[The Shadow of the Cathedral by Vicente Blasco Ibanez]@TWC D-Link bookThe Shadow of the Cathedral CHAPTER X 49/52
Let us alone.
Are you afraid of the Virgin? Undeceive yourself, even if we carry off all she has, she will work no miracle." Gabriel attempted one final effort. "You shall do nothing.
If you pass the railings, if you approach the high altar, I will ring the call bell, and before ten minutes all Toledo will be at the gates." And opening the iron gate of the choir, he entered with a decision that surprised the bell-ringer. The shoemaker in tipsy silence was the only one who followed him. "My children's bread!" he murmured in thickened speech.
"They wish to rob them! They wish to keep them poor!" Mariano heard a metallic clatter, and saw the shoemaker raise his hand armed with the bunch of keys which had fallen on the marble steps of the railing, then he heard a strangely sonorous sound, as if something hollow was being struck. Gabriel gave one scream, and fell forwards on the ground; the shoemaker continued striking his head. "Do not give him any more--stop!" These were the last words Gabriel heard confusedly, as he lay stretched at the entrance of the choir; a warm and sticky liquid ran over his eyes; afterwards--silence, darkness and--nothing! His last thought was to tell himself he was dying--that probably he was already dead, and that only the last vital struggle remained to him, the last struggle of a life vanishing for ever. Still he came back to life.
He opened his eyes with difficulty and saw the sun coming through a barred window, white walls, and a dirty and darned cotton counterpane.
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