Veronique’s estimate was correct,
provided that the door opened outwards and that her
enemies were at once revealed to view. She therefore
examined the door and suddenly observed that, against
all logical expectation, it had a large strong bolt
at the bottom. Should she make use of it?
She had no time to weigh the advantages
or drawbacks of this plan. She had heard a jingle
of keys and, almost at the same time, the sound of
a key grating in the lock.
Veronique received a very clear vision
of what was likely to happen. When the assailants
burst in, she would be thrust aside, she would be
hampered in her movements, her aim would be inaccurate
and her shots would miss, whereupon they would
shut the door again and promptly hurry off to Francois’
cell. The thought of it made her lose her head;
and her action was instinctive and immediate.
First, she pushed the bolt at the foot of the door.
Next, half rising, she slammed the iron shutter over
the wicket. A latch clicked. It was no longer
possible either to enter or to look in.
Then at once she realized the absurdity
of her action, which had not opposed any obstacle
to the menace of the enemy. Stephane, leaping
to her side, said:
“Good heavens, what have you
done? Why, they saw that I was not moving and
they now know that I am not alone!”
“Exactly,” she answered,
striving to defend herself. “They will try
to break down the door, which will give us the time
we want.”
“The time we want for what?”
“To make our escape.”
“Which way?”
“Francois will call out to us. Francois
will . . .”
She did not complete her sentence.
They now heard the sound of footsteps moving swiftly
down the passage. There was no doubt about it;
the enemy, without troubling about Stephane, whose
flight appeared impossible, was making for the upper
floor of cells. Moreover, might he not suppose
that the two friends were acting in agreement and
that it was the boy who was in Stephane’s cell
and who had barred the door?
Veronique therefore had precipitated
events and given them a turn which she had so many
reasons to dread; and Francois, up above, would be
caught at the very moment when he was preparing to
escape.
She was utterly overwhelmed:
“Why did I come here?”
she muttered. “It would have been so simple
to wait! The two of us would have saved you to
a certainty.”
One idea flashed through the confusion
of her mind: had she not sought to hasten Stephane’s
release because of what she knew of this man’s
love for her? And was it not an unworthy curiosity
that had prompted her to make the attempt? A
horrible idea, which she at once rejected, saying:
“No, I had to come. It is fate which is
persecuting us.”
“Don’t believe it,” said Stephane.
“Everything will come right.”
“Too late!” said she, shaking her head.
“Why? How do we know that
Francois has not left his cell? You yourself
thought so just now . . . .”
She did not reply. Her face became
drawn and very pale. By virtue of her sufferings
she had acquired a kind of intuition of the evil that
threatened her. This evil now surrounded her on
every hand. A second series of ordeals was before
her, more terrible than the first.
“There’s death all about us,” she
said.
He tried to smile:
“You are talking like the people of Sarek.
You have the same fears . . .”
“They were right to be afraid.
And you yourself feel the horror of it all.”
She rushed to the door, drew the bolt,
tried to open it; but what could she do against that
massive, iron-clad door?
Stephane seized her by the arm:
“One moment . . . . Listen . . . .
It sounds as if . . .”
“Yes,” she said, “it’s
up there that they are knocking . . . above our heads
. . . in Francois’ cell . . . .”
“Not at all, not at all: listen . . . .”
There was a long silence; and then
blows were heard in the thickness of the cliff.
The sound came from below them.
“The same blows that I heard
this morning,” said Stephane, in dismay.
“The same attempt of which I spoke to you . .
. . Ah, I understand! . . .”
“What? What do you mean?”
The blows were repeated, at regular
intervals, and then ceased, to be followed by a dull,
continuous sound, pierced by shriller creakings and
sudden cracks, like the straining of machinery newly
started, or of one of those capstans which are used
for hoisting boats up a beach.
Veronique listened, desperately expectant
of what was coming, trying to guess, seeking to find
some clue in Stephane’s eyes. He stood in
front of her, looking at her as a man, in the hour
of danger, looks at the woman he loves.
And suddenly she staggered and had
to press her hand against the wall. It was as
though the cave and indeed the whole cliff were bodily
moving from its place.
“Oh,” she murmured, “is
it I who am trembling like this? Is it from fear
that I am shaking from head to foot?”
Seizing Stephane’s hands, she said:
“Tell me! I want to know! . . .”
He did not answer. There was
no fear in his eyes bedewed with tears, there was
nothing but immense love and unbounded despair.
