As I stole a glance round the place I saw the eyes
of the rats in the bone heaps, but missed the eyes along the back.
But even as I looked I saw them again appear. The old woman's
"Wait!" had given me a respite from attack, and the men had sunk
back to their reclining posture.
"I once lost a ring-a beautiful diamond hoop that had belonged
to a queen, and which was given to me by a farmer of the taxes, who
afterwards cut his throat because I sent him away. I thought it
must have been stolen, and taxed my people; but I could get no
trace. The police came and suggested that it had found its way to
the drain. We descended-I in my fine clothes, for I would not trust
them with my beautiful ring! I know more of the drains since then,
and of rats, too! but I shall never forget the horror of that
place-alive with blazing eyes, a wall of them just outside the
light of our torches. Well, we got beneath my house. We searched
the outlet of the drain, and there in the filth found my ring, and
we came out.
"But we found something else also before we came! As we were
coming toward the opening a lot of sewer rats-human ones this
time-came toward us. They told the police that one of their number
had gone into the drain, but had not returned. He had gone in only
shortly before we had, and, if lost, could hardly be far off. They
asked help to seek him, so we turned back. They tried to prevent me
going, but I insisted. It was a new excitement, and had I not
recovered my ring? Not far did we go till we came on something.
There was but little water, and the bottom of the drain was raised
with brick, rubbish, and much matter of the kind. He had made a
fight for it, even when his torch had gone out. But they were too
many for him! They had not been long about it! The bones were still
warm; but they were picked clean. They had even eaten their own
dead ones and there were bones of rats as well as of the man. They
took it cool enough those other-the human ones-and joked of their
comrade when they found him dead, though they would have helped him
living. Bah! what matters it-life or death?"
"And had you no fear?" I asked her.
"Fear!" she said with a laugh. "Me have fear? Ask Pierre! But
I
was younger then, and, as I came through that horrible drain
with its wall of greedy eyes, always moving with the circle of the
light from the torches, I did not feel easy. I kept on before the
men, though! It is a way I have! I never let the men get it before
me. All I want is a chance and a means! And they ate him up-took
every trace away except the bones; and no one knew it, nor no sound
of him was ever heard!" Here she broke into a chuckling fit of the
ghastliest merriment which it was ever my lot to hear and see. A
great poetess describes her heroine singing: "Oh! to see or hear
her singing! Scarce I know which is the divinest."
And I can apply the same idea to the old crone-in all save the
divinity, for I scarce could tell which was the most hellish-the
harsh, malicious, satisfied, cruel laugh, or the leering grin, and
the horrible square opening of the mouth like a tragic mask, and
the yellow gleam of the few discoloured teeth in the shapeless
gums. In that laugh and with that grin and the chuckling
satisfaction I knew as well as if it had been spoken to me in words
of thunder that my murder was settled, and the murderers only bided
the proper time for its accomplishment. I could read between the
lines of her gruesome story the commands to her accomplices.
"Wait," she seemed to say, "bide your time. I shall strike the
first blow. Find the weapon for me, and I shall make the
opportunity! He shall not escape! Keep him quiet, and then no one
will be wiser. There will be no outcry, and the rats will do their
work!"
It was growing darker and darker; the night was coming. I stole
a glance round the shanty, still all the same! The bloody axe in
the corner, the heaps of filth, and the eyes on the bone heaps and
in the crannies of the floor.
Pierre had been still ostensibly filling his pipe; he now struck
a light and began to puff away at it. The old woman said:
"Dear heart, how dark it is! Pierre, like a good lad, light the
lamp!"
Pierre got up and with the lighted match in his hand touched the
wick of a lamp which hung at one side of the entrance to the
shanty, and which had a reflector that threw the light all over the
place. It was evidently that which was used for their sorting at
night.
"Not that, stupid! Not that! The lantern!" she called out to
him.
He immediately blew it out, saying: "All right, mother, I'll
find it," and he hustled about the left corner of the room-the old
woman saying through the darkness:
"The lantern! the lantern! Oh! That is the light that is most
useful to us poor folks. The lantern was the friend of the
revolution! It is the friend of the chiffonier! It helps us when
all else fails."
Hardly had she said the word when there was a kind of creaking
of the whole place, and something was steadily dragged over the
roof.
Again I seemed to read between the lines of her words.
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