Complete Works of Bram Stoker (258 page)

This new stage of Harold’s life made for quicker development than any which had gone before.  Hitherto he had not the same sense of responsibility.  To obey is in itself a relief; and as it is an actual consolation to weak natures, so it is only a retarding of the strong.  Now he had another individuality to think of.  There was in his own nature a vein of anxiety of which the subconsciousness of his own strength threw up the outcrop.

Little Stephen with the instinct of her sex discovered before long this weakness.  For it is a weakness when any quality can be assailed or used.  The using of a man’s weakness is not always coquetry; but it is something very like it.  Many a time the little girl, who looked up to and admired the big boy who could compel her to anything when he was so minded, would, for her own ends, work on his sense of responsibility, taking an elfin delight in his discomfiture.

The result of Stephen’s harmless little coquetries was that Harold had occasionally either to thwart some little plan of daring, or else cover up its results.  In either case her confidence in him grew, so that before long he became an established fact in her life, a being in whose power and discretion and loyalty she had absolute, blind faith.  And this feeling seemed to grow with her own growth.  Indeed at one time it came to be more than an ordinary faith.  It happened thus:

The old Church of St. Stephen, which was the parish church of Normanstand, had a peculiar interest for the Norman family.  There, either within the existing walls or those which had preceded them when the church was rebuilt by that Sir Stephen who was standard-bearer to Henry VI., were buried all the direct members of the line.  It was an unbroken record of the inheritors since the first Sir Stephen, who had his place in the Domesday Book.  Without, in the churchyard close to the church, were buried all such of the collaterals as had died within hail of Norcester.  Some there were of course who, having achieved distinction in various walks of life, were further honoured by a resting-place within the chancel.  The whole interior was full of records of the family.  Squire Norman was fond of coming to the place; and often from the very beginning had taken Stephen with him.  One of her earliest recollections was kneeling down with her father, who held her hand in his, whilst with the other he wiped the tears from his eyes, before a tomb sculptured beautifully in snowy marble.  She never forgot the words he had said to her:

‘You will always remember, darling, that your dear mother rests in this sacred place.  When I am gone, if you are ever in any trouble come here.  Come alone and open out your heart.  You need never fear to ask God for help at the grave of your mother!’  The child had been impressed, as had been many and many another of her race.  For seven hundred years each child of the house of Norman had been brought alone by either parent and had heard some such words.  The custom had come to be almost a family ritual, and it never failed to leave its impress in greater or lesser degree.

Whenever Harold had in the early days paid a visit to Normanstand, the church had generally been an objective of their excursions.  He was always delighted to go.  His love for his own ancestry made him admire and respect that of others; so that Stephen’s enthusiasm in the matter was but another cord to bind him to her.

In one of their excursions they found the door into the crypt open; and nothing would do Stephen but that they should enter it.  To-day, however, they had no light; but they arranged that on the morrow they would bring candles with them and explore the place thoroughly.  The afternoon of the next day saw them at the door of the crypt with a candle, which Harold proceeded to light.  Stephen looked on admiringly, and said in a half-conscious way, the half-consciousness being shown in the implication:

‘You are not afraid of the crypt?’

‘Not a bit!  In my father’s church there was a crypt, and I was in it several times.’  As he spoke the memory of the last time he had been there swept over him.  He seemed to see again the many lights, held in hands that were never still, making a grim gloom where the black shadows were not; to hear again the stamp and hurried shuffle of the many feet, as the great oak coffin was borne by the struggling mass of men down the steep stairway and in through the narrow door . . . And then the hush when voices faded away; and the silence seemed a real thing, as for a while he stood alone close to the dead father who had been all in all to him.  And once again he seemed to feel the recall to the living world of sorrow and of light, when his inert hand was taken in the strong loving one of Squire Norman.

He paused and drew back.

‘Why don’t you go on?’ she asked, surprised.

