Veronique was left alone on Coffin
Island. Until the sun sank among the clouds that
seemed, on the horizon, to rest upon the sea, she did
not move, but sat huddled against the window, with
her head buried in her two arms resting on the sill.
The dread reality passed through the
darkness of her mind like pictures which she strove
not to see, but which at times became so clearly defined
that she imagined herself to be living through those
atrocious scenes again.
Still she sought no explanation of
all this and formed no theories as to all the motives
which might have thrown a light upon the tragedy.
She admitted the madness of Francois and of Stephane
Maroux, being unable to suppose any other reasons
for such actions as theirs. And, believing the
two murderers to be mad, she did not even try to attribute
to them any projects or definite wishes.
Moreover, Honorine’s madness,
of which she had, so to speak, observed the outbreak,
impelled her to look upon all that had happened as
provoked by a sort of mental upset to which all the
people of Sarek had fallen victims. She herself
at moments felt that her brain was reeling, that her
ideas were fading away in a mist, that invisible ghosts
were hovering around her.
She dozed off into a sleep which was
haunted by these images and in which she felt so wretched
that she began to sob. Also it seemed to her
that she could hear a slight noise which, in her benumbed
wits, assumed a hostile significance. Enemies
were approaching. She opened her eyes.
A couple of yards in front of her,
sitting upon its haunches, was a queer animal, covered
with long mud-coloured hair and holding its fore-paws
folded like a pair of arms.
It was a dog; and she at once remembered
Francois’ dog, of which Honorine had spoken
as a dear, devoted, comical creature. She even
remembered his name, All’s-Well.
As she uttered this name in an undertone,
she felt an angry impulse and was almost driving away
the animal endowed with such an ironical nickname.
All’s-Well! And she thought of all the victims
of the horrible nightmare, of all the dead people
of Sarek, of her murdered father, of Honorine killing
herself, of Francois going mad. All’s-Well,
forsooth!
Meanwhile the dog did not stir.
He was sitting up as Honorine had described, with
his head a little on one side, one eye closed, the
corners of his mouth drawn back to his ears and his
arms crossed in front of him; and there was really
something very like a smile flitting over his face.
Veronique now remembered: this
was the manner in which All’s-Well displayed
his sympathy for those in trouble. All’s-Well
could not bear the sight of tears. When people
wept, he sat up until they in their turn smiled and
petted him.
Veronique did not smile, but she pressed
him against her and said:
“No, my poor dog, all’s
not well; on the contrary, all’s as bad as it
can be. No matter: we must live, mustn’t
we, and we mustn’t go mad ourselves like the
others?”
The necessities of life obliged her
to act. She went down to the kitchen, found some
food and gave the dog a good share of it. Then
she went upstairs again.
Night had fallen. She opened,
on the first floor, the door of a bedroom which at
ordinary times must have been unoccupied. She
was weighed down with an immense fatigue, caused by
all the efforts and violent emotions which she had
undergone. She fell asleep almost at once.
All’s Well lay awake at the foot of her bed.
Next morning she woke late, with a
curious feeling of peace and security. It seemed
to her that her present life was somehow connected
with her calm and placid life at Besancon. The
few days of horror which she had passed fell away
from her like distant events whose return she had
no need to fear. The men and women who had gone
under in the great horror became to her mind almost
like strangers whom one has met and does not expect
to see again. Her heart ceased bleeding.
Her sorrow for them did not reach the depths of her
soul.
It was due to the unforeseen and undisturbed
rest, the consoling solitude. And all this seemed
to her so pleasant that, when a steamer came and anchored
on the spot of the disaster, she made no signal.
No doubt yesterday, from the mainland, they had seen
the flash of the explosions and heard the report of
the shots. Veronique remained motionless.
She saw a boat put off from the steamer
and supposed that they were going to land and explore
the village. But not only did she dread an enquiry
in which her son might be involved: she herself
did not wish to be found, to be questioned, to have
her name, her identity, her story discovered and to
be brought back into the infernal circle from which
she had escaped. She preferred to wait a week
or two, to wait until chance brought within hailing-distance
of the island some fishing-boat which could pick her
up.
