A man stood on a solitary rock. Suddenly he uttered a shout of triumph. He had discovered the secret of immense wealth. And this man threw down the pickaxe in his hand and standing erect, cried aloud: "Oh! you whose infamy condemned me to fourteen years of imprisonment, and whose name I do not yet know, beware! DantÈs is free." Young and with confidence in the future, Edmond DantÈs, the lover of MercÉdÈs, returned to Marseilles, with the promise of a captaincy. He was to marry MercÉdÈs. It was at supper on the evening of the betrothal when soldiers came to arrest him. He was accused of having carried letters to Napoleon, at Elba. In vain did he assert and even prove his innocence before de Villefort, a magistrate. Edmond DantÈs was torn from his betrothed, and imprisoned for fourteen years in the ChÂteau d'If. Another prisoner was there, the AbbÉ Faria. This prisoner was supposed to be mad, because he had offered to buy his liberty with millions. The AbbÉ imparted to DantÈs the secret of the treasure concealed by the Spadas in the caverns of the island of Monte-Cristo, a desolate rock in the Mediterranean. And And now DantÈs was master of the treasure of the Spadas, and he started to find his old father and his fiancÉe. He swore to avenge himself on those who had betrayed him. He left the rock. He went to his father's house. His father had died of hunger. MercÉdÈs, his fiancÉe, was married to another—to one of the three men who had woven the plot that had cost DantÈs fourteen years of his youth. One was named Danglars, a rival claimant to the title of captain. The second was a drunken man, more weak than wicked. The third was Fernando Mondego, a fisherman, who loved MercÉdÈs. And it was this Fernando who had married MercÉdÈs, and was now known by the title of the Comte de Morcerf. Caderousse, still poor, kept a wine shop, and Danglars was one of the first bankers in Paris. Another enemy, and perhaps the most infamous of them all, was the magistrate, de Villefort, who, knowing the innocence of DantÈs, had nevertheless sentenced him to prison. Because DantÈs in his explanation used the name of Noirtier, who was the father of Villefort, and said that the letters he brought from the island of Elba were given to him by this man, de Villefort, lest his own position should be compromised, got rid of this person as soon as possible, and sent him to the ChÂteau d'If for fourteen years. These were the crimes that DantÈs swore to punish. He did so. Danglars the banker he ruined. Fernando the fisherman, known when DantÈs returned as the "Look me full in the face, Fernando, and you will understand the whole. I am Edmond DantÈs." And the man fled. Within an hour he blew out his brains. Then came the turn of de Villefort. His wife, a perverse creature, to ensure an inheritance to her son, committed several murders with poisons. De Villefort himself had buried a child alive, the child of Madame Danglars and himself. But the child was saved by a Corsican, Bertuccio. The child, born of crime, had the most criminal instincts. And one day Monte-Cristo found him in the prison at Toulon. He named him Benedetto. He assisted him to escape, and Benedetto assassinated Caderousse. And then Benedetto, tried for this murder, found himself face to face with his father Villefort, the Procureur de Roi. Benedetto loudly flung his father's crimes in his face, and Villefort fled from the court-room. When he reached home Villefort found that his wife had poisoned herself and his son, the only being he loved. And then Monte-Cristo appeared before him and told him his real name, Edmond DantÈs! Villefort became insane. And the work of vengeance was complete. Monte-Cristo was so rich that he was all-powerful. And yet Ten years had elapsed since that awful night when Monte-Cristo, with blanched hair, carried away the body of his only son. A man stood alone on a rock on the island of Monte-Cristo. And this man was Edmond DantÈs. For ten years he had lived on this rock. In all that time he had not seen a human face nor heard a human voice, except at rare intervals when some ship, driven from her course by contrary winds, sent her boats to this island for water. Then Monte-Cristo, concealing himself, watched these men and heard their joyous laughter. Once, when Monte-Cristo had been on the rock eight years, he saw a ship coming toward it at full sail. It was not driven there by contrary winds or by a storm, and Monte-Cristo saw a man on deck surveying the island through a glass. Concealing himself he saw several men, whom he did not know, land, and search the island. It will be remembered that long before, Ali and Bertuccio had, by their master's orders, blown up the grottos, the last vestiges of the Spada treasures. He saw these men sound the rocks and try them with pickaxes. They were adventurers, who knew something of what the island had contained, but yet they found nothing. Monte-Cristo contrived to get near them without their knowledge. They were "Have you not heard," said the other, "that the island was inhabited?" "Sailors say that they often see at sunset a tall form on these rocks." "An optical delusion." "No—these sailors know what they say, but Italians are inclined to carry their religion into everything, so they call this form the AbbÉ of Monte-Cristo." "We have not found him, and yet we have searched every corner." "He may be dead." "That may be, but surely this is a proof that no such treasures ever existed here, for if they had, he would not remain here to die of hunger!" "At all events we will make a sacrifice to the unknown God, as the ancients did." And they put together all the provisions they had—bread, fruit and wine—and with the point of a dagger they traced on the rock the words: "For the AbbÉ of Monte-Cristo!" Then they departed. "Poor fools!" said the Count, as he watched the fast lessening sails. "No, there is no treasure on this island save one, and that would be valueless to you!" Monte-Cristo had lived all these years on roots and bark, for he had sworn never to touch money again while he lived. On the night when we again find Monte-Cristo, he came down from the high rock by a narrow path which "Esperance," he said, solemnly, "has not the day arrived?" There was a long silence. Then—was it a reality? It seemed as if the lips moved and pronounced the word: "Come!" Monte-Cristo smiled. "I knew it!" he murmured. His face was transfigured, his white hair was like a halo about his head. "I am coming, my son!" he said. "I must first finish my task." He drew from his pocket a roll of parchment, and read it aloud:
Below this signature was a singular design. Monte-Cristo studied it. "Yes, it is right," he said. "Ah! Faria, may your treasure fall into worthier hands than mine!" He felt strangely faint. He laid his hand on his heart. "Yes, Esperance," he said, softly, "I come!" He took up a crystal cube, which was solid enough to resist a shock of any kind. He folded the paper, and placed it in the cube, sealing it carefully. Then once more he ascended the stairs, and stood under the starlit sky. Monte-Cristo went down to the shore. He raised the crystal cube above his head, and threw it with all his strength. He heard it drop into the water. Monte-Cristo's secret was given to the waves. Then he turned, and slowly retraced his steps. As he went down the stairs his strength seemed to leave him. He lay down next to Esperance. He crossed his arms on his breast. Upon his lips was a smile of ineffable peace. His eyes closed. He was at rest. Those who loved him often utter his name, and wipe away a tear as they speak of him. But they never knew where he, who was known as Edmond DantÈs, Count of Monte-Cristo, died. THE END |