Thursday, October 9, 2008

To Kill A Mockingbird By: Harper Lee

Chapter One


When he was nearly thirteen, my brother Jem got his arm badly broken at the elbow. When it healed, and Jem's fears of never being able to play football were assuaged, he was seldom self-conscious about his injury. His left arm was somewhat shorter than his right; when he stood or walked, the back of his hand was at right angles to his body, his thumb parallel to his thigh. He couldn't have cared less, so long as he could pass and punt.
When enough years had gone by to enable us to look back on them, we sometimes discussed the events leading to his accident. I maintain that the Ewells started it all, but Jem, who was four years my senior, said it started long before that. He said it began the summer Dill came to us, when Dill first gave us the idea of making Boo Radley come out.
I said if he wanted to take a broad view of the thing, it really began with Andrew Jackson. If General Jackson hadn't run the Creeks up the creek, Simon Finch would never have paddled up the Alabama, and where would we be if he hadn't? We were far too old to settle an argument with a fist-fight, so we consulted Atticus. Our father said we were both right.
Being Southerners, it was a source of shame to some members of the family that we had no recorded ancestors on either side of the Battle of Hastings. All we had was Simon Finch, a fur-trapping apothecary from Cornwall whose piety was exceeded only by his stinginess. In England, Simon was irritated by the persecution of those who called themselves Methodists at the hands of their more liberal brethren, and as Simon called himself a Methodist, he worked his way across the Atlantic to Philadelphia, thence to Jamaica, thence to Mobile, and up the Saint Stephens. Mindful of John Wesley's strictures on the use of many words in buying and selling, Simon made a pile practicing medicine, but in this pursuit he was unhappy lest he be tempted into doing what he knew was not for the glory of God, as the putting on of gold and costly apparel. So Simon, having forgotten his teacher's dictum on the possession of human chattels, bought three slaves and with their aid established a homestead on the banks of the Alabama River some forty miles above Saint Stephens. He returned to Saint Stephens only once, to find a wife, and with her established a line that ran high to daughters. Simon lived to an impressive age and died rich.
It was customary for the men in the family to remain on Simon's homestead, Finch's Landing, and make their living from cotton. The place was self-sufficient: modest in comparison with the empires around it, the Landing nevertheless produced everything required to sustain life except ice, wheat flour, and articles of clothing, supplied by river-boats from Mobile.
Simon would have regarded with impotent fury the disturbance between the North and the South, as it left his descendants stripped of everything but their land, yet the tradition of living on the land remained unbroken until well into the twentieth century, when my father, Atticus Finch, went to Montgomery to read law, and his younger brother went to Boston to study medicine. Their sister Alexandra was the Finch who remained at the Landing: she married a taciturn man who spent most of his time lying in a hammock by the river wondering if his trot-lines were full.
When my father was admitted to the bar, he returned to Maycomb and began his practice. Maycomb, some twenty miles east of Finch's Landing, was the county seat of Maycomb County. Atticus's office in the courthouse contained little more than a hat rack, a spittoon, a checkerboard and an unsullied Code of Alabama. His first two clients were the last two persons hanged in the Maycomb County jail. Atticus had urged them to accept the

I Am Legend By: Richard Matheson (chapters 1-4)

Chapter One


ON THOSE CLOUDY DAYS, Robert Neville was never sure when sunset came, and
sometimes they were in the streets before he could get back.
If he had been more analytical, he might have calculated the approximate time of their arrival;
but he still used the lifetime habit of judging nightfall by the sky, and on cloudy days that
method didn’t work. That was why he chose to stay near the house on those days.
He walked around the house in the dull gray of afternoon, a cigarette dangling from the corner
of his mouth, trailing threadlike smoke over his shoulder. He checked each window to see if any
of the boards had been loosened. After violent attacks, the planks were often split or partially
pried off, and he had to replace them completely; a job he hated. Today only one plank was
loose. Isn’t that amazing? he thought.
In the back yard he checked the hothouse and the water tank. Sometimes the structure around
the tank might be weakened or its rain catchers bent or broken off. Sometimes they would lob
rocks over the high fence around the hothouse, and occasionally they would tear through the
overhead net and he’d have to replace panes.
Both the tank and the hothouse were undamaged today. He went to the house for a hammer
and nails. As he pushed open the front door, he looked at the distorted reflection of himself in
the cracked mirror he’d fastened to the door a month ago. In a few days, jagged pieces of the
silver-backed glass would start to fall off. Let ‘em fall, he thought. It was the last damned
mirror he’d put there; it wasn’t worth it. He’d put garlic there instead. Garlic always worked.
He passed slowly through the dim silence of the living room, turned left into the small
hallway, and left again into his bedroom.
Once the room had been warmly decorated, but that was in another time. Now it was a room
entirely functional, and since Neville’s bed and bureau took up so little space, he had converted
one side of the room into a shop.
A long bench covered almost an entire wall, on its hardwood top a heavy band saw; a wood
lathe, an emery wheel, and a vise. Above it, on the wall, were haphazard racks of the tools that
Robert Nèville used.
He took a hammer from the bench and picked out a few nails from one of the disordered bins.
Then he went back outside and nailed the plank fast to the shutter. The unused nails he threw
into the rubble next door.
For a while he stood on the front lawn looking up and down the silent length of Cimarron
Street. He was a tall man, thirty-six, born of English-German stock, his features undistinguished
except for the long, determined mouth and the bright blue of his eyes, which moved now over
the charred ruins of the houses on each side of his. He’d burned them down to prevent them
from jumping on his roof from the adjacent ones.
After a few minutes he took a long, slow breath and went back into the house. He tossed the
hammer on the living-room couch, then lit another cigarette and had his midmorning drink.