But no one came to the Priory.
The steamer put off; and nothing disturbed her isolation.
And so she remained for three days.
Fate seemed to have reconsidered its intention of
making fresh assaults upon her. She was alone
and her own mistress. All’s Well, whose
company had done her a world of good, disappeared.
The Priory domain occupied the whole
end of the island, on the site of a Benedictine abbey,
which had been abandoned in the fifteenth century and
gradually fallen into ruin and decay.
The house, built in the eighteenth
century by a wealthy Breton ship-owner out of the
materials of the old abbey and the stones of the chapel,
was in no way interesting either outside or in.
Veronique, for that matter, did not dare to enter
any of the rooms. The memory of her father and
son checked her before the closed doors.
But, on the second day, in the bright
spring sunshine, she explored the park. It extended
to the point of the island and, like the sward in
front of the house, was studded with ruins and covered
with ivy. She noticed that all the paths ran
towards a steep promontory crowned with a clump of
enormous oaks. When she reached the spot, she
found that these oaks stood round a crescent-shaped
clearing which was open to the sea.
In the centre of the clearing was
a cromlech with a rather short, oval table upheld
by two supports of rock, which were almost square.
The spot possessed an impressive magnificence and
commanded a boundless view.
“The Fairies’ Dolmen,
of which Honorine spoke,” thought Veronique.
“I cannot be far from the Calvary and Maguennoc’s
flowers.”
She walked round the megalith.
The inner surface of the two uprights bore a few illegible
engraved signs. But the two outer surfaces facing
the sea formed as it were two smooth slabs prepared
to receive an inscription; and here she saw something
that caused her to shudder with anguish. On the
right, deeply encrusted, was an unskilful, primitive
drawing of four crosses with four female figures writhing
upon them. On the left was a column of lines
of writing, whose characters, inadequately carved
in the stone, had been almost obliterated by the weather,
or perhaps even deliberately effaced by human hands.
A few words remained, however, the very words which
Veronique had read on the drawing which she found
beside Maguennoc’s corpse:
“Four women crucified . . .
. Thirty coffins . . . . The God-Stone which
gives life or death.”
Veronique moved away, staggering.
The mystery was once more before her, as everywhere
in the island, and she was determined to escape from
it until the moment when she could leave Sarek altogether.
She took a path which started from
the clearing and led past the last oak on the right.
This oak appeared to have been struck by lightning,
for all that remained of it was the trunk and a few
dead branches.
Farther on, she went down some stone
steps, crossed a little meadow in which stood four
rows of menhirs and stopped suddenly with a stifled
cry, a cry of admiration and amazement, before the
sight that presented itself to her eyes.
“Maguennoc’s flowers,” she whispered.
The last two menhirs of the central
alley which she was following stood like the posts
of a door that opened upon the most glorious spectacle,
a rectangular space, fifty yards long at most, which
was reached by a short descending flight of steps
and bordered by two rows of menhirs all of the
same height and placed at accurately measured intervals,
like the columns of a temple. The nave and side-aisles
of this temple were paved with wide, irregular, broken
granite flag-stones, which the grass, growing in the
cracks, marked with patterns similar to those of the
lead which frames the pieces of a stained-glass window.
In the middle was a small bed of flowers
thronging around an ancient stone crucifix. But
such flowers! Flowers which the wildest imagination
or fancy never conceived, dream-flowers, miraculous
flowers, flowers out of all proportion to ordinary
flowers!
Veronique recognized all of them;
and yet she stood dumbfounded at their size and splendour.
There were flowers of many varieties, but few of each
variety. It was like a nosegay made to contain
every colour, every perfume and every beauty that
flowers can possess.
And the strangest thing was that these
flowers, which do not usually bloom at the same time
and which open in successive months, were all growing
and blossoming together! On one and the same day,
these flowers, all perennial flowers whose time does
not last much more than two or three weeks, were blooming
and multiplying, full and heavy, vivid, sumptuous,
proudly borne on their sturdy stems.
