Complete Works of Bram Stoker (281 page)

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When the time for parting came Pearl was inconsolable.  Not knowing any reason why The Man should not do as she wished she was persistent in her petitions to Harold that he should come with her, and to her father and mother that they should induce him to do so.  Mrs. Stonehouse would have wished him to join them if only for a time.  Her husband, unable to give any hint without betraying confidence, had to content himself with trying to appease his little daughter by vague hopes rather than promises that her friend would join them at some other time.

When the
Scoriac
was warped at the pier there was a tendency on the part of the passengers to give Harold a sort of public send-off; but becoming aware of it he hurried down the gangway without waiting.  Having only hand luggage, for he was to get his equipment in New York, he had cleared and passed the ring of customs officers before the most expeditious of the other passengers had collected their baggage.  He had said good-bye to the Stonehouses in their own cabin.  Pearl had been so much affected at saying good-bye, and his heart had so warmed to her, that at last he had said impulsively:

‘Don’t cry, darling.  If I am spared I shall come back to you within three years.  Perhaps I will write before then; but there are not many post-offices where I am going to!’

Children are easily satisfied.  Their trust makes a promise a real thing; and its acceptance is the beginning of satisfaction.  But for weeks after the parting she had often fits of deep depression, and at such times her tears always flowed.  She took note of the date, and there was never a day that she did not think of and sigh for The Man.

And The Man, away in the wilds of Alaska, was feeling, day by day and hour by hour, the chastening and purifying influences of the wilderness.  Hot passions cooled before the breath of the snowfield and the glacier.  The moaning of a tortured spirit was lost in the roar of the avalanche and the scream of the cyclone.  Pale sorrow and cold despair were warmed and quickened by the fierce sunlight which came suddenly and stayed only long enough to vitalise all nature.

And as the first step to understanding, The Man forgot himself.

CHAPTER XXVIII  —  DE LANNOY

Two years!

Not much to look back upon, but a world to look forward to.  To Stephen, dowered though she was with rare personal gifts and with wealth and position accorded to but few, the hours of waiting were longer than the years that were past.  Yet the time had new and startling incidents for her.  Towards Christmas in the second year the Boer war had reached its climax of evil.  As the news of disaster after disaster was flashed through the cable she like others felt appalled at the sacrifices that were being exacted by the God of War.

One day she casually read in The Times that the Earl de Lannoy had died in his London mansion, and further learned that he had never recovered from the shock of hearing that his two sons and his nephew had been killed.  The paragraph concluded: “By his death the title passes to a distant relative.  The new Lord de Lannoy is at present in India with his regiment, the 35th or ‘Grey’ Hussars, of which he is Colonel.”  She gave the matter a more than passing thought, for it was sad to find a whole family thus wiped out at a blow.

Early in February she received a telegram from her London solicitor saying that he wished to see her on an important matter.  Her answer was: “Come at once”; and at tea-time Mr. Copleston arrived.  He was an old friend and she greeted him warmly.  She was a little chilled when he answered with what seemed unusual deference:

‘I thank your Ladyship for your kindness!’  She raised her eyebrows but made no comment: she was learning to be silent under surprise.  When she had handed the old gentleman his tea she said:

‘My aunt has chosen to remain away, thinking that you might wish to see me privately.  But I take it that there is nothing which she may not share.  I have no secrets from her.’

He rubbed his hands genially as he replied:

‘Not at all; not at all!  I should like her to be present.  It will, I am sure, be a delight to us all.’

Again raised eyebrows; again silence on the subject.  When a servant answered her bell she told him to ask Miss Rowly if she would kindly join them.

Aunt Laetitia and the solicitor were old cronies, and their greeting was most friendly.  When the old gentlewoman had seated herself and taken her cup of tea, Mr. Copleston said to Stephen, with a sort of pomposity:

‘I have to announce your succession to the Earldom de Lannoy!’

Stephen sat quite still.  She knew the news was true; Mr. Copleston was not one who would jest on a business subject, and too accurate a lawyer to make an error in a matter of fact.  But the fact did not seem to touch her.  It was not that she was indifferent to it; few women could hear such news without a thrill.  Mr. Copleston seemed at a loss.  Miss Rowly rose and quietly kissed her, and saying simply, ‘God bless you, my dear!’ went back to her seat.

