The first sense to return for Jonathan Harker was his sense of smell, and he almost wished it hadn't. His reawakening nostrils sucked in a detestable mixture of mildew, stale rodent droppings and a pungent rusting smell. That odor stew jabbed into his cloudy brain and caused his eyes to sputter open, his heavy eyelids fluttering reluctantly as they did so. While his unhappy nostrils were awash in sensation, his peering eyes saw little more than gloom and shadow.
Slowly, his blinking eyes focused, taking advantage of what little light entered the room. The majority of the weak light came from his left, but when he turned his head to find its source, his neck screamed, and a thousand pinpoints of white hot fire howled from the base of his skull to the middle of his back. Still, he forced his head to continue its rotation, his mind needing to see something in this foul smelling room.
The light came from a small window, at most two feet high by a foot across. This lone window sat sad and solitary about twenty-five feet above the reeking floor. The wall it inhabited was a good fifty or sixty feet in length and possibly equally as high. Clearly, the dim light entering that minuscule window was moonlight. It crept through the window as if, for some reason, afraid to pass through it into the room beyond.
Jonathan let out a teeth-gritting moan as he tried to sit up. Every muscle in his body seemed to ache, every bone seemed bruised to its marrow. Groaning, he managed to get himself up on one elbow, waiting a few seconds for the pain to subside before trying to move further. Propped shakily on that elbow, he realized that his vision was becoming accustomed to the darkness, and he could make out a few objects, though just barely. Several large casks, possibly wine casks or the like, lined the wall opposite the anemic little window. Beyond them, and slightly toward the center of the room, a huge stone archway joined two massive pillars, each of those in turn joined by smaller archways to the walls of the room. For all intents and purposes, it appeared that Jonathan was lying on the floor of an ancient stone cellar lined with wine casks.
The ringing in his ears slowly ceased its constant droning, to be replaced by more awful sounds. In the distance, somewhere beyond those barely visible archways, came the sounds of life, though apparently not pleasant life. The chittering and squealing of vermin confirmed the odor of droppings, and the straining moonlight shone brightly in tiny red eyes that darted about in the blackness beyond the archways.
Jonathan strained to rise, but about halfway to a sitting position blood surged and pounded in his head, an aching throb that made him nearly black out, and he slumped back down on his back, staring up at the ceiling he couldn't see. And as he lay there, trying weakly to recover, the memories flooded back.
His first memory was of strong fingers around his throat, lifting him in the air as if he weighed less than a thin sheet of parchment. The second memory was of his cut finger, and the thirsty animal that hungrily sucked the dribbling blood from it. Then the floodgates opened. Memory after memory raced into his reeling brain. The red, boiling eyes...the long fingernails that scratched his throat as the fingers squeezed...the foul metallic breath... the sharp pain in his neck as fangs sunk deep... being tossed down into this dungeon-like cellar as if he were but a child's doll... landing in pain, and sinking into oblivion.
Dracula...the lord of this house, the inhuman creature who'd lured him here for the purpose of purchasing a new home in England.... in actuality a new den of death from which to reach out and secure an entirely new, unlimited source of victims. And when the deal was done, Jonathan was but another meal for the Lord of the Undead, and his partially drained husk was discarded as impersonally as another man might empty the trash. And that's how he came to find himself in this dank, foul smelling cellar, with skulking rats for company.
But it wasn't the rats that frightened him. For now there came sounds of larger life, human life....or, rather, inhuman life. Centuries worth of dust began to swirl on the floor around him as a cold breeze blew at him from beyond the archways. Figures moved in the darkness, and three sets of shining red eyes hovered several feet above the smaller eyes of the skittering vermin below, the mice and rats fleeing whatever was now approaching.
Under that central archway, three figures slowly coalesced and solidified around those glowing eyes. First, a wispy white figure appeared, then two others on either side of it. Three women - or what had once been women - glided into view, heads bowed slightly, but eyes fixed intently on Jonathan. Their hands were clasped together in front of them, as if each was praying to their Lord and Master. They didn't seem to be walking, but rather floating toward Jonathan, and as they glided ever nearer, evil grins formed on their blood red lips, lips made all the more starkly crimson by the pale flesh of the faces surrounding them...and because of the flowing white wedding dresses billowing softly about each of them.
A hiss came from the creature in the center. "At last, he awakens," it said, the grin barely able to conceal the lusting tongue.
"Yesssss...," the figure to the left concurred, "and hear how his blood pulses. Apparently, our Lord and Master has treated us to his leavings."
The form on the right added, "Are you both as famished as I? Leavings or not, I crave the taste of blood, the yielding of soft flesh. I am hungry."
"I'm sure we are easily as hungry as you are," center replied, but then looked Jonathan up and down and added, "but I hunger for much more than blood, my sisters."
Their laughter was unholy, and not unlike the squealing of the rats. The creature on the right laughed so hard she had to put a red-clawed hand up to her mouth, but she squealed and snorted loudly nonetheless. All three continued their ghostly advance on the weakened and battered Mr. Harker.
When they'd come to within a few yards of Jonathan, their eerie gliding stopped. They glared down at him, each inspecting him as if he were a side of beef to be prepared for the cooking pot. Despite his still being fully clothed, they eyed him up and down, one devouring his legs with her evil eyes, another licking her lips as she ogled his neck and shoulders, the third looking squarely between his legs. It was this last that made Jonathan most uneasy.
The undead who'd been hungrily eyeing his neck and shoulders sucked in a huge lungful of air and hissed out words that were unnaturally stretched out and elongated as if she were saying them in her sleep.