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Quo Vadis, by Henryk Sienkiewicz

CHAPTER LIX

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_ FOR some rime Vinicius had spent his nights away from home. It
occurred to Petronius that perhaps he had formed a new plan, and
was working to liberate Lygia from the Esquiline dungeon; he did
not wish, however, to inquire about anything, lest he might bring
misfortune to the work. This sceptical exquisite had become in a
certain sense superstitious. He had failed to snatch Lygia from the
Mamertine prison, hence had ceased to believe in his own star.

Besides, he did not count this time on a favorable outcome for the
efforts of Vinicius. The Esquiline prison, formed in a hurry from
the cellars of houses thrown down to stop the fire, was not, it is
true, so terrible as the old Tullianum near the Capitol, but it was a
hundred times better guarded. Petronius understood perfectly that
Lygia had been taken there only to escape death and not escape the
amphitheatre. He could understand at once that for this very reason
they were guarding her as a man guards the eye in his head.

"Evidently," said he to himself, "Caesar and Tigellinus have
reserved her for some special spectacle, more dreadful than all
others, and Vinicius is more likely to perish than rescue her."

Vinicius, too, had lost hope of being able to free Lygia. Christ
alone could do that. The young tribune now thought only of seeing
her in prison.

For some time the knowledge that Nazarius had penetrated the
Mamertine prison as a corpse-bearer had given him no peace;
hence he resolved to try that method also.

The overseer of the "Putrid Pits," who had been bribed f or an
immense sum of money, admitted him at last among servants
whom he sent nightly to prisons for corpses. The danger that
Vinicius might be recognized was really small. He was preserved
from it by night, the dress of a slave, and the defective illumination
of the prison. Besides, into whose head could it enter that a
patrician, the grandson of one consul, the son of another, could be
found among servants, corpse-bearers, exposed to the miasma of
prisons and the "Putrid Pits"? And he began work to which men
were forced only by slavery or the direst need.

When the desired evening came, he girded his loins gladly,
covered his head with a cloth steeped in turpentine, and with
throbbing heart betook himself, with a crowd of others, to the
Esquiine.

The pretorian guards made no trouble, for all had brought proper
tesserae, which the centurion examined by the light of a lantern.
After a while the great iron doors opened before them, and they
entered.

Vinicius saw an extensive vaulted cellar, from which they passed
to a series of others. Dim tapers illuminated the interior of each,
which was filled with people. Some of these were lying at the
walls sunk in sleep, or dead, perhaps. Others surrounded large
vessels of water, standing in the middle, out of which they drank as
people tormented with fever; others were sitting on the grounds,
their elbows on their knees, their heads on their palms; here and
there children were sleeping, nestled up to their mothers. Groans,
loud hurried breathing of the sick, weeping, whispered prayers,
hymns in an undertone, the curses of overseers were heard round
about it. In this dungeon was the odor of crowds and corpses. In its
gloomy depth dark figures were swarming; nearer, close to
flickering lights, were visible faces, pale, terrified, hungry, and
cadaverous, with eyes dim, or else flaming with fever, with lips
blue, with streams of sweat on their foreheads, and with clammy
hair. In corners the sick were moaning loudly; some begged for
water; others, to be led to death. And still that prison was less
terrible than the old Tullianum. The legs bent under Vinicius when
he saw all this, and breath was failing in his breast. At the thought
that Lygia was in the midst of this misery and misfortune, the hair
rose on his head, and he stifled a cry of despair. The amphitheatre,
the teeth of wild beasts, the cross, -- anything was better than those
dreadful dungeons filled with the odor of corpses, places in which
imploring voices called from every corner, --

"Lead us to death!"

Vinicius pressed his nails into his palms, for he felt that he was
growing weak, and that presence of mind was deserting him. All
that he had felt till then, all his love and pain, changed in him to
one desire for death.

Just then near his side was heard the overseer of the "Putrid Pits,"--

"How many corpses have ye to-day?"

"About a dozen," answered the guardian of the prison, "but there
will be more before morning; some are in agony at the walls."