Realising that Mr. Copleston expected some acknowledgment, Stephen held out her hand to him and said quietly:

‘Thank you!’

After a long pause she added quietly:

‘Now, won’t you tell us about it?  I am in absolute ignorance; and don’t understand.’

‘I had better not burden you, at first, with too many details, which can come later; but give you a rough survey of the situation.’

‘Your title of Countess de Lannoy comes to you through your ancestor Isobel, third and youngest daughter of the sixth Earl; Messrs Collinbrae and Jackson, knowing that my firm acted for your family, communicated with us.  Lest there should be any error we followed most carefully every descendant and every branch of the family, for we thought it best not to communicate with you till your right of inheritance was beyond dispute.  We arrived independently at the same result as Messrs. Collinbrae and Jackson.  There is absolutely no doubt whatever of your claim.  You will petition the Crown, and on reference to the House of Lords the Committee for Privileges will admit your right.  May I offer my congratulations, Lady de Lannoy on your acquisition?  By the way, I may say that all the estates of the Earldom, which have been from the first kept in strict entail, go with the title de Lannoy.’

During the recital Stephen was conscious of a sort of bitter comment on the tendencies of good fortune.

‘Too late! too late!’ something seemed to whisper, ‘what delight it would have been had Father inherited . . . If Harold had not gone . . . !’  All the natural joy seemed to vanish, as bubbles break into empty air.

To Aunt Laetitia the new title was a source of pride and joy, far greater than would have been the case had it come to herself.  She had for so many years longed for new honours for Stephen that she had almost come to regard them as a right whose coming should not be too long delayed.  Miss Rowly had never been to Lannoy; and, indeed, she knew personally nothing of the county Angleshire in which it was situated.  She was naturally anxious to see the new domain; but kept her feeling concealed during the months that elapsed until Stephen’s right had been conceded by the Committee for Privileges.  But after that her impatience became manifest to Stephen, who said one day in a teasing, caressing way, as was sometimes her wont:

‘Why, Auntie, what a hurry you are in!  Lannoy will keep, won’t it?’

‘Oh, my dear,’ she replied, shaking her head, ‘I can understand your own reticence, for you don’t want to seem greedy and in a hurry about your new possessions.  But when people come to my age there’s no time to waste.  I feel I would not have complete material for happiness in the World-to-come, if there were not a remembrance of my darling in her new home!’

Stephen was much touched; she said impulsively:

‘We shall go to-morrow, Auntie.  No!  Let us go to-day.  You shall not wait an hour that I can help!’  She ran to the bell; but before her hand was on the cord the other said:

‘Not yet!  Stephen dear.  It would flurry me to start all at once; to-morrow will be time enough.  And that will give you time to send word so that they will be prepared for your coming.’

How often do we look for that to-morrow which never comes?  How often do we find that its looked-for rosy tints are none other than the gloom-laden grey of the present?

Before the morrow’s sun was high in the heavens Stephen was hurriedly summoned to her aunt’s bedside.  She lay calm and peaceful; but one side of her face was alive and the other seemingly dead.  In the night a paralytic stroke had seized her.  The doctors said she might in time recover a little, but she would never be her old active self again.  She herself, with much painful effort, managed to convey to Stephen that she knew the end was near.  Stephen, knowing the wish of her heart and thinking that it might do her good to gratify her wish, asked if she should arrange that she be brought to Lannoy.  Feebly and slowly, word by word, she managed to convey her idea.

‘Not now, dear one.  I shall see it all in time!  —  Soon!  And I shall understand and rejoice!’  For a long time she lay still, holding with her right hand, which was not paralysed, the other’s hand.  Then she murmured:

‘You will find happiness there!’  She said no more; but seemed to sleep.

From that sleep she never woke, but faded slowly, softly away.

Stephen was broken-hearted.  Now, indeed, she felt alone and desolate.  All were gone.  Father, uncle, aunt!  —  And  Harold.  The kingdoms of the Earth which lay at her feet were of no account.  One hour of the dead or departed, any of them, back again were worth them all!

