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He was not to die yet. He was not even to lose his mind; of that he was perfectly aware. He was no ordinary prisoner. No usual fate was in store for him; that also he knew. A charge of heresy in his case was absurd.
No witnesses could be brought who, speaking truth, could condemn him for heresy. But what Don Perez had told him was now easily understood. He was in a place where there was no appeal, a situation with no egress.
There was not the slightest doubt in his mind that a dreadful vengeance was to be taken upon him for his treatment of the King of Spain. The Holy Office was a royal court provided with ecclesiastical weapons. Its familiars had got him in their grip; he was to die the death.
As he lay motionless day after day, night after night, in the silence--the hideous silence without light--the walls so close, pressing on him, forbidding him free movement, at every moment seeming as if they would rush together and crush him in this night of Erebus, he began to have visitors.
Sometimes a sulphurous radiance would fill the place. He would see the bowing, mocking figure of King Philip, the long yellow face looking down upon him with a malign smile. He would hear a great hoa.r.s.e voice, and a little woman with a shrivelled face and covered with jewels, would squeak and gibber at him. Then, with a clank of armour, and a sudden fresh smell of the fields, Sir Henry Commendone would stand there, with a "How like you this life of the pit, Johnnie?" ... "How like you this blackness, my son?"
Then he would put up his hands and press these grisly phantoms out of the dark. He would press them away with one great effort of the will.
They would go, and he remained trembling in the chill, damp negation of light, which was so far more than darkness. He would grope for the pieces of his miserable food, and search the earthen pitcher for water.
And all this, these tortures beyond belief, beyond understanding of the ordinary man, were but as soft couches to one who is weary, food to one hungered, water to lips parched in a desert--compared with the deepest, unutterable descent of all.
The cold and stinking blackness which held him tight as a fossil in a bed of clay was not the worst. His eyes that saw nothing, his limbs that were shot with cramping pain, his nostrils and stomach that could not endure this uncleaned cage, were a torture beyond thinking.
Many a time he thought of the mercy of Bishop Bonner and Queen Mary--the mercy that let a gentleman ride under the pleasant skies of England to a twenty minutes' death--G.o.d! these were pleasant tortures! His own present hopelessness, all that he endured in body--why, dear G.o.d! these were but pleasant tortures too, things to bite upon and endure, compared with the Satanic horror, the icy dread, the bitter, hopeless tears, when he thought of Elizabeth.
He had long since ceased praying for himself. It mattered little or nothing what happened to him. That he should be taken out to torture would be a relief, a happiness. He would lie in the rack laughing. They could fill his belly with water, or strain the greasy hempen ropes into his flesh, and still he would laugh and forgive them--Dr. Taylor had forgiven less than they would do to him, he would forgive more than all for the sake of Christ and His Maid-Mother. How easy that would be! To be given something to endure, to prove himself a man and a Christian!
But to forgive them for what they might be doing, they might have done, to his dear lady--how could he forgive _that_ to these blood-stained men?
Through all the icy hours he thought of one thing, until his own pains vanished to nothingness.
Perchance, and the dreadful uncertainty in his utter impotence and silence swung like a bell in his brain, and cut through his soul like the swinging pendola which they said the familiars of the Holy Office used, Elizabeth had already suffered unspeakable things.
He saw again a pair of hands--cruel hands--hands with thick thumbs. Had hands like these grasped and twisted the white limbs of the girl he loved? Divorced from him, helpless, away from any comfort, any kind voice, was it not true--_was_ it true?--that already his sweetheart had been tortured to her death?
He had tried over and over again to pray for Elizabeth, to call to the seat where G.o.d was, that He might save the dear child from these torments unspeakable.
But there was always the silence, the dead physical blackness and silence. He beat his hands upon the stone wall; he bruised his head upon the roof of darkness which would not let him stand upright, and he knew--as it is appointed to some chosen men to know--that unutterable, unthinkable despair of travail which made Our Lord Himself call out in the last hour of His pa.s.sion, [Greek: eli, eli lama sabachthani]
There was no response to his prayers. Into his heart came no answering message of hope.
And then the mind of this man, which had borne so much, and suffered so greatly, began to become powerless to feel. A bottle can only hold a certain amount of water, the strings of an instrument be plucked to a certain measure of sound, the brain of a man can endure up to a certain strain, and then it snaps entirely, or is drowsed with misery.
Physically, the young man was in perfect health when they had taken him to his prison. He had lived always a cleanly and athletic life. No sensual ease had ever dimmed his faculties. And therefore, though he knew it not, the frightful mental agony he had undergone had but drawn upon the reserve of his physical forces, and had hardly injured his body at all. The food they gave him, at any rate for the time of his disappearance from the world of sentient beings, was enough to support life. And while he lay in dreadful hopelessness, while his limbs were racked with pain, and it seemed to him that he stood upon the very threshold of death, he was in reality physically competent, and a few hours of relief would bring his body back to its pristine strength.
There came a time when he lay upon his stone floor perfectly motionless.
The merciful anodyne that comes to all tortured people when either the brain or body can bear no more, had come to him now.
It seemed but a short moment--in reality it was several hours--since his jailors, those masked still-moving figures, had brought him a renewal of his food. He could not eat the bread, but two figs upon the platter were grateful and cooling to his throat, though he was unconscious of any physical gratification. He knew, sometime after, that sustenance had been brought to him, and that he had a great thirst. He stretched out his hand mechanically for the pitcher, rising from the floor and pressing the brim to his lips.
He drank deeply, and as he drank became suddenly aware that this was not the lukewarm water of the past darkness, but something that ran through his veins, that swiftly ran through them, and as the blood mounted to his brain gave him courage, awoke him, fed the starved nerves. It was wine he was drinking! wine that perhaps would be red in the light; wine that once more filled him with endeavour, and a desperate desire which was not hope but the last protest against his fate.
He lay back once more, by no means the same man he had been some little time agone, and as he reclined in a happy physical stupor--the while his brain was alive again and began to work--he said many times to himself the name of Jesus.
"Jesus! Jesus! Jesus!"--it was all he could say; it was all he could think of, it was his last prayer. Just the name alone.
And very speedily the prayer was answered. Out of the depths he cried--"_De profundis clamavit_"--and the door opened, as it opened to the Apostle Paul, and the place where he was was filled with red light.
For a moment he was unable to realise it. He pa.s.sed one wasted and dirty hand before his eyes. "Jesus!" he said again, in a dreamy, wondering voice.
He felt himself lifted up from where he lay. Two strong hands were under his arms; he was taken out of the stinking _oubliette_ into the corridor beyond.
He stood upright. He stretched out his arms. He breathed another air. It was a damp, foetid, underground air, but it seemed to him that it came from the gardens of the Hesperides.
Then he became conscious of a voice speaking quietly, quickly, and with great insistence.
The voice in his ear!
... "Senor, we have had to wait. You have had to lie in this dungeon, and I could do nothing for you--for you that saved my life. It hath taken many days to think out a plan to save you and the Senorita. But 'tis done now, 'tis cut and dried, and neither you nor she shall go to the death designed for you both. It hath been designed by the a.s.sessor and the Procurator Fiscal, acting under orders of the Grand Inquisitor, that you shall be tortured to death, or near to it, and that to the Senorita shall be done the same. Then you are to be taken to the Quemadero--that great altar of stone supported by figures of the Holy Apostles--and there burnt to death at the forthcoming _auto da fe_."
"Then what,"--Johnnie's voice came from him in a hollow whisper.
"Hush, hush," the other voice answered him; "'tis all arranged. 'Tis all settled, but still it dependeth upon you, Senor. Will you save your lady love, and go free with her from here, and with your servant also, or will you die and let her die too?"
"Then she hath not been tortured?"
"Not yet; it is for to-night. You come afterwards. But you do not know me, Senor; you do not realise who I am."
At this Johnnie looked into the face of the man who supported him.
"Ah," he said, in a dreamy voice, "Alonso!--I took you from the sea, did not I?"
Everything was circling round him, he wanted to fall, to lie down and sleep in this new air....
The torturer saw it--he had a dreadful knowledge of those who were about to faint. He caught hold of Johnnie somewhere at the back of the neck.
There was a sudden scientific pressure of the flat thumb upon a nerve, and the sinking senses of the captive came back to him in a flood of painful consciousness.
"Ah!" he cried, "but I feel better now! Go on, go on, tell me, what is all this?..."
One big thumb was pressed gently at the back of Johnnie's head. "It is this," said the voice, "and now, Senor, listen to me as if you had never listened to any other voice in this whole world. In the first place, you have much money; you have much money to be employed for you, in the hands of your servant, and from him I hear that you are n.o.ble and wealthy in England. I myself am a young man, but lately introduced to do the work I do. I am in debt, Senor, and neither my father nor my brother will help me. There is a family feud between us. Now my father is the head sworn-torturer of the Holy Office; my brother is his a.s.sistant, and I am the a.s.sistant to my brother. The three of us do rack and put to pain those who come before us. But I myself am tired of this business, and would away to a country where I can earn a more honest and kindly living. Therefore if thou wilt help me to do this, all will be well.
There is a carrack sailing for the port of Rome this very night, and we can all be aboard of it, and save ourselves, if thou wilt do what we have made a plan of."
"And what is that?" Johnnie asked.
"'Tis a dangerous and deadly thing. We may win a way to safety and joy, or it may be that we perish. I'll put it upon the throw of the die, and so must you, Senor."
Johnnie clutched Alonso by the arm. "Man! man!" he said, "there is some doubt in your voice. What is it? what is it? I would do anything but lose my immortal soul to save the Senorita from what is to be done to her to-night."
"'Tis well," the other answered briefly. "Then now I will tell you what you must do. 'Tis now the hour of sunset. In two hours more the Senorita will be brought to the rooms of the Question. Thy servant is of the height and build of my father. Thou art the same as regards my brother.
If you consent to what I shall tell you, you and your servant will take the place of my brother and father. No one will know you from them, because we wear black linen garments and a hood which covereth our faces. I will go away, and I will put something in their wine which will send my father and my brother to sleep for long hours--sometimes we put it in the water we give to drink to those who come to us for torture, and who are able, or their relatives indeed, to pay well for such service. My people will know nothing, and you, with Juan thy servant, will take their places. Nor will the Inquisitor know. It hath been well thought out, Senor. I shall give you your directions, and understanding Spanish you will follow them out as if you were indeed my blood-brother.
As for the man Juan, it will be your part to whisper to him what he has to do, for I cannot otherwise make him understand."
Suddenly a dreadful thought flashed into Johnnie's mind. This man understood no word of English. How, then, had he plotted this scheme of rescue and escape with John Hull? Was this not one of those dreadful traps--themselves part of a devilish scheme of torture--of which he had heard in England, and of which Don Perez had more than hinted?
"And how dost _thou_ understand my man John," he said, "seeing that thou knowest no word of his language?"