Horrible beyond conception was the change which had taken place in my best friend, Crawford
Tillinghast. I had not seen him since that day, two months and a half before, when he had told
me toward what goal his physical and metaphysical researches were leading; when he had answered
my awed and almost frightened remonstrances by driving me from his laboratory and his house
in a burst of fanatical rage. I had known that he now remained mostly shut in the attic laboratory
with that accursed electrical machine, eating little and excluding even the servants, but I
had not thought that a brief period of ten weeks could so alter and disfigure any human creature.
It is not pleasant to see a stout man suddenly grown thin, and it is even worse when the baggy
skin becomes yellowed or greyed, the eyes sunken, circled, and uncannily glowing, the forehead
veined and corrugated, and the hands tremulous and twitching. And if added to this there be
a repellent unkemptness; a wild disorder of dress, a bushiness of dark hair white at the roots,
and an unchecked growth of pure white beard on a face once clean-shaven, the cumulative effect
is quite shocking. But such was the aspect of Crawford Tillinghast on the night his half-coherent
message brought me to his door after my weeks of exile; such the spectre that trembled as it
admitted me, candle in hand, and glanced furtively over its shoulder as if fearful of unseen
things in the ancient, lonely house set back from Benevolent Street.

That Crawford Tillinghast should ever have studied science and philosophy was
a mistake. These things should be left to the frigid and impersonal investigator, for they offer
two equally tragic alternatives to the man of feeling and action; despair if he fail in his
quest, and terrors unutterable and unimaginable if he succeed. Tillinghast had once been the
prey of failure, solitary and melancholy; but now I knew, with nauseating fears of my own, that
he was the prey of success. I had indeed warned him ten weeks before, when he burst forth with
his tale of what he felt himself about to discover. He had been flushed and excited then, talking
in a high and unnatural, though always pedantic, voice.

“What do we know,” he had said, “of the world and the universe
about us? Our means of receiving impressions are absurdly few, and our notions of surrounding
objects infinitely narrow. We see things only as we are constructed to see them, and can gain
no idea of their absolute nature. With five feeble senses we pretend to comprehend the boundlessly
complex cosmos, yet other beings with a wider, stronger, or different range of senses might
not only see very differently the things we see, but might see and study whole worlds of matter,
energy, and life which lie close at hand yet can never be detected with the senses we have.
I have always believed that such strange, inaccessible worlds exist at our very elbows,
and
now I believe I have found a way to break down the barriers. I am not joking. Within twenty-four
hours that machine near the table will generate waves acting on unrecognised sense-organs that
exist in us as atrophied or rudimentary vestiges. Those waves will open up to us many vistas
unknown to man, and several unknown to anything we consider organic life. We shall see that
at which dogs howl in the dark, and that at which cats prick up their ears after midnight. We
shall see these things, and other things which no breathing creature has yet seen. We shall
overleap time, space, and dimensions, and without bodily motion peer to the bottom of creation.

When Tillinghast said these things I remonstrated, for I knew him well enough
to be frightened rather than amused; but he was a fanatic, and drove me from the house. Now
he was no less a fanatic, but his desire to speak had conquered his resentment, and he had written
me imperatively in a hand I could scarcely recognise. As I entered the abode of the friend so
suddenly metamorphosed to a shivering gargoyle, I became infected with the terror which seemed
stalking in all the shadows. The words and beliefs expressed ten weeks before seemed bodied
forth in the darkness beyond the small circle of candle light, and I sickened at the hollow,
altered voice of my host. I wished the servants were about, and did not like it when he said
they had all left three days previously. It seemed strange that old Gregory, at least, should
desert his master without telling as tried a friend as I. It was he who had given me all the
information I had of Tillinghast after I was repulsed in rage.

Yet I soon subordinated all my fears to my growing curiosity and fascination.
Just what Crawford Tillinghast now wished of me I could only guess, but that he had some stupendous
secret or discovery to impart, I could not doubt. Before I had protested at his unnatural pryings
into the unthinkable; now that he had evidently succeeded to some degree I almost shared his
spirit, terrible though the cost of victory appeared. Up through the dark emptiness of the house
I followed the bobbing candle in the hand of this shaking parody on man. The electricity seemed
to be turned off, and when I asked my guide he said it was for a definite reason.

“It would be too much . . . I would not dare,” he
continued to mutter. I especially noted his new habit of muttering, for it was not like him
to talk to himself. We entered the laboratory in the attic, and I observed that detestable electrical
machine, glowing with a sickly, sinister, violet luminosity. It was connected with a powerful
chemical battery, but seemed to be receiving no current; for I recalled that in its experimental
stage it had sputtered and purred when in action. In reply to my question Tillinghast mumbled
that this permanent glow was not electrical in any sense that I could understand.

