file:///G|/rah/Brian%20Lumley/Brian%20Lumley%20-%20E-Branch%201%20-%20Defilers.txt
singing, painting, building? How do the dead go on?
To questions such as this there was no answer until there was the Necroscope: a man who could look
into the graves of men and into their dead minds. And through him-only through Harry Keogh-the
dead were enabled. He taught them deadspeak, how to converse with one another, and joined them up
across the world,- he brought sons and daughters to long-lost mothers and fathers, reunited old
friends, resolved old doubts and arguments and reinspired the brilliance of great minds guttering
low. And without ever intending it- scarcely realizing what was happening-he became a lone candle
flickering in the long night of the dead. And they basked in his warmth and loved him for it.
But as much as Harry Keogh gave the dead, just so much and more he received. From his mother, who
in life had been a psychic medium, the germ of that metaphysical skill from which his greater
abilities derived. From August Ferdinand Mobius, a long-dead mathematician and astronomer,
knowledge and
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mastery of the Mobius Continuum, an undimensioned place (for want of a better description)
parallel with all time and space. And from Faethor Ferenczy, the history of a vampire world and
its undead inhabitants, some of which-much like Faethor himself-had from time to time found their
way into our world. But it should be stated that this latter knowledge was obtained more out of
the extinct vampire's longing for life than his love of the Necroscope . . .
And from that time on-from Harry's discovery of vampires in our world, to the time of his "death"
in Starside-the Necroscope was dedicated to their destruction. For he knew that if the terrible
Lords and Ladies of the Wamphyri weren't put down, then that they must surely enslave mankind.
But in the end-himself a vampire and righting the Thing within him to his last breath-even Harry
gave in, "died," and was no more. Oh, really . . . ?
But for every rule there has to be an exception, and Harry Keogh, Necroscope, was-he is-the
exception to the rule of negative interaction between the Great Majority and the living. For in
life he was the master of the Mobius Continuum, and used it to pursue vampires. So that now, in
death . . . ?
Harry Keogh was not alone in his lifelong war against the Wamphyri. Recruited into E-Branch as a
youth, he had the backing of that most secret of secret organizations almost to the end. And even
when Harry was himself no longer entirely human, still Ben Trask, the Head of E-Branch, was his
friend. It was Trask, the human lie detector, who saw the "truth" of Harry: that he would never
turn on his own kind,- but still, best to take no chances, and Trask had been tasked to hound him
from Earth.
Nevertheless, when at last the Necroscope returned to Sunside/Starside, to fight his last great
battle there, he went of his own accord and not because he was driven out.
And it was Ben Trask, too, along with many more members of E-Branch, who saw-who were given to see-
Harry's passing on the night he died.
It was a vision, a hologram, a real yet unreal thing. They saw The End of Harry as if it were here
and now when in fact it occurred in an alien world on the other side of space-time.
Thirteen witnesses in all, in the ops room at E-Branch HQ; they all saw the same thing: that
smoking, smouldering, hideous corpse, cruciform and crucified in midair, tumbling backwards, head
over heels, free of the floor as on an invisible spit. And despite the crisped and blackened face,
Ben Trask had known who it was, that this was Harry.
And for all that they encircled it, still the thing seemed to fall away from them, growing
smaller, receding toward a nebulous origin-or destiny?-out of which ribbons of neon light reached
like myriad writhing tentacles to welcome it.
The figure dwindled, shrank to a mote, and finally disappeared. But where it had been-
An explosion! A sunburst of golden fire, expanding hugely, silently, awe-
NECROSCOPE: DEFILERS 11
somely! So that the thirteen observers had gasped and ducked down,- and despite that this thing
was in their group mind, they instinctively turned away from the blinding intensity of its glare-
and of what flew out of it. All except Trask, who had shielded his eyes but continued to watch,
because that was his nature and he must know the truth.
And the truth of it had been fantastic.
Those myriad golden splinters speeding outwards from the sunburst, angling this way and that,
sentient, seeking, disappearing into as many unknown places. Those, what, pieces? Of the
Necroscope, Harry Keogh All that remained of him, of what he'd been and what he'd meant? And as
the last of them had zipped by Trask and vanished from view, so the writhing streamers of red,
blue, and green ghost-light had likewise blinked out of existence . . .
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