woodworked Victorian style even if it was in the Spanish
   part). At the corner, he halted and stuck his head around.
   The woman at the extreme end was facing him. By the
   light of a floor lamp near her, he could see that she was
   tall and black-haired and beautiful—the woman in the
   portrait above the mantel in the drawing room.
   She beckoned to him and turned and disappeared
   around the corner.
   He felt a little disoriented, not so much as if he were
   being disconnected from a part of himself inside himself
   but as if the walls around him were being subtly warped.
   Just as he rounded the corner, he saw her skirt going
   into a doorway. This led to a room halfway down the hall.
   The only light was .that from the lamp on a stand in the
   hallway. He groped around until he felt the light switch.
   The response was the illumination of a small lamp at the
   other end on a stand by a huge bed with a canopy. He did
   not know much about furniture, but it looked like a bed
   from one of the Louis series, Louis Quatorze, perhaps.
   The rest of the expensive-looking furniture seemed to go
   with the bed. A large crystal chandelier hung from the
   center of the ceiling.
   The wall was White paneling, and one of the panels was
   just swinging shut.
   Childe thought it was swinging shut. He had blinked,
   and then the wall seemed solid.
   There was no other way for the woman to have gone.
   Do ghosts have to open doors, or panels, to go from
   one room to another?
   Perhaps they did, if they existed. However, he had seen
   nothing to indicate that Dolores—or whoever the woman
   was—must be a ghost.
   If she were a hoax set up by Baron Igescu for the bene-
   fit of others, and particularly for Childe, she was leading
   him on for a reason that he could only believe was sinis-
   ter. The panel led to a passage between the walls, and
   Igescu must want him to go through a panel.
   The newspaper article had said that the original house
   had contained between-walls passages and underground
   passages, and several secret tunnels which led to exits in
   the woods. Don del Osorojo had built these because he
   feared attacks from bandits, wild Indians, revolting peas-
   ants, and, possibly, government troops. The Don, it
   seemed, was having trouble with tax-collectors; the gov-
   ernment claimed that he was hiding gold and silver.
   When the first Baron Igescu, the present owner's uncle,
   had added the wings, he had also built secret passageways
   which connected to those in the central house. Not so
   secret, actually, since the workers had talked about them,
   but no drawings or blueprints of the house's construction
   existed, as far as anybody knew. And most of the workers
   would now be dead or so old they could not remember the
   layout, even if any of them could be found.
   The panel had been opened long enough for him to
   know that it was an entrance. Perhaps the baron wanted
   him to know it; perhaps Dolores, the ghost. In any event,
   he meant to go through it.
   Finding the actuator of the entrance was another matter.
   He pressed the wood around the panel, tried to move
   strips around it, knocked at various places on the panel
   (it sounded hollow), and examined the wood closely for
   holes. He found nothing out-of-the-way.
   Straightening up, he half-turned in an angry movement
   and then turned back again, as if he would catch some-
   thing—or somebody—doing something behind his back.
   There was nothing behind him that had not been there
   before. But he did glimpse himself in the huge floor-to-
   ceiling mirror that constituted half of the wall across the
   room.
   13
   The mirror certainly was not reflecting as a mirror should.
   Nor was it reflecting grossly or exaggeratedly, like a funny-
   house mirror. The distortions—if they could be called dis-
   tortions—were subtle. And as evasive as drops of mer-
   cury.
   There were slight shirtings of everything reflected, of
   the wall behind him, the painting on the wall to one side
   of him, the canopied bed, and himself. It was as if he
   were looking at an underwater room through a window,
   with himself deep in the water and the mirror a window,
   or porthole, to a room in a subaquatic palace. The objects
   in the room, and he seemed to be as much an object as
   the bed or a chair, swayed a little. As if currents of cold
   water succeeded by warmer water compressed or ex-
   panded the water and so changed the intensity and the
   refraction of lighting.
   There was more to the shifting than that, however. At
   one place, the room and everything in it, including him-
   self, seemed almost—not quite—normal. As they should
   be or as it seemed that they should be. Seemed, he
   thought, because it struck him that things as they are
   were not necessarily things as they should be, that custom
   had made strangeness, or outrageousness (a peculiar
   word, what made him think of that?), comfortable.
   Then the "normality" disappeared as the objects twisted
   or swayed, he was not sure which they did, and the room,
   and he, became "evil."
   He did not look "weak" nor "petty" nor "sneaky" nor
   "selfish" nor "indifferent," all of which he felt himself to
   be at various times. He looked "evil." Malignant, destroy-
   ing, utterly loveless.
