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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Six Fingers of Time, by R.&nbsp;A. Lafferty
+ </title>
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+
+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Six Fingers of Time, by Raphael Aloysius Lafferty
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Six Fingers of Time
+
+Author: Raphael Aloysius Lafferty
+
+Release Date: March 16, 2010 [EBook #31663]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIX FINGERS OF TIME ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Irma Spehar and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="tn">
+
+<h5>Transcriber's Note</h5>
+
+<p>This etext was produced from the September 1960 issue of If.
+Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.&nbsp;S.
+copyright on this publication was renewed. Obvious printer's and
+punctuation errors have been fixed. Original page numbers have
+been retained.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/i108.jpg" width="400" height="593" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<table summary="titlepage">
+<tr><td><h1><span style="padding-right: 4em">THE</span><br />
+<span style="padding-right: 1em">SIX</span><br />
+FINGERS OF<br />
+<span style="padding-left: 1em">TIME</span></h1></td>
+
+<td style="padding-left: 2em"><div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/i109.jpg" width="200" height="361" alt="" title="" />
+</div></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Time is money.<br /></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+<span class="i0">Time heals all wounds.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Given time,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">anything is possible.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And now he had all the<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">time in the world!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="author"><b>By R.&nbsp;A. LAFFERTY</b><br />
+
+<small>Illustrated by GAUGHAN</small></p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">H</span>e began</span> by breaking
+things that morning. He
+broke the glass of water on
+his night stand. He knocked
+it crazily against the opposite
+wall and shattered it. Yet it
+shattered slowly. This would
+have surprised him if he had
+been fully awake, for he had
+only reached out sleepily for
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Nor had he wakened regularly
+to his alarm; he had
+wakened to a weird, slow, low
+booming, yet the clock said
+six, time for the alarm. And
+the low boom, when it came
+again, seemed to come from
+the clock.</p>
+
+<p>He reached out and touched
+it gently, but it floated off the
+stand at his touch and bounced
+around slowly on the floor.
+And when he picked it up
+again it had stopped, nor
+would shaking start it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He checked the electric
+clock in the kitchen. This also
+said six o’clock, but the sweep
+hand did not move. In his
+living room the radio clock
+said six, but the second hand
+seemed stationary.</p>
+
+<p>“But the lights in both
+rooms work,” said Vincent.
+“How are the clocks stopped?
+Are they on a separate circuit?”</p>
+
+<p>He went back to his bedroom
+and got his wristwatch.
+It also said six; and its sweep
+hand did not sweep.</p>
+
+<p>“Now this could get silly.
+What is it that would stop
+both mechanical and electrical
+clocks?”</p>
+
+<p>He went to the window and
+looked out at the clock on the
+Mutual Insurance Building. It
+said six o’clock, and the second
+hand did not move.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it is possible that the
+confusion is not limited to myself.
+I once heard the fanciful
+theory that a cold shower will
+clear the mind. For me it
+never has, but I will try it. I
+can always use cleanliness
+for an excuse.”</p>
+
+<p>The shower didn’t work.
+Yes, it did: the water came
+now, but not like water; like
+very slow syrup that hung in
+the air. He reached up to
+touch it there hanging down
+and stretching. And it shattered
+like glass when he
+touched it and drifted in fantastic
+slow globs across the
+room. But it had the feel of
+water, wet and pleasantly
+cool. And in a quarter of a
+minute or so it was down over
+his shoulders and back, and he
+luxuriated in it. He let it soak
+his head and it cleared his
+wits at once.</p>
+
+<p>“There is not a thing wrong
+with me. I am fine. It is not
+my fault that the water is
+slow this morning and other
+things awry.”</p>
+
+<p>He reached for the towel
+and it tore to pieces in his
+hands like porous wet paper.</p>
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">N</span>ow</span> he became very careful
+in the way he handled
+things. Slowly, tenderly, and
+deftly he took them so that
+they would not break. He
+shaved himself without mishap
+in spite of the slow water
+in the lavatory also.</p>
+
+<p>Then he dressed himself
+with the greatest caution and
+cunning, breaking nothing except
+his shoe laces, a thing
+that is likely to happen at any
+time.</p>
+
+<p>“If there is nothing the
+matter with me, then I will
+check and see if there is anything
+seriously wrong with
+the world. The dawn was fairly
+along when I looked out, as
+it should have been. Approximately
+twenty minutes have
+passed; it is a clear morning;
+the sun should now have hit
+the top several stories of the
+Insurance Building.”</p>
+
+<p>But it had not. It was a
+clear morning, but the dawn
+had not brightened at all in
+the twenty minutes. And that
+big clock still said six. It had
+not changed.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it had changed, and he
+knew it with a queer feeling.
+He pictured it as it had been
+before. The hour and the minute
+hand had not moved noticeably.
+But the second hand
+had moved. It had moved a
+third of the dial.</p>
+
+<p>So he pulled up a chair to
+the window and watched it.
+He realized that, though he
+could not see it move, yet it
+did make progress. He watched
+it for perhaps five minutes.
+It moved through a space of
+perhaps five seconds.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that is not my problem.
+It is that of the clock
+maker, either a terrestrial or
+a celestial one.”</p>
+
+<p>But he left his rooms without
+a good breakfast, and he
+left them very early. How did
+he know that it was early
+since there was something
+wrong with the time? Well, it
+was early at least according
+to the sun and according to
+the clocks, neither of which
+institutions seemed to be
+working properly.</p>
+
+<p>He left without a good
+breakfast because the coffee
+would not make and the bacon
+would not fry. And in plain
+point of fact the fire would
+not heat. The gas flame came
+from the pilot light like a
+slowly spreading stream or an
+unfolding flower. Then it
+burned far too steadily. The
+skillet remained cold when
+placed over it; nor would water<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+even heat. It had taken at
+least five minutes to get the
+water out of the faucet in the
+first place.</p>
+
+<p>He ate a few pieces of leftover
+bread and some scraps of
+meat.</p>
+
+<p>In the street there was no
+motion, no real motion. A
+truck, first seeming at rest,
+moved very slowly. There was
+no gear in which it could move
+so slowly. And there was a
+taxi which crept along, but
+Charles Vincent had to look
+at it carefully for some time
+to be sure that it was in motion.
+Then he received a shock.
+He realized by the early morning
+light that the driver of it
+was dead. Dead with his eyes
+wide open!</p>
+
+<p>Slowly as it was going, and
+by whatever means it was
+moving, it should really be
+stopped. He walked over to it,
+opened the door, and pulled
+on the brake. Then he looked
+into the eyes of the dead man.
+Was he really dead? It was
+hard to be sure. He felt warm.
+But, even as Vincent looked,
+the eyes of the dead man had
+begun to close. And close they
+did and open again in a matter
+of about twenty seconds.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">T</span>his</span> was weird. The slowly
+closing and opening eyes
+sent a chill through Vincent.
+And the dead man had begun
+to lean forward in his seat.
+Vincent put a hand in the
+middle of the man’s chest to
+hold him upright, but he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+found the forward pressure
+as relentless as it was slow.
+He was unable to keep the
+dead man up.</p>
+
+<p>So he let him go, watching
+curiously; and in a few seconds
+the driver’s face was
+against the wheel. But it was
+almost as if it had no intention
+of stopping there. It
+pressed into the wheel with
+dogged force. He would surely
+break his face. Vincent took
+several holds on the dead man
+and counteracted the pressure
+somewhat. Yet the face was
+being damaged, and if things
+were normal, blood would
+have flowed.</p>
+
+<p>The man had been dead so
+long however, that (though he
+was still warm) his blood
+must have congealed, for it
+was fully two minutes before
+it began to ooze.</p>
+
+<p>“Whatever I have done, I
+have done enough damage,”
+said Vincent. “And, in whatever
+nightmare I am in, I am
+likely to do further harm if I
+meddle more. I had better
+leave it alone.”</p>
+
+<p>He walked on down the
+morning street. Yet whatever
+vehicles he saw were moving
+with an incredible slowness,
+as though driven by some fantastic
+gear reduction. And
+there were people here and
+there frozen solid. It was a
+chilly morning, but it was not
+that cold. They were immobile
+in positions of motion, as
+though they were playing the
+children’s game of Statues.</p>
+
+<p>“How is it,” said Charles
+Vincent, “that this young girl
+(who I believe works across
+the street from us) should
+have died standing up and in
+full stride? But, no. She is
+not dead. Or, if so, she died
+with a very alert expression.
+And—oh, my God, she’s doing
+it too!”</p>
+
+<p>For he realized that the
+eyes of the girl were closing,
+and in the space of no more
+than a quarter of a second
+they had completed their cycle
+and were open again. Also,
+and this was even stranger,
+she had moved, moved forward
+in full stride. He would
+have timed her if he could,
+but how could he when all the
+clocks were crazy? Yet she
+must have been taking about
+two steps a minute.</p>
+
+<p>He went into the cafeteria.
+The early morning crowd that
+he had often watched through
+the windows was there. The
+girl who made flapjacks in the
+window had just flipped one
+and it hung in the air. Then it
+floated over as if caught by
+a slight breeze, and sank
+slowly down as if settling in
+water.</p>
+
+<p>The breakfasters, like the
+people in the street, were all
+dead in this new way, moving
+with almost imperceptible motion.
+And all had apparently
+died in the act of drinking
+coffee, eating eggs, or munching
+toast. And if there were
+only time enough, there was
+even a chance that they would
+get the drinking, eating, and
+munching done with, for there
+was the shadow of movement
+in them all.</p>
+
+<p>The cashier had the register
+drawer open and money in her
+hand, and the hand of the customer
+was outstretched for it.
+In time, somewhere in the new
+leisurely time, the hands
+would come together and the
+change be given. And so it
+happened. It may have been
+a minute and a half, or two
+minutes, or two and a half. It
+is always hard to judge time,
+and now it had become all but
+impossible.</p>
+
+<p>“I am still hungry,” said
+Charles Vincent, “but it would
+be foolhardy to wait for service
+here. Should I help myself?
+They will not mind if they are
+dead. And if they are not dead,
+in any case it seems that I am
+invisible to them.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">H</span>e wolfed</span> several rolls.
+He opened a bottle of
+milk and held it upside down
+over his glass while he ate another
+roll. Liquids had all become
+perversely slow.</p>
+
+<p>But he felt better for his
+erratic breakfast. He would
+have paid for it, but how?</p>
+
+<p>He left the cafeteria and
+walked about the town as it
+seemed still to be quite early,
+though one could depend on
+neither sun nor clock for the
+time any more. The traffic
+lights were unchanging. He
+sat for a long time in a little
+park and watched the town<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+and the big clock in the Commerce
+Building tower; but like
+all the clocks it was either
+stopped or the hand would
+creep too slowly to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>It must have been just about
+an hour till the traffic lights
+changed, but change they did
+at last. By picking a point on
+the building across the street
+and watching what moved
+past it, he found that the
+traffic did indeed move. In a
+minute or so, the entire length
+of a car would pass the given
+point.</p>
+
+<p>He had, he recalled, been
+very far behind in his work
+and it had been worrying him.
+He decided to go to the office,
+early as it was or seemed to be.</p>
+
+<p>He let himself in. Nobody
+else was there. He resolved not
+to look at the clock and to be
+very careful of the way he
+handled all objects because of
+his new propensity for breaking
+things. This considered, all
+seemed normal there. He had
+said the day before that he
+could hardly catch up on his
+work if he put in two days
+solid. He now resolved at least
+to work steadily until something
+happened, whatever it
+was.</p>
+
+<p>For hour after hour he
+worked on his tabulations and
+reports. Nobody else had arrived.
