doesnât breathe through his nose. I watched your nostrils, Lantry. The little nostril hairs never once quivered in the last hour. That wasnât enough. It was a fact I filed. It wasnât enough. He breathes through his mouth, I said, on purpose. And then I gave you a cigarette and you sucked and blew, sucked and blew. None of it ever came out your nose. I told myself, well, thatâs all right. He doesnât inhale. Is that terrible, is that suspect? All in the mouth, all in the mouth. And then, I looked at your chest. I watched. It never moved up or down, it did nothing. Heâs convinced himself, I said to myself. Heâs convinced himself about all this. He doesnât move his chest, except slowly, when he thinks youâre not looking. Thatâs what I told myself.â
The words went on in the silent room, not pausing, still in a dream. âAnd then I offered you a drink but you donât drink and I thought, he doesnât drink, I thought. Is that terrible? And I watched and watched you all this time. Lantry holds his breath, heâs fooling himself. But now, yes, now, I understand it quite well. Now I know everything the way it is. Do you know how I know? I do not hear breathing in the room. I wait and I hear nothing. There is no beat of heart or intake of lung. The room is so silent. Nonsense, one might say, but I know. At the Incinerator I know. There is a difference. You enter a room where a man is on a bed and you know immediately whether he will look up and speak to you or whether he will not speak to you ever again. Laugh if you will, but one can tell. It is a subliminal thing. It is the whistle the dog hears when no human hears. It is the tick of a clock that has ticked so long one no longer notices. Something is in a room when a man lives in it. Something is not in the room when a man is dead in it.â
Â
McC LURE SHUT HIS EYES A MOMENT . He put down his sherry glass. He waited a moment. He took up his cigarette and puffed it and then put it down in a black tray.
âI am alone in this room,â he said.
Lantry did not move.
âYou are dead,â said McClure. âMy mind does not know this. It is not a thinking thing. It is a thing of the senses and the subconscious. At first I thought, this man thinks he is dead, risen from the dead, a vampire. Is that not logical? Would not any man, buried as many centuries, raised in a superstitious, ignorant culture, think likewise of himself once risen from the tomb? Yes, that is logical. This man has hypnotized himself and fitted his bodily functions so that they would in no way interfere with his self-delusion, his great paranoia. He governs his breathing. He tells himself, I cannot hear my breathing, therefore I am dead. His inner mind censors the sound of breathing. He does not allow himself to eat or drink. These things he probably does in his sleep, with part of his mind, hiding the evidences of this humanity from his deluded mind at other times.â
McClure finished it. âI was wrong. You are not insane. You are not deluding yourself. Nor me. This is all very illogical andâI must admitâalmost frightening. Does that make you feel good, to think you frighten me? I have no label for you. Youâre a very odd man, Lantry. Iâm glad to have met you. This will make an interesting report indeed.â
âIs there anything wrong with me being dead?â said Lantry. âIs it a crime?
âYou must admit itâs highly unusual.â
âBut, still now, is it a crime?â asked Lantry.
âWe have no crime, no criminal court. We want to examine you, naturally, to find out how you have happened. It is like that chemical which, one minute is inert, the next is living cell. Who can say where what happened to what. You are that impossibility. It is enough to drive a man quite insane.â
âWill I be released when you are done fingering me?â
âYou will not be held. If