   He walked slowly toward the mirror. His image, waver-
   ing, advanced. It smiled, and he suddenly realized that he
   was smiling. That smile was not utterly loveless; it was a
   smile of pure love. Love of hatred and of corruption and
   of all living things.
   He could almost smell the stink of hate and of death.
   Then he thought that the smile was not of love but
   of greed, unless greed was a form of love. It could be.
   The meanings of words were as shifting and elusive as
   the images in the mirror.
   He became sick; something was gnawing at his nerves
   in the pit of his stomach.
   It was a form of sea-sickness, he thought. See-sickness,
   rather.
   He turned away from the mirror, feeling as he did so a
   chill pass over his scalp and a vulnerability—a hollowness
   —between his shoulders, as if the man in the mirror
   would stick him in the back with a knife if he exposed his
   back to him.
   He hated the mirror and the room it mirrored. He had
   to get out of it. If he could not get the panel open in a
   few seconds, he would have to leave by the door.
   There was no use in repeating his first efforts. The key
   to the panel was not in its immediate neighborhood, so
   he would have to look elsewhere. Perhaps its actuator, a
   button, a stud, something, could be behind the large oil
   painting. This was of a man who looked much like the
   baron and was probably his uncle. Childe lifted it up and
   off its hooks and placed it upright on the floor, leaning
					     					 			r />   against the wall. The space behind where it had been was
   smooth. No actuator mechanism here.
   He replaced the painting. It seemed twice as heavy
   when he lifted it
   up as it had when he had taken it down.
   This room was draining him of his strength.
   He turned away from the painting and stopped. The
   panel had swung inward into the darkness behind the
   wall.
   Childe, keeping an eye on the panel, placed a hand on
   the lower corner of the portrait-frame and moved it
   slightly. The panel, however, had already started to close.
   Evidently the actuating mechanism opened it briefly and
   then closed it automatically.
   He waited until the panel shut and again moved the
   frame sideways. Nothing happened. But when he lifted
   the painting slightly, the panel again swung open.
   Childe did not hesitate. He ran to the panel, stepped
   through cautiously, making sure that there was firm foot-
   ing in the darkness, and then got to one side to permit the
   panel to swing shut. He was in unrelieved black; the air
   was dead and odorous of decaying wood, plaster falling
   apart, and a trace of long-dead mice. There was also a
   teaser (was it there or not?) of perfume.
   The flashlight showed a dusty corridor about four feet
   wide and seven high. It did not end against the wall of
   the hallway, as he had expected. A well of blackness
   turned out to be a stairway under the hall. At its bottom
   was a small platform and another stairway leading up, he
   presumed, to another passageway on the other side of the
   hall.
   In the opposite direction, the passageway ran straight
   for about fifty feet and then disappeared around a corner.
   He walked slowly in that direction and examined the
   walls, ceiling, and floor carefully. When he had gone far
   enough to be past the baron's bedroom, he found a panel
   on hinges. It was too small and too far up the wall for
   passage. He unlocked its latch, turned his flashlight off,
   and swung it slowly out to avoid squeaking of hinges.
   They gave no sound. The panel had hidden a one-way
   mirror. He was looking into a bedroom. A titian-haired
   woman came through the door from the hall about seven
   seconds later. She walked past him, only five feet away,
   and disappeared into another doorway. She was wear-
   ing a print dress with large red flowers; her legs were
   bare and her feet were sandaled.
   The woman was so beautiful that he had felt sick in
   his solar plexus for a moment, a feeling he had experi-
   enced three times, when seeing for the first time women
   so beautiful that he was agonized because he would never
   have them.
   Childe thought that it would be better to continue his
   exploring, but he could not resist the feeling that he might
   see something significant if he stayed here. The woman
   had looked so determined, as if she had something im-
   portant to do. He placed his ear against the glass and
   could hear, faintly, Richard Strauss' Thus Spake Zara-
   thustra. It must be coming from the room into which
   she had gone.
   The bedroom was in rather somber taste for a beauti-
   ful young woman; the baron's room, if it had been the
   baron's room, would have been more appropriate for her.
   It was far cheerier, if you excepted the wall-mirror. The
   walls were of dark dull wooden paneling about six feet
   up from the floor; above them was a dull dark wallpaper
   with faint images: queer birds, twisted dragons, and the
   recurring figures of what could be a nude Adam and Eve
   and an apple tree. There were no snakes.
