“I didn't!” Blaine cried.
“You did! You aren't human! You aren't natural! Everything shuns you except your friend the dead man! Why aren't you dead, murderer!”
Blaine's fist moved toward the painting. The thin voice screamed, “Don't!”
“Will you leave me alone?” Blaine asked.
“Put down the painting,” Reilly begged.
Blaine put it carefully down.
“I'll leave you alone,” Reilly said. “Why shouldn't I? There are things you can't see, Blaine, but I see them. Your time on Earth will be short, very short, painfully short. Those you trust will betray you, those you hate will conquer you. You will die, Blaine, not in years but soon, sooner than you could believe. You'll be betrayed, and you'll die by your own hand.”
“You’re crazy!” Blaine shouted.
“Am I?” Reilly cackled. “Am I? Am I?” The silvery mist vanished. Reilly was gone.
Smith led him back through narrow winding passageways to the street level. Outside the air was chilly, and dawn had touched the tall buildings with red and gray.
Blaine started to thank him, but Smith shook his head. “No reason for thanks! After all, I need you, Blaine. Where would I be if the poltergeist killed you? Take care of yourself, be careful. Nothing is possible for me without you.”
The zombie gazed anxiously at him for a moment, then hurried away. Blaine watched him go, wondering if it wouldn't be better to have a dozen enemies than Smith for a friend.
21
Half an hour later he was at Marie Thorne's apartment. Marie, without makeup, dressed in a housecoat, blinked sleepily and led him to the kitchen, where she dialed coffee, toast and scrambled eggs.
“I wish,” she said, “you'd make your dramatic appearances at a decent hour. It's six-thirty in the morning.”
“I'll try to do better in the future,” Blaine said cheerfully.
“You said you'd call. What happened to you?”
“Did you worry?”
“Not in the slightest. What happened?”
Between bites of toast Blaine told her about the hunt, the haunting, and the exorcism. She listened to it all, then said, “So you’re obviously very proud of yourself, and I guess you should be. But you still don't know what Smith wants from you, or even who he is.”
“Haven't the slightest idea,” Blaine said. “Smith doesn't, either. Frankly, I couldn't care less.”
“What happens when he finds out?”
“I'll worry about that when it happens.”
Marie raised both eyebrows but made no comment. “Tom, what are your plans now?”
“I'm going to get a job.”
“As a hunter?”
“No. Logical or not, I'm going to try the yacht design agencies. Then I'm going to come around here and bother you at reasonable hours. How does that sound?”
“Impractical. Do you want some good advice?”
“No.”
“I'm giving it to you anyhow. Tom, get out of New York. Go as far away as you can. Go to Fiji or Samoa.”
“Why should I?”
Marie began to pace restlessly up and down the kitchen. “You simply don't understand this world.”
“I think I do.”
“No! Tom, you've had a few typical experiences, that's all. But that doesn't mean you've assimilated our culture. You've been snatched, haunted, and you've gone on a hunt. But it adds up to not much more than a guided tour. Reilly was right, you’re as lost and helpless as a caveman would be in your own 1958.”
“That's ridiculous, and I object to the comparison.”
“All right, let's make it a 14th century Chinese. Suppose this hypothetical Chinaman had met a gangster, gone on a bus ride and seen Coney Island. Would you say he understood 20th century America?”
“Of course not. But what's the point?”
“The point,” she said, “is that you aren't safe here, and you can't even sense what or where or how urgent the dangers are. For one, that damned Smith is after you. Next, Reilly's heirs might not take kindly to you desecrating his tomb; they might find it necessary to do something about it. And the directors at Rex are still arguing about what they should do about you. You've altered things, changed things, disrupted things. Can't you feel it?”
“I can handle Smith,” Blaine said. “To hell with Reilly's heirs. As for the directors, what can they do to me?”
She came over to him and put her arms around his neck. “Tom,” she said earnestly, “any man born here who found himself in your shoes would run as fast as he could!”
Blaine held her close for a moment and stroked her sleek dark hair. She cared for him, she wanted him to be safe. But he was in no mood for warnings. He had survived the dangers of the hunt, had passed through the iron door into the underworld and won through again to the light. Now, sitting in Marie's sunny kitchen, he felt elated and at peace with the world. Danger seemed an academic problem not worthy of discussion at the moment, and the idea of running away from New York was absurd.
“Tell me,” Blaine said lightly, “among the things I've disrupted — is one of them you?”
“I'm probably going to lose my job, if that's what you mean.”
“That's not what I mean.”
“Then you should know the answer… Tom, will you please get out of New York?”
“No. And please stop sounding so panicky.”
“Oh Lord,” she sighed, “We talk the same language but I'm not getting through. You don't understand. Let me try an example.” She thought for a moment. “Suppose a man owned a sailboat —”
“Do you sail?” Blaine asked.
“Yes, I love sailing. Tom, listen to me! Suppose a man owned a sailboat in which he was planning an ocean voyage —”
“Across the sea of life,” Blaine filled in.
“You’re not funny,” she said, looking very pretty and serious. “This man doesn't know anything about boats. He sees it floating, nicely painted, everything in place. He can't imagine any danger. Then you look the boat over. You see that the frames are cracked, teredos have gotten into the rudder post, there's dry rot in the mast step, the sails are mildewed, the keel bolts are rusted, and the fastenings are ready to let go.”
“Where'd you learn so much about boats?” Blaine asked.
“I've been sailing since I was a kid. Will you please pay attention? You tell that man his boat is not seaworthy, the first gale is likely to sink him.”
“We'll have to go sailing sometime,” Blaine said.
“But this man,” Marie continued doggedly, “doesn't know anything about boats. The thing looks all right. And the hell of it is, you can't tell him exactly what is going to happen, or when. Maybe the boat will hold together for a month, or a year, or maybe only a week. Maybe the keel bolts will go first, or perhaps it'll be the mast. You just don't know. And that's the situation here. I can't tell you what's going to happen, or when. I just know you’re unseaworthy. You must get out of here!”
She looked at him hopefully. Blaine nodded and said, “You'll make one hell of a crew.”
“So you’re not going?”
“No. I've been up all night. The only place I'm going now is to bed. Would you care to join me?”
“Go to hell!”
“Darling, please! Where's your pity for a homeless wanderer from the past?”
“I'm going out,” she said. “Help yourself to the bedroom. You'd better think about what I told you.”
“Sure,” Blaine said. “But why should I worry when I have you looking out for me?”
“Smith's looking for you, too,” she reminded him. She kissed him quickly and left the room.
Blaine finished his breakfast and turned in. He awoke in the early afternoon. Marie still hadn't returned, so before leaving he wrote her a cheerful note with the address of his hotel.