He did not like to tell her then.  Somehow, it seemed out of place.  He had often spoken to her of his father, and she had always been a sympathetic listener; but here, at the entrance of the grim vault, he did not wish to pain her with his own thoughts of sorrow and all the terrible memories which the similarity of the place evoked.  And even whilst he hesitated there came to him a thought so laden with pain and fear that he rejoiced at the pause which gave it to him in time.  It was in that very crypt that Stephen’s mother had been buried, and had they two gone in, as they had intended, the girl might have seen her mother’s coffin as he had seen his father’s, but under circumstances which made him shiver.  He had been, as he said, often in the crypt at Carstone; and well he knew the sordidness of the chamber of death.  His imagination was alive as well as his memory; he shuddered, not for himself, but for Stephen.  How could he allow the girl to suffer in such a way as she might, as she infallibly would, if it were made apparent to her in such a brutal way?  How pitiful, how meanly pitiful, is the aftermath of death.  Well he remembered how many a night he woke in an agony, thinking of how his father lay in that cold, silent, dust-strewn vault, in the silence and the dark, with never a ray of light or hope or love!  Gone, abandoned, forgotten by all, save perhaps one heart which bled . . . He would save little Stephen, if he could, from such a memory.  He would not give any reason for refusing to go in.

He blew out the candle, and turned the key in the lock, took it out, and put it in his pocket.

‘Come, Stephen!’ he said, ‘let us go somewhere else.  We will not go into the crypt to-day!’

‘Why not?’  The lips that spoke were pouted mutinously and the face was flushed.  The imperious little lady was not at all satisfied to give up the cherished project.  For a whole day and night she had, whilst waking, thought of the coming adventure; the thrill of it was not now to be turned to cold disappointment without even an explanation.  She did not think that Harold was afraid; that would be ridiculous.  But she wondered; and mysteries always annoyed her.  She did not like to be at fault, more especially when other people knew.  All the pride in her revolted.

‘Why not?’ she repeated more imperiously still.

Harold said kindly:

‘Because, Stephen, there is really a good reason.  Don’t ask me, for I can’t tell you.  You must take it from me that I am right.  You know, dear, that I wouldn’t willingly disappoint you; and I know that you had set your heart on this.  But indeed, indeed I have a good reason.’

Stephen was really angry now.  She was amenable to reason, though she did not consciously know what reason was; but to accept some one else’s reason blindfold was repugnant to her nature, even at her then age.  She was about to speak angrily, but looking up she saw that Harold’s mouth was set with marble firmness.  So, after her manner, she acquiesced in the inevitable and said:

‘All right!  Harold.’

But in the inner recesses of her firm-set mind was a distinct intention to visit the vault when more favourable circumstances would permit.

CHAPTER V  —  THE CRYPT

It was some weeks before Stephen got the chance she wanted.  She knew it would be difficult to evade Harold’s observation, for the big boy’s acuteness as to facts had impressed itself on her.  It was strange that out of her very trust in Harold came a form of distrust in others.  In the little matter of evading him she inclined to any one in whom there was his opposite, in whose reliability she instinctively mistrusted.  ‘There is nothing bad or good but thinking makes it so!’  To enter that crypt, which had seemed so small a matter at first, had now in process of thinking and wishing and scheming become a thing to be much desired.  Harold saw, or rather felt, that something was in the girl’s mind, and took for granted that it had something to do with the crypt.  But he thought it better not to say anything lest he should keep awake a desire which he hoped would die naturally.

One day it was arranged that Harold should go over to Carstone to see the solicitor who had wound up his father’s business.  He was to stay the night and ride back next day.  Stephen, on hearing of the arrangement, so contrived matters that Master Everard, the son of a banker who had recently purchased an estate in the neighbourhood, was asked to come to play with her on the day when Harold left.  It was holiday time at Eton, and he was at home.  Stephen did not mention to Harold the fact of his coming; it was only from a chance allusion of Mrs. Jarrold before he went that he inferred it.  He did not think the matter of sufficient importance to wonder why Stephen, who generally told him everything, had not mentioned this.

During their play, Stephen, after pledging him to secrecy, told Leonard of her intention of visiting the crypt, and asked him to help her in it.  This was an adventure, and as such commended itself to the schoolboy heart.  He entered at once into the scheme con amore; and the two discussed ways and means.  Leonard’s only regret was that he was associated with a little girl in such a project.  It was something of a blow to his personal vanity, which was a large item in his moral equipment, that such a project should have been initiated by the girl and not by himself.  He was to get possession of the key and in the forenoon of the next day he was to be waiting in the churchyard, when Stephen would join him as soon as she could evade her nurse.  She was now more than eleven, and had less need of being watched than in her earlier years.  It was possible, with strategy, to get away undiscovered for an hour.

