There it was of a lighter colour; there it showed spots and splashes
of the hue of that brown spot on the ceiling, which the child's
fanciful
terror had distorted into the
likeness of a spot of blood.
Thin remains of a discoloured moustache and whiskers,
hanging over
the upper lip, and over the hollows where the cheeks had once been,
made the head just recognisable as the head of a man. Over all
the features death and time had done their obliterating work.
The eyelids were closed. The hair on the skull, discoloured like
the hair on the face, had been burnt away in places. The bluish lips,
parted in a fixed grin, showed the double row of teeth.
By slow degrees, the hovering head (
perfectly still when she
first saw it) began to
descend towards Agnes as she lay beneath.
By slow degrees, that strange doubly-blended odour, which the
Commissioners had discovered in the vaults of the old palace--
which had sickened Francis Westwick in the bed-chamber of
the new hotel--spread its fetid exhalations over the room.
Downward and
downward the
hideousapparition made its slow progress,
until it stopped close over Agnes--stopped, and turned slowly,
so that the face of it confronted the upturned face of the woman in
the chair.
There was a pause. Then, a supernatural
movement disturbed the rigid
repose of the dead face.
The closed eyelids opened slowly. The eyes revealed themselves,
bright with the
glassy film of death--and fixed their
dreadful look
on the woman in the chair.
Agnes saw that look; saw the eyelids of the living woman open slowly
like the eyelids of the dead; saw her rise, as if in obedience
to some silent command--and saw no more.
Her next
consciousimpression was of the
sunlight pouring in at
the window; of the friendly presence of Lady Montbarry at the bedside;
and of the children's wondering faces peeping in at the door.
CHAPTER XXIII
'...You have some influence over Agnes. Try what you
can do, Henry, to make her take a
sensible view of the matter.
There is really nothing to make a fuss about. My wife's maid knocked
at her door early in the morning, with the
customary cup of tea.
Getting no answer, she went round to the dressing-room--found the door
on that side unlocked--and discovered Agnes on the bed in a fainting fit.
With my wife's help, they brought her to herself again; and she
told the
extraordinary story which I have just
repeated to you.
You must have seen for yourself that she has been over-fatigued,
poor thing, by our long railway journeys: her nerves are out of order--
and she is just the person to be easily terrified by a dream.
She obstinately refuses, however, to accept this
rational view.
Don't suppose that I have been
severe with her! All that a man
can do to
humour her I have done. I have written to the Countess
(in her assumed name)
offering to
restore the room to her.
She writes back,
positively declining to return to it.
I have
accordingly arranged (so as not to have the thing
known in the hotel) to occupy the room for one or two nights,
and to leave Agnes to recover her spirits under my wife's care.
Is there anything more that I can do? Whatever questions Agnes has
asked of me I have answered to the best of my
ability; she knows
all that you told me about Francis and the Countess last night.
But try as I may I can't quiet her mind. I have given up the attempt
in
despair, and left her in the drawing-room. Go, like a good fellow,
and try what you can do to
compose her.'
In those words, Lord Montbarry stated the case to his brother
from the
rational point of view. Henry made no remark, he went
straight to the drawing-room.
He found Agnes walking rapidly
backwards and forwards,
flushed and excited. 'If you come here to say what your brother
has been
saying to me,' she broke out, before he could speak,
'spare yourself the trouble. I don't want common sense--
I want a true friend who will believe in me.'
'I am that friend, Agnes,' Henry answered quietly, 'and you know it.'
'You really believe that I am not deluded by a dream?'
I know that you are not deluded--in one particular, at least.'
'In what particular?'
'In what you have said of the Countess. It is
perfectly true--'
Agnes stopped him there. 'Why do I only hear this morning
that the Countess and Mrs. James are one and the same person?'
she asked distrustfully. 'Why was I not told of it last night?'
'You forget that you had accepted the exchange of rooms before I
reached Venice,' Henry replied. 'I felt
strongly tempted to tell you,
even then--but your
sleeping arrangements for the night were
all made; I should only have inconvenienced and alarmed you.
I waited till the morning, after
hearing from my brother that
you had yourself seen to your
security from any
intrusion.
How that
intrusion was
accomplished it is impossible to say.
I can only declare that the Countess's presence by your bedside
last night was no dream of yours. On her own authority I can testify
that it was a reality.'
'On her own authority?' Agnes
repeatedeagerly. 'Have you seen
her this morning?'
'I have seen her not ten minutes since.'
'What was she doing?'
She was
busily engaged in
writing. I could not even get her to look
at me until I thought of mentioning your name.'
'She remembered me, of course?'
'She remembered you with some difficulty. Finding that she wouldn't answer
me on any other terms, I questioned her as if I had come direct from you.
Then she spoke. She not only admitted that she had the same superstitious
motive for placing you in that room which she had acknowledged
to Francis--she even owned that she had been by your bedside,
watching through the night, "to see what you saw," as she expressed it.
Hearing this, I tried to
persuade her to tell me how she got into
the room. Unluckily, her
manuscript on the table caught her eye;
she returned to her
writing. "The Baron wants money," she said;
"I must get on with my play." What she saw or dreamed while she was
in your room last night, it is at present impossible to discover.
But judging by my brother's
account of her, as well as by what I
remember of her myself, some recent influence has been at work which
has produced a marked change in this
wretched woman for the worse.
Her mind (since last night, perhaps) is
partially deranged.
One proof of it is that she spoke to me of the Baron as if he were
still a living man. When Francis saw her, she declared that the Baron
was dead, which is the truth. The United States Consul at Milan
showed us the
announcement of the death in an American newspaper.
So far as I can see, such sense as she still possesses seems to be
entirely absorbed in one
absurd idea--the idea of
writing a play
for Francis to bring out at his theatre. He admits that he encouraged
her to hope she might get money in this way. I think he did wrong.
Don't you agree with me?'
Without heeding the question, Agnes rose
abruptly from her chair.
'Do me one more kindness, Henry,' she said. 'Take me to the Countess
at once.'
Henry hesitated. 'Are you
composed enough to see her, after the shock
that you have suffered?' he asked.
She trembled, the flush on her face died away, and left it
deadly pale.
But she held to her
resolution. 'You have heard of what I saw last night?'
she said faintly.
'Don't speak of it!' Henry interposed. 'Don't uselessly
agitate yourself.'
'I must speak! My mind is full of
horrid questions about it.
I know I can't
identify it--and yet I ask myself over and over again,
in whose
likeness did it appear? Was it in the
likeness of Ferrari?
or was it--?' she stopped, shuddering. 'The Countess knows, I must
see the Countess!' she resumed vehemently. 'Whether my courage fails