Later he forced himself into the kitchen to grind up the five-day accumulation of garbage in
the sink. He knew he should burn up the paper plates and utensils too, and dust the furniture and
wash out the sinks and the bathtub and toilet, and change the sheets and pillowcase on his bed;
but he didn’t feel like it.
For he was a man and he was alone and these things had no importance to him.
It was almost noon. Robert Neville was in his hothouse collecting a basketful of garlic.
In the beginning it had made him sick to smell garlic in such quantity his stomach had been in
a state of constant turmoil. Now the smell was in his house and in his clothes, and sometimes he
thought it was even in his flesh.
He hardly noticed it at all.
When he had enough bulbs, he went back to the house and dumped them on the drainboard of
the sink. As he flicked the wall switch, the light flickered, then flared into normal brilliance. A
disgusted hiss passed his clenched teeth. The generator was at it again. He’d have to get out that
damned manual again and check the wiring. And, if it were too much trouble to repair, he’d
have to install a new generator.
Angrily he jerked a high- legged stool to the sink, got a knife, and sat down with an exhausted
grunt.
First, be separated the bulbs into the small, sickle-shaped cloves. Then he cut each pink,
leathery clove in half, exposing the fleshy center buds. The air thickened with the musky,
pungent odor. When it got too oppressive, he snapped on the air-conditioning unit and suction
drew away the worst of it.
Now he reached over and took an icepick from its wall rack. He punched holes in each clove
half, then strung them all together with wire until he had about twenty-five necklaces.
In the beginning he had hung these necklaces over the windows. But from a distance they’d
thrown rocks until he’d been forced to cover the broken panes with plywood scraps. Finally one
day he’d torn off the plywood and nailed up even rows of planks instead. It had made the house
a gloomy sepulcher, but it was better than having rocks come flying into his rooms in a shower
of splintered glass. And, once he had installed the three air-conditioning units, it wasn’t too bad.
A man could get used to anything if he had to.
When he was finished stringing the garlic cloves, he went outside and nailed them over the
window boarding, taking down the old strings, which had lost most of their potent smell.
He had to go through this process twice a week. Until he found something better, it was his
first line of defense.
Defense? he often thought. For what?
All afternoon he made stakes.
He lathed them out of thick doweling, band-sawed into nine- inch lengths. These be held
against the whirling emery stone until they were as sharp as daggers
It was tiresome, monotonous work, and it filled the air with hot-smelling wood dust that
settled in his pores and got into his lungs and made him cough.
Yet he never seemed to get ahead. No matter how many stakes he made, they were gone in
no time at all. Doweling was getting harder to find, too. Eventually he’d have to lathe down
rectangular lengths of wood. Won’t that be fun? he thought irritably.
It was all very depressing and it made him resolve to find a better method of disposal. But
how could he find it when they never gave him a chance to slow down and think?
As he lathed, he listened to records over the loudspeaker he’d set up in the bedroom—
Beethoven’s Third, Seventh, and Ninth symphonies. He was glad he’d learned early in life, from
his mother, to appreciate this kind of music. It helped to fill the terrible void of hours.
From four o’clock on, his gaze kept shifting to the clock on the wall. He worked in silence,
lips pressed into a hard line, a cigarette in the corner of his mouth, his eyes staring at the bit as it
gnawed away the wood and sent floury dust filtering down to the floor.
Four- fifteen. Four-thirty. It was a quarter to five.
In another hour they’d be at the house again, the filthy bastards. As soon as the light was
gone.
He stood before the giant freezer, selecting his supper.
His jaded eyes moved over the stacks of meats down to the frozen vegetables, down to the
breads and pastries, the fruits and ice cream.
He picked out two lamb chops, string beans, and a small box of orange sherbet. He picked the
boxes from the freezer and pushed shut the door with his elbow,
Next he moved over to the uneven stacks of cans piled to the ceiling. He took down a can of
tomato juice, then left the room that had once belonged to Kathy and now belonged to his
stomach.
He moved slowly across the living room, looking at the mural that covered the back wall. It
showed a cliff edge, sheering off to green-blue ocean that surged and broke over black rocks.
Far up in the clear blue sky, white sea gulls floated on the wind, and over on the right a gnarled
tree hung over the precipice, its dark branches etched against the sky.
Neville walked into the kitchen and dumped the groceries on the table, his eyes moving to the
clock. Twenty minutes to six. Soon now.
He poured a little water into a small pan and clanked it down on a stove burner. Next he
thawed out the chops and put them under the broiler. By this time the water was boiling and he
dropped in the frozen string beans and covered them, thinking that it was probably the electric
stove that was milking the generator.
At the table he sliced himself two pieces of bread and poured himself a glass of tomato juice.
He sat down and looked at the red second hand as it swept slowly around the clock face. The
bastards ought to be here soon.
After he’d finished his tomato juice, he walked to the front door and went out onto the porch.
He stepped off onto the lawn and walked down to the sidewalk.
The sky was darkening and it was getting chilly. He looked up and down Cimarron Street, the
cool breeze ruffling his blond hair. That’s what was wrong with these cloudy days; you never
knew when they were coming.
Oh, well, at least they were better than those damned dust storms. With a shrug, he moved
back across the lawn and into the house, locking and bolting the door behind him, sliding the
thick bar into place. Then he went back into the kitchen, turned his chops, and switched off the
heat under the string beans.
He was putting the food on his plate when he stopped and his eyes moved quickly to the
clock. Six-twenty- five today. Ben Cortman was shouting.
“Come out, Neville!”
Robert Neville sat down with a sigh and began to eat.
He sat in the living room, trying to read. He’d made himself a whisky and soda at his small
bar and he held the cold glass as he read a physiology text. From the speaker over the hallway
door, the music of Schonberg was playing loudly.