+Could something be
+wrong? Certainly something
+was wrong. But this was not
+a holiday. That was not it.</p>
+
+<p>Just how long can a stubborn
+and mystified man plug<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+away at his task? It was hour
+after hour after hour. He did
+not become hungry nor particularly
+tired. And he did get
+through a lot of work.</p>
+
+<p>“It must be half done. However
+it has happened, I have
+caught up on at least a day’s
+work. I will keep on.”</p>
+
+<p>He must have continued silently
+for another eight or ten
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>He was caught up completely
+on his back work.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, to some extent I can
+work into the future. I can
+head up and carry over. I can
+put in everything but the figures
+of the field reports.”</p>
+
+<p>And he did so.</p>
+
+<p>“It will be hard to bury me
+in work again. I could almost
+coast for a day. I don’t even
+know what day it is, but I
+must have worked twenty
+hours straight through and
+nobody has arrived. Perhaps
+nobody ever will arrive. If
+they are moving with the
+speed of the people in the
+nightmare outside, it is no
+wonder they have not arrived.”</p>
+
+<p>He put his head down on his
+arms on the desk. The last
+thing he saw before he closed
+his eyes was the misshapen
+left thumb that he had always
+tried to conceal a little by the
+way he handled his hands.</p>
+
+<p>“At least I know that I am
+still myself. I’d know myself
+anywhere by that.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he went to sleep at his
+desk.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">J</span>enny</span> came in with a
+quick click-click-click of
+high heels, and he wakened to
+the noise.</p>
+
+<p>“What are you doing dozing
+at your desk, Mr. Vincent?
+Have you been here all night?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know, Jenny. Honestly
+I don’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“I was only teasing. Sometimes
+when I get here a little
+early I take a catnap myself.”</p>
+
+<p>The clock said six minutes
+till eight and the second hand
+was sweeping normally. Time
+had returned to the world. Or
+to him. But had all that early
+morning of his been a dream?
+Then it had been a very efficient
+dream. He had accomplished
+work that he could
+hardly have done in two days.
+And it was the same day that
+it was supposed to be.</p>
+
+<p>He went to the water fountain.
+The water now behaved
+normally. He went to the window.
+The traffic was behaving
+as it should. Though sometimes
+slow and sometimes
+snarled, yet it was in the pace
+of the regular world.</p>
+
+<p>The other workers arrived.
+They were not balls of fire,
+but neither was it necessary
+to observe them for several
+minutes to be sure they
+weren’t dead.</p>
+
+<p>“It did have its advantages,”
+Charles Vincent said.
+“I would be afraid to live with
+it permanently, but it would
+be handy to go into for a few
+minutes a day and accomplish
+the business of hours. I may
+be a case for the doctor. But
+just how would I go about telling
+a doctor what was bothering
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>Now it had surely been less
+than two hours from his first
+rising till the time that he
+wakened to the noise of Jenny
+from his second sleep. And
+how long that second sleep had
+been, or in which time enclave,
+he had no idea. But how account
+for it all? He had spent
+a long while in his own rooms,
+much longer than ordinary in
+his confusion. He had walked
+the city mile after mile in his
+puzzlement. And he had sat in
+the little park for hours and
+studied the situation. And he
+had worked at his own desk
+for an outlandish long time.</p>
+
+<p>Well, he would go to the
+doctor. A man is obliged to
+refrain from making a fool of
+himself to the world at large,
+but to his own lawyer, his
+priest, or his doctor he will
+sometimes have to come as a
+fool. By their callings they are
+restrained from scoffing openly.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Mason was not particularly
+a friend. Charles Vincent
+realized with some unease that
+he did not have any particular
+friends, only acquaintances
+and associates. It was
+as though he were of a species
+slightly apart from his fellows.
+He wished now a little
+that he had a particular
+friend.</p>
+
+<p>But Dr. Mason was an acquaintance
+of some years, had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+the reputation of being a good
+doctor, and besides Vincent
+had now arrived at his office
+and been shown in. He would
+either have to—well, that was
+as good a beginning as any.</p>
+
+<p>“Doctor, I am in a predicament.
+I will either have to invent
+some symptoms to
+account for my visit here, or
+make an excuse and bolt, or
+tell you what is bothering me,
+even though you will think I
+am a new sort of idiot.”</p>
+
+<p>“Vincent, every day people
+invent symptoms to cover
+their visits here, and I know
+that they have lost their nerve
+about the real reason for coming.
+And every day people do
+make excuses and bolt. But experience
+tells me that I will
+get a larger fee if you tackle
+the third alternative. And,
+Vincent, there is no new sort
+of idiot.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">V</span>incent</span> said, “It may not
+sound so silly if I tell it
+quickly. I awoke this morning
+to some very puzzling incidents.
+It seemed that time itself
+had stopped, or that the
+whole world had gone into
+super-slow motion. The water
+would neither flow nor boil,
+and fire would not heat food.
+The clocks, which I first believed
+had stopped, crept
+along at perhaps a minute an
+hour. The people I met in the
+streets appeared dead, frozen
+in lifelike attitudes. And it
+was only by watching them
+for a very long time that I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+perceived that they did indeed
+have motion. One car I saw
+creeping slower than the most
+backward snail, and a dead
+man at the wheel of it. I went
+to it, opened the door, and put
+on the brake. I realized after
+a time that the man was not
+dead. But he bent forward
+and broke his face on the
+steering wheel. It must have
+taken a full minute for his
+head to travel no more than
+ten inches, yet I was unable
+to prevent his hitting the
+wheel. I then did other bizarre
+things in a world that had
+died on its feet. I walked many
+miles through the city, and
+then I sat for hours in the
+park. I went to the office and
+let myself in. I accomplished
+work that must have taken me
+twenty hours. I then took a
+nap at my desk. When I awoke
+on the arrival of the others, it
+was six minutes to eight in the
+morning of the same day, today.
+Not two hours had passed
+from my rising, and time was
+back to normal. But the things
+that happened in that time
+that could never be compressed
+into two hours.”</p>
+
+<p>“One question first, Vincent.
+Did you actually accomplish
+the work of many hours?”</p>
+
+<p>“I did. It was done, and
+done in that time. It did not
+become undone on the return
+of time to normal.”</p>
+
+<p>“A second question. Had
+you been worried about your
+work, about being behind?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Emphatically.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then here is one explanation.
+You retired last night.
+But very shortly afterward
+you arose in a state of somnambulism.
+There are facets
+of sleepwalking which we do
+not at all understand. The
+time-out-of-focus interludes
+were parts of a walking dream
+of yours. You dressed and
+went to your office and worked
+all night. It is possible to do
+routine tasks in a somnambulistic
+state rapidly and even
+feverishly, with an intense
+concentration—to perform
+prodigies. You may have fallen
+into a normal sleep there
+when you had finished, or you
+may have been awakened directly
+from your somnambulistic
+trance on the arrival of
+your co-workers. There, that
+is a plausible and workable
+explanation. In the case of an
+apparently bizarre happening,
+it is always well to have a
+rational explanation to fall
+back on. They will usually satisfy
+a patient and put his
+mind at rest. But often they
+do not satisfy me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your explanation very
+nearly satisfies me, Dr. Mason,
+and it does put my mind considerably
+at rest. I am sure
+that in a short while I will be
+able to accept it completely.
+But why does it not satisfy
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“One reason is a man I
+treated early this morning. He
+had his face smashed, and he
+had seen—or almost seen—a
+ghost: a ghost of incredible
+swiftness that was more
+sensed than seen. The ghost
+opened the door of his car
+while it was going at full
+speed, jerked on the brake,
+and caused him to crack his
+head. This man was dazed and
+had a slight concussion. I have
+convinced him that he did not
+see any ghost at all, that he
+must have dozed at the wheel
+and run into something. As I
+say, I am harder to convince
+than my patients. But it may
+have been coincidence.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope so. But you also
+seem to have another reservation.”</p>
+
+<p>“After quite a few years in
+practice, I seldom see or hear
+anything new. Twice before
+I have been told a happening
+or a dream on the line of what
+you experienced.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you convince your patients
+that it was only a
+dream?”</p>
+
+<p>“I did. Both of them. That
+is, I convinced them the first
+few times it happened to
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Were they satisfied?”</p>
+
+<p>“At first. Later, not entirely.
+But they both died within
+a year of their first coming
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing violent, I hope.”</p>
+
+<p>“Both had the gentlest
+deaths. That of senility extreme.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh. Well, I’m too young for
+that.”</p>
+
+<p>“I would like you to come
+back in a month or so.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will, if the delusion or the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+dream returns. Or if I do not
+feel well.”</p>
+
+<p>After this Charles Vincent
+began to forget about the incident.
+He only recalled it with
+humor sometimes when again
+he was behind in his work.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, if it gets bad enough
+I may do another sleepwalking
+act and catch up. But if
+there is another aspect of time
+and I could enter it at will, it
+might often be handy.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">C</span>harles Vincent</span> never
+saw his face at all. It is
+very dark in some of those
+clubs and the Coq Bleu is like
+the inside of a tomb. He went
+to the clubs only about once a
+month, sometimes after a
+show when he did not want to
+go home to bed, sometimes
+when he was just plain restless.</p>
+
+<p>Citizens of the more fortunate
+states may not know of
+the mysteries of the clubs. In
+Vincent’s the only bars are
+beer bars, and only in the
+clubs can a person get a drink,
+and only members are admitted.
+It is true that even such
+a small club as the Coq Bleu
+had thirty thousand members,
+and at a dollar a year that is
+a nice sideline. The little numbered
+membership cards cost
+a penny each for the printing,
+and the member wrote in his
+own name. But he had to have
+a card—or a dollar for a card—to
+gain admittance.</p>
+
+<p>But there could be no entertainments
+in the clubs. There<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+was nothing there but the
+little bar room in the near
+darkness.</p>
+
+<p>The man was there, and
+then he was not, and then he
+was there again. And always
+where he sat it was too dark
+to see his face.</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder,” he said to Vincent
+(or to the bar at large,
+though there were no other
+customers and the bartender
+was asleep), “I wonder if you
+have ever read Zurbarin on
+the Relationship of Extradigitalism
+to Genius?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have never heard of the
+work nor of the man,” said
+Vincent. “I doubt if either
+exists.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am Zurbarin,” said the
+man.</p>
+
+<p>Vincent hid his misshapen
+left thumb. Yet it could not
+have been noticed in that
+light, and he must have been
+crazy to believe there was any
+connection between it and the
+man’s remark. It was not truly
+a double thumb. He was not
+an extradigital, nor was he a
+genius.</p>
+
+<p>“I refuse to become interested
+in you,” said Vincent.
+“I am on the verge of leaving.
+I dislike waking the bartender,
+but I did want another
+drink.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sooner done than said.”</p>
+
+<p>“What is?”</p>
+
+<p>“Your glass is full.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is? So it is. Is it a
+trick?”</p>
+
+<p>“Trick is the name for anything
+either too frivolous or
+too mystifying for us to comprehend.
+But on one long early
+morning of a month ago, you
+also could have done the
+trick, and nearly as well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Could I have? How would
+you know about my long early
+morning—assuming there to
+have been such?”</p>
+
+<p>“I watched you for a while.
+Few others have the equipment
+to watch you with when
+you’re in the aspect.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">S</span>o they</span> were silent for
+some time, and Vincent
+watched the clock and was
+ready to go.</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder,” said the man in
+the dark, “if you have read
+Schimmelpenninck on the Sexagintal
+and the Duodecimal in
+the Chaldee Mysteries?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have not and I doubt if
+anyone else has. I would guess
+that you are also Schimmelpenninck
+and that you have
+just made up the name on the
+spur of the moment.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am Schimm, it is true,
+but I made up the name on the
+spur of a moment many years
+ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am a little bored with
+you,” said Vincent, “but I
+would appreciate it if you’d
+do your glass-filling trick once
+more.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have just done so. And
+you are not bored; you are
+frightened.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of what?” asked Vincent,
+whose glass was in fact full
+again.</p>
+
+<p>“Of reentering a dread that
+you are not sure was a dream.
+But there are advantages to
+being both invisible and inaudible.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can you be invisible?”</p>
+
+<p>“Was I not when I went behind
+the bar just now and
+fixed you a drink?”</p>
+
+<p>“How?”</p>
+
+<p>“A man in full stride goes
+at the rate of about five miles
+an hour. Multiply that by
+sixty, which is the number of
+time. When I leave my stool
+and go behind the bar, I go
+and return at the rate of three
+hundred miles an hour. So I
+am invisible to you, particularly
+if I move while you
+blink.”</p>
+
+<p>“One thing does not match.
+You might have got around
+there and back, but you could
+not have poured.”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall I say that mastery
+over liquids is not given to
+beginners? But for us there
+are many ways to outwit the
+slowness of matter.”</p>
+
+<p>“I believe that you are a
+hoaxer. Do you know Dr.