There were spiderworts, there were
ranunculi, tiger-lilies, columbines, blood-red
potentillas, irises of a brighter violet than a bishop’s
cassock. There were larkspurs, phlox, fuchsias,
monk’s-hoods, montbretias. And, above all
this, to Veronique’s intense emotion, above
the dazzling flower-bed, standing a little higher in
a narrow border around the pedestal of the crucifix,
with all their blue, white and violet clusters seeming
to lift themselves so as to touch the Saviour’s
very form, were verOnicas!
She was faint with emotion. As
she came nearer, she had read on a little label fastened
to the pedestal these two words.
“Mother’s flowers.”
Veronique did not believe in miracles.
She was obliged to admit that the flowers were wonderful,
beyond all comparison with the flowers of our climes.
But she refused to think that this anomaly was not
to be explained except by supernatural causes or by
magic recipes of which Maguennoc held the secret.
No, there was some reason, perhaps a very simple one,
of which events would afford a full explanation.
Meanwhile, amid the beautiful pagan
setting, in the very centre of the miracle which it
seemed to have wrought by its presence, the figure
of Christ Crucified rose from the mass of flowers
which offered Him their colours and their perfumes.
Veronique knelt and prayed.
Next day and the day after, she returned
to the Calvary of the Flowers. Here the mystery
that surrounded her on every side had manifested itself
in the most charming fashion; and her son played a
part in it that enabled Veronique to think of him,
before her own flowers, without hatred or despair.
But, on the fifth day, she perceived
that her provisions were becoming exhausted; and in
the middle of the afternoon she went down to the village.
There she noticed that most of the
houses had been left open, so certain had their owners
been, on leaving, of coming back again and taking what
they needed in a second trip.
Sick at heart, she dared not cross
the thresholds. There were geraniums on the window-ledges.
Tall clocks with brass pendulums were ticking off
the time in the empty rooms. She moved away.
In a shed near the quay, however,
she saw the sacks and boxes which Honorine had brought
with her in the motor-boat.
“Well,” she thought, “I
shan’t starve. There’s enough to last
me for weeks; and by that time . . .”
She filled a basket with chocolate,
biscuits, a few tins of preserved meat, rice and matches;
and she was on the point of returning to the Priory,
when it occurred to her that she would continue her
walk to the other end of the island. She would
fetch her basket on the way back.
A shady road climbed upwards on the
right. The landscape seemed to be the same:
the same flat stretches of moorland, without ploughed
fields or pastures; the same clumps of ancient oaks.
The island also became narrower, with no obstacle
to block the view of the sea on either side or of
the Penmarch headland in the distance.
There was also a hedge which ran from
one cliff to the other and which served to enclose
a property, a shabby property, with a straggling,
dilapidated, tumbledown house upon it, some out-houses
with patched roofs and a dirty, badly-kept yard, full
of scrap-iron and stacks of firewood.
Veronique was already retracing her
steps, when she stopped in alarm and surprise.
It seemed to her that she heard some one moan.
She listened, striving to plumb the vast silence,
and once again the same sound, but this time more
distinctly, reached her ears; and there were others:
cries of pain, cries for help, women’s cries.
Then had not all the inhabitants taken to flight?
She had a feeling of joy mingled with some sorrow,
to know that she was not alone in Sarek, and of fear
also, at the thought that events would perhaps drag
her back again into the fatal cycle of death and horror.
So far as Veronique was able to judge,
the noise came not from the house, but from the buildings
on the right of the yard. This yard was closed
with a simple gate which she had only to push and which
opened with the creaking sound of wood upon wood.
The cries in the out-house at once
increased in number. The people inside had no
doubt heard Veronique approach. She hastened her
steps.
Though the roof of the out-buildings
was gone in places, the walls were thick and solid,
with old arched doors strengthened with iron bars.
There was a knocking against one of these doors from
the inside, while the cries became more urgent:
“Help! Help!”
But there was a dispute; and another, less strident
voice grated:
“Be quiet, Clemence, can’t you? It
may be them!”
“No, no, Gertrude, it’s
not! I don’t hear them! . . . Open
the door, will you? The key ought to be there.”
Veronique, who was seeking for some
means of entering, now saw a big key in the lock.
She turned it; and the door opened.
She at once recognized the sisters
Archignat, half-dressed, gaunt, evil-looking, witch-like.
