<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER II </h2>
<h3> THE CRIME </h3>
<p>He joined a horde of adventurers who were passing through the place.</p>
<p>He learned what it was to suffer hunger, thirst, sickness and filth. He
grew accustomed to the din of battles and to the sight of dying men. The
wind tanned his skin. His limbs became hardened through contact with
armour, and as he was very strong and brave, temperate and of good
counsel, he easily obtained command of a company.</p>
<p>At the outset of a battle, he would electrify his soldiers by a motion of
his sword. He would climb the walls of a citadel with a knotted rope, at
night, rocked by the storm, while sparks of fire clung to his cuirass, and
molten lead and boiling tar poured from the battlements.</p>
<p>Often a stone would break his shield. Bridges crowded with men gave way
under him. Once, by turning his mace, he rid himself of fourteen horsemen.
He defeated all those who came forward to fight him on the field of
honour, and more than a score of times it was believed that he had been
killed.</p>
<p>However, thanks to Divine protection, he always escaped, for he shielded
orphans, widows, and aged men. When he caught sight of one of the latter
walking ahead of him, he would call to him to show his face, as if he
feared that he might kill him by mistake.</p>
<p>All sorts of intrepid men gathered under his leadership, fugitive slaves,
peasant rebels, and penniless bastards; he then organized an army which
increased so much that he became famous and was in great demand.</p>
<p>He succoured in turn the Dauphin of France, the King of England, the
Templars of Jerusalem, the General of the Parths, the Negus of Abyssinia
and the Emperor of Calicut. He fought against Scandinavians covered with
fish-scales, against negroes mounted on red asses and armed with shields
made of hippopotamus hide, against gold-coloured Indians who wielded
great, shining swords above their heads. He conquered the Troglodytes and
the cannibals. He travelled through regions so torrid that the heat of the
sun would set fire to the hair on one’s head; he journeyed through
countries so glacial that one’s arms would fall from the body; and he
passed through places where the fogs were so dense that it seemed like
being surrounded by phantoms.</p>
<p>Republics in trouble consulted him; when he conferred with ambassadors, he
always obtained unexpected concessions. Also, if a monarch behaved badly,
he would arrive on the scene and rebuke him. He freed nations. He rescued
queens sequestered in towers. It was he and no other that killed the
serpent of Milan and the dragon of Oberbirbach.</p>
<p>Now, the Emperor of Occitania, having triumphed over the Spanish
Mussulmans, had taken the sister of the Caliph of Cordova as a concubine,
and had had one daughter by her, whom he brought up in the teachings of
Christ. But the Caliph, feigning that he wished to become converted, made
him a visit, and brought with him a numerous escort. He slaughtered the
entire garrison and threw the Emperor into a dungeon, and treated him with
great cruelty in order to obtain possession of his treasures.</p>
<p>Julian went to his assistance, destroyed the army of infidels, laid siege
to the city, slew the Caliph, chopped off his head and threw it over the
fortifications like a cannon-ball.</p>
<p>As a reward for so great a service, the Emperor presented him with a large
sum of money in baskets; but Julian declined it. Then the Emperor,
thinking that the amount was not sufficiently large, offered him three
quarters of his fortune, and on meeting a second refusal, proposed to
share his kingdom with his benefactor. But Julian only thanked him for it,
and the Emperor felt like weeping with vexation at not being able to show
his gratitude, when he suddenly tapped his forehead and whispered a few
words in the ear of one of his courtiers; the tapestry curtains parted and
a young girl appeared.</p>
<p>Her large black eyes shone like two soft lights. A charming smile parted
her lips. Her curls were caught in the jewels of her half-opened bodice,
and the grace of her youthful body could be divined under the transparency
of her tunic.</p>
<p>She was small and quite plump, but her waist was slender.</p>
<p>Julian was absolutely dazzled, all the more since he had always led a
chaste life.</p>
<p>So he married the Emperor’s daughter, and received at the same time a
castle she had inherited from her mother; and when the rejoicings were
over, he departed with his bride, after many courtesies had been exchanged
on both sides.</p>
<p>The castle was of Moorish design, in white marble, erected on a promontory
