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"I am guilty!" stammered the countess, laying her hands upon her breast.
"Then," said the pastor, "Heaven inspired you not to throw this portrait, like that of the others, into the fire, for in this man you will find a physician able to cure your sick soul. It is really providential that this portrait should be in your hands, for the others were idle, foolish dreams. Here you have found your ideal, under whose guidance you may hope to find health and salvation. He will lead you, not in a dream, but in reality, to the blessed regions of peace and true piety, where alone, my daughter, real happiness is to be found. This man possesses strength of mind and elevation of character sufficient to exorcise all the spirits which haunt your castle, and to banish from your mind those temptations which spring from the same source as the more visible demons which we call ghosts."
CHAPTER VIII
THE EXORCIST
Acting upon the advice of Herr Mahok, the countess resolved to lay all her troubles before a new physician for her soul. That very day the pastor wrote to Abbe Samuel, who was then in Pesth, inviting him to come to Bondavara Castle.
The abbe was a man of high calling; one of those priests who are more or less independent in their ideas. He had friendly relations with certain personages, and the initiated knew that certain articles with the signature "S," which appeared in the opposition paper, were from his pen. In society he was agreeable and polished, and his presence never hindered rational enjoyment. In intellectual circles he shone; his lectures, which were prepared with great care, were attended by the _elite_ of society, and, as a natural consequence, the ultramontane papers were much against him. Once, even, the police had paid him a domiciliary visit, although they themselves did not know wherein he had given cause for suspicion. All these circ.u.mstances had raised his reputation, which had lately been increased by the appearance of his picture in a first-rate ill.u.s.trated journal. This won for him the general public. So stately was his air, his high, broad forehead, manly, expressive features, well-marked eyebrows, and frank, fearless look, with nothing sinister or cunning in it. For the rest, there was little of the priest about him; his well-knit, robust, muscular form was rather that of a gladiator. Through the whole country he was well-known as the independent priest, who ventured to tell the government what he thought.
For this reason the excellent Herr Mahok had for him the greatest respect. He, as an insignificant parish priest, could do nothing for his fatherland. It was true that, many years ago, he had fought more than twenty battles with the Honved Battalion; he had preached to his men how they should love their country, and for this he had been sentenced to death, which sentence had been commuted to ten years'
imprisonment; he had pa.s.sed five of those years in chains, and his feet still bore the marks of the wounds made by the heavy irons. But what were these trifles, of which Herr Mahok thought little, in comparison to the bold deeds of the Abbe Samuel, who dared to write independent articles in the papers, and to sign them with the initial of his name. To have fought with Haynau against the Russians under fire of heavy cannon, to have been in the galleys, that was a mere joke. To have the fearful police upon your track, that was serious.
Herr Mahok thought most highly of the abbe's capabilities, measuring them by the loss of his own physical and mental energy--for after fifteen years, five of which had been spent in heavy iron chains, a man is not what he was.
After some days the invited guest arrived at the parsonage of Herr Mahok. The pastor related to him, circ.u.mstantially, all that had reference to the countess, with the exception, of course, of such matters as were under the sacred seal of confession. He told him about the ghosts, and his own experience under that head.
Herr Samuel received the narration with fits of laughter.
"You may laugh here as much as you like, but I beg of you not to do so before the countess; she holds to her ghosts," remarked the pastor, with an air of one who knew what he was saying.
The abbe then asked for information concerning the disposition of the rooms in the castle, how they were situated in regard to one another.
He made the pastor describe minutely every particular of what he had himself been witness to, also how he and his sacristan had made good their escape through the lattice door.
The equipage of the countess came at the usual hour to fetch both the guests to the castle, which lay at some little distance from the village.
It was only natural, all things taken into account, that the countess on her first introduction to the abbe should lose all control of her nerves, and that she should give way to several hysterical symptoms, which could only be calmed by the abbe laying his hand in paternal benediction upon her forehead. Fraulein Emerenzia's nerves, in accordance with the sympathy which existed between her and her mistress, became at once similarly affected, and required a similar imposition of hands; but neither of the priests troubled themselves about her, and when the countess recovered from her attack, the companion did likewise.
During dinner, which was served with great elegance, the abbe discoursed upon every possible subject, and made inquiries as to the prospects of the country, the occupations of the people, the age of the servants, and so forth. He addressed a great deal of his conversation to Fraulein Emerenzia, attended to her wants; when he offered her wine she covered her gla.s.s with her hand, and declared she never tasted anything but water, which seemed infinitely to surprise him; also, when he wished to know whether the ring on her finger was one of betrothal, Emerenzia tried to blush, and gave him to understand that, from her own choice, she meant to live and die a maid.
After dinner was over, Herr Mahok remained in the dining-room to entertain the Fraulein--that is to say, he seated himself in an armchair, folded his hands upon his rotund stomach, closed his eyes, and during a sweet doze heard the clatter of Emerenzia's sharp voice.
The abbe went with the countess into her private sitting-room. She sat upon the sofa, her eyes on the ground, waiting with much inward trepidation to hear what sentence so exalted a personage would p.r.o.nounce upon the demoniacal possession. As he did not speak, she in a timid voice began--
"Has my confessor told you the terrible secret of the castle?"
