
Chapter 25
Dr. Seward's
Diary
11 October, Evening.--Jonathan Harker has asked me to note
this, as he says he is hardly equal to the task, and he wants an exact record
kept.
I think that none of us were surprised when we were asked
to see Mrs. Harker a little before the time of sunset. We have of late come to
understand that sunrise and sunset are to her times of peculiar freedom. When
her old self can be manifest without any controlling force subduing or
restraining her, or inciting her to action. This mood or condition begins some
half hour or more before actual sunrise or sunset, and lasts till either the sun
is high, or whilst the clouds are still aglow with the rays streaming above the
horizon. At first there is a sort of negative condition, as if some tie were
loosened, and then the absolute freedom quickly follows. When, however, the
freedom ceases the change back or relapse comes quickly, preceded only by a
spell of warning silence.
Tonight, when we met, she was somewhat constrained, and
bore all the signs of an internal struggle. I put it down myself to her making a
violent effort at the earliest instant she could do so.
A very few minutes, however, gave her complete control of
herself. Then, motioning her husband to sit beside her on the sofa where she was
half reclining, she made the rest of us bring chairs up close.
Taking her husband's hand in hers, she began, "We are all
here together in freedom, for perhaps the last time! I know that you will always
be with me to the end." This was to her husband whose hand had, as we could see,
tightened upon her. "In the morning we go out upon our task, and God alone knows
what may be in store for any of us. You are going to be so good to me to take me
with you. I know that all that brave earnest men can do for a poor weak woman,
whose soul perhaps is lost, no, no, not yet, but is at any rate at stake, you
will do. But you must remember that I am not as you are. There is a poison in my
blood, in my soul, which may destroy me, which must destroy me, unless some
relief comes to us. Oh, my friends, you know as well as I do, that my soul is at
stake. And though I know there is one way out for me, you must not and I must
not take it!" She looked appealingly to us all in turn, beginning and ending
with her husband.
"What is that way?" asked Van Helsing in a hoarse voice.
"What is that way, which we must not, may not, take?"
"That I may die now, either by my own hand or that of
another, before the greater evil is entirely wrought. I know, and you know, that
were I once dead you could and would set free my immortal spirit, even as you
did my poor Lucy's. Were death, or the fear of death, the only thing that stood
in the way I would not shrink to die here now, amidst the friends who love me.
But death is not all. I cannot believe that to die in such a case, when there is
hope before us and a bitter task to be done, is God's will. Therefore, I on my
part, give up here the certainty of eternal rest, and go out into the dark where
may be the blackest things that the world or the nether world holds!"
We were all silent, for we knew instinctively that this
was only a prelude. The faces of the others were set, and Harker's grew ashen
grey. Perhaps, he guessed better than any of us what was coming.
She continued, "This is what I can give into the
hotchpots." I could not but note the quaint legal phrase which she used in such a
place, and with all seriousness. "What will each of you give? Your lives I
know," she went on quickly, "that is easy for brave men. Your lives are God's,
and you can give them back to Him, but what will you give to me?" She looked
again questionly, but this time avoided her husband's face. Quincy seemed to
understand, he nodded, and her face lit up. "Then I shall tell you plainly what I
want, for there must be no doubtful matter in this connection between us now.
You must promise me, one and all, even you, my beloved husband, that should the
time come, you will kill me."
"What is that time?" The voice was Quincy's, but it was
low and strained.
"When you shall be convinced that I am so changed that it
is better that I die that I may live. When I am thus dead in the flesh, then you
will, without a moment's delay, drive a stake through me and cut off my head, or
do whatever else may be wanting to give me rest!"
Quincy was the first to rise after the pause. He knelt
down before her and taking her hand in his said solemnly, "I'm only a rough
fellow, who hasn't, perhaps, lived as a man should to win such a distinction,
but I swear to you by all that I hold sacred and dear that, should the time ever
come, I shall not flinch from the duty that you have set us. And I promise you,
too, that I shall make all certain, for if I am only doubtful I shall take it
that the time has come!"
"My true friend!" was all she could say amid her
fast-falling tears, as bending over, she kissed his hand.
"I swear the same, my dear Madam Mina!" said Van Helsing.
"And I!" said Lord Godalming, each of them in turn kneeling to her to take the
oath. I followed, myself.
Then her husband turned to her wan-eyed and with a
greenish pallor which subdued the snowy whiteness of his hair, and asked, "And
must I, too, make such a promise, oh, my wife?"
"You too, my dearest," she said, with infinite yearning of
pity in her voice and eyes. "You must not shrink. You are nearest and dearest
and all the world to me. Our souls are knit into one, for all life and all time.
Think, dear, that there have been times when brave men have killed their wives
and their womankind, to keep them from falling into the hands of the enemy.
Their hands did not falter any the more because those that they loved implored
them to slay them. It is men's duty towards those whom they love, in such times
of sore trial! And oh, my dear, if it is to be that I must meet death at any
hand, let it be at the hand of him that loves me best. Dr. Van Helsing, I have
not forgotten your mercy in poor Lucy's case to him who loved." She stopped with
a flying blush, and changed her phrase, "to him who had best right to give her
peace. If that time shall come again, I look to you to make it a happy memory of
my husband's life that it was his loving hand which set me free from the awful
thrall upon me."
"Again I swear!" came the Professor's resonant
voice.
Mrs. Harker smiled, positively smiled, as with a sigh of
relief she leaned back and said, "And now one word of warning, a warning which
you must never forget. This time, if it ever come, may come quickly and
unexpectedly, and in such case you must lose no time in using your opportunity.
At such a time I myself might be...nay! If the time ever come, shall be, leagued
with your enemy against you.
"One more request," she became very solemn as she said
this, "it is not vital and necessary like the other, but I want you to do one
thing for me, if you will."
We all acquiesced, but no one spoke. There was no need to
speak.
"I want you to read the Burial Service." She was
interrupted by a deep groan from her husband. Taking his hand in hers, she held
it over her heart, and continued. "You must read it over me some day. Whatever
may be the issue of all this fearful state of things, it will be a sweet thought
to all or some of us. You, my dearest, will I hope read it, for then it will be
in your voice in my memory forever, come what may!"
"But oh, my dear one," he pleaded, "death is afar off from
you."
"Nay," she said, holding up a warning hand. "I am deeper
in death at this moment than if the weight of an earthly grave lay heavy upon
me!"
"Oh, my wife, must I read it?" he said, before he
began.
"It would comfort me, my husband!" was all she said, and
he began to read when she had got the book ready.
How can I, how could anyone, tell of that strange scene,
its solemnity, its gloom, its sadness, its horror, and withal, its sweetness.
Even a skeptic, who can see nothing but a travesty of bitter truth in anything
holy or emotional, would have been melted to the heart had he seen that little
group of loving and devoted friends kneeling round that stricken and sorrowing
lady. Or heard the tender passion of her husband's voice, as in tones so broken
and emotional that often he had to pause, he read the simple and beautiful
service from the Burial of the Dead. I cannot go on...words...and
v-voices...f-fail m-me!
She was right in her instinct. Strange as it was, bizarre
as it may hereafter seem even to us who felt its potent influence at the time,
it comforted us much. And the silence, which showed Mrs. Harker's coming relapse
from her freedom of soul, did not seem so full of despair to any of us as we had
dreaded.
Jonathan Harker's
Journal15 October, Varna.--We
left Charing Cross on the morning of the 12th, got to Paris the same night, and
took the places secured for us in the Orient Express. We traveled night and day,
arriving here at about five o'clock. Lord Godalming went to the Consulate to see
if any telegram had arrived for him, whilst the rest of us came on to this
hotel, "the Odessa." The journey may have had incidents. I was, however, too
eager to get on, to care for them. Until the Czarina Catherine comes into port
there will be no interest for me in anything in the wide world. Thank God! Mina
is well, and looks to be getting stronger. Her color is coming back. She sleeps
a great deal. Throughout the journey she slept nearly all the time. Before
sunrise and sunset, however, she is very wakeful and alert. And it has become a
habit for Van Helsing to hypnotize her at such times. At first, some effort was
needed, and he had to make many passes. But now, she seems to yield at once, as
if by habit, and scarcely any action is needed. He seems to have power at these
particular moments to simply will, and her thoughts obey him. He always asks her
what she can see and hear.
She answers to the first, "Nothing, all is dark."
And to the second, "I can hear the waves lapping against
the ship, and the water rushing by. Canvas and cordage strain and masts and
yards creak. The wind is high...I can hear it in the shrouds, and the bow throws
back the foam."
It is evident that the Czarina Catherine is still at sea,
hastening on her way to Varna. Lord Godalming has just returned. He had four
telegrams, one each day since we started, and all to the same effect. That the
Czarina Catherine had not been reported to Lloyd's from anywhere. He had
arranged before leaving London that his agent should send him every day a
telegram saying if the ship had been reported. He was to have a message even if
she were not reported, so that he might be sure that there was a watch being
kept at the other end of the wire.
We had dinner and went to bed early. Tomorrow we are to
see the Vice Consul, and to arrange, if we can, about getting on board the ship
as soon as she arrives. Van Helsing says that our chance will be to get on the
boat between sunrise and sunset. The Count, even if he takes the form of a bat,
cannot cross the running water of his own volition, and so cannot leave the
ship. As he dare not change to man's form without suspicion, which he evidently
wishes to avoid, he must remain in the box. If, then, we can come on board after
sunrise, he is at our mercy, for we can open the box and make sure of him, as we
did of poor Lucy, before he wakes. What mercy he shall get from us all will not
count for much. We think that we shall not have much trouble with officials or
the seamen. Thank God! This is the country where bribery can do anything, and we
are well supplied with money. We have only to make sure that the ship cannot
come into port between sunset and sunrise without our being warned, and we shall
be safe. Judge Moneybag will settle this case, I think!
16 October.--Mina's report still the same. Lapping waves
and rushing water, darkness and favoring winds. We are evidently in good time,
and when we hear of the Czarina Catherine we shall be ready. As she must pass
the Dardanelles we are sure to have some report.
17 October.--Everything is pretty well fixed now, I think,
to welcome the Count on his return from his tour. Godalming told the shippers
that he fancied that the box sent aboard might contain something stolen from a
friend of his, and got a half consent that he might open it at his own risk. The
owner gave him a paper telling the Captain to give him every facility in doing
whatever he chose on board the ship, and also a similar authorization to his
agent at Varna. We have seen the agent, who was much impressed with Godalming's
kindly manner to him, and we are all satisfied that whatever he can do to aid
our wishes will be done.
We have already arranged what to do in case we get the box
open. If the Count is there, Van Helsing and Seward will cut off his head at
once and drive a stake through his heart. Morris and Godalming and I shall
prevent interference, even if we have to use the arms which we shall have ready.
The Professor says that if we can so treat the Count's body, it will soon after
fall into dust. In such case there would be no evidence against us, in case any
suspicion of murder were aroused. But even if it were not, we should stand or
fall by our act, and perhaps some day this very script may be evidence to come
between some of us and a rope. For myself, I should take the chance only too
thankfully if it were to come. We mean to leave no stone unturned to carry out
our intent. We have arranged with certain officials that the instant the Czarina
Catherine is seen, we are to be informed by a special messenger.
24 October.--A whole week of waiting. Daily telegrams to
Godalming, but only the same story. "Not yet reported." Mina's morning and
evening hypnotic answer is unvaried. Lapping waves, rushing water, and creaking
masts.