and surrounded by orange-trees.</p>
<p>Terraces of flowers extended to the shell-strewn shores of a beautiful
bay. Behind the castle spread a fan-shaped forest. The sky was always
blue, and the trees were swayed in turn by the ocean-breeze and by the
winds that blew from the mountains that closed the horizon.</p>
<p>Light entered the apartments through the incrustations of the walls. High,
reed-like columns supported the ceiling of the cupolas, decorated in
imitation of stalactites.</p>
<p>Fountains played in the spacious halls; the courts were inlaid with
mosaic; there were festooned partitions and a great profusion of
architectural fancies; and everywhere reigned a silence so deep that the
swish of a sash or the echo of a sigh could be distinctly heard.</p>
<p>Julian now had renounced war. Surrounded by a peaceful people, he remained
idle, receiving every day a throng of subjects who came and knelt before
him and kissed his hand in Oriental fashion.</p>
<p>Clad in sumptuous garments, he would gaze out of the window and think of
his past exploits; and wish that he might again run in the desert in
pursuit of ostriches and gazelles, hide among the bamboos to watch for
leopards, ride through forests filled with rhinoceroses, climb the most
inaccessible peaks in order to have a better aim at the eagles, and fight
the polar bears on the icebergs of the northern sea.</p>
<p>Sometimes, in his dreams, he fancied himself like Adam in the midst of
Paradise, surrounded by all the beasts; by merely extending his arm, he
was able to kill them; or else they filed past him, in pairs, by order of
size, from the lions and the elephants to the ermines and the ducks, as on
the day they entered Noah’s Ark.</p>
<p>Hidden in the shadow of a cave, he aimed unerring arrows at them; then
came others and still others, until he awoke, wild-eyed.</p>
<p>Princes, friends of his, invited him to their meets, but he always refused
their invitations, because he thought that by this kind of penance he
might possibly avert the threatened misfortune; it seemed to him that the
fate of his parents depended on his refusal to slaughter animals. He
suffered because he could not see them, and his other desire was growing
well-nigh unbearable.</p>
<p>In order to divert his mind, his wife had dancers and jugglers come to the
castle.</p>
<p>She went abroad with him in an open litter; at other times, stretched out
on the edge of a boat, they watched for hours the fish disport themselves
in the water, which was as clear as the sky. Often she playfully threw
flowers at him or nestling at his feet, she played melodies on an old
mandolin; then, clasping her hands on his shoulder, she would inquire
tremulously: “What troubles thee, my dear lord?”</p>
<p>He would not reply, or else he would burst into tears; but at last, one
day, he confessed his fearful dread.</p>
<p>His wife scorned the idea and reasoned wisely with him: probably his
father and mother were dead; and even if he should ever see them again,
through what chance, to what end, would he arrive at this abomination?
Therefore, his fears were groundless, and he should hunt again.</p>
<p>Julian listened to her and smiled, but he could not bring himself to yield
to his desire.</p>
<p>One August evening when they were in their bed-chamber, she having just
retired and he being about to kneel in prayer, he heard the yelping of a
fox and light footsteps under the window; and he thought he saw things in
the dark that looked like animals. The temptation was too strong. He
seized his quiver.</p>
<p>His wife appeared astonished.</p>
<p>“I am obeying you,” quoth he, “and I shall be back at sunrise.”</p>
<p>However, she feared that some calamity would happen. But he reassured her
and departed, surprised at her illogical moods.</p>
<p>A short time afterwards, a page came to announce that two strangers
desired, in the absence of the lord of the castle, to see its mistress at
once.</p>
<p>Soon a stooping old man and an aged woman entered the room; their coarse
garments were covered with dust and each leaned on a stick.</p>
<p>They grew bold enough to say that they brought Julian news of his parents.
She leaned out of the bed to listen to them. But after glancing at each
other, the old people asked her whether he ever referred to them and if he
still loved them.</p>
<p>“Oh! yes!” she said.</p>
<p>Then they exclaimed:</p>
<p>“We are his parents!” and they sat themselves down, for they were very
tired.</p>
<p>But there was nothing to show the young wife that her husband was their
son.</p>
<p>They proved it by describing to her the birthmarks he had on his body.
