Complete Works of Bram Stoker (347 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Bram Stoker
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Little by little the fierce chattering of her teeth began to abate as the warmth of her surroundings stole through her.  I also felt, even in this strangely awakening position, the influence of the quiet; and sleep began to steal over me.  Several times I tried to fend it off, but, as I could not make any overt movement without alarming my strange and beautiful companion, I had to yield myself to drowsiness.  I was still in such an overwhelming stupor of surprise that I could not even think freely.  There was nothing for me but to control myself and wait.  Before I could well fix my thoughts I was asleep.

I was recalled to consciousness by hearing, even through the pall of sleep that bound me, the crowing of a cock in some of the out-offices of the castle.  At the same instant the figure, lying deathly still but for the gentle heaving of her bosom, began to struggle wildly.  The sound had won through the gates of her sleep also.  With a swift, gliding motion she slipped from the bed to the floor, saying in a fierce whisper as she pulled herself up to her full height:

“Let me out!  I must go!  I must go!”

By this time I was fully awake, and the whole position of things came to me in an instant which I shall never  —  can never  —  forget: the dim light of the candle, now nearly burned down to the socket, all the dimmer from the fact that the first grey gleam of morning was stealing in round the edges of the heavy curtain; the tall, slim figure in the brown dressing-gown whose over-length trailed on the floor, the black hair showing glossy in the light, and increasing by contrast the marble whiteness of the face, in which the black eyes sent through their stars fiery gleams.  She appeared quite in a frenzy of haste; her eagerness was simply irresistible.

I was so stupefied with amazement, as well as with sleep, that I did not attempt to stop her, but began instinctively to help her by furthering her wishes.  As she ran behind the screen, and, as far as sound could inform me,  —  began frantically to disrobe herself of the warm dressing-gown and to don again the ice-cold wet shroud, I pulled back the curtain from the window, and drew the bolt of the glass door.  As I did so she was already behind me, shivering.  As I threw open the door she glided out with a swift silent movement, but trembling in an agonised way.  As she passed me, she murmured in a low voice, which was almost lost in the chattering of her teeth:

“Oh, thank you  —  thank you a thousand times!  But I must go.  I
must
!  I
must
!  I shall come again, and try to show my gratitude.  Do not condemn me as ungrateful  —  till then.”  And she was gone.

I watched her pass the length of the white path, flitting from shrub to shrub or statue as she had come.  In the cold grey light of the undeveloped dawn she seemed even more ghostly than she had done in the black shadow of the night.

When she disappeared from sight in the shadow of the wood, I stood on the terrace for a long time watching, in case I should be afforded another glimpse of her, for there was now no doubt in my mind that she had for me some strange attraction.  I felt even then that the look in those glorious starry eyes would be with me always so long as I might live.  There was some fascination which went deeper than my eyes or my flesh or my heart  —  down deep into the very depths of my soul.  My mind was all in a whirl, so that I could hardly think coherently.  It all was like a dream; the reality seemed far away.  It was not possible to doubt that the phantom figure which had been so close to me during the dark hours of the night was actual flesh and blood.  Yet she was so cold, so cold!  Altogether I could not fix my mind to either proposition: that it was a living woman who had held my hand, or a dead body reanimated for the time or the occasion in some strange manner.

The difficulty was too great for me to make up my mind upon it, even had I wanted to.  But, in any case, I did not want to.  This would, no doubt, come in time.  But till then I wished to dream on, as anyone does in a dream which can still be blissful though there be pauses of pain, or ghastliness, or doubt, or terror.

So I closed the window and drew the curtain again, feeling for the first time the cold in which I had stood on the wet marble floor of the terrace when my bare feet began to get warm on the soft carpet.  To get rid of the chill feeling I got into the bed on which
she
had lain, and as the warmth restored me tried to think coherently.  For a short while I was going over the facts of the night  —  or what seemed as facts to my remembrance.  But as I continued to think, the possibilities of any result seemed to get less, and I found myself vainly trying to reconcile with the logic of life the grim episode of the night.  The effort proved to be too much for such concentration as was left to me; moreover, interrupted sleep was clamant, and would not be denied.  What I dreamt of  —  if I dreamt at all  —  I know not.  I only know that I was ready for waking when the time came.  It came with a violent knocking at my door.  I sprang from bed, fully awake in a second, drew the bolt, and slipped back to bed.  With a hurried “May I come in?” Aunt Janet entered.  She seemed relieved when she saw me, and gave without my asking an explanation of her perturbation:

