CHAPTER XXI

Chapter 243,740 wordsCompleted

In the Orkney Islands Victor is summoned before a magistrate and a small panel of local witnesses. Fishermen, led by Daniel Nugent, recount that during a storm‑tossed night they found a freshly dead, apparently strangled young man on the beach; the corpse bore a black fingernail mark on its neck, the very mark Victor recognized from his brother William’s murderer. Several observers also describe a solitary boat, the same boat Victor had arrived in, near the spot of the body. The body is taken to a cottage, then to the magistrate’s room, where Victor is forced to view it. The dead figure is identified as his beloved friend Henry Clerval. Overcome with horror Victor cries that he has already “destroyed” two lives and that Clerval is his next victim; the shock induces a violent fever that leaves him near death for two months. During his delirium he blames himself for the murders of William, Justine and now Clerval, and repeatedly begs for death. He is tended by an indifferent nurse (the warden’s wife) and a physician, but receives genuine assistance from the magistrate’s clerk, Mr Kirwin, who secures a decent prison cell, a doctor, medicines and later a French‑speaking nurse. After weeks of illness Victor’s father, Beaufort, arrives in the prison. Victor, delirious with hope, cries for his family—Elizabeth and his cousin Ernest—and is briefly uplifted by his father’s comforting words. Beaufort’s presence steadies Victor enough for a gradual recovery, though Victor remains haunted by the creature and the unseen murderer. The grand jury, hearing that Victor was on the Orkney Islands at the time the body was discovered, rejects the charge. Two weeks after his removal from the jail Victor is released. Beaufort arranges passage from Ireland to Havre‑de‑Grace; on the ship Victor spends nights on deck, staring at the stars and the rolling sea, haunted by visions of Clerval’s lifeless eyes and the creature’s “watery, clouded” gaze. He relies on nightly doses of laudanum to sustain himself, suffers recurring nightmares in which the creature grasps his neck, and experiences fleeting calm when his father reassures him. Nonetheless he resolves to return to Geneva as soon as possible to protect his loved ones and to lie in wait for the monster that still threatens them.