Complete Works of Bram Stoker (352 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Bram Stoker
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The place was a tiny gorge, with but one entrance, which was hidden behind a barren spur of rock  —  just a sort of long fissure, jagged and curving, in the rock, like a fault in the stratification.  I could just struggle through it with considerable effort, holding my breath here and there, so as to reduce my depth of chest.  Within it was tree-clad, and full of possibilities of concealment.

As I came away I marked well its direction and approaches, noting any guiding mark which might aid in finding it by day or night.  I explored every foot of ground around it  —  in front, on each side, and above.  But from nowhere could I see an indication of its existence.  It was a veritable secret chamber wrought by the hand of Nature itself.  I did not return home till I was familiar with every detail near and around it.  This new knowledge added distinctly to my sense of security.

Later in the day I tried to find the Vladika or any mountaineer of importance, for I thought that such a hiding-place which had been used so recently might be dangerous, and especially at a time when, as I had learned at the meeting where they did
not
fire their guns that there may have been spies about or a traitor in the land.

Even before I came to my own room to-night I had fully made up my mind to go out early in the morning and find some proper person to whom to impart the information, so that a watch might be kept on the place.  It is now getting on for midnight, and when I have had my usual last look at the garden I shall turn in.  Aunt Janet was uneasy all day, and especially so this evening.  I think it must have been my absence at the usual breakfast-hour which got on her nerves; and that unsatisfied mental or psychical irritation increased as the day wore on.

RUPERT’S JOURNAL  — 
Continued
.

May
20, 1907.

The clock on the mantelpiece in my room, which chimes on the notes of the clock at St. James’s Palace, was striking midnight when I opened the glass door on the terrace.  I had put out my lights before I drew the curtain, as I wished to see the full effect of the moonlight.  Now that the rainy season is over, the moon is quite as beautiful as it was in the wet, and a great deal more comfortable.  I was in evening dress, with a smoking-jacket in lieu of a coat, and I felt the air mild and mellow on the warm side, as I stood on the terrace.

But even in that bright moonlight the further corners of the great garden were full of mysterious shadows.  I peered into them as well as I could  —  and my eyes are pretty good naturally, and are well trained.  There was not the least movement.  The air was as still as death, the foliage as still as though wrought in stone.

I looked for quite a long time in the hope of seeing something of my Lady.  The quarters chimed several times, but I stood on unheeding.  At last I thought I saw far off in the very corner of the old defending wall a flicker of white.  It was but momentary, and could hardly have accounted in itself for the way my heart beat.  I controlled myself, and stood as though I, too, were a graven image.  I was rewarded by seeing presently another gleam of white.  And then an unspeakable rapture stole over me as I realised that my Lady was coming as she had come before.  I would have hurried out to meet her, but that I knew well that this would not be in accord with her wishes.  So, thinking to please her, I drew back into the room.  I was glad I had done so when, from the dark corner where I stood, I saw her steal up the marble steps and stand timidly looking in at the door.  Then, after a long pause, came a whisper as faint and sweet as the music of a distant Æolian harp:

“Are you there?  May I come in?  Answer me!  I am lonely and in fear!”  For answer I emerged from my dim corner so swiftly that she was startled.  I could hear from the quivering intake of her breath that she was striving  —  happily with success  —  to suppress a shriek.

“Come in,” I said quietly.  “I was waiting for you, for I felt that you would come.  I only came in from the terrace when I saw you coming, lest you might fear that anyone might see us.  That is not possible, but I thought you wished that I should be careful.”

“I did  —  I do,” she answered in a low, sweet voice, but very firmly.  “But never avoid precaution.  There is nothing that may not happen here.  There may be eyes where we least expect  —  or suspect them.”  As she spoke the last words solemnly and in a low whisper, she was entering the room.  I closed the glass door and bolted it, rolled back the steel grille, and pulled the heavy curtain.  Then, when I had lit a candle, I went over and put a light to the fire.  In a few seconds the dry wood had caught, and the flames were beginning to rise and crackle.  She had not objected to my closing the window and drawing the curtain; neither did she make any comment on my lighting the fire.  She simply acquiesced in it, as though it was now a matter of course.  When I made the pile of cushions before it as on the occasion of her last visit, she sank down on them, and held out her white, trembling hands to the warmth.