“Oh, laddie, I hae been so uneasy aboot ye all the nicht.  I hae had dreams an’ veesions an’ a’ sorts o’ uncanny fancies.  I fear that  —  ”  She was by now drawing back the curtain, and as her eyes took in the marks of wet all over the floor the current of her thoughts changed:

“Why, laddie, whativer hae ye been doin’ wi’ yer baith?  Oh, the mess ye hae made!  ‘Tis sinful to gie sic trouble an’ waste . . . ”  And so she went on.  I was glad to hear the tirade, which was only what a good housewife, outraged in her sentiments of order, would have made.  I listened in patience  —  with pleasure when I thought of what she would have thought (and said) had she known the real facts.  I was well pleased to have got off so easily.

RUPERT’S JOURNAL  — 
Continued
.

April
10, 1907.

For some days after what I call “the episode” I was in a strange condition of mind.  I did not take anyone  —  not even Aunt Janet  —  into confidence.  Even she dear, and open-hearted and liberal-minded as she is, might not have understood well enough to be just and tolerant; and I did not care to hear any adverse comment on my strange visitor.  Somehow I could not bear the thought of anyone finding fault with her or in her, though, strangely enough, I was eternally defending her to myself; for, despite my wishes, embarrassing thoughts
would
come again and again, and again in all sorts and variants of queries difficult to answer.  I found myself defending her, sometimes as a woman hard pressed by spiritual fear and physical suffering, sometimes as not being amenable to laws that govern the Living.  Indeed, I could not make up my mind whether I looked on her as a living human being or as one with some strange existence in another world, and having only a chance foothold in our own.  In such doubt imagination began to work, and thoughts of evil, of danger, of doubt, even of fear, began to crowd on me with such persistence and in such varied forms that I found my instinct of reticence growing into a settled purpose.  The value of this instinctive precaution was promptly shown by Aunt Janet’s state of mind, with consequent revelation of it.  She became full of gloomy prognostications and what I thought were morbid fears.  For the first time in my life I discovered that Aunt Janet had nerves!  I had long had a secret belief that she was gifted, to some degree at any rate, with Second Sight, which quality, or whatever it is, skilled in the powers if not the lore of superstition, manages to keep at stretch not only the mind of its immediate pathic, but of others relevant to it.  Perhaps this natural quality had received a fresh impetus from the arrival of some cases of her books sent on by Sir Colin.  She appeared to read and reread these works, which were chiefly on occult subjects, day and night, except when she was imparting to me choice excerpts of the most baleful and fearsome kind.  Indeed, before a week was over I found myself to be an expert in the history of the cult, as well as in its manifestations, which latter I had been versed in for a good many years.

The result of all this was that it set me brooding.  Such, at least, I gathered was the fact when Aunt Janet took me to task for it.  She always speaks out according to her convictions, so that her thinking I brooded was to me a proof that I did; and after a personal examination I came  —  reluctantly  —  to the conclusion that she was right, so far, at any rate, as my outer conduct was concerned.  The state of mind I was in, however, kept me from making any acknowledgment of it  —  the real cause of my keeping so much to myself and of being so
distrait
.  And so I went on, torturing myself as before with introspective questioning; and she, with her mind set on my actions, and endeavouring to find a cause for them, continued and expounded her beliefs and fears.

Her nightly chats with me when we were alone after dinner  —  for I had come to avoid her questioning at other times  —  kept my imagination at high pressure.  Despite myself, I could not but find new cause for concern in the perennial founts of her superstition.  I had thought, years ago, that I had then sounded the depths of this branch of psychicism; but this new phase of thought, founded on the really deep hold which the existence of my beautiful visitor and her sad and dreadful circumstances had taken upon me, brought me a new concern in the matter of self-importance.  I came to think that I must reconstruct my self-values, and begin a fresh understanding of ethical beliefs.  Do what I would, my mind would keep turning on the uncanny subjects brought before it.  I began to apply them one by one to my own late experience, and unconsciously to try to fit them in turn to the present case.

