Henry Kuttner - The Portal in the Picture

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THE
PORTAL IN
THE PICTURE
Prologue
SHE called herself Malesca. Her agent called her the "Loveliest Girl in the World" and I suppose he wasn't
far wrong, at that. If I'd known she was playing the Windsor Roof that night I'd have gone somewhere
else.
But by the time I was at the table, having a sandwich and a highball, it was too late. The lights dimmed,
the spot went on and there stood Malesca, bowing to the storm of applause. I wasn't going to let her spoil
my drink. I could always look somewhere else while she was on. I ate white meat of chicken, drank my
highball and thought about other things—until the famous velvet voice began to sing.
I listened to her sing. A chair creaked. In the dimness someone sat down beside me. I peered through the
gloom, recognizing the man, a top figure in show business.
"Hello, Burton," he said.
"Hello."
"Mind if I join you?"
I waved my hand and he gave his order to the waiter who slid up noiselessly. Malesca was still singing.
The man beside me watched her, as rapt and intent as everybody else in the club except me.
Two .encores later, when the lights went up, I realized that he was staring at me curiously. My disinterest
in the singer must have been pretty obvious.
"No like?" he asked in a puzzled voice.
Even before Korzybski that particular question would have been meaningless. I couldn't answer him and I
knew it. So I
3
didn't bother. I just didn't say anything. I could see Malesca from the corner of my eye, hear the rustle of
her stiff skirts as she came through the tables toward me. I sighed.
She was wearing some light flowery scent I knew she hadn't picked out for herself. She put her hand on
the table edge and leaned toward me.
"Eddie," she said.
"Well?"
"Eddie, I haven't seen you for ages."
"That's right."
"Listen, why don't you wait around? Take me somewhere after my last show. We could have a drink or
something. How about it, Eddie?"
Her voice was pure magic. It had been magic on radio and records and video. It would soon be magic in
the movies. I didn't say a word.
"Eddie—please."
I picked up my glass, emptied it, brushed crumbs off my coat, laid the napkin beside the plate.
"Thanks," I said. "Wish I could."
She stared at me, the familiar, searching stare full of incomprehension. I could hear the applause still
echoing.
"Eddie—"
"You fieard me," I said. "Take a walk. Take an encore. Go on, beat it."
Without a word she turned away and went back to the floor, her skirts frothing and hissing as she
squeezed between the tables. The man beside me said: "Eddie, are you crazy?"
"Probably," I said. I wasn't going to explain to him.
"All right, Eddie. You know the answers, I suppose. But something must be wrong. The most beautiful
woman in the world throwing herself at your feet—and you won't even look at her. That just isn't
sensible."
"I'm not a very sensible guy," I told him. It was a lie, of course. I'm the most sensible guy in the world—in
any world.
"Don't give me cliches," he said. "That's no answer."
"Cliches!" I said and choked in my glass. "Okay, okay, never mind. Nothing wrong with cliches, you
know. They're just truths that happen so often they're trite. It doesn't make them any less true, does it?" I
looked at Malesca squaring off at the mike, getting ready to sing again.
"I knew a man once who tried to discredit cliches," I went on thoughtfully, knowing I was probably saying
too much. "He failed. He had quite a time, that guy."
"What happened?"
"Oh, he found a fabulous land and rescued a beautiful goddess and overthrew a wicked high priest and—
forget it. Maybe it was a book I read."
"What fabulous land was that?" my friend inquired idly.
"Malesco."
He lifted an eyebrow at me and glanced across the room at the Most Beautiful Girl in the World.
"Malesco? Where's that?"
"Right behind you," I said.
Then I picked up my fresh highball and buried my nose in it. I had nothing more to say—to him. But a
chord in the music just then woke a thin shivering wire of sound at the back of my brain, and for an instant
the barrier between this world and the worlds outside was as thin as air.
Malesco, I thought. I shut my eyes and tried to make the domes and towers of that rose-red city take shape
in the darkness while the chord still sounded in my ears. But I couldn't do it. Malesco had gone back into
the fable again and the gates were shut forever.
And yet, when I think about it now even the sense of wonder and disbelief is suspended and I have no
feeling at all that it was in some dream I walked those streets. They were real. I've got the most convincing
kind of proof that they were real.
It all happened quite a while ago...
Chapter I
REMEMBER the story of the blind men and the elephant? Not one of them ever found out it was an
elephant. That's the way it was with me. A new world was opening right in front of me and I put it down
to eyestrain.
