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Harrow: Four Novels Box Set
Harrow: Four Novels Box Set Read online
Table of Contents
Nightmare House
NIGHTMARE HOUSE
Prologue
PART ONE
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
PART TWO
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Epilogue
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CONTACT DOUGLAS CLEGG
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About the Author
Mischief
Mischief
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Author Note
PART ONE
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
PART TWO
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
PART THREE
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Epilogue
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Publisher Information
About the Author
The Infinite
The Infinite
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PART ONE
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
PART TWO
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
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Publication Information
About the Author
The Abandoned
The Abandoned
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Author's Note
PROLOGUE
PART ONE
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
PART TWO
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
PART THREE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
PART FOUR
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
EPILOGUE
AFTERWORD
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Publisher Information
About the Author
NIGHTMARE HOUSE
Book One of the Harrow Series
Douglas Clegg
ALKEMARA PRESS
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Dear Reader,
This is Book One of the Harrow Haunting series, dealing with a mysterious, haunted mansion in the Hudson Valley. The other novels in this series are Mischief, The Infinite, and The Abandoned. They may be read in any order. The Necromancer and Isis are character prequels to Harrow itself, about the two founders of this bad place.
Welcome to Harrow – just don’t forget your key to the front door.
Best,
Douglas Clegg
But who hath seen her wave her hand?
Or at the casement seen her stand?
Or is she known in all the land,
The Lady of Shalott?
—Alfred, Lord Tennyson, The Lady of Shalott
Prologue
Stet Fortuna Domus.
It was the carving above the keystone of the house: May the House’s Fortune Stand.
The old man stole that phrase from another Harrow, but it fit this place.
At least it fit his wishes for his Harrow.
A telling moment: when I was six years old and on one of my infrequent but wonderful stays at my grandfather’s estate, he told me that there were three things to watch for in the world.
While I could not—ten minutes later—remember a single one, what I remember now is the warmth of his hand, the musty smell of the ill-fitting suit that must’ve lived most of the year within a mothballed closet, and the way he could not stop looking at me as if I were the most important child in the world even with my lies and games and pouts and stolen gingerbread men from the kitchen. It was the only time I felt this in my childhood.
I never forgot that moment.
Even now, I can’t judge him beyond knowing that my grandfather loved me and wanted all of this for me.
It was the house—and what it held.
I would never call a work of architecture evil; nor would I suggest that a house could be anything but a benign presence. It is always the human element that corrodes the stones and the wood and the brick and the foundation. It is the human heart that bends the floors and burns the rooms and imbues the structure with the spirit of error and false remembrance.
Imagine this house, this estate, this property: the acreage, the river, the trees, the gardens, the entire world captured within a home.
It sits on a slope, surrounded by woods. Beyond the house, a village, and beyond the hills and woods and village, the Hudson River. It was built over many years, unfinished in some respects even after my grandfather’s death. All anyone really knew of the property was what they’d heard of the rumors and the gossip and the newspaper accounts now and then of an eccentric collector living up the Hudson.
Some believed that a great treasure was buried within its walls; that screams came from Harrow more than once; that a madman built it for his own tomb; that no one willingly remained overnight in the house; that a child could still be heard keening from within on damp October nights.
The year was 1926 when I arrived at Harrow and claimed my birthright.
My name is Esteban. My father was from solid New England stock that could trace its line right back to Cornwall, and what was not English was French, from my grandmother’s side. My mother, whose maiden name was Juliet Chambers, was from a similar background.
The name Esteban came from a promise my mother made to someone at my birth—a midwife, who rushed to her side after a carriage overturned and nearly killed her.
The midwife delivered the baby—which was, of course, me—and asked my mother to name the child Esteban, for a saint, which was enough of an aristocratic sounding name that my father begrudgingly allowed it.
I’d heard this story since my memory began.
My mother told me that, without this mysterious woman, I would never have burst into the world with all my limbs attached, nor would she have lived beyond my first cry.
