When in May, 1886, I found myself
at last in Paris, I naturally determined to throw
myself on the charity of an old chum of mine, Eugene
Marie d’Ardèche, who had forsaken Boston a year
or more ago on receiving word of the death of an aunt
who had left him such property as she possessed.
I fancy this windfall surprised him not a little, for
the relations between the aunt and nephew had never
been cordial, judging from Eugene’s remarks
touching the lady, who was, it seems, a more or less
wicked and witch-like old person, with a penchant for
black magic, at least such was the common report.
Why she should leave all her property
to d’Ardèche, no one could tell, unless it was
that she felt his rather hobbledehoy tendencies towards
Buddhism and occultism might some day lead him to her
own unhallowed height of questionable illumination.
To be sure d’Ardèche reviled her as a bad old
woman, being himself in that state of enthusiastic
exaltation which sometimes accompanies a boyish fancy
for occultism; but in spite of his distant and repellent
attitude, Mlle. Blaye de Tartas made
him her sole heir, to the violent wrath of a questionable
old party known to infamy as the Sar Torrevieja, the
“King of the Sorcerers.” This malevolent
old portent, whose gray and crafty face was often seen
in the Rue M. lé Prince during the life
of Mlle. de Tartas had, it seems, fully
expected to enjoy her small wealth after her death;
and when it appeared that she had left him only the
contents of the gloomy old house in the Quartier
Latin, giving the house itself and all else of which
she died possessed to her nephew in America, the Sar
proceeded to remove everything from the place, and
then to curse it elaborately and comprehensively,
together with all those who should ever dwell therein.
Whereupon he disappeared.
This final episode was the last word
I received from Eugene, but I knew the number of the
house, 252 Rue M. lé Prince. So, after
a day or two given to a first cursory survey of Paris,
I started across the Seine to find Eugene and compel
him to do the honors of the city.
Every one who knows the Latin Quarter
knows the Rue M. lé Prince, running up the
hill towards the Garden of the Luxembourg. It
is full of queer houses and odd corners, or
was in ’86, and certainly N
was, when I found it, quite as queer as any. It
was nothing but a doorway, a black arch of old stone
between and under two new houses painted yellow.
The effect of this bit of seventeenth-century masonry,
with its dirty old doors, and rusty broken lantern
sticking gaunt and grim out over the narrow sidewalk,
was, in its frame of fresh plaster, sinister in the
extreme.
I wondered if I had made a mistake
in the number; it was quite evident that no one lived
behind those cobwebs. I went into the doorway
of one of the new hotels and interviewed the concierge.
No, M. d’Ardèche did not live
there, though to be sure he owned the mansion; he
himself resided in Meudon, in the country house of
the late Mlle. de Tartas. Would Monsieur
like the number and the street?
Monsieur would like them extremely,
so I took the card that the concierge wrote for me,
and forthwith started for the river, in order that
I might take a steamboat for Meudon. By one of
those coincidences which happen so often, being quite
inexplicable, I had not gone twenty paces down the
street before I ran directly into the arms of Eugene
d’Ardèche. In three minutes we were sitting
in the queer little garden of the Chien Bleu, drinking
vermouth and absinthe, and talking it all over.
“You do not live in your aunt’s
house?” I said at last, interrogatively.
“No, but if this sort of thing
keeps on I shall have to. I like Meudon much
better, and the house is perfect, all furnished, and
nothing in it newer than the last century. You
must come out with me to-night and see it. I
have got a jolly room fixed up for my Buddha.
But there is something wrong with this house opposite.
I can’t keep a tenant in it, not
four days. I have had three, all within six months,
but the stories have gone around and a man would as
soon think of hiring the Cour des Comptes
to live in as N. It is notorious. The
fact is, it is haunted the worst way.”
I laughed and ordered more vermouth.
