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<h2> XVI. BEFORE THE REVOLUTIONARY TRIBUNAL </h2>
<p>Only, Rouletabille refused to be put into the basket. He would not let
them disarm him until they promised to call a carriage. The Vehicle rolled
into the court, and while Pere Alexis was kept back in his shop at the
point of a revolver, Rouletabille quietly got in, smoking his pipe. The
man who appeared to be the chief of the band (the gentleman of the Neva)
got in too and sat down beside him. The carriage windows were shuttered,
preventing all communication with the outside, and only a tiny lantern
lighted the interior. They started. The carriage was driven by two men in
brown coats trimmed with false astrakhan. The dvornicks saluted, believing
it a police affair. The concierge made the sign of the cross.</p>
<p>The journey lasted several hours without other incidents than those
brought about by the tremendous jolts, which threw the two passengers
inside one on top of the other. This might have made an opening for
conversation; and the "gentleman of the Neva" tried it; but in vain.
Rouletabille would not respond. At one moment, indeed, the gentleman, who
was growing bored, became so pressing that the reporter finally said in
the curt tone he always used when he was irritated:</p>
<p>"I pray you, monsieur, let me smoke my pipe in peace."</p>
<p>Upon which the gentleman prudently occupied himself in lowering one of the
windows, for it grew stifling.</p>
<p>Finally, after much jolting, there was a stop while the horses were
changed and the gentleman asked Rouletabille to let himself be
blindfolded. "The moment has come; they are going to hang me without any
form of trial," thought the reporter, and when, blinded with the bandage,
he felt himself lifted under the arms, there was revolt of his whole
being, that being which, now that it was on the point of dying, did not
wish to cease. Rouletabille would have believed himself stronger, more
courageous, more stoical at least. But blind instinct swept all of this
away, that instinct of conservation which had no concern with the minor
bravadoes of the reporter, no concern with the fine heroic manner, of the
determined pose to die finely, because the instinct of conservation, which
is, as its rigid name indicates, essentially materialistic, demands only,
thinks of nothing but, to live. And it was that instinct which made
Rouletabille's last pipe die out unpuffed.</p>
<p>The young man was furious with himself, and he grew pale with the fear
that he might not succeed in mastering this emotion, he took fierce hold
of himself and his members, which had stiffened at the contact of seizure
by rough hands, relaxed, and he allowed himself to be led. Truly, he was
disgusted with his faintness and weakness. He had seen men die who knew
they were going to die. His task as reporter had led him more than once to
the foot of the guillotine. And the wretches he had seen there had died
bravely. Extraordinarily enough, the most criminal had ordinarily met
death most bravely. Of course, they had had leisure to prepare themselves,
thinking a long time in advance of that supreme moment. But they affronted
death, came to it almost negligently, found strength even to say banal or
taunting things to those around them. He recalled above all a boy of
eighteen years old who had cowardly murdered an old woman and two children
in a back-country farm, and had walked to his death without a tremor,
talking reassuringly to the priest and the police official, who walked
almost sick with horror on either side of him. Could he, then, not be as
brave as that child?</p>
<p>They made him mount some steps and he felt that he had entered the stuffy
atmosphere of a closed room. Then someone removed the bandage. He was in a
room of sinister aspect and in the midst of a rather large company.</p>
<p>Within these naked, neglected walls there were about thirty young men,
some of them apparently quite as young as Rouletabille, with candid blue
eyes and pale complexions. The others, older men, were of the physical
type of Christs, not the animated Christs of Occidental painters, but
those that are seen on the panels of the Byzantine school or fastened on
the ikons, sculptures of silver or gold. Their long hair, deeply parted in
the middle, fell upon their shoulders in curl-tipped golden masses. Some
leant against the wall, erect, and motionless. Others were seated on the
floor, their legs crossed. Most of them were in winter coats, bought in
the bazaars. But there were also men from the country, with their skins of
beasts, their sayons, their touloupes. One of them had his legs laced
about with cords and was shod with twined willow twigs. The contrast
afforded by various ones of these grave and attentive figures showed that
representatives from the entire revolutionary party were present. At the
back of the room, behind a table, three young men were seated, and the
oldest of them was not more than twenty-five and had the benign beauty of
Jesus on feast-days, canopied by consecrated palms.</p>
<p>In the center of the room a small table stood, quite bare and without any
apparent purpose.</p>
<p>On the right was another table with paper, pens and ink-stands. It was
there that Rouletabille was conducted and asked to be seated. Then he saw
that another man was at his side, who was required to keep standing. His
face was pale and desperate, very drawn. His eyes burned somberly, in
spite of the panic that deformed his features Rouletabille recognized one
of the unintroduced friends whom Gounsovski had brought with him to the
supper at Krestowsky. Evidently since then the always-threatening
misfortune had fallen upon him. They were proceeding with his trial. The
one who seemed to preside over these strange sessions pronounced a name:</p>
<p>"Annouchka!"</p>
<p>A door opened, and Annouchka appeared.</p>
<p>Rouletabille hardly recognized her, she was so strangely dressed, like the
Russian poor, with her under-jacket of red-flannel and the handkerchief
which, knotted under her chin, covered all her beautiful hair.</p>
<p>She immediately testified in Russian against the man, who protested until
they compelled him to be silent. She drew from her pocket papers which
were read aloud, and which appeared to crush the accused. He fell back
onto his seat. He shivered. He hid his head in his hands, and Rouletabille
saw the hands tremble. The man kept that position while the other