She was different to-night from what she had been on either of the two former visits.  From her present bearing I arrived at some gauge of her self-concern, her self-respect.  Now that she was dry, and not overmastered by wet and cold, a sweet and gracious dignity seemed to shine from her, enwrapping her, as it were, with a luminous veil.  It was not that she was by this made or shown as cold or distant, or in any way harsh or forbidding.  On the contrary, protected by this dignity, she seemed much more sweet and genial than before.  It was as though she felt that she could afford to stoop now that her loftiness was realised  —  that her position was recognised and secure.  If her inherent dignity made an impenetrable nimbus round her, this was against others; she herself was not bound by it, or to be bound.  So marked was this, so entirely and sweetly womanly did she appear, that I caught myself wondering in flashes of thought, which came as sharp periods of doubting judgment between spells of unconscious fascination, how I had ever come to think she was aught but perfect woman.  As she rested, half sitting and half lying on the pile of cushions, she was all grace, and beauty, and charm, and sweetness  —  the veritable perfect woman of the dreams of a man, be he young or old.  To have such a woman sit by his hearth and hold her holy of holies in his heart might well be a rapture to any man.  Even an hour of such entrancing joy might be well won by a lifetime of pain, by the balance of a long life sacrificed, by the extinction of life itself.  Quick behind the record of such thoughts came the answer to the doubt they challenged: if it should turn out that she was not living at all, but one of the doomed and pitiful Un-Dead, then so much more on account of her very sweetness and beauty would be the winning of her back to Life and Heaven  —  even were it that she might find happiness in the heart and in the arms of another man.

Once, when I leaned over the hearth to put fresh logs on the fire, my face was so close to hers that I felt her breath on my cheek.  It thrilled me to feel even the suggestion of that ineffable contact.  Her breath was sweet  —  sweet as the breath of a calf, sweet as the whiff of a summer breeze across beds of mignonette.  How could anyone believe for a moment that such sweet breath could come from the lips of the dead  —  the dead
in esse
or
in posse
  —  that corruption could send forth fragrance so sweet and pure?  It was with satisfied happiness that, as I looked at her from my stool, I saw the dancing of the flames from the beech-logs reflected in her glorious black eyes, and the stars that were hidden in them shine out with new colours and new lustre as they gleamed, rising and falling like hopes and fears.  As the light leaped, so did smiles of quiet happiness flit over her beautiful face, the merriment of the joyous flames being reflected in ever-changing dimples.

At first I was a little disconcerted whenever my eyes took note of her shroud, and there came a momentary regret that the weather had not been again bad, so that there might have been compulsion for her putting on another garment  —  anything lacking the loathsomeness of that pitiful wrapping.  Little by little, however, this feeling disappeared, and I found no matter for even dissatisfaction in her wrapping.  Indeed, my thoughts found inward voice before the subject was dismissed from my mind:

“One becomes accustomed to anything  —  even a shroud!”  But the thought was followed by a submerging wave of pity that she should have had such a dreadful experience.

By-and-by we seemed both to forget everything  —  I know I did  —  except that we were man and woman, and close together.  The strangeness of the situation and the circumstances did not seem of moment  —  not worth even a passing thought.  We still sat apart and said little, if anything.  I cannot recall a single word that either of us spoke whilst we sat before the fire, but other language than speech came into play; the eyes told their own story, as eyes can do, and more eloquently than lips whilst exercising their function of speech.  Question and answer followed each other in this satisfying language, and with an unspeakable rapture I began to realise that my affection was returned.  Under these circumstances it was unrealizable that there should be any incongruity in the whole affair.  I was not myself in the mood of questioning.  I was diffident with that diffidence which comes alone from true love, as though it were a necessary emanation from that delightful and overwhelming and commanding passion.  In her presence there seemed to surge up within me that which forbade speech.  Speech under present conditions would have seemed to me unnecessary, imperfect, and even vulgarly overt.  She, too, was silent.  But now that I am alone, and memory is alone with me, I am convinced that she also had been happy.  No, not that exactly.  “Happiness” is not the word to describe either her feeling or my own.  Happiness is more active, a more conscious enjoyment.  We had been content.  That expresses our condition perfectly; and now that I can analyze my own feeling, and understand what the word implies, I am satisfied of its accuracy.  “Content” has both a positive and negative meaning or antecedent condition.  It implies an absence of disturbing conditions as well as of wants; also it implies something positive which has been won or achieved, or which has accrued.  In our state of mind  —  for though it may be presumption on my part, I am satisfied that our ideas were mutual  —  it meant that we had reached an understanding whence all that might come must be for good.  God grant that it may be so!