Telegram, October 24th Rufus Smith,
Lloyd's, London, to Lord Godalming, Care of H. B. M. Vice Consul,
Varna"Czarina Catherine reported
this morning from Dardanelles."
Dr. Seward's
Diary25 October.--How I miss my
phonograph! To write a diary with a pen is irksome to me! But Van Helsing says I
must. We were all wild with excitement yesterday when Godalming got his telegram
from Lloyd's. I know now what men feel in battle when the call to action is
heard. Mrs. Harker, alone of our party, did not show any signs of emotion. After
all, it is not strange that she did not, for we took special care not to let her
know anything about it, and we all tried not to show any excitement when we were
in her presence. In old days she would, I am sure, have noticed, no matter how
we might have tried to conceal it. But in this way she is greatly changed during
the past three weeks. The lethargy grows upon her, and though she seems strong
and well, and is getting back some of her color, Van Helsing and I are not
satisfied. We talk of her often. We have not, however, said a word to the
others. It would break poor Harker's heart, certainly his nerve, if he knew that
we had even a suspicion on the subject. Van Helsing examines, he tells me, her
teeth very carefully, whilst she is in the hypnotic condition, for he says that
so long as they do not begin to sharpen there is no active danger of a change in
her. If this change should come, it would be necessary to take steps! We both
know what those steps would have to be, though we do not mention our thoughts to
each other. We should neither of us shrink from the task, awful though it be to
contemplate. "Euthanasia" is an excellent and a comforting word! I am grateful
to whoever invented it.
It is only about 24 hours' sail from the Dardanelles to
here, at the rate the Czarina Catherine has come from London. She should
therefore arrive some time in the morning, but as she cannot possibly get in
before noon, we are all about to retire early. We shall get up at one o'clock,
so as to be ready.
25 October, Noon.--No news yet of the ship's arrival. Mrs.
Harker's hypnotic report this morning was the same as usual, so it is possible
that we may get news at any moment. We men are all in a fever of excitement,
except Harker, who is calm. His hands are cold as ice, and an hour ago I found
him whetting the edge of the great Ghoorka knife which he now always carries
with him. It will be a bad lookout for the Count if the edge of that "Kukri"
ever touches his throat, driven by that stern, ice-cold hand!
Van Helsing and I were a little alarmed about Mrs. Harker
today. About noon she got into a sort of lethargy which we did not like.
Although we kept silence to the others, we were neither of us happy about it.
She had been restless all the morning, so that we were at first glad to know
that she was sleeping. When, however, her husband mentioned casually that she
was sleeping so soundly that he could not wake her, we went to her room to see
for ourselves. She was breathing naturally and looked so well and peaceful that
we agreed that the sleep was better for her than anything else. Poor girl, she
has so much to forget that it is no wonder that sleep, if it brings oblivion to
her, does her good.
Later.--Our opinion was justified, for when after a
refreshing sleep of some hours she woke up, she seemed brighter and better than
she had been for days. At sunset she made the usual hypnotic report. Wherever he
may be in the Black Sea, the Count is hurrying to his destination. To his doom,
I trust!
26 October.--Another day and no tidings of the Czarina
Catherine. She ought to be here by now. That she is still journeying somewhere
is apparent, for Mrs. Harker's hypnotic report at sunrise was still the same. It
is possible that the vessel may be lying by, at times, for fog. Some of the
steamers which came in last evening reported patches of fog both to north and
south of the port. We must continue our watching, as the ship may now be
signaled any moment.
27 October, Noon.--Most strange. No news yet of the ship
we wait for. Mrs. Harker reported last night and this morning as usual. "Lapping
waves and rushing water," though she added that "the waves were very faint." The
telegrams from London have been the same, "no further report." Van Helsing is
terribly anxious, and told me just now that he fears the Count is escaping
us.
He added significantly, "I did not like that lethargy of
Madam Mina's. Souls and memories can do strange things during trance." I was
about to ask him more, but Harker just then came in, and he held up a warning
hand. We must try tonight at sunset to make her speak more fully when in her
hypnotic state.
28 October.--Telegram. Rufus Smith, London, to Lord
Godalming, care H. B. M. Vice Consul, Varna "Czarina Catherine reported entering
Galatz at one o'clock today."
Dr. Seward's
Diary28 October.--When the
telegram came announcing the arrival in Galatz I do not think it was such a
shock to any of us as might have been expected. True, we did not know whence, or
how, or when, the bolt would come. But I think we all expected that something
strange would happen. The day of arrival at Varna made us individually satisfied
that things would not be just as we had expected. We only waited to learn where
the change would occur. None the less, however, it was a surprise. I suppose
that nature works on such a hopeful basis that we believe against ourselves that
things will be as they ought to be, not as we should know that they will be.
Transcendentalism is a beacon to the angels, even if it be a will-o'-the-wisp to
man. Van Helsing raised his hand over his head for a moment, as though in
remonstrance with the Almighty. But he said not a word, and in a few seconds
stood up with his face sternly set.
Lord Godalming grew very pale, and sat breathing heavily.
I was myself half stunned and looked in wonder at one after another. Quincy
Morris tightened his belt with that quick movement which I knew so well. In our
old wandering days it meant "action." Mrs. Harker grew ghastly white, so that
the scar on her forehead seemed to burn, but she folded her hands meekly and
looked up in prayer. Harker smiled, actually smiled, the dark, bitter smile of
one who is without hope, but at the same time his action belied his words, for
his hands instinctively sought the hilt of the great Kukri knife and rested
there.
"When does the next train start for Galatz?" said Van
Helsing to us generally.
"At 6:30 tomorrow morning!" We all started, for the answer
came from Mrs. Harker.
"How on earth do you know?" said Art.
"You forget, or perhaps you do not know, though Jonathan
does and so does Dr. Van Helsing, that I am the train fiend. At home in Exeter I
always used to make up the time tables, so as to be helpful to my husband. I
found it so useful sometimes, that I always make a study of the time tables now.
I knew that if anything were to take us to Castle Dracula we should go by
Galatz, or at any rate through Bucharest, so I learned the times very carefully.
Unhappily there are not many to learn, as the only train tomorrow leaves as I
say."
"Wonderful woman!" murmured the Professor.
"Can't we get a special?" asked Lord Godalming.
Van Helsing shook his head, "I fear not. This land is very
different from yours or mine. Even if we did have a special, it would probably
not arrive as soon as our regular train. Moreover, we have something to prepare.
We must think. Now let us organize. You, friend Arthur, go to the train and get
the tickets and arrange that all be ready for us to go in the morning. Do you,
friend Jonathan, go to the agent of the ship and get from him letters to the
agent in Galatz, with authority to make a search of the ship just as it was
here. Quincy Morris, you see the Vice Consul, and get his aid with his fellow
in Galatz and all he can do to make our way smooth, so that no times be lost
when over the Danube. John will stay with Madam Mina and me, and we shall
consult. For so if time be long you may be delayed. And it will not matter when
the sun set, since I am here with Madam to make report."
"And I," said Mrs. Harker brightly, and more like her old
self than she had been for many a long day, "shall try to be of use in all ways,
and shall think and write for you as I used to do. Something is shifting from me
in some strange way, and I feel freer than I have been of late!"
The three younger men looked happier at the moment as they
seemed to realize the significance of her words. But Van Helsing and I, turning
to each other, met each a grave and troubled glance. We said nothing at the
time, however.
When the three men had gone out to their tasks Van Helsing
asked Mrs. Harker to look up the copy of the diaries and find him the part of
Harker's journal at the Castle. She went away to get it.
When the door was shut upon her he said to me, "We mean
the same! Speak out!"
"Here is some change. It is a hope that makes me sick, for
it may deceive us."
"Quite so. Do you know why I asked her to get the
manuscript?"
"No!" said I, "unless it was to get an opportunity of
seeing me alone."
"You are in part right, friend John, but only in part. I
want to tell you something. And oh, my friend, I am taking a great, a terrible,
risk. But I believe it is right. In the moment when Madam Mina said those words
that arrest both our understanding, an inspiration came to me. In the trance of
three days ago the Count sent her his spirit to read her mind. Or more like he
took her to see him in his earth box in the ship with water rushing, just as it
go free at rise and set of sun. He learn then that we are here, for she have
more to tell in her open life with eyes to see ears to hear than he, shut as he
is, in his coffin box. Now he make his most effort to escape us. At present he
want her not.
"He is sure with his so great knowledge that she will come
at his call. But he cut her off, take her, as he can do, out of his own power,
that so she come not to him. Ah! There I have hope that our man brains that have
been of man so long and that have not lost the grace of God, will come higher
than his child-brain that lie in his tomb for centuries, that grow not yet to
our stature, and that do only work selfish and therefore small. Here comes Madam
Mina. Not a word to her of her trance! She knows it not, and it would overwhelm
her and make despair just when we want all her hope, all her courage, when most
we want all her great brain which is trained like man's brain, but is of sweet
woman and have a special power which the Count give her, and which he may not
take away altogether, though he think not so. Hush! Let me speak, and you shall
learn. Oh, John, my friend, we are in awful straits. I fear, as I never feared
before. We can only trust the good God. Silence! Here she comes!" I thought that
the Professor was going to break down and have hysterics, just as he had when
Lucy died, but with a great effort he controlled himself and was at perfect
nervous poise when Mrs. Harker tripped into the room, bright and happy looking
and, in the doing of work, seemingly forgetful of her misery. As she came in,
she handed a number of sheets of typewriting to Van Helsing. He looked over them
gravely, his face brightening up as he read.
Then holding the pages between his finger and thumb he
said, "Friend John, to you with so much experience already, and you too, dear
Madam Mina, that are young, here is a lesson. Do not fear ever to think. A half
thought has been buzzing often in my brain, but I fear to let him loose his
wings. Here now, with more knowledge, I go back to where that half thought come
from and I find that he be no half thought at all. That be a whole thought,
though so young that he is not yet strong to use his little wings. Nay, like the
'Ugly Duck' of my friend Hans Andersen, he be no duck thought at all, but a big
swan thought that sail nobly on big wings, when the time come for him to try
them. See I read here what Jonathan have written.
"That other of his race who, in a later age, again and
again, brought his forces over The Great River into Turkey Land, who when he was
beaten back, came again, and again, and again, though he had to come alone from
the bloody field where his troops were being slaughtered, since he knew that he
alone could ultimately triumph.
"What does this tell us? Not much? No! The Count's child
thought see nothing, therefore he speak so free. Your man thought see nothing.
My man thought see nothing, till just now. No! But there comes another word from
some one who speak without thought because she, too, know not what it mean, what
it might mean. Just as there are elements which rest, yet when in nature's
course they move on their way and they touch, the pouf! And there comes a flash
of light, heaven wide, that blind and kill and destroy some. But that show up
all earth below for leagues and leagues. Is it not so? Well, I shall explain. To
begin, have you ever study the philosophy of crime? 'Yes' and 'No.' You, John,
yes, for it is a study of insanity. You, no, Madam Mina, for crime touch you
not, not but once. Still, your mind works true, and argues not a particulari
ad universale. There is this peculiarity in criminals. It is so constant, in
all countries and at all times, that even police, who know not much from
philosophy, come to know it empirically, that it is. That is to be empiric. The
criminal always work at one crime, that is the true criminal who seems
predestinate to crime, and who will of none other. This criminal has not full
man brain. He is clever and cunning and resourceful, but he be not of man
stature as to brain. He be of child brain in much. Now this criminal of ours is
pre-destinate to crime also. He, too, have child brain, and it is of the child
to do what he have done. The little bird, the little fish, the little animal
learn not by principle, but empirically. And when he learn to do, then there is
to him the ground to start from to do more. 'Dos pou sto,' said
Archimedes. 'Give me a fulcrum, and I shall move the world!' To do once, is the
fulcrum whereby child brain become man brain. And until he have the purpose to
do more, he continue to do the same again every time, just as he have done
before! Oh, my dear, I see that your eyes are opened, and that to you the
lightning flash show all the leagues," for Mrs. Harker began to clap her hands
and her eyes sparkled.
