Classic Audiobook Collection - The Gargoyle by Greye La Spina ~ Full Audiobook [horror]
Episode Date: November 26, 2025The Gargoyle by Greye La Spina audiobook. Genre: horror From the lurid brilliance of Weird Tales comes Greye La Spina's Gothic occult thriller, a headlong descent into a castle where reason is a thin... shield. Luke Porter, a working painter with a practical mind, is approached by the flamboyant and unsettling Cagliostro Moderno, an amateur mystic who insists he has uncovered something monstrous at remote Fanewold Castle. Luke expects a crank and a curiosity, not the steady drumbeat of coincidences and warnings that seem to herd them toward the castle gates - and toward a presence Moderno fears to name. Inside Fanewold, whispers of black magic cling to the stonework. A cloaked figure known only as The Master moves in secrecy, preaching devotion to Lucifer and tightening his influence over his young cousin, Sybil, whose innocence makes her the perfect focus for an unthinkable rite. With only fragments of evidence, a growing sense of spiritual peril, and the wary help of Sybil's handmaid, Alden, Luke must decide how far a skeptic will go when faced with forces that do not care whether he believes. As the castle's shadows lengthen, temptation, obsession, and courage collide in a race against a ritual already set in motion. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:14:15) Chapter 02 (00:30:40) Chapter 03 (00:47:37) Chapter 04 (01:03:38) Chapter 05 (01:21:02) Chapter 06 (01:32:22) Chapter 07 (01:52:19) Chapter 08 (02:07:26) Chapter 09 (02:22:16) Chapter 10 (02:40:13) Chapter 11 (02:54:59) Chapter 12 (03:05:35) Chapter 13 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The Gargoyle by Greilaspina
Chapter 1
Alias Cagliostro
Luke Porter had just ordered supper
His waitress, a chatty and pert young countrywoman,
hesitated before departing for the kitchen.
It was obvious that she had something on her mind.
Luke's light gray eyes twinkled at her half-confusion.
He was enjoying the play of expression over her face
and had no intention of helping her out.
At his open amusement, she took heart.
"'There's a party outside who wants to know if he can have his supper with you,'
she told him finally.
"'He says you don't know him, but he thinks he has something interesting to tell you.'
"'He does, eh?' Luke laughed softly.
"'Why does he think I will be interested in his information?'
The young woman put her hand into her gingham apron, pocket,
and drew out a newspaper clipping which she held toward him.
She waited in silence until the young man had read it,
and when he looked up his face slight with interest.
She had her turn at laughter.
Huh, changed your mind, didn't you, mister? Shall he come in?
Tell him if he doesn't come, I'll go out and pull him in, exclaimed Luke,
and once more bent his gaze upon the clipping.
It was a rather astonishing advertisement.
Occultist. I want to initiate occultist of mature years,
with an assistant youth of fine physique and handsome to aid in the completion of important occult
experiment. Four particulars address occult book concern, Forty Park Row, New York City.
As Luke stared incredulously, something happened to the print. It went blurry, and then cleared
up to a few words in an expanse of white. For a moment, he could not understand what had happened.
Then he read the visiting card that had been laid upon the clipping and lifted his eyes to see
the owner of that formidable and mysterious Cogliostro Maderno, initiate occultist.
imagination had conjured up almost instantaneously,
a tall and slender figure of fearsome dignity,
with flashing black eyes.
What confronted him as he rose instinctively to his feet
was a black cloaked form of hardly middle height but of heavy build.
The individual enveloped in the cloak was so holding it
that his face was almost hidden.
All that showed was a small button-like nose above which peered pale blue eyes
squinting involuntarily, as if in distaste at the light which flooded the
room in true country-hustlery fashion.
Carrot-colored hair stood in a stiff pompadour above a sallow face.
Mr. Moderno?
queried Luke uncertainly.
The mysterious stranger bowed with tremendous dignity.
Will you be seated, sir?
And will you mercifully explain this?
Luke lifted the newspaper clipping and his gray eyes searched the sallow countenance of the
stranger, who seated himself opposite, and it once became a figure of far more
impressiveness, owing to the fact that his body was long, making him seem much taller when seated than he really was.
He threw back the black mantle, displaying a flame-colored lining covered with symbolic figures, embroidered in various shades.
But in tossing back the mantle, he also uncovered his face, so that the combination of button nose,
Cupid's bow, mouth, and squinting pale blue eyes made up an ensemble oddly at variance with his air of mystery and importance.
Call me Cagliostro, he commanded severely.
Young man, are you married?
Luke parried.
Well, what if I am? he asked.
How can it matter to you?
It may matter much to me.
And to you as well.
Do not be flippant.
Give me a direct answer.
Upon your single status, much depends.
Luke's firm lips curled whimsically at the corners.
Good friend Cagliostro, I am still heart whole and fancy-free.
The unknown drew what was obvious.
Obviously a deep sigh of relief.
Then you can serve as my assistant, he exclaimed, pointing at the clipping,
which Luke still held between thumb and forefinger of one well-formed hand.
But my good chap, I don't know anything about magic of any kind.
The young man retorted, humoring what certainly appeared to be a harmless madman.
All my magic consists of splashing colors on canvas.
But you are young and good-looking and unmarried?
The unknown insisted, and my nephew disappointed me.
me at the last moment, he confided leaning across the table, and unbending sufficiently from his
high pose to look pleadingly at the artist.
Luke Porter stared incredulously at his vis-à-vis, the impulse to shout with laughter,
seizing almost irresistibly upon him. The man was amusing in his gravity.
Have some of the steak, he offered. Potatoes? As long as you're here, you'd better help me eat,
good cagliostro, and then out with the whole story, you can't expect me to be your assistant unless
you tell me the situation, you know. Cogliostro Modarno hesitated, the squinting blue eyes searchingly
upon Luke. Then he let himself relax comfortably in his chair, held out the plate the waitress
had provided for the unexpected guest, and began to talk incoherently. Luke listened and began
to gather in details of an eerie situation, the like of which he had never in his life believed
possible. Somewhere in the Pennsylvania woods near Shakerville, about a mile up Wadi Ridge from
the main road between Shakerville and Spinnerton, there was the replica of a medieval castle
called Fainwalled by the owners. This castle had been built by the present Madame Fain
in her girlhood as a surprise for her young husband. Madame Fane had had all the money,
but the young husband had not remained with her long after the birth of their child, a boy.
He had deserted her, eloping with a country girl from a nearby farm. Since that time,
Madame Fain had shut herself up with her son in the castle,
surrounded by faithful servants rendered blind, deaf, and dumb by the large wages they received.
It was the son, Guy Fane, who was a student of the occult,
and who had advertised through the book concern for another occultist to aid him in his experiments.
At this point in his recital, Cagliostro grew somewhat darker of color,
and drew out a smaller business card than the important one he had first given the artist.
on it was printed in unobtrusive lettering
Herbert Benny
Rare Books, Occult Books, a specialty
That is the name given me at birth
exclaimed he, the pale blue eyes watchfully on Luke's face
To detect the slightest tendency to amusement
Cagliostro is the name I have earned
By my research along occult lines
You can readily understand Mr. Porter, thank you,
That Benny is hardly a name to command such respect
as an adept magician merits.
Naturally, Mr. Benny, agreed Luke, the mobile lips twitching.
Cagliostro, please, corrected the mage pointedly.
Well, by reason of my correspondence, with the book concern,
it believed me to be the proper person to attend Mr. Fane in his experiments.
He lifted his round little chin, his chest swelling perceptibly.
Astonishing.
I therefore selected my sister's son, a young and handsome boy,
To be my assistant, although what Mr. Fain wishes a green youth for is beyond my comprehension,
puzzled Cagliostro.
But Bobby got cold feet just before I left, because he was invited to a costume ball and didn't want to miss it,
with cold disdain.
So you are in need of a handsome young man who isn't tied to a wife, laughed Luke,
pushing away his plate and leaning back in his chair easily.
How were you to know I'm not lying when I say I'm single?
Cagliostro stiffened, the squintestr.
the blue eyes narrowed.
It would not be easy to deceive me, Mr. Porter, he declared impressively.
I asked you to be sure, but that was to give you a chance to declare yourself.
I knew you weren't married.
You did, may I ask how?
By your eagle look.
My, puzzled Luke.
You look free, wild, uh, and the mage had a loss for appropriate,
Words waved his hands expressively, displaying one pudgy finger, an oddly carved ring with a heavy, blood-red stone.
I see, murmured Luke, smiling.
You will go with me after dinner, asserted Cagliostro with the mean of one who has untold resources at his back to enforce his wishes.
To Fainwald, whatever emolument I receive from my occult services shall be evenly divided with you.
But go alone, I dare not.
After my correspondence with Mr. Fane.
The handsome, unmarried assistant is absolutely obligatory, he finished pleadingly.
My good Cagliostro, Luke retorted with a slight smile,
I am on my way to Bower's Ridge to visit an old college friend who spends his summers on a farm there.
I haven't seen him for four years.
I certainly do not intend to give up my visit to go on such a wild goose chase as you've outlined.
I am an artist, not a magician.
Cagliostro rose from his seat, drawing the black mantle about him again with an impressive air.
One arm held it across his face, hiding all but the small blue eyes that now flashed with a sudden, steely light at the imperturbable young artist.
I shall be on my way, he announced, in the taxi I ordered.
But I warn you, young man, that before the evening is old, you will be at my side, acting in the capacity I've outlined.
I need you.
and when Cagliostromederno needs anything,
the whole universe swings that thing toward him.
He finished majestically, and stalked toward the dining room door.
At the entrance he turned.
Shall I dismiss the taxi?
He insinuated.
The mantle slipping sufficiently to discover the button nose that looked so childish on the small round face.
Then you can take me there directly in your roadster.
Luke got up from the table a trifle impatiently.
His gray eyes darkened.
"'My good Cagliostro, when I say a thing, I mean it,' he remarked pointedly.
"'I am not going to Fainwald.
I am going up the pipe, down the third road to the right, and then the first road to the left.'
"'Down the first road to the left,' repeated the occultist.
A sudden flash of expression went across his face.
He laughed outright.
"'Good night!'
or rather off-weida-zane, he said mockingly as he went out of the room.
Now what the devil did he mean by that?
wondered the artist as he drove his roadster down the pike half an hour later.
Too darn sure of getting what he wants, that fellow.
If I weren't afraid old Ralph might go back to the city in another week or ten days,
I'd take up with friend Benny's offer.
It was mighty intriguing.
The October dusk was gathering swiftly.
Luke switched on his headlights and proceeded with caution along the country road, the third to his right.
After going about three miles, he met another car, and the two cars had to manage rather carefully to avoid the deep ditches outlining the road on either side.
As the other car passed, the driver leaned out and hailed Luke.
Your name's Potter, ain't it? The old guy says not to forget the first turn to the left, he yelled.
Much obliged, the artist shouted as he got his car back on the road and drove slowly away.
He was just a little irritated by the reminder from the occultist who had only too evidently not forgotten the necessity of a young and handsome assistant, and was still hopeful that Luke might change his mind.
The first road to the left proved to be a dirt road with deep ruts, obviously, one that did not see much traffic.
Luke turned down it, driving cautiously. The road led winding into the very heart of a forest.
It went more and more deeply, the headlights darted weirdly between serried ranks of...
crowding trees until the wood seemed full of awesome shades that slipped behind the shelter of tree trunks,
as Luke drove on into their midst. It was somehow strangely oppressive and ominous to the
sensitive perception of the young artist. He told himself that he would not particularly care to
pass the night in such a place, alone among those slinking shadows. And then in the glare of the
headlights, there appeared another shadow, detached from those that slunk back, massing behind
him as he drove on. Black with flapping ebbin wings that waved on either side as it came toward him,
like a tremendous bat running on hind legs down the roadway to intercept him. The thing advanced,
stumbling, tripping, but ever nearer. Luke felt his blood chill in his veins. He dare not drive
directly upon that black thing in his way. He stopped the car, letting the engine run. What in God's
universe could it be. And then it came into the full glare of the headlights and it had a white
face like a man's. It was a man. The black wings were only the flapping corners of a great mantle.
It was a man. And as it ran, it moaned as if in pain. Luke stared and credulous, stopped the engine,
sprang out of the car to meet him. For he saw now who it was. It was the little occultist,
staring-eyed, white-faced, drawn into a Greek tragic moment.
mask of horror. He was moaning as he ran blindly along the roadway. The artist stopped him with a
hand on his shoulder as the little man would have fled back along the road toward the pike.
And at the touch of Luke's hand, Herbert Benny collapsed like a pricked balloon,
stumbling all in a heap upon the road, with a quavering screech of unutterable fear and horror
pushing between his distorted lips.
End of Chapter 1.
Chapter 2 of the Gargoyle by Grella Lest.
Spina. This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 2. An Appeal for Help
Even in Prohibition Days a man can, at a pinch, provide himself with brandy or whiskey,
if he knows where to go for it. And there are moments when such stimulants or grave necessities.
The emergency called for Luke's flask, and he had this satisfaction a little later of seeing
the occultist pale blue eyelids flicker than Titan, as if apprehensive.
of what they might look upon if they opened.
All right, friend Cagliostro?
Quared the artist, giving the fainting man a slight shake.
The squinting eyes opened widely and fell upon Luke's handsome face
in the full glare of the headlights.
The squared mouth relaxed with obvious relief.
Benny reached out convulsively to grasp Luke's hand.
God be thanked! You are real, oh!
And then the thought of something came back to him,
for he staggered up from the roadway,
looking apprehensively in the direction
from which he had been running.
Did you see anything?
He quavered.
Very little of the impressive initiate left in his manner.
Was there anything after me?
Luke shook his head.
He peered down the road, but there was nothing now.
The car stood quiet.
The shadows, which had but a few minutes ago been slinking from trunk to trunk,
now remained in ominous hiding.
The roadway loomed darkly upon a steep and stony slope,
unlighted by the headlights because of its pitch.
Can you turn around here?
Quavered Herbert Benny,
one pudgy hand grasping Luke's firm arm.
Why should I turn around, disgustedly?
Because this isn't the right road for you, Mr. Porter.
I took the first road to the left, disputed Luke.
This is the way to Bauer's Ridge, isn't it?
Benny let out a squeak of nervous laughter,
which he almost as instantly hushed
with that same apprehensive look up the road.
You took the first turn to the left, he explained,
but this is a private lane,
not the first road to the left,
which you should have taken about half a mile farther on.
This is a private lane leading to Fainwald, he finished.
Luke stared at him, half irritated, half amused.
And you were careful to confuse me
so that I would take it and appear at Fainwald as your assistant, he accused.
Well, now that I'm here, do you mind telling me if you were coming to meet me?
If not, why were you running away?
Good God, I wasn't meeting anybody, cried the occultist wildly.
I was, well, not running away, he stopped, then went on a little defiantly.
Yes, I was running away. You'd have done it too if you'd been in my place.
God, if you'd seen what I did.
His voice rose in a shrill, tremolo of emotion.
I saw the devil himself.
Yes, I did.
Don't dispute me, Mr. Porter.
I beg of you.
I'm not a lunatic.
I'm a sane man.
I'm a man who has seen many strange supernatural phenomena.
But never before, never, I say,
did I see the devil impropriet persona?
Good God, it was horrible.
You'd better get into my car, suggested the artist.
I'll go along here and take a look at Bielzebub, friend Cagliostro.
when we found him, you'll probably discover you're mistaken.
No, no, no, denied the occultist hurriedly.
I couldn't have been mistaken.
The taxi driver left me about 100 yards from the castle draw,
because he was superstitious.
I walked up to the moat by myself carrying my bags,
and I was standing there, wondering how I could announce my arrival
when the moon came out from behind the clouds,
and I saw that the draw was down.
Well, prompted Luke, waiting impatiently, foot over the starter.
And there was something, something uncanny about it.
About what?
The draw being open?
With irony.
No, no, no.
There was somebody leaning over the side of it, looking down into the moat.
I went over to speak to him, to it, and it raised its monstrous countenance and looked at me, and my God, it was the devil himself.
Now, friend Cagliostro, you know as well as I that his satanic majesty isn't
in the habit of strolling around in flesh and blood
the way you're telling me, reproved Luke,
starting the car.
Oh, don't go back, don't!
Turn around, I beg of you. If you drive ahead,
you'll meet it, too.
I'm going to drive ahead, friend Benny.
If you don't like it, get out now and walk.
I have a mind to see your devil for myself.
At least the experience cannot fail
to be stimulating, Luke grinned to himself.
But his terrible eyes,
his idiot smile, that bloated miss your face.
That bloated miss-shape a nose
The purple face like
Decomposing flesh
The twisted frightful mouth
Good God, Mr. Porter
You don't know what a hideous thing
You're going to confront
Turn back while there is yet time
Turned shut up
Snapped Luke
A fine occultist you are
To let a mere ugly demon terrify you
To such an extent
This dig was too much for the dignity
Of the occultist who sank back in his seat in silence
evidently trying hard to regain something of his previous composure and impressiveness.
Luke was obliged to go into low, up the slope, which was not only very steep, but covered with large rolling stones over which his car slipped and skidded unpleasantly.
But when the summit of the rise had been reached, he was rewarded by an astonishing sight.
The moon was bright in an unclouded sky.
Her light threw into high relief the battlements of what might have been an ancient medieval castle,
while black shadows blocked out the approach to the great pile of massive granite blocks,
so that the draw bridge of which the occultist had spoken remained in darkness.
The headlights of the car fell upon this spot as Luke maneuvered the roadster for that purpose,
disclosing a bridge across a moat at least ten feet wide.
The bridge was solitary.
No one stood there in the glare of the headlights,
but just inside the portal of the draw a man waited,
so impassively that he seemed to waxen.
figure, arrayed in the ancient garb of an old-time page with doublet and hose.
Is that your devil? Luke laughed. Cagliostro drew a long breath of relief.
No, that isn't the thing I saw. That was unutterably horrible. This is just a man, I imagine.
The car went closer. As it approached the draw, the page came out, holding up one hand and
warning his voice fell clearly in quite good English on the night air. He at least was flesh and blood.
"'Don't drive over the bridge, sir, if you please.
"'You will find the garage around at the side of the castle to your right, sir.
"'If you will be kind enough to put up your car and come back here on foot,
"'I'll send a man to get your bags, sir.'
"'Evidently we're expected,' Luke murmured to his companion.
"'I've half a mind to go in, friend Cagliostro.'
"'He thinks you are my assistant,' whispered the occultist.
"'His voice was under control now.
are you, will you?
Yes, I am, and I will, decided Lute, curiosity getting the better of him.
Send a man for our bags, he called to the servant who bowed and disappeared within.
At the left of the castle, there seemed to be no road, but the roadway at the right had been given a little attention.
Ruts had been smoothed out, stones removed.
Halfway down beside the castle moat, a large granite garage loomed up.
Luke drove the roadster into it, and a minute later, two minutes later two,
in, also arrayed in medieval costume, appeared and picked up his bags, painting paraphernalia
he left in the car.
"'Where are your bags for Nkugliostro?' he inquired.
The occultist shifted the pale blue eyes uneasily from Luke's amused gray orbs.
"'I, uh, left them in front of the draw,' he admitted.
"'When you—oh, excuse me, I understand,' grinned Luke as he followed the servants back to
the draw.
The thing that the artist did not like was that as they entered the courtyard within those lofty stone walls,
a creaking sound announced that the drawbridge was being raised.
