Raoul, his throat filled with sobs, oaths and insults, fumbled

awkwardly at the great mirror that had opened one night, before his

eyes, to let Christine pass to the murky dwelling below. He pushed,

pressed, groped about, but the glass apparently obeyed no one but Erik

... Perhaps actions were not enough with a glass of the kind? Perhaps

he was expected to utter certain words? When he was a little boy, he

had heard that there were things that obeyed the spoken word!

Suddenly, Raoul remembered something about a gate opening into the Rue

Scribe, an underground passage running straight to the Rue Scribe from

the lake ... Yes, Christine had told him about that... And, when he

found that the key was no longer in the box, he nevertheless ran to the

Rue Scribe. Outside, in the street, he passed his trembling hands over

the huge stones, felt for outlets ... met with iron bars ... were those

they? ... Or these? ... Or could it be that air-hole? ... He plunged

his useless eyes through the bars ... How dark it was in there! ... He

listened ... All was silence! ... He went round the building ... and

came to bigger bars, immense gates! ... It was the entrance to the Cour

de l'Administration.

Raoul rushed into the doorkeeper's lodge.

"I beg your pardon, madame, could you tell me where to find a gate or

door, made of bars, iron bars, opening into the Rue Scribe ... and

leading to the lake? ... You know the lake I mean? ... Yes, the

underground lake ... under the Opera."

"Yes, sir, I know there is a lake under the Opera, but I don't know

which door leads to it. I have never been there!"

"And the Rue Scribe, madame, the Rue Scribe? Have you never been to

the Rue Scribe?"

The woman laughed, screamed with laughter! Raoul darted away, roaring

with anger, ran up-stairs, four stairs at a time, down-stairs, rushed

through the whole of the business side of the opera-house, found

himself once more in the light of the stage.

He stopped, with his heart thumping in his chest: suppose Christine

Daae had been found? He saw a group of men and asked: "I beg your pardon, gentlemen. Could you tell me where Christine Daae

is?"

And somebody laughed.

At the same moment the stage buzzed with a new sound and, amid a crowd

of men in evening-dress, all talking and gesticulating together,

appeared a man who seemed very calm and displayed a pleasant face, all

pink and chubby-cheeked, crowned with curly hair and lit up by a pair

of wonderfully serene blue eyes. Mercier, the acting-manager, called

the Vicomte de Chagny's attention to him and said: "This is the gentleman to whom you should put your question, monsieur.

Let me introduce Mifroid, the commissary of police."

"Ah, M. le Vicomte de Chagny! Delighted to meet you, monsieur," said

the commissary. "Would you mind coming with me? ... And now where are

the managers? ... Where are the managers?"




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