IN THE TORTURE-CHAMBER OF VERA CRUZ.
Both lads felt their hearts stop beating,
and a cold chill seized their bodies as they heard
the footsteps pass other cell doors without pausing,
and continue down the passage towards their own.
Those dreadful cries still rang in
their ears, and they felt that if the approaching
person was coming to conduct them also to the torture,
they could not bear it. They were still, it
must be remembered, only lads, and the sound of those
cries of agony had racked their nerves as
they might those of much older men more
than they themselves knew.
They felt their very hair rising on
their scalps, and a sensation of deadly sickness and
faintness swept over them.
Harry was the first to recover his
presence of mind, and he spoke to Roger.
“Come, come, Roger, lad,”
said he; “pull yourself together, my friend.
If they are indeed coming for us, we must make up our
minds to endure it as best we can, even as we have
done before. And perchance we are mistaken,
and they do not intend to torture us at all.”
Roger came out of his dismal reverie
of foreboding, and his face became once more immobile.
A few heartbeats and he was as well prepared as Harry
for what might happen.
Once, for a moment, the footsteps
paused, and their hearts gave a great bound of thankfulness.
The messenger, then, was not coming for them after
all!
Their sensation of relief, however,
was of but brief duration.
After a pause, lasting but a few moments,
those inexorable footsteps resumed their approach
once more, and nearer and nearer they came toward
the door of the last cell.
Roger and Harry glanced at one another,
rose from their respective stools, and stood upright
facing the door. They had just time to give
each other a firm and reassuring hand-clasp, when the
key grated in the rusty lock outside, the bolts were
slipped back with a grinding noise, and the door creaked
open on its hinges, disclosing, against the semi-darkness
of the long corridor, the form of a man, robed from
head to foot in black. Even his head and face
were invisible, covered by a kind of black cloth helmet
terminating in a peak, and with two slits cut in it
for the eyes. Through these slits they could
discern a pair of fiery orbs, shining like those of
a cat in the darkness, looking full at them, as though
to read their inmost thoughts.
If the mysterious visitor anticipated
seeing any signs of alarm on the lads’ faces,
he was disappointed, for the two stood up facing him,
and gave him back glance for glance.
Just for a single instant the same
thought leapt through both their brains: “Why
not make a rush, knock the dark visitant down and stun
him, and attempt to find our way out of the building
before aught is discovered?” Indeed they both
exchanged glances at that instant.
It seemed, however, as though the
masked man read their thoughts; for, stepping to one
side of the door, he pointed silently down the corridor,
and there they saw what at first they had not observed,
namely, a file of similarly masked figures on each
side of the passage, standing against the walls, with
naked swords in their hands.
It was of no use. Escape that
way was, on the face of it, hopeless. The masked
messenger read the expression on the boys’ faces
as they looked, and they could have sworn that a cruel
smile lurked behind that black mask. Then came
a voice from the figure, in pure English, without
a trace of any foreign accent:
“You are both required to attend
a scene of punishment. It is the order of the
Grand Inquisitor, and you are required to witness it
as earnest of what you yourselves will undergo here
should you be foolish enough to disobey, or in any
way attempt to thwart, the wishes or designs of the
Holy Inquisition.” Here he crossed himself.
“A warning is but seldom given to heretics;
so accept this one as it is meant; for your own good
I tell you this. Now follow me, and be careful
that you make no attempt at escape, for it is absolutely
impossible for you to succeed, and you would but bring
a heavy punishment on yourselves. And, above
all, whatever you see or hear, keep a still tongue
in your heads; do not presume to speak to anyone where
you are going. If you obey implicitly it may
be that you will be leniently dealt with.”
The masked man turned, beckoning over
his shoulder for them to follow, and then preceded
them up the passage.
They were a great deal relieved to
find that they were not to be this time tortured;
but they knew only too well what punishment it was
that they were to witness, and they felt their hearts
sicken within them. They both knew that the advice
they had just received was good, and resolved, if
possible, to abide by it. They therefore followed
their leader along the corridor in silence, while
the masked men with swords fell in behind them as
soon as they had passed, effectually preventing any
attempt on their part at escape.
Up the passage they went, reached
the end of it, and then turned to the right, afterwards
climbing up a long flight of steps. This brought
them to another long passage, but much wider than
the one leading to their own cell. It was also
covered with some kind of matting, and several doors
opened into the corridor.
Along this corridor they went, and
came presently to another large door, through which
they passed, finding themselves in a large and lofty
room.
This was somewhat dark, and, after
the light through which they had just passed, they
could not for a few moments discern the objects contained
therein. Then, as their eyes became more accustomed
to the half-light, they perceived, hanging on the
wall, strange instruments of iron and wood, and in
different places in the apartment were standing curious-looking
machines, the use of which they could only imagine
with a shudder.