A quick look behind him confirmed this suspicion.
He and Cagliostro Moderno were now cut off from the outside world as completely as if they had been immured in a jail in solitary confinement.
Those high walls meant no escape.
That wide moat might not be deep enough for a plunge from the battlements.
Luke was suddenly glad to remember that in one of his bags was an automatic.
If you have no objection, sir,
one of the men asked Luke much to the occultist discomfiture,
taking the artist for the principal of the two.
The master would like to have you wait for ten minutes on the roof garden,
until your rooms are made ready.
He cannot see you tonight as he is occupied with an important experiment.
We will await his pleasure, hasty.
exclaimed the occultist, assuming the lead with dignity.
He had once more swung his mantle about his plump form,
and was permitting only the button-nosed and squinting eyes to appear above one edge of it.
Luke shrugged indifferent shoulders,
as he followed the page up a winding staircase in a tower that rose on one side of the courtyard.
They emerged upon what seemed to be a kind of roof garden,
located on the broad top of one of the side walls of the castle,
and wide enough to cover not only the wall but part of that portion of the building.
Here the servitor paused, hesitated, then turned directly to loop.
The master has directed me, sir, to ask that you pace back and forth along this central path,
until I can come for you a little later.
Luke stared a quirk of amusement twisting his mobile lips.
Is that a suggestion or a command? he inquired pleasantly.
"'Oh, sir, the master always has a good reason backed of the most absurd.'
"'That is, apparently absurd, requests,' the man amended hastily.
"'How about me?' bristled the occultist.
"'Perhaps he means that it is I who am to walk back and forth.
"'It is I who am the—'
"'Pardon me, sir, but it is the younger man to whom the master's request is directed,'
"'the page said respectfully.
Gaglioster retired, slightly peevish to seat himself on a rustic bench at one side of the narrow past.
Luke, with much inward curiosity and amusement, strode back and forth along the pebbled way.
The page disappeared.
Luke passing the doorway as he walked suddenly stopped short,
his head jerking to instant attention without turning it in the direction of what he heard.
It was a voice, a husky pleading woman's voice whispering tensely.
don't turn your head.
Pretend to be looking at the moon.
But if you are a gentleman,
don't leave this place without seeing Alden first.
Alden!
For God's sake, don't fail me.
Look, the light, from the master's tower.
I must go or he will see me here.
At four in the morning.
On this roof garden is the safest place.
The voice ceased.
There was the slightest rustle as of a woman's garments,
and then a blinding ray of light shot across the garden,
disclosing everything as brightly as in broad daylight, startled out of his astonishment at that mysterious and appealing feminine voice.
Luke sprang out of the path of the ray, only to find it following him persistently as he walked.
Lord, what's that? gasped Cagliostro jumping to his feet.
Somebody's turning a searchlight on us. The artist decided as he stopped to peer past the light, but it was too blinding.
I think I understand, gabbled the occultist, the pale eyes thrust up into Luke's perplexed face.
"'It's him, taking a look at me, proudly.
"'He asked you to walk so that he could tell which of us was which.
"'After this reflection he hurried to seat himself again on the rustic bench, posing importantly.
"'Darned impudent of Mr. Fane,' Luke decided,
"'must be an eccentric of the first water.
"'He deliberately turned his back to the searchlight, which played about the garden,
"'then back to him almost as if suggesting that he walk again.
but he stood deliberately still.
Within five minutes the page appeared in the doorway
and indicated that the two were to follow him.
Winding passages gave place to steep and narrow staircases,
dimly lighted by scattered candles guttering against dark walls.
Stairways led to corridors across which tiny slits in the stone of the outer walls
through occasional threads of faint moonlight.
At last the servant threw open the door of a room,
motioned Cogliostro to enter, left him standing there with a very
vague disturbed expression on his face, and led Luke to another room around a turn in the same corridor.
If there is anything you'd like, sir, just ring for me. The electric button is here. My name is
Mason, by the way, sir. It is the master's desire that you drink a goblet of hot wine, sir,
after your cold drive. I will bring it presently. He threw open a door at one side of the
great apartment, disclosing a luxuriously appointed private bath. I think you
you will be very comfortable, sir.
Luke looked about him.
Observing the tapestry hung walls,
the thickly carpeted floor,
the overstuffed armchairs,
the immense antique bed.
He nodded appreciatively.
I think I shall, he agreed.
Thank your master for the hot wine, he added.
It will be doubly welcome.
Mason bowed and disappeared.
Urged by he knew not what motive,
but with the feeling that he would like to be
secured against intrusion in this strange
place, the artist made a hasty examination of the room,
lifting tapestries to peer behind them for hidden doors, and pulling up the bigger rugs for trap doors.
He grinned as he did so, feeling his actions absurd.
But the absurdity of it did not keep him from making a thorough examination of his surroundings.
The conclusion he arrived at was that he was secure from intrusion from the bathroom,
but that any of those blocks of granite forming the walls might be, in reality, secret doors.
"'Anything he felt would be possible, plausible in this strange castle.
"'His thoughts ran to the voice of that unseen woman
"'who had asked him to meet her in the roof garden at four that morning.
"'Was it a man or a woman whom he was to meet?
"'A man, Alden?'
"'Luc prepared for the night by slipping on a dressing-gown and slippers to blind Mason.
"'When the man appeared with the steaming goblet of wine,
"'he was told to leave it on the stand by the bed.
"'I'll drink it a little later,' the artist said,
casually. Spiced rather heavily, isn't it?
It makes a good nightcap, sir, Mason remarked.
A rather odd expression passing over his face.
This unguarded look was not lost on Luke, who inwardly decided not to drink the wine,
although it smelled enticing.
I understand from Mr. Moderno, sir, that you've both dined.
Is there anything else I can do for you, sir?
No, sir? Thank you.
Mason retired.
closing the heavy door behind him. Luke at once went across the room, found a massive key,
and turned it in the great hand-hammered bronze lock. That door at least should be impassable.
Then from his bag he took an electric torch and his automatic, slipping them into different pockets
of his coat, which he now reassumed. The spicy odor of the steaming wine penetrated to every
corner of the room affecting Luke soporifically. He picked up the goblet, carried it into the bathroom,
and emptied it. He could not afford to sleep this first night in Fainwold.
End of Chapter 2.
Chapter 3 of the Gargoyle by Greya Laspina.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 3 Behind the Arras
Despite his intention to remain awake, the artist caught himself on the point of dozing more than once as the night wore on.
when a light tap sounded on his door,
then he was sure for a moment that he had only imagined it
and looked at his watch with the electric torch
not wishing to turn on even the shaded electric nightlamp.
It was half past one o'clock,
and the wrap on his door was no dream,
for it came again timidly, yet persistently.
Luke crossed the room and listened.
Again the tap.
With one hand in his pocket where the automatic lay,
he unlocked the door and very quietly swung at ajar.
A dark figure stood.
stood in the flickering light of the corridor candles, which contrasted oddly with the luxurious
appointments, electric and otherwise, of his apartment. As he opened the door cautiously, this figure
moved toward him with a slight rustle of stark garments. It was a woman who came in at the door,
pushing it shut behind her. Luke touched the electric button. The room was flooded with light.
She stood without shrinking, her eyes narrowed at the sudden blaze of illumination, an elderly
woman with faded blue eyes, fine features that must once have been very lovely, but were now lined
heavily with the wrinkles of secret anxieties and apprehensions. Her dress was simple, dark, nondescript,
but her apron in the cap resting on her straightly drawn gray hair were snowy and starched,
modern to the last extreme, evidently an upper servant.
You are the unmarried young man, she whispered, one finger warning him to keep his voice low.
Luke nodded, smooth brow contracted gray eyes darkening with puzzlement.
I am Alden, the woman continued, still in that low, half-rightened manner.
Miss Fane's nurse. That is, I was her nurse. I've been her personal maid for some years,
since she grew up from the baby I first cared for.
Who is Miss Fane? She is the adopted daughter of Madame Fane, Mr. Porter.
It is about her that I have come to you, risking God only knows how much, to get your help for her sake.
If the master discovers that I have been to you, he will dispose of me somehow, she said darkly.
At any rate, he would see to it that I could not help my little Sybil in this moment of dire need, Mr. Porter.
She laid her worn hand on Luke's arm appealingly.
Do not trust Guy Fain.
He is a monster who will stop at no.
nothing to gain his own ends.
She shuddered convincingly.
Still, I do not understand, Luke said gently.
Guy Fain is planning some monumental crime against Sybil, the woman whispered tensely.
Just what it is, I can only surmise.
But my barest imaginings of it are so horrible that I dare not put them into words.
It is against her immortal soul that he is plotting, Mr. Porter.
What use he wishes to make of an innocent girl?
I cannot dare not think, but she must be saved. She must.
If there is anything I can do, Luke began vaguely,
when Alden seized his arm convulsively between her nervous working fingers.
Listen, she remained in apprehensive silence for a long moment.
Then she drew Luke toward the inner wall of his room.
Lock your door, now, please follow me.
in absolute silence. I'm going to take you through a secret passage into Miss Fane's room,
and hide you behind the tapestry so that you can understand something. Her finger went to her lips again
in warning. She took a pocket flash from her apron and turned it on. Lifting one heavy hanging,
she motioned Luke to follow. He did so, feeling as if he were in a strange dream. She pushed
something somewhere in the wall. A part of what had seemed solid stuff.
stone swung slowly away on a central pivot.
Into the opening, thus discovered, she stepped, with beckoning finger.
The artist walked behind her closely.
Through a short passage, and then she once more hunted for and found some secret spring,
which swung back a smaller stone like a window.
Again, that warning for silence.
Then she took Luke's hand in hers, pushed it through the window,
until he touched a swinging heavy material which he realized was a tapestry hanging similar to those in his own room.
As he made the discovery he heard voices again,
and strained against the small opening to hear them better,
had a gesture from the woman who then shut off the flashlight.
Through the chinks and the woven stuff came glints of light.
Luke was impatient now to see,
and as if she had divined his wish, Alden whispered cautiously
that if he had a pinknife,
he might be able to cut out a small piece of the tapestry.
The artist took the suggestion,
and after a minute's awkward attempt succeeded,
and his eye went to the small opening.
He was looking into a charming boudoir,
furnished in modern French fashion with pale blues and pinks,
enlighted by a brilliant chandelier of crystal drops.
On a bed opposite, a girl was sleeping deeply,
a girl whose fair, blonde loveliness stirred the artist's soul,
and made his fingers itch to depict her on canvas.
On either side of the sleeper's bed stood a figure,
and either was ominous to a terrifying degree.
One was short, squat ungainly,
draped from head to foot and swathing folds of somber black,
so thick as to conceal effectually whatever was beneath them.
Not even the face of this individual showed under the double thicknesses of black chiffon
that left only the flashing of dark eyes to be glimpsed occasionally.
She sleeps, came the thick folds of the veil,
in a voice singularly rich and melodious.
Yet for a moment I thought she was only feigning sleep.
My fearful imagination, but she sleeps soundly.
The opiate never fails to do its work.
The second being, a woman, tall black-garbed, bent over the sleeping girl.
Snow-white hair was piled above a face of singular but repelling pride and much devastated beauty.
mingled in that speaking countenance were the traces of battling emotions that must have been going on in her soul for years to have altered her face so terribly.
Now across it writhed in sequence fury and reluctance, hate, and a kind of disdainful pity.
The man had been watching her attentively, for his voice issued now from the swathing folds of black.
My dear mother, is it possible that you are considering withdrawal at this late moment?
Now, when all lies ready to my hand, when the final act of this stupend, this drama is ready
to be played out, when he has promised to grant my prayers impossible.
I cannot look upon so much innocence and purity without experiencing something of remorse
at the part I must play, cried the dark woman.
I am not withdrawing, Guy, but she is so beautiful, so unsuspecting, so...
Oh, yes, I grant you.
all this, my dear mother. It is very tender and woman-like for you to feel such sympathy for her.
But what about me? Terribly. Do you not owe me some reparation for what you have done to me?
I, who am what your deliberate desire for revenge upon a husband's infidelity's made me,
a thing so utterly horrible that I dare not look at my hideous mockery of a face,
lest I perish at my own temerity, my flesh creeping at the revolting and grisly monster that would confront me in my mirror.
Enough, guy, enough! The mother wrung her attenuated hands.
Oh, your revenge upon my father was complete, my dear mother. Yet the worst part of it fell upon me, who was innocent of any wrong.
My forbidding deformities have served your purpose. Now you must expiate your crime against
me. You must pay, mother. You must pay. She pressed both hands to her wrinkled cheeks.
I never dreamed what it would mean to you, she pleaded. Forgive, forgive you. Perhaps I may find it
in my heart if there is a human heart within this unsightly monstrous mass of flesh to forgive you
when the final act of the drama has been played out. Oh, when I have gained the grace and comeliness of which
your revengeful hate robbed me.
Perhaps I may forgive you then,
she held her outstretched hands toward him pleadingly.
Have I rebelled, Guy,
have I not put myself utterly in your hands,
even to the extent of endangering my mortal soul?
Whaled she as if in agony.
Your soul endangered, my dear mother,
the man laughed a short sneering laugh.
You should have considered your soul,
and mine, dear mother, mine!
Long ago, when you per-a-lawed,
prepared Lucifer's chapel, and frequented it during those months before my hateful birth,
thinking only of your unspeakable revenge upon my father.
You had your wish.
You drove him away in horror at the sight of the monstrous prodigy that would be his heir.
Now I must have my wish.
It is only to undo what you did, sweet mother, in mocking tones.
I sometimes wonder if a demon inhabits your frame, Guy.
The squat individual chuckled horribly.
Perhaps it is so, dear mother, who can tell.
But my wish is so modest.
I only ask that the exquisite loveliness reposing on this couch
deliver up to me some of its charm.
And with generosity I am willing, anxious to give all,
all my own ugliness, all my forbidding deformity in exchange.
But you told me you would use the man,
hesitated the woman, the short figure.
gave a shrug of its shoulders.
I tried to see him in the searchlight,
but I couldn't tell whether or not he had the physique,
the features that would interest me more than these,
motioning toward the girl.
It is the more subtle way to take them from him
and wreck her soul afterwards, he observed thoughtfully.
Well, tomorrow I must see him and decide.
Guy, spare her soul, let it be a stranger, not this poor child.
I tell you I'm afraid.
She is too pure, too innocent.
The very stars in their courses will fight for her.
And is not her purity, her innocence, what make her more acceptable to him?
Ah!
And he lifted black swathed arms above the sleeping girl and terrible invocation.
Lucifer, son of the morning, only thou canst understand how great is my impatience,
at the delay of these last preparations that will make the sacrifice success.
acceptable unto thee. I tell you, mother, not until this girl sees her purity and loveliness
turning into ugliness, her innocence of thought replaced by the lowest, vilest passions
that can enter the human mind. Not until then will Lucifer exalt in the sacrifice.
There you air, wretched boy, cried out the mother passionately. Her beauty may pass,
but her soul is in a higher keeping. I have made no mistakes, my mother.
Her soul will yet be Lucifer's.
He who has been instructed by a prince of the fallen hosts of heaven cannot err.
But don't you see that because he is a prince of darkness,
he has failed to take into his calculations the power of light?
Guy, guy, beware of putting overmuch trust in Lucifer.
He only seeks to draw you to himself, not to exalt.
It is your mother, your wretched mother who warns you,
your mother who has paid ten thousand times in agony and tears for her crime
against her unborn son.
The veiled figure made the travesty of a cross
by folding its arms
and resting its hands upon its own shoulders.
Then the head bent upon the folded arms,
while a mocking, ironical laugh issued softly
from the folds of the veil.
You don't believe yet, do you, mother?
Well, you shall.
In spite of what you have already experienced,
what you have seen with your own eyes,
you remain incredulous,
You persist in your skepticism?
Oh, he cried out with strange passion.
Do not dare tell me that you do not believe.
Your words unnerve me.
I almost feel as if there were some powerful influence near this sleeping girl,
some influence mutely but strongly battling against me.
To the chapel! To the chapel!
He moved rapidly to the woman's side and urged her toward the door.
Not to night, Guy.
I cannot bear it again so soon.
"'I am not a young woman. You are fearless, but I am unutterably afraid. Not tonight I implore you.
"'To the chapel!' cried the man's malefluous voice inexorably.
"'I will sacrifice a pair of doves, or a young lamb. You must be convinced, or you cannot help me, and I must not fail.
I would rather die than fail.'
The reluctant woman moved slowly toward the door, followed by the squat figure of the strange being in its black wrappings.
The door of Sybil Fane's room swung to behind those ill-omened figures.
As it closed, Alden's hand plucked nervously at Luke Porter's sleeve.
Mr. Porter, we must get back to your room at once.
You're supposed to be asleep.
And if the master should happen to visit your room, she left the sentence unfinished.
You go ahead, you know the way, whispered Luke, irritated at the inference unspoken.
He wanted to take one last last.
look at the sleeping beauty in the great antique bed, but the light in the room had been extinguished,
and there only remained to follow Alden back through the narrow winding of the secret passage.
Back in his room, Alden let the tapestry drop over the hidden door, and turned to the young man,
heavy eyes burning in her wrinkled face.
"'I cannot tell the whole story now,' she said hurriedly.
"'If you promise you will not leave here, without making an attempt to rescue Sybil, I will try to see
before too many days it passed, and then I will tell you the secrets that I have learned,
and the secret that I know, I only.
That girl is certainly in bad hands, judging from the conversation we've just overheard,
Luke decided.
Alden, I'm with you. If she needs me, I am at Miss Fain's service.
She doesn't know yet what danger she is in, Alden pointed out.
So far, she has had the kindest treatment, and has been indulged in every way,
except that she has been told she cannot leave the castle until after she is married.
Then she has never been outside these walls, asked the artist, astonished.
She has read about the world and carefully censored books,
but she has been taught that a girl does not emerge from such seclusion as this until she marries,
and there is yet another thing.
Well, prompted Luke.
Mr. Porter, she believes that any day her future husband may appear in Fainwold.
She is registered to fall in love with the first good-looking man who comes here.
Why, that should please the master, I do not know, but I am sure that he intends you to be a civil suitor.
It might be worse, murmured Luke, thinking of the flower-like loveliness of that sleeping beauty.
Well, Alden, cheer up.
When I get a better understanding of the situation, you may rely upon me to do my best for Miss Fane.
She is too charming a girl to be left to the tender mercies of such a man as this Guy Fane seems to be.
judging from what I've heard tonight.
Sometime you will know how deeply I appreciate your kindness, Mr. Porter.
Sometime, when you know my secret, murmured the woman.
Until then, I beg one thing only, do not trust the master.
She unlocked the hall door, listened for a moment,
then opened it quietly and slipped out into the light of the flickering candles.
End of Chapter 3.
Chapter 4 of The Gargoyle by Greya Lestager.
Bina.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 4. The Master
From the deep slumber into which his vigils finally plunged him,
Luke wakened to hear someone rapping loudly at the door.
He got up lazily and unlocked it.
If you please, sir, the master has ordered breakfast for you,
and the other gentleman on the roof garden.
The morning is mild and warm, sir.
of course, and the voice altered subtly.
If you prefer to breakfast in bed, I am sure the master will alter his arrangements.
Let it be the roof garden, Mason, Luke acquiesced.
I'll be out in ten minutes, is Mr. Benny? That is the other gentleman up?