Not loudly enough, though. He still heard them outside, their murmuring and their walkings
about and their cries, their snarling and fighting among themselves. Once in a while a rock or
brick thudded off the house. Sometimes a dog barked.
And they were all there for the same thing.
Robert Neville closed his eyes a moment and held his lips in a tight line. Then he opened his
eyes and lit another cigarette, letting the smoke go deep into his lungs.
He wished he’d had time to soundproof the house. It wouldn’t be so bad if it weren’t that he
had to listen to them. Even after five months, it got on his nerves.
He never looked at them any more. In the beginning he’d made a peephole in the front
window and watched them. But then the women had seen him and had started striking vile
postures in order to entice him out of the house. He didn’t want to look at that.
He put down his book and stared bleakly at the rug, hearing Verklärte Nacht play over the
loud-speaker. He knew he could put plugs in his ears to shut off the sound of them, but that
would shut off the music too, and he didn’t want to feel that they were forcing him into a shell.
He closed his eyes again. It was the women who made it so difficult, be thought, the women
posing like lewd puppets in the night on the possibility that he’d see them and decide to come
out.
A shudder. ran through him. Every night it was the same. He’d be reading and listening to
music. Then he’d start to think about soundproofing the house, then he’d think about the
women.
Deep in his body, the knotting heat began again, and be pressed his lips together until they
were white. He knew the feeling well and it enraged him that he couldn’t combat it. It grew and
grew until he couldn’t sit still any more. Then he’d get up and pace the floor, fists bloodless at
his sides. Maybe he’d set up the movie projector or eat something or have too much to drink or
turn the music up so loud it hurt his ears. He had to do something when it got really bad.
He felt the muscles of his abdomen closing in like frightening coils. He picked up the book
and tried to read, his lips forming each word slowly and painfully.
But in a moment the book was on his lap again. He looked at the bookcase across from him.
All the knowledge in those books couldn’t put out the fires in him; all the words of centuries
couldn’t end the wordless, mindless craving of his flesh.
The realization made him sick. It was an insult to a man. All right, it was a natural drive, but
there was no outlet for it any more. They’d forced celibacy on him; he’d have to live with it.
You have a mind, don’t you? he asked himself. Well, use it?
He reached over and turned the music still louder; then forced himself to read a whole page
without pause. He read about blood cells being forced through membranes, about pale lymph
carrying the wastes through tubes blocked by lymph nodes, about lymphocytes and phago cytic
cells.
“—to empty, in the left shoulder region, near the thorax, into a large vein of the blood
circulating system.”
The book shut with a thud.
Why didn’t they leave him alone? Did they think they could all have him? Were they so
stupid they thought that? Why did they keep coming every night? After five months, you’d
think they’d give up and try elsewhere.
He went over to the bar and made himself another drink. As he turned back to his chair he
heard stones rattling down across the roof and landing with thuds in the shrubbery beside the
house. Above the noises, he heard Ben Cortman shout as he always shouted.
“Come out, Neville!”
Someday I’ll get that bastard, he thought as he took a big swallow of the bitter drink.
Someday I’ll knock a stake right through his goddamn chest. I’ll make one a foot long for him, a
special one with ribbons on it, the bastard.
Tomorrow. Tomorrow he’d soundproof the house. His fingers drew into white-knuckled
fists. He couldn’t stand thinking about those women. If he didn’t hear them, maybe he wouldn’t
think about them. Tomorrow. Tomorrow.
The music ended and he took a stack of records off the turntable and slid them back into their
cardboard envelopes. Now he could hear them even more clearly outside. He reached for the
first new record he could get and put it on the turntable and twisted the volume up to its highest
point.
“The Year of the Plague,” by Roger Leie, filled his ears. Violins scraped and whined,
tympani thudded like the beats of a dying heart, flutes played weird, atonal melodies.
With a stiffening of rage, he wrenched up the record and snapped it over his right knee. He’d
meant to break it long ago. He walked on rigid legs to the kitche n and flung the pieces into the
trash box. Then he stood in the dark kitchen, eyes tightly shut, teeth clenched, hands damped
over his ears. Leave me alone, leave me alone, leave me alone!
No use, you couldn’t beat them at night. No use trying; it was their special time. He was
acting very stupidly, trying to beat them. Should he watch a movie? No, he didn’t feel like
setting up the projector. He’d go to bed and put the plugs in his ears. It was what he ended up
doing every night, anyway.
Quickly, trying not to think at all; he went to the bedroom and undressed. He put on pajama
bottoms and went into the bathroom. He never wore pajama tops; it was a habit he’d acquired in
Panama during the war.
As he washed, he looked into the mirror at his broad chest, at the dark hair swirling around
the nipples and down the center line of his chest. He looked at the ornate cross he’d had tattooed
on his chest one night in Panama when he’d been drunk. What a fool I was in those days! he
thought. Well, maybe that cross had saved his life.
He brushed his teeth carefully and used dental- floss. He tried to take good care of his teeth
because he was his own dentist now. Some things could go to pot, but not his health, he thought.
Then why don’t you stop pouring alcohol into yourself? he thought. Why don’t you shut the hell
up? he thought.
Now be went through the house, turning out lights. For a few minutes he looked at the mural
and tried to believe it was really the ocean. But how could he believe it with all the bumpings
and the scrapings, the howlings and snarlings and cries in the night?
He turned off the living-room lamp and went into the bedroom.
He made a sound of disgust when he saw that sawdust covered the bed. He brushed it off
with snapping hand strokes, thinking that he’d better build a partition between the shop and the
sleeping portion of the room. Better do this and better do that, he thought morosely. There were
so many damned things to do, he’d never get to the real problem.
He jammed in his earplugs and a great silence engulfed him. He turned off the light and
crawled in between the sheets. He looked at the radium- faced clock and saw that it was only a
few minutes past ten. Just as well, he thought. This way I’ll get an early start.
