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The portrait was of a powerfully built man in military dress, with a metal breastplate. The eyes stared down with the expression of a man used to command. Under the heavy moustache, the thin lips were tightly closed.
Miss Bengtsson said: “Your English ghost writer M. R. James has a story about Magnus. We have it here in Swedish.”
“Is it accurate?”
Geijerstam said: “Remarkably accurate. James came to this house — we have his signature in the visitor’s book.”
Carlsen asked: “What did Magnus do?”
“Basically, he was a sadist. There was a peasants’ revolt in Västergötland in 1690, and the king appointed Magnus to deal with it. Magnus repressed it so bloodily that even the courtiers were shocked. They say he executed more than four thousand people — half the population of the southern province. The king — Charles the Eleventh — was angry because it meant that he lost taxes. So Magnus was banished from court in disgrace. According to the legend, it was then that he decided to make the Black Pilgrimage to Chorazin. Chorazin was a village in Hungary where the inhabitants were all supposed to be in league with the devil. We have a manuscript in Magnus’s handwriting, and it actually says: ‘He who wishes to drink the blood of his enemies and obtain faithful servants should voyage to the town of Chorazin and pay homage to the Prince of the Air.’ ”
Fallada said: “That probably explains the vampire legend — the phrase about drinking the blood of his enemies.”
“That is impossible. To begin with, the manuscript is in Latin, and it was found among various alchemical works in the North Tower. I doubt whether anyone read it for half a century after his death. Secondly, he is referred to in a manuscript in the Royal Library as a vampire.”
“Did he make the Black Pilgrimage?”
“We do not know, but it is almost certain.”
Fallada said: “And you think that turned him into a vampire?”
“Ah, that is a difficult question. Magnus was a sadist already, and he was in a position of power. I believe that such men easily develop into vampires — energy vampires. They derive pleasure from causing terror and drinking the vitality of their victims. So he was probably a kind of vampire before he made the Black Pilgrimage. But when he decided to make the Black Pilgrimage, he made a deliberate choice of evil. From then on, it was no longer a matter of wicked impulses, but of conscious, deliberately planned cruelty.”
“But what did he do ?”
“Tortured peasants, burned down houses. They say he had two poachers skinned alive.”
“Which makes it sound as if he was a sadistic psychopath rather than a vampire.”
“I agree. It was after his death that he became known as a vampire. I have an eighteenth-century account book, written by a steward, that says ‘The labourers insist on being home before dark, since Count Magnus was seen in the churchyard.’ They say he left his mausoleum on nights of the full moon.”
“And is there any evidence of vampirism after his death?”
“Some. The records of the church in Stensel mention the burial of a poacher who was found on the island with his face eaten away. His family paid for three masses to ‘rescue his soul from the evil one.’ Then there was the wife of a coach maker in Storavan who was burnt as a witch; she claimed that Count Magnus was her lover and had taught her to drink the blood of children.”
They had finished the first course; Fallada, who had been sitting with his back to the tapestry, now stood up to look at it more closely. After staring up at it for several minutes, he said: “To be honest, I find it difficult to take the idea seriously. I accept what you say about energy vampires, because my own experiments lead me to the same conclusion. But all this is legend, and I find it hard to take it seriously.”
Geijerstam said: “You should not underestimate legends.”
“In other words, there’s no smoke without fire?”
“I think so. How do you explain the great vampire epidemic that swept across Europe at the beginning of the eighteenth century? Ten years earlier, vampires were almost unknown. And then, quite suddenly, you begin to get stories of creatures who come back from the dead and drink human blood. In 1730, there was a kind of plague of vampirism from Greece to the Baltic Sea — hundreds of reports. The first book on vampirism was not written until ten years later, so you cannot lay the blame on imaginative writers.”
“But it could have been a kind of collective hysteria.”
