He seizes my arms,
binds1 them to my side, then he slips a black silken
noose2 about my neck; he holds both ends of the cord and, by
tightening3, he can strangle and dispatch me to the other world ei quickly or slowly, depending upon his pleasure.
"This torture is sweeter than you may imagine, Therese," says Roland; "you will only approach death by way of unspeakably pleasurable sensations; the pressure this noose will bring to bear upon your nervous system will set fire to the organs of
voluptuousness4; the effect is certain; were all the people who are
condemned5 to this torture to know in what an
intoxication6 of joy it makes one die, less terrified by this retribution for their crimes, they would commit them more often and with much greater self-assurance; this delicious operation, Therese, by causing, as well, the
contraction7 of the locale in which I am going to fit myself," he added as he presented himself to a criminal avenue so
worthy8 of such a
villain9, "is also going to double my pleasure."
He thrusts, he sweats, 'tis in vain; he prepares the road, 'tis
futile10; he is too
monstrously11 proportioned, his enterprises are repeatedly
frustrated12; and then his
wrath13 nails, his hands, his feet fly to revenge him upon the
opposition14 Nature puts up against him; he returns to the assault, the glowing blade slides to the edge of the neighboring canal and
smiting15 vigorously,
penetrates16 to nigh the midway mark; I utter a cry; Roland,
enraged17 by his mistake, withdraws
petulantly18, and this time hammers at the other gate with such force the moistened
dart19 plunges20 in,
rending21 me. Roland exploits this first sally's success; his efforts become more violent; he gains ground; as he advances, he gradually
tightens22 the fatal cord he has passed round my neck,
hideous23 screams burst from my lips; amused by them, the
ferocious24 Roland urges me to redouble my howlings, - for he is but too confident of their insufficiency, he is
perfectly25 able to put a stop to them when he wishes; their
shrill26 sharp notes
inflame27 him, the noose's pressure is
modulated28 by his degrees of delight; little by little my voice waxes faint; the tightenings now become so intense that my senses weaken although I do not lose the power to feel;
brutally29 shaken by the enormous instrument with which Roland is rending my entrails, despite my
frightful30 circumstances, I feel myself flooded by his lust's jetted outpourings; I still hear the cries he mouths as he discharges; an instant of
stupor31 followed, I knew not what had happened to me, but soon my eyes open again to the light, I find myself free,
untied32, and my
sensory33 organs seem to come back to life.
"Well, Therese," says my butcher, "I dare swear that if you'll tell the truth you'll say you felt pleasure only?"
"Only horror, Monsieur, only disgust, only
anguish34 and despair."
"You are Lying, I am
fully35 acquainted with the effects you have just experienced, but what does it matter what they were? I fancy you already know me well enough to be damned certain that when I undertake something with you, the joy you reap from it concerns me
infinitely36 less than my own, and this voluptuousness I seek has been so keen that in an instant I am going to
procure37 some more of it. It is now upon yourself, Therese," declares this signal
libertine38, "it is upon you alone your life is going to depend."
Whereupon he
hitches39 about my neck the rope that hangs from the ceiling; he has me stand upon a stool, pulls the rope
taut40, secures it, and to the stool he attaches a string whose end he keeps in his hand as he sits down in an armchair facing me; I am given a
sickle41 which I am to use to
sever42 the rope at the moment when, by means of the string, he jerks the stool from beneath my feet.
"Notice, Therese," he says when all is ready, "that though you may miss your blow, I'll not miss mine; and so I am not mistaken when I say your life depends upon you."
He excites himself; it is at his intoxication's critical moment he is to snatch away the stool which, removed, will leave me
dangling43 from the beam; he does everything possible to pretend the instant has come; he would be beside himself were I to miss my cue; but do what he will, I divine the crisis, the violence of his
ecstasy44 betrays him, I see him make the telltale movement, the stool flies away, I cut the rope and fall to the ground; there I am, completely detached, and although five yards divide us, would you believe it, Madame? I feel my entire body
drenched45 with the evidence of his
delirium46 and his
frenzy47.
