The sun had nearly reached the meridian,
and his scorching rays fell full on the rocks, which
seemed themselves sensible of the heat. Thousands
of grasshoppers, hidden in the bushes, chirped with
a monotonous and dull note; the leaves of the myrtle
and olive trees waved and rustled in the wind.
At every step that Edmond took he disturbed the lizards
glittering with the hues of the emerald; afar off he
saw the wild goats bounding from crag to crag.
In a word, the island was inhabited, yet Edmond felt
himself alone, guided by the hand of God. He
felt an indescribable sensation somewhat akin to dread that
dread of the daylight which even in the desert makes
us fear we are watched and observed. This feeling
was so strong that at the moment when Edmond was about
to begin his labor, he stopped, laid down his pickaxe,
seized his gun, mounted to the summit of the highest
rock, and from thence gazed round in every direction.
But it was not upon Corsica, the very
houses of which he could distinguish; or on Sardinia;
or on the Island of Elba, with its historical associations;
or upon the almost imperceptible line that to the
experienced eye of a sailor alone revealed the coast
of Genoa the proud, and Leghorn the commercial, that
he gazed. It was at the brigantine that had left
in the morning, and the tartan that had just set sail,
that Edmond fixed his eyes. The first was just
disappearing in the straits of Bonifacio; the other,
following an opposite direction, was about to round
the Island of Corsica. This sight reassured him.
He then looked at the objects near him. He saw
that he was on the highest point of the island, a
statue on this vast pedestal of granite, nothing human
appearing in sight, while the blue ocean beat against
the base of the island, and covered it with a fringe
of foam. Then he descended with cautious and
slow step, for he dreaded lest an accident similar
to that he had so adroitly feigned should happen in
reality.
Dantes, as we have said, had traced
the marks along the rocks, and he had noticed that
they led to a small creek, which was hidden like the
bath of some ancient nymph. This creek was sufficiently
wide at its mouth, and deep in the centre, to admit
of the entrance of a small vessel of the lugger class,
which would be perfectly concealed from observation.
Then following the clew that, in the
hands of the Abbe Faria, had been so skilfully used
to guide him through the Daedalian labyrinth of probabilities,
he thought that the Cardinal Spada, anxious not to
be watched, had entered the creek, concealed his little
barque, followed the line marked by the notches in
the rock, and at the end of it had buried his treasure.
It was this idea that had brought Dantes back to the
circular rock. One thing only perplexed Edmond,
and destroyed his theory. How could this rock,
which weighed several tons, have been lifted to this
spot, without the aid of many men? Suddenly an
idea flashed across his mind. Instead of raising
it, thought he, they have lowered it. And he
sprang from the rock in order to inspect the base
on which it had formerly stood. He soon perceived
that a slope had been formed, and the rock had slid
along this until it stopped at the spot it now occupied.
A large stone had served as a wedge; flints and pebbles
had been inserted around it, so as to conceal the orifice;
this species of masonry had been covered with earth,
and grass and weeds had grown there, moss had clung
to the stones, myrtle-bushes had taken root, and the
old rock seemed fixed to the earth.
Dantes dug away the earth carefully,
and detected, or fancied he detected, the ingenious
artifice. He attacked this wall, cemented by the
hand of time, with his pickaxe. After ten minutes’
labor the wall gave way, and a hole large enough to
insert the arm was opened. Dantes went and cut
the strongest olive-tree he could find, stripped off
its branches, inserted it in the hole, and used it
as a lever. But the rock was too heavy, and too
firmly wedged, to be moved by any one man, were he
Hercules himself. Dantes saw that he must attack
the wedge. But how? He cast his eyes around,
and saw the horn full of powder which his friend Jacopo
had left him. He smiled; the infernal invention
would serve him for this purpose. With the aid
of his pickaxe, Dantes, after the manner of a labor-saving
pioneer, dug a mine between the upper rock and the
one that supported it, filled it with powder, then
made a match by rolling his handkerchief in saltpetre.
