"I do not know
why we came here, nor why we should stay a moment longer."
"I hate it all!" cried Donatello with peculiar energy. "Dear
friends, let us hasten back into the blessed daylight!"
From the first, Donatello had shown little fancy for the
expedition; for, like most Italians, and in especial accordance
with the law of his own simple and physically happy nature, this
young man had an infinite repugnance to graves and skulls, and to
all that ghastliness which the Gothic mind loves to associate with
the idea of death. He shuddered, and looked fearfully round,
drawing nearer to Miriam, whose attractive influence alone had
enticed him into that gloomy region.
"What a child you are, poor Donatello!" she observed, with the
freedom which she always used towards him. "You are afraid of
ghosts!"
"Yes, signorina; terribly afraid!" said the truthful
Donatello.
"I also believe in ghosts," answered Miriam, "and could tremble
at them, in a suitable place. But these sepulchres are so old, and
these skulls and white ashes so very dry, that methinks they have
ceased to be haunted. The most awful idea connected with the
catacombs is their interminable extent, and the possibility of
going astray into this labyrinth of darkness, which broods around
the little glimmer of our tapers."
"Has any one ever been lost here?" asked Kenyon of the
guide.
"Surely, signor; one, no longer ago than my father's time," said
the guide; and he added, with the air of a man who believed what he
was telling, "but the first that went astray here was a pagan of
old Rome, who hid himself in order to spy out and betray the
blessed saints, who then dwelt and worshipped in these dismal
places. You have heard the story, signor? A miracle was wrought
upon the accursed one; and, ever since (for fifteen centuries at
least), he has been groping in the darkness, seeking his way out of
the catacomb."
"Has he ever been seen?" asked Hilda, who had great and
tremulous faith in marvels of this kind.
"These eyes of mine never beheld him, signorina; the saints
forbid!" answered the guide. "But it is well known that he watches
near parties that come into the catacomb, especially if they be
heretics, hoping to lead some straggler astray. What this lost
wretch pines for, almost as much as for the blessed sunshine, is a
companion to be miserable with him."
"Such an intense desire for sympathy indicates something amiable
in the poor fellow, at all events," observed Kenyon.
They had now reached a larger chapel than those heretofore seen;
it was of a circular shape, and, though hewn out of the solid mass
of red sandstone, had pillars, and a carved roof, and other tokens
of a regular architectural design. Nevertheless, considered as a
church, it was exceedingly minute, being scarcely twice a man's
stature in height, and only two or three paces from wall to wall;
and while their collected torches illuminated this one small,
consecrated spot, the great darkness spread all round it, like that
immenser mystery which envelops our little life, and into which
friends vanish from us, one by one. "Why, where is Miriam?" cried
Hilda. The party gazed hurriedly from face to face, and became
aware that one of their party had vanished into the great darkness,
even while they were shuddering at the remote possibility of such a
misfortune.
CHAPTER IV
THE SPECTRE OF THE CATACOMB
"Surely, she cannot be lost!" exclaimed Kenyon. "It is but a
moment since she was speaking."
"No, no!" said Hilda, in great alarm. "She was behind us all;
and it is a long while since we have heard her voice!"
"Torches! torches!" cried Donatello desperately. "I will seek
her, be the darkness ever so dismal!"
But the guide held him back, and assured them all that there was
no possibility of assisting their lost companion, unless by
shouting at the very top of their voices. As the sound would go
very far along these close and narrow passages, there was a fair
probability that Miriam might hear the call, and be able to retrace
her steps.
Accordingly, they all—Kenyon with his bass voice; Donatello with
his tenor; the guide with that high and hard Italian cry, which
makes the streets of Rome so resonant; and Hilda with her slender
scream, piercing farther than the united uproar of the rest—began
to shriek, halloo, and bellow, with the utmost force of their
lungs. And, not to prolong the reader's suspense (for we do not
particularly seek to interest him in this scene, telling it only on
account of the trouble and strange entanglement which followed),
they soon heard a responsive call, in a female voice.
"It was the signorina!" cried Donatello joyfully.
"Yes; it was certainly dear Miriam's voice," said Hilda. "And
here she comes! Thank Heaven! Thank Heaven!"
The figure of their friend was now discernible by her own
torchlight, approaching out of one of the cavernous passages.
Miriam came forward, but not with the eagerness and tremulous joy
of a fearful girl, just rescued from a labyrinth of gloomy mystery.
She made no immediate response to their inquiries and tumultuous
congratulations; and, as they afterwards remembered, there was
something absorbed, thoughtful, and self-concentrated in her
deportment. She looked pale, as well she might, and held her torch
with a nervous grasp, the tremor of which was seen in the irregular
twinkling of the flame. This last was the chief perceptible sign of
any recent agitation or alarm.
"Dearest, dearest Miriam," exclaimed Hilda, throwing her arms
about her friend, "where have you been straying from us? Blessed be
Providence, which has rescued you out of that miserable
darkness!"
"Hush, dear Hilda!" whispered Miriam, with a strange little
laugh. "Are you quite sure that it was Heaven's guidance which
brought me back? If so, it was by an odd messenger, as you will
confess. See; there he stands."
Startled at Miriam's words and manner, Hilda gazed into the
duskiness whither she pointed, and there beheld a figure standing
just on the doubtful limit of obscurity, at the threshold of the
small, illuminated chapel. Kenyon discerned him at the same
instant, and drew nearer with his torch; although the guide
attempted to dissuade him, averring that, once beyond the
consecrated precincts of the chapel, the apparition would have
power to tear him limb from limb. It struck the sculptor, however,
when he afterwards recurred to these circumstances, that the guide
manifested no such apprehension on his own account as he professed
on behalf of others; for he kept pace with Kenyon as the latter
approached the figure, though still endeavoring to restrain
'him.
In fine, they both drew near enough to get as good a view of the
spectre as the smoky light of their torches, struggling with the
massive gloom, could supply.
The stranger was of exceedingly picturesque, and even
melodramatic aspect. He was clad in a voluminous cloak, that seemed
to be made of a buffalo's hide, and a pair of those goat-skin
breeches, with the hair outward, which are still commonly worn by
the peasants of the Roman Campagna. In this garb, they look like
antique Satyrs; and, in truth, the Spectre of the Catacomb might
have represented the last survivor of that vanished race, hiding
himself in sepulchral gloom, and mourning over his lost life of
woods and streams.
Furthermore, he had on a broad-brimmed, conical hat, beneath the
shadow of which a wild visage was indistinctly seen, floating away,
as it were, into a dusky wilderness of mustache and beard. His eyes
winked, and turned uneasily from the torches, like a creature to
whom midnight would be more congenial than noonday.
On the whole, the spectre might have made a considerable
impression on the sculptor's nerves, only that he was in the habit
of observing similar figures, almost every day, reclining on the
Spanish steps, and waiting for some artist to invite them within
the magic realm of picture. Nor, even thus familiarized with the
stranger's peculiarities of appearance, could Kenyon help wondering
to see such a personage, shaping himself so suddenly out of the
void darkness of the catacomb.
"What are you?" said the sculptor, advancing his torch nearer.
"And how long have you been wandering here?"
"A thousand and five hundred years!" muttered the guide, loud
enough to be heard by all the party. "It is the old pagan phantom
that I told you of, who sought to betray the blessed saints!"
"Yes; it is a phantom!" cried Donatello, with a shudder. "Ah,
dearest signorina, what a fearful thing has beset you in those dark
corridors!"
"Nonsense, Donatello," said the sculptor.
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