He is already out, sir. A light sleeper, sir, I'd say.
Didn't touch the spiced wine, sir, irrelevantly.
You may as well take it.
take out my empty goblet, Luke suggested.
Now you're here.
That's some wine, Mason, but it makes a fellow sleep, he said casually.
Under his heavy eyebrows, the keen gray eyes watched Mason's face.
You may well say so, sir.
Miss Sybil always sleeps heavily after drinking it.
The master gives it to her whenever she complains of insomnia.
Mason appeared innocent enough, but Luke fancied that the man was studying him curiously
behind that impassive gaze.
May I give you a hand, sir, with your dressing?
Thanks, no, not used to being.
Valade, Mason.
I'll be upstairs in a few minutes, dismissed Luke.
I wanted to drug me last night, he murmured to himself.
I'll have to watch out for these quieting nightcaps, he told himself as he dressed.
But his thoughts were more on the mystifying remarks he had heard the night before,
hidden behind the tapestry of Sybil Fain's room.
He was anxious to meet the girl and wondered if she was.
appear at breakfast. There was no one in the garden but the occultist, however, and the little
man was pacing nervously up and down the path when Luke appeared at the doorway.
"'This is a strange place,' was his greeting. "'Did—did you sleep last night?'
"'Like a top,' Luke replied carelessly.
Cogliostro girked his carity head from one side to the other, and after his squinty eyes had
gazed watchfully about him, he said in a low voice,
"'Well, I suppose you drank that wine, didn't you?'
Luke laughed.
No, my good cagliostro, I didn't.
What do you take me for, a babe in arms?
I poured it down the lavatory in the bathroom
and sat up for hours to find why I had been offered the potion.
Then you know about it?
Babbled the occultist, marveling.
How did you know?
How did you?
Perryed Luke, smiling.
By the way, I see our breakfast is ready and it looks mighty appetizing.
He drew up a chair and would have seen.
seated himself so that he was facing the forest, but Mason hastily interfered, pulling out a chair
that seated him facing the interior towers of the castle.
Slightly puzzled, Luke took the place.
As he helped himself to crisp bacon and gold and marmalade, his watchful eyes went over the
towers that he faced.
Within the castle walls there rose a great roof of corrugated glass, admitting sunlight but shutting
out all intrusive glances.
This translucent roof was built in a series of terraces culminating.
in a central tower at one end, which style of architecture permitted the insertion of ventilators
in the shape of metal blinds set with the openings downward, again with the very obvious end
of shielding the courtyard from curious eyes, while at the same time affording free access of fresh air.
That's an odd sort of thing, he started to say to his companion, when he was suddenly half-blinded
by a brilliant flash of light from the tower above the glass roof. A flash so sharp and sudden that he
flung up one hand to protect his eyes. It was as if some mischievous urchin had manipulated a mirror
to deflect the sun's rays into his face. When he looked to see what had occasioned the flash,
his curiosity was piqued, and at the same time he was slightly irritated. It was a repetition
of last night's occurrence with the searchlight. The flash had been occasioned by the reflection
of sunlight from glass, but the glass had not been a mirror. It was from the barrels of field glass
in the act of being once more leveled in his direction.
Some curious individual was looking him over in this manner.
Darned impertinence, Luke said aloud.
Cagliostro, what would you take that to be?
He pointed out the two barrels of the field glass,
which he could observe distinctly between the shutters of a window in the central tower.
The occultist looked back across his shoulders without much interest,
obviously preoccupied with his own thoughts.
Somebody's looking us over, my friend.
He didn't get a very good look at it.
last night, so he's trying it in daylight.
And I know who it is, Luke added in a low voice.
The pale blue eyes shifted to look into Luke's.
Somewhere in their depths flickered a keener perception than the artist had supposed a little
Benny capable of.
It's he, whispered the occultist.
How do you know?
I feel it, Mr. Porter.
Well, I know because, and then Luke broke off remembering that the information he had gained
by listening behind the hangings in Sybil Fane's room
was not to be imparted in this fashion.
Did you feel it, too?
Why, yes, that is about what I'd think.
Luke stumbled awkwardly.
We are supposed to meet Mr. Fain this morning,
the occultist volunteered,
as he finished his second cup of coffee with gusto.
Mr. Fane wishes Mr. Porter to go up to his study first,
said Mason's suave voice over Luke's shoulder.
Cagliostro bristled with indignation.
His pouting mouth stuck its lips out in protest.
"'There's some mistake,' he scolded peevishly.
"'This young man is merely my—my assistant.
"'I am the occultist, not he.'
The Major Domo did not smile.
He spoke seriously and respectfully.
"'Quite so, sir.
But Mr. Fane undoubtedly wishes to see if your assistant is satisfactory before bothering you with an interview.
He would not care to take up your time needlessly,
I'm sure, sir.
The occultist was satisfied.
He seated himself, wrapped in his dark mantle upon the rustic bench, with immense dignity.
I will wait here until you return, Mr. Porter, he announced.
Will you kindly come with me, sir?
Mason requested.
The master has asked me to tell you that he hopes you will make allowance for him,
if you find him irritable.
He is tired and nervous from a sleepless night.
Without giving the artist time to reply, Mason led the way down long corridors and staircases
that led Luke, surmised by the general direction, into the very heart of Fainwold Castle.
At last they paused before a door. Mason opened it noiselessly,
stepping to one side and motioning the artist to enter. No announcement was made.
Indeed, as the room was in complete darkness, Luke could hardly believe that anyone was waiting there.
He stepped across the threshold of the room slowly and paused,
hardly knowing whether to stop where he was or to feel his way forward through the stygian darkness.
The outer corridor had been dimly illuminated by occasional tall and narrow windows,
shadowed by climbing ivy,
but this room apparently had no windows,
and the only light was that of a single candle standing,
so far back in the depths of the apartment,
that it served but to make the darkness visible.
Luke took another step forward.
He stood stock still and waited.
He had no intention of breaking a rib by a fall over unseen pieces of antique furniture.
He had half a mind to step back out of that uncanny blackness that seemed to be closing in like innumerable, invisible, presences,
alive with inconceivable and strange malevolence.
As he stood, half exasperated and half unnerved by the oddity of his bizarre reception,
a voice sounded on his ear,
so unexpectedly near at hand that the startled young man went back several paces.
The soft and musical notes of that plaintive voice did not move Luke from his quick indignation,
and although the first word spoken were an apology,
the artist gulped hard to swallow his resentment, those tricks of darkness, and an unseen speaker.
Memory of the previous night's revelations also angered him.
Pardon me, my dear sir, I beg of you,
"'for what must seem a strange and inhospitable reception,' said the voice.
"'I am, alas, inflicted with a malady which precludes your reception
"'in other than the dim light of this room.
"'My eyes,' went on that melancholy and touching voice plaintively,
"'cannot bear more than the pale light of a single candle at a distance.'
"'Such a reception is hardly reassuring,' Luke remarked coldly,
his nerves yet throbbing.
But since you have been so kind as to explain that it is due to a misfortune,
I cannot, of course, do other than extend sympathy for a malady which shuts you away from the glorious light of day.
I am speaking, I presume, to Mr. Guy Fane.
I am Guy Fane.
Your name I am informed is Luke Porter.
If you will step forward, Mr. Porter, your hand will find a chair already placed.
I would like to ask a few questions of you if you do not object.
Luke found the indicated chair and sat down uncomfortably.
This conversation with an unseen person in the dark was not just to his taste.
He loved sunshine in space, not this black crowding darkness.
I understand that you have come with Cagliostro-Moderno as his assistant.
Have you ever studied magic?
Luke consulted himself hastily.
He dared not deny knowledge of the subject entirely,
for this might result in his being shut out completely
from the strange experiments he was now burning to witness.
Moreover, he did not wish to leave Fain Wald without first meeting Sybil Fane,
and seeing how he could be of service to her if she really needed,
as Alden had declared his help.
I have not gone very deeply into the subject, Mr. Fane,
he admitted with apparent frankness,
but you must know that it is too tremendous in scope for anyone to say that he has done more than studied it.
Then it is our cagliostro who is the real adept, the initiate.
A laugh followed the words.
A laugh so eerie that Luke had much ado to keep his nerves from throbbing uncomfortably again.
The Kekenation broke off as suddenly as it had burst forth, leaving in its wake a silence yet more uncanny.
Luke felt that, through the gloom the unseen master was gazing at him with keen eyes that pierced the darkness and was cynically enjoying his manifest discomfort.
He took himself in hand firmly.
Guy Fane spoke suddenly then, taking up the current of his thought as if he had not broken it off by his uncanny laughter.
He really doesn't look the part, do you think, Mr. Porter?
One doesn't have to look the part, does he, to accomplish what he sets out to do?
I don't wear flowing ties and long hair, but I've managed to achieve a small success at painting,
and I don't look the part I've been told often, Luke retorted.
You are not slow at a parry, Mr. Porter, complimented the invisible host.
What I wish to know is, do you feel skeptical about magic, or have you reason to believe that it exists?
I've seen black magic worked in Haiti, Luke said slowly.
after that, can I deny it?
Right to the point, aren't you?
What does it represent to you?
The reply came slowly, for Luke felt that Guy Fain laid much stress upon it.
The whole affair savored so much of the ultra,
that he felt extreme dislike to discuss such a subject under such conditions.
Yet the very silence appeared to wait upon his answer.
In its final analysis, magic is no more than the power,
of the imagination, utilized along lines which the masses are not conversant.
The imagination possesses potentialities fraught with more far-reaching influence and potent force
than is realized by the average man, he said at last.
Ah, your opinion interests me immensely. It coincides with mine. You would concede then that
under conditions whether human mind has been wrought up to a high tension, incidents ordinarily
termed miraculous might take place.
Admittedly, what would you consider the conditions most favorable for the working of so-called
asked the master, eagerness discernible in his mellow voice?
The Bible states plainly that the first condition is that of ardent demand, the second is
that of earnest belief that the demand not only will be fulfilled, but is already fulfilled.
Then you think results will be quicker and more powerful in proportion to the street.
of the faith involved.
Assuredly, Mr. Fane.
I am much gratified to find that we are so deeply in accord on such an interesting subject, Mr. Porter.
I am conducting an experiment along magical lines, and shall later on expect some very important
assistance from you.
My good mother cannot assist me as much as she used to.
Growing ill health makes it impossible for her to concentrate mentally.
Luke remained silent.
There was a short pause.
In the meantime, may I ask you to do what you can
to make the hours pass agreeably for my cousin?
I shall consider the personal favor all that you do for.
In fact, you will be doing me a great service,
which you may understand better later on.
Mason?
The Major Domo appeared in the dim entrance.
Will you kindly take Mr. Porter to Miss Fain
and bring me the, uh, adept,
who must have been waiting impatiently
for this pleasant little chat with Mr. Porter to end.
Luke followed the servitor into the corridor
as Guy Fane's velvety voice sank musically into the darkness and died away.
But after he had taken the few steps which would bring him to comparative light,
he paused,
with a vivid impression that something stood before him,
blocking his way and staring up at him with eyes that mocked subtly.
"'How extremely psychic you are, my dear Mr. Porter,' murmured Guy's voice, vibrating with gentle amusement.
As he spoke, a soft rustle betrayed the movement of someone near at hand. The way it was clear.
Luke followed Mason down the corridor beneath the light of the guttering candles.
As he went, he heard that strange laugh again, full now of what seemed to his sensitive ear, malicious enjoyment.
The sound of it struck an angry chill through him.
As he groped along, he continued to feel strange.
Peering eyes followed his slow progress,
and the sensation did not serve in any way to retard his steps.
End of Chapter 4.
Chapter 5 of The Gargoyle by Greya Laspina.
This Loverbox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 5.
Sybil
Conducted by Mason, Luke found himself back.
back in the roof garden after the usual traverse of twisting, winding corridors.
The impatient Cagliostro arose immediately, anxious for his own interview with the master,
but on his way out stopped to whisper in Luke's ear.
Well, is he satisfied? What did he ask you? What did you say to him?
Luke's lips twitched with amusement. His gray eyes danced.
Friend Cagliostro, I was asked if I believe in magic, and I said I did.
The occultist pale blue eyes stared incredulously at him.
Well, you're rather surprising, Mr. Porter.
I had no idea that you were far enough along on the road to believe in the tremendous underlying powers and forces
which the average individual doesn't even suspect, let alone believe in.
Well, well, well.
Down the corridor behind the retreating Mason, Luke could hear that astonishing echo of well, well,
as Cagliostro went to his interview.
The breakfast table had been removed.
A gaily red vis-a-vis swing had been stood up in its place, as if in preparation for someone.
Luke dropped into one side of it and began mulling over his experiences of the past night,
and that morning, swinging back and forth as he thought.
That Guy Fain was a monomaniac on the subject of black magic he could see readily.
What he disliked was the implication that the innocent Sybil Fane was to be involved
to her own injury in some of Guy Fain's villainous or criminal practices.
Moreover, Luke himself was also being drawn into them,
if he was to believe the hints contained in the words of the master the night before.
Just how he could be useful to the black magician he could not imagine,
and he wondered how much of his knowledge on the subject
could safely be imparted to Cagliostro Moderno,
whose ingenious nature he had sensed even at their first meeting.
Luke did not believe that the little Herbert Benny cared to
be drawn into such vile practices as Guy Fane would be guilty of.
To a certain extent then, Herbert Benny might be trusted,
and if his knowledge of black magic was more than merely theoretical,
perhaps he would understand why Guy Fane imagined he could rob another man of fine physique,
handsome features for his own vicious purposes.
Sunkin in his puzzled thoughts, Luke did not see a slender girlish figure
that tripped from the doorway across the garden path toward him,
and came to a stop before the swing.
Then he looked up, startled for a moment.
Sybil's blonde hair had been cut in a modern bob,
but with its fluffy curls it made a soft frame about her face.
She lifted her eyes to him,
and the artist almost cried out with exultation.
So beautiful was their purple pansy velvetyness.
The play of alert and arch-intelligence lightened the lovely face
that he had seen the night before in soft repose.
Only one defect, if defect it was, made Sybil's eyes seem
deep with mystery.
The eyebrows that outlined them above were much darker than her hair,
making her eyes and her crimson lips stand out with startling prominence on her pale skin.
The artist sprang to his feet.
Miss Fane?
The girl put out both hands in such friendly fashion that Luke dropped formality at once.
Her charm, her poise, her absolute ingenuousness,
made their impression upon the man as well as upon the artist.
He took the slender hands in his
They stood for a moment in silence
Looking at each other with interested eyes
Then Sybil spoke in a soft repressed little voice
With a nervous, undertone trembling through it
Are you, are you
My lover?
The artist remained silent for an astonished moment
His mobile lips parting slightly
With the shock of her words
Some movement in the doorway drew his eyes
The grey-haired Alden was standing there
"'Dowena-like, one finger ever so slightly uplifted as if in mourning.
"'He remembered her words of the previous night.
"'May I be your lover?' he said quickly.
"'She nodded with sweet simplicity,
"'on his purple eyes still upon him.
"'Her hands clung with a soft pressure that stirred his heart strangely.
"'He swore to himself that no harm should touch this innocent,
"'enuous girl if he could foresee and prevent it.'
"'Let us sit on the parapet,' proposed Sybil, gaily drawing him to the garden wall,
which overhung the black moat.
"'There are so many things I want to ask you,
"'and I am so glad you are handsome, dear lover.
"'I have always been afraid you wouldn't look the way I wished.'
"'And I do?' smiled Luke,
"'letting himself fall and with the mood of the girl as one humours an innocent child.
"'Oh, I love your great eyes,' she said honestly,
"'and your teeth are so nice when you smile,
and you have a kind of air.
You see, lover, I've never yet seen any man
but the servants here.
My cousin Guy never lets anyone see him
because he has weak eyes, poor dear,
and cannot come out in the sun,
and you are so different from Mason and the other men.
I should hope so, was Luke's fervent, though unspoken comment.
Mrs. Alden advanced from the doorway,
civil turned toward her.
Old nurse with a welcoming smile.
Oh, Alden, dear, isn't my lover beautiful?
The ardent admiration in her voice brought color to the artist's tan cheeks, but he met the unsmiling gaze of Alden with frank sincerity.
Isn't Sybil the loveliest thing the world has ever seen?
He asked of no one in particular, but his voice vibrated with an emotion that Alden noted, if the girl did not.
The older woman stood near the two as they sat on the parapet.
She looked down into the moat below, Luke still holding the girl's slender hands in his,
artist eyes feasting upon her blonde loveliness
enhanced by the crude embroideries on the white woolen sports frock
did not realize at first what Alden was saying
then when she repeated her words he gave them alert attention
realizing that she spoke with a hidden meaning
nobody could hope to swim unhurt through that black water
she was saying significantly
ten feet wide and eight feet deep is that sluggish water
Mr. Porter and look
She leaned across the parapet, pointing urgently at something whitish that floated in the turbid water.
As Luke leaned over to look, there was the movement of some long, slimy thing below,
and the whitish article went whirling in the eddies caused by the abrupt movement of that water snake.
It was the body of a dove. The poor thing's plumage was soiled with viscid green and darker stains that might have been dried blood.
Luke's eyes went to Alden's and mute inquiry.
The woman shook her head as if she either could not or would not explain.
Sybil, however, was not so backward.
You're wondering about that poor dove?
She asked softly.
Oh, that is one thing I don't like.
I don't indeed.
I've told my cousin Guy hundreds of times
that I just couldn't bear it to have my doves killed for sacrifices.
No matter how great the cause.
Her voice trembled slightly,
and Luke saw that the pansy eyes were moist.
But he is above worry.
over the life of a dove
when he is seeking wonderful things
that are so much more important.
There was a dreamy look now in the purple eyes.
Alden looked at her charge,
a tragic impotence on her wrinkled face.
Now it is a dove, she said,
not directly to Luke,
but as if she were talking to herself.
The other day it was a young lamb,
and it may someday be another lamb.
Luke felt cold chills
traversing his spinal column.
This black magician then was actually sacrificing lives to his devilish gods.
Could it be possible that Sybil and he himself are already devoted to that devil worship?
Luke told himself that in future he would not stir without the automatic in his pocket.
The tenseness of his gray eyes did not escape Alden's observation.
She sighed as if in relief.
Don't let's talk about it, hastily interpolated Sybil with a shudder.
I just cannot get used to it.
I've told Cousin Guy many times that I'm sure the high powers
would appreciate fine fruits or choice flowers or incense,
as well as a poor little dove's life.
Shall we talk about painting you, Sybil? suggested Luke,
the artist in him gaining the mastery.
She clapped her hands gaily.
That would be fun, lover.
Call me Luke, dear, that is my name.
Luke, how odd, but I like it.
Where are your canvases and brushes?
in colors, Luke turned to Alden.
I left the whole business in my car outside in the garage.
Can I manage to get outside the castle?
A mysterious smile came over Alden's face.
No, Mr. Porter, you cannot.
What?
Exploded Luke.
Alden's finger went to her lips again.
It would be better for you to ask Mason to send a man for your painting things,
she suggested pointedly.
reluctantly Luke assented.
He did not like the idea that he was virtually a prisoner in the castle,
but in view of more important things, he put that thought aside for the time being.
Mason sent a page for the artist's paraphernalia.
The easel was set up in the garden and Sybil seated herself on the parapet.
Little pointed chin on drawn up knees about which her arms were clasped in childish fashion.