He lay there on the bed and took deep breaths of the darkness, hoping for sleep. But the
silence didn’t really help. He could still see them out there, the white-faced men prowling
around his house, looking ceaselessly for a way to get in at him. Some of them, probably,
crouching on their haunches like dogs, eyes glittering at the house, teeth slowly grating together,
back and forth, back and forth.
And the women ...
Did he have to start thinking about them again? He tossed over on his stomach with a curse
and pressed his face into the hot pillow. He lay there, breathing heavily, body writhing slightly
on the sheet. Let the morning come. His mind spoke the words it spoke every night, Dear God,
let the morning come.
He dreamed about Virginia and he cried out in his sleep and his fingers gripped the sheets like
frenzied talons.

Chapter Two


THE ALARM WENT OFF at five-thirty and Robert Neville reached out a numbed arm in the
morning gloom and pushed in the stop.
He reached for his cigarettes and lit one, then sat up. After a few moments he got up and
walked into the dark living room and opened the peephole door.
Outside, on the lawn, the dark figures stood like silent soldiers on duty. As he watched, some
of them started moving away, and he heard them muttering discontentedly among themselves.
Another night was ended.
He went back to the bedroom, switched on the light, and dressed. As he was pulling on his
shirt, he heard Ben Cortman cry out, “Come out, Neville!”
And that was all. After that, they all went away weaker, he knew, than when they had come.
Unless they had attacked one of their own. They did that often. There was no union among
them. Their need was their only motivation.
After dressing, Neville sat down on his bed with a grunt and penciled his list for the day:
Lathe at Sears
Water
Check generator
Doweling (?)
Usual
Breakfast was hasty: a glass of orange juice, a slice of toast, and two cups of coffee. He
finished it quickly, wishing he had the patience to eat slowly.
After breakfast he threw the paper plate and cup into the trash box and brushed his teeth. At
least I have one good habit, he consoled himself.
The first thing he did when he went outside was look at the sky. It was clear, virtually
cloudless. He could go, out today. Good.
As he crossed the porch, his shoe kicked some pieces of the mirror. Well, the damn thing
broke just as I thought it would, he thought. He’d clean it up later.
One of the bodies was sprawled on the sidewalk; the other one was half concealed in the
shrubbery. They were both women. They were almost always women.
He unlocked the garage door and backed his Willys station wagon into the early-morning
crispness. Then he got out and pulled down the back gate. He put on heavy gloves and walked
over to the woman on the sidewalk.
There was certainly nothing attractive about them in the daylight, he thought, as he dragged
them across the lawn and threw them up on the canvas tarpaulin. There wasn’t a drop left in
them; both women were the color of fish out of water. He raised the gate and fastened it.
He went around the lawn then, picking up stones and bricks and putting them into a cloth
sack. He put the sack in the station wagon and then took off his gloves. He went inside the
house, washed his hands, and made lunch: two sandwiches, a few cookies, and a thermos of hot
coffee.
When that was done, he went into the bedroom and got his bag of stakes. He slung this across
his back and buckled on the holster that held his mallet. Then he went out of the house, locking
the front door behind him.
He wouldn’t bother searching for Ben Cortman that morning; there were too many other
things to do. For a second, he thought about the soundproofing job he’d resolved to do on the
house. Well, the hell with it, he thought. I’ll do it tomorrow or some cloudy day.
He got into the station wagon and checked his list. “Lathe at Sears”; that was first. After he
dumped the bodies, of course.
He started the car and backed quickly into the street and headed for Compton Boulevard.
There he turned right and headed east. On both sides of him the houses stood silent, and against
the curbs cars were parked, empty and dead.
Robert Neville’s eyes shifted down for a moment to the fuel gauge. There was still a half
tank, but he might as well stop on Western Avenue and fill it. There was no point in using any
of the gasoline stored in the garage until be had to.
He pulled into the silent station and braked. He got a barrel of gasoline and siphoned it into
his tank until the pale amber fluid came gushing out of the tank opening and ran down onto the
cement.
He checked the oil, water, battery water, and tires. Everything was in good condition. It
usually was, because he took special care of the car. If it ever broke down so that he couldn’t get
back to the house by sunset…
Well, there was no point in even worrying about that. If it ever happened, that was the end.
Now he continued up Compton Boulevard past the tall oil derricks, through Compton,
through all the silent streets. There was no one to be seen anywhere.
But Robert Neville knew where they were.
The fire was always burning. As the car drew closer, he pulled on his gloves and gas mask
and watched through the eyepieces the sooty pall of smoke hovering above the earth. The entire
field had been excavated into one gigantic pit, that was in June 1975.
Neville parked the car and jumped out, anxious to get the job over with quickly. Throwing
the catch and jerking. down the rear gate, he pulled out one of the bodies and dragged it to the
edge of the pit. There he stood it on its feet and shoved.
The body bumped and rolled down the steep incline until it settled on the great pile of
smoldering ashes at the bottom.
Robert Neville drew in harsh breaths as he hurried back to the station wagon. He always felt
as though he were strangling when he was here, even though he had the gas mask on.
Now he dragged the second body to the brink of the pit and pushed it over. Then, after
tossing the sack, of rocks down, he hurried back to the car and sped away.
After he’d driven a half mile, he skinned off the mask and gloves and tossed them into the
back. His mouth opened and he drew in deep lungfuls of fresh air. He took the flask from the
glove compartment and took a long drink of burning whisky. Then he lit a cigarette and inhaled
deeply. Sometimes he had to go to the burning pit every day for weeks at a time, and it always
made him sick.
Somewhere down there was Kathy.
On the way to Inglewood he stopped at a market to get some bottled water. As he entered the
silent store, the smell of rotted food filled his nostrils. Quickly he pushed a metal wagon up and
down the silent, dust-thick aisles, the heavy smell of decay setting his teeth on edge, making him
breathe through his mouth.
