the unguess-able Will-Mind-Urge of Hagar Inscrutable; that meant that there was gilded wood everywhere there could be, and strips of scarlet cloth hanging from the ceiling in circles of five. There was, you see, a Sanctified Ineffability about the unequal lengths of the cloth strips.
The faces of the congregation were varying studies in rapture. As the stringy, brown person tinkled a bell they rose and blinked absently at him as he waved a benediction and vanished behind a door covered with chunks of gilded wood.
The congregation began to buzz quietly.
'Well?' demanded one of another. 'What did you think of it?”
'I dunno. Who's he, anyway?' A respectful gesture at the door covered with gilded wood.
'Kazam's his name. They say he hasn't touched food since he saw the Ineluctable Modality.'
'What's that?'
Pitying smile. 'You couldn't understand it just yet. Wait till you've come around a few more times. Then maybe you'll be able to read his book—
The Unravelling.' After that you can tackle the 'Isba Kazhlunk' that he found in the Siberian ice. It opened the way to the Ineluctable Modality, but it's pretty deep stuff—even for me.'
They filed from the hall buzzing quietly, dropping coins into a bowl that stood casually by the exit. Above the bowl hung from the ceiling strips of red cloth in a circle of five. The bowl, of course, was covered with chunks of gilded wood.
Beyond the door the stringy, brown man was having a little trouble.
Detective Fitzgerald would not be convinced.
'In the first place,' said the detective, 'you aren't licensed to collect charities. In the second place this whole thing looks like fraud and escheatment. In the third place this building isn't a dwelling and you'll have to move that cot out of here.' He gestured disdainfully at an army collapsible that stood by the battered roUtop desk. Detective Fitzgerald was a big, florid man who dressed with exquisite neatness. 'I am sorry,'
said the stringy, brown man. 'What must Idor
'Let's begin at the beginning. The Constitution guarantees freedom of worship, but I don't know if they meant something like this. Are you a citizen?'
'No. Here are my registration papers.' The stringy, brown man took them from a cheap, new wallet
'Born in Persia. Name's Joseph Kazam. Occupation, scholar. How do you make that out?'
'It's a good word,' said Joseph Kazam with a hopeless little gesture.
'Are you going to send me away—deport me?'
'I don't know,' said the detective thoughtfully. 'If you register your religion at City Hall before we get any more complaints, it'll be all right'
'Ah,' breathed Kazam. 'Complaints?'
Fitzgerald looked at him quizzically. 'We got one from a man named Rooney,' he said. 'Do you know him?'
'Yes. Runi Sarif is his real name. He has hounded me out of Norway, Ireland and Canada—wherever I try to reestablish the Cult of Hagar.'
Fitzgerald looked away. 'I suppose,' he said matter-of-factly, 'you have lots of secret enemies plotting against you.'
Kazam surprised him with a burst of rich laughter. 'I have been investigated too often,' grinned the Persian, 'not to recognize that one.
You think I'm mad.'
'No,' mumbled the detective, crestfallen. 'I just wanted to find out Anybody running a nut cult's automatically reserved a place in Bellevue.'
'Forget it, sir. I spit on the Cult of Hagar. It is my livelihood, but I know better than any man that it is a mockery. Do you know what our highest mystery is? The Ineluctable Modality.' Kazam sneered.
'That's Joyce,' said Fitzgerald with, a grin. 'You have a sense of humor, Mr. Kazam. That's a rare thing in the religious.'
'Please,' said Joseph Kazam. 'Don't call me that. I am not worthy—the noble, sincere men who work for their various faiths are my envy. I have seen too much to be one of them.'
'Go on,' said Fitzgerald, leaning forward. He read books, this detective, and dearly loved an abstract discussion.
The Persian hesitated. 'I,' he said at length, 'am an occult engineer. I am a man who can make the hidden forces work.'
'Like staring a leprechaun in the eye till he finds you a pot of gold?'
suggested the detective with a chuckle.
'One manifestation,' said Kazam calmly. 'Only one.'
'Look,' said Fitzgerald. 'They still have that room in Bellevue. Don't say that in publip—stick to the Ineluctable Modality if you know what's good for you.'
'Tut,' said the Persian regretfully. 'He's working on you.'
The detective looked around the room. 'Meaning who?' he demanded.
'Runi Sarif. He's trying to reach your mind and turn you against me.'
'Balony,' said Fitzgerald coarsely. 'You get yourself registered as a religion hi twenty-four hours; then find yourself a place to live. I'll hold off any charges of fraud for a while. Just watch your step.' He jammed a natty Homburg down over his sandy hair and strode pugnaciously from the office.
Joseph Kazman sighed. Obviously the detective had been disappointed.
That night, hi his bachelor's flat, Fitzgerald tossed and turned uneasily on his modern bed. Being blessed with a sound digestion able to cope even with a steady diet of chain-restaurant food and the soundest of consciences, the detective was agitated profoundly by his wakefulness.
Being, like all bachelors, a cautious man, he hesitated to dose himself with the veronal he kept for occasions like this, few and far between though they were. Finally, as he heard the locals pass one by one on the El a few blocks away and then heard the first express of the morning, with its higher-pitched bickering of wheels and quicker vibration against the track, he stumbled from bed and walked dazedly into his bathroom, fumbled open the medicine chest.
Only when he had the bottle and had shaken two pills into his hand did he think to turn on the light. He pulled the cord and dropped the pills hi horror. They weren't the veronal at all but an old prescription which he had thriftily kept till they might be of use again.
Two would have been a fatal overdose. Shakily Fitzgerald filled a glass of water and drank it down, spilling about a third on his pajamas. He replaced the pills and threw away the entire bottle. You never know when a thing like that might happen again, he thought—too late to mend.
Now thoroughly sure that he needed the sedative, he swallowed a dose.
By the time he had replaced the bottle he could scarcely find his way back to the bed, so sleepy was he.
He dreamed then. Detective Fitzgerald was standing on a plain, a white plain, that was very hot. His feet were bare. In the middle distance was a stone tower above which circled winged skulls—bat-winged skulls, whose rattling and flapping he could plainly hear.
From the plain—he realized then that it was a desert of fine, white sand—spouted up little funnels or vortices of fog in a circle around bun. He began to run very slowly, much slower than he wanted to. He thought he was running away from the tower and the vortices, but somehow they continued to stay in his field of vision. No matter where he swerved the tower was always hi front and the little twisters around him. The circle was growing smaller around him, and he redoubled his efforts to escape.
Finally he tried flying, leaping into the air. Though he drifted for yards at a tune, slowly and easily, he could not land where he wanted to. From the air the vortices looked like petals of a flower, and when he came drifting down to the desert he would land hi the very center of the strange blossom.
Again he ran, the circle of foggy ccnes following still, the tower still before him. He felt with his bare feet something tinglingly clammy. The circle had contracted to the point of coalescence, had gripped his two feet like a trap.
He shot into the air and headed straight for the tower. The creaking, napping noise of the bat-winged skulls was very much louder now. He cast his eyes to the side and was just able to see the tips of his own black, flapping
