Castle Rouge (31 page)

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Authors: Carole Nelson Douglas

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Traditional British, #Historical

BOOK: Castle Rouge
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Or a ghost.

I pulled my icy toes under the folds of my nightshirt. Of…Godfrey’s nightshirt. My features twisted as I realized that this might be his final bequest to me.

Did ghosts walk at dawn? Perhaps in Transylvania they did, especially in the midst of this thick, dark, cold, scowling forest. My room still harbored pools of night-shadows in the corners.

And what else?

I heard a scrape. Possibly the screech of claw on stone. Cats? Or rats stirring one last time before the pallid daylight beat back the night and its denizens for another twelve hours.

The hinges on the huge wooden door that led to the hallway squealed like a dying rat. I had never seen it opened, never dreamed that it did. Everything came to me through Godfrey’s chamber.

Surely this door had been locked?

Not now. It was so wide, perhaps five feet, that it took a long time for even a slit of hallway beyond to appear.

When that tall needle of darkness appeared, I stared into its black heart. Slowly my eyes made out a lighter figure etched against it, almost like a stone statue to be found in a Catholic church.

While I stared, wondering who would set a statue on guard outside my door and what saint this figure was meant to represent, a bit of warming daylight from the window reflected from two tiny glittering points—the eyes! Like quartz stone set in gray marble they glimmered, moist, vivid, alive, seeing me!

No saint, but a
ghost
hovered outside my door.

It was my worst nightmare come true, and I must face it alone. So I did the only sensible thing an Englishwoman in such straits can do.

I screamed until I had no more air in my lungs, and then I swooned.

I really cannot recommend such behavior, however time tested.

When I awoke, I was in a most uncomfortable pile on the floor.

However, as I looked around for the horrid figure on the threshold, I discovered my scream had raised, not the dead, but the dear person of Godfrey!

He bent over me like a concerned doctor, sprinkling water on my wrists and temples.

However, we did not have water, so it must have been wine he sprinkled on my person.

I sat up, shaking off the bloody drops.

“Are you all right, Nell?”

“Are
you
all right? I saw the rope hanging limp against the castle and assumed the worst.”

“What worst?”

“Several variations. Thank God you are here. The place is haunted. I saw the most horrible revenant with icy burning eyes in the doorway.”

Godfrey’s head turned while he examined the threshold. “I just came through that door. No one was there.”

“Of course not! Ghosts can vanish in the shake of a demon’s tail. It was awful, worse than anything from Sheridan le Fanu.”

“That is what results from reading too many ghost stories at a tender age, Nell,” he said, assisting me to my feet and dusting me off most considerately. “What did this ghost do besides appear?”

“That was enough. I have never seen such evil eyes, so light you could look right through them, as through water.”

Godfrey nodded at the arched windows behind me. “Light can play tricks, especially in such a Gothic pile as this. In fact, I reached the doorway as you were screaming. Perhaps your eyes had created an illusion from the light and shadow of the hall and I stepped into it.”

“Your eyes are quite a light gray, Godfrey, almost silver at times, but I have never had the experience of seeing evil incarnate in them, and that is what those ghastly eyes from the hallway were.”

I shivered and could not stop. “It is true,” I admitted, “that your ash-stained clothing could have seemed like the stone garb of a statue.”

“There, you see? Easily explained.” Godfrey examined his clothing and began dusting himself off. “Ashes and then stone dust from all that climbing and wall hugging.”

“Then you reached your goal?”

“Indeed, and I returned with booty.”

“Booty? What of value could reside in this decrepit castle?”

Godfrey began pulling items from the front of his shirt, while I looked correctly away.

“Books. The bay of windows is in a vast library with books even older than what sits on the few shelves in my chamber. A fascinating collection dating from several eras, some as old as the Dark Ages, I think, and many in foreign tongues.”

“Evil tongues, no doubt.”

“Unlike Irene, I am no linguist, but many were filled with the thick consonants that betoken eastern European languages, and others were in strange letters both like and utterly unlike European languages.”

“So what did you bring back?”

“Something to divert you. In English I found a volume of the American author, Nathaniel Hawthorne—”

“I have never heard of him.”

“Now you have,” he said, handing me the dusty book. “And…perhaps I should not hand this one over. It is too inciting of the imagination for you now.”

“What is it? Godfrey, let me at least see? Oh! Poe. You remembered my fondness for his works.”

“I don’t know.” Godfrey opened the first few pages and frowned at the title page. “‘The Masque of the Red Death.’ Much too morbid for you to read, Nell.” He tsked like a governess withdrawing a treat presumed too rich for a child’s appetite.

“I have read most of them anyway, Godfrey. Let me have it, or I shall…shall scream again.”

“We can’t have that. Your scream is piercing enough to injure even ghostly ears. It is a formidable weapon, if you could manage to remain conscious long enough to use it twice.”

“I am afraid I emulated a fitful child too well. I meant only to scare the ghost away, not to use all my breath doing it. My next screams will be more of the staccato sort, I promise you, Godfrey, so I shall stay awake for hours to scream every villain in the place deaf.”

He let my eager hands claim the book of Poe, and grinned.

I realized that he had thoroughly distracted me from the issue of the evil-eyed “ghost.”

“Is it not strange,” he went on, “that books as relatively recent as these should occupy shelves in a remote Transylvanian castle’s library?”

“Everything about this place is strange. I would not be surprised to find
Psychopathia Sexualis
in that library.”

Godfrey immediately grew alert. “A barrister has more than a passing acquaintance with Latin and that title is not one I would expect a parson’s daughter to be bandying about. What book is that?”