Luke silent, prepared his palate, and began to paint.
in this manner the morning fled and when luncheon was announced he hardly cared to leave his work which was shaping up in a most gratifying manner after luncheon i'll pose again sybil promised fluttering around the easel in delight at the more than vague promise luke had given to her portrait come luke let's hurry with lunch the dining-room in feign-walled castle was extraordinarily handsome luke betrayed his artist's interest the moment it burst upon him
It was beautifully panelled with solid mahogany to judge from the massiveness of the carving that decorated the wood.
Around the entire room ran a jutting balcony, enclosed in a marvelously carved balustrade.
Above this was a latticework screen.
For just what purpose the screen had been designed, Luke did not know,
but he concluded that it afforded a fine vantage point from which an invisible observer could look down into the room.
Sibyl waited, standing by her chair at the table.
presently a woman entered the room, a woman of proud dignity, tall, stately, but a wreck of what must once have been magnificent womanhood.
Flashing black eyes gleamed under heavy brow, still black, making a strange contrast with snowy hair piled high.
Never had the artist seen a more melancholy and interesting countenance than that of Madame Fane.
He could the better observe it now than at a distance as he had the night previous.
The simplicity of her coiffure
made more pronounced the sophistication
of the concealed fire smouldering in the twin volcanoes
under her heavy brows.
Those occasional brilliant flashes
betrayed the vivid and powerfully restrained personality.
Rarely, however, did she raise her heavy lids
to look anyone directly in the eye.
Rather did she turn her face slightly,
replying in monosyllables which discouraged
direct conversation with her.
A strange, silent woman
who gave the impression of forces ill-spent and coping vainly with something bigger than herself.
And hints, Chari of so little energy or vitality as might escape her in a single word.
Sybil seated herself after Madame Fain, and motioned looked to pay no attention to her aunt,
as the girl called the older woman.
Conversation during luncheon lagged.
This might have been Madame Fain's cold abstraction or Sybil's intimation that Guy Fain lunched on the balcony, hidden behind the lattice.
There was something too, ominous and oppressive in the older woman's heavy glance,
which Luke more than once found fixed with strange intensity upon either Sybil or himself,
nor was this all.
He felt as if a thousand mocking evil eyes were watching his every movement from behind that lattice.
Although the brilliantly lighted dining room must have been hard on Guy Fane's weak eyes,
unless the master was posing with regard to his mysterious malady.
Luke was glad when the meal was over,
and Sybil drew him back to the garden to finish her portrait.
An inquiry as to the whereabouts of Herbert Benny
led to the response from the girl that he was probably with her cousin,
preparing himself for the greatest experiment of all,
the subject of which she was ignorant about,
but for which her cousin had prepared her mentally to look forward joyfully.
Cagliostro, in effect, did not show up all afternoon.
At dinner, however, he appeared,
serious, distant of mean, obviously wrapped,
up in his thoughts.
Luke's attempts to draw him into conversation met with a decided rebuff.
The occultist took himself seriously.
Whether or not the master had divulged the object of his experiments,
Luke could not discover without a private conversation with Cagliostro,
and Cagliostro evaded him neatly after dinner.
The autumn evening had grown slightly chill.
Sibyl therefore led the way to her boudoir,
a charming room where she had a piano, a harp, and a violin.
Her taste, she told Luke, had run largely to music because it stirred her emotion so beautifully.
Guy had provided teachers, women always, from time to time, but for some reason none of them remained long.
Just when they were getting interesting, Sybil said regretfully, and were telling me more about the outside world they disappeared.
But I've learned to amuse myself a lot with music, Luke. Shall I play to you?
She played. The evening wore on to 11 o'clock.
Mason appeared in the doorway.
with a silver tray on which steamed the spiced wine, which Luke suspected of supperific qualities.
Sybil sceptors innocently enough, but Luke managed to avoid drinking the nightcap except for a few
mouthfuls, which he took partly out of sheer curiosity, and partly to disarm the waiting and watchful
Mason. That night, Luke let himself slip into a half-sleep, induced probably by what little wine
he had taken, and partly by lack of much sleep the night before. In some subtle manner, strange thoughts
entered his unguarded mind, wild dreams through which flitted figures clad in medieval vestures,
carrying tall candlesticks with flickering lights atop. As he dozed, he seemed to hear snatches
of talk. So much a dream was it that he did not make the necessary effort to awake and make sure
that it was imagination only. A figure short and ungainly, with veiled face, abtruded itself.
To his half-day's consciousness, there seemed to be an atmosphere of thick,
murky, precious, in the vicinity of this veiled being, an atmosphere weighing so heavily upon
his spirits that he felt his throat choking physically. But the sensation was also of a moral
cast, a shrinking of the higher senses with repugnance. Another figure, tall and thin,
impressed him with the deep, shuddering pity, such as one might feel for a soul that regards
its own deliberate ruin with a fright, yet holds to its terrible course as if change
by bonds too powerful to be broken.
He is a handsome fellow, a voice murmured.
These fine, shapely limbs please me well.
A hand touched Luke lightly.
At the loathsome contact he shrank with a half-mown.
There was a grim laugh.
The speaker leaned more closely over the sleeper
who began to draw gasping breaths as if oppressed beyond endurance.
How my very nearness affects this youth.
the spells of Lord Lucifer have indeed been powerful.
They have made me another and loftier being than mere man.
Awful pride, reigning in the words.
Tell me, dear mother, mockingly,
how long will it be for this youth to grow so ardent and his wooing
that Sybil's susceptible heart so carefully prepared will yield to his love-making?
If they are not for each other, it will be never, declared Madam Fain.
Oh, how you love to croak your woeful prophecies.
Lucifer, Lord Lucifer, grant my prayer soon.
I can wait no longer.
My monstrous, my execrable body is poisoning my soul with detestation.
You awaken him, warned the other.
He is starting and muttering in his sleep.
Come.
Both figures melted into nothingness.
Luke fell into a deep and dreamless sleep.
End of Chapter 5
Chapter 6 of the Gargoyle by Greil Aspina
The Sliberbox Recordings in the Public Domain
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 6
The story so far
Luke Porter, a young painter, joins Herbert Benny
Cagliostro Madardo, in a visit to Fain Walt Castle
Where live Guy Fain and his mother
And a beautiful girl called Sybil
Cagliostro is an occultist and pseudo-magician
and has come in response to Guy Fane's request for his aid in an important experiment in magic,
assisted by a young man of fine and handsome physique, Luke.
Guy Fane proves to be a monstrosity so hideous that he appears to no one in the light,
and wears a thick black veil at all times,
so that even his own mother will be spared the sight of his frightful countenance.
Luke learns through Alden, Sybil's old nurse,
that Guy Fane is planning some terrible attack upon Sybil's immortal soul.
She takes him behind the curtains, and from his hiding place he hears Guy Fane and his mother plotting,
and learns that the monstrosity plans to free himself from his hideous body by black magic
and attain a new and beautiful body for himself.
To Luke, this seems a madcap, preposterous idea.
Luke and Cagliostra held virtually prisoners in the castle.
The driver edges up, and the moat is full of venomous snakes.
Luke finds that Guy Fane is sacrificing doves and lambs to Lucifer in preparation for his great work of black
magic. Meantime, Luke is falling in love with Sybil.
Chapter 6, Mephistopheles.
Mason appeared at Luke's door in the morning, brought another message from the master,
who sent word that he would like a few words with Mr. Porter, if possible, directly after
breakfast.
He has arranged to receive you in his study, sir. You may find it more agreeable, sir,
as it is fairly well-lighted. I may say, sir, that this is most unusual on Mr. Fingham
He rarely receives visitors except in complete darkness, beamed Mason.
Where is Mr. Maderto this morning? Luke inquired. He was anxious to get in touch with Herbert
Benny at the earliest occasion to see how much the little man knew of Guy Fane's plans.
I believe he is in the chapel, sir, busy with something for the master.
With this, Luke had to contend himself, and immediately after breakfast at which Sybil did not
up here, he followed Mason again down winding stairs and through mazes of corridors.
The room into which he was finally ushered was a spacious apartment, fairly well lighted by
carefully shaded candles and sconces on the walls. To a height of four feet from the floor,
the walls were lined with solidly packed bookcases, padded armchairs invited. At the farther end
of the room, in a niche in the wall, a great crystal globe hanging on a hardly discernible
silvery chain, caught reflected, and broke into shimmering rainbow colors the soft radiance of the
shaded candles. The light, however, was not the honest glow of the average candle,
but a sickly reddish light augmented by the shades which were dull red. At the side of the room
far back a delicate lattice extending to eight feet in height, carried with its presence the inference
that the master was there. Pray forgive me if I startle you, begged Guy Fain's voice with plaintive
intonation. I know it must seem strange to converse with a man who remains hidden from sight,
but alas, my affliction has laid this heavy cross upon me. You will note that I have done my poor
best to light the room better, Mr. Porter. Please try to do me the justice of believing that I am not
a mummer who attempts to mystify by such cheap methods as darkness and an unseen speaker.
My magic is of an entirely different type, I assure you.
Won't you drop a chair near the screen?
Thank you so much.
Ah, I feel sure we shall get along famously,
and that your presence here will be affraught with much satisfaction to me.
Luke sensed the undertone of something not in accord with the words.
Guy Fane was amusing himself by conveying one meaning to the artist,
while he laughed inwardly at a significance in his words,
intelligible only to himself.
instinctively Luke was on guard, but in settling the chair he seated himself in such a way that his face was partly in shadow.
He did not intend that the unseen watcher should startle him and read that astonishment on his face.
When you came here as Cagliostro Moderno's assistant, it was understood that you were heart whole and unmarried.
I must reassure myself on this point.
It is the basis of a plan that furnishes the reason for Sybil's existence.
I cannot explain fully now, but you shall understand all within a comparatively short time,
when I have every reason to hope you will be furnished with the key to the mystery.
The first important thing you are here for is to become the suitor of my cousin Sybil,
and I shall not frown upon your addresses.
Luke sprang from his chair in some heat.
That is too much.
What do you take me for that you make such a cold-blooded proposal?
I am not the man to fall in love at your behest, I assure you, to say nothing of the implied disrespect toward the young lady.
Calm yourself, my hot-blooded and enthusiastic young friend,
sued the master's voice, reaching out after him as he paced the floor, with almost tangible forcefulness.
I take you for a gentleman, but consider I know Sybil's prospects.
I have her interests at heart.
Her own father desired that she be amoured within these walls until I,
considered it wise for her to emerge. He did not wish her to fall victim to some fortune-hunter
who might rob her of all and leave her broken-hearted. Her private fortune, Mr. Porter, is immense.
Which doesn't interest me in the slightest, cried Luke angrily. Ah, but consider, I have thought long and
gravely how to provide a suitable husband for my pretty little innocent cousin. Through my occult
relationships I tried to find a man. Young, handsome, healthy, heart-free, who might find it easy
to love such a girl as Sybil, and save her from the suffering she might otherwise experience
in less worthy hands. Be honest, Mr. Porter. If you could gain the love and respect of Sybil Fane,
would you? Granted that you grew to love her. Feel it a wrong done the girl to provide her
with a good man who loved her first of all for herself. Luke stopped him abruptly.
I cannot deny that your words are couched in sophistry that carries reluctant conviction to my intellect.
But something tells me.
Oh, how you weary me, you cautious and particular man.
With your some things that tell you quite nothing.
Forgive me if I point out that you are meeting honest frankness on my part with intellectual distrust on yours.
Can sincerity be so rare to your experience that you cannot recognize it when you meet it face to face?
The speaker's voice was so earnest with deep feeling that Luke almost discredited his own
intuitional misgivings and his knowledge of the speaker's nefarious schemes.
On the surface, you may be right in what you propose, Mr. Fain.
But there is something despicably small in discussing Miss Fain in such a way.
There you are again, the voice reproached him.
You know that the thing is innately right, but you hold that to discuss it isn't delicate.
What strange reasoning, perhaps.
Perhaps you're not the man I thought you to be, sir.
Would you like to retire from this indelicate situation?
Fine irony in the intonation.
If so, you only have to ring for Mason.
He will get your belongings.
You can shake off the dust of Fainwald Castle from your too delicate person.
Luke sat down abruptly.
This would not be what he wanted.
Not now.
The die was cast.
He knew that he could not leave the castle, leaving Sybil to the tender mercies of this strange.
monomaniac. He spoke quickly, abruptly, and with sincerity. I admire your cousin hardly,
Mr. Fane. She is a most unusual girl for these modern flapper days. I can hardly say that my
admiration will ripen to something warmer, but I ardently wish to remain.
Mr. Porter, I cannot find words to thank you for your decision with all that it implies
significantly.
For it, I believe I shall owe you a lifelong debt.
Credit me with not being as lacking in delicacy
as you may have been led to believe by this brief conversation.
You will, I'm sure, entertain other and stronger feelings toward me
as our acquaintance progresses to its destined end.
Luke sensed again some subtle significance in the words that as yet he could not understand.
It is to be hoped I will, he retorted pointedly.
The unseen laughed softly as if to himself, and that thrill of strange distrust shot through Luke's mind again.
Look, young man, and say if such an innocent and legitimate temptation was ever offered you before in your life.
The wall above one bookcase seemed to become misty.
It faded more and more.
In its place there grew the soft light of an autumn morning.
And as the picture grew clearer, Luke realized that by some ledger domain or hypnotic trick, he was looking directly at Sybil Fane, as she stood among her doves in the roof garden.
Is it not easy to love such a woman? whispered the voice of the unseen.
And easy to win her regard. Could you find a fair woman the world or one more easily molded to your ideal?
I warn you, sir, to make haste with your wooing.
In two weeks that girl comes of age,
with the rat to go out into the world she longs to see.
Will you let her fall into unscrupulous hands?
Save her if you are a true man,
from those unknown perils that otherwise await her.
Luke replied from his heart.
Mr. Fain, what you are and what your designs and motives may be,
I do not know. But I warn you, if I fall in love with your cousin, nobody, not you yourself,
shall ever lay a finger on her to harm or even to startle her.
Ah, there speaks the kind of man to whom I can gladly give my cousin's hand,
applauded Guy Fane approvingly.
I know you will protect her from everyone but yourself, ambiguously.
Before Luke could resent the delicate insinuation, the master continued,
If you do not mind, I shall be excused now, as I have much to do.
I hope to see you again within a few days, Mr. Porter.
And I hope then that all my warm wishes shall have come to fruition.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of the Gargoyle by Gerea Lesbina.
This Liberbox's recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 7.
Alden's Secret
A carefree day passed in Sybil's company
The portrait Luke had begun
Was growing into a vivid likeness of this charming and genuous girl
Who in no way concealed the interest she felt for him
Firmly believing the artist to be her accepted lover and future husband
As the picture came to completion
Luke realized that he was devoted to Sybil Fain's service
Body and soul no matter at what cost
During the early evening he managed to get a minute's conversation
with Herbert Benny. The little man, draped in a black mantle, was just emerging from his
room as Luke happened to be passing. The occultist drew back with what seemed real resentment
when Luke almost collared him in his eagerness. Do not touch me, he cried hastily. I am engaged
in work of such a lofty character that I dare not come in contact with souls as immersed in
materialism as yours. You needn't shout so, my good Coglioastro, the artist protested. I'm not
deaf, really. Without, however, lowering his voice, the adept continued as he tried to slip
past the young man. Pure blind fool, who are you to accost one who has been favored by the great
Lord Lucifer himself? Stand aside and let me pass. Are you crazy? Luke managed to ask in
astonishment. Stand aside, shouted Cagliostro Moderna fiercely. The master awaits. But I have
something important to tell you, my good Benny. We shall meet again, Mr.
"'I assure you,'
"'loudly declared the occultist.
"'Until then, beware how you approach me uninvited.'
With that he slid off down the corridor
at a pace that closely resembled flight,
leaving the artist staring after him
with a conviction that magic,
either black or white,
had turned a little man's brain.
Thoughtful, Luke returned to Sybil's boudoir.
"'Don't know what's come over, Cagliostro,'
he invited more to Alden than to the girl.
He's simply fed up to the neck with mystery
and refuses even to shake hands with me.
Alden's wrinkled face grew tense.
She moved across the room so that she would pass close to Luke,
and as she walked nearer, she murmured in low tones.
Four o'clock this morning, the roof garden, don't fail me.
Luke nodded his head casually as if in time to the music cybil was now bringing out of the harp.
But Alden catching his eyes understood.
At dinner that evening, Luke avoided with suspicion any food that might serve as conveyance for an opiate.
But the only thing that fell under his suspicion was a highly spiced pudding with wine sauce.
He noticed that Madame Fain ate no sauce, but Sibyl, fond of sweets, called for a second helping of it.
His doubts were confirmed later that evening as Sybil complained of drowsiness and retired early.
Excitement and anxiety served Luke in good stead.
Sleep apparently had deserted him.
He was wide awake and alert in every fiber of his being.
Understanding that no locks could keep him from inspection by visitors,
he decided to feign sleep.
He therefore threw himself upon the bed as if overcome by drowsiness.
Under his pillow he slipped his automatic and his electric flash.
Well for him that he took this course instead of going directly to the garden
to wait there for his appointment with Alden.
In less than half an hour after he had flung himself upon the bed,
wholly dressed, the tapestry stirred vaguely in the light,
which he had left on by the bedside,
and the tall form of Madame Fain emerged and advanced to his side.
She bent over and regarded him keenly.
He could feel that fixed gaze penetrating even with his eyes closed.
After a long moment, she sighed involuntarily, said,
Poor fellow!
And her muffled footfalls died away.
It was some time before he dared open his eyes,
but when he did so, the room was quiet,
and he felt that he was alone once more.
Evidently, she had wished to make sure that he slept soundly
that meant there was something afoot.
Luke lay with him.
relaxed muscles for what seemed ages before he very cautiously consulted his wristwatch to find it close upon midnight that mystic hour when tombs open and unhappy spirits leave their moldy beds for a brief space
an uncontrollable presentment gripped his heart with intolerable foreboding luke was intuitive just now he could have sworn without knowing precisely what he meant that evil was stalking abroad he could not stand it any longer to lie supine
on the bed, waiting.
He got up, deciding to slip out into the garden before something happened to detain him.
If he chanced to be missed, was it likely that he would be sought out there?
And if discovered there, what more natural than the moon, the starry vault, and a sentimental
temperament had combined to attract him to enjoy the romantic beauties of the night?
Luke, with the electric flash and the pistol, searched his apartment as thoroughly as he could,
to satisfy himself that at least his departure would go unnoticed.
He then slipped a pistol into his pocket, retaining the torch,
which was heavy enough to make a formidable weapon at a pinch.
He unlocked the door and opened it cautiously.
Not a sound did it make.
Evidently it had been well oiled by some interested person.
Up and down the corridor he glanced.
The flickering candles guttered in their sockets,
but disclosed no one in sight.
But he was not a dozen paces.
from his door before he heard the unmistakable rustling of garments,
from which direction he could not tell.
He sprang back, regained the shelter of his room,
and with the dorajarre peered out into the corridor.
A figure draped in flowing, trailing garments of white glided into view.
As it approached almost noiselessly save for the frou-fru of its robes,
Luke's blood congealed with strange surmises.
In this strange place anything was possible.
Was he indeed looking with startling eyes upon a visitant from another sphere?
His flesh crept at the unearthly suggestion conveyed by the gliding movement of that white-robed creature, whatever it might be.