He lighted it and retired. The explosion soon
followed; the upper rock was lifted from its base by
the terrific force of the powder; the lower one flew
into pieces; thousands of insects escaped from the
aperture Dantes had previously formed, and a huge
snake, like the guardian demon of the treasure, rolled
himself along in darkening coils, and disappeared.
Dantes approached the upper rock,
which now, without any support, leaned towards the
sea. The intrepid treasure-seeker walked round
it, and, selecting the spot from whence it appeared
most susceptible to attack, placed his lever in one
of the crevices, and strained every nerve to move
the mass. The rock, already shaken by the explosion,
tottered on its base. Dantes redoubled his efforts;
he seemed like one of the ancient Titans, who uprooted
the mountains to hurl against the father of the gods.
The rock yielded, rolled over, bounded from point to
point, and finally disappeared in the ocean.
On the spot it had occupied was a
circular space, exposing an iron ring let into a square
flag-stone. Dantes uttered a cry of joy and surprise;
never had a first attempt been crowned with more perfect
success. He would fain have continued, but his
knees trembled, and his heart beat so violently, and
his sight became so dim, that he was forced to pause.
This feeling lasted but for a moment. Edmond inserted
his lever in the ring and exerted all his strength;
the flag-stone yielded, and disclosed steps that descended
until they were lost in the obscurity of a subterraneous
grotto. Any one else would have rushed on with
a cry of joy. Dantes turned pale, hesitated,
and reflected. “Come,” said he to
himself, “be a man. I am accustomed to adversity.
I must not be cast down by the discovery that I have
been deceived. What, then, would be the use of
all I have suffered? The heart breaks when, after
having been elated by flattering hopes, it sees all
its illusions destroyed. Faria has dreamed this;
the Cardinal Spada buried no treasure here; perhaps
he never came here, or if he did, Cæsar Borgia, the
intrepid adventurer, the stealthy and indefatigable
plunderer, has followed him, discovered his traces,
pursued them as I have done, raised the stone, and
descending before me, has left me nothing.”
He remained motionless and pensive, his eyes fixed
on the gloomy aperture that was open at his feet.
“Now that I expect nothing,
now that I no longer entertain the slightest hopes,
the end of this adventure becomes simply a matter of
curiosity.” And he remained again motionless
and thoughtful.
“Yes, yes; this is an adventure
worthy a place in the varied career of that royal
bandit. This fabulous event formed but a link
in a long chain of marvels. Yes, Borgia has been
here, a torch in one hand, a sword in the other, and
within twenty paces, at the foot of this rock, perhaps
two guards kept watch on land and sea, while their
master descended, as I am about to descend, dispelling
the darkness before his awe-inspiring progress.”
“But what was the fate of the
guards who thus possessed his secret?” asked
Dantes of himself.
“The fate,” replied he,
smiling, “of those who buried Alaric.”
“Yet, had he come,” thought
Dantes, “he would have found the treasure, and
Borgia, he who compared Italy to an artichoke, which
he could devour leaf by leaf, knew too well the value
of time to waste it in replacing this rock. I
will go down.”
Then he descended, a smile on his
lips, and murmuring that last word of human philosophy,
“Perhaps!” But instead of the darkness,
and the thick and mephitic atmosphere he had expected
to find, Dantes saw a dim and bluish light, which,
as well as the air, entered, not merely by the aperture
he had just formed, but by the interstices and crevices
of the rock which were visible from without, and through
which he could distinguish the blue sky and the waving
branches of the evergreen oaks, and the tendrils of
the creepers that grew from the rocks. After having
stood a few minutes in the cavern, the atmosphere of
which was rather warm than damp, Dantes’ eye,
habituated as it was to darkness, could pierce even
to the remotest angles of the cavern, which was of
granite that sparkled like diamonds. “Alas,”
said Edmond, smiling, “these are the treasures
the cardinal has left; and the good abbe, seeing in
a dream these glittering walls, has indulged in fallacious
hopes.”
