Complete Works of Bram Stoker (282 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Bram Stoker
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Stephen dismounted and walked round the yard admiring everything.  She did not feel as if intruding; for the gateway was wide open.

A low door in the base of the mill tower opened, and a maid appeared, a demure pretty little thing of sixteen or seventeen years, dressed in a prim strait dress and an old-fashioned Puritan cap.  Seeing a stranger, she made an ejaculation and drew back hastily.  Stephen called out to her:

‘Don’t be afraid, little girl!  Will you kindly tell me who lives here?’  The answer came with some hesitation:

‘Sister Ruth.’

‘And who is Sister Ruth?’  The question came instinctively and without premeditation.  The maid, embarrassed, held hard to the half-open door and shifted from foot to foot uneasily.

‘I don’t know!’ she said at last.  ‘Only Sister Ruth, I suppose!’  It was manifest that the matter had never afforded her anything in the nature of a problem.  There was an embarrassing silence.  Stephen did not wish to seem, or even to be, prying; but her curiosity was aroused.  What manner of woman was this who lived so manifestly alone, and who had but a Christian name!  Stephen, however, had all her life been accustomed to dominance, and at Normanstand and Norwood had made many acquaintances amongst her poorer neighbours.  She was just about to ask if she might see Sister Ruth, when behind the maid in the dark of the low passage-way appeared the tall, slim figure of a silver woman.  Truly a silver woman!  The first flash of Stephen’s thought was correct.  White-haired, white-faced, white-capped, white-kerchiefed; in a plain-cut dress of light-grey silk, without adornment of any kind.  The whole ensemble was as a piece of old silver.  The lines of her face were very dignified, very sweet, very beautiful.  Stephen felt at once that she was in the presence of no common woman.  She looked an admiration which all her Quaker garments could not forbid the other to feel.  She was not the first to speak; in such a noble presence the dignity of Stephen’s youth imperatively demanded silence, if not humility.  So she waited.  The Silver Lady, for so Stephen ever after held her in her mind, said quietly, but with manifest welcome:

‘Didst thou wish to see me?  Wilt thou come in?’  Stephen answered frankly:

‘I should like to come in; if you will not think me rude.  The fact is, I was struck when riding by with the beautiful situation of the mill.  I thought it was only an old mill till I saw the garden hedges; and I came round to ask if I might go in.’  The  Silver Lady came forward at a pace that by itself expressed warmth as she said heartily:

‘Indeed thou mayest.  Stay! it is tea-time.  Let us put thy horse in one of the sheds; there is no man here at present to do it.  Then thou shalt come with me and see my beautiful view!’  She was about to take the horse herself, but Stephen forestalled her with a quick: ‘No, no! pray let me.  I am quite accustomed.’  She led the horse to a shed, and having looped the rein over a hook, patted him and ran back.  The Silver Lady gave her a hand, and they entered the dark passage together.

Stephen was thinking if she ought to begin by telling her name.  But the Haroun al Raschid feeling for adventure incognito is an innate principle of the sons of men.  It was seldom indeed that her life had afforded her such an opportunity.

The Silver Lady on her own part also wished for silence, as she looked for the effect on her companion when the glory of the view should break upon her.  When they had climbed the winding stone stair, which led up some twenty feet, there was a low wide landing with the remains of the main shaft of the mill machinery running through it.  From one side rose a stone stair curving with the outer wall of the mill tower and guarded by a heavy iron rail.  A dozen steps there were, and then a landing a couple of yards square; then a deep doorway cut in the thickness of the wall, round which the winding stair continued.

The Silver Lady, who had led the way, threw open the door, and motioned to her guest to enter.  Stephen stood for a few moments, surprised as well as delighted, for the room before her as not like anything which she had ever seen or thought of.

It was a section of almost the whole tower, and was of considerable size, for the machinery and even the inner shaft had been removed.  East and south and west the wall had been partially cut away so that great wide windows nearly the full height of the room showed the magnificent panorama.  In the depths of the ample windows were little cloistered nooks where one might with a feeling of super-solitude be away from and above the world.

The room was beautifully furnished and everywhere were flowers, with leaves and sprays and branches where possible.