He shrank back into the welcome shelter of his gloomy room, hoping that if this were a manifestation of life from beyond the grave,
it would pass on its uneasy way without stopping.
His blood curdled in his veins.
Heartbeats died into sluggish thuds.
Nearer glided the wraith. Breath almost failed the young man, cold sweat standing out and beads on his icy brow. It passed, still with that soft whispering sound of garments, and whipped around the corner of the corridor. Everything was still again.
Luke flung the cold perspiration from his forehead. Reaction set in. With a sudden revulsion of feeling, his blood ran hot in his veins again, and he sprang out to make sure just what it was.
was that he had seen.
After all, a spirit's robes would not have rustled, as did this wraiths.
He gained on the gliding specter, which approached the door of the master's study,
entering as the portal opened silently.
As it turned, Luke drew back with a half-stifled groan, so severe was the shock which
he received.
The face that he saw was the face of Sybil Fain.
The door closed upon her, the girl whom he now knew he loved, the girl who had stolen to
visit her mysterious cousin in secret while the world slept.
Ugly suspicions crowded upon him.
Was it possible that she loved her cousin and secretly passed the nights in his company?
This girl upon whose innate purity and innocence Luke would have staked his life a few minutes
before?
Why then was Guy Fane so anxious to secure for her a husband?
To cover up his own derelictions toward this girl whom he had wronged?
The incredible fact remained.
Luke had seen with his own eyes,
Sybil Fane creeping at midnight to her cousin's study.
He turned back down the corridor,
feeling his way along the wall in the half-light almost stupidly.
When another figure crept up behind him and laid a hand on his shoulder,
he whirled, bringing the pistol out into position with a lithe movement.
The wrinkled, sad face of Alden looked pityingly at him in the dim light.
You saw?
she whispered.
"'My God, yes,' he groaned.
"'He had never been so unutterably wretched in his life.
"'It was a revelation that something outside himself
"'could so stir the depths of his being.
"'Just like that, when the moon comes to fullness for months past,'
"'whispered Alden cautiously,
"'as she walked like a dream woman to that room.
"'I do not know if she walks in her sleep
"'or if he has hypnotized her by his magical arts
"'and his influence over her.
Luke caught at the woman's arm impulsively.
Say it again.
He got out hoarsely.
Say it again.
She is not mistress of her own actions.
Alden shook her head mournfully.
How like a man, always ready to believe the worst.
You imagined that my lamb went like a bad woman to meet her cousin?
Oh, I could not forgive you for your suspicions.
Did I not know how one's confidence in everything good and true is shaken after a short residence here?
One evening comes to doubt the Almighty.
It is in the air this evil that is supreme here,
but to believe my Sybil, the poor innocent lamb guilty of,
Oh, you of all men should have believed in her against the entire world.
Luke listened in shame to Alden's arraignment.
I'm sorry, he said simply,
but for a moment I thought how easy it would be for him.
Good heaven, while we stand talking here,
who knows what is happening to Sybil.
He whirled round and pulled the woman with him.
I have my pistol.
We'll see whether his magic will protect him from that.
Alden caught at him with her free hand.
Hush, don't be rash, Mr. Porter.
Trust me that no harm has yet befallen my lamb.
Madam Fane is with her also,
and only a virgin can be of use to the master in his experiments.
She is safe.
But there must be something we can do,
begged Luke, almost frantic with apprehension
in spite of Alden's attempt at reassurance.
Yes, there is something we can do. Follow me.
She withdrew her hand and walked noiselessly but swiftly down the corridor.
At last she entered what seemed a blind passage,
glanced both up and down the corridor to make sure no one else was in sight,
then pressed upon a neural of the rich carving upon one of the walls.
A portion of the wall moved slowly, disclosing yawning blackness.
Alden stepped inside motioning the artist to follow.
She touched another button within, and the door closed upon them.
In the light of a pocket flash which she took from her apron pocket,
she found matches and lighted candles, disclosing a room about ten by ten feet,
holding a couch and a table, two chairs,
and piled against one wall a quantity of tinned food,
as well as two full-gallon bottles of water.
Guy Fane himself does not know about this room.
how I found it years ago
would make too long a story
I kept the knowledge to myself
not knowing when it might prove useful
of late I have often thought
I would conceal Sybil here if the worst
came to the worst
she could stay here for a couple of weeks
while I got into the outside world and procured help
there's a small window up there covered with ivy
she would be lonesome but safe
she motioned him to a chair
and herself sank upon the couch
heaving a deep sigh as she did so
I have a long story to tell you, a painful one to me, but only by listening to it can you understand why I am so absolutely devoted to my charge.
I only fear what I have to tell you may turn you from her. If you are less a man than I hope you are.
Why speak in riddles? I have discovered tonight that I love her. That is sufficient, is it not?
Alden regarded him steadily for a moment. Her blue eyes were moist than from what she must have read in his face.
Well, let me tell you the story as quickly as I can.
I have no regrets, Mr. Porter, for myself.
But when I think of Sybil, I wonder if God is punishing me through her.
Do you believe that he would deliver my little girl over to the various devils of hell for their sport?
To punish her wretched mother for having loved not wisely but too well?
Luke admitted a low whistle.
You mean that Sybil is your daughter? How can that be?
"'She is my own child,' declared Alden stubbornly.
"'And now tell me, do you find her less desirable
"'because her father and mother loved each other sufficiently
"'to despise the world's conventions?'
"'Stop, please. I have already told you that I love Sybil.
"'I hope to make her my wife as soon as we can get her out of this devilish place.
"'That part of it is settled.
"'What I'd like to know is
"'how you come to be playing made to your own child.
Does Madame Fain know?
Nobody knows, Mr. Porter, not even Sybil.
And if Madame Fain knew, she would have me out of the castle,
or worse yet, down in some secret dungeon the next moment.
Yet, Madam Fain knows who and what Sybil is.
That is the reason that I fear Madam and the master.
For heaven's sake, stop reddling, Luke said impatiently.
Get at the pith of it, can't you?
How can I begin?
It tears my very soul to go all over it once more.
Yet I must! I must!
The artist's pity rose for the unhappy and mysterious woman.
I'm sorry if I appeared abrupt or harsh, he said gently.
But it is important that you give me all the information you can,
just as quickly as possible.
It may throw light on a confusing situation.
I can assure you of one thing.
I believe that you did nothing from bad motives.
Sybil's mother could have been mistaken, but not wicked.
Alden smiled wanly.
For that, I thank you, Mr. Porter, here is the situation.
She began the story, telling it in short, terse sentences,
each word of which was fraught with significance.
Finding himself in financial straits,
Arthur Fain married a wealthy heiress,
who tried in vain to win the love of her handsome husband.
Madam Fain discovered that her husband had married her for money,
and that he was intimate with the daughter.
of a nearby farmer, a girl whom she had never seen, but whom she believed to be the commonest of the common.
In the fury of insincentinate rage, the wife planned revenge. She was a woman of strong passions.
Within the castle she had happily built for her husband and herself. She had a strange chapel equipped,
and there she spent all her time alone. After the birth of his son and heir, Arthur Fane left the castle,
renouncing with a kind of horror the young mother, the child, and the money he had married to procure.
Until that day, Mr. Porter, Alden declared with simple dignity.
Mr. Fane and I had been friends only.
But when I found that Madame Fane had revenged herself upon him in some secret and horrible way,
that revolted him to such an extent that he would no longer live under the same roof with her,
I gave myself to him gladly, proudly, and have never regretted for me.
myself, having taken that step to lighten a little the burden of his remorse and grief.
She continued.
Only once did he refer to the reason for his desertion of Madame Fain.
My God, he said to me, I can never banish that sight from before my eyes.
She lifted the cover and showed me my child.
It was not mine.
Before God, it was not mine.
It was the offspring of some devil out of hell, but not my flesh and blood, I swear.
Arthur Fane fled with the farmer's daughter.
Untrained to any work that fitted him,
to support a wife, he struggled along with his faithful and devoted companion
for several hard years of poverty and suffering.
Typhoid fever attacked his enfeebled frame,
robbing Alden of the father of her child,
then a lovely little girl of two years.
Broken in health, unable to care for herself and still less for the child.
Alden permitted an appeal to be made to Madam Fane for the offspring of Arthur Fane.
I was sick, hopeless, miserably unhappy, longing only to die.
Madam Fain sent word that she not really did not care to see me,
but that if I would give up the child to her absolutely,
she would bring it up as if it were her own,
an expiation of some wrong which she admitted she had done to her husband.
Sybil was sent to her,
but as I grew stronger, my longing for my baby grew,
I applied to Madame Fane under an assumed name
for a position as made in her household.
She needed a nurse for Sybil, and God let me stay to watch over my little girl.
And then he must have sent me also, the artist murmured in low tones.
And the sooner we start to get her out of this hellish place, the better.
We can do nothing tonight, Mr. Porter.
Sybil has disappeared in this manner for months now, always at the full of the moon or near that time.
Madame Fayon assists the master, which fact in a measure is a safeguard for my little girl.
And I know how I cannot explain that for tonight she is guarded.
Where is this devil's chapel where Guy Fane performs his experiments?
Ask Luke grimly.
I'd like to take a look at it.
Alden mused thoughtfully.
It might be managed if they are still in the master's study.
But they may have gone into the chapel to perform invocations and then...
I'm not afraid of that silly rot, Luke snorted scornfully.
Alden regarded him with pity.
That is because you do not know how powerful the master is, she asserted sadly.
You would be a babe in his hands.
Luke laughed regarding his strong, capable hands meaningly.
She answered quickly.
Oh, that isn't what I mean at all.
He can look at you, with his face unveiled,
and you would be frozen at his mercy.
You don't know.
Nonsense.
I'll risk it anyway.
It's quite possible that I can outlaw.
stare him, Luke suggested with grim humor.
Perhaps, but I doubt it, she answered quite seriously.
And now I must ask you to restrain your impatience until I tell you it is time to act in safety.
Tomorrow you can, if you will, try to get word to anybody you know outside.
Perhaps you may be successful where I have found the attempt futile, sadly.
One thing you must promise me, Mr. Porter, Sybil must never know the secret of her birth.
She must never learn that I am her mother.
Her pale blue eyes pleaded with him.
The artist, sensing her fine desire for sacrifice, acquiesced unwillingly.
We can go then and see if the chapel is unoccupied.
She opened the secret panel showing Luke how the button worked,
and the two emerged hastily, closing it behind them.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of the Gargoyle Bagrea La Spina.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 8, Lucifer's Chapel
Follow me, make no sound.
Luke followed down dark passages, up and down, winding stairways.
At last, a closed door at the end of a long corridor was reached.
Alden turned with a warning gesture.
I'm now taking you where you can unswing, look down into the interior,
of the chapel, I found the place years ago by accident.
She shuddered convulsively.
Good God, it was horrible.
I have not been there since, and I cannot face the evil that dwells there.
You must go in alone.
Luke's hand was turning the knob with caution, but he whispered sternly.
If I do not return within a half hour, you must open the door and come for me, for civil's sake.
To himself he was thinking resentfully that if he was,
Herbert Benny's mind were not so easily unbalanced.
The little occultist might have been of assistance.
As matters stood, however,
Cogliostro-Moderno would be a nuisance instead of a help,
owing to his blind mad devotion to occultism.
Luke opened the door.
A stream of brilliant ruby radiance shot out through the chink,
casting a lurid and ghastly gleam upon the white face of the poor mother,
who dropped to her knees with a terrified gasp,
and began to pray fervently.
The artist looked within.
There was a long, narrow gallery with apparently no discernible outlets save the door by which he was now entering.
A lattice-work screen rose from the solid stone balustrade, forming a shield for him while permitting at the same time an unobstructed view of the immense room below.
Through the lacy interstices of this screen there poured the intolerably brilliant red light.
Luke closed the door quietly and stepped close to the screen.
What he saw below filled him with unutterable horror and loathing.
He was looking upon one of those unholy places which have been desecrated to mocking ceremonials
by the foul imaginations of perverted men and women, devoted body and soul to the worship of evil.
The room was a large one, and the crimson light illuminated it sufficiently for him to distinguish fairly well as the decorations and furnishings.
All of a character so bizarre, so vile, as to force upon him the conclusion that they must have been designed and carried out by diseased imaginations.
Balls and hangings were black, absorbing the radiance of that ruby illumination,
but here and there the artist could distinguish what he felt must have been,
in a white light, embroideries of occult symbols upon the hangings.
Against this backdrop stood at irregular intervals great white crosses before which were sculptured figures in black,
figures that made him shudder with uncontrollable horror at their repulsive and abhorrent ugliness.
It seemed as if the human imagination had here attained the climax of revolting, horrific, distortion and deformity in sculpture and pictorial art.
Not a statue, not a painting, but showed the human face and form in such revolting deformity as to send sickly shutters through the observer's shrinking frame.
The purpose of this ghastly place was obvious.
The red light shining everywhere now attracted Luke's attention.
It originated in a crystal sphere, hung on almost invisible chains in a shrine just back of the altar.
The gleam was not a quiet one.
It played about the heart of that globe, like darting flames of unquiet, unholy fire.
And as these tongues of ruby light played in and out, and licked the surface of the sphere uncannily,
the shadows in the chapel moved and danced, until it seemed to Luke's excited gaze that they actually possessed life,
and only waited the right moment to move from their pedestals
and go horribly forward to worship at that altar.
Evil. Unutterable evil.
Hovered about that glowing sphere.
A fugitive gleam of golden light came from behind a draped doorway
at one side of the altar.
The light grew stronger.
A short squat figure voluminously veiled and black emerged,
carrying a tall candle of black wax that burned with the yellow flame.
The figure advanced to the lower steps of the altar, paused, made a deeply reverent genuflection.
Then Guy, for Luke surmised that it was he, placed the candle in a ready holder at one end of a long marble slab which formed an altar.
Again he bent deeply, then faced about behind the altars if waiting.
The curtain swung aside again, this time admitting a processional of three persons.
And the van strutted with inconceivable pride and dignity,
the short, stout form of Cugliostro, draped in trailing red robes embroidered with black symbols of mysticism.
The occultist bore another candle, which he is solemnly placed at the lower end of the altar, taking his place then beside the master.
The other two worshippers were women.
Madame Fain was the first, kneeling upon the steps before the altar, with a kind of shrinking dread discernible on her face.
She was in black, but the other figure was white-draped.
Luke, a choking sensation in his throat,
recognized the tranquil, unmoved face of Sybil Fain.
The girl went forward to the steps of the shrine,
bowed deeply, then mounted the stairs
until she stood above the two adepts,
and immediately before the crystal globe,
which began to shimmer vaguely with the violent agitation
of those red and evil tongues of lurid light.
Madame Fane arose.
From a great casket at one side she took double handfuls of some powder,
casting it upon a tripod sensor that up to now had apparently been unlighted.
But at once following her action that crystal sphere shot out its tongues of flame.
Longer, longer.
One reached, ignited, the incense.
Tall spirals of smoke poured out, heavy with some eastern fragrance that rose almost overpoweringly to Luke's nostrils.
As he inhaled it reluctantly, it seemed to him that the obscene's,
sculptured figures below began to stir uneasily, coming to life at last.
Madam Fane sank once more upon her knees, her forehead resting on the stare above her.
Sybil continued to stand, immovable, before that glowing sphere from which an occasional
tongue of flame shot out toward her, but retracted before coming in contact with the girl.
Behind the altar, the two magi now raised their arms in frantic invocation toward the shrine of the
Ruby Globe.
Lucifer! Lucifer! Lucifer!
Son of the morning, we offer thee that sacrifice thou hast demanded.
Give us a sign.
Appear, we implore thee.
The hearts of doves and young lambs have I offered thee,
O Lord of the fallen hosts,
tonight I offer the soul of a virgin, a virgin maid, Lord Lucifer.
A sign, a sign that my sacrifice will be acceptable.
Cagliostro was stirring uneasily.
Carity head lifted from between his outstretched arms.
Luke could see inexplicable emotions
following each other over that Cupid's bow mouth
that twisted so oddly.
The squinty blue eyes were now upon Sybil
as she stood motionless before the great globe.
He leaned toward Guy Fain and whispered something hurriedly.
The master bent a dark gaze upon him
through the folds of the veil.
Hushul!
Do you not see you?
that Lord Lucifer showing himself to his worshippers?
Cagliostro offended, shrank back.
From the sphere shot those quivering tongues as of living flame,
licking its surface in gracious curves and reaching out
on either side of Sybil's quiescent form,
like the groping tentacles of an octopus.
The still air began to stir with murmuring sounds.
A soft whining hum vibrated on the atmosphere
as if some unearthly visitant were cleaving,
the ether with sweeping wings as it passed through space.
Luke's knees suddenly gave way under him.
Some potent influence against which he was powerless to resist had pushed him down.
He knelt because he could not stand up,
but he could still stare through the lattice with starting eyes.
Sybil was moving, as if impelled by some irresistible force.
She moved slowly backward down the steps of the shrine
until she reached the marble slab.
Upon this she bent back until she lay upon it arm stiff at her sides.
Guy Fane was throwing his hands into the air with wild, triumphant gestures.
Then he fumbled under his enveloping garments and drew forth a knife.
As the blade flashed upward, Cagliostro Moderno, awakening from his trance,
flung himself forward and knocked the knife clinging and whirring down into the middle of the room.
His face, a mingled materialization of stupefaction and horror, writhed into that squire
weared semblance of a Greek tragic mask, which he had worn on the night he had fled
through the forest from the monster he had seen bending over the bridge.
"'I forbid it!' shouted the little occultist frantically.
"'Fool! Let me alone! How dare you interrupt! Lord Lucifer, I implore!'
Madame Fane had come to her feet and was watching the two, who swayed back and forth as they
struggled on the steps of the altar. The shrouding veils that concealed her son's face were in the
hands of the other mage who tore at them frantically. They parted. From his vantage point, Luke
strained to see, but Guy Fane's back was toward him. Only the tragic mask of Herbert Benny's round
face was visible, and that was frozen into a horror so dreadful, so unbearable, so nearly
verging upon utter madness that Luke's blood congealed in his veins. What was the little man seeing
that he should shrink back, letting the veil fall again over Guy Fain's now motionless figure?
Could it be true that the master could blast
With a look of his terrible eyes
There was a frightful wailing cry
From the occultist's widened lips
He staggered away from the altar
Down the steps stumbling as if blinded
And plunged out of sight
Behind the drapery that hung before the door
By which the procession had entered
Luke tried to get to his feet
He managed to rise and cling to the screen
How to rescue Sybil was his overmastering thought
But until he could conquer that strange weakness
which had overcome him.
It was useless to do other than try, if necessary, to shoot from his concealment,
in the hope of at least terrifying Guy Fain enough to stop the present ceremony.
With this in mind, he fumbled for the automatic.
Madam Fain, however, had run up the steps of the altar.
She bent over the girl.
After a moment she lifted the golden head upon her arm,
regarded Sybil's face intently,
and then addressed her son,
who watched without changing the position he had held
as the horrified Cagliostro fled his presence.
She is coming out of the trance, guy, said Madame Fane almost with eagerness.
You can do nothing more tonight.
Let me take her back to her room, my son.
She almost pleaded.
A hard laugh issued from the master.
I would have won tonight, by now, had not that fool,
may he be blasted in soul and body forever, prevented me.
I thought him pliable enough to serve my purpose.
Now I must get him out of the way, or he may try to balk me in my plans.