"He has told me all that he knows."
"And what view would the authorities of the Church take, do you think?"
"My individual opinion, countess, is that the whole thing is a conspiracy of the living."
"Of the living!" repented the countess. "And my visions?"
"Those can be explained by psychological means. You are of a susceptible, nervous temperament; your senses are made acquainted with the first portion of the history, your imagination works out the remainder. Your dreams, countess, are hallucinations, nothing else.
Visible ghosts do not exist; those who are dead cannot live and move, for the reason that their organic powers are at an end."
The countess shook her head incredulously. To say the truth, she was ill-pleased. She had expected from so high and intellectual an ecclesiastic a very different explanation. If he could only tell us this, it was, indeed, lost trouble to send so far for him.
Herr Samuel was quick enough to read in her face what was pa.s.sing in her mind, and hastened to apply a radical cure.
"Countess, I know you doubt what I say, because you have firm faith in what your eyes have seen, your ears have heard. You are quite convinced that you yourself have been many times in the haunted vault, and have there seen the spirits of your departed ancestors."
"Only last night," whispered the countess, in an awed voice, "the tumult was fearful. They told me they would come again to-night, that they would expect me."
"And have you promised to go to them?"
"When day comes I shudder from the idea, but at night some strange, mysterious power draws me to the vault; I know all fear will vanish, and I shall not be able to stay away."
"Very good. Then to-night I shall go with you to the vault of your ancestors."
At these words a sudden flush covered the pale face of the countess.
The living portrait! She should go with him--where? Perhaps into h.e.l.l.
She trembled at the thought; then with a violent effort recovered her composure, and said, in a hesitating manner--
"I do not know. I do not think it would be possible. I should have to let my household into the secret."
The abbe understood the nature of the question, and all the consequences it involved.
"That would not be necessary. On the contrary, your household must know nothing of my visit."
The countess looked at him. She was puzzled, agitated. What could he mean? He could not imagine for a moment that he was to spend the night with her--alone?
The abbe read her thought and answered quietly--
"I shall go away now with Pastor Mahok. I shall return about midnight, and will knock at your door to announce my arrival."
Theudelinde shook her head. "That is impossible. In winter every door in my house is locked by seven o'clock. To reach my suite of rooms, you should pa.s.s through no less than seven doors. First the castle door. This is watched by my portress, an old woman who never sleeps; besides, two monstrous bloodhounds keep guard there. They are chained to the door with long chains; they would eat you if you tried to pa.s.s.
Then comes the door of the corridor, to which there are two locks; my companion keeps the key of one, my housekeeper the key of the other, and to open it you must awake both. The third is the door to the staircase; the cook has the key under her pillow, and she sleeps so soundly, and the whole house is astir before she moves. The fourth is the entrance to the secret lattice pa.s.sage; this is in the keeping of the housemaid, a nervous girl, who, when it grows dark, would not go into the next room. The fifth door leads to the chamber of my own maid, a very modest young person, who would not open the door to a man were he prophet or saint. The sixth door is that of Fraulein Emerenzia, my companion; she falls into violent hysterics if at night any one turns the handle of her door. The seventh and last door is that of my dressing-room, which is fitted with a peculiar self-acting lock, a new invention. I ask your reverence if, under such conditions, you could make your way here at midnight?"
"Permit me, in my turn, to put a question to you. You have given me to understand that you descend constantly to the vault of your ancestors.
How does it happen that you pa.s.s through all these well-guarded doors?"
Over the countenance of the countess a triumphant smile pa.s.sed. The superst.i.tious woman could repel the attack of the scientist.
"Oh, I do not pa.s.s through any of them! From my bedroom a secret staircase leads to the chapel vault. I go down this staircase."
It would have been only natural that the abbe on hearing this should have proposed to conceal himself in the library, and there await the countess. But he read the character of his hostess and knew that such a proposal would have shocked her prudish mind and have offended her so deeply that, in all probability, she would have refused to listen any further. She required the most delicate management; this the quick-seeing abbe recognized perfectly.
"I am still of the same mind," he said, calmly. "I shall knock at your door this night at twelve o'clock."
At these words the countess was seized with a nervous shudder, but the abbe went on without taking any notice--
"If you believe that there are unearthly beings who are possessed of mysterious powers by which they pa.s.s through locked doors and make themselves visible to some human beings, invisible to others, then why should I not have this power also? But you imagine that because I am only a man born of dust I cannot infringe the laws of nature. Let me remind you that there is a natural explanation for all that may seem to you incomprehensible. Witchcraft is now no longer a mystery. We do not now burn Boscos and Galuches upon funeral piles. Do not for a moment think that I am a Bosco or a Paracelsus. I repeat that what I promise I will perform; at the same hour at which the ghosts begin their orgies will I knock at your door with the words, _In nomine Domini aperientur portae fidelium_--'In the name of the Lord may the doors of the faithful be opened.' Remember, no one but us two is to know anything of my coming to-night. Till then may the blessing of G.o.d be with you."