Erik poured a drop of rum into the daroga's cup and, pointing to the

viscount, said: "He came to himself long before we knew if you were still alive,

daroga. He is quite well. He is asleep. We must not wake him."

Erik left the room for a moment, and the Persian raised himself on his

elbow, looked around him and saw Christine Daae sitting by the

fireside. He spoke to her, called her, but he was still very weak and

fell back on his pillow. Christine came to him, laid her hand on his

forehead and went away again. And the Persian remembered that, as she

went, she did not give a glance at M. de Chagny, who, it is true, was

sleeping peacefully; and she sat down again in her chair by the

chimney-corner, silent as a sister of charity who had taken a vow of

silence.

Erik returned with some little bottles which he placed on the

mantelpiece. And, again in a whisper, so as not to wake M. de Chagny,

he said to the Persian, after sitting down and feeling his pulse: "You are now saved, both of you. And soon I shall take you up to the

surface of the earth, TO PLEASE MY WIFE."

Thereupon he rose, without any further explanation, and disappeared

once more.

The Persian now looked at Christine's quiet profile under the lamp.

She was reading a tiny book, with gilt edges, like a religious book.

There are editions of THE IMITATION that look like that. The Persian

still had in his ears the natural tone in which the other had said, "to

please my wife." Very gently, he called her again; but Christine was

wrapped up in her book and did not hear him.

Erik returned, mixed the daroga a draft and advised him not to speak to

"his wife" again nor to any one, BECAUSE IT MIGHT BE VERY DANGEROUS TO

EVERYBODY'S HEALTH.

Eventually, the Persian fell asleep, like M. de Chagny, and did not

wake until he was in his own room, nursed by his faithful Darius, who

told him that, on the night before, he was found propped against the

door of his flat, where he had been brought by a stranger, who rang the

bell before going away.

As soon as the daroga recovered his strength and his wits, he sent to

Count Philippe's house to inquire after the viscount's health. The

answer was that the young man had not been seen and that Count Philippe

was dead. His body was found on the bank of the Opera lake, on the

Rue-Scribe side. The Persian remembered the requiem mass which he had

heard from behind the wall of the torture-chamber, and had no doubt

concerning the crime and the criminal. Knowing Erik as he did, he

easily reconstructed the tragedy. Thinking that his brother had run

away with Christine Daae, Philippe had dashed in pursuit of him along

the Brussels Road, where he knew that everything was prepared for the

elopement. Failing to find the pair, he hurried back to the Opera,

remembered Raoul's strange confidence about his fantastic rival and

learned that the viscount had made every effort to enter the cellars of

the theater and that he had disappeared, leaving his hat in the prima

donna's dressing-room beside an empty pistol-case. And the count, who

no longer entertained any doubt of his brother's madness, in his turn

darted into that infernal underground maze. This was enough, in the

Persian's eyes, to explain the discovery of the Comte de Chagny's

corpse on the shore of the lake, where the siren, Erik's siren, kept

watch.




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