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For one thing, he had been constructed along almost painfully ordinary lines. And for another, they couldn't very well release the information that a mechanical man built by their laboratories was wandering the streets. It would cause a panic. And there was enough panic, what with the nerve gas and the bombs."
"So they never found him, I gather."
"No," Donovan said, wistfully. "They never found him. And they kept their secret well: it died when they died."
"And what happened to the creature?"
"Very little, to tell the truth. They'd given him a decent intelligence, you see--far more decent, and complex, then they knew--so he didn't have much trouble finding small jobs. A rather old-looking man, fairly strong--he made out. Needless to say, he couldn't stay in the town for more than twenty years or so, because of his inability to age, but this was all right. Everyone makes friends and loses them. He got used to it."
Father Courtney sat very still now. The birds had flown away from the telephone lines, and were at the window, beating their wings, and crying harshly.
"But all this time, he's been thinking, Father. Thinking and reading. He makes quite a study of philosophy, and for a time he favors a somewhat peculiar combination of Russell and Schopenhauer--unbitter bitterness, you might say. Then this phase pa.s.ses, and he begins to search through the vast theological and methaphysical literature. For what? He isn't sure. However, he is sure of one thing, now: He is, indubitably, human. Without breath, without heart, without blood or bone, artificially created, he thinks this and believes it, with a fair amount of firmness, too. Isn't that remarkable!"
"It is indeed," the priest said, his throat oddly tight and dry. "Go on."
"Well," Donovan chuckled, "I've caught your interest, have I? All right, then. Let us imagine that one hundred years have pa.s.sed. The creature has been able to make minor repairs on himself, but--at last--he is dying. Like an ancient motor, he's gone on running year after year, until he's all paste and hairpins, and now, like the motor, he's falling apart. And nothing and no one can save him."
The acrid aroma burned and fumed.
"Here's the real paradox, though. Our man has become religious. Father! He doesn't have a living cell within him, yet he's concerned about his soul!"
Donovan's eyes quieted, as the rest of him did. "The problem," he said, "is this: Having lived creditably for over a century as a member of the human species, can this creature of ours hope for Heaven? Or will he 'die' and become only a heap of metal cogs?"
Father Courtney leapt from the chair, and moved to the bed. "George, in Heaven's name, let me call Doctor Ferguson!"
"Answer the question first. Or haven't you decided?"
"There's nothing to decide," the priest said, with impatience. "It's a preposterous idea. No machine can have a soul."
Donovan made the sighing sound, through closed lips. He said, "You don't think it's conceivable, then, that G.o.d could have made an exception here?"
"What do you mean?"
"That He could have taken pity on this theoretical man of ours, and breathed a soul into him after all? Is that so impossible?"
Father Courtney shrugged. "It's a poor word, impossible," he said. "But it's a poor problem, too.
Why not ask me whether pigs ought to be allowed to fly?""Then you admit it's conceivable?"
"I admit nothing of the kind. It simply isn't the sort of question any man can answer."
"Not even a priest?"
"Especially not a priest. You know as much about Catholicism as I do, George; you ought to know how absurd the proposition is."
"Yes," Donovan said. His eyes were closed.
Father Courtney remembered the time they had argued furiously on what would happen if you went back in time and killed your own grandfather. This was like that argument. Exactly like it--exactly. It was no stranger than a dozen other discussions (What if Mozart had been a writer instead of a composer? If a person died and remained dead for an hour and were then revived, would he be haunted by his own ghost?) Plus, perhaps, the fact that Donovan might be in a fever. Perhaps and might and why do I sit here while his life may be draining away . . - The old man made a sharp noise. "But you can tell me this much," he said. "If our theoretical man were dying, and you knew that he was dying, would you give him Extreme Unction?"
"George, you're delirious."
"No, I'm not: please Father! Would you give this creature the Last Rites? If, say, you knew him?
If you'd known him for years, as a friend, as a member of the parish?"
The priest shook his head. "It would be sacriligious."
"But why? You said yourself that he might have a soul, that G.o.d might have granted him this.
Didn't you say that?"
"Father, remember, he's a friend of yours. You know him _well_. You and he, this creature, have worked together, side by side, for years. You've taken a thousand walks together, shared the same interests, the same love of art and knowledge. For the sake of the thesis, Father. Do you understand?"
"No," the priest said, feeling a chill freeze into him. "No, I don't."
"Just answer this, then. If your friend were suddenly to reveal himself to you as a machine, and he was dying, and wanted very much to go to Heaven--what would you do?"
