Roy Holdstrom had built dinosaurs in his garage since he was twelve. The dinosaurs chased his father around the yard, on 8-millimeter film, and ate him up. Later, when Roy was twenty, he moved his dinosaurs into small fly-by-night studios and began to make on-the-cheap lost-world films that made him famous. His dinosaurs so much filled his life that his friends worried and tried to find him a nice girl who would put up with his Beasts. They were still searching.
I walked up the porch steps remembering one special night when Roy had taken me to a performance of
Our seats were so far over that?oh God!?I could see only the Dragon Fafner?s left
?Damn!? whispered Roy.
And Fafner was dead, the magic sword deep in his heart. Siegfried yelled in triumph. Roy leaped to his feet, cursing the stage, and ran out.
I found him in the lobby muttering to himself.
?Some
As we stormed out into the night, Siegfried was still screaming about life, love, and butchery.
?Poor bastards, that audience,? said Roy. ?Trapped for two more
And here he was now, swinging quietly in a glider swing on a front porch lost in time but brought back up through the years.
?Hey!? he called, happily. ?What?d I
?No,
?Both!?
Roy laughed, truly happy, and held out a big fat copy of You
?He was wrong,? said Roy, quietly.
?Yes,? I said, ?here we
I stopped. For just beyond this meadowland of sets, I saw the high graveyard/studio wall. The ghost of a body on a ladder was there, but I wasn?t ready to mention it yet. Instead, I said: ?How you doing with your Beast?
?Heck, where?s
That?s the way it had been for many days now.
Roy and I had been called in to blueprint and build beasts, to make meteors fall from outer space and humanoid critters rise from dark lagoons, dripping cliches of tar from dime-store teeth.
They had hired Roy first, because he was technically advanced. His pterodactyls truly flew across the primordial skies. His bron-tosaurs were mountains on their way to Mahomet.
And then someone had read twenty or thirty of my Weird Tales, stories I had been writing since I was twelve and selling to the pulp magazines since I was twenty-one, and hired me to ?write up a drama? for Roy?s beasts, all of which hyperventilated me, for I had paid my way or snuck into some nine thousand movies and had been waiting half a lifetime for someone to fire a starter?s gun to run me amok in film.
?I want something never
?Out near Meteor Crater in Arizona?? I put in. ?Been there a million years. What a place for a
?Out comes our
?Do we actually
?Whatta you
?Sure, but look at a film like
?Radio shows!!? cried Manny Leiber. ?Dammit, people want to see what scares them??
?I don?t want to argue??
?Don?t!? Manny glared. ?Give me ten pages to scare me gutless! You?? pointing at Roy??whatever he writes you glue together with dinosaur droppings! Now, scram! Go make faces in the mirror at three in the morning!?
?Sir!? we cried.
The door slammed.
Outside in the sunlight, Roy and I blinked at each other.
?Another fine mess you got us in, Stanley!?
Still yelling with laughter, we went to work.