He went on, "Now you shall speak. Tell us two dry men of
science what you see with those so bright eyes." He took her hand and held it
whilst he spoke. His finger and thumb closed on her pulse, as I thought
instinctively and unconsciously, as she spoke.
"The Count is a criminal and of criminal type. Nordau and
Lombroso would so classify him, and qua criminal he is of an imperfectly formed
mind. Thus, in a difficulty he has to seek resource in habit. His past is a
clue, and the one page of it that we know, and that from his own lips, tells
that once before, when in what Mr. Morris would call a 'tight place,' he went
back to his own country from the land he had tried to invade, and thence,
without losing purpose, prepared himself for a new effort. He came again better
equipped for his work, and won. So he came to London to invade a new land. He
was beaten, and when all hope of success was lost, and his existence in danger,
he fled back over the sea to his home. Just as formerly he had fled back over
the Danube from Turkey Land."
"Good, good! Oh, you so clever lady!" said Van Helsing,
enthusiastically, as he stooped and kissed her hand. A moment later he said to
me, as calmly as though we had been having a sick room consultation,
"Seventy-two only, and in all this excitement. I have hope."
Turning to her again, he said with keen expectation, "But
go on. Go on! There is more to tell if you will. Be not afraid. John and I know.
I do in any case, and shall tell you if you are right. Speak, without
fear!"
"I will try to. But you will forgive me if I seem too
egotistical."
"Nay! Fear not, you must be egotist, for it is of you that
we think."
"Then, as he is criminal he is selfish. And as his
intellect is small and his action is based on selfishness, he confines himself to
one purpose. That purpose is remorseless. As he fled back over the
Danube, leaving his forces to be cut to pieces, so now he is intent on being
safe, careless of all. So his own selfishness frees my soul somewhat from the
terrible power which he acquired over me on that dreadful night. I felt it! Oh,
I felt it! Thank God, for His great mercy! My soul is freer than it has been
since that awful hour. And all that haunts me is a fear lest in some trance or
dream he may have used my knowledge for his ends."
The Professor stood up, "He has so used your mind, and by
it he has left us here in Varna, whilst the ship that carried him rushed through
enveloping fog up to Galatz, where, doubtless, he had made preparation for
escaping from us. But his child mind only saw so far. And it may be that as ever
is in God's Providence, the very thing that the evil doer most reckoned on for
his selfish good, turns out to be his chiefest harm. The hunter is taken in his
own snare, as the great Psalmist says. For now that he think he is free from
every trace of us all, and that he has escaped us with so many hours to him,
then his selfish child brain will whisper him to sleep. He think, too, that as
he cut himself off from knowing your mind, there can be no knowledge of him to
you. There is where he fail! That terrible baptism of blood which he give you
makes you free to go to him in spirit, as you have as yet done in your times of
freedom, when the sun rise and set. At such times you go by my volition and not
by his. And this power to good of you and others, you have won from your
suffering at his hands. This is now all more precious that he know it not, and
to guard himself have even cut himself off from his knowledge of our where. We,
however, are not selfish, and we believe that God is with us through all this
blackness, and these many dark hours. We shall follow him, and we shall not
flinch. Even if we peril ourselves that we become like him. Friend John, this
has been a great hour, and it have done much to advance us on our way. You must
be scribe and write him all down, so that when the others return from their work
you can give it to them, then they shall know as we do."
And so I have written it whilst we wait their return, and
Mrs. Harker has written with the typewriter all since she brought the MS to
us.
Chapter 26
Dr. Seward's
Diary29 October.--This is written
in the train from Varna to Galatz. Last night we all assembled a little before
the time of sunset. Each of us had done his work as well as he could, so far as
thought, and endeavor, and opportunity go, we are prepared for the whole of our
journey, and for our work when we get to Galatz. When the usual time came round
Mrs. Harker prepared herself for her hypnotic effort, and after a longer and
more serious effort on the part of Van Helsing than has been usually necessary,
she sank into the trance. Usually she speaks on a hint, but this time the
Professor had to ask her questions, and to ask them pretty resolutely, before we
could learn anything. At last her answer came.
"I can see nothing. We are still. There are no waves
lapping, but only a steady swirl of water softly running against the hawser. I
can hear men's voices calling, near and far, and the roll and creak of oars in
the rowlocks. A gun is fired somewhere, the echo of it seems far away. There is
tramping of feet overhead, and ropes and chains are dragged along. What is this?
There is a gleam of light. I can feel the air blowing upon me."
Here she stopped. She had risen, as if impulsively, from
where she lay on the sofa, and raised both her hands, palms upwards, as if
lifting a weight. Van Helsing and I looked at each other with understanding.
Quincy raised his eyebrows slightly and looked at her intently, whilst Harker's
hand instinctively closed round the hilt of his Kukri. There was a long pause.
We all knew that the time when she could speak was passing, but we felt that it
was useless to say anything.
Suddenly she sat up, and as she opened her eyes said
sweetly, "Would none of you like a cup of tea? You must all be so tired!"
We could only make her happy, and so acquiesced. She
bustled off to get tea. When she had gone Van Helsing said, "You see, my
friends. He is close to land. He has left his earth chest. But he has yet to get
on shore. In the night he may lie hidden somewhere, but if he be not carried on
shore, or if the ship do not touch it, he cannot achieve the land. In such case
he can, if it be in the night, change his form and jump or fly on shore, then,
unless he be carried he cannot escape. And if he be carried, then the customs
men may discover what the box contain. Thus, in fine, if he escape not on shore
tonight, or before dawn, there will be the whole day lost to him. We may then
arrive in time. For if he escape not at night we shall come on him in daytime,
boxed up and at our mercy. For he dare not be his true self, awake and visible,
lest he be discovered."
There was no more to be said, so we waited in patience
until the dawn, at which time we might learn more from Mrs. Harker.
Early this morning we listened, with breathless anxiety,
for her response in her trance. The hypnotic stage was even longer in coming
than before, and when it came the time remaining until full sunrise was so short
that we began to despair. Van Helsing seemed to throw his whole soul into the
effort. At last, in obedience to his will she made reply.
"All is dark. I hear lapping water, level with me, and
some creaking as of wood on wood." She paused, and the red sun shot up. We must
wait till tonight.
And so it is that we are traveling towards Galatz in an
agony of expectation. We are due to arrive between two and three in the morning.
But already, at Bucharest, we are three hours late, so we cannot possibly get in
till well after sunup. Thus we shall have two more hypnotic messages from Mrs.
Harker! Either or both may possibly throw more light on what is
happening.
Later.--Sunset has come and gone. Fortunately it came at a
time when there was no distraction. For had it occurred whilst we were at a
station, we might not have secured the necessary calm and isolation. Mrs. Harker
yielded to the hypnotic influence even less readily than this morning. I am in
fear that her power of reading the Count's sensations may die away, just when we
want it most. It seems to me that her imagination is beginning to work. Whilst
she has been in the trance hitherto she has confined herself to the simplest of
facts. If this goes on it may ultimately mislead us. If I thought that the
Count's power over her would die away equally with her power of knowledge it
would be a happy thought. But I am afraid that it may not be so.
When she did speak, her words were enigmatical, "Something
is going out. I can feel it pass me like a cold wind. I can hear, far off,
confused sounds, as of men talking in strange tongues, fierce falling water, and
the howling of wolves." She stopped and a shudder ran through her, increasing in
intensity for a few seconds, till at the end, she shook as though in a palsy.
She said no more, even in answer to the Professor's imperative questioning. When
she woke from the trance, she was cold, and exhausted, and languid, but her mind
was all alert. She could not remember anything, but asked what she had said.
When she was told, she pondered over it deeply for a long time and in
silence.
30 October, 7 a.m.--We are near Galatz now, and I may not
have time to write later. Sunrise this morning was anxiously looked for by us
all. Knowing of the increasing difficulty of procuring the hypnotic trance, Van
Helsing began his passes earlier than usual. They produced no effect, however,
until the regular time, when she yielded with a still greater difficulty, only a
minute before the sun rose. The Professor lost no time in his
questioning.
Her answer came with equal quickness, "All is dark. I hear
water swirling by, level with my ears, and the creaking of wood on wood. Cattle
low far off. There is another sound, a queer one like..." She stopped and grew
white, and whiter still.
"Go on, go on! Speak, I command you!" said Van Helsing in
an agonized voice. At the same time there was despair in his eyes, for the risen
sun was reddening even Mrs. Harker's pale face. She opened her eyes, and we all
started as she said, sweetly and seemingly with the utmost unconcern.
"Oh, Professor, why ask me to do what you know I can't? I
don't remember anything." Then, seeing the look of amazement on our faces, she
said, turning from one to the other with a troubled look, "What have I said?
What have I done? I know nothing, only that I was lying here, half asleep, and
heard you say 'go on! speak, I command you!' It seemed so funny to hear you
order me about, as if I were a bad child!"
"Oh, Madam Mina," he said, sadly, "it is proof, if proof
be needed, of how I love and honor you, when a word for your good, spoken more
earnest than ever, can seem so strange because it is to order her whom I am
proud to obey!"
The whistles are sounding. We are nearing Galatz. We are
on fire with anxiety and eagerness.
Mina Harker's
Journal30 October.--Mr. Morris
took me to the hotel where our rooms had been ordered by telegraph, he being the
one who could best be spared, since he does not speak any foreign language. The
forces were distributed much as they had been at Varna, except that Lord
Godalming went to the Vice Consul, as his rank might serve as an immediate
guarantee of some sort to the official, we being in extreme hurry. Jonathan and
the two doctors went to the shipping agent to learn particulars of the arrival
of the Czarina Catherine.
Later.--Lord Godalming has returned. The Consul is away,
and the Vice Consul sick. So the routine work has been attended to by a clerk.
He was very obliging, and offered to do anything in his power.
Jonathan Harker's
Journal30 October.--At nine
o'clock Dr. Van Helsing, Dr. Seward, and I called on Messrs. Mackenzie &
Steinkoff, the agents of the London firm of Hapgood. They had received a wire
from London, in answer to Lord Godalming's telegraphed request, asking them to
show us any civility in their power. They were more than kind and courteous, and
took us at once on board the Czarina Catherine, which lay at anchor out in the
river harbor. There we saw the Captain, Donelson by name, who told us of his
voyage. He said that in all his life he had never had so favorable a run.
"Man!" he said, "but it made us afeard, for we expect it
that we should have to pay for it wi' some rare piece o' ill luck, so as to keep
up the average. It's no canny to run fare London to the Black Sea wi' a wind
hint ye, as though the Deil himself were blawin' on yer sail for his ain
purpose. An' a' the time we could no speer a thing. Gin we were nigh a ship, or
a port, or a headland, a fog fell on us and traveled wi' us, till when after it
had lifted and we looked out, the deil a thing could we see. We ran by Gibraltar
wi'oot bein' able to signal. An' til we came to the Dardanelles and had to wait
to get our permit to pass, we never were within hail o' aught. At first I
inclined to slack off sail and beat about till the fog was lifted. But whiles, I
thocht that if the Deil was minded to get us into the Black Sea quick, he was
like to do it whether we would or no. If we had a quick voyage it would be no to
our miscredit wi'the owners, or no hurt to our traffic, an' the Old Mon who had
served his ain purpose wad be decently grateful to us for no hindering'
him."
