The Doll Story MEGAPACK ®. Frances Hodgson Burnett
around the room no matter where you go. There was also a small cross-shaped burn in the dress, which I don’t suppose you noticed. At first, I thought it might have been a reaction of the silver from the crucifix oxidizing onto the fabric of the dress. Had we been able to analyze this under a microscope, we would have been able to find out for sure. To my eye, believe it or not, it looked more like a burn mark. Anyway, it’s someone else’s now. Although I don’t know why it should have fetched so much.”
“That’s exactly what I’m trying to find out. Any information you can provide would be kept in the strictest confidence, of course.”
“Hmm. It is against all regulations and company policy.”
“Please, Malcolm. You help me out with this one, and I’ll see that your company gets a bigger share of the proceeds from our next house clearance.”
There came a resigned sigh from the other side of the phone. “Very well, Mr. Briggs. Bear with me for a minute or two while I get the necessary documentation.”
Briggs removed a pen from a drawer and waited.
After a few minutes break, the phone was picked up again. “Here we are. All right, Mr. Briggs, here are the details you seek. The buyer was a Mr. Lagur Thorko.” He spelled the name out to the other. “A Hungarian collector of antiquities. The address given is number one hundred and nineteen Warwick Close, here in the city. No phone number.”
Briggs jotted down the details. “I appreciate your assistance, Malcolm.”
“Yes, well, let’s not make a habit of prying into private buyers’ details, shall we? Oh, by the way, just on the off chance you’re going out to see him, you might want to swing round to the auction hall first.”
“Why’s that?” asked Briggs.
“Well it would appear that in his haste to get away with his new acquisition, he forgot to take the little silver crucifix with him. If you were to deliver it, it would save me from having to do so.”
* * * *
It was raining heavily and the sky was dark as Briggs turned his car into Warwick Close. The tall houses on either side appeared abandoned, and some of them showed signs of great decrepitude, with missing slates and broken or boarded-up windows featuring predominantly. No lights could be seen in any of the windows, and he had seen no other cars or pedestrians for about the past five minutes, leading him to the belief that this part of the city was shunned for some reason or another. Why anyone who could afford to pay five hundred pounds for a ghastly-looking antique doll would desire to take up residence in such a rundown district was beyond him. It didn’t seem right at all.
He strained his eyes in order to discern the house numbers that were barely visible on his right-hand side. The houses seemed to increase in their level of general dilapidation the further he went. He had lived in the city all of his life, and had fortunately never been aware of this part before. It would come as no surprise to find that no one lived here anymore.
Passing a small and obviously long-forgotten and clearly neglected cemetery on his left, its outer boundary delineated by a length of spiked iron railing, he soon drew up outside number one hundred and nineteen. From the car window he peered up at the rambling house. Straining his eyes, he could make out what appeared to be flickering candlelight in one of the upstairs rooms.
He opened the door of his car and stepped out. He shivered, plucking at the lapels of his raincoat, feeling the rain soaking through the thin cloth. Completely isolated, standing in a part of the city that was completely foreign to him, he felt very insecure and frightened, mentally debating with himself whether or not he had made a wise judgment in venturing out here alone. Would it not have been better had he come accompanied by either Hargreaves or Jones, or perhaps even Malcolm Reid, the auctioneer, for that matter?
Desperately, he tried to pull himself together. What was the damn matter with him anyway? He had a valid reason to be there—to return some of the buyer’s property, and perhaps he could find an explanation for the unease he had felt since he had first set eyes on the doll. Instinctively, the fingers of his right hand clenched around the small silver crucifix in his pocket.
He reached the tall iron gates of the house. For a long moment he stood hesitant, swaying against the growing wind, peering at the gloomy structure with its turreted towers, probing at the darkening sky. It would be easy, he thought, for a house such as this to earn a reputation for being haunted. All it would take would be for a person to see this place as he now saw it, with the witch’s moon now climbing up behind the rearing outer walls, and that strange, eerie light coming from the upper window.
He began to hope that the owner would not be in; that being the case, he would rapidly get back into his car and drive home, along sanely-lit streets inhabited by normal, living people. Yet, an unsettling notion in his brain told him there was someone in, and that that someone was even now spying on him from a darkened window, watching his every move, deliberating on the purpose of his visit.
Mustering up his courage, Briggs pushed open the gates and walked up the short drive to the front door. He reached out a hand to knock, then drew it back sharply as it swung open on noiseless hinges, revealing the yawning blackness of the entrance. His heart contracted rapidly for a moment, and he could hear the blood pounding in his ears. Then he sucked in a deep breath, fingered the little crucifix in his pocket for assurance, and stepped through into the interior of the house. Now that he was inside, he saw that there was, indeed, a faint glow coming from the top of the stairs directly in front of him. The house smelled of age-old dust, rising damp, and neglect, smells which, due to his profession, he was quite acquainted with.
On the landing above, a shadowy figure appeared, silhouetted against the candlelight, the eldritch glow at his back like an unholy halo about him.
“Good evening.”
Briggs felt his heart leap. For a moment it felt as though his throat had dried up completely and that he had lost the power of speech. He swayed on his feet, and the feeling that the man’s voice held a slightly hypnotic quality dulled his mind for a moment, blanking out any other thoughts. It had sounded cold yet mellow.
The tall figure began to descend the stairs, his cast shadow unnaturally long and menacing.
With a strong conscious effort, Briggs shook his head free of the strange spell the other had on him. “Mr. Thorko, I—I’d like to introduce myself. My name is Peter Briggs, and I’ve—”
“You’ve come to return something of mine? I knew you would.” Thorko was nearly at the bottom of the stairs now, and in the shadowy light from above, his features looked even more cadaverous than they had when Briggs had first seen him. He was dressed in a relatively well-tailored dark suit that, combined with his macabre demeanor and appearance, did little to calm Briggs’ nerves. The man could have just stepped from a coffin or a funeral parlor.
I knew you would, Briggs didn’t like the sound of that. Nervously, he gently chewed his lower lip. He was trembling slightly. Somehow, he found the strength of will to reply: “Yes, that’s right.” His fingers tightened around the crucifix in his pocket. Although he had never been a believer in the existence of vampires, he was half-expecting the man before him with the central European accent to suddenly sprout fangs and leap at him or else turn into a bat. But that’s preposterous, he told himself fiercely, trying to shake away the frightening thoughts. He removed the crucifix on its little chain from his pocket and held it out on his upturned palm.
Although he had expected the other to suddenly recoil from the sight of it, he was pleasantly surprised to note just a flicker of indifference in the other’s eyes.
“To tell you the truth, Mr. Briggs, I did not forget it. I merely chose not to take it.” Something diabolical and malignant glinted in the other’s dark eyes. “You see, I have no need of it. Now that I have her, such trinkets are no longer necessary. You may dispose of it as you see fit.”
Her? Was he referring to the doll? Briggs stared at him uncertainly. He was about to say something when suddenly the door behind him swung shut.
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