+Mason?”</p>
+
+<p>“I know that you went to
+see him. I know of his futile
+attempts to penetrate a certain
+mystery. But I have not
+talked to him of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I still believe that you are
+a phony. Could you put me
+back into the state of my
+dream of a month ago?”</p>
+
+<p>“It was not a dream. But I
+could put you again into that
+state.”</p>
+
+<p>“Prove it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>”</p>
+
+<p>“Watch the clock. Do you
+believe that I can point my
+finger at it and stop it for
+you? It is already stopped for
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I don’t believe it. Yes,
+I guess I have to, since I see
+that you have just done it. But
+it may be another trick. I don’t
+know where the clock is plugged
+in.”</p>
+
+<p>“Neither do I. Come to the
+door. Look at every clock you
+can see. Are they not all
+stopped?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Maybe the power has
+gone off all over town.”</p>
+
+<p>“You know it has not. There
+are still lighted windows in
+those buildings, though it is
+quite late.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why are you playing with
+me? I am neither on the inside
+nor the outside. Either
+tell me the secret or say that
+you will not tell me.”</p>
+
+<p>“The secret isn’t a simple
+one. It can only be arrived
+at after all philosophy and
+learning have been assimilated.”</p>
+
+<p>“One man cannot arrive at
+that in one lifetime.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not in an ordinary lifetime.
+But the secret of the secret
+(if I may put it that way)
+is that one must use part of
+it as a tool in learning. You
+could not learn all in one lifetime,
+but by being permitted
+the first step—to be able to
+read, say, sixty books in the
+time it took you to read one,
+to pause for a minute in
+thought and use up only one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+second, to get a day’s work
+accomplished in eight minutes
+and so have time for other
+things—by such ways one may
+make a beginning. I will warn
+you, though. Even for the most
+intelligent, it is a race.”</p>
+
+<p>“A race? What race?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is a race between success,
+which is life, and failure,
+which is death.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s skip the melodrama.
+How do I get into the state
+and out of it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, that is simple, so easy
+that it seems like a gadget.
+Here are two diagrams I will
+draw. Note them carefully.
+This first, envision it in your
+mind and you are in the state.
+Now this second one, envision,
+and you are out of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“That easy?”</p>
+
+<p>“That deceptively easy. The
+trick is to learn why it works—if
+you want to succeed,
+meaning to live.”</p>
+
+<p>So Charles Vincent left him
+and went home, walking the
+mile in a little less than fifteen
+normal seconds. But he
+still had not seen the face of
+the man.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">T</span>here</span> are advantages intellectual,
+monetary, and
+amorous in being able to enter
+the accelerated state at will.
+It is a fox game. One must be
+careful not to be caught at it,
+nor to break or harm that
+which is in the normal state.</p>
+
+<p>Vincent could always find
+eight or ten minutes unobserved
+to accomplish the day’s
+work. And a fifteen-minute
+coffee break could turn into a
+fifteen-hour romp around the
+town.</p>
+
+<p>There was this boyish
+pleasure in becoming a ghost:
+to appear and stand motionless
+in front of an onrushing
+train and to cause the scream
+of the whistle, and to be in
+no danger, being able to move
+five or ten times as fast as the
+train; to enter and to sit suddenly
+in the middle of a select
+group and see them stare, and
+then disappear from the middle
+of them; to interfere in
+sports and games, entering a
+prize ring and tripping, hampering,
+or slugging the unliked fighter;
+to blue-shot
+down the hockey ice, skating
+at fifteen hundred miles an
+hour and scoring dozens of
+goals at either end while the
+people only know that something
+odd is happening.</p>
+
+<p>There was pleasure in being
+able to shatter windows by
+chanting little songs, for the
+voice (when in the state) will
+be to the world at sixty times
+its regular pitch, though normal
+to oneself. And for this
+reason also he was inaudible
+to others.</p>
+
+<p>There was fun in petty
+thieving and tricks. He would
+take a wallet from a man’s
+pocket and be two blocks away
+when the victim turned at the
+feel. He would come back and
+stuff it into the man’s mouth
+as he bleated to a policeman.</p>
+
+<p>He would come into the
+home of a lady writing a letter,
+snatch up the paper and
+write three lines and vanish
+before the scream got out of
+her throat.</p>
+
+<p>He would take food off
+forks, put baby turtles and
+live fish into bowls of soup
+between spoonfuls of the
+eater.</p>
+
+<p>He would lash the hands of
+handshakers tightly together
+with stout cord. He unzippered
+persons of both sexes when
+they were at their most
+pompous. He changed cards
+from one player’s hand to another’s.
+He removed golf balls
+from tees during the backswing
+and left notes written
+large “YOU MISSED ME”
+pinned to the ground with the
+tee.</p>
+
+<p>Or he shaved mustaches
+and heads. Returning repeatedly
+to one woman he disliked,
+he gradually clipped her bald
+and finally gilded her pate.</p>
+
+<p>With tellers counting their
+money, he interfered outrageously
+and enriched himself.
+He snipped cigarettes in two
+with a scissors and blew out
+matches, so that one frustrated
+man broke down and
+cried at his inability to get a
+light.</p>
+
+<p>He removed the weapons
+from the holsters of policemen
+and put cap pistols and water
+guns in their places. He unclipped
+the leashes of dogs and
+substituted little toy dogs rolling
+on wheels.</p>
+
+<p>He put frogs in water<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+glasses and left lighted firecrackers
+on bridge tables.</p>
+
+<p>He reset wrist watches on
+wrists, and played pranks in
+men’s rooms.</p>
+
+<p>“I was always a boy at
+heart,” said Charles Vincent.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">A</span>lso</span> during those first few
+days of the controlled
+new state, he established himself
+materially, acquiring
+wealth by devious ways, and
+opening bank accounts in various
+cities under various
+names, against a time of possible
+need.</p>
+
+<p>Nor did he ever feel any
+shame for the tricks he played
+on unaccelerated humanity.
+For the people, when he was
+in the state, were as statues
+to him, hardly living, barely
+moving, unseeing, unhearing.
+And it is no shame to show
+disrespect to such comical
+statues.</p>
+
+<p>And also, and again because
+he was a boy at heart, he had
+fun with the girls.</p>
+
+<p>“I am one mass of black and
+blue marks,” said Jenny one
+day. “My lips are sore and my
+front teeth feel loosened. I
+don’t know what in the world
+is the matter with me.”</p>
+
+<p>Yet he had not meant to
+bruise or harm her. He was
+rather fond of her and he resolved
+to be much more careful.
+Yet it was fun, when he
+was in the state and invisible
+to her because of his speed, to
+kiss her here and there in out-of-the-way
+places. She made<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+a nice statue and it was good
+sport. And there were others.</p>
+
+<p>“You look older,” said one
+of his co-workers one day.
+“Are you taking care of yourself?
+Are you worried?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am not,” said Vincent. “I
+never felt better or happier in
+my life.”</p>
+
+<p>But now there was time for
+so many things—time, in fact,
+for everything. There was no
+reason why he could not master
+anything in the world,
+when he could take off for fifteen
+minutes and gain fifteen
+hours. Vincent was a rapid
+but careful reader. He could
+now read from a hundred and
+twenty to two hundred books
+in an evening and night; and
+he slept in the accelerated
+state and could get a full
+night’s sleep in eight minutes.</p>
+
+<p>He first acquired a knowledge
+of languages. A quite extensive
+reading knowledge of
+a language can be acquired in
+three hundred hours world
+time, or three hundred minutes
+(five hours) accelerated
+time. And if one takes the
+tongues in order, from the
+most familiar to the most remote,
+there is no real difficulty.
+He acquired fifty for a
+starter, and could always add
+any other any evening that he
+found he had a need for it.
+And at the same time he began
+to assemble and consolidate
+knowledge. Of literature,
+properly speaking, there are
+no more than ten thousand
+books that are really worth
+reading and falling in love
+with. These were gone
+through with high pleasure,
+and two or three thousand of
+them were important enough
+to be reserved for future rereading.</p>
+
+<p>History, however, is very
+uneven; and it is necessary to
+read texts and sources that for
+form are not worth reading.
+And the same with philosophy.
+Mathematics and science, pure
+or physical, could not, of
+course, be covered with the
+same speed. Yet, with time
+available, all could be mastered.
+There is no concept ever
+expressed by any human mind
+that cannot be comprehended
+by any other normal human
+mind, if time is available and
+it is taken in the proper order
+and context and with the
+proper preparatory work.</p>
+
+<p>And often, and now more
+often, Vincent felt that he
+was touching the fingers of the
+secret; and always, when he
+came near it, it had a little bit
+the smell of the pit.</p>
+
+<p>For he had pegged out all
+the main points of the history
+of man; or rather most of the
+tenable, or at least possible,
+theories of the history of man.
+It was hard to hold the main
+line of it, that double road of
+rationality and revelation that
+should lead always to a fuller
+and fuller development (not
+the fetish of progress, that toy
+word used only by toy people),
+to an unfolding and growth
+and perfectibility.</p>
+
+<p>But the main line was often
+obscure and all but obliterated,
+and traced through fog
+and miasma. He had accepted
+the Fall of Man and the Redemption
+as the cardinal
+points of history. But he understood
+now that neither
+happened only once, that both
+were of constant occurrence;
+that there was a hand reaching
+up from that old pit with
+its shadow over man. And he
+had come to picture that hand
+in his dreams (for his dreams
+were especially vivid when in
+the state) as a six-digited
+monster reaching out. He began
+to realize that the thing
+he was caught in was dangerous
+and deadly.</p>
+
+<p>Very dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>Very deadly.</p>
+
+<p>One of the weird books that
+he often returned to and which
+continually puzzled him was
+the Relationship of Extradigitalism
+to Genius, written by
+the man whose face he had
+never seen, in one of his
+manifestations.</p>
+
+<p>It promised more than it
+delivered, and it intimated
+more than it said. Its theory
+was tedious and tenuous, bolstered
+with undigested mountains
+of doubtful data. It left
+him unconvinced that persons
+of genius (even if it could be
+agreed who or what they
+were) had often the oddity of
+extra fingers and toes, or the
+vestiges of them. And it puzzled
+him what possible difference
+it could make.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">Y</span>et</span> there were hints here
+of a Corsican who commonly
+kept a hand hidden, or
+an earlier and more bizarre
+commander who wore always
+a mailed glove, of another man
+with a glove between the two;
+hints that the multiplex-adept,
+Leonardo himself, who sometimes
+drew the hands of men
+and often those of monsters
+with six fingers, may himself
+have had the touch. There was
+a comment of Caesar, not conclusive,
+to the same effect. It
+is known that Alexander had
+a minor peculiarity; it is not
+known what it was; this man
+made it seem that this was it.
+And it was averred of Gregory
+and Augustine, of Benedict
+and Albert and Acquinas. Yet
+a man with a deformity
+could not enter the priesthood;
+if they had it, it must have
+been in vestigial form.</p>
+
+<p>There were cases for Charles
+Magnut and Mahmud, for
+Saladin the Horseman and for
+Akhnaton the King; for
+Homer (a Seleuciad-Greek
+statuette shows him with six
+fingers strumming an unidentified
+instrument while reciting);
+for Pythagoras, for
+Buonarroti, Santi, Theotokopolous,
+van Rijn, Robusti.</p>
+
+<p>Zurbarin catalogued eight
+thousand names. He maintained
+that they were geniuses.
+And that they were extradigitals.</p>
+
+<p>Charles Vincent grinned
+and looked down at his misshapen
+or double thumb.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>“At least I am in good
+though monotonous company.
+But what in the name of triple
+time is he driving at?”</p>
+
+<p>And it was not long afterward
+that Vincent was examining
+cuneiform tablets in the
+State Museum. These were a
+broken and not continuous
+series on the theory of numbers,
+tolerably legible to the
+now encyclopedic Charles Vincent.
+And the series read in
+part:</p>
+
+<p>“On the divergence of the
+basis itself and the confusion
+caused—for it is five, or it is
+six, or ten or twelve, or sixty
+or a hundred, or three hundred
+and sixty or the double
+hundred, the thousand. The
+reason, not clearly understood
+by the people, is that Six and
+the Dozen are first, and Sixty
+is a compromise in condescending
+to the people. For the
+five, the ten are late, and are
+no older than the people themselves.
+It is said, and credited,
+that people began to count by
+fives and tens from the number
+of fingers on their hands.