   The carpet was thick and also dull and dark with im-
   ages too faded to be identified. The bed was, like the
   baron's, canopied, but it was of a period he did not rec-
   ognize, although this did not mean much, because he
   knew very little about furniture or furnishings. Its legs
   were wrought-iron in the form of dragon's claws. The
   bedspread and the canopy were a dark red. There was a
   mirror on the wall opposite. It was three-sided, like the
   mirrors used in the clothing departments of stores. It
   seemed to be nothing extraordinary; it reflected the win-
   dow through which Childe was looking as another mirror
   above a large dull red-brown dresser.
   There was a chandelier of cut quartz with dull yellow
   sockets for candles. The light in the room, however, came
   from a number of table and floor lamps. The corners of
   the room were in shadow.
   Childe waited for a while and sweated. It was hot in
   the corridor, and the various odors, of wood, plaster, and
   long-dead mice, became stronger instead of dying on a
   dulling nose. The teaser of perfume was entirely gone. Fi-
   nally, just as he decided that he should be moving on—
   and why was he standing here in the first place—the
   woman came through the door. She was naked; her titian-
   red hair hung loosely around her shoulders and down her
   back. She held a long-necked bottle to her lips as she
   walked toward the dresser. She paused before it and con-
   tinued to drink until only about two inches of the liquid
   was left. Then she put the bottle on the dresser and
   leaned forward to look into the mirror.
   She had taken her makeup off. She peered into the
   mirror as if she were searching for defects. Childe stepped
   back, because it seemed impossible that she would not
   see him. Then he steepped forward again. If she knew that
   this was a one-way mirror, she did not care if another was
   on the other side. Or supposed that no hostile person
   would be there. Perhaps only the baron knew of this
   passageway.
   She seemed to find her inspection of her face satisfac-
   tory, and she might have found it very pleasing, to judge
   from her smile. She straightened up and looked at her
   body and also seemed pleased at this. Childe felt uncom-
   fortable, as if he were doing something perverted by
   spying on her, but he also began to get excited.
   She wriggled a little, swayed her hips from side to
   side, and ran her hands up and down her ribs and hips
   and then cupped them over her breasts and rubbed the
   nipples with the ends of her thumbs. The nipples swelled.
   Childe's penis swelled, also.
   Keeping her left hand busy with her breast, she put her
   right hand on her pubes, and opened the top of the slit
   with one finger and began to rub her clitoris. She worked
   swiftly at it, rubbing vigorously, and suddenly she threw
   her head back, her mouth open, ecstasy on her face.
   Childe felt both excited and repulsed. Part of the re-
   pulsion was because he was no voyeur; he felt that it was
   indecent to watch anyone under these circumstances. It
   was true that he did not have to stay, but he was here to
   investigate kidnapping and murder, and this certainly
   looked worth investigating.
   She continued to rub her clitoris and the hairy lips.					     					 			r />
   And then—here Childe was startled and shaken but also
   knew that he had somehow expected it—a tiny thing,
   like a slender white tongue, spurted from the slit.
   It was not a tongue. It was more like a snake or an eel.
   It was as small in diameter as a garter snake but much
   longer. How long it was he could not determine yet, be-
   cause its body kept sliding out and out. It kept coming,
   and its skin was smooth and hairless, as smooth as the
   woman's belly and as white, and the skin glistened with
   the fluid released from her cunt.
   It shot out in a downward arc, like a half-erect penis,
   and then it turned and flopped over against her belly and
   began to zigzag upwards. It continued to slide out from
   the slit as if yards of it were still coiled inside her womb,
   and it oozed up until its snaky length was coiled once
   around her left breast.
   Childe could see the details of the thing's head, which
   was the size of a golf ball. It turned twice to look directly
   at him. Into the mirror, rather.
   Its head was bald except for a fringe of oil-plastered
   black hair around the tiny ears. It had two thin but wet-
   black eyebrows and a wet black Mephistophelean mous-
   tache and beard. The nose was relatively large and meat
   cleaver shaped. The eyes were dark, but they were so
   small and set so far back that they would have seemed
   dark to Childe even if they had been palest blue. The
   mouth was as much a slit as the vagina from which the
   creature had issued, but it briefly opened it and Childe
   could see two rows of little yellow teeth and a pink-red
   tongue.
   The face was tiny, but there was nothing feeble about
   its malignancy.
   The woman's lips moved. Childe could not hear her,
   but he thought that she was crooning.
   The snaky body resumed its climbing while more of its
   body slid out of the pink fissure and the dark-red bush.
   It rounded her breast and went up her shoulder and
   around her neck and came around the right side and ex-
   tended a loop outwards and then in so that the Lilliputian
   head faced her. The woman turned a little then, thus
   permitting Childe a .quarter-view of her profile.