Even from where she stood in the doorway Stephen had a bird’s-eye view of the whole countryside; not only of the coast, with which she was already familiar, and on which her windows at the Castle looked, but to the south and west, which the hill rising steep behind the castle and to southward shut out.

The Silver Lady could not but notice her guest’s genuine admiration.

‘Thou likest my room and my view.  There is no use asking thee, I see thou dost!’  Stephen answered with a little gasp.

‘I think it is the quaintest and most beautiful place I have ever seen!’

‘I am so glad thou likest it.  I have lived here for nearly forty years; and they have been years of unutterable peace and earthly happiness!  And now, thou wilt have some tea!’

Stephen left the mill that afternoon with a warmth of heart that she had been a stranger to for many a day.  The two women had accepted each other simply.  ‘I am called Ruth,’ said the Silver Lady.  ‘And I am Stephen,’ said the Countess de Lannoy in reply.  And that was all; neither had any clue to the other’s identity.  Stephen felt that some story lay behind that calm, sweet personality; much sorrow goes to the making of fearless quietude.  The Quaker lady moved so little out of her own environment that she did not even suspect the identity of her visitor.  All that she knew of change was a notice from the solicitor to the estate that, as the headship had lapsed into another branch of the possessing family, she must be prepared, if necessary, to vacate her tenancy, which was one ‘at will.’

It was not long before Stephen availed herself of the permission to come again.  This time she made up her mind to tell who she was, lest the concealment of her identity might lead to awkwardness.  At that meeting friendship became union.

The natures of the two women expanded to each other; and after a very few meetings there was established between them a rare confidence.  Even the personal austerity of Quakerdom, or the state and estate of the peeress, could not come between.  Their friendship seemed to be for the life of one.  To the other it would be a memory.

The Silver Lady never left the chosen routine of her own life.  Whatever was the reason of her giving up the world, she kept it to herself; and Stephen respected her reticence as much as she did her confidence.

It had become a habit, early in their friendship, for Stephen to ride or walk over to the windmill in the dusk of the evening when she felt especially lonely.  On one such occasion she pushed open the outer door, which was never shut, and took her way up the stone stair.  She knew she would find her friend seated in the window with hands folded on lap, looking out into the silent dusk with that absorbed understanding of things which is holier than reverence, and spiritually more active than conscious prayer.

She tapped the door lightly, and stepped into the room.

With a glad exclamation, which coming through her habitual sedateness showed how much she loved the young girl, Sister Ruth started to her feet.  There was something of such truth in the note she had sounded, that the lonely girl’s heart went out to her in abandoned fulness.  She held out her arms; and, as she came close to the other, fell rather than sank at her feet.  The elder woman recognised, and knew.  She made no effort to restrain her; but sinking back into her own seat laid the girl’s head in her lap, and held her hands close against her breast.

‘Tell me,’ she whispered.  ‘Won’t you tell me, dear child, what troubles you?  Tell me! dear.  It may bring peace!’

‘Oh, I am miserable, miserable, miserable!’ moaned Stephen in a low voice whose despair made the other’s heart grow cold.  The Silver Lady knew that here golden silence was the best of help; holding close the other’s hands, she waited.  Stephen’s breast began to heave; with an impulsive motion she drew away her hands and put them before her burning face, which she pressed lower still on the other’s lap.  Sister Ruth knew that the trouble, whatever it was, was about to find a voice.  And then came in a low shuddering whisper a voice muffled in the folds of the dress:

‘I killed a man!’

In all her life the Silver Lady had never been so startled or so shocked.  She had grown so to love the bright, brilliant young girl that the whispered confession cut through the silence of the dusk as a shriek of murder goes through the silent gloom of night.  Her hands flew wide from her breast, and the convulsive shudder which shook her all in an instant woke Stephen through all her own deep emotion to the instinct of protection of the other.  The girl looked up, shaking her head, and said with a sadness which stilled all the other’s fear:

‘Ah!  Don’t be frightened!  It is not murder that I tell you of.  Perhaps if it were, the thought would be easier to bear!  He would have been hurt less if it had been only his body that I slew.  Well I know now that his life would have been freely given if I wished it; if it had been for my good.  But it was the best of him that I killed; his soul.  His noble, loving, trusting, unselfish soul.  The bravest and truest soul that ever had place in a man’s breast! . . . ‘  Her speaking ended with a sob; her body sank lower.