This mixture of simplicity and cunning, of superstition
and commercial reasoning, aroused Van Helsing, who said, "Mine friend, that
Devil is more clever than he is thought by some, and he know when he meet his
match!"
The skipper was not displeased with the compliment, and
went on, "When we got past the Bosphorus the men began to grumble. Some o' them,
the Romanians, came and asked me to heave overboard a big box which had been
put on board by a queer lookin' old man just before we had started frae London.
I had seen them speer at the fellow, and put out their twa fingers when they saw
him, to guard them against the evil eye. Man! but the supersteetion of
foreigners is pairfectly rideeculous! I sent them aboot their business pretty
quick, but as just after a fog closed in on us I felt a wee bit as they did
anent something, though I wouldn't say it was again the big box. Well, on we
went, and as the fog didn't let up for five days I joost let the wind carry us,
for if the Deil wanted to get somewheres, well, he would fetch it up a'reet. An'
if he didn't, well, we'd keep a sharp lookout anyhow. Sure eneuch, we had a fair
way and deep water all the time. And two days ago, when the mornin' sun came
through the fog, we found ourselves just in the river opposite Galatz. The
Roumanians were wild, and wanted me right or wrong to take out the box and fling
it in the river. I had to argy wi' them aboot it wi' a handspike. An' when the
last o' them rose off the deck wi' his head in his hand, I had convinced them
that, evil eye or no evil eye, the property and the trust of my owners were
better in my hands than in the river Danube. They had, mind ye, taken the box on
the deck ready to fling in, and as it was marked Galatz via Varna, I thocht I'd
let it lie till we discharged in the port an' get rid o't althegither. We didn't
do much clearin' that day, an' had to remain the nicht at anchor. But in the
mornin', braw an' airly, an hour before sunup, a man came aboard wi' an order,
written to him from England, to receive a box marked for one Count Dracula. Sure
eneuch the matter was one ready to his hand. He had his papers a' reet, an' gla
d I was to be rid o' the dam' thing, for I was beginnin' masel' to feel uneasy
at it. If the Deil did have any luggage aboord the ship, I'm thinkin' it was
nane ither than that same!"
"What was the name of the man who took it?" asked Dr. Van
Helsing with restrained eagerness.
"I'll be tellin' ye quick!" he answered, and stepping down
to his cabin, produced a receipt signed "Immanuel Hildesheim." Burgen-strasse 16
was the address. We found out that this was all the Captain knew, so with thanks
we came away.
We found Hildesheim in his office, a Hebrew of rather the
Adelphi Theatre type, with a nose like a sheep, and a fez. His arguments were
pointed with specie, we doing the punctuation, and with a little bargaining he
told us what he knew. This turned out to be simple but important. He had
received a letter from Mr. de Ville of London, telling him to receive, if
possible before sunrise so as to avoid customs, a box which would arrive at
Galatz in the Czarina Catherine. This he was to give in charge to a certain
Petrof Skinsky, who dealt with the Slovaks who traded down the river to the
port. He had been paid for his work by an English bank note, which had been duly
cashed for gold at the Danube International Bank. When Skinsky had come to him,
he had taken him to the ship and handed over the box, so as to save parterage.
That was all he knew.
We then sought for Skinsky, but were unable to find him.
One of his neighbors, who did not seem to bear him any affection, said that he
had gone away two days before, no one knew whither. This was corroborated by his
landlord, who had received by messenger the key of the house together with the
rent due, in English money. This had been between ten and eleven o'clock last
night. We were at a standstill again.
Whilst we were talking one came running and breathlessly
gasped out that the body of Skinsky had been found inside the wall of the
churchyard of St. Peter, and that the throat had been torn open as if by some
wild animal. Those we had been speaking with ran off to see the horror, the
women crying out. "This is the work of a Slovak!" We hurried away lest we should
have been in some way drawn into the affair, and so detained.
As we came home we could arrive at no definite conclusion.
We were all convinced that the box was on its way, by water,to somewhere, but
where that might be we would have to discover. With heavy hearts we came home to
the hotel to Mina.
When we met together, the first thing was to consult as to
taking Mina again into our confidence. Things are getting desperate, and it is
at least a chance, though a hazardous one. As a preliminary step, I was released
from my promise to her.
Mina Harker's
Journal30 October, evening.--They
were so tired and worn out and dispirited that there was nothing to be done till
they had some rest, so I asked them all to lie down for half an hour whilst I
should enter everything up to the moment. I feel so grateful to the man who
invented the "Traveler's" typewriter, and to Mr. Morris for getting this one
for me. I should have felt quite astray doing the work if I had to write with a
pen...
It is all done. Poor dear, dear Jonathan, what he must
have suffered, what he must be suffering now. He lies on the sofa hardly seeming
to breathe, and his whole body appears in collapse. His brows are knit. His face
is drawn with pain. Poor fellow, maybe he is thinking, and I can see his face
all wrinkled up with the concentration of his thoughts. Oh! if I could only help
at all. I shall do what I can.
I have asked Dr. Van Helsing, and he has got me all the
papers that I have not yet seen. Whilst they are resting, I shall go over all
carefully, and perhaps I may arrive at some conclusion. I shall try to follow
the Professor's example, and think without prejudice on the facts before
me...
I do believe that under God's providence I have made a
discovery. I shall get the maps and look over them.
I am more than ever sure that I am right. My new
conclusion is ready, so I shall get our party together and read it. They can
judge it. It is well to be accurate, and every minute is precious.
Mina Harker's
Memorandum
(Entered in Her
Journal)
Ground of inquiry.--Count Dracula's problem is to get back
to his own place.
(a) He must be brought back by some one. This
is evident. For had he power to move himself as he wished he could go either
as man, or wolf, or bat, or in some other way. He evidently fears discovery or
interference, in the state of helplessness in which he must be, confined as he
is between dawn and sunset in his wooden box.
(b) How is he to be taken?--Here a process of exclusions
may help us. By road, by rail, by water? 1. By Road.--There are endless difficulties, especially in leaving
the city.
(x) There are people. And people are curious,
and investigate. A hint, a surmise, a doubt as to what might be in the box,
would destroy him.
(y) There are, or there may be, customs and
octroi officers to pass.
(z) His pursuers might follow. This is his highest fear.
And in order to prevent his being betrayed he has repelled, so far as he can,
even his victim, me! 2. By
Rail.--There is no one in charge of the box. It would have to take its chance of
being delayed, and delay would be fatal, with enemies on the track. True, he
might escape at night. But what would he be, if left in a strange place with no
refuge that he could fly to? This is not what he intends, and he does not mean
to risk it.
3. By Water.--Here is the safest way, in one respect, but
with most danger in another. On the water he is powerless except at night. Even
then he can only summon fog and storm and snow and his wolves. But were he
wrecked, the living water would engulf him, helpless, and he would indeed be
lost. He could have the vessel drive to land, but if it were unfriendly land,
wherein he was not free to move, his position would still be desperate.
We know from the record that he was on the water, so what
we have to do is to ascertain what water.
The first thing is to realize exactly what he has done as
yet. We may, then, get a light on what his task is to be.
Firstly.--We must differentiate between what he did in
London as part of his general plan of action, when he was pressed for moments
and had to arrange as best he could.
Secondly we must see, as well as we can surmise it from
the facts we know of, what he has done here.
As to the first, he evidently intended to arrive at
Galatz, and sent invoice to Varna to deceive us lest we should ascertain his
means of exit from England. His immediate and sole purpose then was to escape.
The proof of this, is the letter of instructions sent ot Immanuel Hildesheim to
clear and take away the box before sunrise. There is also the instruction to
Petrof Skinsky. These we must only guess at, but there must have been some
letter or message, since Skinsky came to Hildesheim.
That, so far, his plans were successful we know. The
Czarina Catherine made a phenomenally quick journey. So much so that Captain
Donelson's suspicions were aroused. But his superstition united with his
canniness played the Count's game for him, and he ran with his favoring wind
through fogs and all till he brought up blindfold at Galatz. That the Count's
arrangements were well made, has been proved. Hildesheim cleared the box, took
it off, and gave it to Skinsky. Skinsky took it, and here we lose the trail. We
only know that the box is somewhere on the water, moving along. The customs and
the octroi, if there be any, have been avoided.
Now we come to what the Count must have done after his
arrival, on land, at Galatz.
The box was given to Skinsky before sunrise. At sunrise
the Count could appear in his own form. Here, we ask why Skinsky was chosen at
all to aid in the work? In my husband's diary, Skinsky is mentioned as dealing
with the Slovaks who trade down the river to the port. And the man's remark,
that the murder was the work of a Slovak, showed the general feeling against his
class. The Count wanted isolation.
My surmise is this, that in London the Count decided to
get back to his castle by water, as the most safe and secret way. He was brought
from the castle by Szgany, and probably they delivered their cargo to Slovaks
who took the boxes to Varna, for there they were shipped to London. Thus the
Count had knowledge of the persons who could arrange this service. When the box
was on land, before sunrise or after sunset, he came out from his box, met
Skinsky and instructed him what to do as to arranging the carriage of the box up
some river. When this was done, and he knew that all was in train, he blotted
out his traces, as he thought, by murdering his agent.
I have examined the map and find that the river most
suitable for the Slovaks to have ascended is either the Pruth or the Sereth. I
read in the typescript that in my trance I heard cows low and water swirling
level with my ears and the creaking of wood. The Count in his box, then, was on
a river in an open boat, propelled probably either by oars or poles, for the
banks are near and it is working against stream. There would be no such if
floating down stream.
Of course it may not be either the Sereth or the Pruth,
but we may possibly investigate further. Now of these two, the Pruth is the more
easily navigated, but the Sereth is, at Fundu, joined by the Bistritza which
runs up round the Borgo Pass. The loop it makes is manifestly as close to
Dracula's castle as can be got by water.
Mina Harker's
Journal--continuedWhen I had done
reading, Jonathan took me in his arms and kissed me. The others kept shaking me
by both hands, and Dr. Van Helsing said, "Our dear Madam Mina is once more our
teacher. Her eyes have been where we were blinded. Now we are on the track once
again, and this time we may succeed. Our enemy is at his most helpless. And if
we can come on him by day, on the water, our task will be over. He has a start,
but he is powerless to hasten, as he may not leave this box lest those who carry
him may suspect. For them to suspect would be to prompt them to throw him in the
stream where he perish. This he knows, and will not. Now men, to our Council of
War, for here and now, we must plan what each and all shall do."
"I shall get a steam launch and follow him," said Lord
Godalming.
"And I, horses to follow on the bank lest by chance he
land," said Mr. Morris.
"Good!" said the Professor, "both good. But neither must
go alone. There must be force to overcome force if need be. The Slovak is strong
and rough, and he carries rude arms." All the men smiled, for amongst them they
carried a small arsenal.
Said Mr. Morris, "I have brought some Winchesters. They
are pretty handy in a crowd, and there may be wolves. The Count, if you
remember, took some other precautions. He made some requisitions on others that
Mrs. Harker could not quite hear or understand. We must be ready at all
points."