“Indeed, it could. But what started the hysteria?” The arrival of the main course interrupted the conversation. There were small circular steaks of elk and reindeer, with fennel sauce and sour cream. They drank a heavy red Bulgarian wine, served cold. For the remainder of the meal, the conversation remained general. The girls were evidently bored with the talk of vampires; they wanted Carlsen to describe the finding of the derelict.
Geijerstam interrupted only once; it was when Carlsen was speaking of the glass column, with its squidlike creatures.
“Do you have any theory about what they were?”
“None. Unless they were some kind of food.”
Miss Freytag said: “I hate octopuses.” She said it with such intensity that they all looked at her.
Fallada said: “Have you ever encountered one?”
Her face coloured. “No.” Carlsen wondered why Geijerstam was smiling.
They drank coffee in the library. The heat of the fire made Carlsen yawn. The Count said: “Would you like to go to your room now?”
Carlsen shook his head, smiling with embarrassment. “No. Your excellent food has made me sleepy. But I want to hear more about Count Magnus.”
“Would you care to see his laboratory?”
Selma Bengtsson said: “At this time of night?”
Geijerstam said mildly: “My dear, this is the time when the alchemists did most of their work.”
Carlsen said: “Yes, I’d like to see it.”
“In that case, you will need your overcoat. It is cold up there.” He turned to the girls. “Would anyone else care to come?”
All three shook their heads. Selma Bengtsson said: “I can’t even stand the place by daylight.”
Fallada said: “Do you think the Count’s activities might interest me?”
“I am sure of it.”
Geijerstam opened a drawer and took out a large key. “We have to go outside the house. There used to be an entrance on the other side of the hall, but the previous owner had it bricked up.”
He led them out of the front door. It was a clear moonlit night; the moon made a silver path along the water. Carlsen felt revived by the cold air. Geijerstam led them along the gravel path, towards the northern wing.
Fallada asked: “Why did he brick it up? Was he afraid of ghosts?”
“Not of ghosts, I think — although I never knew him. The house had been empty for fifty years before I moved in.” He inserted the key in the lock of the massive door, then turned the handle. Carlsen expected a creak of rusty hinges, but it opened silently. The air inside smelt musty and was unexpectedly cold. Carlsen knotted his scarf around his throat and turned up the overcoat collar. On their left, the door that should have led into the house had been bolted to its frame with angle irons.
Fallada said: “Was this built at the same time as the rest of the house?”
“Yes. Why do you ask?”
“I notice that the stairs are unworn.”
“I have often wondered about that. I think that perhaps no one uses them.”
As in the main part of the house, the walls were panelled with pinewood. Geijerstam led the way up three flights of stairs, halting on each landing to point out the pictures. “These are by Gonzales Coques, the Spanish painter. As a young man, Count Magnus was a diplomatic envoy in Antwerp, where Coques worked for the Governor of the Netherlands. He commissioned these portraits of great alchemists. This is Albertus Magnus. This is Cornelius Agrippa. And this is Basil Valentinus, who was a Benedictine monk as well as an alchemist. Do you noti
ce anything about these portraits?”
Carlsen stared hard but finally shook his head. “The painter has given each of them a noble bearing.”
Fallada nodded. “They look like saints.”
“Magnus was in his twenties when these were painted. I think they reveal that he possessed high ideals. And yet a mere ten years later, he was slaughtering the peasants of Västergötland and preparing to sell his soul to the devil.”
“Why?”
The Count shrugged. “I think I know why, but it would take a long time to explain.” He led the way up the final flight. From the stained-glass window in the alcove, they could see the expanse of moonlit water.
The door that faced them on the top landing was covered with heavy iron bands and metal studs. Its right edge showed signs of having been forced; the wood was splintered, and there were the marks of hatchets.
Geijerstam said: “I imagine this room was sealed after Magnus’s death, and the key was probably thrown away. Someone of a later generation broke it open.” He pushed the door, and it swung open.
