The Lady of the Shroud by Bram Stoker (book series for 10 year olds .txt) 📕
"Sorry. But, of course, you don't understand such things." Then he went on talking before father had time to say a word.
"Let us get back to business. As you do not seem to follow me, let me explain that it is BECAUSE I do not forget that I wish to do this. I remember my dear mother's wish to make Aunt Janet happy, and would like to do as she did."
"AUNT Janet?" said father, very properly sneering at his ignorance. "She is not your aunt. Why, even her sister, who was married to your uncle, was only your aunt by courtesy." I could not help feeling that Rupert meant to be rude to my father, though his words were quite polite. If I had been as much bigger than him as he was than me, I should have flown at him; but he was a very big boy for his age. I am myself rather thin. Mother says thinness is an "appanage of birth."
"My Aunt Janet, sir, is an aunt by love. Courtesy is a small word to use in connection with such devoti
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point of the promontory—I mean the little, or, rather, lesser
promontory—that continues on the spur of the mountain range. For
the lesser promontory or extension of the mountain is in reality
vast; the lowest bit of cliff along the sea-front is not less than a
couple of hundred feet high. That point of rock is really very
peculiar. I think Dame Nature must, in the early days of her
housekeeping—or, rather, house-BUILDING—have intended to give her
little child, man, a rudimentary lesson in self-protection. It is
just a natural bastion such as a titanic Vauban might have designed
in primeval times. So far as the Castle is concerned, it is alone
visible from the sea. Any enemy approaching could see only that
frowning wall of black rock, of vast height and perpendicular
steepness. Even the old fortifications which crown it are not built,
but cut in the solid rock. A long narrow creek of very deep water,
walled in by high, steep cliffs, runs in behind the Castle, bending
north and west, making safe and secret anchorage. Into the creek
falls over a precipice a mountain-stream, which never fails in volume
of water. On the western shore of that creek is the Castle, a huge
pile of buildings of every style of architecture, from the Twelfth
century to where such things seemed to stop in this dear old-world
land—about the time of Queen Elizabeth. So it is pretty
picturesque. I can tell you. When we got the first glimpse of the
place from the steamer the officer, with whom I was on the bridge,
pointed towards it and said:
“That is where we saw the dead woman floating in a coffin.” That was
rather interesting, so I asked him all about it. He took from his
pocket-book a cutting from an Italian paper, which he handed to me.
As I can read and speak Italian fairly well, it was all right; but as
you, my dear Aunt Janet, are not skilled in languages, and as I doubt
if there is any assistance of the kind to be had at Croom, I do not
send it. But as I have heard that the item has been produced in the
last number of The Journal of Occultism, you will be easily able to
get it. As he handed me the cutting he said: “I am Destilia!” His
story was so strange that I asked him a good many questions about it.
He answered me quite frankly on every point, but always adhering
stoutly to the main point—namely, that it was no phantom or mirage,
no dream or imperfect vision in a fog. “We were four in all who saw
it,” he said—“three from the bridge and the Englishman, Caulfield—
from the bows—whose account exactly agreed with what we saw.
Captain Mirolani and Falamano and I were all awake and in good trim.
We looked with our night-glasses, which are more than usually
powerful. You know, we need good glasses for the east shore of the
Adriatic and for among the islands to the south. There was a full
moon and a brilliant light. Of course we were a little way off, for
though the Spear of Ivan is in deep water, one has to be careful of
currents, for it is in just such places that the dangerous currents
run.” The agent of Lloyd’s told me only a few weeks ago that it was
only after a prolonged investigation of the tidal and sea currents
that the house decided to except from ordinary sea risks losses due
to a too close course by the Spear of Ivan. When I tried to get a
little more definite account of the coffin-boat and the dead lady
that is given in The Journal of Occultism he simply shrugged his
shoulders. “Signor, it is all,” he said. “That Englishman wrote
everything after endless questioning.”
So you see, my dear, that our new home is not without superstitious
interests of its own. It is rather a nice idea, is it not, to have a
dead woman cruising round our promontory in a coffin? I doubt if
even at Croom you can beat that. “Makes the place kind of homey,” as
an American would say. When you come, Aunt Janet, you will not feel
lonesome, at any rate, and it will save us the trouble of importing
some of your Highland ghosts to make you feel at home in the new
land. I don’t know, but we might ask the stiff to come to tea with
us. Of course, it would be a late tea. Somewhere between midnight
and cock-crow would be about the etiquette of the thing, I fancy!
But I must tell you all the realities of the Castle and around it.
So I will write again within a day or two, and try to let you know
enough to prepare you for coming here. Till then adieu, my dear.
Your loving
RUPERT.
From Rupert Sent Leger, Vissarion, to Janet MacKelpie,
Croom.
January 25, 1907.