He found the water bottles in back, and also found a door opening on a flight of stairs. After
putting all the bottles into the wagon, he went up the stairs. The owner of the market might be
up there; he might as well get started.
There were two of them. In the living room, lying on a couch, was a woman about thirty
years old, wearing a red housecoat. Her chest rose and fell slowly as she lay there, eyes closed,
her hands clasped over her stomach.
Robert Neville’s hands fumbled on the stake and mallet. It was always hard, when they were
alive; especially with women. He could feel that senseless demand returning again, tightening
his muscles. He forced it down. It was insane, there was no rational argument for it.
She made no sound except for a sudden, hoarse intake of breath. As he walked into the
bedroom, he could hear a sound like the sound of water running. Well, what else can I do? he
asked himself, for he still had to convince himself he was doing the right thing.
He stood in the bedroom doorway, staring at the small bed by the window, his throat moving,
breath shuddering in his chest. Then, driven on, he walked to the side of the bed and looked
down at her.
Why do they all look like Kathy to me? he thought, drawing out the second stake with
shaking hands.
Driving slowly to Sears, he tried to forget by wondering why it was that only wooden stakes
should work.
He frowned as he drove along the empty boulevard, the only sound the muted growling of the
motor in his car. It seemed fantastic that it had taken him five months to start wondering about
it.
Which brought another question to mind. How was it that he always managed to hit the
heart? It had to be the heart; Dr. Busch had said so. Yet he, Neville, had no anatomical
knowledge.
His brow furrowed. It irritated him that he should have gone through this hideous process so
long without stopping once to question it.
He shook, his head. No, I should think it over carefully, he thought, I should collect all the
questions before I try to answer them. Things should be done the right way, the scientific way.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, he thought, shades of old Fritz. That had been his father’s name. Neville
had loathed his father and fought the acquisition of his father’s logic and mechanical facility
every inch of the way. His father had died denying the vampire violently to the last.
At Sears he got the lathe, loaded it into the station wagon, then searched the store.
There were five of them in the basement, hiding in various shadowed places. One of them
Neville found inside a display freezer. When he saw the man lying there in this enamel coffin,
he had to laugh; it seemed such a funny place to hide.
Later, he thought of what a humorless world it was when he could find amusement in such a
thing.
About two o’clock he parked and ate his lunch. Everything seemed to taste of garlic.
And that set him wondering about the effect garlic had on them. It must have been the smell
that chased them off, but why?
They were strange, the facts about them: their staying inside by day, their avoidance of garlic,
their death by stake, their reputed fear of crosses, their supposed dread of mirrors.
Take that last, now. According to legend, they were invisible in mirrors, but he knew that was
untrue. As untrue as the belief that they transformed themselves into bats. That was a
superstition that logic, plus observation had easily disposed of. It was equally foolish to believe
that they could transform themselves into wolves. Without a doubt there were vampire dogs; he
had seen and heard them outside his house at night. But they were only dogs.
Robert Neville compressed his lips suddenly. Forget it, he told himself; you’re not ready, yet.
The time would come when he’d take a crack at it, detail for detail, but the time wasn’t now.
There were enough things to worry about now.
After lunch, he went from house to house and used up all his stakes. He had forty-seven
stakes.

Chapter Three


“THE STRENGTH OF THE vampire is that no one will believe in him.”
Thank you, Dr. Van Helsing, he thought, putting down his copy Of “Dracula.” He sat staring
moodily at the bookcase, listening to Brahms’ second piano concerto, a whisky sour in his right
hand, a cigarette between his lips.
It was true. The book was a hodgepodge of superstitions and soap-opera clichés, but that line
was true; no one had believed in them, and how could they fight something they didn’t even
believe in?
That was what the situation had been. Something black and of the night had come crawling
out of the Middle Ages. Something with no framework or credulity, something that had been
consigned, fact and figure, to the pages of imaginative literature. Vampires were passé;
Summers’ idylls or Stoker’s melodramatics or a brief inclusion in the Britannica or grist for the
pulp writer’s mill or raw material for the B-film factories. A tenuous legend passed from century
to century.
Well, it was true.
He took a sip from his drink and closed his eyes as the cold liquid trickled down his throat and
warmed his stomach. True, he thought, but no one ever got the chance to know it. Oh, they
knew it was something, but it couldn’t be that—not that. That was imagination, that was
superstition, there was no such thing as that.
And, before science had caught up with the lege nd, the legend had swallowed science and
everything.
He hadn't found any doweling that day. He hadn’t checked the generator. He hadn’t cleaned
up the pieces of mirror. He hadn’t eaten supper; he’d lost his appetite. That wasn’t hard. He
lost it most of the time. He couldn’t do the things he’d done all afternoon and then come home
to a hearty meal. Not even after five months.
He thought of the eleven—no, the twelve children that afternoon, and he finished his drink in
two swallows.
He blinked and the room wavered a little before him. You’re getting blotto, Father, he told
himself. So what? he returned. Has anyone more right?
He tossed the book across the room. Begone, Van Helsing and Mina and Jonathan and bloodeyed
Count and all! All figments, all driveling extrapolations on a somber theme.
A coughing chuckle emptied itself from his throat. Outside, Ben Cortman called for him to
come out. Be right out, Benny, he thought. Soon as I get my tuxedo on.
He shuddered. and gritted his teeth edges toge ther. Be right out. Well; why not? Why not go
out? It was a sure way to be free of them.
Be one of them.
He chuckled at the simplicity of it, then shoved himself up and walked crookedly to the bar.
Why not? His mind plodded on. Why go through all this complexity when a flung open door
and a few steps would end it all?
