Pierre blackmails Rammaendelo into persuading his brother to perform the marriage by telling him that he has proof that Rammaendelo poisoned his wife. Lucy comes across several drawings depicting bestiality, and becomes sexually excited at the thought of her impending marriage, even though she has never met Mathurin.
Rammaendelo, who is not in favor of the marriage because he is dependent on Mathurin to look after him, shows her a book that describes the beautiful Romilda's fight with a beast in the local forest 200 years ago. They find a back route to the house at a back door to the house, where Lucy asks Rammaendelo about rumors. Lucy and her aunt, Virginia, are driven by their chauffeur towards the farm but their way is blocked by a fallen tree. Pierre summons the local priest to the house for the baptism, but Pierre, by promising the priest repairs to his church and a new bell, performs the ritual himself so that the priest will not find out the truth about Mathurin. Mathurin, who manages the family horse-breeding business, is dim-witted and deformed, and has never been baptized. Months of his death, she marries Mathurin, the Marquis Pierre de l'Esperance's son, and be married by Cardinal Joseph do Balo, the brother of Pierre's uncle, the crippled Duc Rammaendelo de Balo, who shares their crumbling farmhouse with Pierre's daughter Clarisse, and their servant Ifany. Plot īusinessman Philip Broadhurst dies and leaves his estate to his daughter, Lucy, on the condition that, within six After Immoral Tales was remastered as a film of four stories, the footage became the dream sequence of The Beast. However, Borowczyk later rendered Lokis as a story ( La véritable histoire de la bête du Gévaudan) in Immoral Tales (1974), which was envisaged to be a film of six stories. A loose adaptation of the novella Lokis by Prosper Mérimée was originally conceived in 1972 as a film on its own.