“That is all right. It
is haunted all the same, or enough to keep it empty,
and the funny part is that no one knows how
it is haunted. Nothing is ever seen, nothing
heard. As far as I can find out, people just
have the horrors there, and have them so bad they have
to go to the hospital afterwards. I have one
ex-tenant in the Bicetre now. So the house stands
empty, and as it covers considerable ground and is
taxed for a lot, I don’t know what to do about
it. I think I’ll either give it to that
child of sin, Torrevieja, or else go and live in it
myself. I shouldn’t mind the ghosts, I
am sure.”
“Did you ever stay there?”
“No, but I have always intended
to, and in fact I came up here to-day to see a couple
of rake-hell fellows I know, Fargeau and Duchesne,
doctors in the Clinical Hospital beyond here, up by
the Parc Mont Souris. They promised that they
would spend the night with me some time in my aunt’s
house, which is called around here, you
must know, ’la Bouche d’Enfer,’ and
I thought perhaps they would make it this week, if
they can get off duty. Come up with me while
I see them, and then we can go across the river to
Vefour’s and have some luncheon, you can get
your things at the Chatham, and we will go out to
Meudon, where of course you will spend the night with
me.”
The plan suited me perfectly, so we
went up to the hospital, found Fargeau, who declared
that he and Duchesne were ready for anything, the
nearer the real “bouche d’enfer”
the better; that the following Thursday they would
both be off duty for the night, and that on that day
they would join in an attempt to outwit the devil
and clear up the mystery of N.
“Does M. l’Americain go with us?”
asked Fargeau.
“Why of course,” I replied,
“I intend to go, and you must not refuse me,
d’Ardèche; I decline to be put off. Here
is a chance for you to do the honors of your city
in a manner which is faultless. Show me a real
live ghost, and I will forgive Paris for having lost
the Jardin Mabille.”
So it was settled.
Later we went down to Meudon and ate
dinner in the terrace room of the villa, which was
all that d’Ardèche had said, and more, so utterly
was its atmosphere that of the seventeenth century.
At dinner Eugene told me more about his late aunt,
and the queer goings on in the old house.
Mlle. Blaye lived, it seems,
all alone, except for one female servant of her own
age; a severe, taciturn creature, with massive Breton
features and a Breton tongue, whenever she vouchsafed
to use it. No one ever was seen to enter the
door of N except Jeanne the servant and the Sar
Torrevieja, the latter coming constantly from none
knew whither, and always entering, never leaving.
Indeed, the neighbors, who for eleven years had watched
the old sorcerer sidle crab-wise up to the bell almost
every day, declared vociferously that never
had he been seen to leave the house. Once, when
they decided to keep absolute guard, the watcher,
none other than Maitre Garceau of the Chien Bleu, after
keeping his eyes fixed on the door from ten o’clock
one morning when the Sar arrived until four in the
afternoon, during which time the door was unopened
(he knew this, for had he not gummed a ten-centime
stamp over the joint and was not the stamp unbroken)
nearly fell down when the sinister figure of Torrevieja
slid wickedly by him with a dry “Pardon, Monsieur!”
and disappeared again through the black doorway.
This was curious, for N was
entirely surrounded by houses, its only windows opening
on a courtyard into which no eye could look from the
hotels of the Rue M. lé Prince and the Rue
de l’Ecole, and the mystery was one of the choice
possessions of the Latin Quarter.
Once a year the austerity of the place
was broken, and the denizens of the whole quarter
stood open-mouthed watching many carriages drive up
to N, many of them private, not a few with crests
on the door panels, from all of them descending veiled
female figures and men with coat collars turned up.
Then followed curious sounds of music from within,
and those whose houses joined the blank walls of N became for the moment popular, for by placing
the ear against the wall strange music could distinctly
be heard, and the sound of monotonous chanting voices
now and then. By dawn the last guest would have
departed, and for another year the hotel of Mlle.
de Tartas was ominously silent.
Eugene declared that he believed it
was a celebration of “Walpurgisnacht,”
and certainly appearances favored such a fancy.