For the life of him, he didn’t know. There was, of course, the faint possibility that others like
him existed somewhere, trying to go on, hoping that someday they would be among their own
kind again. But how could he ever find them if they weren’t within a day’s drive of his house?
He shrugged and poured more whisky in the glass; he’d given up the use of jiggers months
ago. Garlic on the windows, and nets over the hothouse and burn the bodies and cart the rocks
away and, fraction of an inch by fraction of an inch, reduce their unholy numbers. Why kid
himself? He’d never find anyone else.
His body dropped down heavily on the chair. Here we are, kiddies, sitting like a bug in a rug,
snugly, surrounded by a battalion of blood-suckers who wish no more than to sip freely of my
bonded, 100-proof hemoglobin. Have a drink, men, this one’s really on me.
His face twisted into an expression of raw, unqualified hatred. Bastards! I’ll kill eve ry,
mother’s son of you before I’ll give in! His right hand closed like a clamp and the glass
shattered in his grip.
He looked down, dull-eyed, at the fragments on the floor, at the jagged piece of glass still in
his hand, at the whisky-diluted blood dripping off his palm.
Wouldn’t they like to get some of it, though? he thought. He started up with a furious lurch
and almost opened the door so he could wave the hand in their faces and hear them howl.
Then he closed his eyes and a shudder ran through his body. Wise up, buddy, he thought. Go
bandage your goddamn hand.
He stumbled into the bathroom and washed his hand carefully, gasping as he daubed iodine
into the sliced-open flesh. Then he bandaged it clumsily, his broad chest rising and falling with
jerky movements, sweat dripping from his forehead. I need a cigarette, he thought.
In the living room again, he changed Brahms for Bernstein and lit a cigarette. What will I do
if I ever run out of coffin nails? he wondered, looking at the cigarette’s blue trailing smoke.
Well, there wasn’t much chance of that. He had about a thousand cartons in the closet of
Kathy’s—He clenched his teeth together. In the closet of the larder, the larder, the larder.
Kathy’s room.
He sat staring with dead eyes at the mural while "The Age of Anxiety” pulsed in his ears.
Age of anxiety, he mused. You thought you had anxiety, Lenny boy. Lenny and Benny; you
two should meet. Composer, meet corpse. Mamma, when I grow up I wanna be a wampir like
Dada.
Why, bless you, boo, of course you shall.
The whisky gurgled into the glass. He grimaced a little at the pain in his hand and shifted the
bottle to his left hand.
He sat down and sipped. Let the jagged edge of sobriety be now dulled, he thought. Let the
crumby balance of clear vision be expunged, but post haste. I hate ‘em.
Gradually the room shifted on its gyroscopic center and wove and undulated about his chair.
A pleasant haze, fuzzy at the edges, took over sight. He looked at the glass, at the record player.
He let his head flop from side to side. Outside, they prowled and muttered and waited.
Pore vampires, he thought, pore little cusses, pussyfootin’ round my house, so thirsty, so all
forlorn.
A thought. He raised a forefinger that wavered before his eyes.
Friends, I come before you to discuss the vampire; a minority element if there ever was one,
and there was one.
But to concision: I will sketch out the basis for my thesis, which thesis is this: Vampires are
prejudiced against…
The keynote of minority prejudice is this: They are loathed because they are feared. Thus…
He made himself a drink. A long one.
At one time, the Dark and Middle Ages, to be succinct, the vampire’s power was great, the
fear of him tremendous. He was anathema and still remains anathema. Society hates him
without ration.
But are his needs any more shocking than the needs of other animals and men? Are his deeds
more outrageous than the deeds of the parent who drained the spirit from his child? The vampire
may foster quickened heartbeats and levitated hair. But is he worse than the parent who gave to
society a neurotic child who became a politician? Is he worse than the manufacturer who set up
belated foundations with the money he made by handing bombs and guns to suicidal
nationalists? Is he worse than the distiller who gave bastardized grain juice to stultify further the
brains of those who, sober, were incapable of a progressive thought? (Nay, I apologize for this
calumny; I nip the brew that feeds me.) Is he worse, then, than the publisher who filled
ubiquitous racks with lust and death wishes? Really, now, search your soul; lovie—is the
vampire so bad?
All he does is drink blood.
Why, then, this unkind prejudice, this thoughtless bias? Why cannot the vampire live where
be chooses? Why must he seek out hiding places where none can find him out? Why do you
wish him destroyed? Ah, see, you have turned the poor guileless innocent into a haunted animal.
He has no means of support, no measures for proper education, he has not the, voting franchise.
No wonder he is compelled to seek out a predatory nocturnal existence;
Robert Neville grunted a surly grunt. Sure, sure, he thought, but would you let your sister
marry one?
He shrugged. You got me there, buddy, you got me there.
The music ended. The needle scratched back and forth in the black grooves. He sat there,
feeling a chill creeping up his legs. That’s what was wrong with drinking too much. You
became immune to drunken delights. There was no solace in liquor. Before you got happy, you
collapsed. Already the room was straightening out, the sounds outside were starting to nibble at
his eardrums..
“Come out, Neville!”
His throat moved and a shaking breath passed his lips. Come out. The women were out
there, their dresses open or taken off, their flesh waiting for his touch, their lips waiting for—My
blood, my blood!
As if it were someone else’s hand, he watched his whitened fist rise up slowly, shuddering, to
drive down on his leg. The pain made him suck in a breath of the house’s stale air. Garlic.
Everywhere the smell of garlic. In his clothes and in the furniture and in his food and even in his
drink. Have a garlic and soda; his mind rattled out the attempted joke.
He lurched up and started pacing. What am I going to do now? Go through the routine
again? I’ll save you the trouble. Reading-drinking-soundproof-the-house—the women. The
women, the lustful, bloodthirsty, naked women flaunting their hot bodies at him. No, not hot.
