CHAPTER XXIII

Chapter 262,597 wordsCompleted

Victor and Elizabeth land at a lakeside inn at eight o’clock, watching the fading light before a violent western wind and sudden rainstorm descend. As night falls Victor is seized by terror, grips a hidden pistol, and vows to fight until either he or his enemy perishes. Elizabeth notices his agitation, asks what he fears, and he tries to reassure her while his anxiety deepens. A horrendous scream erupts from Elizabeth’s bedroom; Victor rushes in to find his wife dead, her body thrown across the bed with a murderous mark around her neck. At the open window he sees the Creature grinning, pointing at the corpse, then leaping toward the lake. Victor fires his pistol, but the monster escapes. The inn’s guests launch a frantic boat chase, casting nets and searching the woods, but find nothing. Exhausted and feverish Victor collapses, is carried back to his room, and lapses into a stupor. After recovering he rows back across the lake toward Geneva, haunted by memories of William, Justine, Henry Clerval and now Elizabeth, and by the thought that his father may also be in danger. In Geneva he finds his father Beaufort already weakened by the news; the old man dies in Victor’s arms within days. Victor is seized, declared mad, and confined in a damp cell for several months. During solitary confinement his sorrow hardens into a maddening rage and a vow of revenge against his creation. About a month after his release he goes to a criminal magistrate, calmly recounting the whole tragic chain of murders and accusing the Creature. The magistrate listens, expresses disbelief in the monster’s supernatural abilities and doubts the feasibility of capture, yet promises to exert all possible effort. Victor erupts in fury, declaring his revenge the sole passion of his soul. The magistrate attempts to soothe him, but Victor leaves, angry and still plotting a new course of action against the Creature.