+But before the people the—by
+the reason that they had—counted
+by sixes and twelves.
+But Sixty is the number of
+time, divisible by both, for
+both must live together in
+time, though not on the same
+plane of time—” Much of the
+rest was scattered. And it was
+while trying to set the hundreds
+of unordered clay tablets
+in proper sequence that
+Charles Vincent created the
+legend of the ghost in the museum.</p>
+
+<p>For he spent his multi-hundred-hour
+nights there studying
+and classifying. Naturally
+he could not work without
+light, and naturally he could
+be seen when he sat still at his
+studies. But as the slow-moving
+guards attempted to close
+in on him, he would move to
+avoid them, and his speed
+made him invisible to them.
+They were a nuisance and had
+to be discouraged. He belabored
+them soundly and they
+became less eager to try to
+capture him.</p>
+
+<p>His only fear was that they
+would some time try to shoot
+him to see if he were ghost or
+human. He could avoid a seen
+shot, which would come at no
+more than two and a half
+times his own greatest speed.
+But an unperceived shot could
+penetrate dangerously, even
+fatally, before he twisted
+away from it.</p>
+
+<p>He had fathered legends of
+other ghosts, that of the Central
+Library, that of University
+Library, that of the John
+Charles Underwood Jr. Technical
+Library. This plurality
+of ghosts tended to cancel out
+each other and bring believers
+into ridicule. Even those who
+had seen him as a ghost did
+not admit that they believed
+in the ghosts.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">H</span>e went</span> back to Dr. Mason
+for his monthly
+checkup.</p>
+
+<p>“You look terrible,” said the
+Doctor. “Whatever it is, you
+have changed. If you can afford
+it, you should take a long
+rest.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have the means,” said
+Charles Vincent, “and that is
+just what I will do. I’ll take a
+rest for a year or two.”</p>
+
+<p>He had begun to begrudge
+the time that he must spend at
+the world’s pace. From now on
+he was regarded as a recluse.
+He was silent and unsociable,
+for he found it a nuisance to
+come back to the common state
+to engage in conversation, and
+in his special state voices were
+too slow-pitched to intrude into
+his consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>Except that of the man
+whose face he had never seen.</p>
+
+<p>“You are making very tardy
+progress,” said the man. Once
+more they were in a dark club.
+“Those who do not show more
+progress we cannot use. After
+all, you are only a vestigial. It
+is probable that you have very
+little of the ancient race in
+you. Fortunately those who do
+not show progress destroy
+themselves. You had not imagined
+that there were only two
+phases of time, had you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Lately I have come to suspect
+that there are many
+more,” said Charles Vincent.</p>
+
+<p>“And you understand that
+only one step cannot succeed?”</p>
+
+<p>“I understand that the life
+I have been living is in direct
+violation of all that we know
+of the laws of mass, momentum,
+and acceleration, as well<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+as those of conservation of
+energy, the potential of the
+human person, the moral compensation,
+the golden mean,
+and the capacity of human organs.
+I know that I cannot
+multiply energy and experience
+sixty times without a
+compensating increase of food
+intake, and yet I do it. I know
+that I cannot live on eight
+minutes’ sleep in twenty-four
+hours, but I do that also. I
+know that I cannot reasonably
+crowd four thousand years of
+experience into one lifetime,
+yet unreasonably I do not see
+what will prevent it. But you
+say I will destroy myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Those who take only the
+first step destroy themselves.”</p>
+
+<p>“And how does one take the
+second step?”</p>
+
+<p>“At the proper moment you
+will be given the choice.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have the most uncanny
+feeling that I will refuse the
+choice.”</p>
+
+<p>“From present indications,
+you will refuse it. You are fastidious.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have a smell about
+you, Old Man without a face.
+I know now what it is. It is
+the smell of the pit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you so slow to learn
+that?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is the mud from the pit,
+the same from which the clay
+tablets were formed, from the
+old land between the rivers.
+I’ve dreamed of the six-fingered
+hand reaching up
+from the pit and overshadowing
+us all. And I have read:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+‘The people first counted by
+fives and tens from the number
+of fingers on their hands.
+But before the people—for
+the reason that they had—counted
+by sixes and twelves.’
+But time has left blanks in
+those tablets.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, time in one of its
+manifestations has deftly and
+with a purpose left those
+blanks.”</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot discover the name
+of the thing that goes in one
+of those blanks. Can you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am part of the name that
+goes into one of those blanks.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you are the man without
+a face. But why is it that
+you overshadow and control
+people? And to what purpose?”</p>
+
+<p>“It will be long before you
+know those answers.”</p>
+
+<p>“When the choice comes to
+me, it will bear very careful
+weighing.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">A</span>fter</span> that a chill descended
+on the life of Charles
+Vincent, for all that he still
+possessed his exceptional powers.
+And he seldom now indulged
+in pranks.</p>
+
+<p>Except for Jennifer Parkey.</p>
+
+<p>It was unusual that he
+should be drawn to her. He
+knew her only slightly in the
+common world and she was at
+least fifteen years his senior.
+But now she appealed to him
+for her youthful qualities, and
+all his pranks with her were
+gentle ones.</p>
+
+<p>For one thing this spinster
+did not frighten, nor did she
+begin locking her doors, never
+having bothered about such
+things before. He would come
+behind her and stroke her
+hair, and she would speak out
+calmly with that sort of quickening
+in her voice: “Who are
+you? Why won’t you let me
+see you? You are a friend,
+aren’t you? Are you a man, or
+are you something else? If you
+can caress me, why can’t you
+talk to me? Please let me see
+you. I promise that I won’t
+hurt you.”</p>
+
+<p>It was as though she could
+not imagine that anything
+strange would hurt her. Or
+again when he hugged her or
+kissed her on the nape, she
+would call: “You must be a
+little boy, or very like a little
+boy, whoever you are. You are
+good not to break my things
+when you move about. Come
+here and let me hold you.”</p>
+
+<p>It is only very good people
+who have no fear at all of the
+unknown.</p>
+
+<p>When Vincent met Jennifer
+in the regular world, as he
+more often now found occasion
+to do, she looked at him
+appraisingly, as though she
+guessed some sort of connection.</p>
+
+<p>She said one day: “I know
+it is an impolite thing to say,
+but you do not look well at all.
+Have you been to a doctor?”</p>
+
+<p>“Several times. But I think
+it is my doctor who should go
+to a doctor. He was always
+given to peculiar remarks, but
+now he is becoming a little unsettled.”</p>
+
+<p>“If I were your doctor, I
+believe I would also become a
+little unsettled. But you should
+find out what is wrong. You
+look terrible.”</p>
+
+<p>He did not look terrible. He
+had lost his hair, it is true,
+but many men lose their hair
+by thirty, though not perhaps
+as suddenly as he had. He
+thought of attributing it to the
+air resistance. After all, when
+he was in the state he did
+stride at some three hundred
+miles an hour. And enough of
+that is likely to blow the hair
+right off your head. And might
+that not also be the reason for
+his worsened complexion and
+the tireder look that appeared
+in his eyes? But he knew that
+this was nonsense. He felt no
+more air pressure when in his
+accelerated state than when in
+the normal one.</p>
+
+<p>He had received his summons.
+He chose not to answer
+it. He did not want to be presented
+with the choice; he had
+no wish to be one with those
+of the pit. But he had no intention
+of giving up the great
+advantage which he now held
+over nature.</p>
+
+<p>“I will have it both ways,”
+he said. “I am already a contradiction
+and an impossibility.
+The proverb was only the
+early statement of the law of
+moral compensation: ‘You
+can’t take more out of a basket
+than it holds.’ But for a
+long time I have been in violation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+of the laws and balances.
+‘There is no road without
+a turning,’ ‘Those who
+dance will have to pay the
+fiddler,’ ‘Everything that goes
+up comes down,’ But are proverbs
+really universal laws?
+Certainly. A sound proverb
+has the force of universal law;
+it is but another statement of
+it. But I have contradicted
+the universal laws. It remains
+to be seen whether I have contradicted
+them with impunity.
+‘Every action has its reaction.’
+If I refuse to deal with them,
+I will provoke a strong reaction.
+The man without a face
+said that it was always a race
+between full knowing and destruction.
+Very well, I will
+race them for it.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">T</span>hey</span> began to persecute
+him then. He knew that
+they were in a state as accelerated
+from his as his was from
+the normal. To them he was
+the almost motionless statue,
+hardly to be told from a dead
+man. To him they were by
+their speed both invisible and
+inaudible. They hurt him and
+haunted him. But still he
+would not answer the summons.</p>
+
+<p>When the meeting took
+place, it was they who had to
+come to him, and they materialized
+there in his room,
+men without faces.</p>
+
+<p>“The choice,” said one.
+“You force us to be so clumsy
+as to have to voice it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will have no part of you.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+You all smell of the pit, of that
+old mud of the cuneiforms of
+the land between the rivers, of
+the people who were before
+the people.”</p>
+
+<p>“It has endured a long time,
+and we consider it as enduring
+forever. But the Garden which
+was in the neighborhood—do
+you know how long the Garden
+lasted?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“That all happened in a
+single day, and before nightfall
+they were outside. You
+want to throw in with something
+more permanent, don’t
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I don’t believe I do.”</p>
+
+<p>“What have you to lose?”</p>
+
+<p>“Only my hope of eternity.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you don’t believe in
+that. No man has ever really
+believed in eternity.”</p>
+
+<p>“No man has ever either
+entirely believed or disbelieved
+in it,” said Charles Vincent.</p>
+
+<p>“At least it cannot be
+proved,” said one of the faceless
+men. “Nothing is proved
+until it is over with. And in
+this case, if it is ever over
+with, then it is disproved. And
+all that time would one not be
+tempted to wonder, ‘What if,
+after all, it ends in the next
+minute?’”</p>
+
+<p>“I imagine that if we survive
+the flesh we will receive
+some sort of surety,” said
+Vincent.</p>
+
+<p>“But you are not sure either
+of such surviving or receiving.
+Now <i>we</i> have a very close approximation
+of eternity. When
+time is multiplied by itself,
+and that repeated again and
+again, does that not approximate
+eternity?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t believe it does. But
+I will not be of you. One of
+you has said that I am too fastidious.
+So now will you say
+that you’ll destroy me?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. We will only let you
+be destroyed. By yourself,
+you cannot win the race with
+destruction.”</p>
+
+<p>After that Charles Vincent
+somehow felt more mature. He
+knew he was not really meant
+to be a six-fingered thing of
+the pit. He knew that in some
+way he would have to pay for
+every minute and hour that he
+had gained. But what he had
+gained he would use to the
+fullest. And whatever could be
+accomplished by sheer acquisition
+of human knowledge, he
+would try to accomplish.</p>
+
+<p>And he now startled Dr.
+Mason by the medical knowledge
+he had picked up, the
+while the doctor amused him
+by the concern he showed for
+Vincent. For he felt fine. He
+was perhaps not as active as
+he had been, but that was only
+because he had become dubious
+of aimless activity. He was
+still the ghost of the libraries
+and museums, but was puzzled
+that the published reports
+intimated that an old ghost
+had replaced a young one.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">H</span>e now</span> paid his mystic
+visits to Jennifer Parkey
+less often. For he was always
+dismayed to hear her exclaim
+to him in his ghostly form:
+“Your touch is so changed.
+You poor thing! Is there anything
+at all I can do to help
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>He decided that somehow
+she was too immature to understand
+him, though he was
+still fond of her. He transferred
+his affections to Mrs.
+Milly Maltby, a widow at
+least thirty years his senior.
+Yet here it was a sort of girlishness
+in her that appealed
+to him. She was a woman of
+sharp wit and real affection,
+and she also accepted his visitations
+without fear, following
+a little initial panic.</p>
+
+<p>They played games, writing
+games, for they communicated
+by writing. She would scribble
+a line, then hold the paper up
+in the air whence he would
+cause it to vanish into his
+sphere. He would return it in
+half a minute, or half a second
+by her time, with his retort.
+He had the advantage of her
+in time with greatly more opportunity
+to think up responses,
+but she had the advantage
+over him in natural wit and
+was hard to top.</p>
+
+<p>They also played checkers,
+and he often had to retire
+apart and read a chapter of
+a book on the art between
+moves, and even so she often
+beat him; for native talent is
+likely to be a match for accumulated
+lore and codified
+procedure.</p>
+
+<p>But to Milly also he was unfaithful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+in his fashion, being
+now interested (he no longer
+became enamored or entranced)
+in a Mrs. Roberts,
+a great-grandmother who was
+his elder by at least fifty years.