They were in a wash-house filled with implements;
and Veronique saw at the back, lying on some straw,
a third woman, who was bewailing her fate in an almost
inaudible voice and who was obviously the third sister.
At that moment, one of the first two
collapsed from exhaustion; and the other, whose eyes
were bright with fever, seized Veronique by the arm
and began to gasp:
“Did you see them, tell me?
. . . Are they there? . . . How is it they
didn’t kill you? . . . They are the masters
of Sarek since the others went off . . . . And
it’s our turn next . . . . We’ve been
locked in here now for six days . . . . Listen,
it was on the day when everybody left. We three
came here, to the wash-house, to fetch our linen, which
was drying. And then they came . . . .
We didn’t hear them . . . . One never does
hear them . . . . And then, suddenly, the door
was locked on us . . . . A slam, a turn of the
key . . . and the thing was done . . . . We had
bread, apples and best of all, brandy . . . .
We didn’t do so badly . . . . Only, were
they going to come back and kill us? Was it our
turn next? . . . Oh, my dear good lady, how we
strained our ears! And how we trembled with fear!
. . . My eldest sister’s gone crazy . .
. . Hark, you can hear her raving . . . .
The other, Clemence, has borne all she can . . . .
And I . . . I . . . Gertrude . . .”
Gertrude had plenty of strength left,
for she was twisting Veronique’s arm:
“And Correjou? He came
back, didn’t he, and went away again? Why
didn’t anyone come to look for us? It would
have been easy enough: everybody knew where we
were; and we called out at the least sound. So
what does it all mean?”
Veronique hesitated what to reply.
Still, why should she conceal the truth?
She replied:
“The two boats went down.”
“What?”
“The two boats sank in view
of Sarek. All on board were drowned. It was
opposite the Priory . . . after leaving the Devil’s
Passage.”
Veronique said no more, so as to avoid
mentioning the names of Francois and his tutor or
speaking of the part which these two had played.
But Clemence now sat up, with distorted features.
She had been leaning against the door and raised herself
to her knees.
Gertrude murmured:
“And Honorine?”
“Honorine is dead.”
“Dead!”
The two sisters both cried out at
once. Then they were silent and looked at each
other. The same thought struck them both.
They seemed to be reflecting. Gertrude was moving
her fingers as though counting. And the terror
on their two faces increased.
Speaking in a very low voice, as though
choking with fear, Gertrude, with her eyes fixed on
Veronique, said:
“That’s it . . . that’s
it . . . I’ve got the total . . . .
Do you know how many there were in the boats, without
my sisters and me? Do you know? Twenty .
. . . Well, reckon it up: twenty . . . and
Maguennoc, who was the first to die . . . and M. Antoine,
who died afterwards . . . and little Francois and
M. Stephane, who vanished, but who are dead too .
. . and Honorine and Marie Le Goff, both dead . . .
. So reckon it up: that makes twenty-six,
twenty-six . . . The total’s correct, isn’t
it? . . . Now take twenty-six from thirty . .
. . You understand, don’t you? The
thirty coffins: they have to be filled . . . .
So twenty-six from thirty . . . leaves four, doesn’t
it?”
She could no longer speak; her tongue
faltered. Nevertheless the terrible syllables
came from her mouth; and Veronique heard her stammering:
“Eh? Do you understand?
. . . That leaves four . . . us four . . . the
three sisters Archignat, who were kept behind and locked
up . . . and yourself . . . . So do
you follow me? the three crosses you
know, the ’four women crucified’ the
number’s there . . . it’s our four selves
. . . there’s no one besides us on the island
. . . four women . . . .”
Veronique had listened in silence.
She broke out into a slight perspiration.
She shrugged her shoulders, however:
“Well? And then? If
there’s no one except ourselves on the island,
what are you afraid of?”
“Them, of course! Them!”
Veronique lost her patience:
“But if everybody has gone!” she exclaimed.
Gertrude took fright:
“Speak low. Suppose they heard you!”
“But who?”
“They: the people of old.”
“The people of old?”
“Yes, those who used to make
sacrifices . . . the people who killed men and women
. . . to please their gods.”