Dr. Seward said, "I think I had better go with Quincy. We
have been accustomed to hunt together, and we two, well armed, will be a match
for whatever may come along. You must not be alone, Art. It may be necessary to
fight the Slovaks, and a chance thrust, for I don't suppose these fellows carry
guns, would undo all our plans. There must be no chances, this time. We shall not
rest until the Count's head and body have been separated, and we are sure that
he cannot reincarnate."
He looked at Jonathan as he spoke, and Jonathan looked at
me. I could see that the poor dear was torn about in his mind. Of course he
wanted to be with me. But then the boat service would, most likely, be the one
which would destroy the...the...Vampire. (Why did I hesitate to write the
word?)
He was silent awhile, and during his silence Dr. Van
Helsing spoke, "Friend Jonathan, this is to you for twice reasons. First,
because you are young and brave and can fight, and all energies may be needed at
the last. And again that it is your right to destroy him. That, which has
wrought such woe to you and yours. Be not afraid for Madam Mina. She will be my
care, if I may. I am old. My legs are not so quick to run as once. And I am not
used to ride so long or to pursue as need be, or to fight with lethal weapons.
But I can be of other service. I can fight in other way. And I can die, if need
be, as well as younger men. Now let me say that what I would is this. While you,
my Lord Godalming and friend Jonathan go in your so swift little steamboat up
the river, and whilst John and Quincy guard the bank where perchance he might
be landed, I will take Madam Mina right into the heart of the enemy's country.
Whilst the old fox is tied in his box, floating on the running stream whence he
cannot escape to land, where he dares not raise the lid of his coffin box lest
his Slovak carriers should in fear leave him to perish, we shall go in the track
where Jonathan went, from Bistritz over the Borgo, and find our way to the
Castle of Dracula. Here, Madam Mina's hypnotic power will surely help, and we
shall find our way, all dark and unknown otherwise, after the first sunrise when
we are near that fateful place. There is much to be done, and other places to be
made sanctify, so that that nest of vipers be obliterated."
Here Jonathan interrupted him hotly, "Do you mean to say,
Professor Van Helsing, that you would bring Mina, in her sad case and tainted as
she is with that devil's illness, right into the jaws of his deathtrap? Not for
the world! Not for Heaven or Hell!"
He became almost speechless for a minute, and then went
on, "Do you know what the place is? Have you seen that awful den of hellish
infamy, with the very moonlight alive with grisly shapes, and ever speck of dust
that whirls in the wind a devouring monster in embryo? Have you felt the
Vampire's lips upon your throat?"
Here he turned to me, and as his eyes lit on my forehead
he threw up his arms with a cry, "Oh, my God, what have we done to have this
terror upon us?" and he sank down on the sofa in a collapse of misery.
The Professor's voice, as he spoke in clear, sweet tones,
which seemed to vibrate in the air, calmed us all.
"Oh, my friend, it is because I would save Madam Mina from
that awful place that I would go. God forbid that I should take her into that
place. There is work, wild work, to be done before that place can be purify.
Remember that we are in terrible straits. If the Count escape us this time, and
he is strong and subtle and cunning, he may choose to sleep him for a century,
and then in time our dear one," he took my hand, "would come to him to keep him
company, and would be as those others that you, Jonathan, saw. You have told us
of their gloating lips. You heard their ribald laugh as they clutched the moving
bag that the Count threw to them. You shudder, and well may it be. Forgive me
that I make you so much pain, but it is necessary. My friend, is it not a dire
need for that which I am giving, possibly my life? If it, were that any one went
into that place to stay, it is I who would have to go to keep them
company."
"Do as you will," said Jonathan, with a sob that shook him
all over, "we are in the hands of God!"
Later.--Oh, it did me good to see the way that these brave
men worked. How can women help loving men when they are so earnest, and so true,
and so brave! And, too, it made me think of the wonderful power of money! What
can it not do when basely used. I felt so thankful that Lord Godalming is rich,
and both he and Mr. Morris, who also has plenty of money, are willing to spend it
so freely. For if they did not, our little expedition could not start, either so
promptly or so well equipped, as it will within another hour. It is not three
hours since it was arranged what part each of us was to do. And now Lord
Godalming and Jonathan have a lovely steam launch, with steam up ready to start
at a moment's notice. Dr. Seward and Mr. Morris have half a dozen good horses,
well appointed. We have all the maps and appliances of various kinds that can be
had. Professor Van Helsing and I are to leave by the 11:40 train tonight for
Veresti, where we are to get a carriage to drive to the Borgo Pass. We are
bringing a good deal of ready money, as we are to buy a carriage and horses. We
shall drive ourselves, for we have no one whom we can trust in the matter. The
Professor knows something of a great many languages, so we shall get on all
right. We have all got arms, even for me a large bore revolver. Jonathan would
not be happy unless I was armed like the rest. Alas! I cannot carry one arm that
the rest do, the scar on my forehead forbids that. Dear Dr. Van Helsing comforts
me by telling me that I am fully armed as there may be wolves. The weather is
getting colder every hour, and there are snow flurries which come and go as
warnings.
Later.--It took all my courage to say goodbye to my
darling. We may never meet again. Courage, Mina! The Professor is looking at you
keenly. His look is a warning. There must be no tears now, unless it may be that
God will let them fall in gladness.
Jonathan Harker's
Journal30 October, night.--I am
writing this in the light from the furnace door of the steam launch. Lord
Godalming is firing up. He is an experienced hand at the work, as he has had for
years a launch of his own on the Thames, and another on the Norfolk Broads.
Regarding our plans, we finally decided that Mina's guess was correct, and that
if any waterway was chosen for the Count's escape back to his Castle, the Sereth
and then the Bistritza at its junction, would be the one. We took it, that
somewhere about the 47th degree, north latitude, would be the place chosen for
crossing the country between the river and the Carpathians. We have no fear in
running at good speed up the river at night. There is plenty of water, and the
banks are wide enough apart to make steaming, even in the dark, easy enough.
Lord Godalming tells me to sleep for a while, as it is enough for the present for
one to be on watch. But I cannot sleep, how can I with the terrible danger
hanging over my darling, and her going out into that awful place...
My only comfort is that we are in the hands of God. Only
for that faith it would be easier to die than to live, and so be quit of all the
trouble. Mr. Morris and Dr. Seward were off on their long ride before we
started. They are to keep up the right bank, far enough off to get on higher
lands where they can see a good stretch of river and avoid the following of its
curves. They have, for the first stages, two men to ride and lead their spare
horses, four in all, so as not to excite curiosity. When they dismiss the men,
which shall be shortly, they shall themselves look after the horses. It may be
necessary for us to join forces. If so they can mount our whole party. One of
the saddles has a moveable horn, and can be easily adapted for Mina, if
required.
It is a wild adventure we are on. Here, as we are rushing
along through the darkness, with the cold from the river seeming to rise up and
strike us, with all the mysterious voices of the night around us, it all comes
home. We seem to be drifting into unknown places and unknown ways. Into a whole
world of dark and dreadful things. Godalming is shutting the furnace
door...
31 October.--Still hurrying along. The day has come, and
Godalming is sleeping. I am on watch. The morning is bitterly cold, the furnace
heat is grateful, though we have heavy fur coats. As yet we have passed only a
few open boats, but none of them had on board any box or package of anything
like the size of the one we seek. The men were scared every time we turned our
electric lamp on them, and fell on their knees and prayed.
1 November, evening.--No news all day. We have found
nothing of the kind we seek. We have now passed into the Bistritza, and if we
are wrong in our surmise our chance is gone. We have overhauled every boat, big
and little. Early this morning, one crew took us for a Government boat, and
treated us accordingly. We saw in this a way of smoothing matters, so at Fundu,
where the Bistritza runs into the Sereth, we got a Romanian flag which we now
fly conspicuously. With every boat which we have over-hauled since then this
trick has succeeded. We have had every deference shown to us, and not once any
objection to whatever we chose to ask or do. Some of the Slovaks tell us that a
big boat passed them, going at more than usual speed as she had a double crew on
board. This was before they came to Fundu, so they could not tell us whether the
boat turned into the Bistritza or continued on up the Sereth. At Fundu we could
not hear of any such boat, so she must have passed there in the night. I am
feeling very sleepy. The cold is perhaps beginning to tell upon me, and nature
must have rest some time. Godalming insists that he shall keep the first watch.
God bless him for all his goodness to poor dear Mina and me.
2 November, morning.--It is broad daylight. That good
fellow would not wake me. He says it would have been a sin to, for I slept
peacefully and was forgetting my trouble. It seems brutally selfish to me to
have slept so long, and let him watch all night, but he was quite right. I am a
new man this morning. And, as I sit here and watch him sleeping, I can do all
that is necessary both as to minding the engine, steering, and keeping watch. I
can feel that my strength and energy are coming back to me. I wonder where Mina
is now, and Van Helsing. They should have got to Veresti about noon on
Wednesday. It would take them some time to get the carriage and horses. So if
they had started and travelled hard, they would be about now at the Borgo Pass.
God guide and help them! I am afraid to think what may happen. If we could only
go faster. But we cannot. The engines are throbbing and doing their utmost. I
wonder how Dr. Seward and Mr. Morris are getting on. There seem to be endless
streams running down the mountains into this river, but as none of them are very
large, at present, at all events, though they are doubtless terrible in winter
and when the snow melts, the horsemen may not have met much obstruction. I hope
that before we get to Strasba we may see them. For if by that time we have not
overtaken the Count, it may be necessary to take counsel together what to do
next.
Dr. Seward's
Diary2 November.--Three days on
the road. No news, and no time to write it if there had been, for every moment
is precious. We have had only the rest needful for the horses. But we are both
bearing it wonderfully. Those adventurous days of ours are turning up useful. We
must push on. We shall never feel happy till we get the launch in sight
again.
3 November.--We heard at Fundu that the launch had gone up
the Bistritza. I wish it wasn't so cold. There are signs of snow coming. And if
it falls heavy it will stop us. In such case we must get a sledge and go on,
Russian fashion.
4 November.--Today we heard of the launch having been
detained by an accident when trying to force a way up the rapids. The Slovak
boats get up all right, by aid of a rope and steering with knowledge. Some went
up only a few hours before. Godalming is an amateur fitter himself, and
evidently it was he who put the launch in trim again.
Finally, they got up the rapids all right, with local
help, and are off on the chase afresh. I fear that the boat is not any better
for the accident, the peasantry tell us that after she got upon smooth water
again, she kept stopping every now and again so long as she was in sight. We
must push on harder than ever. Our help may be wanted soon.
Mina Harker's
Journal31 October.--Arrived at
Veresti at noon. The Professor tells me that this morning at dawn he could
hardly hypnotize me at all, and that all I could say was, "dark and quiet." He
is off now buying a carriage and horses. He says that he will later on try to
buy additional horses, so that we may be able to change them on the way. We have
something more than 70 miles before us. The country is lovely, and most
interesting. If only we were under different conditions, how delightful it would
be to see it all. If Jonathan and I were driving through it alone what a
pleasure it would be. To stop and see people, and learn something of their life,
and to fill our minds and memories with all the color and picturesque ness of the
whole wild, beautiful country and the quaint people! But, alas!
