"Listen," replied Juve. "The mysterious, nameless and terrible accomplice of Fantomas, is no other than a snake! A snake trained to crush bodies in its coils. After having long suspected its existence, I began to be sure of it when I found that strange scale at Neuilly. This accounts for the incomprehensible state of Mme. Valgrand"s body, the extraordinary attempt on Dixon, the murderous thing that terrified Josephine! That is why, expecting to-night"s visit, I barbed myself with iron like a knight of old, feeling pretty sure that if the hands of the officers were torn by the armlets of Liabeuf, the coils of Fantomas"
serpent would be flayed on touching my sharp spikes."
"Juve!" cried Fandor, "if I hadn"t had the bad luck to upset the lamp, we should have caught this frightful beast."
"Probably, but what should we have done with it? After all, it"s better that it should go back to Fantomas."
"But you haven"t yet told me what happened!"
The young man"s face displayed such curiosity that Juve burst out laughing.
"Journalist! Incorrigible newsmonger! All right, take notes for your article describing this appalling adventure. So, then, Fandor, the lamp once out, the hours go by, a trifle more slowly in the darkness than in the light. You are silent and still like a little Moses in your wicker cradle. As for me, armoured as I was, I tried not to stir in my bed--to spare the sheets--Juve is not wealthy. Midnight, one o"clock, two, the quarter past. How long it is!--Then, an alarm! A cat that mews strangely. Then comes that little hissing sound I begin to know.
Hiss--hiss! Oh, what a horrid feeling! I guess that the window is opening wider. You heard, as I did, Fandor, the revolting scales grit on the boards. But you didn"t know what it was, whereas I did know it was the snake! I swear to you it needed all my pluck not to flinch, for I wanted at any cost to see it through to the end, and know whether, behind this reptile, Fantomas was not going to show his vile snout.
"Ah, the brute, how quickly he went to work. As I was listening, my muscles tense, my nerves on edge, I suddenly felt my sheet stir--the foul beast is trained to attack beds, remember the attack on Dixon--and suddenly it was the grip, furious, quick as a whip stroke, twining about me. I was thrown down, tossed, shaken, torn like a feather, tied up like a sausage!
"My arms glued to my body, my loins hampered. I intended not to say a word, I had faith in my iron-work; but to be frank, I was scared, awfully scared. And I yelled: "Fandor! Help!"
"Oh, those accursed moments. He began to squeeze horribly when all at once I felt a cold liquid flow over my skin--blood. The brute was wounded. We still wrestled, and you tripped in the darkness and smashed the gla.s.s of the lamp, and I was choking gradually. All my life I shall remember it. And then, what relief, what joy when the grip slackened, when he gives up and makes off. The beast glided over the floor, reached the window, hissed frantically and vanished. There, M. Reporter, you have impressions from life, and rough ones, too! Well, the luck is turning, and I think it is veering to our quarter. Things are going from bad to worse for Fantomas. I tell you, Fandor, we shall nab him before long!"
x.x.xIII
A SCANDAL IN THE CLOISTER
Slight sounds, scarcely audible, disturbed the peace of the cloister. In the absolute silence of the night, vague noises could be distinguished.
Furtive steps, whisperings, doors opened or shut cautiously. Then the blinking light of a candle shone at a cas.e.m.e.nt, two or three other windows were illuminated and the hubbub grew general. Voices were heard, frightened interjections, the stir increased in the long corridor on which cells opened. Generally the curtains of these cells were discreetly drawn; now they were being pulled aside. Drowsy faces looked out of the gloom; the excitement increased.
"Sister Marguerite! Sister Vincent! Sister Clotilde! What is it? What is happening? Listen!"
The alarmed nuns gathered at the far end of the pa.s.sage. The worthy women, roused from their rest, had hastily arranged their coifs, and chastely wrapped themselves in their flowing robes. They turned their frightened faces toward the chapel.