The door through which they had just
entered was closed and locked, and, turning round,
the two friends saw that the masked guards had vanished,
as also had the guide who had conducted them thither.
But the chamber was tenanted by several funereal
figures in black, all with their faces hidden, and
whose movements even seemed to suggest something horrible
and repulsive.
In silence one of the masked figures
took down an instrument from the wall, and walked
to the opposite end of the room, where stood another
group of men in black, with cowled heads.
The lads watched, as if fascinated,
and with an inward feeling that something dreadful
was about to occur. They could perceive a certain
dim outline of something that looked like a framework
of timber, but its complete shape was hidden from
them by the figures of those who were standing in
between.
All the masked men appeared to the
boys to be waiting for something or someone before
they proceeded with whatever they were preparing to
do.
As they stood there, frozen into rigidity
and silence by a dreadful and indefinable sensation
of horror, they heard a fluttering sigh coming from
the opposite end of the room, apparently from somewhere
near the mysterious framework.
This sigh, faint at first, suddenly
changed into a most fearful sound something
between a moan and the noise a man makes when the breath
is suddenly driven from his body. The sound
was so full of horror that they felt their blood literally
curdle within them. It was all the more terrifying
because they could not tell who or what it was that
produced it. In spite of themselves they moved
a few steps nearer, and then a sight met their eyes
which turned them sick.
What they had taken for a wooden framework
was indeed a framework, but one for a terrible use.
It consisted of four pieces of timber
merely, two long and two short. These were fastened
together in the form of a rectangle, thus producing
an article somewhat resembling a bed-frame, only rather
narrower; and the wood-work was much more massive.
Two iron rings were fixed in the centre of each of
the short pieces, and to each of these were attached
stout straps of raw hide.
And there, stretched upon this framework,
and supported in position solely by his hands and
ankles, around which were fastened the raw hide strips
attached to the rings, lay the figure of a man!
The body was perfectly naked; and
as the boys looked, unable to turn their eyes away
through sheer horror at the sight, which held them
as though fascinated, the groups of cowled men separated
and, seizing the lads, pushed them forward until they
stood close to the framework and had a full view of
the whole dreadful scene. A voice behind them
uttered the words:
“Look! Take warning!”
But it is very doubtful whether either Harry or Roger
heard the words; their brains seemed paralysed by the
sight that met their eyes.
The figure was that of a man, evidently
in the prime of life; the legs were stretched so far
apart by the framework that it was extraordinary that
flesh and blood could endure the strain and still hang
together. The arms were also stretched out above
the man’s head to such an extent that they seemed
to be literally parting from the poor body at the
shoulders. The muscles had started up, and seemed
to be bursting through the skin, and the flesh was
stretched so tightly over the bones that it seemed
a skeleton rather than a human living body upon which
they gazed.
But it was not this sight of a living,
breathing, sentient human body strained and stretched
to the point of being torn asunder that excited the
lads’ commiseration and horror, and caused them
inwardly to register a solemn and awful vow of vengeance
upon the human fiends around them should the opportunity
ever arise. No, terrible as was that sight,
there were others horrors that only the
most debased and cruel imagination could possibly
invent, and to which no pen could possibly do justice,
even were any good purpose to be achieved by the attempted
recital of them that caused the lads’
souls to revolt at once and for ever against a people
that could perpetrate such diabolical cruelties.
Another deep groan issued from the
lips of the hapless sufferer, and he opened his eyes,
which had until now been closed, and then they saw
that a certain suspicion that for some moments had
been growing in their minds was but too well founded.
Yes, yes! Oh, horror! it was de Soto, that
noble, brave, and chivalrous Spaniard whom they had
last seen retiring with the rest of their prisoners
into the depths of the jungle of Cuba!
Harry uttered a little cry, and, swaying
for a moment, fell heavily into the arms of Roger,
who laid him gently on the stone floor.
At this, one of the cowled inquisitors
stepped forward; but at that moment a door opened
and a man entered, clad in rich and costly vestments,
his identity unconcealed in any way by cowl or cloak.
Roger looked up, and could scarcely credit his senses.
Where where had he seen
that sinister and evil countenance before? As
he looked, so did the man who had just entered look
at Roger, a new light dawning in his evil eyes.
Then Roger recognised the man; he
had seen him before. It was Alvarez!
The new-comer spoke in Spanish:
“Has the man yet confessed?”
And one of the masked men replied:
“No, your excellency; he has not as yet.
But we hope that during the next torture he will speak;
he is but now only just recovering from the last.”
“Continue, then,” commanded
Alvarez. “But first remove those two boys
to their cell, and I charge you, on your lives, to
see that they escape not; for of all those whom I
have ever wished to have in my power I wanted that
one most” pointing to Roger.
“Therefore, keep him safe; keep both of them
safe; for I shall require them soon.”