He now seated me near the machine, so that it was on my right, and turned a
switch somewhere below the crowning cluster of glass bulbs. The usual sputtering began, turned
to a whine, and terminated in a drone so soft as to suggest a return to silence. Meanwhile the
luminosity increased, waned again, then assumed a pale, outré colour or blend of colours
which I could neither place nor describe. Tillinghast had been watching me, and noted my puzzled
expression.

“Do you know what that is?” he whispered. “
That is ultra-violet.”
He chuckled oddly at my surprise. “You thought ultra-violet was invisible, and so it is—but
you can see that and many other invisible things
now.

“Listen to me! The waves from that thing are waking a thousand sleeping
senses in us; senses which we inherit from aeons of evolution from the state of detached electrons
to the state of organic humanity. I have seen
truth, and I intend to shew it to you.
Do you wonder how it will seem? I will tell you.” Here Tillinghast seated himself directly
opposite me, blowing out his candle and staring hideously into my eyes. “Your existing
sense-organs—ears first, I think—will pick up many of the impressions, for they
are closely connected with the dormant organs. Then there will be others. You have heard of
the pineal gland? I laugh at the shallow endocrinologist, fellow-dupe and fellow-parvenu of
the Freudian. That gland is the great sense-organ of organs—
I have found out. It
is like sight in the end, and transmits visual pictures to the brain. If you are normal, that
is the way you ought to get most of it . . . I mean get most of the evidence
from
beyond.”

I looked about the immense attic room with the sloping south wall, dimly lit
by rays which the every-day eye cannot see. The far corners were all shadows, and the whole
place took on a hazy unreality which obscured its nature and invited the imagination to symbolism
and phantasm. During the interval that Tillinghast was silent I fancied myself in some vast
and incredible temple of long-dead gods; some vague edifice of innumerable black stone columns
reaching up from a floor of damp slabs to a cloudy height beyond the range of my vision. The
picture was very vivid for a while, but gradually gave way to a more horrible conception; that
of utter, absolute solitude in infinite, sightless, soundless space. There seemed to be a void,
and nothing more, and I felt a childish fear which prompted me to draw from my hip pocket the
revolver I always carried after dark since the night I was held up in East Providence. Then,
from the farthermost regions of remoteness, the
sound softly glided into existence. It
was infinitely faint, subtly vibrant, and unmistakably musical, but held a quality of surpassing
wildness which made its impact feel like a delicate torture of my whole body. I felt sensations
like those one feels when accidentally scratching ground glass. Simultaneously there developed
something like a cold draught, which apparently swept past me from the direction of the distant
sound. As I waited breathlessly I perceived that both sound and wind were increasing; the effect
being to give me an odd notion of myself as tied to a pair of rails in the path of a gigantic
approaching locomotive. I began to speak to Tillinghast, and as I did so all the unusual impressions
abruptly vanished. I saw only the man, the glowing machine, and the dim apartment. Tillinghast
was grinning repulsively at the revolver which I had almost unconsciously drawn, but from his
expression I was sure he had seen and heard as much as I, if not a great deal more. I whispered
what I had experienced, and he bade me to remain as quiet and receptive as possible.

“Don’t move,” he cautioned, “for in these rays
we
are able to be seen as well as to see. I told you the servants left, but I didn’t
tell you
how. It was that thick-witted housekeeper—she turned on the lights downstairs
after I had warned her not to, and the wires picked up sympathetic vibrations. It must have
been frightful—I could hear the screams up here in spite of all I was seeing and hearing
from another direction, and later it was rather awful to find those empty heaps of clothes around
the house. Mrs. Updike’s clothes were close to the front hall switch—that’s
how I know she did it. It got them all. But so long as we don’t move we’re fairly
safe. Remember we’re dealing with a hideous world in which we are practically helpless. . . .
Keep still!”

The combined shock of the revelation and of the abrupt command gave me a kind
of paralysis, and in my terror my mind again opened to the impressions coming from what Tillinghast
called “
beyond”. I was now in a vortex of sound and motion, with confused
pictures before my eyes. I saw the blurred outlines of the room, but from some point in space
there seemed to be pouring a seething column of unrecognisable shapes or clouds, penetrating
the solid roof at a point ahead and to the right of me. Then I glimpsed the temple-like effect
again, but this time the pillars reached up into an aërial ocean of light, which sent down
one blinding beam along the path of the cloudy column I had seen before. After that the scene
was almost wholly kaleidoscopic, and in the jumble of sights, sounds, and unidentified sense-impressions
I felt that I was about to dissolve or in some way lose the solid form. One definite flash I
shall always remember. I seemed for an instant to behold a patch of strange night sky filled
with shining, revolving spheres, and as it receded I saw that the glowing suns formed a constellation
or galaxy of settled shape; this shape being the distorted face of Crawford Tillinghast. At
another time I felt the huge animate things brushing past me and occasionally
walking or
drifting through my supposedly solid body, and thought I saw Tillinghast look at them as
though his better trained senses could catch them visually. I recalled what he had said of the
pineal gland, and wondered what he saw with this preternatural eye.