Later.--Dr. Van Helsing has returned. He has got the
carriage and horses. We are to have some dinner, and to start in an hour. The
landlady is putting us up a huge basket of provisions. It seems enough for a
company of soldiers. The Professor encourages her, and whispers to me that it
may be a week before we can get any food again. He has been shopping too, and
has sent home such a wonderful lot of fur coats and wraps, and all sorts of warm
things. There will not be any chance of our being cold.
We shall soon be off. I am afraid to think what may happen
to us. We are truly in the hands of God. He alone knows what may be, and I pray
Him, with all the strength of my sad and humble soul, that He will watch over my
beloved husband. That whatever may happen, Jonathan may know that I loved him
and honored him more than I can say, and that my latest and truest thought will
be always for him.
Chapter 27
Mina Harker's
Journal
1 November.--All day long we have traveled, and at a good
speed. The horses seem to know that they are being kindly treated, for they go
willingly their full stage at best speed. We have now had so many changes and
find the same thing so constantly that we are encouraged to think that the
journey will be an easy one. Dr. Van Helsing is laconic, he tells the farmers
that he is hurrying to Bistritz, and pays them well to make the exchange of
horses. We get hot soup, or coffee, or tea, and off we go. It is a lovely
country. Full of beauties of all imaginable kinds, and the people are brave, and
strong, and simple, and seem full of nice qualities. They are very, very
superstitious. In the first house where we stopped, when the woman who served us
saw the scar on my forehead, she crossed herself and put out two fingers towards
me, to keep off the evil eye. I believe they went to the trouble of putting an
extra amount of garlic into our food, and I can't abide garlic. Ever since then
I have taken care not to take off my hat or veil, and so have escaped their
suspicions. We are traveling fast, and as we have no driver with us to carry
tales, we go ahead of scandal. But I daresay that fear of the evil eye will
follow hard behind us all the way. The Professor seems tireless. All day he
would not take any rest, though he made me sleep for a long spell. At sunset time
he hypnotized me, and he says I answered as usual, "darkness, lapping water and
creaking wood." So our enemy is still on the river. I am afraid to think of
Jonathan, but somehow I have now no fear for him, or for myself. I write this
whilst we wait in a farmhouse for the horses to be ready. Dr. Van Helsing is
sleeping. Poor dear, he looks very tired and old and grey, but his mouth is set
as firmly as a conqueror's. Even in his sleep he is intense with resolution.
When we have well started I must make him rest whilst I drive. I shall tell him
that we have days before us, and he must not break down when most of all his
strength will be needed...All is ready. We are off shortly.
2 November, morning.--I was successful, and we took turns
driving all night. Now the day is on us, bright though cold. There is a strange
heaviness in the air. I say heaviness for want of a better word. I mean that it
oppresses us both. It is very cold, and only our warm furs keep us comfortable.
At dawn Van Helsing hypnotized me. He says I answered "darkness, creaking wood
and roaring water," so the river is changing as they ascend. I do hope that my
darling will not run any chance of danger, more than need be, but we are in
God's hands.
2 November, night.--All day long driving. The country gets
wilder as we go, and the great spurs of the Carpathians, which at Veresti seemed
so far from us and so low on the horizon, now seem to gather round us and tower
in front. We both seem in good spirits. I think we make an effort each to cheer
the other, in the doing so we cheer ourselves. Dr. Van Helsing says that by
morning we shall reach the Borgo Pass. The houses are very few here now, and the
Professor says that the last horse we got will have to go on with us, as we may
not be able to change. He got two in addition to the two we changed, so that now
we have a rude four-in-hand. The dear horses are patient and good, and they give
us no trouble. We are not worried with other travelers, and so even I can
drive. We shall get to the Pass in daylight. We do not want to arrive before. So
we take it easy, and have each a long rest in turn. Oh, what will tomorrow bring
to us? We go to seek the place where my poor darling suffered so much. God grant
that we may be guided aright, and that He will deign to watch over my husband and
those dear to us both, and who are in such deadly peril. As for me, I am not
worthy in His sight. Alas! I am unclean to His eyes, and shall be until He may
deign to let me stand forth in His sight as one of those who have not incurred
His wrath.
Memorandum by Abraham Van
Helsing4 November.--This to my
old and true friend John Seward, M.D., of Purefleet, London, in case I may not
see him. It may explain. It is morning, and I write by a fire which all the
night I have kept alive, Madam Mina aiding me. It is cold, cold. So cold that
the grey heavy sky is full of snow, which when it falls will settle for all
winter as the ground is hardening to receive it. It seems to have affected Madam
Mina. She has been so heavy of head all day that she was not like herself. She
sleeps, and sleeps, and sleeps! She who is usual so alert, have done literally
nothing all the day. She even have lost her appetite. She make no entry into her
little diary, she who write so faithful at every pause. Something whisper to me
that all is not well. However, tonight she is more vif. Her long sleep all day
have refresh and restore her, for now she is all sweet and bright as ever. At
sunset I try to hypnotize her, but alas! with no effect. The power has grown
less and less with each day, and tonight it fail me altogether. Well, God's will
be done, whatever it may be, and whithersoever it may lead!
Now to the historical, for as Madam Mina write not in her
stenography, I must, in my cumbrous old fashion, that so each day of us may not
go unrecorded.
We got to the Borgo Pass just after sunrise yesterday
morning. When I saw the signs of the dawn I got ready for the hypnotism. We
stopped our carriage, and got down so that there might be no disturbance. I made
a couch with furs, and Madam Mina, lying down, yield herself as usual, but more
slow and more short time than ever, to the hypnotic sleep. As before, came the
answer, "darkness and the swirling of water." Then she woke, bright and radiant
and we go on our way and soon reach the Pass. At this time and place, she become
all on fire with zeal. Some new guiding power be in her manifested, for she
point to a road and say, "This is the way."
"How know you it?" I ask.
"Of course I know it,' she answer, and with a pause, add,
"Have not my Jonathan traveled it and wrote of his travel?"
At first I think somewhat strange, but soon I see that
there be only one such byroad. It is used but little, and very different from
the coach road from the Bukovina to Bistritz, which is more wide and hard, and
more of use.
So we came down this road. When we meet other ways, not
always were we sure that they were roads at all, for they be neglect and light
snow have fallen, the horses know and they only. I give rein to them, and they
go on so patient. By and by we find all the things which Jonathan have note in
that wonderful diary of him. Then we go on for long, long hours and hours. At
the first, I tell Madam Mina to sleep. She try, and she succeed. She sleep all
the time, till at the last, I feel myself to suspicious grow, and attempt to
wake her. But she sleep on, and I may not wake her though I try. I do not wish
to try too hard lest I harm her. For I know that she have suffer much, and sleep
at times be all-in-all to her. I think I drowse myself, for all of sudden I feel
guilt, as though I have done something. I find myself bolt up, with the reins in
my hand, and the good horses go along jog, jog, just as ever. I look down and
find Madam Mina still asleep. It is now not far off sunset time, and over the
snow the light of the sun flow in big yellow flood, so that we throw great long
shadow on where the mountain rise so steep. For we are going up, and up, and all
is oh, so wild and rocky, as though it were the end of the world.
Then I arouse Madam Mina. This time she wake with not much
trouble, and then I try to put her to hypnotic sleep. But she sleep not, being
as though I were not. Still I try and try, till all at once I find her and
myself in dark, so I look round, and find that the sun have gone down. Madam
Mina laugh, and I turn and look at her. She is now quite awake, and look so well
as I never saw her since that night at Carfax when we first enter the Count's
house. I am amaze, and not at ease then. But she is so bright and tender and
thoughtful for me that I forget all fear. I light a fire, for we have brought
supply of wood with us, and she prepare food while I undo the horses and set
them, tethered in shelter, to feed. Then when I return to the fire she have my
supper ready. I go to help her, but she smile, and tell me that she have eat
already. That she was so hungry that she would not wait. I like it not, and I
have grave doubts. But I fear to affright her, and so I am silent of it. She
help me and I eat alone, and then we wrap in fur and lie beside the fire, and I
tell her to sleep while I watch. But presently I forget all of watching. And
when I sudden remember that I watch, I find her lying quiet, but awake, and
looking at me with so bright eyes. Once, twice more the same occur, and I get
much sleep till before morning. When I wake I try to hypnotize her, but alas!
Though she shut her eyes obedient, she may not sleep. The sun rise up, and up,
and up, and then sleep come to her too late, but so heavy that she will not
wake. I have to lift her up, and place her sleeping in the carriage when I have
harnessed the horses and made all ready. Madam still sleep, and she look in her
sleep more healthy and more redder than before. And I like it not. And I am
afraid, afraid, afraid! I am afraid of all things, even to think but I must go
on my way. The stake we play for is life and death, or more than these, and we
must not flinch.
5 November, morning.--Let me be accurate in everything,
for though you and I have seen some strange things together, you may at the
first think that I, Van Helsing, am mad. That the many horrors and the so long
strain on nerves has at the last turn my brain.
All yesterday we travel, always getting closer to the
mountains, and moving into a more and more wild and desert land. There are
great, frowning precipices and much falling water, and Nature seem to have held
sometime her carnival. Madam Mina still sleep and sleep. And though I did have
hunger and appeased it, I could not waken her, even for food. I began to fear
that the fatal spell of the place was upon her, tainted as she is with that
Vampire baptism. "Well," said I to myself, "if it be that she sleep all the day,
it shall also be that I do not sleep at night." As we travel on the rough road,
for a road of an ancient and imperfect kind there was, I held down my head and
slept.
Again I waked with a sense of guilt and of time passed,
and found Madam Mina still sleeping, and the sun low down. But all was indeed
changed. The frowning mountains seemed further away, and we were near the top of
a steep rising hill, on summit of which was such a castle as Jonathan tell of in
his diary. At once I exulted and feared. For now, for good or ill, the end was
near.
I woke Madam Mina, and again tried to hypnotize her, but
alas! unavailing till too late. Then, ere the great dark came upon us, for even
after down sun the heavens reflected the gone sun on the snow, and all was for a
time in a great twilight. I took out the horses and fed them in what shelter I
could. Then I make a fire, and near it I make Madam Mina, now awake and more
charming than ever, sit comfortable amid her rugs. I got ready food, but she
would not eat, simply saying that she had not hunger. I did not press
her, knowing her unavailingness. But I myself eat, for I must needs now be strong
for all. Then, with the fear on me of what might be, I drew a ring so big for
her comfort, round where Madam Mina sat. And over the ring I passed some of the
wafer, and I broke it fine so that all was well guarded. She sat still all the
time, so still as one dead. And she grew whiter and even whiter till the snow
was not more pale, and no word she said. But when I drew near, she clung to me,
and I could know that the poor soul shook her from head to feet with a tremor
that was pain to feel.
I said to her presently, when she had grown more quiet,
"Will you not come over to the fire?" for I wished to make a test of what she
could. She rose obedient, but when she have made a step she stopped, and stood
as one stricken.
"Why not go on?" I asked. She shook her head, and coming
back, sat down in her place. Then, looking at me with open eyes, as of one waked
from sleep, she said simply, "I cannot!" and remained silent. I rejoiced, for I
knew that what she could not, none of those that we dreaded could. Though there
might be danger to her body, yet her soul was safe!
