but couldn’t know it was useless. Hissing his hatred and expecting at any moment to hear the weapon’s roar, he bounded to Borowitz’s great oak desk and fumbled for a machine-pistol. Harry reversed the shotgun, stepped forward and dealt the necromancer a crashing blow to the head and neck where he scrabbled at the desk. Dragosani was knocked flying, the machine-pistol thud­ding to the carpeted floor. He collided with a wall and for a moment stood there spread-eagled, then went into a crouch. And now he saw that the shotgun in Harry’s hands was broken where the stock joined the barrels, saw Harry’s eyes frantically searching the room for another weapon, saw that he had the advantage and needed no weapon made by men to finish this thing.

Galenski’s bubbling screams from the anteroom were suddenly cut off. Harry backed towards the half-open door. Dragosani wasn’t about to let him go. He leaped

forward, grabbed him by the shoulder and held him effortlessly with one hand at arm’s length.

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