The room inside was bigger than they had expected. It had a strange and disagreeable odour, in which Carlsen seemed to be able to detect incense. There was another element that he found harder to place: a sickly smell. Suddenly, it came to him: the smell of a mortuary when a corpse is being dissected.
Geijerstam pressed the light switch, but nothing happened.
“It’s strange. Electric light bulbs never last very long in this room.”
Carlsen said: “You think the Count dislikes them?”
“Or there is something wrong with the wiring.” Geijerstam struck a match and lit two oil lamps on the bench. They could now see that the main furniture of the room was a furnace of brick, and a tentlike erection. When Carlsen touched this he found it to be made of black silk, the heaviest he had ever seen.
Geijerstam said: “That is a kind of darkroom. Certain alchemical operations have to be performed in total darkness.”
On the shelves there were heavy glass bottles and containers of various shapes and sizes. There was a small stuffed alligator and a creature with a bird’s head, a cat’s body and the tail of a lizard. Carlsen peered at this closely, but was unable to see the joins. In the corner stood a tall, clumsy metal apparatus with many pipes leading away from it, and a heavy clay lid.
Geijerstam took down a leather-bound volume whose hinges were worn through, and opened it on the bench. “This is the Count’s alchemical diary. He seems to have had the makings of a true scientist. All these early experiments are attempts to make a liquid called Alkahest, which is supposed to reduce all matter to its primitive state. That was the first step in alchemy. When he’d obtained his primitive matter, his next task was to seal it in a vessel and put it in the athanor — that is, the furnace in the corner there. Magnus spent almost a year trying to make Alkahest from human blood and urine.” He turned over the pages. The handwriting was angular, spiky and untidy, but the drawings in the text — of chemical apparatus and various plants — showed enormous care and precision.
Geijerstam closed the book. “On January 10, 1683, he became convinced that he had finally made Alkahest from baby’s urine and cream of tartar. This next volume begins two months later, because he needed spring dew for his primal matter. He also spent two hundred gold florins on cobra’s venom from Egypt.”
Fallada said with disgust: “No wonder he went crazy.”
“Oh, no. He has never sounded more sane. He claims that he had saved the life of his bailiff’s wife in childbirth, and cured his shepherd of gout, with a mixture of Alkahest and oil of sulphur. He says: ‘My shepherd climbed to the top of the tree beyond the fish pond.’ But now, look at this” — he turned to the end of the second folio — “what do you notice?”
Carlsen shook his head. “Nothing — except that the writing gets worse.”
“Precisely. He is in despair. A handwriting expert once told me that it is the writing of a man on the point of suicide. Look: ‘ Or n’est il fleur, homme, femme, beauté, que la mort ŕ sa fin ne le chace.’ There is no flower, man, woman, beauty, that death does not chase to his end. He is obsessed by death.”
Fallada asked: “Why does he write in French?”
“He was French. The Swedish court was full of Frenchmen in the seventeenth century. But now look” — he took down another folio, this one bound in black leather — “he writes the date in code, but I have worked out the code: May 1691, the month after his expulsion from the court. “He who wishes to drink the blood of his enemies and obtain faithful servants should voyage to the town of Chorazin and there do homage to the Prince of the Air.” And then the next entry is in November of 1691 — six months later. And look at the handwriting.”
Carlsen said: “Surely it isn’t the same person?” The writing had taken on an altogether different character: neater, smaller, yet more purposeful.
“But it is. We have other documents signed by him in the same handwriting: Magnus of Skane — that is where he was born. But the handwriting changes.” He turned several pages: Carlsen recognised the headlong, untidy scrawl of the earlier volumes. “My handwriting expert said it was a clear case of dual personality. He still performs experiments in alchemy — but now he disguises many of the ingredients in code. But this is what I wanted to show you…” He turned to the end of the volume. In the middle of an empty page, there was a drawing of an octopus. Carlsen and Fallada bent over to look more closely. This drawing lacked the anatomical precision of earlier sketches of plants. The lines were blurred.