Normanstand was now too utterly lonely to be endurable; so Stephen determined to go, for a time at any rate, to Lannoy.  She was becoming accustomed to be called ‘my lady’ and ‘your ladyship,’ and the new loneness made her feel better prepared to take her place amongst new surroundings.

In addition, there was another spur to her going.  Leonard Everard, knowing of her absolute loneliness, and feeling that in it was a possibility of renewing his old status, was beginning to make himself apparent.  He had learned by experience a certain wisdom, and did not put himself forward obtrusively.  But whenever they met he looked at her so meekly and so lovingly that it brought remembrances which came with blushes.  So, all at once, without giving time for the news to permeate through the neighbourhood, she took her way to Lannoy with a few servants.

Stephen’s life had hitherto been spent inland.  She had of course now and again been for short periods to various places; but the wonder of the sea as a constant companion had been practically unknown to her.

Now at her new home its full splendour burst upon her; and so impressed itself upon her that new life seemed to open.

Lannoy was on the north-eastern coast, the castle standing at the base of a wide promontory stretching far into the North Sea.  From the coast the land sloped upward to a great rolling ridge.  The outlook seaward was over a mighty expanse of green sward, dotted here and there with woods and isolated clumps of trees which grew fewer and smaller as the rigour of the northern sea was borne upon them by the easterly gales.

The coast was a wild and lonely one.  No habitation other than an isolated fisher’s cottage was to be seen between the little fishing-port at the northern curve away to the south, where beyond a waste of sandhills and strand another tiny fishing-village nestled under a high cliff, sheltering it from northerly wind.  For centuries the lords of Lannoy had kept their magnificent prospect to themselves; and though they had treated their farmers and cottagers well, none had ever been allowed to settle in the great park to seaward of the castle.

From the terrace of the castle only than one building, other than the cottage on the headland, could be seen.  Far off on the very crest of the ridge was the tower of an old windmill.

CHAPTER XXIX  —  THE SILVER LADY

When it was known that Lady de Lannoy had come to Lannoy there was a prompt rush of such callers as the county afforded.  Stephen, however, did not wish to see anyone just at present.  Partly to avoid the chance meeting with strangers, and partly because she enjoyed and benefited by the exercise, she was much away from home every day.  Sometimes, attended only by a groom, she rode long distances north or south along the coast; or up over the ridge behind the castle and far inland along the shaded roads through the woods; or over bleak wind-swept stretches of moorland.  Sometimes she would walk, all alone, far down to the sea-road, and would sit for hours on the shore or high up on some little rocky headland where she could enjoy the luxury of solitude.

Now and again in her journeyings she made friends, most of them humble ones.  She was so great a lady in her station that she could be familiar without seeming to condescend.  The fishermen of the little ports to north and south came to know her, and to look gladly for her coming.  Their goodwives had for her always a willing curtsy and a ready smile.  As for the children, they looked on her with admiration and love, tempered with awe.  She was so gentle with them, so ready to share their pleasures and interests, that after a while they came to regard her as some strange embodiment of Fairydom and Dreamland.  Many a little heart was made glad by the arrival of some item of delight from the Castle; and the hearts of the sick seemed never to hope, or their eyes to look, in vain.

One friend she made who became very dear and of great import.  Often she had looked up at the old windmill on the crest of the ridge and wondered who inhabited it; for that some one lived in it, or close by, was shown at times by the drifting smoke.  One day she made up her mind to go and see for herself.  She had a fancy not to ask anyone about it.  The place was a little item of mystery; and as such to be treasured and exploited, and in due course explored.  The mill itself was picturesque, and the detail at closer acquaintance sustained the far-off impression.  The roadway forked on the near side of the mill, reuniting again the further side, so that the place made a sort of island  —  mill, out-offices and garden.  As the mill was on the very top of the ridge the garden which lay seawards was sheltered by the building from the west, and from the east by a thick hedge of thorn and privet, which quite hid it from the roadway.  Stephen took the lower road.  Finding no entrance save a locked wooden door she followed round to the western side, where the business side of the mill had been.  It was all still now and silent, and that it had long fallen into disuse was shown by the grey faded look of everything.  Grass, green and luxuriant, grew untrodden between the cobble-stones with which the yard was paved.  There was a sort of old-world quietude about everything which greatly appealed to Stephen.

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