Then she jumped out of bed, called a page, and ordered that a repast be
served to them.</p>
<p>But although they were very hungry, they could scarcely eat, and she
observed surreptitiously how their lean fingers trembled whenever they
lifted their cups.</p>
<p>They asked a hundred questions about their son, and she answered each one
of them, but she was careful not to refer to the terrible idea that
concerned them.</p>
<p>When he failed to return, they had left their château; and had wandered
for several years, following vague indications but without losing hope.</p>
<p>So much money had been spent at the tolls of the rivers and in inns, to
satisfy the rights of princes and the demands of highwaymen, that now
their purse was quite empty and they were obliged to beg. But what did it
matter, since they were about to clasp again their son in their arms? They
lauded his happiness in having such a beautiful wife, and did not tire of
looking at her and kissing her.</p>
<p>The luxuriousness of the apartment astonished them; and the old man, after
examining the walls, inquired why they bore the coat-of-arms of the
Emperor of Occitania.</p>
<p>“He is my father,” she replied.</p>
<p>And he marvelled and remembered the prediction of the gipsy, while his
wife meditated upon the words the hermit had spoken to her. The glory of
their son was undoubtedly only the dawn of eternal splendours, and the old
people remained awed while the light from the candelabra on the table fell
on them.</p>
<p>In the heyday of youth, both had been extremely handsome. The mother had
not lost her hair, and bands of snowy whiteness framed her cheeks; and the
father, with his stalwart figure and long beard, looked like a carved
image.</p>
<p>Julian’s wife prevailed upon them not to wait for him. She put them in her
bed and closed the curtains; and they both fell asleep. The day broke and
outdoors the little birds began to chirp.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Julian had left the castle grounds and walked nervously through
the forest, enjoying the velvety softness of the grass and the balminess
of the air.</p>
<p>The shadow of the trees fell on the earth. Here and there, the moonlight
flecked the glades and Julian feared to advance, because he mistook the
silvery light for water and the tranquil surface of the pools for grass. A
great stillness reigned everywhere, and he failed to see any of the beasts
that only a moment ago were prowling around the castle. As he walked on,
the woods grew thicker, and the darkness more impenetrable. Warm winds,
filled with enervating perfumes, caressed him; he sank into masses of dead
leaves, and after a while he leaned against an oak-tree to rest and catch
his breath.</p>
<p>Suddenly a body blacker than the surrounding darkness sprang from behind
the tree. It was a wild boar. Julian did not have time to stretch his bow,
and he bewailed the fact as if it were some great misfortune. Presently,
having left the woods, he beheld a wolf slinking along a hedge.</p>
<p>He aimed an arrow at him. The wolf paused, turned his head and quietly
continued on his way. He trotted along, always keeping at the same
distance, pausing now and then to look around and resuming his flight as
soon as an arrow was aimed in his direction.</p>
<p>In this way Julian traversed an apparently endless plain, then sand-hills,
and at last found himself on a plateau that dominated a great stretch of
land. Large flat stones were interspersed among crumbling vaults; bones
and skeletons covered the ground, and here and there some mouldy crosses
stood desolate. But presently, shapes moved in the darkness of the tombs,
and from them came panting, wild-eyed hyenas. They approached him and
smelled him, grinning hideously and disclosing their gums. He whipped out
his sword, but they scattered in every direction and continuing their
swift, limping gallop, disappeared in a cloud of dust.</p>
<p>Some time afterwards, in a ravine, he encountered a wild bull, with
threatening horns, pawing the sand with his hoofs. Julian thrust his lance
between his dewlaps. But his weapon snapped as if the beast were made of
bronze; then he closed his eyes in anticipation of his death. When he
opened them again, the bull had vanished.</p>
<p>Then his soul collapsed with shame. Some supernatural power destroyed his
strength, and he set out for home through the forest. The woods were a
tangle of creeping plants that he had to cut with his sword, and while he
was thus engaged, a weasel slid between his feet, a panther jumped over
his shoulder, and a serpent wound itself around the ash-tree.</p>
<p>Among its leaves was a monstrous jackdaw that watched Julian intently, and
here and there, between the branches, appeared great, fiery sparks as if
the sky were raining all its stars upon the forest. But the sparks were
the eyes of wild-cats, owls, squirrels, monkeys and parrots.</p>
<p>Julian aimed his arrows at them, but the feathered weapons lighted on the
leaves of the trees and looked like white butterflies. He threw stones at
them; but the missiles did not strike, and fell to the ground. Then he
cursed himself, and howled imprecations, and in his rage he could have
struck himself.</p>
<p>Then all the beasts he had pursued appeared, and formed a narrow circle
around him. Some sat on their hindquarters, while others stood at full
height. And Julian remained among them, transfixed with terror and
absolutely unable to move. By a supreme effort of his will-power, he took
a step forward; those that perched in the trees opened their wings, those
that trod the earth moved their limbs, and all accompanied him.</p>
<p>The hyenas strode in front of him, the wolf and the wild boar brought up
the rear. On his right, the bull swung its head and on his left the
serpent crawled through the grass; while the panther, arching its back,
advanced with velvety footfalls and long strides. Julian walked as slowly
as possible, so as not to irritate them, while in the depth of bushes he
could distinguish porcupines, foxes, vipers, jackals, and bears.</p>
<p>He began to run; the brutes followed him. The serpent hissed, the
malodorous beasts frothed at the mouth, the wild boar rubbed his tusks
against his heels, and the wolf scratched the palms of his hands with the
hairs of his snout. The monkeys pinched him and made faces, the weasel
tolled over his feet. A bear knocked his cap off with its huge paw, and
the panther disdainfully dropped an arrow it was about to put in its
mouth.</p>
<p>Irony seemed to incite their sly actions. As they watched him out of the
corners of their eyes, they seemed to meditate a plan of revenge, and
Julian, who was deafened by the buzzing of the insects, bruised by the
wings and tails of the birds, choked by the stench of animal breaths,
walked with outstretched arms and closed lids, like a blind man, without
even the strength to beg for mercy.</p>
<p>The crowing of a cock vibrated in the air. Other cocks responded; it was
day; and Julian recognised the top of his palace rising above the
orange-trees.</p>
<p>Then, on the edge of a field, he beheld some red partridges fluttering
around a stubble-field. He unfastened his cloak and threw it over them
like a net. When he lifted it, he found only a bird that had been dead a
long time and was decaying.</p>
<p>This disappointment irritated him more than all the others. The thirst for
carnage stirred afresh within him; animals failing him, he desired to
slaughter men.</p>
<p>He climbed the three terraces and opened the door with a blow of his fist;
but at the foot of the staircase, the memory of his beloved wife softened
his heart. No doubt she was asleep, and he would go up and surprise her.