Fool, to trust any other human being.
Madam Fane lifted the supine form into her arms, but as she turned to go, she spake again.
You lied to me, Guy. You told me you would not resort to the knife with her.
The knife I will not suffer, I tell you. You must find some other way to your purpose.
Is not lucive or powerful enough to give you what you seek if you deliver over this girl's soul
instead of her body?
Oh, mother, mother, how often you must stand in my way.
Just when I see it clear, yes, it can be done without blood,
but the experiment is difficult, and who knows when she will love enough to build the
foundation for her own destruction.
As to that, my son, all is ready, asserted Madame Fane.
Mother, are you sure?
"'Madame Fain walked away, carrying the light form carefully.
"'At the door she turned back for a minute.
"'Gy, if you do not play me faults in this matter,
"'I will serve you to the bitter end.
"'But I will not have the girl's life given to Lucifer,
"'not while I can prevent it.
"'All shall come as you desire, but with her a living sacrifice.
"'Do you feel the prophetic spell upon you, my mother?'
"'I am not sure, but you can consult her,
Later.
Guy Fane, thinking himself alone, leaped up the shrine steps and prostrated himself before the crystal globe.
The tongues of Ruby Flame grew paler.
The chapel's dusk increased.
Luke found himself able to walk and managed to get to the door.
Outside knelt Alden still praying.
He touched her gently on the shoulder and she started, opening her closed eyes to look at him questioningly.
Madame Fain has taken Sybil back to her room, Luke told her.
the anxious mother. But tomorrow, we must get her out of this devilish place. I've seen her
tonight stretched upon the altar, and Guy Fane would have buried a knife in her heart had not
Benny been there to prevent the crime. "'Give me your pistol, please,' whispered Alden intensely.
"'If they try to take her from me again, I can at least save her from such a horrible death.
Better she should die innocent at her mother's hen than a bloody sacrifice to the powers of evil.'
Luke hesitated a moment, then laid the pistol in the mother's hand.
I can get along without it, I fancy.
And now that Benny seems to have come partly to his senses,
perhaps we can enlist him on our side,
unless he is sent away, he added, remembering the master's words.
And between ourselves, I think it would be wise to warn Sybil of the danger that lies ahead.
She ought to know.
It might be dangerous to spring it all upon her at the last moment.
She believes her cousin a kind of God, doesn't she?
She shall know the truth about him, promised Alden grimly.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9 of the gargoyle by Gerea Laspina.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 9.
The Master Consults an Oracle.
Luke's first thought now was to see Herbert Benny immediately and make sure of the little
man's coming to his senses.
He therefore went from the chapel to the chapel to the
the occultist's room while Alden hurried back to look after her charge.
At his first knock, the artist was sure that he heard smothered moans and incoherent
exclamations within the occultist's room. He rapped a little louder.
A voice behind the door answered, trembling with some strong emotion.
Off with you, Sothanus. Get thee behind me a cursed one. I will have no more to do with
your evil work. The voice died away and confused babblings.
Benny, it isn't feigned. It's Porter talking. Let me in.
I must see you at once.
Away with you.
You cannot see me again, Beelzebub.
Open this door, Luke said, low-toned, but forceful.
Pull yourself together, you little idiot.
This is Luke Porter speaking.
I must see you on a matter of life and death.
Open up.
The doorknob rattled feebly.
There was a short pause.
I'm afraid.
Wind the cult is from within.
What if you aren't what you claim to be?
If I'm a mage, I could slip in through the keyhole, you little jackass.
Luke exploded thoroughly.
out of patience. Open this door, I'll shoot off the lock, a futile threat when he had given
his automatic to Alden. The door knob turned slowly, and the door opened, the pallid face of
Herbert Benny appearing in the opening pale blue eyes, squinting, and shrinking dread at the
artist, who jerked the door from the other man's hands, slipped inside, closed and locked it
behind him. Thank God, Mr. Porter, it's you, whined Benny in his scared relief.
And he clutched at the artist's coatesley frantically. We must get out of here immediately.
without waiting for anything this place is a hell mr porter with living demons haunting it i've just met him face to face again oh my god shall i ever be able to brush the awful memory of his horrible countenance from my mind my blood frozen my veins i tell you my
luke reached out took the little man by the shoulders and shook him so hard that the fellow's teeth actually played the castanets against each other keep still for a minute you an incredible idiot he snapped in a low
voice. I saw the whole business just now in the chapel. What I want to know is, where do you stand?
The pale blue eyes stared into Luke's flashing gray orbs with astonishment.
You, you saw? Stammered Herbert Benny stupidly.
How could you have seen? Then you saw his face? The voice broke pitifully and the occultists began to
tremble as if seized by anew.
Good God, Mr. Porter. You must realize how important it is for us to get out of
here immediately. Well, you shut up, Luke apostrophized him through clenched teeth.
He looked distastefully at the terrified magician. You stopped Guy Fane in a critical moment,
Benny. I know, assented the other his breath-catching. But I never dreamed that he would dare
do such a thing to attack that sweet girl with a knife. Why, only the most evil of spirits would
ask for or expect such a devilish proceeding. And Mr. Fane assured me that he had no intention of
injuring her physically.
I haven't been quite sure myself
just what his intentions toward her were.
But he explained that she wasn't...
You understand,
he tapped his forehead significantly
with one forefinger.
Just right.
He thought he could by giving her a severe shock
of some kind,
bring back her wandering senses.
He lied to you, you ass,
and you're so fed up with your importance
that you've swallowed everything he told you, of course.
Luke grunted, disgustingly.
Now that you've seen something of what he's capable,
Do you tend to go on with that rotten mummery, or will you help me get Sybil Fain out of this devil's den?
Oh, I'm only too anxious to get out myself, the occultist assured him hastily.
But how do you propose to manage it?
I don't know yet.
Tomorrow I shall tell him that Sybil is to be my wife and that I wish to leave with her and her maid.
If he refuses to let me go, I'll have to think up something else.
I could help you, perhaps, offered Cagliostro trying desperately to regain something of the ground,
he felt he had lost in the artist's esteem and respect.
I'm not as silly and stupid as resentfully.
You think I am.
I can meet Guy Fane on his own ground, on magical lines and hold my own.
I know I can, he added more firmly.
We don't want any magic, loot negated rather unkindly.
It's all rot.
Guy Fane knows how to utilize natural forces to make an appearance.
The squinty blue eyes regarded the artist now with assurance.
The button nose wrinkled, as Cagliostro asked pointedly.
You can say that, after seeing that ceremony in the chapel tonight?
Mr. Porter, there was much more in it than I care to admit myself.
Guy Fane is a true adept, a master of supernatural powers and forces,
but of a nature to make a child of light shudder sickly.
Luke let go the little man's shoulders and step back from him.
Listen, Benny, are you going to let yourself go again the way you did tonight in the chapel,
just because another human being happens to be more than ordinarily ugly.
Luson Porter, retorted the mage disrespectfully.
But with a measure of return to his old proud impressiveness,
when you find yourself face to face, without previous warning,
with the devil himself, you're apt to let your weak flesh gain the mastery.
But when you know beforehand what you're up against,
you prepare for the ordeal, and you conquer or die, he finished with plaintive gravity.
then you are ready?
You will have to trust me to help you in my own way,
stipulated Caglio Strow seriously.
But I can assure you that I am ready, even for death,
if by dying I can thwart that devil from hell.
Luke clasped the little fellow's hand and gave it a hearty grip.
Then I can look upon you as an ally tomorrow,
he said rather relieved to find the occultist himself once more.
I shall get to work along my own lines,
assured the mage with earnestness.
I shall have much to do to prepare myself for a battle of will with that.
With him, but I shall win.
Never fear, Mr. Porter, I shall win.
Luke left him then, and hurried through the corridors to Sybil's boudoir at the door of which he tapped cautiously.
The door was opened by Alden, whose white face met with his questioning gray eyes with agony written on it.
She hasn't come back.
"'Oh, dear God, she is with Guy Fain and his study, and I am afraid—'
"'Afraid!'
"'Luc whirled about.
"'I'm going there,' he announced.
"'This thing has got me.
"'I can't sit down quietly while Sybil is in that devil's power.
"'I'm going for her.
"'Never fear, I'll bring her back with me, Alden.'
"'He dashed up the hall, leaving her leaning weakly against the doorframe.
"'The door of the master's study swung open silently at his approach,
"'in a sinister fashion which the young man disresely.
regarded in his anxiety.
He rushed into the room, and all at once stopped, midway to the glowing crystal globe
that burned threateningly in the shrine at the farther end of the apartment.
It was as if some giant hand had been placed against his breast, holding him to the spot
against his will.
He struggled vainly to advance.
Perspiration poured down his face and streamed from every pore in his body.
Rash, man, beware of too much daring.
You've seen how easily I can thwart your impotent purposes.
Beware lest I raise my veil and wither you where you stand,
intoned the ominous voice of Guy Fane.
Luker strained himself by an effort,
and all at once that force which had held him back was gone,
before he could move Guy Fane's voice spoke again.
It is not well to cross swords with me unadvisedly, Mr. Portier.
My door opened to you because I am not afraid of you.
or your petty personal desires and intentions,
remain, if you will, but interrupt at your peril.
Interruption will only result in terrible evil to Sybil, who is entranced.
To arouse her with any shock might put to flight forever,
that which forms her individual soul, her personality.
There would be left a mondering idiot, Mr. Porter.
I have warned you.
Luke had learned something of the practice of modern spiritualism and psychic phenomena.
He dared not stir for fear, therefore, of awakening Sybil from her trance.
Guy Fane had stopped him most effectually by that warning, which Luke knew to be well-founded.
He stared about the room.
On a couch under the ruby sphere lay the entranced girl, hands crossed upon her girlish bosom,
motionless save for the even rise and fall that showed her still alive in breathing.
Before her stood the black-veiled form of the master, with uplifted arms in vacation.
Sybil, answer! Where are you now? he exclaimed in a voice of dignity and with an air of high authority.
From the girl's lips came a low murmur, seeming another voice than her ordinary one.
I hover here, master, above the clay housing of my spirit, awaiting your commands.
It is well, I have stripped from your eyes, he made a sweeping gesture over her face with both hands.
The veil that hides the future, tell me shall I soon be free from the hideous and loathsome covering of flesh that conceals my shrinking spirit?
Without hesitation, that mild voice declared,
Yes, before another night shall have passed, you shall shed your monstrous husk, and step from it into it.
glorious freedom.
Lucifer, all-powerful prince! exclaimed Guy and wild triumph, tossing his hands high in
invocation toward the shining ruby globe.
Not in vain have I called upon thee, Lord and Master.
Oh, I shall serve thee well when I shall have won to that face, that form that are to be
mine.
Sybil, tell me if I shall offer your pulsing heart to the Lord and Master of
of your destiny, as I have long intended.
A struggle seemed to be going on in the body of the girl.
Her face distorted painfully.
Luke clenched his hands to keep from rushing to her side.
Then from the tortured lips issued the reply,
My heart has already gone forth,
and is in the safekeeping of the master of my destiny.
Strange, strange, most strange,
muttered Guy Fane, bending to examine her face closely.
Tell me truly, Sybil, plainly, shall I offer your heart soon to Lucifer?
Your beating, pulsing heart? I conjure you give me the truth.
Again the girl's face showed that disturbance, that conflict. Then her voice issued hardly audible from writhing lips.
Proud and presumptuous man, you command the truth. It shall be yours. You have attempted by futile magic arts to alter the decrees of destiny.
All that has happened is that you have become a tool in the scheme of greater forces than your puny soul can imagine.
You believe you have seized upon the prerogatives of the ruler of the universe.
You have associated with the evil fallen one.
Harken, master of evil arts.
It is your soul that lies at stake, and not your body.
Less yet is there danger to the body of this poor girl through whose lips I speak.
Lucifer, who is talking now?
gasped Guy Fane.
Luke could plainly see the trembling of that squat body.
It matters little who I am,
but this innocent girl is protected as you can never imagine.
Spare her of your own free will before she is snatched out of your hands.
Show that your hideous body conceals but poorly a noble soul.
Mortal, this is your last opportunity for your own salvation.
The voice ceased.
Luke, although realizing that something must have gone wrong,
and that Guy Fain was gravely disturbed by the upsetting of his calculations,
felt no slightest disturbance,
but on the contrary, a profound conviction seized upon him that all would yet be well.
By Lucifer and his seven fiends, you unknown speaker,
I shall carry out my plans or die in the attempt.
I know not who you are that speaks to me unbidden through the lips of this entranced girl,
but I dare you to thwart me mysterious oracle.
Sybilphane is devoted to expiation of that which her father's sin brought upon me.
The Almighty and all his angels cannot hold me back now.
I know too much to be disregarded.
Then Lucifer must receive that for which he has waited patiently these many years.
Farewell, wretched worker of ill spells.
You have doomed yourself when you might have worked a noble magic.
Silence, terrible and oppressive, reigned after these last words.
Then the master called with fierce energy.
Sybil, return to this clay before that intruder shall have robbed you of it.
Before what is foredain shall have to come to pass.
Return, I say!
He made frantic passes over that blonde head.
The girl sighed.
Then one hand went up sleepily to rub her eyes.
With a contemptuous gesture, Guy Fain beckoned the artist.
She is normal now. Take her to her maid. I have finished with her for the present.
Omonously. Luke needed no further invitation. He picked Sybil's slender form up and held her close.
You shall never lay a finger on her again, he said to Guy Fain tensely, his gray eyes like
thundercloud shot with lightning. The master paid no more attention to him. He went to the shrine
where swung the ruddy globe and sank on his knees before it, his forehead.
touching the marble step.
End of Chapter 9.
Chapter 10
Of the Gargoyle by Greya Lispina.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 10.
Shut out.
Luke carried his precious burden directly to Alden,
who after she had carefully brought Sybil back to consciousness,
sat beside her,
listening to the artist's recital of that strange possession
by some unknown entity of the gulfe.
girl's unconscious body.
Sybil herself enlightened now by her old nurse and by her lover as to her cousin's nefarious
designs upon her, lay with wide violet eyes.
Upon Luke's face, her expression that of one who refuses to believe what appears incredible
to intelligence.
I shall see Guy Fain tomorrow, declared Luke firmly.
I intend to make a formal demand for Sybil's hand, and as he has already given me his
permission to marry her, I don't see how.
he can refuse to let me take her away, especially if we go right down into town and get a license,
and hunt up a minister immediately. Alden shook her head, a bitter smile curling her kindly mouth.
Don't you think Cousin Guy will let us go? demanded Sybil. Why, Alden, I'll be of age in another
ten days, and then he must let me go. He's told me as much himself often. There's something
mysterious about it all, my lamb, but I feel sure he will let none of us go until he will let us go,
he has carried out his own plans.
Then I shall appeal to Madam Fane.
She is a woman with a woman's heart,
began Luke, when Alden interrupted him.
First of all, she is Guy Fane's mother,
and she owes him a terrible debt.
Too horrible for me to put into words,
the older woman said unwillingly.
She will think first of her son's plans, Mr. Porter.
The rest of us are pawns,
to me move by him as he pleases.
He makes a mistake, I'm afraid, Luke murmured.
"'Perhaps Mr. Benny can suggest something,' Sybil offered.
"'He's a magician, isn't he?'
"'Lute couldn't help smiling at Sybil's ingenuous conclusion.
"'For some reason your cousin has terrified Cuglioastro-Moderno
"'almost into spasms,' he told the girl.
"'But for all that he's promised to do what he can, in his own way,' he amended.
"'But his own way may be the best way,' the girl declared.
"'Mr. Porter, I think my...
My lamb ought to get a little sleep while she can, Alden suggested darkly.
Do you mind?
Luke, don't go away, begged Sybil, violet eyes suddenly wide with fright.
Oh, Alden, don't send him away. Let him sleep on the chaise lounge in my boudoir.
Then he'll be here if anything should happen.
Luke and the older woman exchange glances.
Perhaps that isn't such a bad idea, Mr. Porter, conceded Alden.
but I'd hate to have Mr. Fain know.
There can be no possible harm, Luke decided.
Certainly the man who has as devoted to Sybil's interests as her future husband must be,
can watch over her welfare,
especially after such an experience as she has had tonight, he finished grimly.
Sybil, my darling, sleep.
Alden and I will both be here to see that no harm comes to you.
Sybil pouted her crimson lips,
and Luke bent, stirred to the depths by her innocent trustfulness,
and very tenderly gave her their first kiss.
Luke's resolve to see Guy Fane early that next day was forestalled by the master himself,
in a fashion that made the artist resentful, as it put him in the wrong at once.
Mason brought the message, and he brought it to Luke before the young artist had left Sybil's boudoir.
The Major Domo were a certain knowing air for which Luke would have liked to call him to account,
except that it was too vague in an expression to base such a proceeding upon.
Mr. Fane asked me to inquire if you didn't think it would be well for you to see him at once under the circumstances, the man said.
Luke was furious, but there was, after all, nothing upon which he could put his finger.
Controlling himself as best he could, he answered shortly.
Tell your master that after last night's occurrences, I feel I have a right to make certain demands of him,
and I am only too happy to make them immediately.
Ten minutes afterward, he walked into the open door of Guy Fane's study.
His mouth set in a grim line as he advanced toward the protecting screen at the farther end of the room.
Be seated, Mr. Porter.
Pray do not come any farther.
As you have reason to learn, I am protected.
Luke paused involuntarily.
He remembered that giant hand which had stopped his progress the night before.
"'That's better, Mr. Porter.
"'Now, if you will be seated,
"'we can get down to business more comfortably.
"'I presume you wish to inquire
"'with what I must consider
"'characteristic curiosity, my dear sir,
"'into my private affairs.
"'I've come to tell you
"'that I wish to take Sybil away from this.
"'This devil's den,' the artist jerked out furiously.
"'Ah, how thoughtful of you, dear Mr. Porter.
"'And so you have come to this unwarranted conclusion?
unwarranted, snapped Luke.
When only by a hair's breath did that poor girl escape your knife last night?
A tense pause succeeded upon his words.
When Guy Fane spoke now, it was in measured accents.
I begin to understand.
You managed to gain access to the chapel, then...
The troubled note left his voice,
and he continued with his wanted imperturbable suavity.
You took the liberty of going where you had no business.
to enter. And then you jump to silly conclusions because you imagined, and the voice grew
icy with disdain. I presume that I was about to take the life of my cousin, a girl who has been
brought up under my own eyes and nurtured as tenderly. Why, my dear Mr. Porter, I believe you
have the instincts of a budding occultist yourself. I must see to it that you are present at my next
experiment.
The voice continued with a musing lightness, and that hint of double meeting that made Luke
writhe.
If there are any further experiments, you may be sure I shall be present, the artist declared.
But I do not think there will be any more.
At least not with my wife is the subject of them.
Your wife!
There was a sudden note of alarm in the master's voice that did not escape Luke's notice.
Perhaps I should have said my promised wife.
He amended.
Oh.
The exclamation escaped the master's lips in a gust of breathy relief.
And then as if to cover his momentary lack of restraint, Guy continued smoothly.
You are suddenly what is called in vulgar vernacular.
A quick worker, Mr. Porter.
So Sibyl is in love with you and you with her so quickly.
Admiration in the voice.
Again, Luke writhed.
Sybil wishes to go with me, and her maid.
today, Luke asserted.
Why such haste, dear Mr. Porter,
soothed Guy Fane.
