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Fiction

The Lady of the Shroud

Bram Stoker

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"LOSS OF AN OTTOMAN IRONCLAD WITH ALL HANDS.

"News has been received at Constantinople of the total loss, with all
hands, of one of the newest and finest warships in the Turkish fleet-
-The Mahmoud, Captain Ali Ali--which foundered in a storm on the
night of July 5, some distance off Cabrera, in the Balearic Isles.
There were no survivors, and no wreckage was discovered by the ships
which went in relief--the Pera and the Mustapha--or reported from
anywhere along the shores of the islands, of which exhaustive search
was made.  The Mahmoud was double-manned, as she carried a full extra
crew sent on an educational cruise on the most perfectly
scientifically equipped warship on service in the Mediterranean
waters."


When the Voivode and I talked over the matter, he said:

"After all, Turkey is a shrewd Power.  She certainly seems to know
when she is beaten, and does not intend to make a bad thing seem
worse in the eyes of the world."

Well, 'tis a bad wind that blows good to nobody.  As The Mahmoud was
lost off the Balearics, it cannot have been her that put the
marauders on shore and trained her big guns on Ilsin.  We take it,
therefore, that the latter must have been a pirate, and as we have
taken her derelict in our waters, she is now ours in all ways.
Anyhow, she is ours, and is the first ship of her class in the navy
of the Blue Mountains.  I am inclined to think that even if she was--
or is still--a Turkish ship, Admiral Rooke would not be inclined to
let her go.  As for Captain Desmond, I think he would go straight out
of his mind if such a thing was to be even suggested to him.

It will be a pity if we have any more trouble, for life here is very
happy with us all now.  The Voivode is, I think, like a man in a
dream.  Teuta is ideally happy, and the real affection which sprang
up between them when she and Aunt Janet met is a joy to think of.  I
had posted Teuta about her, so that when they should meet my wife
might not, by any inadvertence, receive or cause any pain.  But the
moment Teuta saw her she ran straight over to her and lifted her in
her strong young arms, and, raising her up as one would lift a child,
kissed her.  Then, when she had put her sitting in the chair from
which she had arisen when we entered the room, she knelt down before
her, and put her face down in her lap.  Aunt Janet's face was a
study; I myself could hardly say whether at the first moment surprise
or joy predominated.  But there could be no doubt about it the
instant after.  She seemed to beam with happiness.  When Teuta knelt
to her, she could only say:

"My dear, my dear, I am glad!  Rupert's wife, you and I must love
each other very much."  Seeing that they were laughing and crying in
each other's arms, I thought it best to come away and leave them
alone.  And I didn't feel a bit lonely either when I was out of sight
of them.  I knew that where those two dear women were there was a
place for my own heart.

When I came back, Teuta was sitting on Aunt Janet's knee.  It seemed
rather stupendous for the old lady, for Teuta is such a splendid
creature that even when she sits on my own knee and I catch a glimpse
of us in some mirror, I cannot but notice what a nobly-built girl she
is.

My wife was jumping up as soon as I was seen, but Aunt Janet held her
tight to her, and said:

"Don't stir, dear.  It is such happiness to me to have you there.
Rupert has always been my 'little boy,' and, in spite of all his
being such a giant, he is so still.  And so you, that he loves, must
be my little girl--in spite of all your beauty and your strength--and
sit on my knee, till you can place there a little one that shall be
dear to us all, and that shall let me feel my youth again.  When
first I saw you I was surprised, for, somehow, though I had never
seen you nor even heard of you, I seemed to know your face.  Sit
where you are, dear.  It is only Rupert--and we both love him."

Teuta looked at me, flushing rosily; but she sat quiet, and drew the
old lady's white head on her young breast.


JANET MACKELPIE'S NOTES.
July 8, 1907.

I used to think that whenever Rupert should get married or start on
the way to it by getting engaged--I would meet his future wife with
something of the same affection that I have always had for himself.
But I know now that what was really in my mind was jealousy, and that
I was really fighting against my own instincts, and pretending to
myself that I was not jealous.  Had I ever had the faintest idea that
she would be anything the least like Teuta, that sort of feeling
should never have had even a foothold.  No wonder my dear boy is in
love with her, for, truth to tell, I am in love with her myself.  I
don't think I ever met a creature--a woman creature, of course, I
mean--with so many splendid qualities.  I almost fear to say it, lest
it should seem to myself wrong; but I think she is as good as a woman
as Rupert is as a man.  And what more than that can I say?  I thought
I loved her and trusted her, and knew her all I could, until this
morning.