A shuddering whine wrenched up through his chest and throat. Goddamn them, what were
they waiting for? Did they think he was going to come out and hand himself over?
Maybe I am, maybe I am. He actually found himself jerking off the crossbar from the door.
Coming, girls, I’m coming. Wet your lips, now.
Outside, they heard the bar being lifted, and a howl of anticipation sounded in the night.
Spinning, he drove his fists one after the other into the wall until he’d cracked the plaster and
broken his skin. Then he stood there trembling helplessly, his teeth chattering.
After a while it passed. He put the bar back across the door and went into the bedroom. He
sank down, on the bed and fell back on the pillow with a groan. His left hand beat once, feebly,
on the bedspread.
Oh, God, he thought, how long, how long?

Chapter Four


THE ALARM NEVER WENT off because he’d forgotten to set it. He slept soundly and
motionlessly, his body like cast iron. When he finally opened his eyes, it was ten o’clock.
With a disgusted muttering, he struggled up and dropped his legs over the side of the bed.
Instantly his head began throbbing as if his brains were trying to force their way through his
skull. Fine, he thought, a hangover. That’s all I need.
He pushed himself up with a groan and stumbled into the bathroom, threw water in his face
and splashed some over his head. No good, his mind complained, no good. I still feel like hell.
In the mirror his face was gaunt, bearded, and very much like the face of a man in his forties.
Love, your magic spell is everywhere; inanely, the words flapped across his brain like wet sheets
in a wind.
He walked slowly into the living room and opened the front door. A curse fell thickly from
his lips at the sight of the woman crumpled across the sidewalk. He started to tighten angrily,
but it made his head throb too much and he had to let it go. I’m sick, he thought.
The sky was gray and dead. Great! he thought. Another day stuck in this boarded- up rat
hole! He slammed the door viciously, then winced, groaning, at the brain-stabbing noise.
Outside, he heard the rest of the mirror fall out and shatter on the porch cement. Oh, great! His
lips contorted back into a white twist of flesh.
Two cups of burning black coffee only made his stomach feel worse. He put down the cup
and went into the living room. To hell with it, he thought, I’ll get drunk again.
But the liquor tasted like turpentine, and with a rasping snarl he flung the glass against the
wall and stood watching the liquor run down onto the rug. Hell, I’m runnin’ out of glasses. The
thought irritated him while breath struggled in through his nostrils and out again in faltering
bursts.
He sank down on the couch and sat there, shaking his head slowly. It was no use; they’d
beaten him, the black bastards had beaten him.
That restless feeling again; the feeling as if he were expanding and the house were contracting
and any second now he’d go bursting through its frame in an explosion of wood, plaster, and
brick. He got up and moved quickly to the door, his hands shaking.
On the lawn, he stood sucking in a great lungful of the wet morning air, his face turned away
from the house he hated. But he hated the other houses around there too, and he hated the
pavement and the sidewalks and the lawns and everything that was on Cimarron Street.
It kept building up. And suddenly he knew he had to get out of there. Cloudy day or not, he
had to get out of there.
He locked the front door, unlocked the garage, and dragged up the thick door on its overhead
hinges. He didn’t bother putting down the door. I’ll be back soon, he thought. I’ll just go away
for a while.
He backed the station wagon quickly down the driveway, jerked it around, and pressed down
hard on the accelerator, heading for Compton Boulevard. He didn’t know where he was going.
He went around the corner doing forty and jumped that to sixty- five before he’d gone another
block. The car leaped forward under his foot and he kept the accelerator on the floor, forced
down by a rigid leg. His hands were like carved ice on the wheel and his face was the face of a
statue. At eighty- nine miles an hour, he shot down the lifeless, empty boulevard, one roaring
sound in the great stillness.
Things rank and gross in nature possess it merely, he thought as he walked slowly across the
cemetery lawn.
The grass was so high that the weight of it had bent it over and it crunched under his heavy
shoes as he walked. There was no sound but that of his shoes and the now senseless singing of
birds. Once I thought they sang because everything was right with the world, Robert Neville
thought, I know now I was wrong. They sing because they’re feeble-minded.
He had raced six miles, the gas pedal pressed to the floor, before he’d realized where he was
going. It was strange the way his mind and body had kept it secret from his consciousness.
Consciously, he’d known only that he was sick and depressed and had to get away from the
house. He didn’t know he was going to visit Virginia.
But he’d driven there directly and as fast as he could. He’d parked at the curb and entered
through the rusted gate, and now his shoes were pressing and crackling through the thick grass.
How long had it been since he’d come here? It must have been at least a month. He wished
he’d brought flowers, but then, he hadn’t realized he was coming here until he was almost at the
gate.
His lips pressed together as an old sorrow held him again. Why couldn’t he have Kathy there
too? Why had he followed so blindly, listening to those fools who set up their stupid regulations
during the plague? If only she could be there, lying across from her mother.
Don’t start that again, he ordered himself.
Drawing closer to the crypt, he stiffened as he noticed that the iron door was slightly ajar. Oh,
no, he thought. He broke into a run across the wet grass. If they’ve been at her, I’ll burn down
the city, he vowed. I swear to God, I’ll burn it to the ground if they’ve touched her.
He flung open the door and it clanged against the marble wall with a hollow, echoing sound.
His eyes moved quickly to the marble base on which the sealed casket rested.
The tension sank; he drew in breath again. It was still there, untouched.
Then, as he started in, he saw the man lying in one corner of the crypt, body curled upon the
cold floor.
With a grunt of rage, Robert Neville rushed at the body, and, grabbing the man’s coat in taut
fingers, he dragged him across the floor and flung him violently out onto the grass. The body
rolled onto its back, the white face pointing at the sky.
Robert Neville went back into the crypt, chest rising and falling with harsh movements. Then
he closed his eyes and stood with his palms resting on the cover of the casket.
