The Erckmann-Chatrian MEGAPACK ®. Emile Erckmann

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Название The Erckmann-Chatrian MEGAPACK ®
Автор произведения Emile Erckmann
Жанр Историческая литература
Серия
Издательство Историческая литература
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isbn 9781434443373



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threatened to come from the hospital to beat me if I did not write at once. Stay! Here is his letter. I tell you, he is a scoundrel!”

      I shrink from repeating all that the Mauresque told me concerning Castagnac. She related to me the history of their liaison; after having seduced her, he had corrupted her; and, for two years, the wretch had traded upon the poor girl’s dishonor; and, not content with that, had beaten her!

      * * * *

      I left Fatima’s house with a heavy heart. Sidi Houniamni was waiting for me at the door; we redescended the Suma alley.

      “Be on your guard,” said the coulouglis, watching me out of the corner of his eye; “be on your guard, Seigneur Talbe—you are very pale; the bad angel hovers above your head!”

      I shook the good fellow by the hand, and replied—

      “Fear nothing!”

      My resolution was taken: without losing a minute I mounted to the Kasbah, entered the hospital, and knocked at Castagnac’s door.

      “Come in!”

      The expression of my face appeared to announce nothing agreeable, for as soon as he perceived me, he rose with a startled look.

      “Oh! It’s you,” he cried with a forced smile; “I was not expecting a visit from you.”

      My only answer was to show him the letter he had written to Fatima. He turned pale and, after looking at the letter for a few seconds, would have sprung upon me; but I stopped him with a gesture.

      “If you move another step,” I said, laying my hand upon the hilt of my sword, “I’ll kill you like a dog! You are a scoundrel, and you have murdered Dutertre! I was in the dissecting-room, and overheard all. Do not deny it! Your conduct towards this woman is odious. A French officer descend to such a degree of infamy! Listen: I might deliver you up to justice; but your dishonor would fall upon all of us. If you are not utterly lost to shame, kill yourself! I will give you till tomorrow. Tomorrow morning at seven o’clock, if I find you living, I will myself deliver you up to the commandant.”

      Having said so much, I retired without waiting for his answer and hastened to give orders to the sentinel not to permit Lieutenant Castagnac to quit the hospital on any pretext; I gave special instructions also to the gatekeeper and held him responsible for anything that might occur in consequence of neglect or weakness on his part. I then tranquilly returned to my lodging, as if nothing particular had taken place. I was even gayer than usual, and sat over my dinner till nearly eight o’clock.

      From the moment Castagnac’s crime was proved to me I felt pitiless: Raymond cried to me for vengeance.

      * * * *

      The voice of the muezzin announced the tenth hour; the mosques were deserted, the night profoundly dark.

      I seated myself in front of the open window, inhaling the mild breath of the breeze, and giving myself up to the reveries that had formerly been so dear to me. How much of suffering and anxiety I had gone through during the past fortnight! In my whole previous existence I had not experienced anything to equal it. I now felt as if I had escaped from the claws of the spirit of darkness and were enjoying my regained liberty.

      In this manner time sped; already the guard had twice made its round and relieved the sentinels, when, suddenly, I heard rapid but stealthy steps on the stairs. A short, sharp knock came at the door.

      I returned no answer.

      An uncertain hand groped for the key.

      “It is Castagnac!” I said to myself, my heart beating rapidly.

      Two seconds passed, then some one without cried—

      “Open the door!”

      I was not deceived; it was he.

      He listened, then placed his shoulder against the heavy oak door and endeavored to force it open.

      Once more all was silent. He listened again. I remained motionless—held my breath. Presently something was thrown down on the stairs; and then I heard the sound of retreating steps.

      I had escaped death! But what next was he going to attempt? In fear of a new and more violent endeavor to burst open the door, I hastened to shoot the two heavy iron bolts which made the amphitheater a veritable prison.

      This was a useless precaution, however, for, on returning to my seat at the window, I saw the shadow of Castagnac passing along the rampart above. The moon, which had risen on the side of the city, projected the shadow of the hospital on to the opposite precipice. A few stars glittered on the horizon; not a breath moved the still air.

      Before venturing upon the dangerous path, the old campaigner halted and looked at my window. He hesitated for a long while.

      At the end of a quarter of an hour he took the first step, moving with his back flattened against the wall. He had reached half-way, and no doubt flattered himself that he should gain the ledge which descended to the Kasbah, when I uttered the death-cry—

      “Raymond! Where are you going?”

      But, whether it was that he was prepared for whatever might happen, or that he had more sang-froid than his victim, the scoundrel was unscared, and answered with an outburst of ironical laughter—

      “A-ha! You are there, are you, doctor? I thought so. Wait till I return; we have a little account to settle together.”

      I lit my torch and held it out above the precipice.

      “It is too late!” I cried. “Wretch! Behold your grave!”

      And the immense ranges of the abyss, with their black slippery rocks, bristling with wild fig-trees, were illuminated to the bottom of the valley.

      The view was Titanic: the white light of the flaming pitch, descending from stage to stage of the rocks, casting their broad shadows into space, seemed to plough into unfathomable depths of darkness.

      I was strongly affected myself, and fell back a step, as if seized with giddiness. But he—separated from the yawning gulf but by the width of a brick—with what terror must he not have been overwhelmed!

      His knees bent under him—his hands clutched at the wall. I held forth the blazing torch again: an enormous bat, disturbed by the light, commenced his dreary round about the gigantic walls, like a black rat with angular wings, floating in the flame; and far, far down, the waves of the Rummel sparkled in immensity.

      “Mercy!” cried the murderer in a broken voice—“mercy!”

      I had not courage to prolong his torture, and threw my torch’ into the abyss. It fell slowly, its ragged flame waving in the darkness; lighting, turn by turn, the ledges of the mighty rocks as it passed them, and sprinkling the bushes with its dazzling sparks.

      While it was yet but a spot in the midst of night, and was still descending, a shadow overtook and passed it like a thunderbolt!

      Justice, I knew, had been done.

      * * * *

      On my way up the stairs from the amphitheater, something bent under my foot: I stooped and picked it up; it was my own sword! With his habitual perfidy, Castagnac had resolved to kill me with my own weapon, so that my death might have appeared to be the result of suicide.

      Moreover, as I had foreseen, the door of my room had been forced open, my bed turned over, my papers scattered about; his search, in fact, had been exhaustive.

      This circumstance completely dissipated the involuntary feeling of pity with which the wretch’s terrific end had inspired me.