He laughed softly.
But there, young love is always impetuous, isn't it?
Have you realized that there must be a license?
And that I certainly will not permit my charge to go from here
until I see her properly married to you by a regularly ordained clergyman.
Are you insinuating?
My dear Mr. Porter.
You have acted so like a child.
that I feel I must take the proper steps
to safeguard my innocent cousin.
You are afraid that the ceremony,
so sadly interrupted by the misunderstanding
with little cagliostro,
was aimed at my cousin's life.
No, Mr. Porter, she must live.
Live, do you understand?
Only a life, but there you would never understand.
I presume you are in a hurry now
to rescue the fair lady
and make your escape from the roof
that has been her safe shelter
from childhood, he pursued plaintively.
So be it, Mr. Porter.
Will this afternoon suit your plans?
Luke's face altered in spite of himself
at this unexpected acquiescence.
Guy Fane laughed again.
You can leave all the details to me,
impetuous lover.
I shall send a couple of servants
to impersonate you to at the License Bureau,
so that you won't have to go down into town
until you leave here for good.
I shall have a clergyman sent for
If you don't like him,
negligently with an undertone of mild amusement,
you can get married again after you leave here.
We will have a wedding supper and tickets ready for the 10 p.m. New York train.
If this suits your plans?
Bewildered to the last degree, Luke managed to get out.
I hope I have misjudged you, but...
But what did you intend to do with that knife?
"'My mother and that foolish magician have both demanded explanations on this point,' Guy said warily.
"'Nothing I tell them seems clear to their blinded imaginations, which must have run away with them.
"'I can use the girl living. Of what use would she be dead?'
"'I had but started a ceremonial,' then he interrupted himself to cry with enthusiasm.
"'Ah, my dear Mr. Porter, one time you shall see such a ceremonial as I doubt has ever been carried
through in its entirety before in the history of the world.
You shall be there, I promise you.
Something sinister troubled the artist vaguely,
but he dared not let his imagination start working
on the master's veiled insinuations.
He told himself that by evening he and Sybil would be well out of the purlius of that strange castle.
Well, now that we've settled everything, proceeded Guy Fingaley,
suppose you tell Sybil that you have my permission and that tonight she will see Fainwold Castle for the last time,
unless you are so kind as to bring her back to visit a lonely and afflicted man someday.
No, do not thank me, Mr. Porter.
I am still a little hurt at your unfounded suspicions of me and my motives.
You shall know more of me before another 24 hours, he promised.
And now, if you will excuse me.
Luke took the hint and went out the door shutting behind him,
apparently of its own volition.
He lost no time in telling Sybil of Guy's ready capitulation.
Alden's forehead wrinkled more than ever as she listened.
I don't know why Sybil's marriage to you should fit in with his plans,
she said in a troubled voice.
And I feel positive that he does not intend to have her leave Fainwald tonight as your wife.
Don't be so pessimistic, Alden, dear, begged Sybil prettily.
"'Come and help me, pack.
"'If we're going away tonight,'
"'and she turned to Luke gaily,
"'we must get everything ready.
"'There'll be lots to do. Come, Alden.'
"'Alden did not follow the girl immediately.
"'She stood looking at Luke irresolutely,
"'at last she said,
"'Mr. Porter, if you find it difficult
"'to get away from here with Sybil,
"'don't bother about me.
"'To them I am nothing but a servant who loves her.
"'They won't do anything to me.
"'You can see about me later on.'
"'Depend upon it, that if I get
so we'll safely away from here my next thought will be for you, Luke said determinedly.
And now I must pack my bags and painting materials.
It was quite evident to Luke that there was something going on in the place later that afternoon.
Alden whispered to him that all the servants had been sent away.
She was white with apprehension, but the artist thought it quite possible that Guy Fane had ordered a lot of marketing done for the wedding supper,
and that the castle people had been sent to do these many errands, going back to his room,
he almost collided with Cagliostro-Moderno, who was hastening down the corridor.
Hello, Benny. What are you doing now? The artist demanded.
I'm going with Madame Fain to town on an errand, the little occultist replied. He lowered his voice.
Once I get there, I'll get in touch with the authorities, and see that some of the police are sent out here to get you and Miss Fane out.
That devil tried to explain his stunt with the knife, but I don't trust him. He is sheer fiend.
does you tell him that i'm not the fool you think i am mr porter returned the little man with dignity i let him think i believed all he said with the result that i am now getting the chance to go to town what is he sending you for persisted luke with an apprehensive glance up and down the corridor the occultist whispered
he sent a maid and one of the men to impersonate you and miss fain to get a license and i'm supposed to take the license and then get a minister madam fain is waiting for
for me, bitterly.
But I shall evade her if I can,
even if I have to make a scene.
Don't make a scene, advised Luke thoughtfully.
Get the clergyman, and when he is here,
we'll make him see how the situation is,
and that will tie Guy Fane's hands.
Besides, we may need you, never can tell.
I'll do my best, promised Herbert Benny,
with dignity pulling his black mantle about him
to conceal his insignificant features.
Luke smote him mightily on the shoulders.
"'Go to it, old man,' he said hardly.
The minutes fled, became hours.
Darkness was falling now, but Herbert Benny did not return.
Moreover, instead of the stir of festive preparations,
a heavy and oppressive stillness brooded over the castle.
"'Come out on the roof garden,' Sybil half whispered,
the spell of the waiting upon her also.
"'I think I'd feel better out in the air.'
The three went out, just in time to see another part of the mysterious drama,
played before their eyes.
There was the sound of the drawbridge lowering
and simultaneously the galloping of horses' hooves.
Then a carriage swung into sight
dimly outlined by the carriage lights.
It whirled to the draw and stopped a woman.
Madam Fane, cried Alden,
sprang out and ran across the draw.
The bridge creaked rose in the air.
The driver of the carriage whipped his horses around
and back in the direction in which he had come.
And as the three stared with strange,
raining eyes, the sound of someone shouting fell upon their ears.
Help!
cried a masculine voice several times,
as little figure came stumbling and sobbing up the road
only to be brought to a short stop by the sluggish water of the impassable moat.
Who is it?
shouted Luke through cupped hands,
but he knew only too well who it was.
It's me, Benny!
Whaled the voice, admission of failure,
in the very use of that hated commonplace name.
It's me!
They've shot me out.
out! They've shut me out!
Luke recovered from his amazement and wonderment
after a moment's astonished exchange of glances with Alden,
whose wrinkled face held a deep significance, which he did not like.
How did it happen?
He shouted back, abandoning caution, convinced now that matters were not as they should be.
Minister wasn't at home!
wailed the occultist from below.
Madam Vane left word that we'd go there for the ceremony tomorrow.
I tried to leave the carriage, but the driver managed to be in my way,
and it's cold out and there weren't many,
people around and...
To make a long story short, Luke told the two
women dryly. Our little friend didn't
succeed in getting word to anyone of our plight,
and now he's been shut outside so that
he can't help us. Hey, Betty,
can't you tramp it back to the town?
You might bring help that way.
In the growing darkness, the occultist
was shaking his head and furious negation.
No, no, no, he called up with more caution.
I must get inside at once. It would take
me hours to get back. I'm no
walker. And that magic must be fought with
Magic!
The only way you can get in, Mr. Biddy, is by swimming across the moat,
began Alden.
What?
Almost screamed the occultist.
Swim among those water snakes and other things?
Woman, do you think I'm crazy?
Not crazy, coldly called down, Alden.
Just a wretched coward, if you will have the truth, Mr. Bidney.
She retired from the parapet scornfully, but Luke saw that her face was melancholy with apprehension.
What made you get up?
of the carriage, inquired Luke.
She dropped her handkerchief outside and asked me to get it for, confessed the dupe magician
mournfully.
I understand, and the driver whipped up his horses and they left you in the road 12 miles out
of town.
A fine idiot you've shown yourself to be.
Oh, Lord, don't I know it now?
What am I going to do?
Alden came back to the parapet and bent over, speaking with cautiously lowered voice.
You go to the garage, and when it's dark, bring Mr. Porter's car around.
Can you drive? All right. Have it near the draw, and then go back to the garage.
My room is opposite there, and I may think up some plan to get you into the castle if I know you will be waiting.
Whatever you say, agreed the little man submissively.
But get in, I must, he added determinedly, for I am the only one of us who knows how to handle supernatural forces, mysteriously.
Luke felt like saying fiddlesticks, but in grave silence watched the occultist walk off down the side of the moat and disembate.
appear into the night.
End of chapter 10.
Chapter 11 of the gargoyle by Greya Lesbina.
The Slipper Vox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 11.
The story so far, Luke Border, a young painter and Herbert Benny,
alias Cagliostro-Moderno and occultist and pseudomagician,
are held virtual prisoners in Fain Waldcastle by Guy Fain the Master,
who is a devil-wishper and adept in black magic.
In the castle is Sybil, a beautiful girl with Alden her maid, who is in reality Sybil's mother.
Guy Vane is a hideous monstrosity, whose soul has been dedicated by his mother to Lucifer in revenge for the unfaithfulness of Guy's father.
He is prevented from sacrificing Sybil to Lucifer by Cagliostro's interference,
but the devil-wishper proceeds with his plan to change bodies with Luke Porter,
a plan which seems to Luke preposterous and incredible.
Luke has fallen in love with Sybil, and Guy Fain, for his own purposes, promises that
Sybil and Luke shall be married that night.
The servants are sent away, and Cagliostro shut out of the castle, while the devil-worshipper
perfects his plans for his great work of black magic.
Chapter 11.
The master prepares.
Will Mr. Porter be kind enough to step to Mr. Fain's study for a minute?
Asked the suave voice of Madame Fane as her tall black garb.
figure appeared in the doorway.
Luke and Alden, standing close together, exchanged a look of apprehension.
Could Madame Fane have heard their conversation with the occultist outside the castle?
Whatever she might have realized, Madam Fain's chalky face was impassive with what must
have been a deceptive composure.
For her smoldering eyes all at once flamed at Luke's momentary indecision,
"'Are you aware, Mr. Porter, that my son is waiting you with considerable eagerness?'
She demanded coldly.
The failure of the plans he laid so carefully for you has disturbed him immensely,
and he wishes to learn your desires in the matter,
now that you and my niece cannot be married to-night.
You stand in your own light with your despicable suspicions.
Luke reached out in the dusk to give Sybil's hand a reassuring pressure.
I'm with you, Madam Fane, he said briefly,
and followed her down the corridor, pulling every faculty into alertness for the coming
ordeal, be it what it might. The door of the study was closed, but it opened silently at
their approach. The ominous glare of that sickly red light streamed out into the corridor,
flickering across Madame Fane's ordinarily pallid face until it appeared transformed, as if writhing
with unmentionable emotions. The black-veiled figure of Guy Fane stood before the crystal globe
facing the door. At the entrance of Luke and Madame Fain, he held up both hands to check their further
advance. Mr. Porter, I beg of you, no words now on the subject which I know is burning on your tongue.
Your marriage must be postponed until tomorrow, and if Sybil then wishes to go on with it,
there was a smooth something in Guy Fane's voice that sent Luke's heart to beating it regularly.
I shall let you both go, with Alden, early in the morning.
Let us go, exclaimed Luke hotly.
"'Poorly chosen words, my dear Mr. Porter,
"'believe me, just poorly chosen.
"'Forgive me for my maladroitness with language.
"'I am not as stupid and awkward in other ways, I assure you.
"'And as proof of this, and of the harmlessness of my innocent ceremonials,
"'I am asking you to accompany me to the chapel with my mother as well,
"'and observe one from start to finish.
"'It cannot but be instructive to you,
"'who have said that you believe in man,
under certain conditions.
Supper is being served to Sybil and Alden and my niece's boudoir,
murmured Madame Fane.
Do you mind waiting until later for yours, Mr. Porter?
Yes, yes, Mother, that will be best, agreed Guy Fane eagerly.
First our ceremonial and in the feast to celebrate its success.
Ah, Mr. Porter, little do you dream what all this means to me tonight,
to have you present, young, handsome,
Strong, vital.
Guy's voice died away as if an ecstasy of pleasure.
It affected Luke unpleasantly.
I would like to know, Mr. Fain, why that harmless little Benny has been shut outside the castle by ruse.
Luke demanded his gray eyes darkening.
Harmless, why, my dear Mr. Porter, that charlatan threatened to ruin one of the most astonishing
experiments mortal men has yet made along magical lines.
When you have witnessed and shared the tremendous thing that his fate,
to come to pass tonight, you will realize that I could not risk having Herbert Benny. What infinite scorn over the poor little man's name. Get excited in his ignorance and ruin everything. Too risky, my dear young man. But come, let us be on our way to the chapel. The squat figure of Guy Fane swept in its rustling black garments ahead of Luke and Madame Fain, who followed in the direction of the chapel. Luke hastened his steps a little,
and reached the side of the master.
I warn you, Mr. Fain, that I have no intention of taking part in any obscene devil-worship,
he began, when Guy interrupted with an involuntary burst of laughter,
that to his sensitive ears sounded almost hysterical.
Devil-worship, sir, what the devil do you mean by that?
Do you dare insinuate that I would have used an innocent girl in such vile practices?
But you shall see you for yourself.
And he laughed again as he moved down the long passages.
At last he opened a door, pulled to one side the somber hangings that veiled it from within,
and entered with a backward gesture of his head for Luke to follow.
The artist entered warily to find himself in the body of the chapel upon which he had gazed once before.
He looked about him strange apprehensions creeping into his mind at the sight of the monstrous decorations of the chapel,
which made their subtle suggestions to his overstrained nerves,
now at their highest tension.
Look about you, Mr. Porter,
cried the high, mellow voice of the master genially.
Is it not astonishing that the mind of human beings
could have imagined and wrought such bizarre creations as these?
Guide, guy, no more, I beg of you,
pleaded Madame Fain, her voice deep with tense emotion.
I cannot bear it if you say more.
My poor mother, you dislike to have.
Have it known that yours was the moving mind?
Or is it just modesty?
Madam Fane's lips admitted a groan, her son laughed heartily.
"'Sit you hear, my mother, and when the time is ripe, throw on the incense,' he commanded brusquely.
"'And no more interruptions, when I start to consecrate the holy blade of sacrifice,' he added sharply.
"'I didn't understand before, my son,' the dark woman murmured,
as she kneeled with bowed head near the tall sensor that swung on its tripod at one side of the altar steps.
Come up here, Mr. Porter, and see if the mechanism of this globe is not interesting, invited Guy Fane.
See how lightly it hangs on the network of fine platinum chains.
Oh, yes, they must be of platinum for occult reasons.
And then tell me, if you can, why it should start swinging of itself in response to the fragrance of burning incense,
the chanting of strange incantations.
Tell me too why those lapping tongues of flame should shoot from its vibrating surface.
Why it should hum and sing its unearthly music.
Accepting the master's invitation, Luke advanced up the steps of the altar,
conscious all the time of an inward arming against some unexpected while on the part of Guy Fane,
whom the artist could not trust.
He looked at the crystal globe gingerly,
simple enough in appearance,
without observable mechanism,
to produce the sound,
the movement, the lifelike flames.
It was an interesting thing in itself.
Remain near it if you choose, Mr. Porteer, and watch it.
See if you can detect chicanery
and my simple methods of bringing it into startling life.
But I would advise, dear young man,
that when you see its spree,
spring into glorious ruby life, you step back out of the reach of those tongues aflame.
They are very real, I assure you, and I do not care to have you tell me that I did not warn you.
Once again, Luke Porter had the experience of watching the master at his incantations.
But this time it was close at hand, standing behind the very altar itself, close to the crystal ball, watching it closely.
Madam Fain tossed great handfuls of incense
upon the smoking tripod sensor.
Volumes of faintly acrid haze began to rise
and float in fitful currents of air through the gloomy chapel.
Lucifer! Lucifer grant a sign!
implored Guy Fane, bending low with imploring arms outstretched before him.
The still air began to crowd with murmurings.
Soft, whining sounds that vibrated through the air.
The great globe in the shrine began to move even
as Luke watched it, to swing slowly at first, but with increasing rapidity in a circle within
the shrine. As it swung, the humming grew louder. Ruby flames leaped from the crystal's heart,
seeming every moment to stretch farther until the artist hastily stepped back and down the stairs
to be out of their way. From an undertone that merely stirred the atmosphere,
vibrations grew in resonance until the entire chapel was vibrating with that rhythmic, sonorous cadence.
The sibilant hum beat against the unwilling ears of the artist with an intolerable sweetness,
as cloying as the sickening sweet odor of ether to the nostrils.
The dim red dusk only half cut the gloom through the clouds and eddies of whirling vaporous incense.
The ruby glow at the heart of the sphere grew and grew until it too seemed intolerable,
with its strange crimson brilliancy.
Luke went down one more step.
But his dazzled gray eyes were on that swinging,
Humming, Ruby, Thing, which shot out its sweeping octopus-like feelers of living fire,
that elongated and retracted in every direction.
The humming sounded louder again,
a dire suggestion of vague and intangible, but nonetheless potent evil.
The vibrations increased in force and volume.
At the foot of the altar lay the master, prostrate,
only muttering exorcisms reached Luke's straining ears.
The tongues of flame now shot forth fiercely,
and the artist, with a muttered exclamation of alarm,
went backward another step,
came in contact with the great marble top of the altar,
reeled slightly, and crumpled back upon it weakly,
horror on his agonized face.
Guy Fane sprang up the altar stairs
with a cry of triumph and leaned over the recumbent young man.
"'You are mine now!' he cried wildly.
"'Your use shall fill my veins anew with vitality.
Your handsome features shall bring me pleasure
Where my gruesome mask of horror
Has brought me only loathing
Your fine limbs
Ah, Lucifer!
Lucifer!
Here lies the youth from whom I am tonight
To recruit that for which I have so long yearned.
Struggling with the despair
Into which his impotent and unconquerable weakness has plunged him,
Luke stirred ever so little.
The flashing eyes of the master were upon him
through the folds of chiffon veil.
They threatened.
Lie still, fool, else I lift my veil.
He who looks upon my face can never be the same again,
cried the master terribly.
Ah, that is better.
The unhappy artist felt weakness creeping inexorably
through his limbs, through his very veins,
until it seemed that the beating of his heart was stilled.
He could hear, see all about him,
but move he could not.
It was as if he were chained to that,
cold marble slab. He strove to keep his senses, but was sick as he realized that he could not now
spring to Sybil's aid should the girl again fall into the hands of the evil mage.
The master turned to his mother.
Woman, the hour's close at hand. Fetch the maiden. Her presence is necessary for this last
right. There was the sound of rustling garments, Luke realized that he and the master were alone.
The swinging and humming of the ruby sphere had somewhat lessened, but there was a
a compelling sound to it now that sent a languid feeling of sensuous and delicious emotion through
Luke's body. He could not fight this as he might have done a little since. Perforce yielding to it,
he felt no repugnance when the ungainly hand of the master began to pass gloatingly up and down
his arms, his legs, over his firm young chest, his youthful face. A glove, thrilling eagerness,
began to rise hotly through his being. Eagerness, for he knew not.
not what.
The master leaned closer.
Through the veiling chiffon, he kissed the smooth cheeks of the helpless man,
kissed them in a sheer voluptuous passion of delight.
Luke's body trembled sickly.
Ah, how can I wait, even minutes, to possess these fine limbs?
Lucifer, mighty art thou above all other angels,
how can I think thee enough for this most splendid gift?