Presently the horses began to scream, and tore at their
tethers till I came to them and quieted them. When they did feel my hands on
them, they whinnied low as in joy, and licked at my hands and were quiet for a
time. Many times through the night did I come to them, till it arrive to the
cold hour when all nature is at lowest, and every time my coming was with quiet
of them. In the cold hour the fire began to die, and I was about stepping forth
to replenish it, for now the snow came in flying sweeps and with it a chill
mist. Even in the dark there was a light of some kind, as there ever is over
snow, and it seemed as though the snow flurries and the wreaths of mist took
shape as of women with trailing garments. All was in dead, grim silence only
that the horses whinnied and cowered, as if in terror of the worst. I began to
fear, horrible fears. But then came to me the sense of safety in that ring
wherein I stood. I began too, to think that my imaginings were of the night, and
the gloom, and the unrest that I have gone through, and all the terrible
anxiety. It was as though my memories of all Jonathan's horrid experience were
befooling me. For the snow flakes and the mist began to wheel and circle round,
till I could get as though a shadowy glimpse of those women that would have
kissed him. And then the horses cowered lower and lower, and moaned in terror as
men do in pain. Even the madness of fright was not to them, so that they could
break away. I feared for my dear Madam Mina when these weird figures drew near
and circled round. I looked at her, but she sat calm, and smiled at me. When I
would have stepped to the fire to replenish it, she caught me and held me back,
and whispered, like a voice that one hears in a dream, so low it was.
"No! No! Do not go without. Here you are safe!"
I turned to her, and looking in her eyes said, "But you?
It is for you that I fear!"
Whereat she laughed, a laugh low and unreal, and said,
"Fear for me! Why fear for me? None safer in all the world from them than I am,"
and as I wondered at the meaning of her words, a puff of wind made the flame
leap up, and I see the red scar on her forehead. Then, alas! I knew. Did I not,
I would soon have learned, for the wheeling figures of mist and snow came
closer, but keeping ever without the Holy circle. Then they began to materialize
till, if God have not taken away my reason, for I saw it through my eyes. There
were before me in actual flesh the same three women that Jonathan saw in the
room, when they would have kissed his throat. I knew the swaying round forms,
the bright hard eyes, the white teeth, the ruddy color, the voluptuous lips.
They smiled ever at poor dear Madam Mina. And as their laugh came through the
silence of the night, they twined their arms and pointed to her, and said in
those so sweet tingling tones that Jonathan said were of the intolerable
sweetness of the water glasses, "Come, sister. Come to us. Come!"
In fear I turned to my poor Madam Mina, and my heart with
gladness leapt like flame. For oh! the terror in her sweet eyes, the repulsion,
the horror, told a story to my heart that was all of hope. God be thanked she
was not, yet of them. I seized some of the firewood which was by me, and holding
out some of the Wafer, advanced on them towards the fire. They drew back before
me, and laughed their low horrid laugh. I fed the fire, and feared them not. For
I knew that we were safe within the ring, which she could not leave no more than
they could enter. The horses had ceased to moan, and lay still on the ground.
The snow fell on them softly, and they grew whiter. I knew that there was for
the poor beasts no more of terror.
And so we remained till the red of the dawn began to fall
through the snow gloom. I was desolate and afraid, and full of woe and terror.
But when that beautiful sun began to climb the horizon life was to me again. At
the first coming of the dawn the horrid figures melted in the whirling mist and
snow. The wreaths of transparent gloom moved away towards the castle, and were
lost.
Instinctively, with the dawn coming, I turned to Madam
Mina, intending to hypnotize her. But she lay in a deep and sudden sleep, from
which I could not wake her. I tried to hypnotize through her sleep, but she made
no response, none at all, and the day broke. I fear yet to stir. I have made my
fire and have seen the horses, they are all dead. Today I have much to do
here, and I keep waiting till the sun is up high. For there may be places where I
must go, where that sunlight, though snow and mist obscure it, will be to me a
safety.
I will strengthen me with breakfast, and then I will do my
terrible work. Madam Mina still sleeps, and God be thanked! She is calm in her
sleep...
Jonathan Harker's
Journal4 November, evening.--The
accident to the launch has been a terrible thing for us. Only for it we should
have overtaken the boat long ago, and by now my dear Mina would have been free.
I fear to think of her, off on the worlds near that horrid place. We have got
horses, and we follow on the track. I note this whilst Godalming is getting
ready. We have our arms. The Szgany must look out if they mean to fight. Oh, if
only Morris and Seward were with us. We must only hope! If I write no more
Goodbye Mina! God bless and keep you.
Dr. Seward's
Diary5 November.--With the dawn
we saw the body of Szgany before us dashing away from the river with their
liter wagon. They surrounded it in a cluster, and hurried along as though
beset. The snow is falling lightly and there is a strange excitement in the air.
It may be our own feelings, but the depression is strange. Far off I hear the
howling of wolves. The snow brings them down from the mountains, and there are
dangers to all of us, and from all sides. The horses are nearly ready, and we
are soon off. We ride to death of some one. God alone knows who, or where, or
what, or when, or how it may be...
Dr. Van Helsing's
Memorandum5 November,
afternoon.--I am at least sane. Thank God for that mercy at all events, though
the proving it has been dreadful. When I left Madam Mina sleeping within the
Holy circle, I took my way to the castle. The blacksmith hammer which I took in
the carriage from Veresti was useful, though the doors were all open I broke
them off the rusty hinges, lest some ill intent or ill chance should close them,
so that being entered I might not get out. Jonathan's bitter experience served
me here. By memory of his diary I found my way to the old chapel, for I knew
that here my work lay. The air was oppressive. It seemed as if there was some
sulphurous fume, which at times made me dizzy. Either there was a roaring in my
ears or I heard afar off the howl of wolves. Then I bethought me of my dear
Madam Mina, and I was in terrible plight. The dilemma had me between his
horns.
Her, I had not dare to take into this place, but left safe
from the Vampire in that Holy circle. And yet even there would be the wolf! I
resolve me that my work lay here, and that as to the wolves we must submit, if
it were God's will. At any rate it was only death and freedom beyond. So did I
choose for her. Had it but been for myself the choice had been easy, the maw of
the wolf were better to rest in than the grave of the Vampire! So I make my
choice to go on with my work.
I knew that there were at least three graves to find,
graves that are inhabit. So I search, and search, and I find one of them. She
lay in her Vampire sleep, so full of life and voluptuous beauty that I shudder
as though I have come to do murder. Ah, I doubt not that in the old time, when
such things were, many a man who set forth to do such a task as mine, found at
the last his heart fail him, and then his nerve. So he delay, and delay, and
delay, till the mere beauty and the fascination of the wanton Undead have
hypnotize him. And he remain on and on, till sunset come, and the Vampire sleep
be over. Then the beautiful eyes of the fair woman open and look love, and the
voluptuous mouth present to a kiss, and the man is weak. And there remain one
more victim in the Vampire fold. One more to swell the grim and grisly ranks of
the Undead!...
There is some fascination, surely, when I am moved by the
mere presence of such an one, even lying as she lay in a tomb fretted with age
and heavy with the dust of centuries, though there be that horrid odor such as
the lairs of the Count have had. Yes, I was moved. I, Van Helsing, with all my
purpose and with my motive for hate. I was moved to a yearning for delay which
seemed to paralyze my faculties and to clog my very soul. It may have been that
the need of natural sleep, and the strange oppression of the air were beginning
to overcome me. Certain it was that I was lapsing into sleep, the open eyed
sleep of one who yields to a sweet fascination, when there came through the snow
stilled air a long, low wail, so full of woe and pity that it woke me like the
sound of a clarion. For it was the voice of my dear Madam Mina that I
heard.
Then I braced myself again to my horrid task, and found by
wrenching away tomb tops one other of the sisters, the other dark one. I dared
not pause to look on her as I had on her sister, lest once more I should begin
to be enthrall. But I go on searching until, presently, I find in a high great
tomb as if made to one much beloved that other fair sister which, like Jonathan
I had seen to gather herself out of the atoms of the mist. She was so fair to
look on, so radiantly beautiful, so exquisitely voluptuous, that the very
instinct of man in me, which calls some of my sex to love and to protect one of
hers, made my head whirl with new emotion. But God be thanked, that soul wail of
my dear Madam Mina had not died out of my ears. And, before the spell could be
wrought further upon me, I had nerved myself to my wild work. By this tim e I
had searched all the tombs in the chapel, so far as I could tell. And as there
had been only three of these Undead phantoms around us in the night, I took it
that there were no more of active Undead existent. There was one great tomb more
lordly than all the rest. Huge it was, and nobly proportioned. On it was but one
word.
DRACULA
This then was the Undead home of the King Vampire, to whom
so many more were due. Its emptiness spoke eloquent to make certain what I knew.
Before I began to restore these women to their dead selves through my awful
work, I laid in Dracula's tomb some of the Wafer, and so banished him from it,
Undead, for ever.
Then began my terrible task, and I dreaded it. Had it been
but one, it had been easy, comparative. But three! To begin twice more after I
had been through a deed of horror. For it was terrible with the sweet Miss Lucy,
what would it not be with these strange ones who had survived through centuries,
and who had been strengthened by the passing of the years. Who would, if they
could, have fought for their foul lives...
Oh, my friend John, but it was butcher work. Had I not
been nerved by thoughts of other dead, and of the living over whom hung such a
pall of fear, I could not have gone on. I tremble and tremble even yet, though
till all was over, God be thanked, my nerve did stand. Had I not seen the repose
in the first place, and the gladness that stole over it just ere the final
dissolution came, as realization that the soul had been won, I could not have
gone further with my butchery. I could not have endured the horrid screeching as
the stake drove home, the plunging of writhing form, and lips of bloody foam. I
should have fled in terror and left my work undone. But it is over! And the poor
souls, I can pity them now and weep, as I think of them placid each in her full
sleep of death for a short moment ere fading. For, friend John, hardly had my
knife severed the head of each, before the whole body began to melt away and
crumble into its native dust, as though the death that should have come
centuries agone had at last assert himself and say at once and loud, "I am
here!"
Before I left the castle I so fixed its entrances that
never more can the Count enter there Undead.
When I stepped into the circle where Madam Mina slept, she
woke from her sleep and, seeing me, cried out in pain that I had endured too
much.
"Come!" she said, "come away from this awful place! Let us
go to meet my husband who is, I know, coming towards us." She was looking thin
and pale and weak. But her eyes were pure and glowed with fervor. I was glad to
see her paleness and her illness, for my mind was full of the fresh horror of
that ruddy vampire sleep.
And so with trust and hope, and yet full of fear, we go
eastward to meet our friends, and him, whom Madam Mina tell me that she know are
coming to meet us.
Mina Harker's
Journal6 November.--It was late
in the afternoon when the Professor and I took our way towards the east whence I
knew Jonathan was coming. We did not go fast, though the way was steeply
downhill, for we had to take heavy rugs and wraps with us. We dared not face the
possibility of being left without warmth in the cold and the snow. We had to
take some of our provisions too, for we were in a perfect desolation, and so far
as we could see through the snowfall, there was not even the sign of habitation.
When we had gone about a mile, I was tired with the heavy walking and sat down
to rest. Then we looked back and saw where the clear line of Dracula's castle
cut the sky. For we were so deep under the hill whereon it was set that the
angle of perspective of the Carpathian mountains was far below it. We saw it in
all its grandeur, perched a thousand feet on the summit of a sheer precipice,
and with seemingly a great gap between it and the steep of the adjacent mountain
on any side. There was something wild and uncanny about the place. We could hear
the distant howling of wolves. They were far off, but the sound, even though
coming muffled through the deadening snowfall, was full of terror. I knew from
the way Dr. Van Helsing was searching about that he was trying to seek some
strategic point, where we would be less exposed in case of attack. The rough
roadway still led downwards. We could trace it through the drifted snow.
