from
Jonathan Harker's Journal ~
I was not alone. The room was
the same, unchanged in any way
since I came into it. I could
see along the floor, in the
brilliant moonlight, my own
footsteps marked where I had
disturbed the long accumulation
of dust. In the moonlight opposite
me were three young women, ladies
by their dress and manner.
I thought at the time that I
must be dreaming when I saw
them, they threw no shadow on
the floor. They came close to
me, and looked at me for some
time, and then whispered together.
Two were dark, and had high
aquiline noses, like the Count,
and great dark, piercing eyes,
that seemed to be almost red
when contrasted with the pale
yellow moon. The other was fair,
as fair as can be, with great
masses of golden hair and eyes
like pale sapphires. I seemed
somehow to know her face, and
to know it in connection with
some dreamy fear, but I could
not recollect at the moment
how or where.
All three had brilliant white
teeth that shone like pearls
against the ruby of their voluptuous
lips. There was something about
them that made me uneasy, some
longing and at the same time
some deadly fear. I felt in
my heart a wicked, burning desire
that they would kiss me with
those red lips. It is not good
to note this down, lest some
day it should meet Mina's eyes
and cause her pain, but it is
the truth.
They whispered together, and
then they all three laughed,
such a silvery, musical laugh,
but as hard as though the sound
never could have come through
the softness of human lips.
It was like the intolerable,
tingling sweetness of waterglasses
when played on by a cunning
hand. The fair girl shook her
head coquettishly, and the other
two urged her on.
One said, "Go on! You are
first, and we shall follow.
Yours is the right to begin."
The other added, "He is
young and strong. There are
kisses for us all."
I lay quiet, looking out from
under my eyelashes in an agony
of delightful anticipation.
The fair girl advanced and bent
over me till I could feel the
movement of her breath upon
me. Sweet it was in one sense,
honey-sweet, and sent the same
tingling through the nerves
as her voice, but with a bitter
underlying the sweet, a bitter
offensiveness, as one smells
in blood.
I was afraid to raise my eyelids,
but looked out and saw perfectly
under the lashes. The girl went
on her knees, and bent over
me, simply gloating. There was
a deliberate voluptuousness
which was both thrilling and
repulsive, and as she arched
her neck she actually licked
her lips like an animal, till
I could see in the moonlight
the moisture shining on the
scarlet lips and on the red
tongue as it lapped the white
sharp teeth. Lower and lower
went her head as the lips went
below the range of my mouth
and chin and seemed to fasten
on my throat.
Then she paused, and I could
hear the churning sound of her
tongue as it licked her teeth
and lips, and I could feel the
hot breath on my neck. Then
the skin of my throat began
to tingle as one's flesh does
when the hand that is to tickle
it approaches nearer, nearer.
I could feel the soft, shivering
touch of the lips on the super
sensitive skin of my throat,
and the hard dents of two sharp
teeth, just touching and pausing
there. I closed my eyes in languorous
ecstasy and waited, waited with
beating heart.
But at that instant, another
sensation swept through me as
quick as lightning.
I was conscious of the presence
of Count Dracula, and of his
being as if lapped in a storm
of fury. As my eyes opened involuntarily
I saw his strong hand grasp
the slender neck of the fair
woman and with giant's power
draw it back, the blue eyes
transformed with fury, the white
teeth champing with rage, and
the fair cheeks blazing red
with passion.
But the Count! Never did I imagine
such wrath and fury, even to
the demons of the pit. His eyes
were positively blazing. The
red light in them was lurid,
as if the flames of hell fire
blazed behind them. His face
was deathly pale, and the lines
of it were hard like drawn wires.
The thick eyebrows that met
over the nose now seemed like
a heaving bar of white-hot metal.
With a fierce sweep of his arm,
he hurled the woman from him,
and then motioned to the others,
as though he were beating them
back. It was the same imperious
gesture that I had seen used
to the wolves. In a voice which,
though low and almost in a whisper
seemed to cut through the air
and then ring in the room he
said,
"How dare you touch him,
any of you? How dare you cast
eyes on him when I had forbidden
it? Back, I tell you all! This
man belongs to me! Beware how
you meddle with him, or you'll
have to deal with me."
The fair girl, with a laugh
of ribald coquetry, turned to
answer him. "You yourself
never loved. You never love!"
On this the other women joined,and
such a mirthless, hard, soulless
laughter rang through the room
that it almost made me faint
to hear. It seemed like the
pleasure of fiends.
Then the Count turned, after
looking at my face attentively,
and said in a soft whisper,
"Yes, I too can love. You
yourselves can tell it from
the past. Is it not so? Well,
now I promise you that when
I am done with him you shall
kiss him at your will. Now go!
Go! I must awaken him, for there
is work to be done."
"Are we to have nothing
tonight?" said one of them,
with a low laugh, as she pointed
to the bag which he had thrown
upon the floor, and which moved
as though there were some living
thing within it.
For answer he nodded his head.
One of the women jumped forward
and opened it. If my ears did
not deceive me there was a gasp
and a low wail, as of a half
smothered child. The women closed
round, whilst I was aghast with
horror. But as I looked, they
disappeared, and with them the
dreadful bag.
There was no door near them,
and they could not have passed
me without my noticing. They
simply seemed to fade into the
rays of the moonlight and pass
out through the window, for
I could see outside the dim,
shadowy forms for a moment before
they entirely faded away.
Then the horror overcame me,and
I sank down unconscious.
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