I’m here, he thought. I’m back. Remember me.
He threw out the flowers he’d brought the time before and cleared away the few leaves that
had blown in because the door had been opened.
Then he sat down beside the casket and rested his forehead against its cold metal side.
Silence held him in its cold and gentle hands.
If I could die now, be thought; peacefully, gently, without a tremor or a crying out, if I could
be with her. If I could believe I would be with her.
His fingers tightened slowly and his head sank forward on his chest.
Virginia. Take me where you are.
A tear, crystal, fell across his motionless hand...
He had no idea how long he’d been there. After a while, though, even the deepest sorrow
faltered, even the most penetrating despair lost its scalpel edge. The flagellant’s curse, he
thought, to grow inured even to the whip.
He straightened up and stood. Still alive, he thought, heart beating senselessly, veins running
without point, bones and muscles and tissue all alive and functioning with no purpose at all.
A moment longer he stood looking down at the casket, then he turned away with a sigh and
left, closing the door behind him quietly so as not to disturb her sleep.
He’d forgotten about the man. He almost tripped over him now, stepping aside with a
muttered curse and starting past the body.
Then, abruptly, he turned back.
What’s this? He looked down incredulously at the man. The man was dead; really dead. But
how could that be? The change had occurred so quickly, yet already the man looked and smelled
as though he’d been dead for days.
His mind began churning with a sudden excitement. Something had killed the vampire;
something brutally effective. The heart had not been touched, no garlic had been present, and
yet...
It came, seemingly, without effort. Of course—the daylight!
A bolt of self-accusation struck him. To know for five months that they remained indoors by
day and never once to make the connection! He closed his eyes, appalled by his own stupidity.
The rays of the sun; the infrared and ultraviolet. It had to be them. But why? Damn it, why
didn’t he know anything about the effects of sunlight on the human system?
Another thought: That man had been one of the true vampires; the living dead. Would
sunlight have the same effect on those who were still alive?
The first excitement he’d felt in months made him break into a run for the station wagon.
As the door slammed shut beside him, he wondered if he should have taken away the dead
man. Would the body attract others, would they invade the crypt? No, they wouldn’t go near the
casket, anyway. It was sealed with garlic. Besides, the man’s blood was dead now, it—Again
his thoughts broke off as he leaped to another conclusion. The sun’s rays must have done
something to their blood!
Was it possible, then, that all things bore relations to the blood? The garlic, the cross, the
mirror, the stake, daylight, the earth some of them slept in? He didn’t see how, and yet...
He had to do a lot of reading, a lot of research. It might be just the thing he needed. He’d
been planning for a long time to do it, but lately it seemed as if he’d forgotten it altogether. Now
this new idea started the desire again.
He started, the car and raced up the street, turning off into a residential section and pulling up
before the first house he came to.
He ran up the pathway to the front door, but it was locked and he couldn’t force it in. With an
impatient growl, he ran to the next house. The door was open and he ran to the stairs through the
darkened living room and jumped up the carpeted steps two at a time.
He found the woman in the bedroom. Without hesitation, he jerked back the covers and
grabbed her by the wrists. She grunted as her body hit the floor, and he heard her making tiny
sounds in her throat as he dragged her into the hall and started down the stairs.
As he pulled her across the living room, she started to move.
Her hands closed over his wrists and her body began to twist and flop on the rug. Her eyes
were still closed, but she gasped and muttered and her body kept trying to writhe out of his grip.
Her dark nails dug into his flesh. He tore out of her grasp with a snarl and dragged her the rest of
the way by her hair. Usually he felt a twinge when he realized that, but for some affliction he
didn’t understand, these people were the same as he. But now an experimental fervor had seized
him and he could think of nothing else.
Even so, he shuddered at the strangled sound of horror she made when he threw her on the
sidewalk outside.
She lay twisting helplessly on the sidewalk, hands opening and closing, lips drawn back from
red-spotted lips.
Robert Neville watched her tensely.
His throat moved. It wouldn’t last, the feeling of callous brutality. He bit his lips as he
watched her. All right, she’s suffering, he argued with himself, but she’s one of them and she’d
kill me gladly if she got the chance. You’ve got to look at it that way, it’s the only way. Teeth
clenched, he stood there and watched her die.
In a few minutes she stopped moving, stopped muttering, and her hands uncurled slowly like
white blossoms on the cement. Robert Neville crouched down and felt for her heartbeat. There
was none. Already her flesh was growing cold.
He straightened up with a thin smile. It was true, then. He didn’t need the stakes. After all
this time, he’d finally found a better method.
Then his breath caught. But how did he know the woman was really dead? How could he
know until sunset?
The thought filled him with a new, more restless anger.
Why did each question blight the answers before it?
He thought about it as he sat drinking a can of tomato juice taken from the supermarket
behind which he was parked.
How was he going to know? He couldn’t very well stay with the woman until sunset came.
Take her home with you, fool.
Again his eyes closed and he felt a shudder of irritation go through him. He was missing all
the obvious answers today. Now he’d have to go all the way back and find her, and he wasn’t
even sure where the house was.
He started the motor and pulled away from the parking lot, glancing down at his watch. Three
o’clock. Plenty of time to get back before they came. He eased the gas pedal down and the
station wagon pulled ahead faster.
It took him about a half hour to relocate the house. The woman was still in the same position
on the sidewalk. Putting on his gloves, Neville lowered the back gate of the station wagon and
walked over to the woman. As be walked, he noticed her figure. No, don’t start that again, for
God’s sake.
He dragged the woman back to the station wagon and tossed her in. Then he closed the gate
and took off his gloves. He held up the watch and looked at it. Three o’clock. Plenty of time
to—He jerked up the watch and held it against his ear, his heart suddenly jumping.
The watch had stopped.