i sprang to my feet.i was in the middle of a drawing-room that seemed to me to be decorated, adorned and furnished with nothing but flowers, flowers both magnificent and stupid, because of the silk ribbons that tied them to baskets, like those which they sell in the shops on the boulevards.they were much too civilized flowers, like those which i used to find in my dressing-room after a first night.and, in the midst of all these flowers, stood the black shape of the man in the mask, with arms crossed, and he said, `don't be afraid, christine; you are in no danger.'
it was the voice!
"my anger equaled my amazement.i rushed at the mask and tried to snatch it away, so as to see the face of the voice.the man said, `you are in no danger, so long as you do not touch the mask.'
and, taking me gently by the wrists, he forced me into a chair and then went down on his knees before me and said nothing more!
his humility gave me back some of my courage; and the light restored me to the realties of life.however extraordinary the adventure might be, i was now surrounded by mortal, visible, tangible things.
the furniture, the hangings, the candles, the vases and the very flowers in their baskets, of which i could almost have told whence they came and what they cost, were bound to confine my imagination to the limits of a drawing-room quite as commonplace as any that, at least, had the excuse of not being in the cellars of the opera.
i had, no doubt, to do with a terrible, eccentric person, who, in some mysterious fashion, had succeeded in taking up his abode there, under the opera house, five stories below the level of the ground.
and the voice, the voice which i had recognized under the mask, was on its knees before me, was a man! and i began to cry....
the man, still kneeling, must have understood the cause of my tears, for he said, `it is true, christine!...i am not an angel, nor a genius, nor a ghost...i am erik!'"christine's narrative was again interrupted.an echo behind them seemed to repeat the word after her.