“A queer thing about the whole
affair is,” he said, “the fact that every
one in the street swears that about a month ago, while
I was out in Concarneau for a visit, the music and
voices were heard again, just as when my revered aunt
was in the flesh. The house was perfectly empty,
as I tell you, so it is quite possible that the good
people were enjoying an hallucination.”
I must acknowledge that these stories
did not reassure me; in fact, as Thursday came near,
I began to regret a little my determination to spend
the night in the house. I was too vain to back
down, however, and the perfect coolness of the two
doctors, who ran down Tuesday to Meudon to make a
few arrangements, caused me to swear that I would die
of fright before I would flinch. I suppose I
believed more or less in ghosts, I am sure now that
I am older I believe in them, there are in fact few
things I can not believe. Two or three
inexplicable things had happened to me, and, although
this was before my adventure with Rendel in Paestum,
I had a strong predisposition to believe some things
that I could not explain, wherein I was out of sympathy
with the age.
Well, to come to the memorable night
of the twelfth of June, we had made our preparations,
and after depositing a big bag inside the doors of
N, went across to the Chien Bleu, where Fargeau
and Duchesne turned up promptly, and we sat down to
the best dinner Pere Garceau could create.
I remember I hardly felt that the
conversation was in good taste. It began with
various stories of Indian fakirs and Oriental
jugglery, matters in which Eugene was curiously well
read, swerved to the horrors of the great Sepoy mutiny,
and thus to reminiscences of the dissecting-room.
By this time we had drunk more or less, and Duchesne
launched into a photographic and Zolaesque account
of the only time (as he said) when he was possessed
of the panic of fear; namely, one night many years
ago, when he was locked by accident into the dissecting-room
of the Loucine, together with several cadávers
of a rather unpleasant nature. I ventured to
protest mildly against the choice of subjects, the
result being a perfect carnival of horrors, so that
when we finally drank our last crème de cacao
and started for “la Bouche d’Enfer,”
my nerves were in a somewhat rocky condition.
It was just ten o’clock when
we came into the street. A hot dead wind drifted
in great puffs through the city, and ragged masses
of vapor swept the purple sky; an unsavory night altogether,
one of those nights of hopeless lassitude when one
feels, if one is at home, like doing nothing but drink
mint juleps and smoke cigarettes.
Eugene opened the creaking door, and
tried to light one of the lanterns; but the gusty
wind blew out every match, and we finally had to close
the outer doors before we could get a light.
At last we had all the lanterns going, and I began
to look around curiously. We were in a long, vaulted
passage, partly carriageway, partly footpath, perfectly
bare but for the street refuse which had drifted in
with eddying winds. Beyond lay the courtyard,
a curious place rendered more curious still by the
fitful moonlight and the flashing of four dark lanterns.
The place had evidently been once a most noble palace.
Opposite rose the oldest portion, a three-story wall
of the time of Francis I., with a great wisteria vine
covering half. The wings on either side were more
modern, seventeenth century, and ugly, while towards
the street was nothing but a flat unbroken wall.
The great bare court, littered with
bits of paper blown in by the wind, fragments of packing
cases, and straw, mysterious with flashing lights
and flaunting shadows, while low masses of torn vapor
drifted overhead, hiding, then revealing the stars,
and all in absolute silence, not even the sounds of
the streets entering this prison-like place, was weird
and uncanny in the extreme. I must confess that
already I began to feel a slight disposition towards
the horrors, but with that curious inconsequence which
so often happens in the case of those who are deliberately
growing scared, I could think of nothing more reassuring
than those delicious verses of Lewis Carroll’s:
“Just the place for
a Snark! I have said it twice,
That alone should
encourage the crew.
Just the place for a Snark!
I have said it thrice,
What I tell you
three times is true,”
which kept repeating themselves over
and over in my brain with feverish insistence.
Even the medical students had stopped
their chaffing, and were studying the surroundings
gravely.
“There is one thing certain,”
said Fargeau, “anything might have happened
here without the slightest chance of discovery.
Did ever you see such a perfect place for lawlessness?”
