The Phantom of the Opera - Page 153/178

The heat did not go with the daylight; on the contrary, it was now

still hotter under the blue rays of the moon. I urged the viscount to

hold our weapons ready to fire and not to stray from camp, while I went

on looking for my spring.

Suddenly, we heard a lion roaring a few yards away.

"Oh," whispered the viscount, "he is quite close! ... Don't you see

him? ... There ... through the trees ... in that thicket! If he roars

again, I will fire! ..."

And the roaring began again, louder than before. And the viscount

fired, but I do not think that he hit the lion; only, he smashed a

mirror, as I perceived the next morning, at daybreak. We must have

covered a good distance during the night, for we suddenly found

ourselves on the edge of the desert, an immense desert of sand, stones

and rocks. It was really not worth while leaving the forest to come

upon the desert. Tired out, I flung myself down beside the viscount,

for I had had enough of looking for springs which I could not find.

I was quite surprised--and I said so to the viscount--that we had

encountered no other dangerous animals during the night. Usually,

after the lion came the leopard and sometimes the buzz of the tsetse

fly. These were easily obtained effects; and I explained to M. de

Chagny that Erik imitated the roar of a lion on a long tabour or

timbrel, with an ass's skin at one end. Over this skin he tied a

string of catgut, which was fastened at the middle to another similar

string passing through the whole length of the tabour. Erik had only

to rub this string with a glove smeared with resin and, according to

the manner in which he rubbed it, he imitated to perfection the voice

of the lion or the leopard, or even the buzzing of the tsetse fly.

The idea that Erik was probably in the room beside us, working his

trick, made me suddenly resolve to enter into a parley with him, for we

must obviously give up all thought of taking him by surprise. And by

this time he must be quite aware who were the occupants of his

torture-chamber. I called him: "Erik! Erik!"

I shouted as loudly as I could across the desert, but there was no

answer to my voice. All around us lay the silence and the bare

immensity of that stony desert. What was to become of us in the midst

of that awful solitude?

We were beginning literally to die of heat, hunger and thirst ... of

thirst especially. At last, I saw M. de Chagny raise himself on his

elbow and point to a spot on the horizon. He had discovered an oasis!