The priest picked up the wine gla.s.s and emptied it. He noticed that his hand was trembling.
"Why--" he began, and stopped, and looked at the silent old man in the bed, studying the face, searching for madness, for death.
"What would you do?"
An unsummoned image flashed through his mind. Donovan, kneeling at the altar for Communion, Sunday after Sunday; Donovan, with his mouth firmly shut, while the other's yawned; Donovan, waiting to the last moment, then s.n.a.t.c.hing the Host, quickly, dartingly, like a lizard gobbling a fly.
Had he ever seen Donovan eat?
Had he seen him take one gla.s.s of wine, ever?
Father Courtney shuddered slightly, brus.h.i.+ng away the images. He felt unwell. He wished the birds would go elsewhere.
_Well, answer him_, he thought. _Give him an answer. Then get in the helicar and fly to Milburn and pray it's not too late_ . . .
"I think," the priest said, "that in such a case, I would administer Extreme Unction."
"Just as a precautionary measure?"
"It's all very ridiculous, but--I think that's what I'd do. Does that answer the question?"
"It does, Father. It does." Donovan's voice came from nowhere. "There is one last point, then I'm finished with my little thesis."
"Yes?"
"Let us say the man dies and you give him Extreme Unction; he does or does not go to Heaven, provided there is a Heaven. What happens to the body? Do you tell the towns-people they have beenliving with a mechanical monster all these years?"
"What do you think, George?"
"I think it would be unwise. They remember our theoretical man as a friend, you see. The shock would be terrible. Also, they would never believe he was the only one of his kind; they'd begin to suspect their neighbors of having clockwork interiors. And some of them might be tempted to investigate and see for sure. And, too, the news would be bound to spread, all over the world. I think it would be a bad thing to let anyone know, Father."
"How would I be able to suppress it?" the priest heard himself ask, seriously.
"By conducting a private autopsy, so to speak. Then, afterwards, you could take the parts to a junkyard and scatter them."
Donovan's voice dropped to a whisper. Again the locust hum.
". . . and if our monster had left a note to the effect he had moved to some unspecified place, you . . .".
The acrid smell billowed, all at once, like a steam, a hiss of blinding vapor.
"George."
Donovan lay unstirring on the cloud of linen, his face composed, expressionless.
"George!"
The priest reached under the blanket and touched the heart-area of Donovan's chest. He tried to pull the eyelids up: they would not move.
He blinked away the burning wetness. "Forgive me!" he said, and paused, and took from his pocket a small white jar and a white stole.
He spoke softly, under his breath, in Latin. While he spoke, he touched the old man's feet and head with glistening fingertips.
Then, when many minutes had pa.s.sed, he raised his head.
Rain sounded in the room, and swift winds, and far-off rockets.
Father Courtney grasped the edge of the blanket.
He made the Sign of the Cross, breathed, and pulled downward, slowly.
After a long while he opened his eyes.
[CharlesBeaumontSelectedStories-pic2.jpg]
Introduction to
THE HOWLING MAN.
by Harlan Ellison
No one--not critics or savants of semiotics or even readers of the most sensitive sort--can know how good Chuck Beaumont was at putting words on paper. Only other writers can feel the impulse thatbeats in his work as strongly as it beats in themselves. Good writers love him and what he did; mediocre writers envy and marvel and even hate him a little because he heard the music denied them; bad writers are simply overwhelmed and are left desolate at the realization that, like Salieri, they can never be Mozart. Charles Beaumont was truly one in a million. A million men and women fighting that battle waged every time they sit down to work, on a battlefield 8 1/2 x 11, in conflict not only with themselves and the best they've ever done personally, but with all the best who went before.
We try to avoid such statements, because they reek of the worst p.r.o.nouncements of Hemingway getting into the ring with Chekhov (that snappy little counterpuncher). But any writer worth the name, unless he or she is totally daft, knows that it's true: comparisons will eventually be made, and one has to go up against the highest standards of literature if one hopes to be read fifteen minutes after final blackout.
Even John Simon knows it: ". . . there is no point in saying less than your predecessors have said."
So we pick our icons. And we pick them carefully, in hopes that we haven't been spotted so many b.a.l.l.s that beating the compet.i.tion is a hollow victory. Mine have been Kafka and Poe and Borges .
. . and Beaumont. (Arrogance had long been my prime character flaw.) Thus far I don't think their shades need worry.
And though I know the former three only through their work, Chuck Beaumont was my friend for about nine years, and I had the honor of buying and publis.h.i.+ng quite a bit of his stuff.
