114 lines
6.9 KiB
Plaintext
114 lines
6.9 KiB
Plaintext
BLUEBEARD
|
|
|
|
Once upon a time... in the fair land of France, there lived a very powerful
|
|
lord, the owner of estates, farms and a great splendid castle, and his name was
|
|
Bluebeard. This wasn't his real name, it was a nickname, due to the fact he had
|
|
a long shaggy black beard with glints of blue in it. He was very handsome and
|
|
charming, but, if the truth be told, there was something about him that made
|
|
you feel respect, and a little uneasy...
|
|
Bluebeard often went away to war, and when he did, he left his wife in
|
|
charge of the castle... He had had lots of wives, all young, pretty and noble.
|
|
As bad luck would have it, one after the other, they had all died, and so the
|
|
noble lord was forever getting married again.
|
|
"Sire," someone would ask now and again, "what did your wives die of?"
|
|
"Hah, my friend," Bluebeard would reply, "one died of smallpox, one of a
|
|
hidden sickness, another of a high fever, another of a terrible infection...
|
|
Ah, I'm very unlucky, and they're unlucky too! They're all buried in the castle
|
|
chapel," he added. Nobody found anything strange about that. Nor did the sweet
|
|
and beautiful young girl that Bluebeard took as a wife think it strange either.
|
|
She went to the castle accompanied by her sister Anna, who said:
|
|
"Oh, aren't you lucky marrying a lord like Bluebeard?"
|
|
"He really is very nice... and when you're close, his beard doesn't look as
|
|
blue as folk say!" said the bride, and the two sisters giggled delightedly.
|
|
Poor souls! They had no idea what lay in store for them!...
|
|
A month or so later, Bluebeard had the carriage brought round and said to
|
|
his wife, "Darling, I must leave you for a few weeks. But keep cheerful during
|
|
that time, invite whoever you like and look after the castle. Here," he added,
|
|
handing his bride a bunch of keys, "you'll need these, the keys of the safe,
|
|
the armoury and the library keys, and this one, which opens all the room doors.
|
|
Now, this little key here," and he pointed to a key that was much smalle than
|
|
the others, "opens the little room at the end of the great ground floor
|
|
corridor. Take your friends were you want, open any door you like, but not this
|
|
one! Is that quite clear?" repeated Bluebeard. "Not this one! Nobody at all is
|
|
allowed to enter that little room. And if you ever did go into it, I would go
|
|
into such a terrible rage that it's better that you don't!"
|
|
"Don't worry, husband," said Bluebeard's wife as she took the keys, "I'll do
|
|
as you say." After giving her a hug, Bluebeard got into his carriage, whipped
|
|
up the horses and off he went.
|
|
The days went by. The young girl invited her friends to the castle and
|
|
showed them round all the rooms except the one at the end of the corridor.
|
|
"Why shouldn't I see inside the little room? Why? Why is it forbidden?"
|
|
Well, she thought about it so much that she ended up bursting with curiosity,
|
|
until one day she opened the door and walked into the little room... Of all
|
|
ghastly horrors! Inside, hanging on the walls were the bodies of Bluebeard's
|
|
wivws: he had strangled them all with his own hands!
|
|
Terror stricken, the girl ran out of the room, but the bunch of keys slipped
|
|
from her grasp. She picked them up without a glance and hurried to her own
|
|
room, her heart thumping wildly in her chest. Horrors! She was living ina
|
|
castle of the dead! So that is what had ahppened to Bluebeard's other wives!
|
|
The girl summoned up her courage and she noticed that one of the keys - the
|
|
very key to the little room - was stained with blood.
|
|
"I must wipe it clean, before my husband comes back!" she said to herself.
|
|
But try as she would, the blood stain wouldn't wash away. She washed, she
|
|
scrubbed and she rinsed it; all in vain, for the key was still red. That very
|
|
evening, Bluebeard came home. Just imagine the state his poor wife was in!
|
|
Bluebeard did not ask his wife for the keys that same evening, but he
|
|
remarked:
|
|
"You look a little upset, darling. Has anything nasty happened?"
|
|
"Oh, no! No!"
|
|
"Are you sorry I came back so soon?"
|
|
"Oh, no! I'm delighted!" But that night, the bride didn't sleep a wink. Next
|
|
day, Bluebeard said:
|
|
"Darling, give me back the keys," and his wife hurriedly did so. Bluebeard
|
|
remarked: "There's one missing, the key to the little room!"
|
|
"Is there?" said the young girl shaking,
|
|
"I must have left it in my room!"
|
|
"All right, go and get it." But when Bluebeard's wife put the key into his
|
|
hand, Bluebeard turned white and in a deep hoarse voice demanded:
|
|
"Why is this key stained with blood?"
|
|
"I don't know..." stammered his wife.
|
|
"You know very well!" he retorted. "You went into the little room, didn't
|
|
you? Well, you'll go back again, this time for good, along with the other
|
|
ladies in there. You must die!"
|
|
"Oh no! I pray you!"
|
|
"You must die!" he repeated. Just then, there was a knock at the door and
|
|
Anna, Bluebeard's wife's sister, entered the castle.
|
|
"Good morning," she said, "you seem rather pale."
|
|
"Not at all, we're quite well," replied Bluebeard. His wife whispered in his
|
|
ear:
|
|
"Please, please give me ten minutes to live!" Bluebeard replied:
|
|
"Not more than ten!" The girl ran to her sister Anna whohad gone up to one
|
|
of the towers and asked her,
|
|
"Anna, do you see ou brothers coming? They promised they would come and see
|
|
me today!" But Anna replied"
|
|
"No, I don't see anyone. What's wrong? You look agitated."
|
|
"Anna, please," said the shaken girl, "look again! Are you sure you can't
|
|
see someone?"
|
|
"No," said her sister, "only one or two peasants." Just then the voice of
|
|
Bluebeard boomed up to them:
|
|
"Wife, your time is up! Come here!"
|
|
"I'm coming!" she called, but then said to her sister: "Oh Anna, aren't our
|
|
brothers coming?..."
|
|
"No," replied Anna. Again Bluebeard shouted up.
|
|
"Come down at once! Or I'll come up!" Trembling like a leaf, his wife went
|
|
downstairs. Bluebeard was clutching a big knife and he grabbed his bride by the
|
|
hair...
|
|
"Sister, I can see two horsemen coming!" called out Anna from the tower that
|
|
very moment. Bluebeard made a horrible face:
|
|
"They too will die!" His wife knelt to implore:
|
|
"Please, please don't kill me. I'll never tell anyone what I saw! I'll never
|
|
say a word!"
|
|
"Yes, you'll never say a word for eternity!" snarled Bluebeard, raising his
|
|
knife. The poor girl screamed:
|
|
"Have pity on me!" But he fiercely replied:
|
|
"No! You must die!" He was about to bring the knife down on the girl's
|
|
delicate neck, when two young men burst into the room: a dragoon and a
|
|
musketeer. They were his wife's brothers.
|
|
Drawing their swords, they leapt towards Bluebeard, who tried to flee up
|
|
some stairs, but was caught and killed. And that was the end of the sad story.
|
|
Bluebeard's poor wives were given a Christian burial, the castle was completely
|
|
renovated and the young widow, some time later, married a good and honest young
|
|
man, who helped her to forget the terrible adventure. And that young lady
|
|
completely lost all her sense of curiosity...
|
|
|