+He had read all the data extant
+on the attraction of the
+old for the young, but he still
+could not explain his successive
+attachments. He decided
+that these three examples
+were enough to establish a
+universal law: that a woman
+is simply not afraid of a ghost,
+though he touches her and is
+invisible, and writes her notes
+without hands. It is possible
+that amorous spirits have
+known this for a long time,
+but Charles Vincent had made
+the discovery himself independently.</p>
+
+<p>When enough knowledge is
+accumulated on any subject,
+the pattern will sometimes
+emerge suddenly, like a form
+in a picture revealed where
+before it was not seen. And
+when enough knowledge is accumulated
+on all subjects, is
+there not a chance that a pattern
+governing all subjects
+will emerge?</p>
+
+<p>Charles Vincent was caught
+up in one last enthusiasm. On
+a long vigil, as he consulted
+source after source and sorted
+them in his mind, it seemed
+that the pattern was coming
+out clearly and simply, for all
+its amazing complexity of detail.</p>
+
+<p>“I know everything that
+they know in the pit, and I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+know a secret that they do not
+know. I have not lost the race—I
+have won it. I can defeat
+them at the point where they
+believe themselves invulnerable.
+If controlled hereafter,
+we need at least not be controlled
+by them. It is all falling
+together now. I have found
+the final truth, and it is they
+who have lost the race. I hold
+the key. I will now be able to
+enjoy the advantage without
+paying the ultimate price of
+defeat and destruction, or of
+collaboration with them.</p>
+
+<p>“Now I have only to implement
+my knowledge, to publish
+the fact, and one shadow at
+least will be lifted from mankind.
+I will do it at once. Well,
+nearly at once. It is almost
+dawn in the normal world. I
+will sit here a very little while
+and rest. Then I will go out
+and begin to make contact
+with the proper persons for
+the disposition of this thing.
+But first I will sit here a little
+while and rest.”</p>
+
+<p>And he died quietly in his
+chair as he sat there.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">D</span>r. Mason</span> made an entry
+in his private journal:
+“Charles Vincent, a completely
+authenticated case of
+premature aging, one of the
+most clear-cut in all gerontology.
+This man was known
+to me for years, and I here
+aver that as of one year ago
+he was of normal appearance
+and physical state, and that
+his chronology is also correct,
+I having also known his
+father. I examined the subject
+during the period of his illness,
+and there is no question
+at all of his identity, which
+has also been established for
+the record by fingerprinting
+and other means. I aver that
+Charles Vincent at the age of
+thirty is dead of old age, having
+the appearance and organic
+condition of a man of
+ninety.”</p>
+
+<p>Then the doctor began to
+make another note: “As in
+two other cases of my own
+observation, the illness was
+accompanied by a certain delusion
+and series of dreams, so
+nearly identical in the three
+men as to be almost unbelievable.
+And for the record, and
+no doubt to the prejudice of
+my own reputation, I will set
+down the report of them
+here.”</p>
+
+<p>But when Dr. Mason had
+written that, he thought about
+it for a while.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I will do no such
+thing,” he said, and he struck
+out the last lines he had written.
+“It is best to let sleeping
+dragons lie.”</p>
+
+<p>And somewhere the faceless
+men with the smell of the pit
+on them smiled to themselves
+in quiet irony.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center" style="padding-top: 1em; font-weight: bold">END</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Six Fingers of Time, by
+Raphael Aloysius Lafferty
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+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg's The Six Fingers of Time, by Raphael Aloysius Lafferty
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Six Fingers of Time
+
+Author: Raphael Aloysius Lafferty
+
+Release Date: March 16, 2010 [EBook #31663]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIX FINGERS OF TIME ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Irma Spehar and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+This etext was produced from the September 1960 issue of If.
+Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U. S.
+copyright on this publication was renewed. Obvious printer's and
+punctuation errors have been fixed. Original page numbers have
+been retained.
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ THE SIX FINGERS OF TIME
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ _Time is money.
+ Time heals all wounds.
+ Given time,
+ anything is possible.
+ And now he had all the
+ time in the world!_
+
+ By R. A. LAFFERTY
+
+ Illustrated by GAUGHAN
+
+
+He began by breaking things that morning. He broke the glass of
+water on his night stand. He knocked it crazily against the
+opposite wall and shattered it. Yet it shattered slowly. This
+would have surprised him if he had been fully awake, for he had
+only reached out sleepily for it.
+
+Nor had he wakened regularly to his alarm; he had wakened to a
+weird, slow, low booming, yet the clock said six, time for the
+alarm. And the low boom, when it came again, seemed to come from
+the clock.
+
+He reached out and touched it gently, but it floated off the
+stand at his touch and bounced around slowly on the floor. And
+when he picked it up again it had stopped, nor would shaking
+start it.
+
+He checked the electric clock in the kitchen. This also said six
+o'clock, but the sweep hand did not move. In his living room the
+radio clock said six, but the second hand seemed stationary.
+
+"But the lights in both rooms work," said Vincent. "How are the
+clocks stopped? Are they on a separate circuit?"
+
+He went back to his bedroom and got his wristwatch. It also said
+six; and its sweep hand did not sweep.
+
+"Now this could get silly. What is it that would stop both
+mechanical and electrical clocks?"
+
+He went to the window and looked out at the clock on the Mutual
+Insurance Building. It said six o'clock, and the second hand did
+not move.
+
+"Well, it is possible that the confusion is not limited to
+myself. I once heard the fanciful theory that a cold shower will
+clear the mind. For me it never has, but I will try it. I can
+always use cleanliness for an excuse."
+
+The shower didn't work. Yes, it did: the water came now, but not
+like water; like very slow syrup that hung in the air. He reached
+up to touch it there hanging down and stretching. And it
+shattered like glass when he touched it and drifted in fantastic
+slow globs across the room. But it had the feel of water, wet and
+pleasantly cool. And in a quarter of a minute or so it was down
+over his shoulders and back, and he luxuriated in it. He let it
+soak his head and it cleared his wits at once.
+
+"There is not a thing wrong with me. I am fine. It is not my
+fault that the water is slow this morning and other things awry."
+
+He reached for the towel and it tore to pieces in his hands like
+porous wet paper.
+
+
+Now he became very careful in the way he handled things. Slowly,
+tenderly, and deftly he took them so that they would not break.
+He shaved himself without mishap in spite of the slow water in
+the lavatory also.
+
+Then he dressed himself with the greatest caution and cunning,
+breaking nothing except his shoe laces, a thing that is likely to
+happen at any time.
+
+"If there is nothing the matter with me, then I will check and
+see if there is anything seriously wrong with the world. The dawn
+was fairly along when I looked out, as it should have been.
+Approximately twenty minutes have passed; it is a clear morning;
+the sun should now have hit the top several stories of the
+Insurance Building."
+
+But it had not. It was a clear morning, but the dawn had not
+brightened at all in the twenty minutes. And that big clock
+still said six. It had not changed.
+
+Yet it had changed, and he knew it with a queer feeling. He
+pictured it as it had been before. The hour and the minute hand
+had not moved noticeably. But the second hand had moved. It had
+moved a third of the dial.
+
+So he pulled up a chair to the window and watched it. He realized
+that, though he could not see it move, yet it did make progress.
+He watched it for perhaps five minutes. It moved through a space
+of perhaps five seconds.
+
+"Well, that is not my problem. It is that of the clock maker,
+either a terrestrial or a celestial one."
+
+But he left his rooms without a good breakfast, and he left them
+very early. How did he know that it was early since there was
+something wrong with the time? Well, it was early at least
+according to the sun and according to the clocks, neither of
+which institutions seemed to be working properly.
+
+He left without a good breakfast because the coffee would not
+make and the bacon would not fry. And in plain point of fact the
+fire would not heat. The gas flame came from the pilot light like
+a slowly spreading stream or an unfolding flower. Then it burned
+far too steadily. The skillet remained cold when placed over it;
+nor would water even heat. It had taken at least five minutes to
+get the water out of the faucet in the first place.
+
+He ate a few pieces of leftover bread and some scraps of meat.
+
+In the street there was no motion, no real motion. A truck, first
+seeming at rest, moved very slowly. There was no gear in which it
+could move so slowly. And there was a taxi which crept along, but
+Charles Vincent had to look at it carefully for some time to be
+sure that it was in motion. Then he received a shock. He realized
+by the early morning light that the driver of it was dead. Dead
+with his eyes wide open!
+
+Slowly as it was going, and by whatever means it was moving, it
+should really be stopped. He walked over to it, opened the door,
+and pulled on the brake. Then he looked into the eyes of the dead
+man. Was he really dead? It was hard to be sure. He felt warm.
+But, even as Vincent looked, the eyes of the dead man had begun
+to close. And close they did and open again in a matter of about
+twenty seconds.
+
+
+This was weird. The slowly closing and opening eyes sent a chill
+through Vincent. And the dead man had begun to lean forward in
+his seat. Vincent put a hand in the middle of the man's chest to
+hold him upright, but he found the forward pressure as relentless
+as it was slow. He was unable to keep the dead man up.
+
+So he let him go, watching curiously; and in a few seconds the
+driver's face was against the wheel. But it was almost as if it
+had no intention of stopping there. It pressed into the wheel
+with dogged force. He would surely break his face. Vincent took
+several holds on the dead man and counteracted the pressure
+somewhat. Yet the face was being damaged, and if things were
+normal, blood would have flowed.
+
+The man had been dead so long however, that (though he was still
+warm) his blood must have congealed, for it was fully two minutes
+before it began to ooze.
+
+"Whatever I have done, I have done enough damage," said Vincent.
+"And, in whatever nightmare I am in, I am likely to do further
+harm if I meddle more. I had better leave it alone."
+
+He walked on down the morning street. Yet whatever vehicles he
+saw were moving with an incredible slowness, as though driven by
+some fantastic gear reduction. And there were people here and
+there frozen solid. It was a chilly morning, but it was not that
+cold. They were immobile in positions of motion, as though they
+were playing the children's game of Statues.
+
+"How is it," said Charles Vincent, "that this young girl (who I
+believe works across the street from us) should have died
+standing up and in full stride? But, no. She is not dead. Or, if
+so, she died with a very alert expression. And--oh, my God, she's
+doing it too!"
+
+For he realized that the eyes of the girl were closing, and in
+the space of no more than a quarter of a second they had
+completed their cycle and were open again. Also, and this was
+even stranger, she had moved, moved forward in full stride. He
+would have timed her if he could, but how could he when all the
+clocks were crazy? Yet she must have been taking about two steps
+a minute.
+
+He went into the cafeteria. The early morning crowd that he had
+often watched through the windows was there. The girl who made
+flapjacks in the window had just flipped one and it hung in the
+air. Then it floated over as if caught by a slight breeze, and
+sank slowly down as if settling in water.
+
+The breakfasters, like the people in the street, were all dead in
+this new way, moving with almost imperceptible motion. And all
+had apparently died in the act of drinking coffee, eating eggs,
+or munching toast. And if there were only time enough, there was
+even a chance that they would get the drinking, eating, and
+munching done with, for there was the shadow of movement in them
+all.
+
+The cashier had the register drawer open and money in her hand,
+and the hand of the customer was outstretched for it. In time,
+somewhere in the new leisurely time, the hands would come
+together and the change be given. And so it happened. It may have
+been a minute and a half, or two minutes, or two and a half. It
+is always hard to judge time, and now it had become all but
+impossible.
+
+"I am still hungry," said Charles Vincent, "but it would be
+foolhardy to wait for service here. Should I help myself? They
+will not mind if they are dead. And if they are not dead, in any
+case it seems that I am invisible to them."
+
+
+He wolfed several rolls. He opened a bottle of milk and held it
+upside down over his glass while he ate another roll. Liquids had
+all become perversely slow.
+
+But he felt better for his erratic breakfast. He would have paid
+for it, but how?
+
+He left the cafeteria and walked about the town as it seemed
+still to be quite early, though one could depend on neither sun
+nor clock for the time any more. The traffic lights were
+unchanging. He sat for a long time in a little park and watched
+the town and the big clock in the Commerce Building tower; but
+like all the clocks it was either stopped or the hand would creep
+too slowly to be seen.