And he fell to complaining of women who concealed dead
children so as to keep them near and not yield them to the "Putrid
Pits." "We must discover corpses first by the odor; through this the
air, so terrible already, is spoiled still more. I would rather be a
slave in some rural prison than guard these dogs rotting here while
alive --"

The overseer of the pits comforted him, saying that his own
service was no easier. By this time the sense of reality had returned
to Vinicius. He began to search the dungeon; but sought in vain for
Lygia, fearing meanwhile that he would never see her alive. A
number of cellars were connected by newly made passages; the
corpse-bearers entered only those from which corpses were to be
carried. Fear seized Vinicius lest that privilege which had cost so
much trouble might serve no purpose. Luckily his patron aided
him.

"Infection spreads most through corpses," said he. "Ye must carry
out the bodies at once, or die yourselves, together with the
prisoners."

"There are only ten of us for all the cellars," said the guardian,
"and we must sleep."

"I will leave four men of mine, who will go through the cellars at
night to see if these are dead."

"We will drink to-morrow if thou do that. Everybody must be
taken to the test; for an order has come to pierce the neck of each
corpse, and then to the 'Putrid Pits' at once with it."

"Very well, but we will drink," said the overseer.

Four men were selected, and among them Vinicius; the others he
took to put the corpses on the biers.

Vinicius was at rest; he was certain now at least of finding Lygia.
The young tribune began by examining the first dungeon carefully;
he looked into all the dark corners hardly reached by the light of
his torch; he examined figures sleeping at the walls under coarse
cloths; he saw that the most grievously ill were drawn into a corner
apart. But Lygia he found in no place. In a second and third
dungeon his search was equally fruitless.

Meanwhile the hour had grown late; all corpses had been carried
out. The guards, disposing themselves in the corridors between
cellars, were asleep; the children, wearied with crying, were silent;
nothing was heard save the breathing of troubled breasts, and here
and there the murmur of prayer.

Vinicius went with his torch to the fourth dungeon, which was
considerably smaller. Raising the light, he began to examine it,
and trembled all at once, for it seemed to him that he saw, near a
latticed opening in the wall, the gigantic form of Ursus. Then,
blowing out the light, he approached him, and asked,--

"Ursus, art thou here?"

"Who art thou?" asked the giant, turning his head. "Dost not know
me?"

"Thou hast quenched the torch; how could I know thee?"

But at that moment Vinicius saw Lygia lying on a cloak near the
wall; so, without speaking further, he knelt near her. Ursus
recognized him, and said, --

"Praise be to Christ! but do not wake her, lord."

Vinicius, kneeling down, gazed at her through his tears. In splte of
the darkness he could distinguish her face, which seemed to him as
pale as ala-. baster, and her emaciated arms. At that sight he was
seized by a love which was like a rending pain, a love which shook
his soul to its uttermost depth, and which at the same time was so
full of pity, respect, and homage that he fell on his face, and
pressed to his lips the hem of the cloak on which rested that head
dearer to him than all else on earth.

Ursus looked at Vinieius for a long time in silence, but at last he
pulled his tunic.

"Lord," asked he, "how didst thou come, and hast thou come here
to save her?"

Vinicius rose, and struggled for a time wth his emotion. "Show me
the means," replied he.

"I thought that thou wouldst find them, lord. Only one method
came to my head --"

Here he turned toward the grating in the wall, as if in answer to
himself, and said, --

"In that way -- but there are soldiers outside --"

"A hundred pretorians."

"Then we cannot pass?"

"No!"

The Lygian rubbed his forehead, and asked again, --

"How didst thou enter?"

"I have a tessera from the overseer of the 'Putrid Pits.'" Then
Vinicius stopped suddenly, as if some idea had flashed through his
head.

"By the Passion of the Redeemer," said he, in a hurried voice, "I
will stay here. Let her take my tessera; she can wrap her head in a
cloth, cover her shoulders with a mantle, and pass out. Among the
slaves who carry out corpses there are several youths not full
grown; hence the pretorians will not notice her, and once at the
house of Petronius she is safe."

But the Lygian dropped his head on his breast, and said, -- "She
would not consent, for she loves thee; besides, she is sick, and
unable to stand alone. If thou and the noble Petronius cannot save
her from prison, who can?" said he, after a while.

"Christ alone."

Then both were silent.

"Christ could save all Christians," thought the Lygian, in his
simple heart; "but since He does not save them, it is clear that the
hour of torture and death has come."

He accepted it for himself, but was grieved to the depth of his soul
for that child who had grown up in his arms, and whom he loved
beyond life.

Vinicius knelt again near Lygia. Through the grating in the wall
moonbeams came in, and gave better light than the one candle
burning yet over the entrance. Lygia opened her eyes now, and
said, placing her feverish hand on the arm of Vinicius,--

"I see thee; I knew that thou wouldst come."

He seized her hands, pressed them to his forehead and his heart,
raised her somewhat, and held her to his breast.

"I have come, dearest. May Christ guard and free thee, beloved
Lygia!" He could say no more, for the heart began to whine in his
breast from pain and love, and he would not show pain in her
presence.

"I am sick, Marcus," said Lygia, "and I must die either on the arena
or here in prison -- I have prayed to see thee before death; thou
hast come, -- Christ has heard me." -

Unable to utter a word yet, he pressed her to his bosom, and she
continucd, --

"I saw thee through the window in the Tullianum. I saw that thou
hadst the wish to come to me. Now the Redeemer has given me a
moment of consciousness, so that we may take farewell of each
other. I am going to Him, Marcus, but I love thee, and shall love
always."

Vinicius conquered himself; he stifled his pain and began to speak
in a voice which he tried to make calm, --

"No, dear Lygia, thou wilt not die. The Apostle commanded me to
believe, and he promised to pray for thee; he knew Christ, -- Christ
loved him and will not refuse him. Hadst thou to die, Peter would
not have commanded me to be confident; but he said, 'Have
confidence!' --No, Lygia! Christ will have mercy. He does not wish
thy death. He will not permit it. I Swear to thee by the name of the
Redeemer that Peter is praying for thee."

Silence followed. The one candle hanging above the entrance went
out, but moonlight entered through the whole opening. In the
opposite corner of the cellar a child whined and was silent. From
outside came the voices of pretorians, who, after watching their
turn out, were playing under the wall at scripte duodecim.

"O Marcus," said Lygia, "Christ Himself called to the Father,
'Remove this bitter cup from Me'; still He drank it. Christ Himself
died on the cross, and thousands are perishing for His sake. Why,
then, should He spare me alone? Who am I, Marcus? I have heard
Peter say that he too would die in torture. Who am I, compared
with Peter? When the pretorians came to ae I dreaded death and
torture, but I dread them no longer. See what a terrible prison this
is, but I am going to heaven. Think of it: Caesar is here, but there
the Redeemer, kind and merciful. And there is no death there.
Thou lovest me; think, then, how happy I shall be. Oh, dear
Marcus, think that thou wilt come to me there."

Here she stopped to get breath in her sick breast, and then raised
his hand to her lips, --

"Marcus?"

"What, dear one?"

"Do not weep for me, and remember this, -- thou wilt come to me.
I have lived a short time, but God gave thy soul to me; hence I
shall tell Christ that though I died, and thou wert looking at my
death, though thou wert left in grief, thou didst not blaspheme
against His will, and that thou lovest Him always. Thou wilt love
Him, and endure my death patiently? For then He will unite us. I
love thee and I wish to be with thee."

Breath failed her then, and in a barely audible voice she finished,--

"Promise me this, Marcus!"

Vinicius embraced her with trembling arms, and said,--

"By thy sacred head! I promise."

Her pale face became radiant in the sad light of the moon, and
once more she raised his hand to her lips, and whispered, --

"I am thy wife!"

Beyond the wall the pretorians playing scriptaee duodecim raised a
louder dispute; but Vinicius and Lygia forgot the prison, the
guards, the world, and, feeling within them the souls of angels,
they began to pray. _

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