They were hidden underneath a pile of human bones in the same room in which Montresor chained and entombed Fortunato, who will himself become another pile of bones.
Hidden under the pile of bones near where Fortunado was chained up.
I read this for school.
He chains Fortunato to the wall and seals him into the niche using bricks.
Montresor tells Fortunato to step forward, follows him, locks him in a niche, then closes up the entrance to the cavity and covers it up with old bones from the catacombs.
Montresor heard jingling bells when he tried to see inside the niche, which reveals that Fortunato was still alive and conscious. This detail adds to the suspense and horror of the story, as it foreshadows Fortunato's terrible fate.
Montresor heard Fortunato's jingling bells from outside the niche when only the eleventh tier was left to be plastered in. This sound added to his feeling of satisfaction and finality as he completed his revenge against Fortunato.
To effectively tile a niche in your bathroom, follow these steps: Measure the niche and choose appropriate tiles. Prepare the niche by cleaning and priming the surface. Apply thinset mortar to the niche and press the tiles into place. Use spacers to ensure even spacing between tiles. Allow the mortar to dry before grouting the tiles. Apply grout and wipe off excess with a damp sponge. Seal the grout to protect it from moisture and stains.
The climax of "The Cask of Amontillado" comes when Montresor walls Fortunato up in a niche in the wall of the catacombs. Fortunato's drunkeness is beginning to wear off, and he realizes Montresor's intent. When he moans, he is no longer in a drunken stupor, but acknowledging his fate. As Montresor places the last brick in the wall, he thrusts a torch behind the wall and the only response was the jingling of bells from Fortunato's costume. At this point, Fortunato is dead (possibly from a heart attack from the shock), and there is no going back for Montresor.
To tile a niche effectively and efficiently, start by measuring the area and selecting the right size and type of tiles. Prepare the niche by cleaning and priming the surface. Apply thin-set mortar to the niche and press the tiles into place, making sure they are level and evenly spaced. Use tile spacers to maintain consistent grout lines. Allow the mortar to dry before grouting the tiles. Seal the grout to protect it from moisture and stains.
Montresor walls up Fortunato alive in a niche in the catacombs. Just before Montresor finishes the wall he tosses a burning torch through the gap. It ends with the revelation it has been 50 yrs since the incident and he has never been caught and Fortunato still hangs from the chains in the niche where he left him.
The climax occurs when Montresor surprises Fortunato in the niche by chaining him to the wall. At that point the suspense of whether Montresor will be successful in gaining his revenge is all but settled, since Fortunato is now helpless to prevent Montressor from killing him in any way Montresor chooses. The fact that Montresor chooses to wall Fortunato in is a detail wold be considered part of the falling action of the story.
In Edgar Allan Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado," Fortunato is tricked by Montresor into following him into the catacombs, where he is ultimately immured alive in a tiny niche as revenge for an unnamed insult.
Not knowing what Fortunato did to Montresor heightens the horror of the story because the reader is never certain if Fortunato ever did anything wrong against Montresor that was deserving of such revenge. If Fortunato's so-called injuries and insults had been laid out for the reader to see, the reader would either sympathize with Montresor or with Fortunato depending on the reader's own point of view. Not knowing what was ever done, in deed if anything had even been done, leaves every reader wondering if Fortunato's death is just a terrible mistake by a madman.
Westminster Abbey