Fallada said: “This is inexact. Look, he shows only one row of suckers here. And he gives it a kind of face — more like a human face.” He looked up at Carlsen. “Did these creatures in the Stranger look anything like that?”
Carlsen shook his head. “No. They certainly had no faces.”
Geijerstam closed the book with a slam and replaced it on the shelf. “Come. I have one more thing to show you.” He blew out the oil lamps, and led them back out onto the landing. Carlsen was relieved to be out of the room. The smell was beginning to make him feel sick. When they stepped out of the front door, he breathed in the cold night air deeply.
Geijerstam turned to the left and led them along the path, then across the lawn by the fish pond. The moonlight made the grass look grey. “Where are we going?”
“To the mausoleum.”
It was dark among the trees; then the path emerged suddenly at the door of the chapel. It was built entirely of timbers and skaped like an inverted V. At close quarters, it was larger than when seen from the air.
Geijerstam turned the heavy metal ring, and the door opened outwards. He switched on the light. The inside was unexpectedly attractive. The ceiling was painted with cherubs and angels, and there were three circular brass chandeliers. The organ was small and painted in red, yellow and blue, with silver pipes. The pulpit resembled the gingerbread house of fairy stories, with a painted roof and a number of dolls that were obviously intended to represent saints.
Geijerstam led them down the northern aisle, past the pulpit, to a wooden door with an arched top. It was unlocked, and the room beyond it smelt of cold stone.
Geijerstam opened a wooden chest and took out an electric lead, with a light bulb at one end. He plugged this into a socket outside the door. “There is no electric light in the mausoleum. When the chapel was electrified — at the beginning of this century — the workmen refused to go in.”
The bulb illuminated an octagonal room with a domed ceiling. There were a number of stone tombs and sarcophagi around the walls. In the centre of the room were three copper sarcophagi. Two of them had crucifixes on the lids; the third had the effigy of a man in military regalia.
“That is the tomb of Count Magnus.” He pointed to the face of the effigy. This seems to be based on a death mask — notice the wound across the forehead. But look, this is the interesting part.” He held the bulb so they could see the scenes engraved on the side of the sarcoph
agus. Some were military. Another showed a city with church spires. But the end plaque, nearest the feet, showed a black octopus with a human face, dragging a man towards a hole in a rock. The man’s face was not visible, but he was wearing armour.
Geijerstam said: “No one has ever been able to understand this scene. Octopuses were almost unknown in Europe at that time.” They stood there, looking at it in silence. The cold in the mausoleum was intense. Carlsen thrust his hands deep into his coat pockets and hunched his head into his collar. This was not the bracing cold he had experienced outside; there was something suffocating about it.
Fallada said: “Very strange.” His voice lacked expression. “I can’t say I like this place much.”
“Why?”
“It seems rather airless.”
Geijerstam looked curiously at Carlsen. “How do you feel?”
Carlsen started to say, “Fine,” from force of habit, then checked himself, sensing a motive behind the question. He said: “Slightly sick.”
“Please describe it.”
“Describe feeling sick?”
“Please.”
“Well… I’ve got a sort of tingling in my fingertips, and your face is slightly blurred. No, everything is slightly blurred.”
Geijerstam smiled and turned to Fallada. “And you?”
Fallada was obviously mystified. “I feel perfectly well. Perhaps Carlsen drank too much wine.”
“No. That is not the reason. I am also experiencing what he described. It always happens in here, particularly at the time of the full moon.”
Fallada said, with only the faintest touch of sarcasm: “More ghosts and bogies?”
Geijerstam shook his head. “No. I believe the Count’s spirit is at rest.”
“What, then?”
“Let us go outside. I am beginning to find this oppressive.” He wiped the sweat from his forehead. Carlsen was glad to follow him. As soon as he stepped over the threshold, the feeling of nausea vanished. In the electric light, the colours of the organ looked gay and festive. His eyes no longer seemed blurred.