From April Fool's Day 1959, my separation date from the U.S. Army, till August of 1960, yoked with the excellent novelist Frank M. Robinson, I was editor of _Rogue_, a slick men's magazine published out of Evanston, Illinois--only a few miles and even fewer dissimilarities from _Playboy's_ offices on Ohio Street in Chicago's Loop. The magazine was published by one of the industry's great characters, William L. Ham ling.
Now, Mr. Ham ling, early in his publis.h.i.+ng career, circa 1950, had worked in Skokie, Illinois for a man named George von Rosen, publisher of (among other t.i.tles, such as _Art Photography_, which Bill worked on) _Modern Man_, arguably the first true men's magazine.
(Let me backtrack for a moment. I hadn't really intended to get into this much ancient history, simply to make a point about origins, but it occurs to me that this is the kind of publis.h.i.+ng history minutiae that gets lost forever unless someone accidentally manages to commit it to paper before the memories blur. Some archivist may one day need this series of linkages, which are kinda sorta fascinating in/of themselves, so excuse the digression.
(Hamling had worked under editor Raymond A. Palmer at Ziff-Davis Publis.h.i.+ng in Chicago during the '40's, winding up as managing editor of the pulp science fiction magazines _Amazing Stories_ and _Fantastic Adventures_ in 1948. When Z-D decided to move the operation to New York in 1950, both Palmer and Ham ling chose to stay in Evanston. Palmer started _Other Worlds_ and _Imagination_, digest-sized genre magazines, and Ham ling got a job with von Rosen.
(In 1951, Ray Palmer fronted Hamling financially and Bill bought _Imagination_, later adding _Imaginative Tales_ and, in 1955, branching out of the sf digest idiom to start a semi-slick men's magazine, Rogue. Which circles us back out of the digression to the element of Hamling's stint at von Rosen's magazine factory that resulted in Beaumont working for us at _Rogue_.) In the accounting department at von Rosen's happy little nudery, was a guy who had been fired from _Esquire_ (which also, at that time, had its office in Chicago.) His name was Hugh Hefner, and his aspirations were only slightly higher than those of his coworker, William L. Ham ling . . . though his taste and inventiveness were infinitely greater. Hamling and Hefner were friendly acquaintances. Not buddies, but chummy enough that when Ham ling saw Hefner start _Playboy_ on his kitchen table (with a capital investment of $600 of his own money and loans from friends that brought the seed total to between $7000-$8000) and quickly achieve high-profile success, his own sense of home-grown American venality was piqued.
By 1953, when Hefner started Playboy and began gathering around him the core talents who would form the basis of the magazine's non-public popularity--Beaumont, Matheson, Herbert Gold, Ken Purdy, and others--Ham ling had become financially solvent with the sf magazines, and he burned with envy at the way in which that no-name guy from von Rosen's accounting department had pa.s.sed him at adead run. Playing his acquaintance with Hefner to get basic start-up information, Hamling began _Rogue_, ripping off as many aspects of the original as he could on a lower budget. The paper wasn't slick, the photos weren't in color, the nudes weren't as stunning, but it was the second men's magazine (excluding _Modern Man_, which was mostly nudes, with prose that might have included some fiction and contemporary articles, but if it did, I can't remember any.) And in 1955 when _Rogue_ debuted, the market was so new that there was plenty of room for a _Playboy_ compet.i.tor, despite its ragtag look.
But Ham ling had a plethora of blind spots. The most interesting, of concern to us here, was that though he envied Hefner to a degree that consumed him, he also admired him and sought to emulate Hefner's every move. By 1959, when Hamling hired me straight out of my honorable discharge to edit _Rogue_, he had decided to go whole hog and turn _Rogue_ into a full slick magazine. So he needed professional talent--both as editorial staff and as contributors--to supplement his own iron will at the conceptual stages. After Frank Robinson and I came on board, Ham ling set about (from the vantage point behind that blind spot) co-opting everyone of talent who worked for Hefner, on the theory that they must be the best - . . after all, wasn't Hefner publis.h.i.+ng them? Don't ask.
The problem for Bill was that most of those people were under exclusive contract to Hefner, with restrictions against their publis.h.i.+ng anywhere else in competing markets that were Draconian. (Once, a model who had appeared in _Playboy_ had the bad fortune to allow a photo set of leftovers appear in _Rogue_. The woman's personal services contract with HMH was voided and she lost thousands of dollars' worth of personal appearance gigs, not to mention the succoring warmth of the Playboy Mansion.) But Bill was determined. The two most prominent contributors to Playboy whose acquisition obsessed Ham ling, were artist Ron Bradford and writer Charles Beaumont. So Bill made the acquaintance of Chuck, and made him money offers Chuck couldn't refuse, and before I arrived at Rogue Chuck was already doing profiles of show biz personalities and sports car pieces under the house pseudonyms "Michael Phillips" and "Robert Courtney." (These names were used by others, as well. My own "The Case for Our College Bohemians"--about which the less said, the better--was published in the August 1 959 Rogue bylined "Robert Courtney.") But on the day that Chuck delivered into my hands the ma.n.u.script of "The Howling Man," which Hefner had rejected for heaven-only-knows-what-reason, I realized instantly that we had been proffered a small literary miracle, and that a house pseudonym would not suffice. Another "Courtney" or "Phillips"
piece meant nothing. But if we could create a separate nom-de-plume persona for Beaumont's fiction, we might be able to raise out of the mire of non-ent.i.ties a penname creation that might have as much serious literary coin as Beaumont himself The Evan Hunter/Ed McBain Theory.
Bill Hamling, of course, thought "The Howling Man" was much too dangerous a Piece for us to publish. Frank Robinson and I beat him mercilessly, day after day, until he finally capitulated; and I set about preparing a showcase for the work that would set it off for special attention.
First, I achieved one of Bill's dreams by getting to artist Ron Bradford, who had been doing the most memorable feature art for Hefner. Through the then-art director, Richard A. Thompson, who knew Bradford in the Chicago art community, I met and cajoled Ron by using the one tool I knew was perfect: I let him read "The Howling Man."
Bradford was as knocked out by the story as Frank and I had been, and he agreed to do the art.
I invented the name "Corey Summerwell" for Bradford and he created a style of collage entirely different from what he was doing for _Playboy_ so Hefner would not be able to make the connection. Ironically, a second piece of Bradford art, for a story t.i.tled "Manny" by Raymond Pa.s.sacantando, got into print a month before the Summerwell painting for 'The Howling Man" in the November 1959 _Rogue_.
All that remained was to invent a pseudonym for Beaumont. We wanted it to be a subterfuge, but we also wanted those who were on to such things to know who was behind the pen-name. I invented C.B. Lovehill. The C and the B are obvious; beau I twisted out the French to get _love_, though idiomatically it was a stretch; and _mont_ became _hill_. On the _meet the authors_ page that issue (called "Rogue Notes'), my attempts to keep Beaumont out of trouble with Hefner by making no allusionsto the pseudonym, were defeated by Hamling who, with typical disregard for anyone else's personal danger, rewrote my copy and d.a.m.ned surely indicated Lovehill was Beaumont to all but the dopiest reader. I was furious with Hamling, as was Beaumont, but life with Hamling in it was like having a nagging summer flu that simply will not go away; and finally, we just had to accept it.
The story was published, it drew huge amounts of laudatory mail, and Chuck went on to do (if memory serves) another half dozen stories for me, stories like "Dead, You Know" and "Genevieve, My Genevieve."
Funnily, in the same "Rogue Notes" where Chuck was betrayed, we ran a photo of "Lovehill." It is a snapshot of Frank Robinson in his summer straw hat, talking on the phone with his back to the camera. (In another issue, "Courtney" is seen in photo closeup. He looks a lot like Ellison.) The story that lies at the heart of all this history has gone on to be recognized as a modern fantasy cla.s.sic. Chuck scripted it for the original _Twilight Zone_ and its television incarnation plays and replays endlessly in syndication; and each time it airs we realize anew how deft, how sinister, how universal in its message it is.
But beyond the simple plot structure and horrendous implications of characterization, "The Howling Man" recommends itself, and the wonders of Beaumont's muse, because it is the rare fiction that we cannot forget. It touches places in the soul that resonate purely, almost thirty years after it first appeared, as strongly as in 1959. It is, for me, not merely a point of pride to be able to say that I was privileged to publish the work of one of the best writers this country ever produced, but it is a way of saying thank you to a man who was my friend and who influenced not only my own writing but my life in ways he would recognize were he still with us.
Yet on this 20th anniversary of Chuck's pa.s.sing (as I write this introduction to what I think is his finest short story), it takes on considerable import for anyone who looks toward the icons for the tap roots of contemporary American fiction.
Charles Beaumont was one in a million, and perhaps rereading "The Howling Man" will remind the other 999,999 that what they do, when they do it with honor and high craft, has been profoundly influenced by what Chuck taught us in the pages of magazines now three decades gone.