I was in my own room, as it is still called.  For, though Rupert
tells me in confidence that under his uncle's will the whole estate
of Vissarion, Castle and all, really belongs to the Voivode, and
though the Voivode has been persuaded to accept the position, he (the
Voivode) will not allow anything to be changed.  He will not even
hear a word of my going, or changing my room, or anything.  And
Rupert backs him up in it, and Teuta too.  So what am I to do but let
the dears have their way?

Well, this morning, when Rupert was with the Voivode at a meeting of
the National Council in the Great Hall, Teuta came to me, and (after
closing the door and bolting it, which surprised me a little) came
and knelt down beside me, and put her face in my lap.  I stroked her
beautiful black hair, and said:

"What is it, Teuta darling?  Is there any trouble?  And why did you
bolt the door?  Has anything happened to Rupert?"  When she looked up
I saw that her beautiful black eyes, with the stars in them, were
overflowing with tears not yet shed.  But she smiled through them,
and the tears did not fall.  When I saw her smile my heart was eased,
and I said without thinking:  "Thank God, darling, Rupert is all
right."

"I thank God, too, dear Aunt Janet!" she said softly; and I took her
in my arms and laid her head on my breast.

"Go on, dear," I said; "tell me what it is that troubles you?"  This
time I saw the tears drop, as she lowered her head and hid her face
from me.

"I'm afraid I have deceived you, Aunt Janet, and that you will not--
cannot--forgive me."

"Lord save you, child!" I said, "there's nothing that you could do
that I could not and would not forgive.  Not that you would ever do
anything base, for that is the only thing that is hard to forgive.
Tell me now what troubles you."

She looked up in my eyes fearlessly, this time with only the signs of
tears that had been, and said proudly:

"Nothing base, Aunt Janet.  My father's daughter would not willingly
be base.  I do not think she could.  Moreover, had I ever done
anything base I should not be here, for--for--I should never have
been Rupert's wife!"

"Then what is it?  Tell your old Aunt Janet, dearie."  She answered
me with another question:

"Aunt Janet, do you know who I am, and how I first met Rupert?"

"You are the Voivodin Teuta Vissarion--the daughter of the Voivode--
Or, rather, you were; you are now Mrs. Rupert Sent Leger.  For he is
still an Englishman, and a good subject of our noble King."

"Yes, Aunt Janet," she said, "I am that, and proud to be it--prouder
than I would be were I my namesake, who was Queen in the old days.
But how and where did I see Rupert first?"  I did not know, and
frankly told her so.  So she answered her question herself:

"I saw him first in his own room at night."  I knew in my heart that
in whatever she did had been nothing wrong, so I sat silent waiting
for her to go on:

"I was in danger, and in deadly fear.  I was afraid I might die--not
that I fear death--and I wanted help and warmth.  I was not dressed
as I am now!"

On the instant it came to me how I knew her face, even the first time
I had seen it.  I wished to help her out of the embarrassing part of
her confidence, so I said:

"Dearie, I think I know.  Tell me, child, will you put on the frock .
. . the dress . . . costume you wore that night, and let me see you
in it?  It is not mere idle curiosity, my child, but something far,
far above such idle folly."

"Wait for me a minute, Aunt Janet," she said, as she rose up; "I
shall not be long."  Then she left the room.

In a very few minutes she was back.  Her appearance might have
frightened some people, for she was clad only in a shroud.  Her feet
were bare, and she walked across the room with the gait of an
empress, and stood before me with her eyes modestly cast down.  But
when presently she looked up and caught my eyes, a smile rippled over
her face.  She threw herself once more before me on her knees, and
embraced me as she said:

"I was afraid I might frighten you, dear."  I knew I could truthfully
reassure her as to that, so I proceeded to do so:

"Do not worry yourself, my dear.  I am not by nature timid.  I come
of a fighting stock which has sent out heroes, and I belong to a
family wherein is the gift of Second Sight.  Why should we fear?  We
know!  Moreover, I saw you in that dress before.  Teuta, I saw you
and Rupert married!"  This time she herself it was that seemed
disconcerted.

