The House on Blackstone Moor (The Blackstone Vampires) Read online




  The House on Blackstone Moor

  Book one of the Blackstone Vampires Series

  by Carole Gill

  List of contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Bonus material

  PUBLISHED BY TUDOR ROSE PRESS

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return it purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author's work

  Copyright 2012 by Carole Gill

  See also http://carolegillofficialauthor.blogspot.com/

  Acknowledgments

  To my darling husband, who gave me the opportunity to write full-time. John, mega thanks! Sincere thanks also to Natalie G. Owens for her expert editing. Thank you both!

  Chapter 1

  They say my father was mad, so corrupted by evil and tainted with sin that he did what he did. I came home to find them all dead; their throats had been savagely cut.

  My sisters, only five and eight, were gone, as well as my brother who was twelve. My mother too lay butchered in her marriage bed. The bed her children were born in.

  I discovered him first—in the sitting room lying in a sea of crimson, the bloody razor still clutched in his hand.

  How pitiful I must have looked, bent down trying to wake him. Calling to him over and over, “Papa please, please wake up!”

  He could not, of course, waken. No more was he to open his eyes in this world—had I not been struck mad, I would have realized.

  Yet, madness is sometimes a mercy when shadows come to take the horror away.

  Do not pull away in terror, please. I have much to confess. Just be patient, for I promise I will tell you everything. The only thing I ask in return is for you not to judge me until you hear my entire story.

  If I recall that dreadful night, I remember it in confusing images and noise. People came and went. Gentle hands touched me, trying to soothe away the shock and agony—voices too, hushed and sad, told me things I could not understand.

  “Go away.”

  I probably said that, though I can’t be sure. Lucidity was not my strong point that night. I do recall someone carrying me out of the house to a neighbor’s house.

  We lived in Notting Hill then, having moved from Mayfair after my father’s illness—more about that later.

  The house was on Blenheim Crescent, a respectable house in a respectable neighborhood. Despite this, the grander environs of Mayfair were much remembered and longed for by my mother especially. My mother, who now lay caked in blood in her disliked rooms of Notting Hill.

  “You remember me, don’t you Rose? It’s Dr. Arliss.”

  Dr. Arliss? Our physician. Was he there?

  “I am sorry Rose, but you must go with them.”

  People can’t be left around screaming, you understand.

  I was silenced by strong hands. “Come along, miss. That’s better.”

  I hadn’t the sense to ask where I was being taken. All I can remember is being removed from my neighbor’s home.

  I couldn’t very well stay in my own home surrounded by the blood-splattered corpses of my murdered family, now could I?

  They half dragged me down the stairs and out into an icy rain.

  “Just get her in...”

  A woman reached for me. I did catch sight of her face; she looked serious but not unkind. “Come along now, dear.”

  Dear, that was nice. I do believe I thanked her. Well, I wasn’t right in my head was I?

  “Where are you taking me?”

  So polite, a soft refined voice heard at church socials. But not me. Churches and I never mixed. Of course, I would regret that.

  “Harry, go get the restraints!”

  Restraints? It doesn’t affect me but that’s because it’s nothing to me. I’m not really there, you see. Well, not all of the time.

  I must explain something. These first hours following the carnage were a blur to me, really. I have only understood things over time. But that is better as I can tell you my story more clearly.

  I dozed, I think. Well, there was a pinch on my arm earlier and Dr. Arliss telling me he was giving me something to relax me.

  The wagon moved—clip clop down the streets for an indeterminable time, but then it stopped. A door opened and other arms reached for me.

  “That’s right, love, all out!”

  They were taking me into a building of some sort. “What is this place?”

  I’m not sure if I asked that question, if I was able to. But if I was, I know I didn’t receive an answer.

  Someone had me under the arm, one of the men from the wagon. “It’s alright.”

  Why was everyone telling me it was alright when it was the worst time of my life?

  We stepped inside a vestibule. A woman looked up from a high desk, not at me but at the man who was still holding my arms. “Name?”

  He took out a piece of paper, glanced at it and said, “Rose Baines 22 Blenheim Crescent, Notting Hill.”

  “Oh! A lady are we, dear?” I start to answer but her words drowned me out. “Right, put her in with the rest of them.”

  This was when I started to feel fearful. The rest of them? That didn’t sound nice. I needed help—had I been arrested? They didn’t think I did it, did they?

  I started to struggle, which was the worst thing I could have done.

  “Now stop that at once!”

  I cried out. “I am innocent please help me!”

  They dragged me away then. And as they did, I got a whiff of ether and disinfectant.

  Was I in a hospital? Maybe that was good. It was better than being in a prison!