As we sat silent, looking into each other’s eyes, and whilst the stars in hers were now full of latent fire, perhaps from the reflection of the flames, she suddenly sprang to her feet, instinctively drawing the horrible shroud round her as she rose to her full height in a voice full of lingering emotion, as of one who is acting under spiritual compulsion rather than personal will, she said in a whisper:

“I must go at once.  I feel the morning drawing nigh.  I must be in my place when the light of day comes.”

She was so earnest that I felt I must not oppose her wish; so I, too, sprang to my feet and ran towards the window.  I pulled the curtain aside sufficiently far for me to press back the grille and reach the glass door, the latch of which I opened.  I passed behind the curtain again, and held the edge of it back so that she could go through.  For an instant she stopped as she broke the long silence:

“You are a true gentleman, and my friend.  You understand all I wish.  Out of the depth of my heart I thank you.”  She held out her beautiful high-bred hand.  I took it in both mine as I fell on my knees, and raised it to my lips.  Its touch made me quiver.  She, too, trembled as she looked down at me with a glance which seemed to search my very soul.  The stars in her eyes, now that the firelight was no longer on them, had gone back to their own mysterious silver.  Then she drew her hand from mine very, very gently, as though it would fain linger; and she passed out behind the curtain with a gentle, sweet, dignified little bow which left me on my knees.

When I heard the glass door pulled-to gently behind her, I rose from my knees and hurried without the curtain, just in time to watch her pass down the steps.  I wanted to see her as long as I could.  The grey of morning was just beginning to war with the night gloom, and by the faint uncertain light I could see dimly the white figure flit between shrub and statue till finally it merged in the far darkness.

I stood for a long time on the terrace, sometimes looking into the darkness in front of me, in case I might be blessed with another glimpse of her; sometimes with my eyes closed, so that I might recall and hold in my mind her passage down the steps.  For the first time since I had met her she had thrown back at me a glance as she stepped on the white path below the terrace.  With the glamour over me of that look, which was all love and enticement, I could have dared all the powers that be.

When the grey dawn was becoming apparent through the lightening of the sky I returned to my room.  In a dazed condition  —  half hypnotised by love  —  I went to bed, and in dreams continued to think, all happily, of my Lady of the Shroud.

RUPERT’S JOURNAL  — 
Continued
.

May
27, 1907.

A whole week has gone since I saw my Love!  There it is; no doubt whatever is left in my mind about it now!  Since I saw her my passion has grown and grown by leaps and bounds, as novelists put it.  It has now become so vast as to overwhelm me, to wipe out all thought of doubt or difficulty.  I suppose it must be what men suffered  —  suffering need not mean pain  —  under enchantments in old times.  I am but as a straw whirled in the resistless eddies of a whirlpool.  I feel that I
must
see her again, even if it be but in her tomb in the crypt.  I must, I suppose, prepare myself for the venture, for many things have to be thought of.  The visit must not be at night, for in such case I might miss her, did she come to me again here . . .

The morning came and went, but my wish and intention still remained; and so in the full tide of noon, with the sun in all its fiery force, I set out for the old church of St. Sava.  I carried with me a lantern with powerful lens.  I had wrapped it up secretly, for I had a feeling that I should not like anyone to know that I had such a thing with me.

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