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
strenghtened 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.
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