He was thinking only of her.
Besides, was it necessary for him
to explain what was happening? Did not the reality
itself become more and more apparent as the seconds
passed? A strange reality indeed, having no connection
with commonplace facts, a reality quite beyond anything
that the imagination might invent in the domain of
evil, a strange reality which Veronique, who was beginning
to grasp its indication, still refused to believe.
Acting like a trap-door, but like
a trap-door working the reverse way, the square of
enormous joists which was set in the middle of the
cave rose, pivoting on the fixed axis by which it
was hinged parallel with the cliff. The almost
imperceptible movement was that of an enormous lid
opening; and the thing already formed a sort of spring-board
reaching from the edge to the back of the cave, a
spring-board with as yet a very slight slope, on which
it was easy enough to keep one’s balance.
At the first moment, Veronique thought
that the enemy’s object was to crush them between
the implacable floor and the granite of the ceiling.
But, almost immediately afterwards, she understood
that the hateful mechanism, by standing erect like
a draw-bridge when hoisted up, was intended to hurl
them over the precipice. And it would carry out
that intention inexorably. The result was fatal
and inevitable. Whatever they might try, whatever
efforts they might make to hold on, a minute would
come when the floor of that draw-bridge would be absolutely
vertical, forming an integral part of the perpendicular
cliff.
“It’s horrible, it’s horrible,”
she muttered.
Their hands were still clasped. Stephane was
weeping silent tears.
Presently she moaned:
“There’s nothing to be done, is there?”
“Nothing,” he replied.
“Still, there is room beyond
that wooden floor. The cave is round. We
might . . .”
“The space is too small.
If we tried to stand between the sides of the square
and the wall, we should be crushed to death. That
has all been planned. I have often thought about
it.”
“Then . . . ?”
“We must wait.”
“For what? For whom?”
“For Francois.”
“Oh, Francois!” she said,
with a sob. “Perhaps he too is doomed .
. . . Or perhaps he is looking for us and will
fall into some trap. In any case, I shall not
see him . . . . And he will know nothing . . .
. And he will not even have seen his mother before
dying . . . .”
She pressed Stephane’s hands and said:
“Stephane, if one of us escapes death and
I hope it may be you . . .”
“It will be you,” he said,
in a tone of conviction. “I am even surprised
that the enemy should condemn you to the same torture
as myself. But no doubt he doesn’t know
that it’s you who are here with me.”
“It surprises me too!”
said Veronique. “A different torture is
set aside for me. But what does it matter, if
I am not to see my son again! . . . Stephane,
I can safely leave him in your charge, can’t
I? I know all that you have already done for
him.”
The floor continued to rise very slowly,
with an uneven vibration and sudden jerks. The
slope became more accentuated. A few minutes more
and they would no longer be able to speak freely and
quietly.
Stephane replied:
“If I survive, I swear to fulfil
my task to the end. I swear it in memory . .
.”
“In memory of me,” she
said, in a firm voice, “in memory of the Veronique
whom you knew . . . and loved.”
He looked at her passionately:
“So you know?”
“Yes; and I tell you frankly,
I have read your diary. I know your love for
me . . . and I accept it.” She gave a sad
smile. “That poor love which you offered
to the woman who was absent . . . and which you are
now offering to the woman who is about to die.”
“No, no,” he said, eagerly,
“don’t believe that . . . . Salvation
may be near at hand . . . . I feel it. My
love does not belong to the past but to the future.”
He stooped to put his lips to her hands.
“Kiss me,” she said, offering him her
forehead.
Each of them had been obliged to place
one foot on the brink of the precipice, on the straight
edge of granite which ran parallel with the fourth
side of the spring-board.
They kissed gravely.
“Hold me firmly,” said Veronique.
She leant back as far as she could,
raising her head, and called in a muffled voice:
“Francois . . . . Francois . . . .”
But there was no one at the upper
opening, from which the ladder was still hanging by
one of its hooks, well out of reach.
Veronique bent over the sea.
At this spot, the swell of the cliff did not project
as much as elsewhere; and she saw, in between the
foam-topped reefs, a little pool of still water, very
calm and so deep that she could not see the bottom.
She thought that death would be gentler there than
on the sharp-pointed rocks and, yielding to a sudden
longing to have done with it all and to avoid a lingering
agony, she said to Stephane:
“Why wait for the end?
Better die than suffer this torture.”
“No, no!” he exclaimed,
horrified at the thought that Veronique might disappear
from his sight.
“Then you are still hoping?”
“Until the last second, since it’s your
life that’s at stake.”
“I have no longer any hope.”
Nor was he borne up by hope; but he
would have given anything to lull Veronique’s
sufferings and to bear the whole weight of the supreme
ordeal himself.
The floor continued to rise.
The vibration had ceased and the slope became much
more marked, already reaching the bottom of the wicket,
half way up the door. Then there was a sound
like a sudden stoppage of machinery, followed by a
violent jolt, and the whole wicket was covered.
It was becoming impossible for them to stand erect.
They lay down on the slanting floor,
bracing their feet against the granite edge.
Two more jerks occurred, each time
pushing the upper end still higher. The top of
the inner wall was reached; and the enormous mechanism
moved slowly forward, along the ceiling, towards the
opening of the cave. They could see very plainly
that it would fit this opening exactly and close it
hermetically, like a draw-bridge. The rock had
been hewn in such a way that the deadly task might
be accomplished without leaving any loophole for chance.
They did not utter a word. With
hands tight-clasped, they resigned themselves to the
inevitable. Their death was assuming the aspect
of an event decreed by destiny. The machine had
been constructed far back in the centuries and had
no doubt been reconstructed, repaired and put in order
at a more recent date; and during those centuries,
worked by invisible executioners, it had caused the
death of culprits, of guilty men and innocent, of
men of Armorica, Gaul, France or foreign lands.
Prisoners of war, sacrilegious monks, persecuted peasants,
renegade Chouans and soldiers of the Revolution;
one by one the monster had hurled them over the cliff.
To-day it was their turn.
They had not even the bitter solace
of rage and hatred. Whom were they to hate?
They were dying in the deepest obscurity, with no hostile
face emerging from that implacable night. They
were dying in the accomplishment of a task unknown
to themselves, to make up a total, so to speak, and
for the fulfilment of absurd prophecies, of imbecile
intentions, such as the orders given by the barbarian
gods and formulated by fanatical priests. They
were it was a thing unheard of the
victims of some expiatory sacrifice, of some holocaust
offered to the divinities of a blood-thirsty creed!
The wall stood behind them. In
a few more minutes it would be perpendicular.
The end was approaching.
Time after time Stephane had to hold
Veronique back. An increasing terror distracted
her mind. She yearned to fling herself down.
“Please, please,” she
stammered, “do let me . . . . I am suffering
more than I can bear.”
Had she not found her son again, she
would have retained her self-control to the end.
But the thought of Francois was unsettling her.
The boy must also be a prisoner, they must be torturing
him too and immolating him, like his mother, on the
altars of the execrable gods.
“No, no, he will come,”
Stephane declared. “You will be saved .
. . . I will have it so . . . . I know it.”
She replied, wildly:
“He is imprisoned as we are
. . . . They are burning him with torches, driving
arrows into him, tearing his flesh . . . . Oh,
my poor little son! . . .”
“He will come, dear, he told
you he would. Nothing can separate a mother and
son who have been brought together again.”
“We have found each other in
death; we shall be united in death. I wish it
might be at once! I don’t want him to suffer!”
The agony was too great. With
an effort she released her hands from Stephane’s
and made a movement to fling herself down. But
she immediately threw herself back against the draw-bridge,
with a cry of amazement which was echoed by Stephane.
Something had passed before their
eyes and disappeared again. It came from the
left.
“The ladder!” exclaimed
Stephane. “It’s the ladder, isn’t
it?”
“Yes, it’s Francois,”
said Veronique, catching her breath with joy and hope.
“He is saved. He is coming to rescue us.”
At that moment, the wall of torment
was almost upright, vibrating implacably beneath their
shoulders. The cave no longer existed behind
them. The depths had already claimed them; at
most they were clinging to a narrow ledge.
Veronique leant outwards again.
The ladder swung back and then became stationary,
fixed by its two hooks.
Above them, at the opening in the
cliff, was a boy’s face; and the boy was smiling
and making gestures:
“Mother, mother . . . quick!”
The call was eager and urgent.
The two arms were outstretched towards the pair below.
Veronique moaned:
“Oh, it’s you, it’s you, my darling!”
“Quick, mother, I’m holding
the ladder! . . . Quick! . . . It’s
quite safe!”
“I’m coming, darling, I’m coming.”
She had seized the nearest upright.