witnesses were heard, their testimony arousing murmurs of indignation that
were quickly checked. Annouchka had gone to take her place with the others
against the wall, in the shadows which more and more invaded the room, at
this ending of a lugubrious day. Two windows reaching to the floor let a
wan light creep with difficulty through their dirty panes, making a vague
twilight in the room. Soon nothing could be seen of the motionless figures
against the wall, much as the faces fade in the frescoes from which the
centuries have effaced the colors in the depths of orthodox convents.</p>
<p>Now someone from the depths of the shadow and the appalling silence read
something; the verdict, doubtless.</p>
<p>The voice ceased.</p>
<p>Then some of the figures detached themselves from the wall and advanced.</p>
<p>The man who crouched near Rouletabille rose in a savage bound and cried
out rapidly, wild words, supplicating words, menacing words.</p>
<p>And then—nothing more but strangling gasps. The figures that had
moved out from the wall had clutched his throat.</p>
<p>The reporter said, "It is cowardly."</p>
<p>Annouchka's voice, low, from the depths of shadow, replied, "It is just."</p>
<p>But Rouletabille was satisfied with having said that, for he had proved to
himself that he could still speak. His emotion had been such, since they
had pushed him into the center of this sinister and expeditious
revolutionary assembly of justice, that he thought of nothing but the
terror of not being able to speak to them, to say something to them, no
matter what, which would prove to them that he had no fear. Well, that was
over. He had not failed to say, "That is cowardly."</p>
<p>And he crossed his arms. But he soon bad to turn away his head in order
not to see the use the table was put to that stood in the center of the
room, where it had seemed to serve no purpose.</p>
<p>They had lifted the man, still struggling, up onto the little table. They
placed a rope about his neck. Then one of the "judges," one of the blond
young men, who seemed no older than Rouletabille, climbed on the table and
slipped the other end of the rope through a great ring-bolt that projected
from a beam of the ceiling. During this time the man struggled futilely,
and his death-rattle rose at last though the continued noise of his
resistance and its overcoming. But his last breath came with so violent a
shake of the body that the whole death-apparatus, rope and ring-bolt,
separated from the ceiling, and rolled to the ground with the dead man.</p>
<p>Rouletabille uttered a cry of horror. "You are assassins!" he cried. But
was the man surely dead? It was this that the pale figures with the yellow
hair set themselves to make sure of. He was. Then they brought two sacks
and the dead man was slipped into one of them.</p>
<p>Rouletabille said to them:</p>
<p>"You are braver when you kill by an explosion, you know."</p>
<p>He regretted bitterly that he had not died the night before in the
explosion. He did not feel very brave. He talked to them bravely enough,
but he trembled as his time approached. That death horrified him. He tried
to keep from looking at the other sack. He took the two ikons, of Saint
Luke and of the Virgin, from his pocket and prayed to them. He thought of
the Lady in Black and wept.</p>
<p>A voice in the shadows said:</p>
<p>"He is crying, the poor little fellow."</p>
<p>It was Annouchka's voice.</p>
<p>Rouletabille dried his tears and said:</p>
<p>"Messieurs, one of you must have a mother."</p>
<p>But all the voices cried:</p>
<p>"No, no, we have mothers no more!"</p>
<p>"They have killed them," cried some. "They have sent them to Siberia,"
cried others.</p>
<p>"Well, I have a mother still," said the poor lad. "I will not have the
opportunity to embrace her. It is a mother that I lost the day of my birth
and that I have found again, but—I suppose it is to be said—on
the day of my death. I shall not see her again. I have a friend; I shall
not see him again either. I have two little ikons here for them, and I am
going to write a letter to each of them, if you will permit it. Swear to
me that you will see these reach them."</p>
<p>"I swear it," said, in French, the voice of Annouchka.</p>
<p>"Thanks, madame, you are kind. And now, messieurs, that is all I ask of
you. I know I am here to reply to very grave accusations. Permit me to say
to you at once that I admit them all to be well founded. Consequently,
there need be no discussion between us. I have deserved death and I accept
it. So permit me not to concern myself with what will be going on here. I
ask of you simply, as a last favor, not to hasten your preparations too
much, so that I may be able to finish my letters."</p>
<p>Upon which, satisfied with himself this time, he sat down again and
commenced to write rapidly. They left him in peace, as he desired. He did
not raise his head once, even at the moment when a murmur louder than
usual showed that the hearers regarded Rouletabille's crimes with especial
detestation. He had the happiness of having entirely completed his
correspond once when they asked him to rise to hear judgment pronounced
upon him. The supreme communion that he had just had with his friend
Sainclair and with the dear Lady in Black restored all his spirit to him.
He listened respectfully to the sentence which condemned him to death,
though he was busy sliding his tongue along the gummed edge of his
envelope.</p>
<p>These were the counts on which he was to be hanged:<br/>
<br/>
1. Because he had come to Russia and mixed in affairs that did not<br/>
concern his nationality, and had done this in spite of warning<br/>
to remain in France.<br/>
<br/>
2. Because he had not kept the promises of neutrality he freely<br/>
made to a representative of the Central Revolutionary Committee.<br/>
<br/>
3. For trying to penetrate the mystery of the Trebassof datcha.<br/>
<br/>
4. For having Comrade Matiew whipped and imprisoned by Koupriane.<br/>
<br/>
5. For having denounced to Koupriane the identity of the two<br/>
"doctors" who had been assigned to kill General Trebassof.<br/>
<br/>
6. For having caused the arrest of Natacha Feodorovna.<br/></p>
<p>It was a list longer than was needed for his doom. Rouletabille kissed his
ikons and handed them to Annouchka along with the letters. Then he
declared, with his lips trembling slightly, and a cold sweat on his
forehead, that he was ready to submit to his fate.</p>
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