  But why, if it wasn’t a prison, did I see a massive gate just ahead, in the very direction we were heading for?

  And then, a surly face, along with clanging keys and the sound of locks being opened, completed the scene.

  “In here.”

  It was a smallish room, more like a cage than a room—far too small for all of the sad humanity that populated it. A sea of the most miserable and pathetic faces greeted me. Some held their sides and rocked back and forth, others slept or cried
. One or two were crouched against the scummy walls, muttering to themselves.

  The realization hit me. They thought me insane!

  I cried out but no one came. “Please, someone!”

  The pathetic creatures I found myself with began to repeat my cries. They didn’t do it to mock me I’m certain, but it was horrible anyway.

  At last I was quiet. I couldn’t stand their shrieking and if that wasn’t bad enough, some of them were filthy and smelled of the street and the gutter.

  I was there for a long time I think, crying quietly and dozing, too. An attendant came around a few times, mostly to look in at us and saunter away, immune to our protestations or questions, mine included.

  I did finally sleep deeply. I don’t know for how long; all I know is that there was the unmistakable sound of jangling keys and the realization that the door had been opened.

  I picked my head up off of the filthy bench to see who had come in. It was a gentleman, that was obvious. He looked over each of us. A burly man accompanied him. They kept whispering to one another.

  When he got to me, he raised the torch into my face. I put my arm up for the light was blinding.

  “No dear,” he said gently, moving my arm down. “I just want to see your face.”

  I almost asked him why. I think now, looking back on it, I should have—things might have been different if I had.

  As he was holding the torch aloft, I could just make out his even features. His expression was kindly. “I am Dr. Bannion and I’d like to talk to you.”

  *

  I was unwell, confused in my mind, yet there are moments I remember well and this was one of them.

  Before he led me out he spoke to the attendant. I am sure that was to ascertain whether she thought I’d be violent. Just to be on the safe side, she went along, her arms at her side but ready to go into action at any time.

  Most of these attendants were big-boned and tall, and could have easily been taken for men.

  “In here, please.”

  It was a small room with a bench and some cabinets. It was filled with medicine bottles and books and things.

  I sat on a bench alongside the attendant with the doctor facing us.

  He began at once. “Now then! Would you prefer to be called by your surname or your Christian name?”

  How singularly unimportant that was in the scheme of things. But I didn’t realize it then, I am certain I said I preferred to be called Rose.

  He looked pleased when I spoke. “Well now, do you feel able to answer some questions, Rose?”

  I quite liked his manner, as ill as I was—and I was very ill and confused a great deal of the time. But, I did like him because he sounded kind and caring. And because he did, I wished to answer all his queries. “I shall try.”

  “Yes, that is all one can ever expect is to try.”

  I noticed then that he nodded toward the attendant to take that as a sign for her departure. I was delighted.

  “What can you tell me, Rose? You were away for the weekend, weren’t you?”

  “Yes I was.” I hadn’t remembered that until he reminded me. “I was at my aunt’s.”

  He was speaking to me and jotting notes down, too. I think I expected that.

  “Your aunt is ill.”

  “Yes, she is dying.” Suddenly, I remembered my mother telling me to go and I got choked up and found it impossible to go on. “Please, sir.”

  He reached over and touched my arm gently as a friend would. I found the gesture reassuring and I smiled. “It is so hard.”

  That, as they say, was the last straw for suddenly I collapsed in a paroxysm of tears and sobs. I was quite wild and unmanageable.

  The attendant reappeared.

  “Rose, I am giving you something. It will help to relax you.”

  Everything became a pleasant blur but I did hear Dr. Bannion’s voice say, “I shall remove her to Marsh where she can get the best care.”

  *

  He told me Marsh was a place where I could rest, where he’d help me get better. “You’ll see, Rose. It’s in the country in a lovely location. I run it and I am certain you will benefit greatly.”

  I had questions I wished to ask him but since I didn’t feel as though he wished me to ask him anything, I didn’t.

  I wonder still what he would have said if I had.

  “We shall take the train. Huddersfield is a long way from London.”

  “In Yorkshire, sir?”

  “Yes, the West Riding and it’s quite beautiful there.”

  I remember bits and pieces of this day. I remember smelling the rain and him helping me into the carriage.

  “Kings Cross, please!”

  The cab jerked forward to oblige.

  “It won’t be long now.”

  I had so many questions but not the sense or ability to ask them, for he had given me another injection before we left.

  “Yes that’s right, you close your eyes.”

  In and out, sleeping one minute and awake the next.

  The cab stopped and we were there—Kings Cross.

  He had already explained that we would have to change trains a few times. “Don’t worry, I shall take care of everything.”