+
+It must have been just about an hour till the traffic lights
+changed, but change they did at last. By picking a point on the
+building across the street and watching what moved past it, he
+found that the traffic did indeed move. In a minute or so, the
+entire length of a car would pass the given point.
+
+He had, he recalled, been very far behind in his work and it had
+been worrying him. He decided to go to the office, early as it
+was or seemed to be.
+
+He let himself in. Nobody else was there. He resolved not to look
+at the clock and to be very careful of the way he handled all
+objects because of his new propensity for breaking things. This
+considered, all seemed normal there. He had said the day before
+that he could hardly catch up on his work if he put in two days
+solid. He now resolved at least to work steadily until something
+happened, whatever it was.
+
+For hour after hour he worked on his tabulations and reports.
+Nobody else had arrived. Could something be wrong? Certainly
+something was wrong. But this was not a holiday. That was not it.
+
+Just how long can a stubborn and mystified man plug away at his
+task? It was hour after hour after hour. He did not become hungry
+nor particularly tired. And he did get through a lot of work.
+
+"It must be half done. However it has happened, I have caught up
+on at least a day's work. I will keep on."
+
+He must have continued silently for another eight or ten hours.
+
+He was caught up completely on his back work.
+
+"Well, to some extent I can work into the future. I can head up
+and carry over. I can put in everything but the figures of the
+field reports."
+
+And he did so.
+
+"It will be hard to bury me in work again. I could almost coast
+for a day. I don't even know what day it is, but I must have
+worked twenty hours straight through and nobody has arrived.
+Perhaps nobody ever will arrive. If they are moving with the
+speed of the people in the nightmare outside, it is no wonder
+they have not arrived."
+
+He put his head down on his arms on the desk. The last thing he
+saw before he closed his eyes was the misshapen left thumb that
+he had always tried to conceal a little by the way he handled his
+hands.
+
+"At least I know that I am still myself. I'd know myself anywhere
+by that."
+
+Then he went to sleep at his desk.
+
+
+Jenny came in with a quick click-click-click of high heels, and
+he wakened to the noise.
+
+"What are you doing dozing at your desk, Mr. Vincent? Have you
+been here all night?"
+
+"I don't know, Jenny. Honestly I don't."
+
+"I was only teasing. Sometimes when I get here a little early I
+take a catnap myself."
+
+The clock said six minutes till eight and the second hand was
+sweeping normally. Time had returned to the world. Or to him. But
+had all that early morning of his been a dream? Then it had been
+a very efficient dream. He had accomplished work that he could
+hardly have done in two days. And it was the same day that it was
+supposed to be.
+
+He went to the water fountain. The water now behaved normally. He
+went to the window. The traffic was behaving as it should. Though
+sometimes slow and sometimes snarled, yet it was in the pace of
+the regular world.
+
+The other workers arrived. They were not balls of fire, but
+neither was it necessary to observe them for several minutes to
+be sure they weren't dead.
+
+"It did have its advantages," Charles Vincent said. "I would be
+afraid to live with it permanently, but it would be handy to go
+into for a few minutes a day and accomplish the business of
+hours. I may be a case for the doctor. But just how would I go
+about telling a doctor what was bothering me?"
+
+Now it had surely been less than two hours from his first rising
+till the time that he wakened to the noise of Jenny from his
+second sleep. And how long that second sleep had been, or in
+which time enclave, he had no idea. But how account for it all?
+He had spent a long while in his own rooms, much longer than
+ordinary in his confusion. He had walked the city mile after mile
+in his puzzlement. And he had sat in the little park for hours
+and studied the situation. And he had worked at his own desk for
+an outlandish long time.
+
+Well, he would go to the doctor. A man is obliged to refrain from
+making a fool of himself to the world at large, but to his own
+lawyer, his priest, or his doctor he will sometimes have to come
+as a fool. By their callings they are restrained from scoffing
+openly.
+
+Dr. Mason was not particularly a friend. Charles Vincent realized
+with some unease that he did not have any particular friends,
+only acquaintances and associates. It was as though he were of a
+species slightly apart from his fellows. He wished now a little
+that he had a particular friend.
+
+But Dr. Mason was an acquaintance of some years, had the
+reputation of being a good doctor, and besides Vincent had now
+arrived at his office and been shown in. He would either have
+to--well, that was as good a beginning as any.
+
+"Doctor, I am in a predicament. I will either have to invent some
+symptoms to account for my visit here, or make an excuse and
+bolt, or tell you what is bothering me, even though you will
+think I am a new sort of idiot."
+
+"Vincent, every day people invent symptoms to cover their visits
+here, and I know that they have lost their nerve about the real
+reason for coming. And every day people do make excuses and bolt.
+But experience tells me that I will get a larger fee if you
+tackle the third alternative. And, Vincent, there is no new sort
+of idiot."
+
+
+Vincent said, "It may not sound so silly if I tell it quickly. I
+awoke this morning to some very puzzling incidents. It seemed
+that time itself had stopped, or that the whole world had gone
+into super-slow motion. The water would neither flow nor boil,
+and fire would not heat food. The clocks, which I first believed
+had stopped, crept along at perhaps a minute an hour. The people
+I met in the streets appeared dead, frozen in lifelike attitudes.
+And it was only by watching them for a very long time that I
+perceived that they did indeed have motion. One car I saw
+creeping slower than the most backward snail, and a dead man at
+the wheel of it. I went to it, opened the door, and put on the
+brake. I realized after a time that the man was not dead. But he
+bent forward and broke his face on the steering wheel. It must
+have taken a full minute for his head to travel no more than ten
+inches, yet I was unable to prevent his hitting the wheel. I then
+did other bizarre things in a world that had died on its feet. I
+walked many miles through the city, and then I sat for hours in
+the park. I went to the office and let myself in. I accomplished
+work that must have taken me twenty hours. I then took a nap at
+my desk. When I awoke on the arrival of the others, it was six
+minutes to eight in the morning of the same day, today. Not two
+hours had passed from my rising, and time was back to normal. But
+the things that happened in that time that could never be
+compressed into two hours."
+
+"One question first, Vincent. Did you actually accomplish the
+work of many hours?"
+
+"I did. It was done, and done in that time. It did not become
+undone on the return of time to normal."
+
+"A second question. Had you been worried about your work, about
+being behind?"
+
+"Yes. Emphatically."
+
+"Then here is one explanation. You retired last night. But very
+shortly afterward you arose in a state of somnambulism. There are
+facets of sleepwalking which we do not at all understand. The
+time-out-of-focus interludes were parts of a walking dream of
+yours. You dressed and went to your office and worked all night.
+It is possible to do routine tasks in a somnambulistic state
+rapidly and even feverishly, with an intense concentration--to
+perform prodigies. You may have fallen into a normal sleep there
+when you had finished, or you may have been awakened directly
+from your somnambulistic trance on the arrival of your co-workers.
+There, that is a plausible and workable explanation. In the case
+of an apparently bizarre happening, it is always well to have a
+rational explanation to fall back on. They will usually satisfy a
+patient and put his mind at rest. But often they do not satisfy
+me."
+
+"Your explanation very nearly satisfies me, Dr. Mason, and it
+does put my mind considerably at rest. I am sure that in a short
+while I will be able to accept it completely. But why does it not
+satisfy you?"
+
+"One reason is a man I treated early this morning. He had his
+face smashed, and he had seen--or almost seen--a ghost: a ghost of
+incredible swiftness that was more sensed than seen. The ghost
+opened the door of his car while it was going at full speed,
+jerked on the brake, and caused him to crack his head. This man
+was dazed and had a slight concussion. I have convinced him that
+he did not see any ghost at all, that he must have dozed at the
+wheel and run into something. As I say, I am harder to convince
+than my patients. But it may have been coincidence."
+
+"I hope so. But you also seem to have another reservation."
+
+"After quite a few years in practice, I seldom see or hear
+anything new. Twice before I have been told a happening or a
+dream on the line of what you experienced."
+
+"Did you convince your patients that it was only a dream?"
+
+"I did. Both of them. That is, I convinced them the first few
+times it happened to them."
+
+"Were they satisfied?"
+
+"At first. Later, not entirely. But they both died within a year
+of their first coming to me."
+
+"Nothing violent, I hope."
+
+"Both had the gentlest deaths. That of senility extreme."
+
+"Oh. Well, I'm too young for that."
+
+"I would like you to come back in a month or so."
+
+"I will, if the delusion or the dream returns. Or if I do not
+feel well."
+
+After this Charles Vincent began to forget about the incident. He
+only recalled it with humor sometimes when again he was behind in
+his work.
+
+"Well, if it gets bad enough I may do another sleepwalking act
+and catch up. But if there is another aspect of time and I could
+enter it at will, it might often be handy."
+
+
+Charles Vincent never saw his face at all. It is very dark in
+some of those clubs and the Coq Bleu is like the inside of a
+tomb. He went to the clubs only about once a month, sometimes
+after a show when he did not want to go home to bed, sometimes
+when he was just plain restless.
+
+Citizens of the more fortunate states may not know of the
+mysteries of the clubs. In Vincent's the only bars are beer bars,
+and only in the clubs can a person get a drink, and only members
+are admitted. It is true that even such a small club as the Coq
+Bleu had thirty thousand members, and at a dollar a year that is
+a nice sideline. The little numbered membership cards cost a
+penny each for the printing, and the member wrote in his own
+name. But he had to have a card--or a dollar for a card--to gain
+admittance.
+
+But there could be no entertainments in the clubs. There was
+nothing there but the little bar room in the near darkness.
+
+The man was there, and then he was not, and then he was there
+again. And always where he sat it was too dark to see his face.
+
+"I wonder," he said to Vincent (or to the bar at large, though
+there were no other customers and the bartender was asleep), "I
+wonder if you have ever read Zurbarin on the Relationship of
+Extradigitalism to Genius?"
+
+"I have never heard of the work nor of the man," said Vincent. "I
+doubt if either exists."
+
+"I am Zurbarin," said the man.
+
+Vincent hid his misshapen left thumb. Yet it could not have been
+noticed in that light, and he must have been crazy to believe
+there was any connection between it and the man's remark. It was
+not truly a double thumb. He was not an extradigital, nor was he
+a genius.
+
+"I refuse to become interested in you," said Vincent. "I am on
+the verge of leaving. I dislike waking the bartender, but I did
+want another drink."
+
+"Sooner done than said."
+
+"What is?"
+
+"Your glass is full."
+
+"It is? So it is. Is it a trick?"
+
+"Trick is the name for anything either too frivolous or too
+mystifying for us to comprehend. But on one long early morning of
+a month ago, you also could have done the trick, and nearly as
+well."
+
+"Could I have? How would you know about my long early
+morning--assuming there to have been such?"
+
+"I watched you for a while. Few others have the equipment to
+watch you with when you're in the aspect."
+
+
+So they were silent for some time, and Vincent watched the clock
+and was ready to go.
+
+"I wonder," said the man in the dark, "if you have read
+Schimmelpenninck on the Sexagintal and the Duodecimal in the
+Chaldee Mysteries?"
+
+"I have not and I doubt if anyone else has. I would guess that
+you are also Schimmelpenninck and that you have just made up the
+name on the spur of the moment."
+
+"I am Schimm, it is true, but I made up the name on the spur of a
+moment many years ago."
+
+"I am a little bored with you," said Vincent, "but I would
+appreciate it if you'd do your glass-filling trick once more."
+
+"I have just done so. And you are not bored; you are frightened."
+
+"Of what?" asked Vincent, whose glass was in fact full again.
+
+"Of reentering a dread that you are not sure was a dream. But
+there are advantages to being both invisible and inaudible."
+
+"Can you be invisible?"
+
+"Was I not when I went behind the bar just now and fixed you a
+drink?"
+
+"How?"
+
+"A man in full stride goes at the rate of about five miles an
+hour. Multiply that by sixty, which is the number of time. When I
+leave my stool and go behind the bar, I go and return at the rate
+of three hundred miles an hour. So I am invisible to you,
+particularly if I move while you blink."
+
+"One thing does not match. You might have got around there and
+back, but you could not have poured."
+
+"Shall I say that mastery over liquids is not given to beginners?
+But for us there are many ways to outwit the slowness of matter."