I sat there in my apartment with a bottle and watched the air flicker ^
I told myself to get up and switch off the lights because Lorna had got in the habit of dropping by if I
didn't show up at the ginmill where she worked, and I didn't want to talk to her. Lorna Maxwell was a
leech. She had attached herself to me with all the simple relentlessness of her one-track mind and short of
killing her I knew no way to pry her loose.
It all seemed so easy to Lorna. Here I was, rising young actor Eddie Burton with a record of three straight
Broadway hits and a good part in something new that all the critics liked. Fine.
Here she was, that third-rate young ginmill singer Lorna Maxwell with no record at all that she admitted
to. Don't ask me how we met or how she got her hooks into me. I'm a born easy mark. Children, animals
and people like Lorna can spot people like me a mile away.
She'd got it into her addled little head somehow that all I had to do was say the word and she'd be right up
there beside me, a success, the darling of the columnists. Only selfishness kept me from saying the magic
word to somebody in authority and turning her into Cinderella. Arguments wouldn't move her. It seemed
simpler to turn off the lights when I was at home alone and not answer the door.
The air flickered again. I squinted and shook my head. This was getting a little alarming. It couldn't be the
Scotch. It never happened outside the apartment. It never happened unless I was looking at that particular
wall.
There was a Rousseau picture on it, Sleeping Gypsy, something Uncle Jim had left me along with the
apartment. I made a great effort to focus on the blue-green sky, the lion's blowing mane, the striped robe
of the black man on the sand.
But all I got was a blur. And then I knew I must be drunk because a sound seemed to go with the blur, a
roaring that might have been the lion except that the lion had entirely vanished and I seemed to be seeing a
dome of shining rosy-red light that moved like water.
I squeezed my eyes shut. This was crazy.
Uncle Jim had left me the apartment in his will. It was one of those deals where you pay a fabulous sum
down and a high rental for life and call the apartment yours. I wouldn't have
got into it myself, but Uncle Jim did and it was nice to have a place the landlord couldn't throw me out of
when somebody offered him a higher bribe.
This is probably the place for a word about Uncle Jim Burton. He was a Character. He had red hair,
freckles and a way of losing himself in foreign parts for months at a stretch. Sometimes for years.
He used to visit us between trips when I was a kid,'and of all the people I knew in those days he was my
favorite because he took me in on a secret.
It started out as bedtime stories. All about a marvelous land called Malesco that followed the pattern for
all marvelous lands. There was a beautiful princess and a wicked high priest and a dashing young hero
whose adventures kept me awake for all of fifteen minutes sometimes after the lights were put out.
Those were the pre-Superman days, so I didn't picture myself soaring through Malesco in a red union suit.
But sometimes I wore a lion skin like Tarzan and sometimes the harness of an intrepid Martian warrior
who looked like John Carter.
I even learned to speak Malescan. Uncle Jim made it up, of course. He had a restless mind, and he was
recovering from some sort of illness during those months he stayed with us when the Malesco stories
began. He made up a vocabulary of the language. We worked out a sort of primer together and jabbered
away to each other in Malescan with a good deal of fluency before the episode came to an end and he
went away again.
I sat there, watching the wall flicker, looking at the blurred rose-red globe on the wall and something like
roofs beyond it, lit with a brilliant sunset. I knew I was imagining most of it. What I saw was the red blur
you get when you rub your eyes hard and my imagination was making it into something very much like
the tales of Malesco Uncle Jim used to tell.
The whole thing had sunk far back into my mind in the many years since. But when I groped I seemed to
dredge up a memory of a city lit with crimson sunsets. In the center of the city was a great dome from
which reflected the light from a surface of—had it been water? Had it been—
The doorbell rang.
"Eddie!" Lorna's voice called loudly. "Eddie, let me in a minute."
I knew if I didn't she'd rouse the neighbors with her knocking and shouting. I heaved myself out of the
chair and sidled cautiously around that blur which was pure imagination between me and the wall where
the Rousseau hung. It was odd, I thought, that the hall wasn't blurred, or the front door, or even Lorna's
pretty, cheap little face when I let her in.
"I waited for you, Eddie," she said reproachfully, slipping in fast before I could change my mind. "What
kept you? Eddie, I had to see you. I've got a new idea. Look, how would it be if I could dance a little too?
Would that help? I've worked out a sort of routine I wish you'd—"
"Have a drink," I said wearily. "Let's not talk about it now, Lorna. My head aches. I think I've got eye
trouble. Things keep blurring."
