This is the body that was given for you--look at it, torn and bleeding, throbbing still with the tortured life, quivering from the bitter death-agony; take it, Christians, and eat!"
He had caught up the sun with the Host and lifted it above his head; and now flung it crashing down upon the floor.
At the ring of the metal on stone the clergy rushed forward together, and twenty hands seized the madman.
Then, and only then, the silence of the people broke in a wild, hysterical scream; and, overturning chairs and benches, beating at the doorways, trampling one upon another, tearing down curtains and garlands in their haste, the surging, sobbing human flood poured out upon the street.
EPILOGUE
"GEMMA, there's a man downstairs who wants to see you."
Martini spoke in the subdued tone which they had both unconsciously adopted during these last ten days.
That, and a certain slow evenness of speech and movement, were the sole expression which either of them gave to their grief.
Gemma, with bare arms and an apron over her dress, was standing at a table, putting up little packages of cartridges for distribution.
She had stood over the work since early morning; and now, in the glaring afternoon, her face looked haggard with fatigue.
"A man, Cesare?
What does he want?"
"I don't know, dear.
He wouldn't tell me.
He said he must speak to you alone."
"Very well." She took off her apron and pulled down the sleeves of her dress. "I must go to him, I suppose; but very likely it's only a spy."
"In any case, I shall be in the next room, within call.
As soon as you get rid of him you had better go and lie down a bit.
You have been standing too long to-day."
"Oh, no!
I would rather go on working."
She went slowly down the stairs, Martini following in silence.
She had grown to look ten years older in these few days, and the gray streak across her hair had widened into a broad band.
She mostly kept her eyes lowered now; but when, by chance, she raised them, he shivered at the horror in their shadows.
In the little parlour she found a clumsy-looking man standing with his heels together in the middle of the floor.
His whole figure and the half-frightened way he looked up when she came in, suggested to her that he must be one of the Swiss guards.
He wore a countryman's blouse, which evidently did not belong to him, and kept glancing round as though afraid of detection.
"Can you speak German?" he asked in the heavy Zurich patois.
"A little.
I hear you want to see me."
"You are Signora Bolla?
I've brought you a letter."
"A--letter?" She was beginning to tremble, and rested one hand on the table to steady herself.
"I'm one of the guard over there." He pointed out of the window to the fortress on the hill. "It's from--the man that was shot last week.
He wrote it the night before.
I promised him I'd give it into your own hand myself."
She bent her head down.
So he had written after all.
"That's why I've been so long bringing it," the soldier went on. "He said I was not to give it to anyone but you, and I couldn't get off before-- they watched me so.
I had to borrow these things to come in."
He was fumbling in the breast of his blouse.
The weather was hot, and the sheet of folded paper that he pulled out was not only dirty and crumpled, but damp.
He stood for a moment shuffling his feet uneasily; then put up one hand and scratched the back of his head.
"You won't say anything," he began again timidly, with a distrustful glance at her. "It's as much as my life's worth to have come here."
"Of course I shall not say anything.
No, wait a minute----"
As he turned to go, she stopped him, feeling for her purse; but he drew back, offended.
"I don't want your money," he said roughly.
"I did it for him--because he asked me to.
I'd have done more than that for him.