"Burglars!" murmured the Sister who was treasurer of the convent, thinking of the cup of gold that the humble little sisterhood preserved as a relic with jealous care.
Another Sister, recently come from the creuse, from which she had been driven by the laws, did not conceal her fears.
"More emissaries of the government! They are going to turn us out!"
The Senior, Sister Vincent, quivering with alarm, stammered:
"It is a revolution--I saw that in "70."
A heap of chairs under the vaulting suddenly toppled down. Panic stricken, the sisters crowded closed together, not daring to go to the chapel, which was joined to the pa.s.sage by a little staircase.
"And the Mother Superior, what did she think of it all--what would she say?"
They drew near the cell, a little apart from the others, occupied by the lady, who, on taking the headship of the "House," had brought with her precious personal a.s.sistance and a good deal of money as well. Sister Vincent, who had gone forward and was about to enter the little chamber, drew back.
"Our Holy Mother," she informed the others, "is at her prayers."
At this very moment broken cries rang down the pa.s.sage. Sister Frances, the janitress, who everyone believed was calmly slumbering in her lodge, suddenly appeared, her eyes wild, her garments in disarray.
The sisters gathered round her, but the helpless woman shrieked, quite beside herself.
"Let me go! Let us flee! I have seen the devil! He is there! In the church! It is frightful!"
Mad with terror, the Sister explained in disjointed phrases what had alarmed her. She had heard a noise and fancied it might be the gardener"s dog shut by mistake in the chapel. Then behold! At the moment she entered the choir the stained-gla.s.s window above the shrine of St.
Clotilde, their patroness, suddenly gave way, and through the opening appeared a supernatural being who came toward her e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.n.g. words she could not understand. Armed with a great cudgel, he struck right and left, making a terrible uproar.
Thereupon the janitress made an effort to escape, but the demon barred her path, and in a sepulchral voice commanded her to go for the Mother Superior and bid her come at once, if she did not want the worst of evils to fall upon the sisterhood.
She had scarcely finished when an echoing crash was heard. The sisters suppressed a cry, and as they turned, pale with dread, before them stood their Mother Superior. With a sweeping gesture, she vaguely gave a blessing as if to endow them with courage, then turned to the janitress.
"My dear Sister Francoise, calm yourself! Be brave! G.o.d will not forsake us! I intend to comply with the desire of the stranger. I will go alone--with G.o.d alone!" Lady Beltham made a mighty effort to disguise the emotion she felt. Slowly she went down the steps and entered the sanctuary, where she halted in a state of terror.
The choir was lit up. The tapers were flaring on the high altar, and in the middle of the chapel, wrapped in a large black cloak, his face hidden by a black mask, stood a man, mysterious and alarming.
"Lady Beltham!"
At the sound of this voice, Lady Beltham fancied she recognised her lover.
"What do you want? What are you doing? It is madness!"
"Nothing is madness in Fantomas!"
Lady Beltham pressed her hands to her heart, unable to speak.
The voice resumed: "Fantomas bids you leave here, Lady Beltham. In two hours you will go from this convent; a closed motor will be waiting for you at the back of the garden, at the little gate. The vehicle will take you to a seaport, where you will board a vessel which the driver will indicate; when the voyage is over you will be in England: there you will receive fresh orders to make for Canada."
Lady Beltham wrung her hands in despair.
"Why do you wish to force me to leave my dear companions?"
"Were you not ready to leave everything, Lady Beltham, to make a new life for yourself with--him you love?"
"Alas!"
"Remember last Tuesday night at the Neuilly mansion!"
"Ah! You should have carried me off then, not left me time to think it over. Now I am no longer willing."
"You will go! Yes or no. Will you obey?"
"I will--for, after all, I love you!"
The two tragic beings were silent for a moment, listening; outside the church the uproar grew in violence, brief orders were being shouted, a blowing of whistles. Suddenly, uttering a hoa.r.s.e cry, the ruffian exclaimed: