When the services were concluded, and I approached the image of our Lady, to replenish the oil in the perpetual lamp at her feet, the doubts as to my having dreamed the scenes of the baccha.n.a.lian revelry came back in full force; some one had been tampering with the jeweled crown on the head of the sacred image--it had been turned around!
There was a pearl in front of the diadem, and a ruby in the back--both as large as a hazel-nut. Today, the ruby gleamed like a coal of fire, where always before the radiance of the pearl had vied with the pure whiteness of the waxen brow. The crown had been reversed--I had not dreamed after all!
This day was, as I have mentioned before, Good Friday--the day of universal fasting. The knights" observance of the day was so rigid that they would not even administer to a dying novice the medicines necessary to alleviate his suffering, because they were composed of manna and hydromel, both of which, containing nutriment, were considered food. Even I fasted the entire day--of a necessity, though, for there was nothing served in the refectory!
My elastic conscience would have permitted me to partake--sparingly, of course!--of food; and I regretted that I had not possessed the forethought to lay aside from the banquet of the preceding night (if it really had not been a dream) the legs of a three thousand-year-old quail!
But, had I done so, they would doubtless have vanished with the pretty flask given me by the heathen queen. When I made my duty-rounds as usual on Good Friday evening, I found my red-bearded patron waiting for me in the sacristy. He said to me:
"This evening, Malchus, you will watch as before at the door of the crypt--but see that you stop there, and keep awake! Don"t let me find you again in the cellar tomorrow morning."
I said to myself: "I shall be very sure not to go to sleep this time!"
The guests arrived earlier this evening. The clock in the tower had not yet ceased striking eleven, when the three knocks sounded on the crypt door.
The ancient beauties did not think it necessary to introduce themselves as before, but they gave me the same orders for the sacred vessels.
When I moved toward the altar, in obedience to the Queen of Sheba"s behest, she called after me: "Don"t look back, Malchus; if you do Satan will fly away with you!"
I did not look backward; I had no need. When I held the gold lid of the chalice in front of me, it served the same purpose as a mirror, and in it I saw Jezebel walk up to the Arminius monument, lay her hand against the head of the rec.u.mbent statue, and thrust it to one side, whereupon the entire ma.s.s of marble swung noiselessly forward, revealing an opening in the wall through which I saw a winding staircase.
Pretending not to have seen anything, or to notice anything unusual in the opening in the wall, I followed the ladies up the stair with the articles they bade me bring after them.
The long table in Baphomet"s hall was again loaded with all sorts of eatables: baked meats, pastry, sweets, fruits. "Meats!" I exclaimed to myself, "meats on Good Friday, when all Christians, even the Calvinists, fast and read their prayer-books to find consolation for their souls and forgetfulness for their stomachs!" And what a feast it was! One might well have believed that hosts and guests had not eaten anything for two or three thousand years! Had I been endowed with the hands of an Aegeon I could not have supplied the viands and wine as rapidly as the hungry and thirsty revelers demanded them of me. I seemed to be continually running to, or returning from, the wine-cellar.
Similar scenes to those enacted the preceding night followed the banquet; only with variations one would hardly believe the human mind capable of inventing.
The Queen of Sheba was even more reckless and abandoned than before; she ordered me to bring her the mantle from the shoulders of the "Woman of Nazareth." I hesitated again to perform the sacrilegious errand, but a sound blow on my back from Iscariot"s fist sent me hurrying to the chapel.
When I returned with the mantle the queen was in need of it, for she was not to be distinguished from the nude G.o.ddess on the back of the wild boar. I was so ashamed for her, I could not lift my eyes when I handed her the mantle. Ashtoreth laughed heartily at me, and exclaimed:
"Here, Malchus, I will drink to Baphomet from this flask; then you shall drink to me."
She drank first, then handed the flask to me; it was the same one she had presented to me the night before.
I had learned something since then! I knew there were trick flasks with two compartments, which might contain two different kinds of liquor without becoming mixed. If the neck of the flask were turned to the right, one of the compartments would be opened; the contents of the other would flow, were the neck turned to the left.
When the heathen queen placed the flask to her lips I had watched her closely, and had seen that her wrist turned slightly to the right.
This movement I took good care to copy when I drank, and, as I had guessed, the wine was deliciously sweet.
I took a good, long pull before removing the flask from my lips.
"Very good wine, isn"t it?" observed Ashtoreth.
"A trifle bitter," I replied, making a wry face, upon which she filliped my nose with her finger, and exclaimed, laughingly:
"You don"t know what is good, Malchus! The wine in this flask is some of that left from the marriage feast at Cana. You may keep this flask, too; put it with the one I gave you last night."
This remark set the entire blasphemous crew into a roar of merriment.
"You may remove these vessels now," said Nebuchadnezzar, when the laughter had subsided, "and fetch us some _spiritus vini_."