But he called to mind the words of
the will, which he knew by heart. “In the
farthest angle of the second opening,” said the
cardinal’s will. He had only found the
first grotto; he had now to seek the second.
Dantes continued his search. He reflected that
this second grotto must penetrate deeper into the
island; he examined the stones, and sounded one part
of the wall where he fancied the opening existed, masked
for precaution’s sake. The pickaxe struck
for a moment with a dull sound that drew out of Dantes’
forehead large drops of perspiration. At last
it seemed to him that one part of the wall gave forth
a more hollow and deeper echo; he eagerly advanced,
and with the quickness of perception that no one but
a prisoner possesses, saw that there, in all probability,
the opening must be.
However, he, like Cæsar Borgia, knew
the value of time; and, in order to avoid fruitless
toil, he sounded all the other walls with his pickaxe,
struck the earth with the butt of his gun, and finding
nothing that appeared suspicious, returned to that
part of the wall whence issued the consoling sound
he had before heard. He again struck it, and
with greater force. Then a singular thing occurred.
As he struck the wall, pieces of stucco similar to
that used in the ground work of arabesques broke
off, and fell to the ground in flakes, exposing a large
white stone. The aperture of the rock had been
closed with stones, then this stucco had been applied,
and painted to imitate granite. Dantes struck
with the sharp end of his pickaxe, which entered someway
between the interstices. It was there he must
dig. But by some strange play of emotion, in
proportion as the proofs that Faria, had not been
deceived became stronger, so did his heart give way,
and a feeling of discouragement stole over him.
This last proof, instead of giving him fresh strength,
deprived him of it; the pickaxe descended, or rather
fell; he placed it on the ground, passed his hand over
his brow, and remounted the stairs, alleging to himself,
as an excuse, a desire to be assured that no one was
watching him, but in reality because he felt that
he was about to faint. The island was deserted,
and the sun seemed to cover it with its fiery glance;
afar off, a few small fishing boats studded the bosom
of the blue ocean.
Dantes had tasted nothing, but he
thought not of hunger at such a moment; he hastily
swallowed a few drops of rum, and again entered the
cavern. The pickaxe that had seemed so heavy,
was now like a feather in his grasp; he seized it,
and attacked the wall. After several blows he
perceived that the stones were not cemented, but had
been merely placed one upon the other, and covered
with stucco; he inserted the point of his pickaxe,
and using the handle as a lever, with joy soon saw
the stone turn as if on hinges, and fall at his feet.
He had nothing more to do now, but with the iron tooth
of the pickaxe to draw the stones towards him one
by one. The aperture was already sufficiently
large for him to enter, but by waiting, he could still
cling to hope, and retard the certainty of deception.
At last, after renewed hesitation, Dantes entered
the second grotto. The second grotto was lower
and more gloomy than the first; the air that could
only enter by the newly formed opening had the mephitic
smell Dantes was surprised not to find in the outer
cavern. He waited in order to allow pure air to
displace the foul atmosphere, and then went on.
At the left of the opening was a dark and deep angle.
But to Dantes’ eye there was no darkness.
He glanced around this second grotto; it was, like
the first, empty.
The treasure, if it existed, was buried
in this corner. The time had at length arrived;
two feet of earth removed, and Dantes’ fate would
be decided. He advanced towards the angle, and
summoning all his resolution, attacked the ground
with the pickaxe. At the fifth or sixth blow
the pickaxe struck against an iron substance.
Never did funeral knell, never did alarm-bell, produce
a greater effect on the hearer. Had Dantes found
nothing he could not have become more ghastly pale.
He again struck his pickaxe into the earth, and encountered
the same resistance, but not the same sound.
