bottles littered the floor and dingy furnishings. The flickering mirage passed, and she saw that the room was exactly as she remembered. She must leave by the window.
There was a tapping at the window.
She started, then recoiled in horror as another repressed memory escaped into consciousness.
The figure that had pursued her through the darkness on that night she had sought refuge here. It waited for her now at the window. Half-glimpsed before, she saw it now fully revealed in the glare of the lightning.
Moisture glistened darkly upon its rippling and exaggerated musculature. Its uncouth head and shoulders hunched forward bullishly; its face was distorted with insensate lust and drooling madness. A grotesque phallus swung between its misshapen legs—serpentine, possessed of its own life and volition. Like an obscene worm, it stretched blindly toward her, blood oozing from its toothless maw.
She raised her hands to ward it off, and the monstrosity pawed at the window, mocking her every terrified movement as it waited there on the other side of the rain-slick glass.
The horror was beyond enduring. There was another casement window to the corner sitting room, the one that overlooked the waters of the river. She spun about and lunged toward it—noticing from the corner of her eye that the creature outside also whirled about, sensing her intent, flung itself toward the far window to forestall her.
The glass of the casement shattered, even as its blubbery hands stretched out toward her. There was no pain in that release, only a dreamlike vertigo as she plunged into the greyness and the rain. Then the water and the darkness received her falling body, and she set out again into the night, letting the current carry her, she knew not where.
“A few personal effects remain to be officially disposed of, Dr Archer—since there’s no one to claim them. It’s been long enough now since the bus accident, and we’d like to be able to close the files on this catastrophe.”
“Let’s have a look.” The psychiatrist opened the box of personal belongings. There wasn’t much; there never was in such cases, and had there been anything worth stealing, it was already unofficially disposed of.
“They still haven’t found a body,” the ward superintendent wondered. “Do you suppose...”
“Callous as it sounds, I rather hope not,” Dr Archer confided. “This patient was a paranoid schizophrenic—and dangerous.”
“Seemed quiet enough on the ward.”
“Thanks to a lot of ECT—and to depot phenothiazines. Without regular therapy, the delusional system would quickly regain control, and the patient would become frankly murderous.”
There were a few toiletry items and some articles of clothing, a brassiere and pantyhose. “I guess send this over to Social Services. These shouldn’t be allowed on a locked ward— ” the psychiatrist pointed to the nylons “—nor these smut magazines.”
“They always find some way to smuggle the stuff in,” the ward superintendent sighed, “and I’ve been working here at Coastal State since back before the War. What about these other books?” Dr Archer considered the stack of dog-eared gothic romance novels. “Just return these to the Patients’ Library. What’s this one?” Beneath the paperbacks lay a small hardcover volume, bound in yellow cloth, somewhat soiled from age.
“Out of the Patients’ Library too, I suppose. People have donated all sorts of books over the years, and if the patients don’t tear them up, they just stay on the shelves forever.”
“The King in Yellow,” Dr Archer read from the spine, opening the book. On the flyleaf a name was penned in a graceful script: Constance Castaigne.
“Perhaps the name of a patient who left it here,” the superintendent suggested. “Around the turn of the century this was a private sanitarium. Somehow, though, the name seems to ring a distant bell.”
“Let’s just be sure this isn’t vintage porno.”
“I can’t be sure—maybe something the old-timers talked about when I first started here. I seem to remember there was some famous scandal involving one of the wealthy families in the city. A murderess, was it? And something about a suicide, or was it an escape? I can’t recall...”
“Harmless nineteenth-century romantic nonsense,” Dr Archer concluded. “Send it on back to the library.”
The psychiatrist glanced at a last few lines before closing the book:
Cassilda: I tell you, I am lost! Utterly lost!
Camilla (terrified herself): You have seen the King...?
Cassilda: And he has taken from me the power to direct or to escape my dreams.
Beyond Any Measure
•I•
“In the dream I find myself alone in a room, I hear musical chimes—a sort of music-box tune— and I look around to see