Having removed his sandals, he unlocked the door softly and entered.</p>
<p>The stained windows dimmed the pale light of dawn. Julian stumbled over
some garment’s lying on the floor and a little further on, he knocked
against a table covered with dishes. “She must have eaten,” he thought; so
he advanced cautiously towards the bed which was concealed by the darkness
in the back of the room. When he reached the edge, he leaned over the
pillow where the two heads were resting close together and stooped to kiss
his wife. His mouth encountered a man’s beard.</p>
<p>He fell back, thinking he had become crazed; then he approached the bed
again and his searching fingers discovered some hair which seemed to be
very long. In order to convince himself that he was mistaken, he once more
passed his hand slowly over the pillow. But this time he was sure that it
was a beard and that a man was there! a man lying beside his wife!</p>
<p>Flying into an ungovernable passion, he sprang upon them with his drawn
dagger, foaming, stamping and howling like a wild beast. After a while he
stopped.</p>
<p>The corpses, pierced through the heart, had not even moved. He listened
attentively to the two death-rattles, they were almost alike, and as they
grew fainter, another voice, coming from far away, seemed to continue
them. Uncertain at first, this plaintive voice came nearer and nearer,
grew louder and louder and presently he recognised, with a feeling of
abject terror, the bellowing of the great black stag.</p>
<p>And as he turned around, he thought he saw the spectre of his wife
standing at the threshold with a light in her hand.</p>
<p>The sound of the murder had aroused her. In one glance she understood what
had happened and fled in horror, letting the candle drop from her hand.
Julian picked it up.</p>
<p>His father and mother lay before him, stretched on their backs, with
gaping wounds in their breasts; and their faces, the expression of which
was full of tender dignity, seemed to hide what might be an eternal
secret.</p>
<p>Splashes and blotches of blood were on their white skin, on the
bed-clothes, on the floor, and on an ivory Christ which hung in the
alcove. The scarlet reflection of the stained window, which just then was
struck by the sun, lighted up the bloody spots and appeared to scatter
them around the whole room. Julian walked toward the corpses, repeating to
himself and trying to believe that he was mistaken, that it was not
possible, that there are often inexplicable likenesses.</p>
<p>At last he bent over to look closely at the old man and he saw, between
the half-closed lids, a dead pupil that scorched him like fire. Then he
went over to the other side of the bed, where the other corpse lay, but
the face was partly hidden by bands of white hair. Julian slipped his
finger beneath them and raised the head, holding it at arm’s length to
study its features, while, with his other hand he lifted the torch. Drops
of blood oozed from the mattress and fell one by one upon the floor.</p>
<p>At the close of the day, he appeared before his wife, and in a changed
voice commanded her first not to answer him, not to approach him, not even
to look at him, and to obey, under the penalty of eternal damnation, every
one of his orders, which were irrevocable.</p>
<p>The funeral was to be held in accordance with the written instructions he
had left on a chair in the death-chamber.</p>
<p>He left her his castle, his vassals, all his worldly goods, without
keeping even his clothes or his sandals, which would be found at the top
of the stairs.</p>
<p>She had obeyed the will of God in bringing about his crime, and
accordingly she must pray for his soul, since henceforth he should cease
to exist.</p>
<p>The dead were buried sumptuously in the chapel of a monastery which it
took three days to reach from the castle. A monk wearing a hood that
covered his head followed the procession alone, for nobody dared to speak
to him. And during the mass, he lay flat on the floor with his face
downward and his arms stretched out at his sides.</p>
<p>After the burial, he was seen to take the road leading into the mountains.
He looked back several times, and finally passed out of sight.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />