The Crystal Stopper Maurice Leblanc (top 10 books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Maurice Leblanc
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Daubrecq was in the front part of the room, four or five yards down from the window at which Lupin lurked. In addition to the ancient chains that had been used to fasten him to his bed and to fasten the bed to an iron hook in the wall, his wrists and ankles were girt with leather thongs; and an ingenious arrangement caused his least movement to set in motion a bell hung to the nearest pillar.
A lamp placed on a stool lit him full in the face.
The Marquis dâAlbufex was standing beside him. Lupin could see his pale features, his grizzled moustache, his long, lean form as he looked at his prisoner with an expression of content and of gratified hatred.
A few minutes passed in profound silence. Then the marquis gave an order:
âLight those three candles, SĂ©bastiani, so that I can see him better.â
And, when the three candles were lit and he had taken a long look at Daubrecq, he stooped over him and said, almost gently:
âI canât say what will be the end of you and me. But at any rate I shall have had some deuced happy moments in this room. You have done me so much harm, Daubrecq! The tears you have made me shed! Yes, real tears, real sobs of despairâ ââ ⊠The money you have robbed me of! A fortune!â ââ ⊠And my terror at the thought that you might give me away! You had but to utter my name to complete my ruin and bring about my disgrace!â ââ ⊠Oh, you villain!â ââ âŠâ
Daubrecq did not budge. He had been deprived of his black glasses, but still kept his spectacles, which reflected the light from the candles. He had lost a good deal of flesh; and the bones stood out above his sunken cheeks.
âCome along,â said dâAlbufex. âThe time has come to act. It seems that there are rogues prowling about the neighbourhood. Heaven forbid that they are here on your account and try to release you; for that would mean your immediate death, as you knowâ ââ ⊠Is the trapdoor still in working order, SĂ©bastiani?â
SĂ©bastiani came nearer, knelt on one knee and lifted and turned a ring, at the foot of the bed, which Lupin had not noticed. One of the flagstones moved on a pivot, disclosing a black hole.
âYou see,â the marquis continued, âeverything is provided for; and I have all that I want at hand, including dungeons: bottomless dungeons, says the legend of the castle. So there is nothing to hope for, no help of any kind. Will you speak?â
Daubrecq did not reply; and he went on:
âThis is the fourth time that I am questioning you, Daubrecq. It is the fourth time that I have troubled to ask you for the document which you possess, in order that I may escape your blackmailing proceedings. It is the fourth time and the last. Will you speak?â
The same silence as before. DâAlbufex made a sign to SĂ©bastiani. The huntsman stepped forward, followed by two of his sons. One of them held a stick in his hand.
âGo ahead,â said dâAlbufex, after waiting a few seconds.
SĂ©bastiani slackened the thongs that bound Daubrecqâs wrists and inserted and fixed the stick between the thongs.
âShall I turn, monsieur le marquis?â
A further silence. The marquis waited. Seeing that Daubrecq did not flinch, he whispered:
âCanât you speak? Why expose yourself to physical suffering?â
No reply.
âTurn away, SĂ©bastiani.â
SĂ©bastiani made the stick turn a complete circle. The thongs stretched and tightened. Daubrecq gave a groan.
âYou wonât speak? Still, you know that I wonât give way, that I canât give way, that I hold you and that, if necessary, I shall torture you till you die of it. You wonât speak? You wonât?â ââ ⊠SĂ©bastiani, once more.â
The huntsman obeyed. Daubrecq gave a violent start of pain and fell back on his bed with a rattle in his throat.
âYou fool!â cried the marquis, shaking with rage. âWhy donât you speak? What, havenât you had enough of that list? Surely itâs somebody elseâs turn! Come, speakâ ââ ⊠Where is it? One word. One word onlyâ ââ ⊠and we will leave you in peaceâ ââ ⊠And, tomorrow, when I have the list, you shall be free. Free, do you understand? But, in Heavenâs name, speak!â ââ ⊠Oh, the brute! SĂ©bastiani, one more turn.â
SĂ©bastiani made a fresh effort. The bones cracked.
âHelp! Help!â cried Daubrecq, in a hoarse voice, vainly struggling to release himself. And, in a spluttering whisper, âMercyâ ââ ⊠mercy.â
It was a dreadful sightâ ââ ⊠The faces of the three sons were horror-struck. Lupin shuddered, sick at heart, and realized that he himself could never have accomplished that abominable thing. He listened for the words that were bound to come. He must learn the truth. Daubrecqâs secret was about to be expressed in syllables, in words wrung from him by pain. And Lupin began to think of his retreat, of the car which was waiting for him, of the wild rush to Paris, of the victory at hand.
âSpeak,â whispered dâAlbufex. âSpeak and it will be over.â
âYesâ ââ ⊠yesâ ââ âŠâ gasped Daubrecq.
âWellâ ââ âŠâ?â
âLaterâ ââ ⊠tomorrowâ ââ âŠâ
âOh, youâre mad!â ââ ⊠What are you talking about: tomorrow?â ââ ⊠SĂ©bastiani, another turn!â
âNo, no!â yelled Daubrecq. âStop!â
âSpeak!â
âWell, thenâ ââ ⊠the paperâ ââ ⊠I have hidden the paperâ ââ âŠâ
But his pain was too great. He raised his head with a last effort, uttered incoherent words, succeeded in twice saying, âMarieâ ââ ⊠Marieâ ââ âŠâ and fell back, exhausted and lifeless.
âLet go at once!â said dâAlbufex to SĂ©bastiani. âHang it all, can we have overdone it?â
But a rapid examination showed him that Daubrecq had only fainted. Thereupon, he himself, worn out with the excitement, dropped on the foot of the bed and, wiping the beads of perspiration from his forehead, stammered:
âOh, what a dirty business!â
âPerhaps thatâs enough for today,â said the huntsman, whose rough face betrayed a certain emotion. âWe might try again tomorrow or the next
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