The Phantom of the Opera - Page 126/178

And he led him to the little staircase by which they had come down

lately.

They went up, stopping at each step, peering into the darkness and the

silence, till they came to the third cellar. Here the Persian motioned

to Raoul to go on his knees; and, in this way, crawling on both knees

and one hand--for the other hand was held in the position

indicated--they reached the end wall.

Against this wall stood a large discarded scene from the ROI DE LAHORE.

Close to this scene was a set piece. Between the scene and the set

piece there was just room for a body ... for a body which one day was

found hanging there. The body of Joseph Buquet.

The Persian, still kneeling, stopped and listened. For a moment, he

seemed to hesitate and looked at Raoul; then he turned his eyes upward,

toward the second cellar, which sent down the faint glimmer of a

lantern, through a cranny between two boards. This glimmer seemed to

trouble the Persian.

At last, he tossed his head and made up his mind to act. He slipped

between the set piece and the scene from the ROI DE LAHORE, with Raoul

close upon his heels. With his free hand, the Persian felt the wall.

Raoul saw him bear heavily upon the wall, just as he had pressed

against the wall in Christine's dressing-room. Then a stone gave way,

leaving a hole in the wall.

This time, the Persian took his pistol from his pocket and made a sign

to Raoul to do as he did. He cocked the pistol.

And, resolutely, still on his knees, he wiggled through the hole in the

wall. Raoul, who had wished to pass first, had to be content to follow

him.

The hole was very narrow. The Persian stopped almost at once. Raoul

heard him feeling the stones around him. Then the Persian took out his

dark lantern again, stooped forward, examined something beneath him and

immediately extinguished his lantern. Raoul heard him say, in a

whisper: "We shall have to drop a few yards, without making a noise; take off

your boots."

The Persian handed his own shoes to Raoul.

"Put them outside the wall," he said. "We shall find them there when

we leave."[5] He crawled a little farther on his knees, then turned right round and

said: "I am going to hang by my hands from the edge of the stone and let

myself drop INTO HIS HOUSE. You must do exactly the same. Do not be

afraid. I will catch you in my arms."

Raoul soon heard a dull sound, evidently produced by the fall of the

Persian, and then dropped down.

He felt himself clasped in the Persian's arms.

"Hush!" said the Persian.

And they stood motionless, listening.