  How comforting that was to hear. I began to trust him and to rely on him then.

  As for the trip itself, I can only recall it as a muddle of steam and groaning metal, of sharp whistles too, so loud I covered my ears.

  “That’s alright, Rose.”

  The calming voice, again. I smiled for I was comforted.

  I slept most of the time, barely noticing being guided gently from one train to another, with his voice always soothing me: “Yes, just this way now. There you may sit down now, Rose.”

  And then later as if I was a sleepwalker waking from a dream, I heard him say, “You really have slept most of the way, we should be arriving fairly soon.”

  He looked pleased and because he did I felt pleased, too. “Truly, I never meant to sleep so much.”

  The train screeched to a stop and we disembarked like two weary travelers nearing the end of an expedition. And perhaps it was, as it was a quest to get better… or so I thought.

  I was not prepared for the tumult. I cringed at the hustle and bustle of so many people rushing this way and that.

  But he calmly ushered me along. “Just this way, Rose, you’re doing splendidly.”

  I was proud and felt my spirits soar.

  A line of cabs and a cab man called out. “Any place. Fair rates!”

  “Marsh, please.”

  A startled look from said cabbie. “Marsh, sir? The town or--!”

  “The asylum, if you please.”

  “Rightie oh, sir!”

  Asylum? A madhouse? Why hadn’t I asked, why hadn’t I known? But what difference could it have possibly made?

  “There it is, Rose.” he nodded, looking at me encouragingly.

  I looked out to see a forbidding place with granite walls and towering gates, implacable barriers to be reckoned with and the words strung across the archway:

  MARSH LUNATIC ASYLUM.

  I had come home, at least for now.

  Chapter 2

  “It is a self-sustaining place, Rose, more like a village than a—” The word hung on his lips, ominously.

  Madhouse.

  He cleared his throat noisily and went on to explain with great pride how the institution was a veritable village of workshops and kitchens, stables and bakery. “There is even a small farm where we grow our own food.”

  I nearly burst out laughing when he said that. I think I thought then that it was a sure sign of madness. I know now that it was proof of my being well.

  We arrived in a heavy downpour. I began to grow increasingly distraught. Dr. Bannion noticed. “Don’t worry, you need rest, that’s all it is.”

  If my first impressions were less than favorable, the ones that followed were consistent with that—the place looked frightening, grim and forbidding. I hoped I wouldn
’t stay long. I was, in short, prepared to lie if I had to in order to get out—whatever the cost to me.

  We stepped into a vestibule and then into the building itself. There was no high desk here as there was in Bedlam.

  Ah! Do forgive me, I am sorry! I didn’t tell you it was Bedlam, did I? Yes, the hospital I had just left was Bethlehem, infamously known as Bedlam.

  If I found it horrible, and I did, I now shuddered to think what it must have been like in its worst days.

  “Rose, as it is late, I am sure you’ll want to go to bed. You may have a wash if you like.”

  He led me over to a door and told me to go inside and wait, which I did. “Inmates are bathed here to soothe their nerves. It’ll do for you now.”

  A severe woman, I took her to be an attendant, looked up in a most hostile manner.

  “I am to have a bath please.” I tried to sound as pleasant as I could but she clucked her tongue and hurried outside as if to check. When she returned she had two buckets of water with her which she dumped into a metal tub. She then sat down, facing me. “Hot water from the kitchen, you were lucky.”

  She wasn’t going to stand there, was she? When I realized she had no intention of leaving, I began to remove my clothes. I hesitated a moment before stepping into the bath whereupon she manhandled me. “Go on! I have other things to do, I ain’t your maid you know!”

  The water was hot and I nearly cried out. Thankfully, I didn’t. It seemed that my sense of self-preservation had surfaced to help me to cope.

  I began to wash myself as best I could but she jumped to her feet, grabbed a bar of soap, and began pushing me this way and that. “Best get this filth off of you!”

  “It stings!” I cried, for this time I could not help myself.

  She shook her head. “You’ll be washed and washed quickly. Just you behave.”

  I began to cry for I could not help myself, though I tried not to be noisy about it.

  And then, mercifully, it was over and she hurried away to get something. When she came back, she had a coarse looking gray colored shift draped over her arm. “Put this on.”

  My skin felt raw and the shift was rough and irritated my skin yet, I neither cried out nor said one word. I am, if nothing else, a fast learner.

  After I was dressed I was told to sit. My nerves were pretty bad. Don’t be misled by the evenness of my dialogue. For you to appreciate the state I was in I think is impossible. Suffice it to say my moods were not static but ever changing, going from bad to worse.