"—look while I just run through it," she went right on as soon as I finished speaking. It was one of her less
endearing tricks.
I shut my ears and followed her back into the living room, hoping she'd go away soon. The Rousseau
Gypsy had come back anyhow. That was a comfort. The red blur which my imagination made into a
vision of Malesco was entirely gone. I sat down in the same chair, sipped my Scotch and looked morosely
at Lorna.
It doesn't matter what she was saying. I heard about every tenth word. She fixed herself a drink and
perched girlishly on the arm of a chair, making graceful gestures with her glass, telling me all about how I
was going to help her become a great dancer if I'd only say the right word to the right man.
I'd heard it all before. I yawned, looked crosseyed at the ice in my glass, drained the last of the Scotch and
glanced up at the opposite wall.
This time it was pure hallucination. Instead of the Rousseau it was another kind of picture on the wall and
it moved as though I were looking at a pull-down movie screen, stereoscopic, technicolored.
There it all was, clear and perfect. No imagination about it this time. Malesco—exactly as Uncle Jim had
told me. A black line that looked like an iron bar ran across one comer of the picture. Beyond it, small and
far away, was the city lit with sunset.
Domes, soaring columns, a shining globe that moved like
water in one enormous sphere, surrounded by curved arches that seemed to support it though they too had
a flowing upward motion. And all the intricate pattern of arches and bubbles was on fire with reflected
light.
A rose-red city, half as old as time.
"Eddie, look at me!"
I didn't stir. This was like hypnosis. I couldn't turn my eyes away from that incredible hallucination. I
knew Lorna' hadn't seen it, for the pitch of her voice didn't change.
Maybe she couldn't see it. Maybe I was crazy. Or maybe she just hadn't glanced that way.
She was babbling something about taking her shoes off so she could show me the dance and I realized
vaguely that she was thumping heavily about the floor. I knew I ought to rub my eyes and try to make that
vision go away.
"Eddie, look at me!" she insisted.
"All right, all right," I said, not looking. "It's fine."
I rubbed my eyes.
Then Lorna screamed.
My head jerked up. I remember the coldness of ice spilling across my hand, I stared at the spot where she
should have been and all I could see across the room was that picture: the sunset city with its globe of
burning water and the black bar across the foreground. The whole city quivered.
I heard her scream fade. It diminished and grew thin and ceased so gradually it still seemed to ring in my
ears long after I thought it had stopped. Then the air's flickering steadied. The rose-red city blurred again
and in the next moment the lion crouched above the sleeping gypsy and the Rousseau painting was
unchanged there on the solid wall.
"Loma," I said. No answer. I stood up, dropping the glass. I took a step forward and stumbled over her
shoes. I ran across to the door and jerked it open. The corridor was empty outside. No footsteps sounded.
I came back and tried the kitchen, the bedroom. No Loma.
An hour later I was down at police headquarters, trying to tell the cops I hadn't murdered her. An hour
after that I was in jail.
Chapter II
I'D RATHER deal with a crook than a fanatic any day. The Assistant D.A. was a fanatic about his own
theories, and I found myself in a difficult spot in less than no time. This isn't the story of how
circumstantial evidence can make mistakes and I won't go into detail. It was just that Lorna had left a
friend waiting in the lobby, the neighbors heard Lorna call and heard me let her in—and where was she?
I didn't try to tell the truth. I said she'd gone out. I was too rattled to remember the shoes and that was a
strong point against me. The Assistant D.A. was bucking for his boss' job, and he got himself £o
thoroughly convinced of my guilt that toward the end I think he'd have been willing to stretch a point or
two, legally speaking, if he could bring a murderer to justice—me.
Maybe you remember the newspaper stories about it. I lost my part in the hit play. I got a lawyer who
didn't believe me because I couldn't tell him the truth. Time went by and all that saved me was the fact that
Lorna's body never did show up. Eventually they let me go.
What would you have done in my spot? In the movies I'd instantly have gone to see Einstein, and he'd
have figured it all out and whipped up a super-machine that would bring Lorna back or send me into a
world like King Kong's.
摘要:

THEPORTALINTHEPICTUREPrologueSHEcalledherselfMalesca.Heragentcalledherthe"LoveliestGirlintheWorld"andIsupposehewasn'tfarwrong,atthat.IfI'dknownshewasplayingtheWindsorRoofthatnightI'dhavegonesomewhereelse.ButbythetimeIwasatthetable,havingasandwichandahighball,itwastoolate.Thelightsdimmed,thespotwento...

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