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HOME > Classical Novels > The Companions of Jehu双雄记 > CHAPTER XVIII. THE TRIAL
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CHAPTER XVIII. THE TRIAL
 The next day Roland, who had been unable to sleep till about two in the morning, woke about seven. Collecting his scattered1 wits, he recalled what had passed between Sir John and himself the night before, and was astonished that the Englishman had not wakened him. He dressed hastily and went to Sir John’s room at the risk of rousing him from his first sleep.  
He knocked at the door. Sir John made no answer. Roland knocked again, louder this time. The same silence. This time some uneasiness mingled2 with Roland’s curiosity. The key was on the outside; the young officer opened the door, and cast a rapid glance around the room. Sir John was not there; he had not returned. The bed was undisturbed. What had happened?
 
There was not an instant to lose, and we may be sure that, with that rapidity of decision we know in Roland, he lost not an instant. He rushed to his room, finished dressing3, put his hunting knife into his belt, slung4 his rifle over his shoulder and went out. No one was yet awake except the chambermaid. Roland met her on the stairs.
 
“Tell Madame de Montrevel,” said he, “that I have gone into the forest of Seillon with my gun. She must not worry if Sir John and I are not on time for breakfast.”
 
Then he darted5 rapidly away. Ten minutes later he reached the window where he had left Sir John the night before. He listened, not a sound came from within; the huntsman’s ear could detect the morning woodland sounds, but no others. Roland climbed through the window with his customary agility6, and rushed through the choir7 into the sacristy.
 
One look sufficed to show him that not only the choir but the entire chapel8 was empty. Had the spectres led the Englishman along the reverse of the way he had come himself? Possibly. Roland passed rapidly behind the altar, into the vaults10, where he found the gate open. He entered the subterranean11 cemetery12. Darkness hid its depths. He called Sir John three times. No one answered.
 
He reached the second gate; it was open like the first. He entered the vaulted13 passage; only, as it would be impossible to use his gun in such darkness, he slung it over his shoulder and drew out his hunting-knife. Feeling his way, he continued to advance without meeting anybody, but the further he went the deeper became the darkness, which indicated that the stone in the cistern14 was closed. He reached the steps, and mounted them until his head touched the revolving15 stone; then he made an effort, and the block turned. Roland saw daylight and leaped into the cistern. The door into the orchard16 stood open. Roland passed through it, crossed that portion of the orchard which lay between the cistern and the corridor at the other end of which he had fired upon the phantom17. He passed along the corridor and entered the refectory. The refectory was empty.
 
Again, as in the funereal18 passageway, Roland called three times. The wondering echo, which seemed to have forgotten the tones of the human voice, answered stammering19. It was improbable that Sir John had come this way; it was necessary to go back. Roland retraced20 his steps, and found himself in the choir again. That was where Sir John had intended to spend the night, and there some trace of him must be found.
 
Roland advanced only a short distance, and then a cry escaped him. A large spot of blood lay at his feet, staining the pavement. On the other side of the choir, a dozen feet from the blood, was another stain, not less large, nor less red, nor less recent. It seemed to make a pendant for the first.
 
One of these stains was to the right, the other to the left of that sort of pedestal intended, as we have said, to support the eagle lectern—the pedestal which Sir John had selected for his place of waiting. Roland went up to it. It was drenched21 with blood! Evidently the drama had taken place on that spot; a drama which, if all the signs were true, must have been terrible.
 
Roland, in his double capacity of huntsman and soldier, was keen at a quest. He could calculate the amount of blood lost by a man who was dead, or by one who was only wounded. That night three men had fallen, either dead or wounded. What were the probabilities?
 
The two stains in the choir to the right and left of the pedestal were probably the blood of Sir John’s two antagonists24. That on the pedestal was probably his own. Attacked on both sides, right and left, he had fired with both hands, killing25 or wounding a man with each shot. Hence these two bloodstains which reddened the pavement. He himself must have been struck down beside the pedestal, on which his blood had spurted26.
 
After a few seconds of examination, Roland was as sure of this as if he had witnessed the struggle with his own eyes. Now, what had been done with the bodies? He cared little enough about two of them; but he was determined27 to know what had become of that of Sir John.
 
A track of blood started from the pedestal and led straight to the door. Sir John’s body had been carried outside. Roland shook the massive door. It was only latched28, and opened at the first pressure. Outside the sill the tracks of blood still continued. Roland could see through the underbrush the path by which the body had been carried. The broken branches, the trampled29 grass, led Roland to the edge of the wood on the road leading from Pont d’Ain to Bourg. There the body, living or dead, seemed to have been laid on the bank of the ditch. Beyond that no traces whatever.
 
A man passed just then, coming from the direction of the Château des Noires-Fontaines. Roland went up to him.
 
“Have you seen anything on the road? Did you meet any one?” he inquired.
 
“Yes,” replied the man, “I saw two peasants carrying a body on a litter.”
 
“Ah!” cried Roland, “was it that of a living man?”
 
“The man was pale and motionless; he looked as if he were dead.”
 
“Was the blood flowing?”
 
“I saw some drops on the road.”
 
“In that case, he is living.”
 
Then taking a louis from his pocket he said: “There’s a louis for you. Run for Dr. Milliet at Bourg; tell him to get a horse and come at full speed to the Château des Noires-Fontaines. You can add that there is a man there in danger of dying.”
 
While the peasant, stimulated30 by the reward, made all haste to Bourg, Roland, leaping along on his vigorous legs, was hurrying to the château.
 
And now, as our readers are, in all probability, as curious as Roland to know what had happened to Sir John, we shall give an account of the events of the night.
 
A few minutes before eleven, Sir John, as we have seen, entered what was usually known as La Correrie, or the pavilion of the Chartreuse, which was nothing more than a chapel erected32 in the woods. From the sacristy he entered the choir. It was empty and seemed solitary33. A rather brilliant moon, veiled from time to time by a cloud, sent its bluish rays through the stained glass, cracked and broken, of the pointed34 windows. Sir John advanced to the middle of the choir, where he paused and remained standing35 beside the pedestal.
 
The minutes slipped away. But this time it was not the convent clock which marked the time, it was the church at Péronnaz; that is to say, the nearest village to the chapel where Sir John was watching.
 
Everything happened up to midnight just as it had to Roland. Sir John heard only the vague rustling36 and passing noises of the night.
 
Midnight sounded; it was the moment he awaited with impatience37, for it was then that something would happen, if anything was to happen. As the last stroke died away he thought he heard footsteps underground, and saw a light appear behind the iron gate leading to the mortuary vault9. His whole attention was fixed
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