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"Then go home and take leave of your family, as if you were going a long journey. Go to your priest and make your peace with G.o.d. Then come back, and tell no one where we are going."
Ivan now made his own preparations. From this adventure he might never return. He made his will. He bequeathed his mine to his workmen, his money to Paul's family. This was an act of justice. If the old man were killed, it was in a measure his, Ivan's, doing.
When this was all done he went out and took his leave of light and air before going into the blackness of everlasting night. It was well under the free air of heaven. The sky might be bluer elsewhere, the gra.s.s greener; still, it was not eternal darkness.
The post brought him a letter. It was from Arpad Belenyi. It told him all that we already know--the fall of Kaulmann, the disappearance of Eveline, whom every one thought had drowned herself. Ivan's heart was stirred by deep sorrow. The sky lost its brightness; the meadow was no longer green; the blackness of the pit would be welcome to him. This news acted upon him as a tonic; he felt braced; his fears vanished.
Life was now more worthless than before.
He set about the necessary preparations with calmness. He collected the instruments which would be needed for this strange search--the levelling instrument, the circ.u.mferentor, the plumb-line. He put them in a bag, which he tied round his neck. Paul carried the pick, the iron rod, and a strong cord.
With this equipment they descended into the cavern, and vanished through the windings of the water-course. After six hours they reappeared. This went on day after day.
Ivan took the measurements of all the windings of the labyrinth, and when he was at home compared them carefully. It took him hours. At night he retired into his laboratory, heated deadly gases in his retorts, and forced the mysterious elements to surrender their long-concealed secrets. He fought with demons who refused to obey him.
"Which of you is the spirit that can extinguish fire? Appear! appear!
Not with Alpha and Omega, not with Solomon's Seal, not in the name of Abraxas and Mithras do I conjure you, but by the force of all-powerful science I order you appear!"
But no spirit appeared.
This double battle, the one under the earth, the one in the air above it, this fight with the two great demons of the world's creation, went on day by day, in daylight and darkness. Ivan had no rest.
One morning he was told that the water in the castle well was hot, and it had a decided taste of sulphur. He began now to despair. The subterranean conflagration was closing round him sooner than he had looked for it. The situation was lost; one year, and the whole place would be consumed.
Raune, when this fact became known, threw up his appointment and openly took service with Prince Waldemar. He was commissioned by his employer to write--as an authentic witness--the accounts of the catastrophe, which appeared constantly in the Vienna papers.
Ivan threw himself with the energy of despair into the search; he penetrated farther into the subterranean labyrinth. Paul was like a ghost; his very soul was steeped in terror, but he held bravely to his master.
One day, amidst the confusion of the different winding pa.s.sages in the rock, they came to a place out of which there seemed to be no exit.
They struck the wall. It returned a hollow sound, so that they drew the conclusion that on the other side there was a large cavern, or s.p.a.ce of some sort. The tumbled ma.s.ses of slate-stratum fallen over one another was a proof that the blockade had been recently made.
"We must clear a pa.s.sage here," said Ivan, taking the pick in his hand.
Paul cowered down, clinging to the wall. He trembled at every blow of the pick given by the vigorous arm of Ivan, who worked with terrible earnestness. So might a despairing soul beat against the gates of h.e.l.l and summon the devil to single combat.
At last the pick made a small hole, through which Ivan pa.s.sed the iron rod, and raised a whole ma.s.s of slates.
"Now, if the water is overhead the crack of doom has come."
The old man crossed himself, and recommended his soul to G.o.d.
Ivan, however, shouted with all the joy of a discoverer: "Do you hear?
The rubbish as it falls makes a splash. The lower basin I am in search of _is here_, underneath us!"
But what if the one above is full? They had still to wait while they counted a hundred beats of the pulse.
Never was a pulse felt under such terrible circ.u.mstances, not even when Ivan had gone down into the burning mine. Not a sound was heard.
In the bosom of the earth all is quiet. Ivan was trembling with joyful excitement.
"Found at last!" he cried. "Now bind the cord round me, and lower me into the well cavern."
