Think, you dolt! Think!

PEACE AND GOODWILL TO ALL MEN!
The 11th Hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month
THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE
CENTRAL GERMAN CONFEDERATION
AND THE SIGNING OF
THE TRADE ALLIANCE
QUEEN VICTORIA MEMORIAL, GREEN PARK, LONDON
His Majesty King George V; HRH Prince Albert;
Prime Minister Disraeli and His Majesty’s Government;
Maximilian II of Bavaria; Emperor Franz Joseph I;
The Göttingen Seven; Count Franz Anton von Kolowrat-Liebsteinsky.
A GOLDEN DAWN FOR EUROPE!
UNITY AND PROSPERITY!
Having enjoyed an extravagant dinner, Burton and his companions were given a tour of New Wardour Castle. The mansion was enormous, and had many high painted ceilings and ornate fireplaces. The ballroom, on the first floor, was perhaps eight times bigger than the one in the Orpheus, with Roman columns rising to a vaulted ceiling from which three elaborate chandeliers hung. A decorative balustrade circled the chamber, from which spectators could look down upon the dancing couples.
The party socialised until near midnight, then the houseguests retired to their rooms; however, shortly before they did so, Burton found a moment to converse alone with Sister Raghavendra.
“Why such concern?” he asked. “Isabel appears in fine fettle.”
“You must tell her to rest,” she replied. “She’s so thrown herself into arranging the party that she’s become overwrought and exhausted. She’s hiding it well, I’ll admit, but I can sense it.”
“I know to trust your judgement, Sadhvi. Thank you. I’ll ensure she has a leisurely day tomorrow.”
When Burton entered his bedchamber, he saw that Bram Stoker had laid out his pyjamas and provided a fresh basin of water along with laundered towels. The lad was now snoring in the next room.
The explorer washed, undressed, and got into bed. He performed a Sufi meditation—one that always sent him quickly into the depths of sleep—and he dreamt.
You’re awake.
No, I’m not.
You are. Get out of bed. Open the curtains.
He sat up and swung his feet to the floor, stood, and walked over to the window.
Look outside.
He took hold of the thick material, drew it to either side, stepped closer to the glass, and peered out. A half-moon was shining behind ragged, fast-moving clouds. Stars flickered, vanished, and reappeared. The landscape crawled with shadows and silver light. There was a path. It cut across a neatly trimmed lawn, ran alongside flower beds, and meandered through the inky darkness beneath breeze-blown trees.
He saw a ghost.
The window’s glass was old and uneven. It distorted the vista. When he moved his head—which he did now—everything outside undulated and jumped. The wraith was there, then not there, then there again. It vanished into shadow and was then momentarily made vivid by moonlight. He struggled for a clear view of it.
A woman?
Yes. Flitting along the path, in a white gown that rippled and flapped around her.
She was moving away from the house. He watched as she darted across a wide wooden bridge spanning a stream then plunged into the gloom at the edge of a thickly forested area.
This is a dream.
If that is true, wake up.
He opened his eyes. Watery daylight was leaking into the bedroom through a chink between the closed curtains. He turned onto his side and took his pocket watch from the bedside table. It was half-past seven. He sat up, stretched, and hissed as his ribs complained, then lay back with his hands behind his head.
He struggled to bring a half-formed thought to conception. It had been there since yesterday evening, nagging at the back of his mind. Something concealed yet…obvious. Damnation, what was it?
It evaded him. However, while wrestling to bring it forth, he instead remembered the dream. Frowning, he sat up again, looked at the window, and muttered, “The Norwood ghosts,” for it was obvious to him that the talk of the River Effra hauntings had invaded his sleep. He got out of bed, crossed the room, drew the curtains, and looked out. Under a grey, threatening sky, the landscape was exactly as he’d seen it under the half-moon.
He tried to recall whether he’d looked out of this window yesterday. He didn’t think he had. How, then, could he have dreamt the view?
A raven flew into the glass with a loud bang. The window cracked and Burton leaped back with a yelp of surprise. The bird dropped from sight.
He put a hand to his chest. His heart was hammering. He fought to calm himself.
The connecting door opened and Bram stepped in.
“Mornin’ to ye, Cap’n. Did ye drop somethin’?”
“Good morning, lad. No—a bird hit the windowpane. Startled me. Did you sleep well?”
“Aye, the sleep o’ the dead. Will I be a-layin’ out your mornin’ suit?”
“Yes please, then go downstairs and find yourself something to eat.”
An hour later, the explorer joined the Arundell family and their guests around a long dining table. A host of quietly ticking clockwork footmen served breakfast. Isabel and Doctor Bird were absent.
“She’s sleeping in,” Blanche said, in response to Burton’s enquiry. “She had a restless night. Doctor Bird is checking on her, just as a precaution. Ah, here he is.”
“She’ll be fine,” Bird announced, entering the room. He pulled out a chair and sat with them. “But she’s very fatigued. Mrs. Arundell, I ordered her to rest today, but she’s somewhat—um—um—”
“Obstinate,” Eliza Arundell supplied. “Always has been. I’ll go up after breakfast. If she won’t listen to her doctor, perhaps she’ll listen to her mother.”
After they’d eaten, Monckton Milnes and Eliphas Levi took to the library to peruse the collection, while the Arundells, Birds, and Beetons retired to the music room. Burton decided on a stroll in the grounds and was joined by Swinburne. Nettles, the butler, handed them each an umbrella as they stepped out. It was raining lightly but steadily.
“You are marrying into money, Richard,” the poet observed, looking back at the manor as they crossed its lawn, “and plenty of it.”
“The wealth is with Isabel’s Great-Uncle Gerard, Algy. Her parents are sufficiently well off but by no means rich, and the fact that their daughter is marrying a heathen means none of their pile will be coming our way. I have, I’ll freely confess, felt rather guilty about that, but Isabel is adamant she wants only what I can offer.”
“A dreadful headache?” Swinburne quipped.
“A life—which she regards as exotic and exciting—in Damascus.”
Even as he said it, Burton felt a sudden reluctance. Bismillah! Had he become so entwined in this Abdu El Yezdi affair that the consulship had lost its allure? How could he break that news to his fiancée?
He pointed his swordstick at the path ahead of them—the one that led over the wooden bridge—and said, “Let’s follow that.”
They strode along the trail, its gravel crunching beneath their boots, the rain sizzling on their brollies, until they came to the stream.
Swinburne gazed up at the treetops. “My hat! What a ruckus those ravens are making.”
Burton gave a distracted sound of agreement. He stopped and squatted, examining a patch of mud between the gravel and the wooden boards of the bridge.
“What have you found?” Swinburne asked.
“A partial print, made by a woman’s bare foot. We’re lucky we caught it. The rain will have it washed away soon enough.”
“That’s rather incongruous—a barefooted woman out in this weather.”
“She was here last night, Algy. I saw her from my bedroom window. I thought I was dreaming a ghost. Apparently not. Hallo! There’s Tom Honesty.” Burton raised his stick and called to the groundsman, who’d just come into view ahead of them. He was dressed in waterproofs, pushing a wheelbarrow filled with cut logs, which he lowered as the explorer and his companion crossed the bridge and approached him.