“But that’s a thing of
the past! The Druids: is that what you mean?
Come, come; there are no Druids nowadays.”
“Speak quietly! Speak quietly!
There are still . . . there are evil spirits . . .”
“Then they’re ghosts?”
asked Veronique, horror-stricken by these superstitions.
“Ghosts, yes, but ghosts of
flesh and blood . . . with hands that lock doors and
keep you imprisoned . . . creatures that sink boats,
the same, I tell you, that killed M. Antoine, Marie
Le Goff and the others . . . that killed twenty-six
of us . . . .”
Veronique did not reply. There
was no reply to make. She knew, she knew only
too well who had killed M. d’Hergemont, Marie
Le Goff and the others and sunk the two boats.
“What time was it when the three
of you were locked in?” she asked.
“Half-past ten . . . .
We had arranged to meet Correjou in the village at
eleven.”
Veronique reflected. It was hardly
possible that Francois and Stephane should have had
time to be at half-past ten in this place and an hour
later to be behind the rock from which they had darted
out upon the two boats. Was it to be presumed
that one or more of their accomplices were left on
the island?
“In any case,” she said,
“you must come to a decision. You can’t
remain in this state. You must rest yourselves,
eat something . . . .”
The second sister had risen to her
feet. She said, in the same hollow and violent
tones as her sister:
“First of all, we must hide
. . . and be able to defend ourselves against them.”
“What do you mean?” asked Veronique.
She too, in spite of herself, felt
this need of a refuge against a possible enemy.
“What do I mean? I’ll
tell you. The thing has been talked about a lot
in the island, especially this year; and Maguennoc
decided that, at the first attack, everybody should
take shelter in the Priory.”
“Why in the Priory?”
“Because we could defend ourselves
there. The cliffs are perpendicular. You’re
protected on every side.”
“What about the bridge?”
“Maguennoc and Honorine thought
of everything. There’s a little hut fifteen
yards to the left of the bridge. That’s
the place they hit on to keep their stock of petrol
in. Empty three or four cans over the bridge,
strike a match . . . and the thing’s done.
You’re just as in your own home. You can’t
be got at and you can’t be attacked.”
“Then why didn’t they
come to the Priory instead of taking to flight in
the boats?”
“It was safer to escape in the
boats. But we no longer have the choice.”
“And when shall we start?”
“At once. It’s daylight still; and
that’s better than the dark.”
“But your sister, the one on her back?”
“We have a barrow. We’ve
got to wheel her. There’s a direct road
to the Priory, without passing through the village.”
Veronique could not help looking with
repugnance upon the prospect of living in close intimacy
with the sisters Archignat. She yielded, however,
swayed by a fear which she was unable to overcome:
“Very well,” she said.
“Let’s go. I’ll take you to
the Priory and come back to the village to fetch some
provisions.”
“Oh, you mustn’t be away
long!” protested one of the sisters. “As
soon as the bridge is cut, we’ll light a bonfire
on Fairies’ Dolmen Hill and they’ll send
a steamer from the mainland. To-day the fog is
coming up; but to-morrow . . .”
Veronique raised no objection.
She now accepted the idea of leaving Sarek, even at
the cost of an enquiry which would reveal her name.
They started, after the two sisters
had swallowed a glass of brandy. The madwoman
sat huddled in the wheel-barrow, laughing softly and
uttering little sentences which she addressed to Veronique
as though she wanted her to laugh too:
“We shan’t meet them yet
. . . . They’re getting ready . . . .”
“Shut up, you old fool!”
said Gertrude. “You’ll bring us bad
luck.”
“Yes, yes, we shall see some
sport . . . . It’ll be great fun . . . .
I have a cross of gold hung round my neck . . . and
another cut into the skin of my head . . . .
Look! . . . Crosses everywhere . . . . One
ought to be comfortable on the cross . . . .
One ought to sleep well there . . . .”
“Shut up, will you, you old
fool?” repeated Gertrude, giving her a box on
the ear.
“All right, all right! . . .
But it’s they who’ll hit you; I see them
hiding! . . .”
The path, which was pretty rough at
first, reached the table-land formed by the west cliffs,
which were loftier, but less rugged and worn away
than the others. The woods were scarcer; and the
oaks were all bent by the wind from the sea.
“We are coming to the heath
which they call the Black Heath,” said Clemence
Archignat.
“They live underneath.”
Veronique once more shrugged her shoulders:
“How do you know?”
“We know more than other people,”
said Gertrude. “They call us witches; and
there’s something in it. Maguennoc himself,
who knew a great deal, used to ask our advice about
anything that had to do with healing, lucky stones,
the herbs you gather on St. John’s Eve . . .”
“Mugwort and vervain,”
chuckled the madwoman. “They are picked
at sunset.”
“Or tradition too,” continued
Gertrude. “We know what’s been said
in the island for hundreds of years; and it’s
always been said that there was a whole town underneath,
with streets and all, in which they used to
live of old. And there are some left still, I’ve
seen them myself.”
Veronique did not reply.
“Yes, my sister and I saw one.
Twice, when the June moon was six days old. He
was dressed in white . . . and he was climbing the
Great Oak to gather the sacred mistletoe . . . with
a golden sickle. The gold glittered in the moonlight.
I saw it, I tell you, and others saw it too . . .
. And he’s not the only one. There
are several of them left over from the old days to
guard the treasure . . . . Yes, as I say, the
treasure . . . . They say it’s a stone which
works miracles, which can make you die if you touch
it and which makes you live if you lie down on it.
That’s all true, Maguennoc told us so, all perfectly
true. They of old guard the stone, the God-Stone,
and they are to sacrifice all of us this year
. . . . yes, all of us, thirty dead people for the
thirty coffins . . . .”
“Four women crucified,” crooned the madwoman.
“And it will be soon. The
sixth day of the moon is near at hand. We must
be gone before they climb the Great Oak to gather
the mistletoe. Look, you can see the Great Oak
from here. It’s in the wood on this side
of the bridge. It stands out above the others.”
“They are hiding behind
it,” said the madwoman, turning round in her
wheel-barrow. “They are waiting for us.”
“That’ll do; and don’t
you stir . . . . As I was saying, you see the
Great Oak . . . over there . . . beyond the end of
the heath. It is . . . it is . . .”
She dropped the wheel-barrow, without
finishing her sentence.
“Well?” asked Clemence. “What’s
the matter?”
“I’ve seen something,”
stammered Gertrude. “Something white, moving
about.”
“Something? What do you
mean? They don’t show themselves in broad
daylight! You’ve gone cross-eyed.”
They both looked for a moment and
then went on again. Soon the Great Oak was out
of sight.
The heath which they were now crossing
was wild and rough, covered with stones lying flat
like tombstones and all pointing in the same direction.
“It’s their burying-ground,”
whispered Gertrude.
They said nothing more. Gertrude
repeatedly had to stop and rest. Clemence had
not the strength to push the wheel-barrow. They
were both of them tottering on their legs; and they
gazed into the distance with anxious eyes.
They went down a dip in the ground
and up again. The path joined that which Veronique
had taken with Honorine on the first day; and they
entered the wood which preceded the bridge.
Presently the growing excitement of
the sisters Archignat made Veronique understand that
they were approaching the Great Oak; and she saw it
standing on a mound of earth and roots, bigger than
the others and separated from them by wider intervals.
She could not help thinking that it was possible for
several men to hide behind that massive trunk and
that perhaps several were hiding there now.
Notwithstanding their fears, the sisters
had quickened their pace; and they kept their eyes
turned from the fatal tree.
They left it behind. Veronique
breathed more freely. All danger was passed;
and she was just about to laugh at the sisters Archignat,
when one of them, Clemence, spun on her heels and
dropped with a moan.
At the same time something fell to
the ground, something that had struck Clemence in
the back. It was an axe, a stone axe.
“Oh, the thunder-stone, the
thunder-stone!” cried Gertrude.
She looked up for a second, as if,
in accordance with the inveterate popular belief,
she believed that the axe came from the sky and was
an emanation of the thunder.
But, at that moment, the madwoman,
who had got out of her barrow, leapt from the ground
and fell head forward. Something else had whizzed
through the air. The madwoman was writhing with
pain. Gertrude and Veronique saw an arrow which
had been driven through her shoulder and was still
vibrating.
Then Gertrude fled screaming.
Veronique hesitated. Clemence
and the madwoman were rolling about on the ground.
The madwoman giggled:
“Behind the oak! They’re hiding .
. . I see them.”
Clemence stammered:
“Help! . . . Lift me up . . . carry me
. . . I’m terrified!”
But another arrow whizzed past them and fell some
distance farther.
Veronique now also took to her heels,
urged not so much by panic, though this would have
been excusable, as by the eager longing to find a weapon
and defend herself. She remembered that in her
father’s study there was a glass case filled
with guns and revolvers, all bearing the word “loaded,”
no doubt as a warning to Francois; and it was one of
these that she wished to seize in order to face the
enemy. She did not even turn round. She
was not interested to know whether she was being pursued.
She ran for the goal, the only profitable goal.
Being lighter and swifter of foot, she overtook Gertrude,
who panted:
“The bridge . . . . We must burn it . .
. . The petrol’s there . . . .”
Veronique did not reply. Breaking
down the bridge was a secondary matter and would even
have been an obstacle to her plan of taking a gun and
attacking the enemy.
But, when she reached the bridge,
Gertrude whirled about in such a way that she almost
fell down the precipice. An arrow had struck her
in the back.
“Help! Help!” she screamed.
“Don’t leave me!”
“I’m coming back,”
replied Veronique, who had not seen the arrow and
thought that Gertrude had merely caught her foot in
running. “I’m coming back, with two
guns. You join me.”
She imagined in her mind that, once
they were both armed, they would go back to the wood
and rescue the other sisters. Redoubling her efforts,
therefore, she reached the wall of the estate, ran
across the grass and went up to her father’s
study. Here she stopped to recover her breath;
and, after she had taken the two guns, her heart beat
so fast that she had to go back at a slower pace.
She was astonished at not meeting
Gertrude, at not seeing her. She called her.
No reply. And it was not till then that the thought
occurred to her that Gertrude had been wounded like
her sisters.
She once more broke into a run.
But, when she came within sight of the bridge, she
heard shrill cries pierce through the buzzing in her
ears and, on coming into the open opposite the sharp
ascent that led to the wood of the Great Oak, she
saw . . .
What she saw rivetted her to the entrance
to the bridge. On the other side, Gertrude was
sprawling upon the ground, struggling, clutching at
the roots, digging her nails into the grass and slowly,
slowly, with an imperceptible and uninterrupted movement,
moving along the slope.
And Veronique became aware that the
unfortunate woman was fastened under the arms and
round the waist by a cord which was hoisting her up,
like a bound and helpless prey, and which was pulled
by invisible hands above.
Veronique raised one of the guns to
her shoulder. But at what enemy was she to take
aim? What enemy was she to fight? Who was
hiding behind the trees and stones that crowned the
hill like a rampart?
Gertrude slipped between those stones,
between those trees. She had ceased screaming,
no doubt she was exhausted and swooning. She
disappeared from sight.
Veronique had not moved. She
realized the futility of any venture or enterprise.
By rushing into a contest in which she was beaten beforehand
she would not be able to rescue the sisters Archignat
and would merely offer herself to the conqueror as
a new and final victim.
Besides, she was overcome with fear.
Everything was happening in accordance with the ruthless
logic of facts of which she did not grasp the meaning
but which all seemed connected like the links of a
chain. She was afraid, afraid of those beings,
afraid of those ghosts, instinctively and unconsciously
afraid, afraid like the sisters Archignat, like Honorine,
like all the victims of the terrible scourge.
She stooped, so as not to be seen
from the Great Oak, and, bending forward and taking
the shelter offered by some bramble-bushes, she reached
the little hut of which the sisters Archignat had spoken,
a sort of summer-house with a pointed roof and coloured
tiles. Half the summer-house was filled with
cans of petrol.
From here she overlooked the bridge,
on which no one could step without being seen by her.
But no one came down from the wood.
Night fell, a night of thick fog silvered
by the moon which just allowed Veronique to see the
opposite side.