It was done. The old miner, as he held the rope, prayed fervently to the Blessed Mother that she would forgive this heretic, who did not know what he was doing. Meantime the lamp sank deeper and deeper.
Suddenly Ivan cried out, "Pull me up!"
His old comrade drew him slowly out of the depths of the earth. As he held out his hand to help him, Ivan suddenly threw his arms round him and embraced him.
"We have reached our goal," he said. "The plumb-line shows a monstrous depth of water."
Paul's brain began to clear. For the first time he had a dim idea of the aims of their labors.
"Now let us get into daylight."
As soon as Ivan got out of the pit he ran home as fast as he could. He compared his measurements, and was well content with the result. At night he shut himself in his laboratory. He was flushed with triumph; another victory would be his. He would also conquer the demon that had hitherto resisted his will. He had the proud feeling of a victorious general who demands the last stronghold to surrender.
"I have already conquered," he said. "You are the next to submit. G.o.d sometimes lends to his creature immortal gifts, moments of creative power, when the infinite takes, as it were, shape, and the finite cries to the infinite, 'Eureka!'"
Ivan poured out ten drops of the water he had brought from the well.
There was not more than would be held in the point of a pen. The laboratory became suddenly dark. The strong heat of the burning coal in the oven went out as if by magic. All was dark; black as night.
This darkness was the light for which Ivan had been seeking.
"I have found it!" he cried aloud. "I have found it!" he cried to his workmen, among whom he rushed, half undressed, with his hat off, like a lunatic.
They did not know what he had found, but they felt certain the discovery which was considered so important by their guide and master must be a matter of rejoicing, in proof of which the miners cheered l.u.s.tily.
CHAPTER x.x.xVIII
AT PAR
The devil's comedy was being played daily on the stock-exchange. The Bondavara Company's shares, the Bondavara Railway shares were tossed here and there, from one hand to another. The tragedy had turned to comedy--that is, for some people, who found the game very humorous.
The very word Bondavara made the stockbrokers laugh. When it happened that some fool bought a share, no one could help laughing. The shares, in fact, were given in exchange for anything of little value--for instance, as make-weight with an old umbrella for a new one. They were also presented to charitable inst.i.tutions.
One witty man went to a fancy ball in a coat made of the shares. This conceit was thought diverting. The exchange, however, was still the field where a desultory fight was kept up by the shareholders. These poor wretches fought for the last flicker of the lamp, which the bears wanted to extinguish altogether.
Prince Waldemar, the leader of the conspiracy, forced the shares day by day lower and lower. At last they fell to one and a half per cent., then to one and a quarter, and this quarter was to go lower, the prince wanting to banish the shares from the quotation list. The owners were making a fight to prevent this--an ineffectual one, it seemed to be. They were almost agreed to give up the fight as a forlorn hope. How could they make head against such odds? The day upon which Raune's report was in the newspapers they resolved to lay down their arms; there seemed no good in protracting the struggle. The report in question was the one which stated what was the nature of the elements that, since the fire in the Bondavara mine, had been found mixed with the water on the lake of the castle; this caused a great "sensation," and was the last straw upon the back of the unfortunate shareholders.
Prince Waldemar had the news proclaimed on 'change that on the last day of the month he would sell his Bondavara Company shares at ten florins. Some people took up the gauntlet he had thrown down. These were shareholders who knew that they would lose by taking this wager, but at the same time hoped by this stroke of policy to prevent the shares from disappearing altogether from the share list. If, therefore, at the end of the month the shares went down to six gulden, they must pay the other side twenty thousand gulden difference; if the shares went up, the other side must do the same.
About noon a broker came to the bank, and said, loud enough for all bystanders to hear, that a gentleman was present who would take five hundred Bondavara shares at par.
If some one had struck a hammer upon the open keys of a piano no greater whir and whiz could have been heard than now ran through the hall. Screams of laughter, exclamations of astonishment, howls of joy, curses, and e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.ns of incredulity were raised in every corner.
Who is he? Is he a lunatic? At par! Bondavara shares! Where is the man?
The broker pointed him out. He was evidently a provincial gentleman, very una.s.suming in his appearance. He was leaning against a pillar, calmly surveying the Olympian games.