Necroscope by Brian Lumley

Inching his chair forward again, his eyes spied some­thing in the back of the open drawer. A Browning 9mm automatic. He’d known Gormley carried a weapon but hadn’t known about this one. But would the gun be loaded, and if it was would it be any good against this?

‘No,’ said the naked apparition with a slow, almost imperceptible shake of its head. ‘No it wouldn’t.’ Which was all the more surprising because its lips didn’t move by the smallest fraction of an inch!

‘Jesus Christ!’ Kyle gasped again, out loud this time, as he once more gave an involuntary start away from the desk. And then, controlling himself, to himself, he said:

You . . . you read my mind!

The apparition smiled a thin smile. ‘We all have our talents, Alec. You have yours and I have mine.’

Kyle’s lower jaw, already agape, now fell open. He wondered which would be easier: to simply think at the thing or to talk to it.

‘Just talk to me,’ said the other. ‘I think that will be easier for both of us.’

Kyle gulped, tried to say something, gulped again and finally gasped out: ‘But who . . . what . . . what the hell are you?’

‘Who I am doesn’t matter. What I have been and will be does. Now listen, I’ve a lot to tell you and it’s all rather important. It will take some time, hours maybe. Do you need anything before I begin?’

Kyle stared hard at the … whatever it was. He stared at it, jerked his eyes away from it, peered at it out of the corner of his eye. It was still there. He surrendered to instinct backed up by at least two of his five senses, those of sight and hearing. The thing seemed rational; it existed; it wanted to talk to him. Why him and why now? Doubtless he’d shortly be finding out. But – God damn! -he wanted to talk to it, too. He had a real live ghost here, or a real dead one!

‘Need anything?’ he shakily repeated the other’s question.

‘You were going to light a cigarette,’ the apparition pointed out. ‘You might also like to take your coat off, get yourself a coffee.’ It shrugged. ‘If you do these things first, then we can get on with it.’

The central heating had come on, turning itself up a notch to compensate for the sudden fall in temperature. Kyle carefully stood up, took off his overcoat and folded it over the back of his chair. ‘Coffee,’ he said. ‘Yes – er, I’ll just be a moment.’

He walked round the desk and past his visitor. It turned to watch him leave the room, a pale shadow of a thing floating there, skinny, insubstantial as a snowflake, a puff of smoke. And yet. . .oh, yes, there was a power in it. Kyle was thankful it didn’t follow him . . .

He put two five-pence pieces in the coffee machine in the main office, fumbling the coins into the slot, and headed for the gents’ toilet before the machine could deliver. He quickly relieved himself, picked up his steam­ing paper cup of coffee on the way back to Gormley’s office. The thing was still there, waiting for him. He carefully walked round it, seated himself again at the desk.

And as he lit a cigarette he looked at his visitor more closely, in greater detail. This was something he had to get fixed in his mind.

Taking into account the fact that its feet weren’t quite touching the floor, it must be about five-ten in height. If its flesh was real instead of milky mist, it – or he – would weigh maybe nine stone. Everything about him was vaguely luminous, as if shining with some faint inner light, so Kyle couldn’t be sure about colouring. His hair, an untidy mop, seemed sandy. Faint and irregular marks on his high cheeks and forehead might be freckles. He would be, oh, maybe twenty-five years old; he had looked younger at first but that effect was wearing off now.

His eyes were interesting. They looked at Kyle and yet seemed to look right through him, as if he were the ghost and not the other way about. They were blue, those eyes – that startlingly colourless blue which always looks so unnatural, so that you think the owner must be wearing lenses. But more than that, there was that in those eyes which said they knew more than any twenty-five-year-old had any right knowing. The wisdom of ages seemed locked in them, the knowledge of centuries lay just beneath the faintly blue film which covered them.

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