Esteban sounded romantic to her ears and seemed a very suitable and exotic name for someone with the dark hair and eyes that neither parent possessed.
My mother often told me that she wanted to name me Zebediah, and given that as an alternative, I was more than happy to be known as Esteban.
My father apparently wanted to Anglicize the name to Steven, but fate intervened: other children could not pronounce “Esteban,” so, since the age of four or so, I’d been briefly known simply as Easton; I mispronounced the name with my childhood lisp as “Ethan,” and when my father got hold of that, he ran as far as he could with it. It was to become official. It was New England; it was Old England; it was acceptable to him, although my mother was noticeably irked, and would occasionally, right up until her death, call me Esteban.
Thus, by third grade I finally had what was considered a normal name among my parents’ set, and one that didn’t raise the specter of some family scandal purely by its foreignness to Bostonians.
But Esteban has been my secret, true name, so you must know it and remember it.
Ethan I became.
My young life was uneventful save for my naming.
My mother—since the accident that precipitated my birth—claimed a weak heart. Her many medications were famous among us: she could not leave her bed without a spoon of some remedy; she could not kiss my father good morning without some wee dram of medical potion to get her heart to its normal capacity; and she often spent months at spas in Saratoga and across the sea—leaving me with a nanny and my f
ather, neither of whom I particularly liked.
Once, I saw my mother laugh and nearly run across the rocky shoreline. I felt that I must have dreamed this, for I never saw this burst of energy again.
But mostly I remember her remaining in the shuttered room of Balmoral, the house along the Cape that my father inherited after his mother died. I knew little of the world other than of Boston and Cape Cod and the Hudson Valley and all the intermediate destinations, until I took a trip to New York City when I was nineteen; then, I wanted to be in no other place in the world than that exciting citadel to ambition, power, and promise. Boston began to seem small and provincial to me.
After my mother died, my father disinherited me over a minor skirmish regarding what he felt I should be doing with my life. He believed I should be playing politics and amassing a fortune by taking advantage of “deals” and “opportunities” and “the way the world works for men” and such.
I felt I should be pursuing my dreams and ambitions. I went to live in New York, and my life as an adult began.
But I only knew Harrow from brief spurts of summer vacations or spring weekends. It was the house my grandfather owned and lived in along the Hudson River.
I remembered it in flashes and in shadows of thought, of a few moments as a child when my father and I traveled there on short and—as far as my father was concerned—unpleasant visits.
I remember my grandfather intensely.
I remember wanting to be there in my dreams.
To me, it seemed a magical place, a palace of wonder and confusion.
To me, Harrow was Mystery.
PART ONE
THE INHERITOR
“There is a real world, but it is beyond this glamour and this vision...You may think this all strange nonsense; it may be strange, but it is true, and the ancients knew what lifting the veil means...”
—Arthur Machen, The Great God Pan
Chapter One
1
My dreams are there, now. You can go in any room, any secret chamber, and you will find them—shadows of dreams, like smoke from a fire that has only just died.
They are no longer with me—I do not dream. I live now in stark reality.
In light.
In a harsh sun.
Harrow took my dreams away.
You know the place; you read of it in the papers, in the pulps, the little legends that have grown there. They are calling it “Nightmare House” now, in the papers, but then, it was just Harrow.
Once, one can suppose, there was some innocence here, on this land, but my research has shown that the earth from which the stones were taken was bloody ground, that not a window—not a piece of glass—was added without some knowledge of the glass’s history, of the wood and stone’s prior existence as tree, as cave, as lair.
And the abbey.
My grandfather liked that kind of touch. Smuggling artifacts and entire structures from the Old World to the New.
He liked owning ancient things.
Harrow was ancient.
Harrow existed, for all I knew, before the world had been created.
2
And the world was still young to me, then.
I was born to the century’s end—1897, to be precise; I was born to the modern age.