“And anything might happen
here now, with the same certainty of impunity,”
continued Duchesne, lighting his pipe, the snap of
the match making us all start. “D’Ardèche,
your lamented relative was certainly well fixed; she
had full scope here for her traditional experiments
in demonology.”
“Curse me if I don’t believe
that those same traditions were more or less founded
on fact,” said Eugene. “I never saw
this court under these conditions before, but I could
believe anything now. What’s that!”
“Nothing but a door slamming,” said Duchesne,
loudly.
“Well, I wish doors wouldn’t
slam in houses that have been empty eleven months.”
“It is irritating,” and
Duchesne slipped his arm through mine; “but we
must take things as they come. Remember we have
to deal not only with the spectral lumber left here
by your scarlet aunt, but as well with the supererogatory
curse of that hell-cat Torrevieja. Come on! let’s
get inside before the hour arrives for the sheeted
dead to squeak and gibber in these lonely halls.
Light your pipes, your tobacco is a sure protection
against ‘your whoreson dead bodies’; light
up and move on.”
We opened the hall door and entered
a vaulted stone vestibule, full of dust, and cobwebby.
“There is nothing on this floor,”
said Eugene, “except servants’ rooms and
offices, and I don’t believe there is anything
wrong with them. I never heard that there was,
any way. Let’s go up stairs.”
So far as we could see, the house
was apparently perfectly uninteresting inside, all
eighteenth-century work, the façade of the main building
being, with the vestibule, the only portion of the
Francis I. work.
“The place was burned during
the Terror,” said Eugene, “for my great-uncle,
from whom Mlle. de Tartas inherited it, was
a good and true Royalist; he went to Spain after the
Revolution, and did not come back until the accession
of Charles X., when he restored the house, and then
died, enormously old. This explains why it is
all so new.”
The old Spanish sorcerer to whom Mlle.
de Tartas had left her personal property had
done his work thoroughly. The house was absolutely
empty, even the wardrobes and bookcases built in had
been carried away; we went through room after room,
finding all absolutely dismantled, only the windows
and doors with their casings, the parquet floors, and
the florid Renaissance mantels remaining.
“I feel better,” remarked
Fargeau. “The house may be haunted, but
it don’t look it, certainly; it is the most
respectable place imaginable.”
“Just you wait,” replied
Eugene. “These are only the state apartments,
which my aunt seldom used, except, perhaps, on her
annual ‘Walpurgisnacht.’ Come up
stairs and I will show you a better mise en scene.”
On this floor, the rooms fronting
the court, the sleeping-rooms, were quite small, ("They
are the bad rooms all the same,” said Eugene,) four
of them, all just as ordinary in appearance as those
below. A corridor ran behind them connecting with
the wing corridor, and from this opened a door, unlike
any of the other doors in that it was covered with
green baize, somewhat moth-eaten. Eugene selected
a key from the bunch he carried, unlocked the door,
and with some difficulty forced it to swing inward;
it was as heavy as the door of a safe.
“We are now,” he said,
“on the very threshold of hell itself; these
rooms in here were my scarlet aunt’s unholy of
unholies. I never let them with the rest of the
house, but keep them as a curiosity. I only wish
Torrevieja had kept out; as it was, he looted them,
as he did the rest of the house, and nothing is left
but the walls and ceiling and floor. They are
something, however, and may suggest what the former
condition must have been. Tremble and enter.”
The first apartment was a kind of
anteroom, a cube of perhaps twenty feet each way,
without windows, and with no doors except that by which
we entered and another to the right. Walls, floor,
and ceiling were covered with a black lacquer, brilliantly
polished, that flashed the light of our lanterns in
a thousand intricate reflections. It was like
the inside of an enormous Japanese box, and about as
empty. From this we passed to another room, and
here we nearly dropped our lanterns. The room
was circular, thirty feet or so in diameter, covered
by a hemispherical dome; walls and ceiling were dark
blue, spotted with gold stars; and reaching from floor
to floor across the dome stretched a colossal figure
in red lacquer of a nude woman kneeling, her legs
reaching out along the floor on either side, her head
touching the lintel of the door through which we had
entered, her arms forming its sides, with the fore
arms extended and stretching along the walls until
they met the long feet. The most astounding, misshapen,
absolutely terrifying thing, I think, I ever saw.