Sister Ruth’s heart began to beat more freely.  She understood now, and all the womanhood, all the wifehood, motherhood suppressed for a lifetime, awoke to the woman’s need.  Gently she stroked the beautiful head that lay so meekly on her lap; and as the girl sobbed with but little appearance of abatement, she said to her softly:

‘Tell me, dear child.  Tell me all about it!  See! we are alone together.  Thou and I; and God!  In God’s dusk; with only the silent land and sea before us!  Won’t thou trust me, dear one, and speak!’

And then, as the shadows fell, and far-off lights at sea began to twinkle over the waste of waters, Stephen found voice and told without reserve the secret of her shame and her remorse.

At last, when her broken voice had trailed away into gentle catchings of the breath, the older woman, knowing that the time come for comfort, took her in her strong arms, holding her face wet against her own, their tears mingling.

‘Cry on, dear heart!’ she said as she kissed her.  ‘Cry on!  It will do thee good!’  She was startled once again as the other seemed for an instant to grow rigid in her arms, and raising her hands cried out in a burst of almost hysterical passion:

‘Cry! cry!  Oh my God! my God!’  Then becoming conscious of her wet face she seemed to become in an instant all limp, and sank on her knees again.  There was so different a note in her voice that the other’s heart leaped as she heard her say:

‘God be thanked for these tears!  Oh, thank God!  Thank God!’  Looking up she saw through the gloom the surprise in her companion’s eyes and answered their query in words:

‘Oh! you don’t know!  You can’t know what it is to me!  I have not cried since last I saw him pass from me in the wood!’

* * * * *

That time of confession seemed to have in some way cleared, purified and satisfied Stephen’s soul.  Life was now easier to bear.  She was able to adapt herself, justifiably to the needs of her position; and all around her and dependent on her began to realise that amongst them was a controlling force, far-reaching sympathy, and a dominant resolution that made for good.

She began to shake off the gloom of her sorrows and to take her place in her new high station.  Friends there were in many, and quondam lovers by the score.  Lovers of all sorts.  Fortune-hunters there were be sure, not a few.  But no need was there for baseness when the lady herself was so desirable; so young, so fair, so lovable.  That she was of great estate and ‘richly left’ made all things possible to any man who had sufficient acquisitiveness, or a good conceit of himself.  In a wide circle of country were many true-lovers who would have done aught to win her praise.

And so in the East the passing of the two years of silence and gloom seemed to be the winning of something brighter to follow.

CHAPTER XXX  —  THE LESSON OF THE WILDERNESS

In the West the two years flew.  Time seemed to go faster there, because life was more strenuous.  Harold, being mainly alone, found endless work always before him.  From daylight to dark labour never ceased; and for his own part he never wished that it should.  In the wilderness, and especially under such conditions as held in Northern Alaska, labour is not merely mechanical.  Every hour of the day is fraught with danger in some new form, and the head has to play its part in the strife against nature.  In such a life there is not much time for thinking or brooding.

At first, when the work and his surroundings were strange to him, Harold did many useless things and ran many unnecessary risks.  But his knowledge grew with experience.  Privations he had in plenty; and all the fibre of his body and the strength of his resolution and endurance were now and again taxed to their utmost.  But with a man of his nature and race the breaking strain is high; and endurance and resolution are qualities which develop with practice.

Gradually his mind came back to normal level; he had won seemingly through the pain that shadowed him.  Without anguish he could now think, remember, look forward.  Then it was that the kindly wisdom of the American came back to him, and came to stay.  He began to examine himself as to his own part of the unhappy transaction; and stray moments of wonderment came as to whether the fault may not, at the very base, have his own.  He began to realise that it is insufficient in this strenuous world to watch and wait; to suppress one’s self; to put aside, in the wish to benefit others, all the hopes, ambitions, cravings which make for personal gain.

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