“An exceedingly nasty one that Henry Irving and Bram Stoker and the theatrical set pass around their men’s club meetings. It is full of the unimaginable deviltry that men may commit, so I am told. Irene had found a copy at the Left Bank book stalls. She thought it shed light on the acts of Jack the Ripper, as if anyone would care to see what the light would reveal in that case.”

“I shall need to have another look at the contents of the library. Perhaps we could visit it together tomorrow night.”

“I am not about to swing from my own rope, Godfrey. However odd my borrowed dress, it is still not suitable for exercise.”

“That’s the point, Nell. Don’t you realize that I climbed my way down, but found my way back up by normal means, and I did not encounter any ghosts?”

“Did you encounter anyone more solid?”

“Now that is odd. There were signs that someone had been using the library recently. The dust was disturbed. But the tales of my explorations must wait. First we need to make like sailor-men and pull the rope back up before someone on the ground sees it in daylight.”

“Of course! How could I have forgotten about that?”

“I suspect you were worrying about my whereabouts and the ghost outside your bedchamber door, which may have been me. Besides, you would never be strong enough to manage such a task by yourself.”

While he talked, Godfrey made for the window and leaned far out to look for witnesses. Satisfied that none were visible, he nodded at me and seized hold of the braided linen. A mighty tug brought a loop of the stuff inside the window.

I picked it up from the floor and joined Godfrey in tugging. He had been right. This was hard, menial work. I pulled on his command of “heave” and released the rope on the “ho.” Like navvies we struggled, and after ten or fifteen minutes of frantic labor, the last length of the stuff finally lay heaped on the floor.

“No rest for the wicked,” Godfrey said jovially. “We must arrange this pile under your coverlet.”

The conjoined coils were heavy enough that the two of us made several trips to transfer the bulk from the floor near the window to lumpy rest under what remained of my bedclothes.

I couldn’t help wondering why we bothered to move the rope. “If you can find your way unmolested inside the castle, what do we need with the rope?”

“First, to hide the fact that it ever existed from our captors; second, we may indeed need it again, especially if locked in our quarters. Third, I did not say that I was able to explore the castle unmolested.”

“You seem none the worse for wear!”

Godfrey’s expression grew wry and secretive at the same time. “There is wear…and there is wear.”

“What do you mean?”

Godfrey sat in one of the overbearing high-backed chairs that populated the castle. “Since I had the opportunity, I explored the lower regions of the castle.”

“And?”

“It is built upon and into the mountain. I moved down into storerooms that reminded me of the system of tunnels beneath the Rothschild country estate at Ferrières. Do you remember that, Nell?”

“How could I forget that underground trophy room with all the mounted heads of beasts upon the walls and the odor of cigar smoke penetrating everything? Although the tiny train to bring food hot from the distant kitchen to the main dining room was rather innovative.”

“No miniature trains here, would that we could escape on one! Only storerooms mostly empty of everything but dust and dead spiders. Yet each time I discovered a stone stairway, I was able to go lower into the foundations of the castle, which quite literally are the foundations of the mountain.

“As I went down, guided by a bit of candle I had found, I began to feel the rush of cool, damp air.”

“Air?”

“I was far below the level where windows were possible.”

“Then…there might be a tunnel of sorts, a way out of the castle.”

Godfrey didn’t answer me directly. Instead his eyes narrowed as he probed his memory.

“That’s what I thought, hoped. I was surely on the last habitable level before solid stone was all that remained. The area was vast, although relatively low-ceilinged. It reminded me of what might lay beneath the burial vaults of a cathedral. Low Gothic arches stretched out in all directions, but the ground was that strange combination of stone and packed earth that makes one think one is standing on the very bones of earth. It was oddly reminiscent of some forgotten chapel. A few wooden shipping or storage boxes were lying about as if tossed up on some dry seabed. I had the strangest sense of being below, not sea level, but below the level of ordinary life.”

“How eerie it sounds! And still you felt the rush of air?”

“Not a rush. Perhaps more of a…an unseen current, like the cold, dry breath of the mountain. The place seemed utterly deserted, my footfalls the only sound. Then, from behind one of the massive pillars that supported the arches, I glimpsed a movement.”

“Oh!”

“I don’t mean to frighten you, Nell. Obviously, I returned unhurt.”

“It is so like the best of ghost stories. Is that what you saw, a ghost?”

“Would that I had. A ghost could not betray my expedition.”

“Who was it then?”

“A Gypsy girl.”

“Even there!?”

“Even there. And more than one.”

“No! How many?”

“Gradually, I detected three. They were as shy as wood nymphs, and very young, wearing no jewelry, nothing that would chime as they moved. That is when I realized that they must have entered the castle from…outside.”

“Outside!”

“They were trespassing as much as I was. They circled me at their shy distance, drawing nearer but still darting behind pillars. I felt the center of some bizarre Maypole dance. I racked my brains for some way to bribe them, dupe them, follow them out. But they obviously spoke only Romany, and our mutual silence seemed a conspiracy of sorts. I feared that if I broke it, I would break some spell, would somehow give their muteness voice, and they would then betray me as I could betray them.

“So we watched and moved in that soundless minuet and finally they faded away, and I retreated to the higher regions. I don’t think they will report my presence, for then they would reveal their own, which was as unlawful.”

I shivered. “They could have been ghosts. Murdered Gypsy girls trying to show you a way out.”

“This much I know. There must be a way in, and out, from far below. We have made much progress in moving about the castle’s exterior and interior. Now we must decide how we can use what we have learned.”

“‘We’ nothing, Godfrey! You have done all the dangerous part.”

He took my mittened hand in his. “We, Nell. It is both of us, or neither of us, that I swear.”

26.

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