Soon, men could fly, could live dozens of stories above the earth, and could speak to each other through a tube or wire. By the time I was ten, I’d already seen automobiles begin to replace carriages; while still a teenager, I went to war in Europe and returned having seen only the slightest bit of action. I owed my grandfather thanks for that; he arranged that I should be an ambulance driver, what with all his connections in government. I suffered small strokes of ill health since battling pneumonia as a child (a weakling from the beginning, my father mentioned frequently), and I was not quite fit for battle.
I married by the time I was 23, worked at a publisher’s office in the city called Foxworth & Sons; although I was not a Foxworth, I had grown up with the “& Sons” and they rewarded me with the sheer glamorous drudgery of publishing what was then the hot item: puzzle books.
I made a good living. In fact, I thought I was happy until Madeleine, my wife, left me.
And then, Harrow changed my life.
My grandfather died in May of 1926, but it took me until October of that year to find my way to his house along the Hudson Valley, to a town called Watch Point.
Justin Gravesend, my grandfather, became first a wealthy businessman and then a wealthy antiquarian. This meant—as my father used to remind me—that he collected ancient things and did not much of anything for the rest of his entire life.
This was not entirely true, since in his youth, my grandfather commanded railroading and shipping interests, but once a fortune amassed, he happily sold off his businesses and retired to the country.
I hadn’t seen the house since childhood. Now that both my father and grandfather were gone—and I, the sole heir—it was my duty to make the day’s drive up from the city to go through things, to decide what to sell, what to keep, and to find just what my grandfather had been up to in the last years of his life—those years when my father and he refused to patch up their differences.
Now, they were both dead.
I stopped to turn the crank only half a dozen times in the course of the trip. The car I owned had been my father’s and was still of the old-fashioned variety of my childhood. We called them jalopies, then; my father paid a pretty penny for that Model T when I was a child, adding to it with whatever were the most modern accessories as the years went on, until it resembled a mess more than a Model T. The wipers my father added in 1920 worked well, and I was thankful for them. This, despite the fact that everyone on the road seemed to be driving the latest Chrysler, the McLaughlin Buick, the Overland, or the newer Ford touring car, so that my Tin Lizzie looked like a throwback to the age of dinosaurs.
Still, it did the job, with more bumps and a good deal more bother then another car. As long as I could get out of the city, I was happy. The city had become a place of broken dreams for me; and I needed to dream something new.
The day began full of good omens. This included the money I now held in my grubby little fingers—more wealth than some of my superiors at the publishing house might possess.
It felt good to be alive, and free, and on the road. The weather was magnificent and balmy for the last days in October, but the day’s mood changed by the time I found the Hudson Valley.
I drove muddy roads through villages and byways where people apparently had not yet discovered pavement or cobblestone, as a storm began.
The drive down the streets of Watch Point became nerve-racking as sheets of rain came down, my wipers barely drawing off one spray of water when another blinded my view, my jacket soaked, all a blur.
By the time I found the narrow road that led to the beginning of the wooded enclave surrounding Harrow, I was convinced I’d skid off the road into some rocky ledge at any moment.
A chill descended with the rain.
I should have taken a train up and then hired a car to Harrow, I thought, as the water soaked into my shirt and trousers, through the cracks and gaping wounds in the old jalopy.
You are a fool, I heard my father’s admonition in my head. You will always be a fool.
A queer sort of folk occupied Watch Point—even as a child I’d noticed their difference—their eyes, which seemed too far apart by a quarter inch or so, their complexions too olive and ash. In the rain, they milled about, a dozen or so of these creatures (all right, these people, but there were times, in these small villages, isolated by thirty miles and a hundred years from the rest of civilization, they seemed to have nothing in common with those of us from the city, as if they were once gray fish flung from the river below). They went about their business as if the storm were not battering at them, as if the flashes of lightning were nothing.
And then, the woods—a golden darkness within the storm—branches waving violently. Entire trees listed to one side or another with the sudden winds, their brilliantly colored leaves battering at the windshield.