* * * * *

At Carstone Harold got though what he had to do that same afternoon and arranged to start early in the morning for Normanstand.  After an early breakfast he set out on his thirty-mile journey at eight o’clock.  Littlejohn, his horse, was in excellent form, notwithstanding his long journey of the day before, and with his nose pointed for home, put his best foot foremost.  Harold felt in great spirits.  The long ride the day before had braced him physically, though there were on his journey times of great sadness when the thought of his father came back to him and the sense of loss was renewed with each thought of his old home.  But youth is naturally buoyant.  His visit to the church, the first thing on his arrival at Carstone, and his kneeling before the stone made sacred to his father’s memory, though it entailed a silent gush of tears, did him good, and even seemed to place his sorrow farther away.  When he came again in the morning before leaving Carstone there were no tears.  There was only a holy memory which seemed to sanctify loss; and his father seemed nearer to him than ever.

As he drew near Normanstand he looked forward eagerly to seeing Stephen, and the sight of the old church lying far below him as he came down the steep road over Alt Hill, which was the short-cut from Norcester, set his mind working.  His visit to the tomb of his own father made him think of the day when he kept Stephen from entering the crypt.

The keenest thought is not always conscious.  It was without definite intention that when he came to the bridle-path Harold turned his horse’s head and rode down to the churchyard.  As he pushed open the door of the church he half expected to see Stephen; and there was a vague possibility that Leonard Everard might be with her.

The church was cool and dim.  Coming from the hot glare the August sunshine it seemed, at the first glance, dark.  He looked around, and a sense of relief came over him.  The place was empty.

But even as he stood, there came a sound which made his heart grow cold.  A cry, muffled, far away and full of anguish; a sobbing cry, which suddenly ceased.

It was the voice of Stephen.  He instinctively knew where it came from; the crypt.  Only for the experience he had had of her desire to enter the place, he would never have suspected that it was so close to him.  He ran towards the corner where commenced the steps leading downward.  As he reached the spot a figure came rushing up the steps.  A boy in Eton jacket and wide collar, careless, pale, and agitated.  It was Leonard Everard.  Harold seized him as he came.

‘Where is Stephen?’ he cried in a quick, low voice.

‘In the vault below there.  She dropped her light and then took mine, and she dropped it too.  Let me go!  Let me go!’  He struggled to get away; but Harold held him tight.

‘Where are the matches?’

‘In my pocket.  Let me go!  Let me go!’

‘Give me them  —  this instant!’  He was examining the frightened boy’s waistcoat pockets as he spoke.  When he had got the matches he let the boy go, and ran down the steps and through the open door into the crypt, calling out as he came:

‘Stephen!  Stephen dear, where are you?  It is I  —  Harold!’  There was no response; his heart seemed to grow cold and his knees to weaken.  The match spluttered and flashed, and in the momentary glare he saw across the vault, which was not a large place, a white mass on the ground.  He had to go carefully, lest the match should be blown out by the wind of his passage; but on coming close he saw that it was Stephen lying senseless in front of a great coffin which rested on a built-out pile of masonry.  Then the match went out.  In the flare of the next one he lit he saw a piece of candle lying on top of the coffin.  He seized and lit it.  He was able to think coolly despite his agitation, and knew that light was the first necessity.  The bruised wick was slow to catch; he had to light another match, his last one, before it flamed.  The couple of seconds that the light went down till the grease melted and the flame leaped again seemed of considerable length.  When the lit candle was placed steadily on top of the coffin, and a light, dim, though strong enough to see with, spread around, he stooped and lifted Stephen in his arms.  She was quite senseless, and so limp that a great fear came upon him that she might be dead.  He did not waste time, but carried her across the vault where the door to the church steps stood out sharp against the darkness, and bore her up into the church.  Holding her in one arm, with the other hand he dragged some long cushions from one of the pews and spread them on the floor; on these he laid her.  His heart was smitten with love and pity as he looked.  She was so helpless; so pitifully helpless!  Her arms and legs were doubled up as though broken, disjointed; the white frock was smeared with patches of thick dust.  Instinctively he stooped and pulled the frock down and straightened out the arms and feet.  He knelt beside her, and felt if her heart was still beating, a great fear over him, a sick apprehension.  A gush of thankful prayer came from his heart.  Thank God! she was alive; he could feel her heart beat, though faintly underneath his hand.  He started to his feet and ran towards the door, seizing his hat, which lay on a seat.  He wanted it to bring back some water.  As he passed out of the door he saw Leonard a little distance off, but took no notice of him.  He ran to the stream, filled his hat with water, and brought it back.  When he came into the church he saw Stephen, already partially restored, sitting up on the cushions with Leonard supporting her.

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