I removed the unclean church vessels and brought from the cellar a large stone jug of _spiritus vini_. The simple juice of the grape was not strong enough for the drunken demons; they wanted the more fiery brandy.
An idea came into my head as I was going to the cellar. The _spiritus vini_ was made in Russia; the mouths of the jugs containing it were sealed so skillfully that only those persons who understood the secret could remove the cork. I had learned this secret while with the haidemaken.
I opened the jug in the cellar, poured out some of the brandy, and filled it up with the drugged wine in the flask intended for me. Then I sealed up the jug and took it to the banquet hall.
"Did you drink any of it?" demanded the knight whom the rest called Herod, when I set the jug on the table.
"I swear by Baphomet I did not!" I replied truthfully.
"Then open the jug," commanded Pilate.
I made believe to pull and tug and twist the cork--I could not remove it from the neck. At last Ahab s.n.a.t.c.hed the jug impatiently from my hands, and after trying in vain for several moments to accomplish what I had failed to do, he set it in a silver basin and struck at the neck with his sword. The jug was broken, of course, and the liquor filled the basin. Then, Bathsheba and Tamar flung into it figs, raisins and orange peel; Delilah took a lighted taper from the candelabra and set fire to the huge dish of crambamboli; at the same moment all the other lights in the hall were extinguished.
Nebuchadnezzar now began to ladle out the burning liquor into goblets which he pa.s.sed to the rest of the company. The flame dispensing king, with his four horns, the fire-sipping forms around him, their faces blanched to a death-like pallor by the green-blue light of the burning brandy, formed a group that excelled in hideousness every ill.u.s.tration I had yet seen of the _danse macabre_.
I fled in horror and disgust from the infernal orgy, fully convinced that I was not dreaming this time. I was determined to make my escape from the abode of demons and idol worshippers.
I said to myself: "If these human beings--that they are not phantoms I am convinced--came to the castle through the crypt, then I, another human being, may go out the way they entered."
I took my lamp, descended to the crypt, and discovered that one of the memorials, which lined the walls, had been shoved to one side. An examination of this memento to a deceased knight revealed that it was not a slab of marble, but a sheet of tin painted to imitate the more solid material. Nor was the niche it covered a tomb, but the outlet to a narrow stairway that ascended in steep spirals from the crypt, opposite to the one which descended to it from the chapel.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "I took my lamp, descended to the crypt"]
I mounted seventeen steps, when further progress was barred by a statue--that of Saint Sebastian. The heroic martyr was represented bound to a tree, his body filled with arrows, as he had appeared when being tortured to death by the commands of the G.o.dless Diocletian.
I had seen this statue often enough by day in the reception-hall of the castle; then it stood in its niche face toward the room; here, at the head of the secret stairway from the crypt, it stood with its face also toward me. "Surely," said I to myself, "St. Sebastian must know something about the secret outlet."
And he did.
I began to examine the niche; then the statue. I noticed that three of the arrows in the breast were bra.s.s, and that the one in the middle was brighter than the other two, as if it had been taken hold of frequently. I mounted the pedestal, and, with one arm around the saint to steady myself, I tried to turn the brighter arrow. After a little, it yielded to the pressure of my hand, and the statue, as well as the niche, began to turn slowly on an unseen axis, and in a few moments I saw the starlit sky above me.
Then I turned the arrow in the opposite direction, and found myself returned to my prison. I had solved the mystery of the phantoms"
appearance in the chapel! I returned to the chapel and examined the mechanism concealed under the Arminius monument. What would be the result, I asked myself, if I turned the head of the grand master back to its proper position?
I did so, and the monument swung back to its place, concealing the entrance to the hall of Baphomet.
By this time the blasphemers in the hall were sound asleep, and heaven alone knew when they would waken! And when they did, they would not be able to get out of their Satan"s temple, for it had neither door nor windows.
No one would know what had become of them--whither they had gone. When they found a way out of their prison--if ever--I should be far enough away over mountain and valley!
I sketched a rapid plan of escape: I would go to the Archbishop of Aix-la-Chapelle and lay information against the knights of Baphomet; and, in order to gain credence for my story, I would take with me the desecrated church vessels. No devout Christian should drink again from the chalice defiled by the lips of Salome and Delilah; should have his offspring christened from the basin polluted by Nebuchadnezzar; should receive the holy water from the aspergill, defiled by being used to stir the infernal mixture concocted by Tamar and Bathsheba; not one of the vessels should be used again, until they had been thoroughly cleansed and re-consecrated by the proper authorities.
"A most praiseworthy determination! You proved yourself a true Christian!" exclaimed the prince, deeply incensed by the impiety of the _dornenritter_, the mere hearing of whose licentious conduct made a G.o.dly man feel the need of absolution. "You did what any honest and respectable Christian would have done in your place!"
"Didn"t I say so?" in triumph exclaimed the mayor, beating the table with his staff. "Didn"t I say the rascal would talk himself out of the church robbery? Instead of sentencing him for the crime, he is commended for it."