"Saw us married!  How on earth did you manage to be there?"

"I was not there.  My Seeing was long before!  Tell me, dear, what
day, or rather what night, was it that you first saw Rupert?"  She
answered sadly:

"I do not know.  Alas!  I lost count of the days as I lay in the tomb
in that dreary Crypt."

"Was your--your clothing wet that night?" I asked.

"Yes.  I had to leave the Crypt, for a great flood was out, and the
church was flooded.  I had to seek help--warmth--for I feared I might
die.  Oh, I was not, as I have told you, afraid of death.  But I had
undertaken a terrible task to which I had pledged myself.  It was for
my father's sake, and the sake of the Land, and I felt that it was a
part of my duty to live.  And so I lived on, when death would have
been relief.  It was to tell you all about this that I came to your
room to-day.  But how did you see me--us--married?"

"Ah, my child!" I answered, "that was before the marriage took place.
The morn after the night that you came in the wet, when, having been
troubled in uncanny dreaming, I came to see if Rupert was a'richt, I
lost remembrance o' my dreaming, for the floor was all wet, and that
took off my attention.  But later, the morn after Rupert used his
fire in his room for the first time, I told him what I had dreamt;
for, lassie, my dear, I saw ye as bride at that weddin' in fine lace
o'er yer shrood, and orange-flowers and ithers in yer black hair; an'
I saw the stars in yer bonny een--the een I love.  But oh, my dear,
when I saw the shrood, and kent what it might mean, I expeckit to see
the worms crawl round yer feet.  But do ye ask yer man to tell ye
what I tell't him that morn.  'Twill interest ye to know how the
hairt o' men can learn by dreams.  Has he ever tellt ye aught o'
this?"

"No, dear," she said simply.  "I think that perhaps he was afraid
that one or other of us, if not both, might be upset by it if he did.
You see, he did not tell you anything at all of our meeting, though I
am sure that he will be glad when he knows that we both know all
about it, and have told each other everything."

That was very sweet of her, and very thoughtful in all ways, so I
said that which I thought would please her best--that is, the truth:

"Ah, lassie, that is what a wife should be--what a wife should do.
Rupert is blessed and happy to have his heart in your keeping."

I knew from the added warmth of her kiss what I had said had pleased
her.


Letter from Ernest Roger Halbard Melton, Humcroft, Salop, to Rupert
Sent Leger, Vissarion, Land of the Blue Mountains.
July 29, 1907.

MY DEAR COUSIN RUPERT,

We have heard such glowing accounts of Vissarion that I am coming out
to see you.  As you are yourself now a landowner, you will understand
that my coming is not altogether a pleasure.  Indeed, it is a duty
first.  When my father dies I shall be head of the family--the family
of which Uncle Roger, to whom we were related, was a member.  It is
therefore meet and fitting that I should know something of our family
branches and of their Seats.  I am not giving you time for much
warning, so am coming on immediately--in fact, I shall arrive almost
as soon as this letter.  But I want to catch you in the middle of
your tricks.  I hear that the Blue Mountaineer girls are peaches, so
don't send them ALL away when you hear I'm coming!

Do send a yacht up to Fiume to meet me.  I hear you have all sorts of
craft at Vissarion.  The MacSkelpie, I hear, said you received her as
a Queen; so I hope you will do the decent by one of your own flesh
and blood, and the future Head of the House at that.  I shan't bring
much of a retinue with me.  _I_ wasn't made a billionaire by old
Roger, so can only take my modest "man Friday"--whose name is
Jenkinson, and a Cockney at that.  So don't have too much gold lace
and diamond-hilted scimitars about, like a good chap, or else he'll
want the very worst--his wyges ryzed.  That old image Rooke that came
over for Miss McS., and whom by chance I saw at the attorney man's,
might pilot me down from Fiume.  The old gentleman-by-Act-of-
Parliament Mr. Bingham Trent (I suppose he has hyphened it by this
time) told me that Miss McS. said he "did her proud" when she went
over under his charge.  I shall be at Fiume on the evening of
Wednesday, and shall stay at the Europa, which is, I am told, the
least indecent hotel in the place.  So you know where to find me, or
any of your attendant demons can know, in case I am to suffer
"substituted service."

Your affectionate Cousin,

ERNEST ROGER HALBARD MELTON.
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