From the navel hung a great white object, like the
traditional roe’s egg of the Arabian Nights.
The floor was of red lacquer, and in it was inlaid
a pentagram the size of the room, made of wide strips
of brass. In the centre of this pentagram was
a circular disk of black stone, slightly saucer-shaped,
with a small outlet in the middle.
The effect of the room was simply
crushing, with this gigantic red figure crouched over
it all, the staring eyes fixed on one, no matter what
his position. None of us spoke, so oppressive
was the whole thing.
The third room was like the first
in dimensions, but instead of being black it was entirely
sheathed with plates of brass, walls, ceiling, and
floor, tarnished now, and turning green,
but still brilliant under the lantern light.
In the middle stood an oblong altar of porphyry, its
longer dimensions on the axis of the suite of rooms,
and at one end, opposite the range of doors, a pedestal
of black basalt.
This was all. Three rooms, stranger
than these, even in their emptiness, it would be hard
to imagine. In Egypt, in India, they would not
be entirely out of place, but here in Paris, in a
commonplace hotel, in the Rue M. lé Prince,
they were incredible.
We retraced our steps, Eugene closed
the iron door with its baize covering, and we went
into one of the front chambers and sat down, looking
at each other.
“Nice party, your aunt,”
said Fargeau. “Nice old party, with amiable
tastes; I am glad we are not to spend the night in
those rooms.”
“What do you suppose she did
there?” inquired Duchesne. “I know
more or less about black art, but that series of rooms
is too much for me.”
“My impression is,” said
d’Ardèche, “that the brazen room was a
kind of sanctuary containing some image or other on
the basalt base, while the stone in front was really
an altar, what the nature of the sacrifice
might be I don’t even guess. The round room
may have been used for invocations and incantations.
The pentagram looks like it. Any way it is all
just about as queer and fin de siecle as I can
well imagine. Look here, it is nearly twelve,
let’s dispose of ourselves, if we are going
to hunt this thing down.”
The four chambers on this floor of
the old house were those said to be haunted, the wings
being quite innocent, and, so far as we knew, the
floors below. It was arranged that we should each
occupy a room, leaving the doors open with the lights
burning, and at the slightest cry or knock we were
all to rush at once to the room from which the warning
sound might come. There was no communication between
the rooms to be sure, but, as the doors all opened
into the corridor, every sound was plainly audible.
The last room fell to me, and I looked it over carefully.
It seemed innocent enough, a commonplace,
square, rather lofty Parisian sleeping-room, finished
in wood painted white, with a small marble mantel,
a dusty floor of inlaid maple and cherry, walls hung
with an ordinary French paper, apparently quite new,
and two deeply embrasured windows looking out on the
court.
I opened the swinging sash with some
trouble, and sat down in the window seat with my lantern
beside me trained on the only door, which gave on
the corridor.
The wind had gone down, and it was
very still without, still and hot.
The masses of luminous vapor were gathering thickly
overhead, no longer urged by the gusty wind.
The great masses of rank wisteria leaves, with here
and there a second blossoming of purple flowers, hung
dead over the window in the sluggish air. Across
the roofs I could hear the sound of a belated fiacre
in the streets below. I filled my pipe again and
waited.
For a time the voices of the men in
the other rooms were a companionship, and at first
I shouted to them now and then, but my voice echoed
rather unpleasantly through the long corridors, and
had a suggestive way of reverberating around the left
wing beside me, and coming out at a broken window
at its extremity like the voice of another man.
I soon gave up my attempts at conversation, and devoted
myself to the task of keeping awake.
