It was not the sound of the voice which aroused her from that strange slumber. It is said that those who sleep in that eccentric manner, are insensible to sounds, but that the lightest touch will arouse them in an instant; and so it was in this case, for Sir Francis Varney, as he spoke, laid upon the hand of Flora two of his cold, corpse-like looking fingers. A shriek burst from her lips, and although the confusion of her memory and conceptions was immense, yet she was awake, and the somnambulistic trance had left her.
"Help, help!" she cried. "Gracious Heavens! Where am I?"
Varney spoke not, but he spread out his long, thin arms in such a manner that he seemed almost to encircle her, while he touched her not, so that escape became a matter of impossibility, and to attempt to do so, must have been to have thrown herself into his hideous embrace.
She could obtain but a single view of the face and figure of him who opposed her progress, but, slight as that view was, it more than sufficed. The very extremity of fear came across her, and she sat like one paralysed; the only evidence of existence she gave consisting in the words,-"The vampyre--the vampyre!"
"Yes," said Varney, "the vampyre. You know me, Flora Bannerworth--Varney, the vampyre; your midnight guest at that feast of blood. I am the vampyre. Look upon me well; shrink not from my gaze. You will do well not to shun me, but to speak to me in such a shape that I may learn to love you."
Chapter# / Title
©2009 Public Domain
More Books: Contemporary Romance Novels
| Vampire Romance Novels
| Historical Romance Novels
| Regency Romance Novels
Romantic Suspense Novels
| Inspirational Romance Novels
| Fantasy and Paranormal Romance Novels
| Western Romance Novels
Other Romance Novels
| Biographies & Memoirs Books
| Mystery & Suspense Books
| Poetry Books
| SciFi & Horror
| Other Fiction
| Other Non-Fiction
© 2011 PublicBookshelf Corporation | How to Publish | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | About Us | Publish | Login | Register