I hope I did not frighten you, dear Aunt Janet, by the yarn of the
lady in the coffin. But I know you are not afraid; you have told me
too many weird stories for me to dread that. Besides, you have
Second Sight—latent, at all events. However, there won’t be any
more ghosts, or about ghosts, in this letter. I want to tell you all
about our new home. I am so glad you are coming out so soon; I am
beginning to feel so lonesome—I walk about sometimes aimlessly, and
find my thoughts drifting in such an odd way. If I didn’t know
better, I might begin to think I was in love! There is no one here
to be in love with; so make your mind easy, Aunt Janet. Not that you
would be unhappy, I know, dear, if I DID fall in love. I suppose I
must marry some day. It is a duty now, I know, when there is such an
estate as Uncle Roger has left me. And I know this: I shall never
marry any woman unless I love her. And I am right sure that if I do
love her you will love her, too, Aunt Janet! Won’t you, dear? It
wouldn’t be half a delight if you didn’t. It won’t if you don’t.
There, now!
But before I begin to describe Vissarion I shall throw a sop to you
as a chatelaine; that may give you patience to read the rest. The
Castle needs a lot of things to make it comfortable—as you would
consider it. In fact, it is absolutely destitute of everything of a
domestic nature. Uncle Roger had it vetted on the defence side, and
so far it could stand a siege. But it couldn’t cook a dinner or go
through a spring-cleaning! As you know, I am not much up in domestic
matters, and so I cannot give you details; but you may take it that
it wants everything. I don’t mean furniture, or silver, or even
gold-plate, or works of art, for it is full of the most magnificent
old things that you can imagine. I think Uncle Roger must have been
a collector, and gathered a lot of good things in all sorts of
places, stored them for years, and then sent them here. But as to
glass, china, delft, all sorts of crockery, linen, household
appliances and machinery, cooking utensils—except of the simplest—
there are none. I don’t think Uncle Roger could have lived here more
than on a temporary picnic. So far as I only am concerned, I am all
right; a gridiron and a saucepan are all I want—and I can use them
myself. But, dear Aunt Janet, I don’t want you to pig it. I would
like you to have everything you can imagine, and all of the very
best. Cost doesn’t count now for us, thanks to Uncle Roger; and so I
want you to order all. I know you, dear—being a woman—won’t object
to shopping. But it will have to be wholesale. This is an enormous
place, and will swallow up all you can buy—like a quicksand. Do as
you like about choosing, but get all the help you can. Don’t be
afraid of getting too much. You can’t, or of being idle when you are
here. I assure you that when you come there will be so much to do
and so many things to think of that you will want to get away from it
all. And, besides, Aunt Janet, I hope you won’t be too long.
Indeed, I don’t wish to be selfish, but your boy is lonely, and wants
you. And when you get here you will be an EMPRESS. I don’t
altogether like doing so, lest I should offend a millionairess like
you; but it may facilitate matters, and the way’s of commerce are
strict, though devious. So I send you a cheque for 1,000 pounds for
the little things: and a letter to the bank to honour your own
cheques for any amount I have got.
I think, by the way, I should, if I were you, take or send out a few
servants—not too many at first, only just enough to attend on our
two selves. You can arrange to send for any more you may want later.
Engage them, and arrange for their being paid—when they are in our
service we must treat them well—and then they can be at our call as
you find that we want them. I think you should secure, say, fifty or
a hundred—‘tis an awfu’ big place, Aunt Janet! And in the same way
will you secure—and, of course, arrange for pay similarly—a hundred
men, exclusive of any servants you think it well to have. I should
like the General, if he can give the time, to choose or pass them. I
want clansmen that I can depend on, if need be. We are going to live
in a country which is at present strange to us, and it is well to
look things in the face. I know Sir Colin will only have men who are
a credit to Scotland and to Ross and to Croom—men who will impress
the Blue Mountaineers. I know they will take them to their hearts—
certainly if any of them are bachelors the girls will! Forgive me!
But if we are to settle here, our followers will probably want to
settle also. Moreover, the Blue Mountaineers may want followers
also! And will want them to settle, too, and have successors!
Now for the description of the place. Well, I simply can’t just now.
It is all so wonderful and so beautiful. The Castle—I have written
so much already about other things that I really must keep the Castle
for another letter! Love to Sir Colin if he is at Croom. And oh,
dear Aunt Janet, how I wish that my dear mother was coming out! It
all seems so dark and empty without her. How she would have enjoyed
it! How proud she would have been! And, my dear, if she could be
with us again, how grateful she would have been to you for all you
have done for her boy! As I am, believe me, most truly and sincerely
and affectionately grateful.
Your loving
RUPERT.
Rupert Sent Leger, Vissarion, to Janet MacKelpie, Croom.
January 26, 1907.
MY DEAR AUNT JANET,
Please read this as if it was a part of the letter I wrote yesterday.
The Castle itself is so vast that I really can’t describe it in
detail. So I am waiting till you come; and then you and I will go
over it together and learn all that we can about it. We shall take
Rooke with us, and, as he is
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