The House of The Vampire by George Sylvester Viereck Chapter 28 Page 7

“I will call you up. We moderns have an advantage over the ancients in this respect: the twentieth-century Pyramus can speak to Thisbe even if innumerable walls sever his body from hers.”

“A quaint conceit! But let us hope that our love-story will end less tragically,” she said, tenderly caressing his hair. “Oh, we shall be happy, you and I,” she added, after a while. “The iron finger of fate that lay so heavily on our lives is now withdrawn. Almost withdrawn. Yes, almost. Only almost.”

And then a sudden fear overcame her.

“No,” she cried, “do not go, do not go! Stay with me; stay here. I feel so frightened. I don’t know what comes over me. I am afraid — afraid for you.”