Anyone but I, taking advantage of the weapon she clutched in her hand, would doubtless have leapt upon that monster; but what might I have gained by this brave
feat48? for I did not have the keys to those
subterranean49 passages, I was ignorant of their scheme, I should have perished before being able to emerge from them; Roland, furthermore, was armed; and so I got up, leaving the sickle on the ground so that he might not conceive the slightest suspicion of my intentions, and indeed he had none, for he had
savored50 the full extent of pleasure and, far more content with my
tractability51, with my resignation, than with my
agility52, he signaled to me and we left.#p#分页标题#e#
The next day I cast an
appraising53 eye upon my companions: those four girls ranged from twenty-five to thirty years of age; although bestialized and besotted by
misery54 and
warped55 by excessive
drudgery56, they still had the remnants of beauty; their figures were handsome, and the youngest, called Suzanne, still had, together with charming eyes, very fine hair; Roland had seized her in Lyon, he had deflowered her, and after having sworn to her family he would marry her, he had brought her to this frightful
chateau57, where she had been three years his slave, and during that period she had been especially singled out to be the object of the monster's ferocities: by
dint58 of blows from the bull's pizzle, her buttocks had become as
calloused59 and toughened as would be cow's hide dried in the sun; she had a cancer upon her left breast and an abscess in her matrix which caused her unspeakable suffering; all that was the
perfidious60 Roland's achievement; each of those horrors was the fruit of his
lecheries61.
It was she who informed me Roland was on the eve of departing for Venice if the considerable sums he had very recently shipped to Spain could be converted into letters of credit he needed for Italy, for he did not want to transport his gold east across the Alps; never did he send any in that direction: it was in a different country from the one he had
decided62 to inhabit that he circulated his false coins; by this device, rich to be sure but only in the bank-notes of another kingdom, his rascalities could never be detected in the land where he planned to take up his next
abode63. But everything could be
overthrown64 within the space of an instant and the
retirement65 he envisioned wholly depended upon this latest transaction in which the bulk of his treasure was compromised. Were Cadiz to accept his false piasters, sequins, and louis, and against them send him letters negotiable in Venice, Roland would be established for the rest of his days; were the fraud to be detected, one single day would suffice to
demolish66 the fragile
edifice67 of his fortune.
"
Alas68!" I remarked upon learning these details, "
Providence69 will be just for once. It will not
countenance70 the success of such a monster, and all of us will be revenged...."
Great God I in view of the experience I had acquired, how was I able thus to reason!
Toward noon we were given a two-hour
respite71, which we always used to good advantage to go for a little individual rest and food in our cells; at two o'clock we were reattached to the wheel and were made to work till nightfall; never were we allowed to enter the chateau; if we were naked, 'twas not only because of the heat, but so as better to be able to receive the bull's pizzle beatings our
savage72 master periodically came to
inflict73 upon us; in winter we were given pantaloons and a light sweater which so closely hugged the skin that our bodies were not the less exposed to the blows of a villain whose unique pleasure was to beat us half-senseless.
A week passed during which I saw no sign of Roland; on the ninth day he visited us at work and maintained Suzanne and I were
improperly74 applying ourselves to our task; he distributed thirty cuts with the pizzle upon each of us,
slashing75 us from back to
calf76.
At midnight on that same day, the evil man came to get me in my
kennel77 and, warmed by the sight of what his cruelties had produced, he once again introduced his terrible bludgeon into the shadowy
lair78 I exposed by the
posture79 he made me assume in order to inspect the
vestiges80 of his rage. When his hungers were
appeased81 I thought to profit from his
momentary82 calm to
supplicate83 him to
mitigate84 my lot. Alas! I was
unaware85 that in such a genius, whereas the
delirious86 interlude
stimulates87 the
penchant88 for cruelty into greater activity, the subsequent reflux does not by any means restore the honest man's pacific
virtues89 to it; 'tis a fire more or less quickened by the fuel wherewith it is fed, but one whose embers, though covered with
cinder90, burn nonetheless.
"And what right have you," Roland replied to me, "to expect me to sweeten your circumstances? Because of the fantasies I am pleased to put into execution with you? But am I to throw myself at your feet and
implore91 you to accord favors for the granting of which you can implore some recompense? I ask nothing from you, I take, and I simply do not see that, because I exercise one right over you, it must result that I have to
abstain92 from demanding a second; there is no love in what I do: love is a
chivalric93 sentiment I hold in sovereign contempt and to whose assaults my heart is always
impervious94; I employ a woman out of necessity, as one employs a round and hollow
vessel95 for a different purpose but an
analogous96 need; but never according this individual, which my money and authority make subject to me, either
esteem97 or tenderness, owing to myself what I get from her and never
exacting98 from her anything but
submission99, I cannot be
constrained100, in the light of all this, to acknowledge any
gratitude101 toward her. I ask them who would like to compel me to be thankful whether a thief who snatches a man's purse in the woods because he, the thief, is the stronger of the two, owes this man any gratitude for the wrong he has just done him; the same holds true for an
outrage102 committed against a woman: it may
justify103 a repetition of the abuse, but never is it a sufficient reason to grant her compensation."#p#分页标题#e#