The Fearsome Touch of Death : Midnight In The Presence Of Death
A man volunteers to keep vigil beside a corpse in an isolated house, dismissing superstition as foolishness and fear as weakness. As the hours drag past midnight, the silence thickens, the darkness presses close, and each small sound begins to carry a weight far heavier than it should.
What begins as mild discomfort sharpens into something far more dangerous. The mind, left alone in a room with the dead, has a way of filling the void. A sheet shifts. A lamp goes out. A memory of cold flesh lingers on the skin. Falred prides himself on his rationality, yet reason becomes fragile when sight fails and imagination takes control. The question is no longer whether the corpse will rise. The question is whether a living man can survive the night with his sanity intact.
“The Fearsome Touch of Death” is a tightly constructed tale of mounting dread. Robert E. Howard strips the setting to its essentials: one room, one corpse, one man who insists he is not afraid. The story advances with relentless clarity, each moment tightening the pressure until a single, irrevocable action brings the night to its conclusion.
Robert E. Howard (1906–1936) is best known as the creator of Conan the Barbarian and a central figure in the pages of Weird Tales. Beyond his sword-and-sorcery epics, Howard produced a wide range of short fiction that explored horror, the uncanny, and the fragile edge of the human mind. His work appeared regularly in Weird Tales throughout the early 1930s, alongside H. P. Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith. In stories like this one, Howard demonstrates that terror does not require ancient tombs or exotic realms—only a quiet room, a restless imagination, and the courage to face what may not be there at all.
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