"Pete!" she cried. "Then it's really true. You are back again."
"Why, of course," said Maxwell.
"I saw it in the papers, but I didn't quite believe it. I thought it was a hoax or a gag of some sort."
"But you invited me," said Maxwell.
"Invited you?"
She wasn't kidding him. He could see she wasn't kidding.
"You mean you didn't send the Shrimp..."
"The Shrimp?"
"Well, a thing that looked like an overgrown shrimp."
She shook her head and, watching her face, Maxwell saw, with something of a shock, that she was growing old. There were many tiny wrinkles around the corners of her eyes that cosmetics failed to hide.
"A thing that looked like a shrimp," he said. "Said it was running errands for you. It said I was invited to the party. It said a car would be sent to fetch me. It even brought me clothes, because it said-"
"Pete," said Nancy, "please believe me. I did none of this. I did not invite you, but I'm glad you're here."
She moved closer and lay a hand upon his arm. Her face crinkled in a giggle. "And I'll be interested in hearing about what happened between you and Mr. Marmaduke."
"That I'm sorry about," said Maxwell.
"No need to be. He's my guest, of course, and one must be considerate of guests, but he's a really terrible person. Pete, he's basically a bore and a snob and-"
"Not now," Maxwell warned her softly.
Mr. Marmaduke had disengaged himself from the circle of guests and was wheeling across the floor toward them. Nancy turned to face him.
"You're all right?" she asked. "You really are all right?"
"Very right," said Mr. Marmaduke.
He wheeled close to Maxwell and an arm extruded from the top of his roly-poly body-a ropelike, flexible arm more like a tentacle than arm, with three clawlike fingers on the end of it. He reached out with it and draped it around Maxwell's shoulders. At the pressure of it, Maxwell had the instinct to shrink away, but with an exercise of conscious will, forced himself not to stir.
"I thank you, sir," said Mr. Marmaduke. "I am most grateful to you. You saved my life perhaps. Just as I fell I saw you leap upon the beast. It was most heroic."
Pressed tight against Maxwell's side, Sylvester lifted his head, dropped his lower jaw, exhibiting his fangs in a silent snarl.
"He would not have hurt you, sir," said Carol. "He's as gentle as a kitten. If you had not run, he'd not have chased you. He had the fool idea that you were playing with him. Sylvester likes to play."
Sylvester yawned, with a fine display of teeth.
"This play," said Mr. Marmaduke, "I do not care about."
"When I saw you fall," said Maxwell, "I was fearful for you. I thought for a moment you would burst wide open."
"Oh, no need of fear," said Mr. Marmaduke. "I am extremely resilient. The body is made of excellent material. It is strong and has a bouncing quality."
He removed his arm from Maxwell's shoulder and it ran like an oily rope, writhing in the air, to plop back into his body. There was no mark on the body surface, Maxwell noticed, to indicate where it might have disappeared.
"You'll excuse me, please," said Mr. Marmaduke. "There's someone I must see." He wheeled about and rolled rapidly away.
Nancy shuddered. "He gives me the creeps," she said. "Although I must admit he is a great attraction. It isn't every hostess who can snag a Wheeler. I don't mind telling you, Pete, that I pulled a lot of wires to get him for a house guest and now I wish I hadn't. There's a slimy feel about him."
"Do you know why he'd be here-here on Earth, I mean?"
"No, I don't. I get the impression that he's a simple tourist. Although I don't imagine such a creature could be a simple tourist."
"I think you're right," said Maxwell.
"Pete," she said, "tell me about yourself. The papers say-"
He grinned. "I know. That I came back from the dead." "But you didn't, really. I know that's not possible. Who was that we buried? Everyone, you must understand, simply everyone, was at the funeral and we all thought it was you. But it couldn't have been you. Whatever could have-"
"Nancy," said Maxwell, "I came back only yesterday. I found that I was dead and that my apartment had been rented and that I had lost my job and-"
"It seems impossible," said Nancy. "Such things just don't happen. I don't see how this happened."
"I'm not entirely clear about it all myself," Maxwell told her. "Later, I suppose, I'll find out more about it."
"Anyway," said Nancy, "you are here and everything's all right and if you don't want to talk about it, I'll circulate the word that you would rather not."
"That's kind of you," said Maxwell, "but it wouldn't work."
"You don't need to worry about newspapermen," said Nancy. "There are no newspaper people here. I used to let them come. A handpicked few, ones I thought that I could trust. But you can't trust any of them. I found that out the hard way. So you won't be bothered with them."
"I understand you have a painting..."
"You know about the painting, then. Let's go and look at it. It's the proudest thing I have. Imagine it, a Lambert! And one that had dropped entirely out of sight. I'll tell you later how it happened to be found, but I won't tell you what it cost me. I won't tell anyone. I'm ashamed of what it cost me."
"Much or little?"
"Much," said Nancy, "and you have to be so careful. It's so easy to be swindled. I wouldn't even talk of buying it until I had it examined by an expert. In fact, two experts. One to check against the other, although I suppose that was unnecessary."
"But there's no doubt it is a Lambert?" ever painted quite like Lambert. But he could be copied, of course, and I had to be sure."
"What do you know about Lambert?" Maxwell asked.
"Something more than the rest of us? Something that's not found its way into books?"
"No. Really not a great deal. Not about the man himself. Why do you ask?"
"Because you are so excited."
"Well, really! Just finding an unknown Lambert is enough, of course. I have two other paintings of his, but this one is something special because it had been lost. Well, actually I don't know if lost is the word or not. Never known, perhaps, would be better. No record of his ever painting it. No record that survived, at least. And it is one of his so-called grotesques. You would hardly think one of them could be lost or mislaid or whatever happened to it. One of his earlier ones, that might be understandable."
They worked their way across the floor, skirting the little clustered groups of guests.
"Here it is," said Nancy.
They had pushed their way through a crowd that had been grouped in front of the wall on which the painting hung. Maxwell tilted his head to stare up at it.
It was somehow different than the color plates he had seen in the library that morning. This was because, he told himself, of the larger size of the painting, the brilliance and the clarity of color, some of which had been lost in the color plates. But this, he realized, was not all of it. The landscape was different and the creatures in it. A more Earth-like landscape-the sweep of gray hills and the brown of the shrubby vegetation that lay upon the land, the squatty fernlike trees. A troop of creatures that could be gnomes wended their way across a distant hill; a goblinlike creature sitting at the base of a tree leaned back against the bole, apparently asleep, with some sort of hat pulled down across his eyes. And others-fearsome, leering creatures, with obscene bodies and faces that made the blood run cold.