“It is a casket of wood bound with iron,”
thought he. At this moment a shadow passed rapidly
before the opening; Dantes seized his gun, sprang
through the opening, and mounted the stair. A
wild goat had passed before the mouth of the cave,
and was feeding at a little distance. This would
have been a favorable occasion to secure his dinner;
but Dantes feared lest the report of his gun should
attract attention.
He thought a moment, cut a branch
of a resinous tree, lighted it at the fire at which
the smugglers had prepared their breakfast, and descended
with this torch. He wished to see everything.
He approached the hole he had dug, and now, with the
aid of the torch, saw that his pickaxe had in reality
struck against iron and wood. He planted his torch
in the ground and resumed his labor. In an instant
a space three feet long by two feet broad was cleared,
and Dantes could see an oaken coffer, bound with cut
steel; in the middle of the lid he saw engraved on
a silver plate, which was still untarnished, the arms
of the Spada family viz., a sword, pale,
on an oval shield, like all the Italian armorial bearings,
and surmounted by a cardinal’s hat; Dantes easily
recognized them, Faria had so often drawn them for
him. There was no longer any doubt: the treasure
was there no one would have been at such
pains to conceal an empty casket. In an instant
he had cleared every obstacle away, and he saw successively
the lock, placed between two padlocks, and the two
handles at each end, all carved as things were carved
at that epoch, when art rendered the commonest metals
precious. Dantes seized the handles, and strove
to lift the coffer; it was impossible. He sought
to open it; lock and padlock were fastened; these
faithful guardians seemed unwilling to surrender their
trust. Dantes inserted the sharp end of the pickaxe
between the coffer and the lid, and pressing with all
his force on the handle, burst open the fastenings.
The hinges yielded in their turn and fell, still holding
in their grasp fragments of the wood, and the chest
was open.
Edmond was seized with vertigo; he
cocked his gun and laid it beside him. He then
closed his eyes as children do in order that they may
see in the resplendent night of their own imagination
more stars than are visible in the firmament; then
he re-opened them, and stood motionless with amazement.
Three compartments divided the coffer. In the
first, blazed piles of golden coin; in the second,
were ranged bars of unpolished gold, which possessed
nothing attractive save their value; in the third,
Edmond grasped handfuls of diamonds, pearls, and rubies,
which, as they fell on one another, sounded like hail
against glass. After having touched, felt, examined
these treasures, Edmond rushed through the caverns
like a man seized with frenzy; he leaped on a rock,
from whence he could behold the sea. He was alone alone
with these countless, these unheard-of treasures!
was he awake, or was it but a dream?
He would fain have gazed upon his
gold, and yet he had not strength enough; for an instant
he leaned his head in his hands as if to prevent his
senses from leaving him, and then rushed madly about
the rocks of Monte Cristo, terrifying the wild goats
and scaring the sea-fowls with his wild cries and
gestures; then he returned, and, still unable to believe
the evidence of his senses, rushed into the grotto,
and found himself before this mine of gold and jewels.
This time he fell on his knees, and, clasping his
hands convulsively, uttered a prayer intelligible
to God alone. He soon became calmer and more happy,
for only now did he begin to realize his felicity.
He then set himself to work to count his fortune.
There were a thousand ingots of gold, each weighing
from two to three pounds; then he piled up twenty-five
thousand crowns, each worth about eighty francs of
our money, and bearing the effigies of Alexander
VI. and his predecessors; and he saw that the complement
was not half empty. And he measured ten double
handfuls of pearls, diamonds, and other gems, many
of which, mounted by the most famous workmen, were
valuable beyond their intrinsic worth. Dantes
saw the light gradually disappear, and fearing to be
surprised in the cavern, left it, his gun in his hand.
A piece of biscuit and a small quantity of rum formed
his supper, and he snatched a few hours’ sleep,
lying over the mouth of the cave.
It was a night of joy and terror,
such as this man of stupendous emotions had already
experienced twice or thrice in his lifetime.