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The monsignor was a most
wary man, and very difficult to catch napping when warned in time. He
immediately hired two other sbirri to assassinate Marzio and Olympio. The one
commissioned to put Olympio out of the way came across him at Terni, and
conscientiously did his work with a poniard, but Marzio's man unfortunately
arrived at Naples too late, and found his bird already in the hands of the
police.
He was put to the torture,
and confessed everything. His deposition was sent to Rome, whither he shortly
afterwards followed it, to be confronted with the accused. Warrants were
immediately issued for the arrest of Giacomo, Bernardo, Lucrezia, and Beatrice;
they were at first confined in the Cenci palace under a strong guard, but the
proofs against them becoming stronger and stronger, they were removed to the
castle of Corte Savella, where they were confronted with Marzio; but they
obstinately denied both any complicity in the crime and any knowledge of the
assassin. Beatrice, above all, displayed the greatest assurance, demanding to
be the first to be confronted with Marzio; whose mendacity she affirmed with
such calm dignity, that he, more than ever smitten by her beauty, determined,
since he could not live for her, to save her by his death. Consequently, he
declared all his statements to be false, and asked forgiveness from God and
from Beatrice; neither threats nor tortures could make him recant, and he died
firm in his denial, under frightful tortures. The Cenci then thought themselves
safe.
God's justice, however,
still pursued them. The sbirro who had killed Olympio happened to be arrested
for another crime, and, making a clean breast, confessed that he had been
employed by Monsignor Guerra--to put out of the way a fellow-assassin named
Olympio, who knew too many of the monsignor's secrets.
Luckily for himself,
Monsignor Guerra heard of this opportunely. A man of infinite resource, he lost
not a moment in timid or irresolute plans, but as it happened that at the very
moment when he was warned, the charcoal dealer who supplied his house with fuel
was at hand, he sent for him, purchased his silence with a handsome bribe, and
then, buying for almost their weight in gold the dirty old clothes which he
wore, he assumed these, cut off all his beautiful cherished fair hair, stained
his beard, smudged his face, bought two asses, laden with charcoal, and limped
up and down the streets of Rome, crying, "Charcoal! charcoal!" Then,
whilst all the detectives were hunting high and low for him, he got out of the
city, met a company of merchants under escort, joined them, and reached Naples,
where he embarked. What ultimately became of him was never known; it has been
asserted, but without confirmation, that he succeeded--in reaching France, and
enlisted in a Swiss regiment in the pay of Henry IV.
The confession of the
sbirro and the disappearance of Monsignor Guerra left no moral doubt of the
guilt of the Cenci. They were consequently sent from the castle to the prison;
the two brothers, when put to the torture, broke down and confessed their
guilt. Lucrezia Petroni's full habit of body rendered her unable to bear the
torture of the rope, and, on being suspended in the air, begged to be lowered,
when she confessed all she knew.
As for Beatrice, she continued
unmoved; neither promises, threats, nor torture had any effect upon her; she
bore everything unflinchingly, and the judge Ulysses Moscati himself, famous
though he was in such matters, failed to draw from her a single incriminating
word. Unwilling to take any further responsibility, he referred the case to
Clement VIII; and the pope, conjecturing that the judge had been too lenient in
applying the torture to, a young and beautiful Roman lady, took it out of his
hands and entrusted it to another judge, whose severity and insensibility to
emotion were undisputed.
This latter reopened the
whole interrogatory, and as Beatrice up to that time had only been subjected to
the ordinary torture, he gave instructions to apply both the ordinary and
extraordinary. This was the rope and pulley, one of the most terrible
inventions ever devised by the most ingenious of tormentors.
To make the nature of this
horrid torture plain to our readers, we give a detailed description of it,
adding an extract of the presiding judge's report of the case, taken from the
Vatican manuscripts.
Of the various forms of
torture then used in Rome the most common were the whistle, the fire, the
sleepless, and the rope.
The mildest, the torture of
the whistle, was used only in the case of children and old persons; it
consisted in thrusting between the nails and the flesh reeds cut in the shape
of whistles.
The fire, frequently
employed before the invention of the sleepless torture, was simply roasting the
soles of the feet before a hot fire.
The sleepless torture,
invented by Marsilius, was worked by forcing the accused into an angular frame
of wood about five feet high, the sufferer being stripped and his arms tied
behind his back to the frame; two men, relieved every five hours, sat beside
him, and roused him the moment he closed his eyes. Marsilius says he has never
found a man proof against this torture; but here he claims more than he is
justly entitled to. Farinacci states that, out of one hundred accused persons
subjected to it, five only refused to confess--a very satisfactory result for
the inventor.
Lastly comes the torture of
the rope and pulley, the most in vogue of all, and known in other Latin
countries as the strappado.
It was divided into three
degrees of intensity--the slight, the severe, and the very severe.
The first, or slight
torture, which consisted mainly in the apprehensions it caused, comprised the
threat of severe torture, introduction into the torture chamber, stripping, and
the tying of the rope in readiness for its appliance. To increase the terror
these preliminaries excited, a pang of physical pain was added by tightening a
cord round the wrists. This often sufficed to extract a confession from women
or men of highly strung nerves.
The second degree, or severe
torture, consisted in fastening the sufferer, stripped naked, and his hands
tied behind his back, by the wrists to one end of a rope passed round a pulley
bolted into the vaulted ceiling, the other end being attached to a windlass, by
turning which he could be hoisted, into the air, and dropped again, either
slowly or with a jerk, as ordered by the judge. The suspension generally lasted
during the recital of a Pater Noster, an Ave Maria, or a Miserere; if the
accused persisted in his denial, it was doubled. This second degree, the last
of the ordinary torture, was put in practice when the crime appeared reasonably
probable but was not absolutely proved.
The third, or very severe,
the first of the extraordinary forms of torture, was so called when the sufferer,
having hung suspended by the wrists, for sometimes a whole hour, was swung
about by the executioner, either like the pendulum of a clock, or by elevating
him with the windlass and dropping him to within a foot or two of the ground.
If he stood this torture, a thing almost unheard of, seeing that it cut the
flesh of the wrist to the bone and dislocated the limbs, weights were attached
to the feet, thus doubling the torture. This last form of torture was only
applied when an atrocious crime had been proved to have been committed upon a
sacred person, such as a priest, a cardinal, a prince, or an eminent and
learned man.
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