It was not easy; why did I eat that
lettuce salad at Pere Garceau’s? I should
have known better. It was making me irresistibly
sleepy, and wakefulness was absolutely necessary.
It was certainly gratifying to know that I could sleep,
that my courage was by me to that extent, but in the
interests of science I must keep awake. But almost
never, it seemed, had sleep looked so desirable.
Half a hundred times, nearly, I would doze for an
instant, only to awake with a start, and find my pipe
gone out. Nor did the exertion of relighting it
pull me together. I struck my match mechanically,
and with the first puff dropped off again. It
was most vexing. I got up and walked around the
room. It was most annoying. My cramped position
had almost put both my legs to sleep. I could
hardly stand. I felt numb, as though with cold.
There was no longer any sound from the other rooms,
nor from without. I sank down in my window seat.
How dark it was growing! I turned up the lantern.
That pipe again, how obstinately it kept going out!
and my last match was gone. The lantern, too,
was that going out? I lifted my hand to
turn it up again. It felt like lead, and fell
beside me.
Then I awoke, absolutely.
I remembered the story of “The Haunters and
the Haunted.” This was the Horror.
I tried to rise, to cry out. My body was like
lead, my tongue was paralyzed. I could hardly
move my eyes. And the light was going out.
There was no question about that. Darker and
darker yet; little by little the pattern of the paper
was swallowed up in the advancing night. A prickling
numbness gathered in every nerve, my right arm slipped
without feeling from my lap to my side, and I could
not raise it, it swung helpless. A
thin, keen humming began in my head, like the cicadas
on a hillside in September. The darkness was
coming fast.
Yes, this was it. Something was
subjecting me, body and mind, to slow paralysis.
Physically I was already dead. If I could only
hold my mind, my consciousness, I might still be safe,
but could I? Could I resist the mad horror of
this silence, the deepening dark, the creeping numbness?
I knew that, like the man in the ghost story, my only
safety lay here.
It had come at last. My body
was dead, I could no longer move my eyes. They
were fixed in that last look on the place where the
door had been, now only a deepening of the dark.
Utter night: the last flicker
of the lantern was gone. I sat and waited; my
mind was still keen, but how long would it last?
There was a limit even to the endurance of the utter
panic of fear.
Then the end began. In the velvet
blackness came two white eyes, milky, opalescent,
small, far away, awful eyes, like a dead
dream. More beautiful than I can describe, the
flakes of white flame moving from the perimeter inward,
disappearing in the centre, like a never ending flow
of opal water into a circular tunnel. I could
not have moved my eyes had I possessed the power:
they devoured the fearful, beautiful things that grew
slowly, slowly larger, fixed on me, advancing, growing
more beautiful, the white flakes of light sweeping
more swiftly into the blazing vortices, the awful
fascination deepening in its insane intensity as the
white, vibrating eyes grew nearer, larger.
Like a hideous and implacable engine
of death the eyes of the unknown Horror swelled and
expanded until they were close before me, enormous,
terrible, and I felt a slow, cold, wet breath propelled
with mechanical regularity against my face, enveloping
me in its fetid mist, in its charnel-house deadliness.
With ordinary fear goes always a physical
terror, but with me in the presence of this unspeakable
Thing was only the utter and awful terror of the mind,
the mad fear of a prolonged and ghostly nightmare.
Again and again I tried to shriek, to make some noise,
but physically I was utterly dead. I could only
feel myself go mad with the terror of hideous death.
The eyes were close on me, their movement
so swift that they seemed to be but palpitating flames,
the dead breath was around me like the depths of the
deepest sea.
Suddenly a wet, icy mouth, like that
of a dead cuttle-fish, shapeless, jelly-like, fell
over mine. The horror began slowly to draw my
life from me, but, as enormous and shuddering folds
of palpitating jelly swept sinuously around me, my
will came back, my body awoke with the reaction of
final fear, and I closed with the nameless death that
enfolded me.
What was it that I was fighting?
