surroundings.

'Well, Monsieur Austin, what do you think of my little show so far?'

'Haven't had so much fun since I went to Madame Tussaud's wax museum.'

'You flatter me. Bravo! The best is yet to come.' Emil kept going until he came to a chamber whose crimson light made all within its special radiance look like victims of the Red Death. In the floor of the room was a circular pit. A razor-sharp pendulum was swinging above a wooden framework. Strapped down on

the framework, with rats crawling over his chest, was a large black bird. It was the scene from the The Pit and the Pendulum, where the victim is being tortured by the Spanish Inquisition. Only in this instance the victim was Cavendish, who was tied down and gagged on the table.

'You will notice some differences in this scene,' Emil said. 'The rats you see scurrying around the dungeon are real. And so is the victim. Mr. Cavendish is a good sport, as the English would say, and he has gracefully agreed to participate for our amusement.'

As Emil led the guests in a polite applause, Cavendish struggled against the bonds that held him.

The pendulum swung lower until it was only inches from the heaving chest. 'He's going to be killed!' a woman screamed.

'Sliced and diced,' Emil said with an incongruous cheeriness. He lowered his voice to a stage whisper. 'Lord Cavendish is a ham at heart, I fear. Don't worry, my friends. The blade is made of wood. We wouldn't want our guest to go to pieces. But if it worries you ...' He snapped his fingers and the swinging pendulum slowed to a stop. Cavendish gave a violent convulsion and lay still.

Emil led the guests into the last dungeon. Although there was no scene set up in the chamber, in some ways it was the most frightening of all. The walls were covered in black velvet that stole what light escaped through the opaque black screen. The atmosphere was the most oppressive. There was a collective sigh of relief when Emil told his guests to follow a passageway that would lead from the dungeon. When Austin and Skye went to follow, he barred their way.

Austin stumbled drunkenly and whipped his cap off in a grand sweep. 'After you, Gaston.'

Emil had shed his foppish Prospero act and now his voice was businesslike and as hard-edged as cold steel.

'While Marcel leads our guests out of the catacombs, I have something special to show you and the young lady,' he said, lifting a fold

of black velvet draped against a wall. Behind the cloth was a cleft in the stones about two feet wide.

Austin blinked. 'What's going on? Is this part of the show?' 'Yes,' Emil said with a hard smile. 'This is part of the show.' He produced a pistol.

Austin looked at the gun and gave a soggy laugh. 'Hell of a show,' he said, shaking his head so the bells jangled.

He stepped through the opening, with Skye, then Emil behind her. They descended two more sets of stairs. The temperature dropped and the air became swamplike. Water glistened on the walls and dripped down on their heads. They continued down until Emil finally ordered them to stop in front of a recess about five feet wide and four feet deep.

He thrust the torch into a sconce and pulled a cloth off a pile of bricks. A trowel and a bucket of mortar sat on the floor next to the bricks. From a niche he extracted a wine bottle whose dark green glass was covered with dust and cobwebs. The bottle was stopped up with a cork, which Emil removed with his teeth. He handed the bottle to Austin

'Drink, Monsieur Austin.'

Austin stared at the bottle. 'Maybe we should let it breathe for a while.'

'It has had centuries to breathe,' Fauchard said. He gestured with his gun. 'Drink.'

Austin grinned foolishly as if he thought the gun was a toy and put the bottle to his mouth. Some of the wine dribbled down his chin and he wiped it away. He offered the bottle to Fauchard, who said, 'No, thank you. I prefer to remain conscious.' 'Huh?'

'You have caused us a great deal of trouble,' Emil said. 'My mother said to dispose of you in the most fitting way I could think

of. A good son always does what his mother tells him to. Sebastian, say hello again to 'Ms. Bouchet.' '

A figure stepped from the shadows and the torch light illuminated the pale features of the man Austin had dubbed Doughboy. His right arm was in a sling.

'I believe you've met Sebastian,' Emil said. 'He has a gift for you, mademoiselle.'

Sebastian threw a crossbow bolt at Skye's feet. 'This is yours.'

'What's going on?' Austin said.

'Your wine contained a paralytic substance,' Emil said. 'Within moments you will be unable to move, but all your other senses will function fine and you will know what is happening to you.' He produced a pair of manacles from under his cloak and dangled them in front of Austin's face. 'Maybe if you say 'For the love of God, Mon-tres or I'll let you go.'

'You bastard,' Austin said. He lsa ned against the wall with his hand as if the strength were ebbing from his legs, but his eyes were fixed on the crossbow bolt a few feet away.

Skye had gasped in fright when she first saw Sebastian. Now, seeing Austin's plight, she lunged for Fauchard's gun hand and grabbed him by the wrist. Sebastian stepped in from behind and wrapped his good arm around her throat. Although he was operating with one arm in a sling, his strength was still formidable and she began to black out for lack of air.

Austin suddenly straightened up. Holding the bottle by the neck, he brought it down on Sebastian's head. The bottle broke in a shower of glass and wine. Sebastian released Skye, who fell to the floor, then stood for a few seconds, an expression of wonder in his eyes, and toppled like a fallen redwood tree.

Emil stepped aside to avoid Sebastian's crashing body and the ugly muzzle of the gun swung toward Austin. Austin threw a body block

and slammed Emil into the recess. He groped for Emil's gun hand, but Fauchard got off a shot. The shot went wild and the bullet hit the wall inches from Austin's face. Stone fragments peppered Austin's cheek and he was blinded temporarily by the close muzzle flash. He tripped over the bricks and went down onto his knees. Fauchard danced out of the way.

'Too bad you won't have the lingering death I planned for you,' he heard Fauchard say. 'Since you're on your knees, why don't you try begging for your life?'

'I don't think so,' Austin said. His fingers curled around a narrow wooden shaft. He scooped up the crossbow bolt and brought the point down on Emil's foot.

The sharp point easily passed through the gold slipper. Emil let out a mighty scream that echoed throughout the vault and he dropped the gun.

By then, Austin was back on his feet. He picked out a point on Emil's jaw and put all his weight and power behind a hard right cross that almost separated Fauchard's head from its shoulders. The gun dropped to the floor and Emil crumpled in a heap next to his companion. Austin helped Skye up. She had her hand to her bruised throat and was having trouble catching her breath.

He made sure she could breathe, then he bent over the dough-faced man.

'Looks like Sebastian let the wine go to his head.' 'Emil said the wine was drugged. How '

'I let it dribble down my chin. Wine that old probably tastes like vinegar.'

Austin grabbed Emil by the ankles and pulled him into the recess.

Then he cuffed one end of the manacles to Fauchard's wrist and the other to a wall ring. As he took his jester's cap off and pulled it down over Fauchard's ears, he said, 'For the love of God, Montresor.'

Austin removed the torch from its sconce and led the way along

the tunnel. Despite his drunken act, he had tried to memorize every foot of the route they had followed. Before long they were back in the dungeons, looking down on Cavendish's body. The rats had scurried off at their approach. The Englishman's plump face was frozen in a rictus of horror.

Austin placed his fingers against Cavendish's neck, but he felt no pulse. 'He's dead.'

'I don't understand,' Skye said. 'There's no blood.' Austin ran his thumb along the edge of the blade, which was touching the feathers on Cavendish's chest. 'Fauchard was telling the truth for a change. The blade is made of wood. Emil failed to let Cavendish in on his joke. I think our friend here was scared to death. C'mon, there's nothing

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