This time, with Stephane’s assistance, she had
no difficulty in placing her foot on the bottom rung.
But she said:
“And you, Stephane? You’re coming
with me, aren’t you?”
“I have plenty of time,” he said.
“Hurry.”
“No, you must promise.”
“I swear. Hurry.”
She climbed four rungs and stopped:
“Are you coming, Stephane?”
He had already turned towards the
cliff and slipped his left hand into a narrow fissure
which remained between the draw-bridge and the rock.
His right hand reached the ladder and he was able
to set foot on the lowest rung. He too was saved.
With what delight Veronique covered
the rest of the distance! What mattered the void
below her, now that her son was there, waiting for
her to clasp him to her breast at last!
“Here I am, here I am,” she said.
“Here I am, my darling.”
She swiftly put her head and shoulders
in the window. He pulled her through; and she
climbed over the ledge. At last she was with her
son.
They flung themselves into each other’s arms:
“Oh, mother, mother, is it really true?
Mother!”
But she had no sooner closed her arms
about him than she drew back a little, she did not
know why. An inexplicable discomfort checked her
first outburst.
“Come here,” she said,
dragging him to the light of the window. “Come
and let me look at you.”
The boy did as she wished. She
examined him for two or three seconds, no longer,
and suddenly, giving a start of terror, ejaculated:
“Then it’s you? It’s you, the
murderer?”
Oh, horror! She was once more
looking on the face of the monster who had killed
her father and Honorine before her eyes!
“So you know me?” he chuckled.
Veronique realised her mistake from
the boy’s very tone. This was not Francois
but the other, the one who had played his devilish
part in the clothes which Francois usually wore.
He gave another chuckle:
“Ah, you’re beginning
to see things as they are, ma’am! You know
me now, don’t you?”
The hateful face contracted, became
wicked and cruel, animated by the vilest expression.
“Vorski! Vorski!”
stammered Veronique. “It’s Vorski
I recognise in you.”
He burst out laughing:
“Why not? Do you think I’m going
to disown my father as you did?”
“Vorski’s son! His son!” Veronique
repeated.
“Lord bless me, yes, his son:
why shouldn’t I be? Surely the good fellow
had the right to have two sons! Me first and dear
Francois next!”
“Vorski’s son!” Veronique exclaimed
once more.
“And one of the best, I tell
you, ma’am, a worthy son of his father and brought
up on the highest principles. I’ve shown
you as much already, haven’t I? But it’s
not finished, we’re only at the beginning . .
. . Here, would you like me to give you a fresh
proof? Just take a squint at that stick-in-the-mud
of a tutor! . . . No, but look how things go when
I take a hand in them.”
He sprang to the window. Stephane’s
head appeared. The boy picked up a stone and
struck with all his might, throwing him backwards.
Veronique, who at the first moment
had hesitated, not realising the danger, now rushed
and seized the boy’s arm. It was too late.
The head vanished. The hooks of the ladder slipped
off the ledge. There was a loud cry, followed
by the sound of a body falling into the water below.
Veronique ran to the window.
The ladder was floating on the part of the little
pool which she was able to see, lying motionless in
its frame of rocks. There was nothing to point
to the place where Stephane had fallen, not an eddy,
not a ripple.
She called out:
“Stephane! Stephane! . . .”
No reply, nothing but the great silence
of space in which the winds are still and the sea
asleep.
“You villain, what have you done?” she
cried.
“Don’t take on, missus,”
he said. “Master Stephane brought up your
kid to be a duffer. Come it’s a laughing
matter, it is, really. Give us a kiss, won’t
you, daddy’s missus? But, I say, what a
face you’re pulling! Surely you don’t
hate me as much as all that?”
He went up to her, with his arms outstretched.
Veronique swiftly covered him with her revolver:
“Be off, be off, or I’ll
kill you as I would a mad dog! Be off!”
The boy’s face became more inhuman
than ever. He fell back step by step, snarling:
“Oh, I’ll make you pay
for this, my pretty lady! . . . What do you mean
by it? I come up to give you a kiss . . .
I’m full of kindly feelings . . . and you want
to shoot me! You shall pay for it in blood . .
. in nice red flowing blood . . . blood . . . blood
. . . .”
He seemed to love the sound of the
word. He repeated it time after time, then once
more gave a burst of evil laughter and fled down the
tunnel which led to the Priory, shouting:
“The blood of your son, Mother
Veronique! . . . The blood of your darling Francois!”