My arms sunk through the unresisting mass that was
turning me to ice. Moment by moment new folds
of cold jelly swept round me, crushing me with the
force of Titans. I fought to wrest my mouth from
this awful Thing that sealed it, but, if ever I succeeded
and caught a single breath, the wet, sucking mass closed
over my face again before I could cry out. I
think I fought for hours, desperately, insanely, in
a silence that was more hideous than any sound, fought
until I felt final death at hand, until the memory
of all my life rushed over me like a flood, until
I no longer had strength to wrench my face from that
hellish succubus, until with a last mechanical struggle
I fell and yielded to death.
Then I heard a voice say, “If
he is dead, I can never forgive myself; I was to blame.”
Another replied, “He is not
dead, I know we can save him if only we reach the
hospital in time. Drive like hell, cocher!
twenty francs for you, if you get there in three minutes.”
Then there was night again, and nothingness,
until I suddenly awoke and stared around. I lay
in a hospital ward, very white and sunny, some yellow
fleurs-de-lis stood beside the head of the pallet,
and a tall sister of mercy sat by my side.
To tell the story in a few words,
I was in the Hotel Dieu, where the men had taken me
that fearful night of the twelfth of June. I asked
for Fargeau or Duchesne, and by and by the latter
came, and sitting beside the bed told me all that
I did not know.
It seems that they had sat, each in
his room, hour after hour, hearing nothing, very much
bored, and disappointed. Soon after two o’clock
Fargeau, who was in the next room, called to me to
ask if I was awake. I gave no reply, and, after
shouting once or twice, he took his lantern and came
to investigate. The door was locked on the inside!
He instantly called d’Ardèche and Duchesne,
and together they hurled themselves against the door.
It resisted. Within they could hear irregular
footsteps dashing here and there, with heavy breathing.
Although frozen with terror, they fought to destroy
the door and finally succeeded by using a great slab
of marble that formed the shelf of the mantel in Fargeau’s
room. As the door crashed in, they were suddenly
hurled back against the walls of the corridor, as
though by an explosion, the lanterns were extinguished,
and they found themselves in utter silence and darkness.
As soon as they recovered from the
shock, they leaped into the room and fell over my
body in the middle of the floor. They lighted
one of the lanterns, and saw the strangest sight that
can be imagined. The floor and walls to the height
of about six feet were running with something that
seemed like stagnant water, thick, glutinous, sickening.
As for me, I was drenched with the same cursed liquid.
The odor of musk was nauseating. They dragged
me away, stripped off my clothing, wrapped me in their
coats, and hurried to the hospital, thinking me perhaps
dead. Soon after sunrise d’Ardèche left
the hospital, being assured that I was in a fair way
to recovery, with time, and with Fargeau went up to
examine by daylight the traces of the adventure that
was so nearly fatal. They were too late.
Fire engines were coming down the street as they passed
the Academie. A neighbor rushed up to d’Ardèche:
“O Monsieur! what misfortune, yet what fortune!
It is true la Bouche d’Enfer I
beg pardon, the residence of the lamented Mlle.
de Tartas, was burned, but not wholly,
only the ancient building. The wings were saved,
and for that great credit is due the brave firemen.
Monsieur will remember them, no doubt.”
It was quite true. Whether a
forgotten lantern, overturned in the excitement, had
done the work, or whether the origin of the fire was
more supernatural, it was certain that “the Mouth
of Hell” was no more. A last engine was
pumping slowly as d’Ardèche came up; half a dozen
limp, and one distended, hose stretched through the
porte cochère, and within only the façade of
Francis I. remained, draped still with the black stems
of the wisteria. Beyond lay a great vacancy, where
thin smoke was rising slowly. Every floor was
gone, and the strange halls of Mlle. Blaye de
Tartas were only a memory.
With d’Ardèche I visited the
place last year, but in the stead of the ancient walls
was then only a new and ordinary building, fresh and
respectable; yet the wonderful stories of the old Bouche
d’Enfer still lingered in the quarter, and
will hold there, I do not doubt, until the Day of
Judgment.