+
+"I believe that you are a hoaxer. Do you know Dr. Mason?"
+
+"I know that you went to see him. I know of his futile attempts
+to penetrate a certain mystery. But I have not talked to him of
+you."
+
+"I still believe that you are a phony. Could you put me back into
+the state of my dream of a month ago?"
+
+"It was not a dream. But I could put you again into that state."
+
+"Prove it."
+
+"Watch the clock. Do you believe that I can point my finger at it
+and stop it for you? It is already stopped for me."
+
+"No, I don't believe it. Yes, I guess I have to, since I see that
+you have just done it. But it may be another trick. I don't know
+where the clock is plugged in."
+
+"Neither do I. Come to the door. Look at every clock you can see.
+Are they not all stopped?"
+
+"Yes. Maybe the power has gone off all over town."
+
+"You know it has not. There are still lighted windows in those
+buildings, though it is quite late."
+
+"Why are you playing with me? I am neither on the inside nor the
+outside. Either tell me the secret or say that you will not tell
+me."
+
+"The secret isn't a simple one. It can only be arrived at after
+all philosophy and learning have been assimilated."
+
+"One man cannot arrive at that in one lifetime."
+
+"Not in an ordinary lifetime. But the secret of the secret (if I
+may put it that way) is that one must use part of it as a tool in
+learning. You could not learn all in one lifetime, but by being
+permitted the first step--to be able to read, say, sixty books in
+the time it took you to read one, to pause for a minute in
+thought and use up only one second, to get a day's work
+accomplished in eight minutes and so have time for other
+things--by such ways one may make a beginning. I will warn you,
+though. Even for the most intelligent, it is a race."
+
+"A race? What race?"
+
+"It is a race between success, which is life, and failure, which
+is death."
+
+"Let's skip the melodrama. How do I get into the state and out of
+it?"
+
+"Oh, that is simple, so easy that it seems like a gadget. Here
+are two diagrams I will draw. Note them carefully. This first,
+envision it in your mind and you are in the state. Now this
+second one, envision, and you are out of it."
+
+"That easy?"
+
+"That deceptively easy. The trick is to learn why it works--if you
+want to succeed, meaning to live."
+
+So Charles Vincent left him and went home, walking the mile in a
+little less than fifteen normal seconds. But he still had not
+seen the face of the man.
+
+
+There are advantages intellectual, monetary, and amorous in being
+able to enter the accelerated state at will. It is a fox game.
+One must be careful not to be caught at it, nor to break or harm
+that which is in the normal state.
+
+Vincent could always find eight or ten minutes unobserved to
+accomplish the day's work. And a fifteen-minute coffee break
+could turn into a fifteen-hour romp around the town.
+
+There was this boyish pleasure in becoming a ghost: to appear and
+stand motionless in front of an onrushing train and to cause the
+scream of the whistle, and to be in no danger, being able to move
+five or ten times as fast as the train; to enter and to sit
+suddenly in the middle of a select group and see them stare, and
+then disappear from the middle of them; to interfere in sports
+and games, entering a prize ring and tripping, hampering, or
+slugging the unliked fighter; to blue-shot down the hockey ice,
+skating at fifteen hundred miles an hour and scoring dozens of
+goals at either end while the people only know that something odd
+is happening.
+
+There was pleasure in being able to shatter windows by chanting
+little songs, for the voice (when in the state) will be to the
+world at sixty times its regular pitch, though normal to oneself.
+And for this reason also he was inaudible to others.
+
+There was fun in petty thieving and tricks. He would take a
+wallet from a man's pocket and be two blocks away when the victim
+turned at the feel. He would come back and stuff it into the
+man's mouth as he bleated to a policeman.
+
+He would come into the home of a lady writing a letter, snatch
+up the paper and write three lines and vanish before the scream
+got out of her throat.
+
+He would take food off forks, put baby turtles and live fish into
+bowls of soup between spoonfuls of the eater.
+
+He would lash the hands of handshakers tightly together with
+stout cord. He unzippered persons of both sexes when they were at
+their most pompous. He changed cards from one player's hand to
+another's. He removed golf balls from tees during the backswing
+and left notes written large "YOU MISSED ME" pinned to the ground
+with the tee.
+
+Or he shaved mustaches and heads. Returning repeatedly to one
+woman he disliked, he gradually clipped her bald and finally
+gilded her pate.
+
+With tellers counting their money, he interfered outrageously and
+enriched himself. He snipped cigarettes in two with a scissors
+and blew out matches, so that one frustrated man broke down and
+cried at his inability to get a light.
+
+He removed the weapons from the holsters of policemen and put cap
+pistols and water guns in their places. He unclipped the leashes
+of dogs and substituted little toy dogs rolling on wheels.
+
+He put frogs in water glasses and left lighted firecrackers on
+bridge tables.
+
+He reset wrist watches on wrists, and played pranks in men's
+rooms.
+
+"I was always a boy at heart," said Charles Vincent.
+
+
+Also during those first few days of the controlled new state, he
+established himself materially, acquiring wealth by devious ways,
+and opening bank accounts in various cities under various names,
+against a time of possible need.
+
+Nor did he ever feel any shame for the tricks he played on
+unaccelerated humanity. For the people, when he was in the state,
+were as statues to him, hardly living, barely moving, unseeing,
+unhearing. And it is no shame to show disrespect to such comical
+statues.
+
+And also, and again because he was a boy at heart, he had fun
+with the girls.
+
+"I am one mass of black and blue marks," said Jenny one day. "My
+lips are sore and my front teeth feel loosened. I don't know what
+in the world is the matter with me."
+
+Yet he had not meant to bruise or harm her. He was rather fond of
+her and he resolved to be much more careful. Yet it was fun, when
+he was in the state and invisible to her because of his speed, to
+kiss her here and there in out-of-the-way places. She made a
+nice statue and it was good sport. And there were others.
+
+"You look older," said one of his co-workers one day. "Are you
+taking care of yourself? Are you worried?"
+
+"I am not," said Vincent. "I never felt better or happier in my
+life."
+
+But now there was time for so many things--time, in fact, for
+everything. There was no reason why he could not master anything
+in the world, when he could take off for fifteen minutes and gain
+fifteen hours. Vincent was a rapid but careful reader. He could
+now read from a hundred and twenty to two hundred books in an
+evening and night; and he slept in the accelerated state and
+could get a full night's sleep in eight minutes.
+
+He first acquired a knowledge of languages. A quite extensive
+reading knowledge of a language can be acquired in three hundred
+hours world time, or three hundred minutes (five hours)
+accelerated time. And if one takes the tongues in order, from the
+most familiar to the most remote, there is no real difficulty. He
+acquired fifty for a starter, and could always add any other any
+evening that he found he had a need for it. And at the same time
+he began to assemble and consolidate knowledge. Of literature,
+properly speaking, there are no more than ten thousand books that
+are really worth reading and falling in love with. These were
+gone through with high pleasure, and two or three thousand of
+them were important enough to be reserved for future rereading.
+
+History, however, is very uneven; and it is necessary to read
+texts and sources that for form are not worth reading. And the
+same with philosophy. Mathematics and science, pure or physical,
+could not, of course, be covered with the same speed. Yet, with
+time available, all could be mastered. There is no concept ever
+expressed by any human mind that cannot be comprehended by any
+other normal human mind, if time is available and it is taken in
+the proper order and context and with the proper preparatory
+work.
+
+And often, and now more often, Vincent felt that he was touching
+the fingers of the secret; and always, when he came near it, it
+had a little bit the smell of the pit.
+
+For he had pegged out all the main points of the history of man;
+or rather most of the tenable, or at least possible, theories of
+the history of man. It was hard to hold the main line of it, that
+double road of rationality and revelation that should lead always
+to a fuller and fuller development (not the fetish of progress,
+that toy word used only by toy people), to an unfolding and
+growth and perfectibility.
+
+But the main line was often obscure and all but obliterated, and
+traced through fog and miasma. He had accepted the Fall of Man
+and the Redemption as the cardinal points of history. But he
+understood now that neither happened only once, that both were of
+constant occurrence; that there was a hand reaching up from that
+old pit with its shadow over man. And he had come to picture that
+hand in his dreams (for his dreams were especially vivid when in
+the state) as a six-digited monster reaching out. He began to
+realize that the thing he was caught in was dangerous and deadly.
+
+Very dangerous.
+
+Very deadly.
+
+One of the weird books that he often returned to and which
+continually puzzled him was the Relationship of Extradigitalism
+to Genius, written by the man whose face he had never seen, in
+one of his manifestations.
+
+It promised more than it delivered, and it intimated more than it
+said. Its theory was tedious and tenuous, bolstered with
+undigested mountains of doubtful data. It left him unconvinced
+that persons of genius (even if it could be agreed who or what
+they were) had often the oddity of extra fingers and toes, or the
+vestiges of them. And it puzzled him what possible difference it
+could make.
+
+
+Yet there were hints here of a Corsican who commonly kept a hand
+hidden, or an earlier and more bizarre commander who wore always
+a mailed glove, of another man with a glove between the two;
+hints that the multiplex-adept, Leonardo himself, who sometimes
+drew the hands of men and often those of monsters with six
+fingers, may himself have had the touch. There was a comment of
+Caesar, not conclusive, to the same effect. It is known that
+Alexander had a minor peculiarity; it is not known what it was;
+this man made it seem that this was it. And it was averred of
+Gregory and Augustine, of Benedict and Albert and Acquinas. Yet a
+man with a deformity could not enter the priesthood; if they had
+it, it must have been in vestigial form.
+
+There were cases for Charles Magnut and Mahmud, for Saladin the
+Horseman and for Akhnaton the King; for Homer (a Seleuciad-Greek
+statuette shows him with six fingers strumming an unidentified
+instrument while reciting); for Pythagoras, for Buonarroti,
+Santi, Theotokopolous, van Rijn, Robusti.
+
+Zurbarin catalogued eight thousand names. He maintained that they
+were geniuses. And that they were extradigitals.
+
+Charles Vincent grinned and looked down at his misshapen or
+double thumb.
+
+"At least I am in good though monotonous company. But what in the
+name of triple time is he driving at?"
+
+And it was not long afterward that Vincent was examining
+cuneiform tablets in the State Museum. These were a broken and
+not continuous series on the theory of numbers, tolerably legible
+to the now encyclopedic Charles Vincent. And the series read in
+part:
+
+"On the divergence of the basis itself and the confusion
+caused--for it is five, or it is six, or ten or twelve, or sixty
+or a hundred, or three hundred and sixty or the double hundred,
+the thousand. The reason, not clearly understood by the people,
+is that Six and the Dozen are first, and Sixty is a compromise in
+condescending to the people. For the five, the ten are late, and
+are no older than the people themselves. It is said, and
+credited, that people began to count by fives and tens from the
+number of fingers on their hands. But before the people the--by
+the reason that they had--counted by sixes and twelves. But Sixty
+is the number of time, divisible by both, for both must live
+together in time, though not on the same plane of time--" Much of
+the rest was scattered. And it was while trying to set the
+hundreds of unordered clay tablets in proper sequence that
+Charles Vincent created the legend of the ghost in the museum.
+
+For he spent his multi-hundred-hour nights there studying and
+classifying. Naturally he could not work without light, and
+naturally he could be seen when he sat still at his studies. But
+as the slow-moving guards attempted to close in on him, he would
+move to avoid them, and his speed made him invisible to them.
+They were a nuisance and had to be discouraged. He belabored them
+soundly and they became less eager to try to capture him.
+
+His only fear was that they would some time try to shoot him to
+see if he were ghost or human. He could avoid a seen shot, which
+would come at no more than two and a half times his own greatest
+speed. But an unperceived shot could penetrate dangerously, even
+fatally, before he twisted away from it.
+
+He had fathered legends of other ghosts, that of the Central
+Library, that of University Library, that of the John Charles
+Underwood Jr. Technical Library. This plurality of ghosts tended
+to cancel out each other and bring believers into ridicule. Even
+those who had seen him as a ghost did not admit that they
+believed in the ghosts.
+
+
+He went back to Dr. Mason for his monthly checkup.
+
+"You look terrible," said the Doctor. "Whatever it is, you have
+changed. If you can afford it, you should take a long rest."
+
+"I have the means," said Charles Vincent, "and that is just what
+I will do. I'll take a rest for a year or two."
+
+He had begun to begrudge the time that he must spend at the
+world's pace. From now on he was regarded as a recluse. He was
+silent and unsociable, for he found it a nuisance to come back to
+the common state to engage in conversation, and in his special
+state voices were too slow-pitched to intrude into his consciousness.
+
+Except that of the man whose face he had never seen.
+
+"You are making very tardy progress," said the man. Once more
+they were in a dark club. "Those who do not show more progress we
+cannot use. After all, you are only a vestigial. It is probable
+that you have very little of the ancient race in you. Fortunately
+those who do not show progress destroy themselves. You had not
+imagined that there were only two phases of time, had you?"
+
+"Lately I have come to suspect that there are many more," said
+Charles Vincent.
+
+"And you understand that only one step cannot succeed?"
+
+"I understand that the life I have been living is in direct
+violation of all that we know of the laws of mass, momentum, and
+acceleration, as well as those of conservation of energy, the
+potential of the human person, the moral compensation, the golden
+mean, and the capacity of human organs. I know that I cannot
+multiply energy and experience sixty times without a compensating
+increase of food intake, and yet I do it. I know that I cannot
+live on eight minutes' sleep in twenty-four hours, but I do that
+also. I know that I cannot reasonably crowd four thousand years
+of experience into one lifetime, yet unreasonably I do not see
+what will prevent it. But you say I will destroy myself."
+
+"Those who take only the first step destroy themselves."
+
+"And how does one take the second step?"
+
+"At the proper moment you will be given the choice."
+
+"I have the most uncanny feeling that I will refuse the choice."
+
+"From present indications, you will refuse it. You are
+fastidious."
+
+"You have a smell about you, Old Man without a face. I know now
+what it is. It is the smell of the pit."
+
+"Are you so slow to learn that?"
+
+"It is the mud from the pit, the same from which the clay tablets
+were formed, from the old land between the rivers. I've dreamed
+of the six-fingered hand reaching up from the pit and overshadowing
+us all. And I have read: 'The people first counted by fives and
+tens from the number of fingers on their hands. But before the
+people--for the reason that they had--counted by sixes and
+twelves.' But time has left blanks in those tablets."
+
+"Yes, time in one of its manifestations has deftly and with a
+purpose left those blanks."
+
+"I cannot discover the name of the thing that goes in one of
+those blanks. Can you?"
+
+"I am part of the name that goes into one of those blanks."
+
+"And you are the man without a face. But why is it that you
+overshadow and control people? And to what purpose?"
+
+"It will be long before you know those answers."
+
+"When the choice comes to me, it will bear very careful
+weighing."
+
+
+After that a chill descended on the life of Charles Vincent, for
+all that he still possessed his exceptional powers. And he seldom
+now indulged in pranks.
+
+Except for Jennifer Parkey.
+
+It was unusual that he should be drawn to her. He knew her only
+slightly in the common world and she was at least fifteen years
+his senior. But now she appealed to him for her youthful
+qualities, and all his pranks with her were gentle ones.
+
+For one thing this spinster did not frighten, nor did she begin
+locking her doors, never having bothered about such things
+before. He would come behind her and stroke her hair, and she
+would speak out calmly with that sort of quickening in her voice:
+"Who are you? Why won't you let me see you? You are a friend,
+aren't you? Are you a man, or are you something else? If you can
+caress me, why can't you talk to me? Please let me see you. I
+promise that I won't hurt you."
+
+It was as though she could not imagine that anything strange
+would hurt her. Or again when he hugged her or kissed her on the
+nape, she would call: "You must be a little boy, or very like a
+little boy, whoever you are. You are good not to break my things
+when you move about. Come here and let me hold you."
+
+It is only very good people who have no fear at all of the
+unknown.
+
+When Vincent met Jennifer in the regular world, as he more often
+now found occasion to do, she looked at him appraisingly, as
+though she guessed some sort of connection.
+
+She said one day: "I know it is an impolite thing to say, but you
+do not look well at all. Have you been to a doctor?"
+
+"Several times. But I think it is my doctor who should go to a
+doctor. He was always given to peculiar remarks, but now he is
+becoming a little unsettled."
+
+"If I were your doctor, I believe I would also become a little
+unsettled. But you should find out what is wrong. You look
+terrible."
+
+He did not look terrible. He had lost his hair, it is true, but
+many men lose their hair by thirty, though not perhaps as
+suddenly as he had. He thought of attributing it to the air
+resistance. After all, when he was in the state he did stride at
+some three hundred miles an hour. And enough of that is likely to
+blow the hair right off your head. And might that not also be the
+reason for his worsened complexion and the tireder look that
+appeared in his eyes? But he knew that this was nonsense. He felt
+no more air pressure when in his accelerated state than when in
+the normal one.
+
+He had received his summons. He chose not to answer it. He did
+not want to be presented with the choice; he had no wish to be
+one with those of the pit. But he had no intention of giving up
+the great advantage which he now held over nature.
+
+"I will have it both ways," he said. "I am already a
+contradiction and an impossibility. The proverb was only the
+early statement of the law of moral compensation: 'You can't take
+more out of a basket than it holds.' But for a long time I have
+been in violation of the laws and balances. 'There is no road
+without a turning,' 'Those who dance will have to pay the
+fiddler,' 'Everything that goes up comes down,' But are proverbs
+really universal laws? Certainly. A sound proverb has the force
+of universal law; it is but another statement of it. But I have
+contradicted the universal laws. It remains to be seen whether I
+have contradicted them with impunity. 'Every action has its
+reaction.' If I refuse to deal with them, I will provoke a strong
+reaction. The man without a face said that it was always a race
+between full knowing and destruction. Very well, I will race them
+for it."
+
+
+They began to persecute him then. He knew that they were in a
+state as accelerated from his as his was from the normal. To them
+he was the almost motionless statue, hardly to be told from a
+dead man. To him they were by their speed both invisible and
+inaudible. They hurt him and haunted him. But still he would not
+answer the summons.
+
+When the meeting took place, it was they who had to come to him,
+and they materialized there in his room, men without faces.
+
+"The choice," said one. "You force us to be so clumsy as to have
+to voice it."
+
+"I will have no part of you. You all smell of the pit, of that
+old mud of the cuneiforms of the land between the rivers, of the
+people who were before the people."
+
+"It has endured a long time, and we consider it as enduring
+forever. But the Garden which was in the neighborhood--do you know
+how long the Garden lasted?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"That all happened in a single day, and before nightfall they
+were outside. You want to throw in with something more permanent,
+don't you."
+
+"No. I don't believe I do."
+
+"What have you to lose?"
+
+"Only my hope of eternity."
+
+"But you don't believe in that. No man has ever really believed
+in eternity."
+
+"No man has ever either entirely believed or disbelieved in it,"
+said Charles Vincent.
+
+"At least it cannot be proved," said one of the faceless men.
+"Nothing is proved until it is over with. And in this case, if it
+is ever over with, then it is disproved. And all that time would
+one not be tempted to wonder, 'What if, after all, it ends in the
+next minute?'"
+
+"I imagine that if we survive the flesh we will receive some sort
+of surety," said Vincent.
+
+"But you are not sure either of such surviving or receiving. Now
+_we_ have a very close approximation of eternity. When time is
+multiplied by itself, and that repeated again and again, does
+that not approximate eternity?"
+
+"I don't believe it does. But I will not be of you. One of you
+has said that I am too fastidious. So now will you say that
+you'll destroy me?"
+
+"No. We will only let you be destroyed. By yourself, you cannot
+win the race with destruction."
+
+After that Charles Vincent somehow felt more mature. He knew he
+was not really meant to be a six-fingered thing of the pit. He
+knew that in some way he would have to pay for every minute and
+hour that he had gained. But what he had gained he would use to
+the fullest. And whatever could be accomplished by sheer
+acquisition of human knowledge, he would try to accomplish.
+
+And he now startled Dr. Mason by the medical knowledge he had
+picked up, the while the doctor amused him by the concern he
+showed for Vincent. For he felt fine. He was perhaps not as
+active as he had been, but that was only because he had become
+dubious of aimless activity. He was still the ghost of the
+libraries and museums, but was puzzled that the published reports
+intimated that an old ghost had replaced a young one.
+
+
+He now paid his mystic visits to Jennifer Parkey less often. For
+he was always dismayed to hear her exclaim to him in his ghostly
+form: "Your touch is so changed. You poor thing! Is there
+anything at all I can do to help you?"
+
+He decided that somehow she was too immature to understand him,
+though he was still fond of her. He transferred his affections to
+Mrs. Milly Maltby, a widow at least thirty years his senior. Yet
+here it was a sort of girlishness in her that appealed to him.
+She was a woman of sharp wit and real affection, and she also
+accepted his visitations without fear, following a little initial
+panic.
+
+They played games, writing games, for they communicated by
+writing. She would scribble a line, then hold the paper up in the
+air whence he would cause it to vanish into his sphere. He would
+return it in half a minute, or half a second by her time, with
+his retort. He had the advantage of her in time with greatly more
+opportunity to think up responses, but she had the advantage over
+him in natural wit and was hard to top.
+
+They also played checkers, and he often had to retire apart and
+read a chapter of a book on the art between moves, and even so
+she often beat him; for native talent is likely to be a match for
+accumulated lore and codified procedure.
+
+But to Milly also he was unfaithful in his fashion, being now
+interested (he no longer became enamored or entranced) in a Mrs.
+Roberts, a great-grandmother who was his elder by at least fifty
+years. He had read all the data extant on the attraction of the
+old for the young, but he still could not explain his successive
+attachments. He decided that these three examples were enough to
+establish a universal law: that a woman is simply not afraid of a
+ghost, though he touches her and is invisible, and writes her
+notes without hands. It is possible that amorous spirits have
+known this for a long time, but Charles Vincent had made the
+discovery himself independently.
+
+When enough knowledge is accumulated on any subject, the pattern
+will sometimes emerge suddenly, like a form in a picture revealed
+where before it was not seen. And when enough knowledge is
+accumulated on all subjects, is there not a chance that a pattern
+governing all subjects will emerge?
+
+Charles Vincent was caught up in one last enthusiasm. On a long
+vigil, as he consulted source after source and sorted them in his
+mind, it seemed that the pattern was coming out clearly and
+simply, for all its amazing complexity of detail.
+
+"I know everything that they know in the pit, and I know a
+secret that they do not know. I have not lost the race--I have won
+it. I can defeat them at the point where they believe themselves
+invulnerable. If controlled hereafter, we need at least not be
+controlled by them. It is all falling together now. I have found
+the final truth, and it is they who have lost the race. I hold
+the key. I will now be able to enjoy the advantage without paying
+the ultimate price of defeat and destruction, or of collaboration
+with them.
+
+"Now I have only to implement my knowledge, to publish the fact,
+and one shadow at least will be lifted from mankind. I will do it
+at once. Well, nearly at once. It is almost dawn in the normal
+world. I will sit here a very little while and rest. Then I will
+go out and begin to make contact with the proper persons for the
+disposition of this thing. But first I will sit here a little
+while and rest."
+
+And he died quietly in his chair as he sat there.
+
+
+Dr. Mason made an entry in his private journal: "Charles Vincent,
+a completely authenticated case of premature aging, one of the
+most clear-cut in all gerontology. This man was known to me for
+years, and I here aver that as of one year ago he was of normal
+appearance and physical state, and that his chronology is also
+correct, I having also known his father. I examined the subject
+during the period of his illness, and there is no question at all
+of his identity, which has also been established for the record
+by fingerprinting and other means. I aver that Charles Vincent at
+the age of thirty is dead of old age, having the appearance and
+organic condition of a man of ninety."
+
+Then the doctor began to make another note: "As in two other
+cases of my own observation, the illness was accompanied by a
+certain delusion and series of dreams, so nearly identical in the
+three men as to be almost unbelievable. And for the record, and
+no doubt to the prejudice of my own reputation, I will set down
+the report of them here."
+
+But when Dr. Mason had written that, he thought about it for a
+while.
+
+"No, I will do no such thing," he said, and he struck out the
+last lines he had written. "It is best to let sleeping dragons
+lie."
+
+And somewhere the faceless men with the smell of the pit on them
+smiled to themselves in quiet irony.
+
+
+END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Six Fingers of Time, by
+Raphael Aloysius Lafferty
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