The Dracula Tape by Fred Saberhagen (best black authors TXT) 📗
- Author: Fred Saberhagen
Book online «The Dracula Tape by Fred Saberhagen (best black authors TXT) 📗». Author Fred Saberhagen
Mina’s face cleared and we stood looking at each other, and she seemed to be wondering what to say next. But gradually she began to smile and shook her head at me. “Vlad, Vlad. There have been times in England, in the bright sunshine, when — forgive me, but when I have doubted your very existence.”
“Oh? But that is all right. Every year there are fewer and fewer people who believe in me. But if they all forget me I will be here anyway, like an artifact of some lost civilization.”
“Oh, Vlad! Your life is such a lonely one. And for six years you have been here waiting.” I had not been waiting entirely unaccompanied, but saw no reason to correct her estimate.
Above, sharp careless footsteps of a small throng resounded on stone vaulting, drawing closer now, and a high voice was raised: “Mummy! Mummy, are you down there?”
I reached Mina in one silent bound, planted a kiss upon her lips, and pressed something into her hand. I was held in man-shape by the daylight, but still those were my grounds and I knew them well. By the time two children came racing into the vault I was out of sight, but watching.
“Mummy, mummy, there you are. Ohh, what’s this? Tombstones!”
Then Harker himself, gray and solid and growing a little portly, strolled in and came to a sudden stop as he realized what chamber he had entered. “Lord,” he murmured, “I never thought to see the day when we could stand here in calm safety.”
“I came to offer up a prayer, Jonathan,” his wife said. “For him.” Her husband was not looking at her, and her eyes flicked in the direction where I had disappeared. “That we may meet someday in — in a happier place than this.”
“How lovely of you, my sweet, to pray for him,” Harker murmured, and gave her hair a little proprietary touch, which must have disarranged it, for a small restorative fingering by her own hand followed in a moment. “What have you there in your hand, Mina?”
“Why, it’s a gold ring. It was here in a crevice between the paving stones, and I picked it up. Do you think I might be allowed to keep it?”
“I don’t see why not, my dear. I believe the proper owner is not likely to come looking for it now. Ha, hum. Quincey, Lucy, show some respect, do not sit on the tombstones, please.”
* * *
Have I seen Mina since? Why yes, I must admit, a time or two.
Jonathan died of apoplexy, raging at Neville Chamberlain in 1938. Mina lived to be ninety-five, and breathed her last in an Exeter nursing home in 1967, and was interred in her family’s plot nearby. In St. Peter’s Cemetery, as a matter of fact, not far from this very snowdrift where we sit …
Van Helsing, God rest his own perturbed soul, was right about one thing at least …
When I have mixed my blood with theirs, often enough, they all must walk after they appear to die. Exceptions are extremely rare. Some, like Lucy Westenra, bestir themselves in a mere three days or less. With some it takes three years or more. Modern embalming methods are to be considered, for if the vampire heart is nearly destroyed it needs a long time to regrow. But it will do so, if destruction is not utterly complete. But after that regrowth, more healing time will pass, time in which the buried body, still quiescent, restores itself inexorably to youth. And after that …
The bond has stretched twixt Mina and myself, but never broken. And I have come here tonight to welcome her into a new life. A life in which I trust she will find, despite its continuation of earthly sorrows, some great joys too, unknown to those who merely breathe … Mina!
The tape ends shortly, the only sounds on its remaining length being the hissing of snow and wind around the windows of the car, and what some listeners describe as faint and distant peals of laughter, one feminine and gay, one masculine and deep.
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