Suddenly I myself became possessed of a kind of augmented sight. Over and above
the luminous and shadowy chaos arose a picture which, though vague, held the elements of consistency
and permanence. It was indeed somewhat familiar, for the unusual part was superimposed upon
the usual terrestrial scene much as a cinema view may be thrown upon the painted curtain of
a theatre. I saw the attic laboratory, the electrical machine, and the unsightly form of Tillinghast
opposite me; but of all the space unoccupied by familiar material objects not one particle was
vacant. Indescribable shapes both alive and otherwise were mixed in disgusting disarray, and
close to every known thing were whole worlds of alien, unknown entities. It likewise seemed
that all the known things entered into the composition of other unknown things, and vice versa.
Foremost among the living objects were great inky, jellyish monstrosities which flabbily quivered
in harmony with the vibrations from the machine. They were present in loathsome profusion, and
I saw to my horror that they
overlapped; that they were semi-fluid and capable of passing
through one another and through what we know as solids. These things were never still, but seemed
ever floating about with some malignant purpose. Sometimes they appeared to devour one another,
the attacker launching itself at its victim and instantaneously obliterating the latter from
sight. Shudderingly I felt that I knew what had obliterated the unfortunate servants, and could
not exclude the things from my mind as I strove to observe other properties of the newly visible
world that lies unseen around us. But Tillinghast had been watching me, and was speaking.

“You see them? You see them? You see the things that float and flop about
you and through you every moment of your life? You see the creatures that form what men call
the pure air and the blue sky? Have I not succeeded in breaking down the barrier; have I not
shewn you worlds that no other living men have seen?” I heard him scream through the horrible
chaos, and looked at the wild face thrust so offensively close to mine. His eyes were pits of
flame, and they glared at me with what I now saw was overwhelming hatred. The machine droned
detestably.

“You think those floundering things wiped out the servants? Fool, they
are harmless! But the servants
are gone, aren’t they? You tried to stop me; you
discouraged me when I needed every drop of encouragement I could get; you were afraid of the
cosmic truth, you damned coward, but now I’ve got you! What swept up the servants? What
made them scream so loud? . . . Don’t know, eh? You’ll know soon enough!
Look at me—listen to what I say—do you suppose there are really any such things
as time and magnitude? Do you fancy there are such things as form or matter? I tell you, I have
struck depths that your little brain can’t picture! I have seen beyond the bounds of infinity
and drawn down daemons from the stars. . . . I have harnessed the shadows that
stride from world to world to sow death and madness. . . . Space belongs to me, do
you hear? Things are hunting me now—the things that devour and dissolve—but I know
how to elude them. It is you they will get, as they got the servants. Stirring, dear sir? I
told you it was dangerous to move. I have saved you so far by telling you to keep still—saved
you to see more sights and to listen to me. If you had moved, they would have been at you long
ago. Don’t worry, they won’t
hurt you. They didn’t hurt the servants—it
was
seeing that made the poor devils scream so. My pets are not pretty, for they come
out of places where aesthetic standards are—
very different. Disintegration is quite
painless, I assure you—but
I want you to see them. I almost saw them, but I knew
how to stop. You are not curious? I always knew you were no scientist! Trembling, eh? Trembling
with anxiety to see the ultimate things I have discovered? Why don’t you move, then? Tired?
Well, don’t worry, my friend,
for they are coming. . . . Look! Look,
curse you, look! . . . It’s just over your left shoulder. . . .”

What remains to be told is very brief, and may be familiar to you from the
newspaper accounts. The police heard a shot in the old Tillinghast house and found us there—Tillinghast
dead and me unconscious. They arrested me because the revolver was in my hand, but released
me in three hours, after they found it was apoplexy which had finished Tillinghast and saw that
my shot had been directed at the noxious machine which now lay hopelessly shattered on the laboratory
floor. I did not tell very much of what I had seen, for I feared the coroner would be sceptical;
but from the evasive outline I did give, the doctor told me that I had undoubtedly been hypnotised
by the vindictive and homicidal madman.

I wish I could believe that doctor. It would help my shaky nerves if I could
dismiss what I now have to think of the air and the sky about and above me. I never feel alone
or comfortable, and a hideous sense of pursuit sometimes comes chillingly on me when I am weary.
What prevents me from believing the doctor is this one simple fact—that the police never
found the bodies of those servants whom they say Crawford Tillinghast murdered.