In a little while the Professor signaled to me, so I got
up and joined him. He had found a wonderful spot, a sort of natural hollow in a
rock, with an entrance like a doorway between two boulders. He took me by the
hand and drew me in.
"See!" he said, "here you will be in shelter. And if the
wolves do come I can meet them one by one."
He brought in our furs, and made a snug nest for me, and
got out some provisions and forced them upon me. But I could not eat, to even
try to do so was repulsive to me, and much as I would have liked to please him, I
could not bring myself to the attempt. He looked very sad, but did not reproach
me. Taking his field glasses from the case, he stood on the top of the rock, and
began to search the horizon.
Suddenly he called out, "Look! Madam Mina, look!
Look!"
I sprang up and stood beside him on the rock. He handed me
his glasses and pointed. The snow was now falling more heavily, and swirled
about fiercely, for a high wind was beginning to blow. However, there were times
when there were pauses between the snow flurries and I could see a long way
round. From the height where we were it was possible to see a great distance.
And far off, beyond the white waste of snow, I could see the river lying like a
black ribbon in kinks and curls as it wound its way. Straight in front of us and
not far off, in fact so near that I wondered we had not noticed before, came a
group of mounted men hurrying along. In the midst of them was a cart, a long
liter wagon which swept from side to side, like a dog's tail wagging, with each
stern inequality of the road. Outlined against the snow as they were, I could
see from the men's clothes that they were peasants or gypsies of some
kind.
On the cart was a great square chest. My heart leaped as I
saw it, for I felt that the end was coming. The evening was now drawing close,
and well I knew that at sunset the Thing, which was till then imprisoned there,
would take new freedom and could in any of many forms elude pursuit. In fear I
turned to the Professor. To my consternation, however, he was not there. An
instant later, I saw him below me. Round the rock he had drawn a circle, such as
we had found shelter in last night.
When he had completed it he stood beside me again saying,
"At least you shall be safe here from him!" He took the glasses from me, and at
the next lull of the snow swept the whole space below us. "See," he said, "they
come quickly. They are flogging the horses, and galloping as hard as they
can."
He paused and went on in a hollow voice, "They are racing
for the sunset. We may be too late. God's will be done!" Down came another
blinding rush of driving snow, and the whole landscape was blotted out. It soon
passed, however, and once more his glasses were fixed on the plain.
Then came a sudden cry, "Look! Look! Look! See, two
horsemen follow fast, coming up from the south. It must be Quincy and John.
Take the glass. Look before the snow blots it all out!" I took it and looked.
The two men might be Dr. Seward and Mr. Morris. I knew at all events that
neither of them was Jonathan. At the same time I knew that Jonathan was not far
off. Looking around I saw on the north side of the coming party two other men,
riding at breakneck speed. One of them I knew was Jonathan, and the other I
took, of course, to be Lord Godalming. They too, were pursuing the party with
the cart. When I told the Professor he shouted in glee like a schoolboy, and
after looking intently till a snow fall made sight impossible, he laid his
Winchester rifle ready for use against the boulder at the opening of our
shelter.
"They are all converging," he said. "When the time comes we
shall have gypsies on all sides." I got out my revolver ready to hand, for
whilst we were speaking the howling of wolves came louder and closer. When the
snow storm abated a moment we looked again. It was strange to see the snow
falling in such heavy flakes close to us, and beyond, the sun shining more and
more brightly as it sank down towards the far mountain tops. Sweeping the glass
all around us I could see here and there dots moving singly and in twos and
threes and larger numbers. The wolves were gathering for their prey.
Every instant seemed an age whilst we waited. The wind
came now in fierce bursts, and the snow was driven with fury as it swept upon us
in circling eddies. At times we could not see an arm's length before us. But at
others, as the hollow sounding wind swept by us, it seemed to clear the air
space around us so that we could see afar off. We had of late been so accustomed
to watch for sunrise and sunset, that we knew with fair accuracy when it would
be. And we knew that before long the sun would set. It was hard to believe that
by our watches it was less than an hour that we waited in that rocky shelter
before the various bodies began to converge close upon us. The wind came now
with fiercer and more bitter sweeps, and more steadily from the north. It
seemingly had driven the snow clouds from us, for with only occasional bursts,
the snow fell. We could distinguish clearly the individuals of each party, the
pursued and the pursuers. Strangely enough those pursued did not seem to
realize, or at least to care, that they were pursued. They seemed, however, to
hasten with redoubled speed as the sun dropped lower and lower on the mountain
tops.
Closer and closer they drew. The Professor and I crouched
down behind our rock, and held our weapons ready. I could see that he was
determined that they should not pass. One and all were quite unaware of our
presence.
All at once two voices shouted out to, "Halt!" One was my
Jonathan's, raised in a high key of passion. The other Mr. Morris' strong
resolute tone of quiet command. The gypsies may not have known the language, but
there was no mistaking the tone, in whatever tongue the words were spoken.
Instinctively they reined in, and at the instant Lord Godalming and Jonathan
dashed up at one side and Dr. Seward and Mr. Morris on the other. The leader of
the gypsies, a splendid looking fellow who sat his horse like a centaur, waved
them back, and in a fierce voice gave to his companions some word to proceed.
They lashed the horses which sprang forward. But the four men raised their
Winchester rifles, and in an unmistakable way commanded them to stop. At the
same moment Dr. Van Helsing and I rose behind the rock and pointed our weapons
at them. Seeing that they were surrounded the men tightened their reins and drew
up. The leader turned to them and gave a word at which every man of the gypsy
party drew what weapon he carried, knife or pistol, and held himself in
readiness to attack. Issue was joined in an instant.
The leader, with a quick movement of his rein, threw his
horse out in front, and pointed first to the sun, now close down on the hill
tops, and then to the castle, said something which I did not understand. For
answer, all four men of our party threw themselves from their horses and dashed
towards the cart. I should have felt terrible fear at seeing Jonathan in such
danger, but that the ardor of battle must have been upon me as well as the rest
of them. I felt no fear, but only a wild, surging desire to do something. Seeing
the quick movement of our parties, the leader of the gypsies gave a command. His
men instantly formed round the cart in a sort of undisciplined endeavor, each
one shouldering and pushing the other in his eagerness to carry out the
order.
In the midst of this I could see that Jonathan on one side
of the ring of men, and Quincy on the other, were forcing a way to the cart. It
was evident that they were bent on finishing their task before the sun should
set. Nothing seemed to stop or even to hinder them. Neither the leveled weapons
nor the flashing knives of the gypsies in front, nor the howling of the wolves
behind, appeared to even attract their attention. Jonathan's impetuosity, and
the manifest singleness of his purpose, seemed to overawe those in front of him.
Instinctively they cowered aside and let him pass. In an instant he had jumped
upon the cart, and with a strength which seemed incredible, raised the great box,
and flung it over the wheel to the ground. In the meantime, Mr. Morris had had
to use force to pass through his side of the ring of Szgany. All the time I had
been breathlessly watching Jonathan I had, with the tail of my eye, seen him
pressing desperately forward, and had seen the knives of the gypsies flash as he
won a way through them, and they cut at him. He had parried with his great bowie
knife, and at first I thought that he too had come through in safety. But as he
sprang beside Jonathan, who had by now jumped from the cart, I could see that
with his left hand he was clutching at his side, and that the blood was spurting
through his fingers. He did not delay notwithstanding this, for as Jonathan,
with desperate energy, attacked one end of the chest, attempting to prize off
the lid with his great Kukri knife, he attacked the other frantically with his
bowie. Under the efforts of both men the lid began to yield. The nails drew with
a screeching sound, and the top of the box was thrown back.
By this time the gypsies, seeing themselves covered by the
Winchesters, and at the mercy of Lord Godalming and Dr. Seward, had given in and
made no further resistance. The sun was almost down on the mountain tops, and
the shadows of the whole group fell upon the snow. I saw the Count lying within
the box upon the earth, some of which the rude falling from the cart had
scattered over him. He was deathly pale, just like a waxen image, and the red
eyes glared with the horrible vindictive look which I knew so well.
As I looked, the eyes saw the sinking sun, and the look of
hate in them turned to triumph.
But, on the instant, came the sweep and flash of
Jonathan's great knife. I shrieked as I saw it shear through the throat. Whilst
at the same moment Mr. Morris's bowie knife plunged into the heart.
It was like a miracle, but before our very eyes, and
almost in the drawing of a breath, the whole body crumbled into dust and passed
from our sight.
I shall be glad as long as I live that even in that moment
of final dissolution, there was in the face a look of peace, such as I never
could have imagined might have rested there.
The Castle of Dracula now stood out against the red sky,
and every stone of its broken battlements was articulated against the light of
the setting sun.
The gypsies, taking us as in some way the cause of the
extraordinary disappearance of the dead man, turned, without a word, and rode
away as if for their lives. Those who were unmounted jumped upon the liter
wagon and shouted to the horsemen not to desert them. The wolves, which had
withdrawn to a safe distance, followed in their wake, leaving us alone.
Mr. Morris, who had sunk to the ground, leaned on his
elbow, holding his hand pressed to his side. The blood still gushed through his
fingers. I flew to him, for the Holy circle did not now keep me back, so did the
two doctors. Jonathan knelt behind him and the wounded man laid back his head on
his shoulder. With a sigh he took, with a feeble effort, my hand in that of his
own which was unstained.
He must have seen the anguish of my heart in my face, for
he smiled at me and said, "I am only too happy to have been of service! Oh,
God!" he cried suddenly, struggling to a sitting posture and pointing to me. "It
was worth for this to die! Look! Look!"
The sun was now right down upon the mountain top, and the
red gleams fell upon my face, so that it was bathed in rosy light. With one
impulse the men sank on their knees and a deep and earnest "Amen" broke from all
as their eyes followed the pointing of his finger.
The dying man spoke, "Now God be thanked that all has not
been in vain! See! The snow is not more stainless than her forehead! The curse
has passed away!"
And, to our bitter grief, with a smile and in silence, he
died, a gallant gentleman.
NoteSeven years ago we all went through the flames. And the happiness
of some of us since then is, we think, well worth the pain we endured. It is an
added joy to Mina and to me that our boy's birthday is the same day as that on
which Quincy Morris died. His mother holds, I know, the secret belief that some
of our brave friend's spirit has passed into him. His bundle of names links all
our little band of men together. But we call him Quincy.
In the summer of this year we made a journey to
Transylvania, and went over the old ground which was, and is, to us so full of
vivid and terrible memories. It was almost impossible to believe that the things
which we had seen with our own eyes and heard with our own ears were living
truths. Every trace of all that had been was blotted out. The castle stood as
before, reared high above a waste of desolation.
When we got home we were talking of the old time, which we
could all look back on without despair, for Godalming and Seward are both
happily married. I took the papers from the safe where they had been ever since
our return so long ago. We were struck with the fact, that in all the mass of
material of which the record is composed, there is hardly one authentic
document. Nothing but a mass of typewriting, except the later notebooks of Mina
and Seward and myself, and Van Helsing's memorandum. We could hardly ask any
one, even did we wish to, to accept these as proofs of so wild a story. Van
Helsing summed it all up as he said, with our boy on his knee.
"We want no proofs. We ask none to believe us! This boy
will some day know what a brave and gallant woman his mother is. Already he
knows her sweetness and loving care. Later on he will understand how some men so
loved her, that they did dare much for her sake.
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