The effect of this brooding was that I was, despite my own will, struck by the similarity of circumstances bearing on my visitor, and the conditions apportioned by tradition and superstition to such strange survivals from earlier ages as these partial existences which are rather Undead than Living  —  still walking the earth, though claimed by the world of the Dead.  Amongst them are the Vampire, or the Wehr-Wolf.  To this class also might belong in a measure the Doppelgänger  —  one of whose dual existences commonly belongs to the actual world around it.  So, too, the denizens of the world of Astralism.  In any of these named worlds there is a material presence  —  which must be created, if only for a single or periodic purpose.  It matters not whether a material presence already created can be receptive of a disembodied soul, or a soul unattached can have a body built up for it or around it; or, again, whether the body of a dead person can be made seeming quick through some diabolic influence manifested in the present, or an inheritance or result of some baleful use of malefic power in the past.  The result is the same in each case, though the ways be widely different: a soul and a body which are not in unity but brought together for strange purposes through stranger means and by powers still more strange.

Through much thought and a process of exclusions the eerie form which seemed to be most in correspondence with my adventure, and most suitable to my fascinating visitor, appeared to be the Vampire.  Doppelgänger, Astral creations, and all such-like, did not comply with the conditions of my night experience.  The Wehr-Wolf is but a variant of the Vampire, and so needed not to be classed or examined at all.  Then it was that, thus focussed, the Lady of the Shroud (for so I came to hold her in my mind) began to assume a new force.  Aunt Janet’s library afforded me clues which I followed with avidity.  In my secret heart I hated the quest, and did not wish to go on with it.  But in this I was not my own master.  Do what I would  —  brush away doubts never so often, new doubts and imaginings came in their stead.  The circumstance almost repeated the parable of the Seven Devils who took the place of the exorcised one.  Doubts I could stand.  Imaginings I could stand.  But doubts and imaginings together made a force so fell that I was driven to accept any reading of the mystery which might presumably afford a foothold for satisfying thought.  And so I came to accept tentatively the Vampire theory  —  accept it, at least, so far as to examine it as judicially as was given me to do.  As the days wore on, so the conviction grew.  The more I read on the subject, the more directly the evidences pointed towards this view.  The more I thought, the more obstinate became the conviction.  I ransacked Aunt Janet’s volumes again and again to find anything to the contrary; but in vain.  Again, no matter how obstinate were my convictions at any given time, unsettlement came with fresh thinking over the argument, so that I was kept in a harassing state of uncertainty.

Briefly, the evidence in favour of accord between the facts of the case and the Vampire theory were:

Her coming was at night  —  the time the Vampire is according to the theory, free to move at will.

She wore her shroud  —  a necessity of coming fresh from grave or tomb; for there is nothing occult about clothing which is not subject to astral or other influences.

She had to be helped into my room  —  in strict accordance with what one sceptical critic of occultism has called “the Vampire etiquette.”

She made violent haste in getting away at cock-crow.

She seemed preternaturally cold; her sleep was almost abnormal in intensity, and yet the sound of the cock-crowing came through it.

These things showed her to be subject to
some
laws, though not in exact accord within those which govern human beings.  Under the stress of such circumstances as she must have gone through, her vitality seemed more than human  —  the quality of vitality which could outlive ordinary burial.  Again, such purpose as she had shown in donning, under stress of some compelling direction, her ice-cold wet shroud, and, wrapt in it, going out again into the night, was hardly normal for a woman.

But if so, and if she was indeed a Vampire, might not whatever it may be that holds such beings in thrall be by some means or other exorcised?  To find the means must be my next task.  I am actually pining to see her again.  Never before have I been stirred to my depths by anyone.  Come it from Heaven or Hell, from the Earth or the Grave, it does not matter; I shall make it my task to win her back to life and peace.  If she be indeed a Vampire, the task may be hard and long; if she be not so, and if it be merely that circumstances have so gathered round her as to produce that impression, the task may be simpler and the result more sweet.  No, not more sweet; for what can be more sweet than to restore the lost or seemingly lost soul of the woman you love!  There, the truth is out at last!  I suppose that I have fallen in love with her.  If so, it is too late for me to fight against it.  I can only wait with what patience I can till I see her again.  But to that end I can do nothing.  I know absolutely nothing about her  —  not even her name.  Patience!

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