After an hour, feeling a little reassured,
she made a first trip with two cans which she emptied
on the outer beams of the bridge.
Ten times, with her ears pricked up,
carrying her gun slung over her shoulder and prepared
at any moment to defend herself, she repeated the
journey. She poured the petrol a little at random,
groping her way and yet as far as possible selecting
the places where her sense of touch seemed to tell
her that the wood was most rotten.
She had a box of matches, the only
one that she had found in the house. She took
out a match and hesitated a moment, frightened at the
thought of the great light it would make:
“Even so,” she reflected,
“if it could be seen from the mainland . . .
But, with this fog . . .”
Suddenly she struck the match and
at once lit a paper torch which she had prepared by
soaking it in petrol.
A great flame blazed and burnt her
fingers. Then she threw the paper in a pool of
petrol which had formed in a hollow and fled back to
the summer-house.
The fire flared up immediately and,
at one flash, spread over the whole part which she
had sprinkled. The cliffs on the two islands,
the strip of granite that united them, the big trees
around, the hill, the wood of the Great Oak and the
sea at the bottom of the ravine: these were all
lit up.
“They know where I am
. . . . They are looking at the summer-house
where I am hiding,” thought Veronique, keeping
her eyes fixed on the Great Oak.
But not a shadow passed through the
wood. Not a sound of voices reached her ears.
Those concealed above did not leave their impenetrable
retreat.
In a few minutes, half the bridge
collapsed, with a great crash and a gush of sparks.
But the other half went on burning; and at every moment
a piece of timber tumbled into the precipice, lighting
up the depths of the night.
Each time that this happened, Veronique
had a sense of relief and her overstrung nerves grew
relaxed. A feeling of security crept over her
and became more and more justified as the gulf between
her and her enemies widened. Nevertheless she
remained inside the summer-house and resolved to wait
for the dawn in order to make sure that no communication
was henceforth possible.
The fog increased. Everything
was shrouded in darkness. About the middle of
the night, she heard a sound on the other side, at
the top of the hill, so far as she could judge.
It was the sound of wood-cutters felling trees, the
regular sound of an axe biting into branches which
were finally removed by breaking.
Veronique had an idea, absurd though
she knew it to be, that they were perhaps building
a foot-bridge; and she clutched her gun resolutely.
About an hour later, she seemed to
hear moans and even a stifled cry, followed, for some
time, by the rustle of leaves and the sound of steps
coming and going. This ceased. Once more
there was a great silence which seemed to absorb in
space every stirring, every restless, every quivering,
every living thing.
The numbness produced by the fatigue
and hunger from which she was beginning to suffer
left Veronique little power of thought. She remembered
above all that, having failed to bring any provisions
from the village, she had nothing to eat. She
did not distress herself, for she was determined,
as soon as the fog lifted and this was bound
to happen before long to light bonfires
with the cans of petrol. She reflected that the
best place would be at the end of the island, at the
spot where the dolmen stood.
But suddenly a dreadful thought struck
her: had she not left her box of matches on the
bridge? She felt in her pockets but could not
find it. All search was in vain.
This also did not perturb her unduly.
For the time being, the feeling that she had escaped
the attacks of the enemy filled her with such delight
that it seemed to her that all the difficulties would
disappear of their own accord.
The hours passed in this way, endlessly
long hours, which the penetrating fog and the cold
made more painful as the morning approached.
Then a faint gleam overspread the
sky. Things emerged from the gloom and assumed
their actual forms. And Veronique now saw that
the bridge had collapsed throughout its length.
An interval of fifty yards separated the two islands,
which were only joined below by the sharp, pointed,
inaccessible ridge of the cliff.
She was saved.
But, on raising her eyes to the hill
opposite, she saw, right at the top of the slope,
a sight that made her utter a cry of horror. Three
of the nearest trees of those which crowned the hill
and belonged to the wood of the Great Oak had been
stripped of their lower branches. And, on the
three bare trunks, with their arms strained backward,
with their legs bound, under the tatters of their
skirts, and with ropes drawn tight beneath their livid
faces, half-hidden by the black bows of their caps,
hung the three sisters Archignat.
They were crucified.