I tingle with mad expectations.
Already I feel the racing of his youthful blood through my veins.
The black velvet curtain parted again,
interrupting the master's rhapsodies.
Luke's straining eyes and his motionless head soon saw the source of the interruption.
Advancing before Madame Fain like a lamb before the slaughterer
came the trembling Sibyl,
widely awake at last to the horror of her situation.
End of Chapter 11.
Chapter 12 of the Gargoyle by Greya Laspina
This Librevox recording is in the public domain
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 12 Cogliostro to the rescue
Sybil the master needs you
Alden whirled to confront the black-clad figure of Madam Fane
Whose dark eyes rested with superb disdain
Upon the wrinkled face of the devoted nurse
Sybil do not go
"'whispered Alden tremulously, twitching at the girl's sleeve.
"'Madame Fain spoke again imperiously.
"'Sibyl, your lover lies in the chapel across Lucifer's altar.
"'Will you leave him there alone?'
"'Luc in Lucifer's chapel,' cried the dazed and horrified girl,
"'her pansy purple eyes roving from one woman to the other.
"'He lies on the altar, Sybil,' repeated Madame Fain grimly.
"'Do you intend to leave him there?'
The veiled significance of her words
pounded into Alden's whirling brain.
"'My darling, my lamb, don't believe her, don't go,' she implored.
Sybil drew her arm away from her nurse with dignity and decision.
Her pale face grew wider, but she stepped to Madame Vane's side.
"'Alden, if he isn't there, tell him at once, that I have gone to find him,' she murmured.
"'If he is, oh no, I won't believe that my cousin could be so vile, so wicked.'
"'Aunt, I am coming.'
Before the agonised Alden could detain her,
the girl had swung down to the corridor
after the swiftly retreating figure of Madame Fane,
and their footsteps died away into silence.
Alden would have run after them,
but her thoughts went suddenly to the little occultist
waiting outside the castle walls.
If only she could devise a way to get him inside,
perhaps he might be able to cope with Guy Fane.
Alden knew that she alone would be helpless,
for she stood in horror of what she might see if the master were once to lift that protecting veil.
She ran to the wall and looked down.
The headlights of Luke's car were on,
and to judge by their position, the car stood near the drawbridge.
Alden leaned over and called softly.
Mr. Benny.
At once, she discerned the little man's squat figure as he ran in front of the car
so that she could see him and called back,
Who is it?
Alden, Mr. Benny, listen.
Her voice cut through the whispering dusk sharply.
Mr. Porter is lying on the altar in the chapel.
A husky intake of breath from below apprised her that Cagliostro had heard.
And Miss Fane has been called there, too. I can do nothing alone.
The little figure moved away from the car, and close to the edge of the moat,
the black waters of which were troubled by swirling things that passed across where it gleamed somberly in the car's illumination.
Mrs. Alden, if you have anything to make a rope of, I can catch one end of it and you can fasten the other securely up where you are.
Then I can manage to swing across the moat.
Oh, I can fix something with cheats, called back Alden eagerly.
Get in, I must, declared the occultist, ominous grimness in his voice.
There's devil's work going on in that chapel, and we must make haste.
If I can get there in time, I may be able to help those poor young things.
things, finished Cagliostro his voice breaking.
I'll be back in five minutes.
Alden rushed down the corridor to the linen closets and secured a number of sheets.
It seemed a century before she had torn and nodded them to make a rope of sufficient length to go.
She hoped to cross the moat.
As Madame Fain unlocked supplies of linen only for each day,
Alden was unable to get enough to her dismay,
for when she had fastened one end to the parapet,
and had flung the other out across the moat,
the occultus could not reach it.
There it hung barely touching the surface of the murky water that seemed to mock at both
would-be rescuers with a thousand twinkling evil eyes.
She hauled in the improvised rope, gathered it into a bunch, and tossed it out again.
Cogliostro springing to catch at it just as it fell short of his grasp, slipped and almost fell into the moat.
Oh, what shall we do? lamented Alden, trembling with sick apprehension as the precious moment slipped by.
"'You wouldn't dare to risk?'
Cagliostro grasped the thought that she had hardly dared put into words.
He could drop into the moat and swim across to where that rope hung dabbling in the black water.
His flesh crept shudderingly on his bones as he bent down to inspect the slimy surface of that repulsive viscid liquid.
As he leaned over something shining writhed out of the blackness and across the light from the car headlights,
something that glistened with a nasty slipperiness that struck nausea to his stomach.
He caught his breath with a quick gasp of repugnance.
Was there no other way?
His gaze swept the steep and slippery sides of the moat.
If it should happen that he could not pull himself out of the water up to that knotted rope of sheets,
or if the knots should give way, or if Alden had not fastened the other insecurely,
he would slip back, and a horrible death inevitably awaited.
his body would fester in the deeps of that stagnant slime
and the things that flourished in it,
as vile as its waters,
would feed upon his shrinking flesh and picket his bones.
"'Have you decided?' pleaded Alden.
"'Oh, every minute is precious, will you try?'
"'You don't happen to know which switch on the switchboard
"'in the master's study controls the workings of the draw, do you?'
"'Counted the shuddering Herbert Binney.
"'He explained some of them to me,
"'but I'm not sure now that I know which one to tell you.
and if you touch the wrong one, you will open trap doors all over the castle.
And another one lights a five-minute fuse to a powder cache that would send Fainwald into the errant ruins.
Alden moaned and rung her wrinkled hands frantically.
I've seen it, but I don't know which switch would be right.
Oh, can't you?
Good Lord, ejaculated the little man piously.
Alden, I'm going to swim the moat.
don't make any more commotion than you can help, warned the woman ominously.
The things would surround you at once, I've seen doves, and once a lamb floating half-devoured.
Herbert Benny dared not hear more. He took off his shoes and discarded his coat.
Then he dropped quietly over the edge of the moat and slipped gently down into black water.
Ugh, how coldly, how hungrily it closed about him.
With an effort he managed to keep his face above the slimy surface, with shrinking,
strokes he struck out for the castle wall from which dangled the sheet rope.
The water about him seemed alive with evil things, foul things, venomous things.
He could feel the stirring of that evil life as he shot through the turbid waters.
Once his hand touched something that slithered across it hastily leaving him with a sickening nausea.
Every moment he expected to feel the fangs of some unknown and hideous reptile fasten and throat her arm.
At last the final stroke.
He caught quickly at the drabbled end of the rope.
And for a moment his faint heart sank, for it gave easily in his grasp.
Momentarily he thought the knots had given way.
Then he realized with relief that the material was only stretching under his weight.
He pulled himself up the wall, bracing himself against it,
and in a few minutes felt the outstretched hands of Alden helping him over the parapet.
His gaze, turned downward to the water he had just quitted,
showed what seemed myriads of tiny shining points.
He realized with a shudder of disgust and loathing that those points were the eyes of the horrors
that had waited for him to slip, to fall, that they might crowd in upon him,
pull him beneath the slimy water, and tear the shrinking flesh from his bones.
Dry clothes, first of all, the occultist exclaimed as he felt himself safely on the parapet.
But, you must trust, me, Alden. I know what I have to do. I cannot go before Guy Fain a dripping scarecrow.
Where would be my dignity? The lofty impression that must surround me like an aura if I am to make the right impression upon him.
I have another mental and other clothes in my room.
Also, I cannot go in my stocking feet,
the little man declared decidedly.
Alden, who would have run at once to the chapel,
was obliged to wait for Cogliostro.
While she waited, she remembered the pistol Luke had given her.
She put it in her apron pocket,
a grim look about her mouth.
When the occultist emerged from his room,
he looked at the part of the serious magician he wished to appear,
until he let the mantle drop from his face.
when the absurd button nose and the squinting pale blue eyes somewhat dulled the new dignity that drew the lines of his cupid's bow mouth into something strange and hard.
The master's study, he said tersely and let the way.
Behind the screen he showed Alden a switchboard with 15 buttons.
One of these operates the draw, the little man said.
I think it is the first one.
If you don't know, why do you touch it? cried out the alarmed Alden, catching at his hand.
He shook off her restraining touch and period.
The next moment he had pressed the first button.
She strained her ears to hear the creaking of the drawbridge,
but there was no sound to break the night's silence.
Cagliostro shook his head, his brow scowling at the switchboard.
Then he deliberately put his hand over and pressed the second button.
Alden's wrinkled face whitened.
Then she uttered a soft exclamation.
The draw!
The second button was right. The way is open.
The chapel next, commanded Cagliostro brusquely.
He strode on ahead of Alden.
who could hear him muttering to himself.
Now what could that first button have been?
The occultist kept asking himself aloud in perplexity.
To Alden, he addressed one more observation.
Keep close to the edges of the corridor, he said warningly.
She understood, shuddering.
Perhaps the first button had opened yawning traps
that would let them down into black gulfs
when they stepped upon them.
Perhaps...
Perhaps that first button had meant that Fainwald
would fly up into the air,
carrying them all to sudden death.
As if this thought had gone home to him also, the occultist
now exclaimed,
Let us run.
If we can get there in time, perhaps we can.
He let the sentence go unfinished as the two of them,
careless of what that first button might have done in the way of opening trap doors,
begin to run through the winding halls.
End of Chapter 12.
Chapter 13 of The Gargoyle by Greya Lispina.
This Labor Vox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 13
Lucifer takes toll
Between the heavy black curtains that shielded the entrance to the chapel,
Alden stumbled like one suddenly dazed.
The loud humming of the ruby globe dominated the atmosphere,
and like one bereft of all willpower, all strength,
the woman sank down behind one of the evil statues near the doorway,
helpless to aid and averting the tragedy that now seemed imminent.
The occultist, more wary because he perhaps knew what he would have to confront,
stood just inside the curtains, out of sight of the master, but in a position to take in everything.
On the marble slab lay the supine figure of Luke Porter, motionless.
Before it with hands outstretched against the nearer advance of the master, stood Sybil,
as if frozen stiff by horror and her impotence.
Guy Fane, his arms lifted to the swinging, flamedonged sphere, was wrapped in echoed.
as he cried his invocations.
Behold the spotless sacrifice.
Today she was supremely happy, and tonight her abandonment to grief is just as keen.
Lord Lucifer is not this broken spirit meet for a sacrifice unto thee.
Madam Fane emptied a handful of incense upon the tripod sensor.
Her garments rustled like wind in the trees as she turned to her son.
Guy, trembled her voice imploringly.
Do not forget your promise to me.
A hard, triumphant laugh issued from the chiffon swathings that hid the master's face.
Woman, what a promises to me, the favored one of Lucifer.
I am a free man. Promises cannot bind me!
But you told me Sybil should live!
She shall live, to endure a living death, he pronounced oracularly.
"'unless she stands in my way, when Lucifer tells me her lover's youth and beauty are ripe for my taking.
"'Then—' and the voice was ominous with unspoken threats.
"'He swept aside his mother's entreating hands.
"'Stand aside, woman,' he thundered.
"'This is no time for your silly chatter. This is my hour.'
Again he lifted both hands in invocation.
"'Lusufor, son of the morning, I have obeyed.
thee, I give thee the soul of Sybil Fain once a happy, light-hearted girl, now a sad and agonizing
woman. Thou hast promised me in return these limbs, these features, and he gestured toward the quiet
form on the altar.
No, no, no! screamed Sybil, finding voice at last.
I do not know what you intend to do, but you shall not harm Luke, not while I live to
prevent it. Perhaps you will not live to prevent it, Sybil, responded the magician,
pausing in his invocation to address her. But if you will stand out of my way, I will spare his life.
Oh, I knew you couldn't be so cruel, the girl gasped. You won't hurt him, will you then? Again,
a laugh issued with malevolent hardness from the veil. I shall take that shell of his.
And give him mine in return, Sybil.
If you can love him still, why, perhaps you can be happy with the monster that he will be.
He turned once more to the globe.
The perfumed incense had created clouds of heavy fragrance,
redolent of the east and its esoteric mysteries.
The master was plainly on the verge of his diabolic experiment.
The whimpering hum of the glowing sphere sounded continuously with a drowsy, numbing effect on the senses.
The master cried out,
Lucifer, Lucifer, Lucifer!
I dedicate to thee the broken heart of the spotless maid.
I offer thee the pulsing heart of the sturdy man
whose youth and comeliness are to be mine.
The humming of the ruby globe grew louder, heavier, sweeter,
until it seemed as if the very atmosphere were charged with some foreign,
supernatural potency, to draw the vitality.
out of those who had braved the horrors of that eerie chapel.
The occultist heard a little sigh
and saw Alden crumpling into a tumbled heap at the foot of the sculpture horror.
The automatic slipped from her pocket to the floor.
Cagliostro salvaged the weapon.
He would try material magic on the master first.
Madam Fane's voice rang out loudly with sudden sharp reproach.
No, guy! You shall not, I tell you! Let her alone!
Her voice rose in a shrill trouble of excitement, ending in a shriek that pierced the eardrums with poignancy.
No, Guy, no! Her blood must not be on your hands. She is your own half-sister!
The master had swung about, the keen blade of a flashing knife in one hand.
With the other he held back the struggling form of his mother, who caught vainly at the deadly blade, her face convulsed with horror and dismay.
Sibyl pressed backward across her lover's motions.
form had spread her hands behind her for his protection.
And it was this thwarting of his intention that had infuriated Guy Fane, who was threatening her with the knife even while he held back his mother's struggling body.
That shrill scream had acted like a powerful tonic to the other mother, lying apparently unconscious at Cagliostro's feet.
Alden was up, and had crossed with a bound, the space separating her from the altar.
The knife swept downward toward Sybil's breast as Guy flung his mother.
to one side, Alden metted in full.
As it clove its way into her unresisting flesh, she laughed aloud.
A terrible laugh that rang out through the atmosphere with ominous import,
then she slipped to the feet of the day's Sybil, gasping, as she fell five pregnant words.
Fools, I am her mother!
It was over in a moment.
The actors and the tragedy stood as it paralyzed by the swift movement of events.
Then Madame Fain broke into a weakly wailing cry.
Her mother!
Oh, now I understand much.
Much?
I knew Sybil was protected.
Her mother!
Burning eyes through his veil, the master turned to look upon the dying woman.
Her mother, he echoed numbly.
Oh, I knew something.
Someone was watching over her to thwart me.
But I shall not be cheated out of my bargain with Lucifer.
The offering which purchases my freedom from this horrible and monstrous form shall yet be his, and it shall be a triple one tonight.
He took the dead woman's shoulder and drew her to one side roughly.
Cagliostro took a step forward from the protection of the statue, but Madame Fane had caught again at her son's arm, this time with a purpose and nervous strength that took him by surprise.
Guy, you shall not!
In that name I dare not utter in this evil place, I swear that I shall perish before you.
you stain your hand with more blood tonight.
Another crime on your soul, my son.
Let these poor helpless creatures go.
Are you mad?
He shouted brutally,
pushing her aside and reaching for Sybil's shoulder.
The terrified girl shrank back,
but not for an instant did she forget to shield her lover's body with her own.
Her purple eyes ablaze with fearless purpose, crying,
Give me the knife!
Madam Fane caught it, Guy's hand,
and by sheer force of sudden surprise,
rested the blade from his fingers.
Then she moved away from him, backward, down the altar steps, holding that horridly dripping thing away from contact with her rustling garments as she backed off, step by step.
The horrified occultist had been paralyzed by the swift march of events, and unable to do even so little as lift the pistol into shooting position.
Alden's astonishing and tragic death had happened so quickly that he knew he could not have saved the unhappy mother.
He stood rooted to the spot now watching this other mother who had snatched.
the deadly knife from the hands of the worshipper of Lucifer.
Madame Fane backed away, holding the weapon from her and mingled repulsion and dread.
For a moment her son followed her with his eyes and then realization that without the knife,
he could not go on with a sacrifice, came to him.
He took a step toward her.
Give me the knife!
rang out the stern command.
She shook her head slowly from side to side,
continuing her retreat toward the corridor door.
Cogliostro lifted the pistol.
and waited for her to pass him.
He intended then, to cover Guy Fane,
make him stand beside her.
Down the altar steps spring the master toward his mother.
And then that took place which Providence decreed.
As Cagliostro peered cautiously around the statue,
watching Madame Fain,
he drew back involuntarily at her loud cry of consternation and dismay.
He leaned out to stare incredulously.
She had disappeared from view as if the earth had,
had opened to swallow her.
The master stopped short.
The paving of the chapel had yawned at his very feet,
had swallowed up the sins and sorrows of his mother,
and had closed relentlessly upon her.
The master turned his head from side to side uneasily.
He knew that someone had tampered with the buttons of the private switchboard.
And I cannot punish her, he murmured in a low voice.
She has gone beyond my reach, that other mother.
It was Sybil's mother.
Oh, if I could bring her back to life, how I would punish those meddling fingers.
He turned and retraced his footsteps to the altar, testing each stone on the way with his foot to be sure that it would bear his weight.
Muttered words fell from his lips as he once more confronted Sibyl.
There are too many mothers here tonight.
Too many mothers!
And my knife is gone, but it shall not matter.
These hands shall tear his pulsing heart from his breast.
Sibyl, while you watch him change into might.
Ugliness!
He came closer to her, while she leaned away from him terrified, but without leaving the man she loved.
His thoughts went at random then, and Sybil watched him, fascinated, as he sank upon his knees before the altar.
Unhappy mother, and that other mother, how could I know that the mothers would ruin everything?
Lucifer, why didst thou not warn me that the mothers would ruin all?
Must I remain an eternal prisoner in this monster?
monstrous shape because of the mothers?
His voice rose in plaintive melancholy.
And did not the oracle promise me that tonight
I should step from this loathsome body into freedom?
Oh, Lord and Master, give me a sign!
Cagliostro had been creeping closer to the altar.
As he went, he managed to make some gesture that caught Sybil's eye.
As soon as she saw him, his finger at his lips imposed silence upon her.
But he glowed at the look of relief that swept across.
her pallid face.
The heavy incense-laden atmosphere vibrated.
Flickering lights and shadows danced evilly on the pavement.
As the ruby tongues of flame darted from the swinging, humming globe of fiery crimson in the shrine,
Cagliostro did not wish to wait longer.
The moment had come for him to act.
Lucifer, grant a sign.
The sacrificial knife has been rested from my fingers.
I have but these naked hands.
touch the altar with thy fire, Lord Lucifer, that I may know it is acceptable.
Into the radiance of that mystic ruby brilliance sprang the short, heavy figure of the little occultist.
Hands up, Guy Fane! I have you covered!
The veiled man rose, turning in a dazed manner,
that betrayed eloquently how far, unaware, the master had been of other presences in the chapel.
He came down the steps of the shrine, with reluctant dignity, but without lifting his hands,
as Herbert Benny had commanded,
Put up your hands, Mr. Fane!
With contemptuous gesture and scornful laugh,
the master folded his arms on his breast
so that the hands rested on opposite shoulders.
Do you really imagine, silly little mummer,
that I, I am to be constrained like any common man
to comply with your very rude demand?
I who can lift my veil again
and blast you where you stand?
Has not one lesson been sufficient?
Must I repeat it?
The little man shivered.
His pale blue eyes squinted from Guy to the eager, strained face of Sybil, and back again.
Shoot, if it pleases you, observed the master nonchalantly.
The experience may teach you another lesson.
Your bullets cannot penetrate my charmed flesh.
None but a silver bullet can harm me.
And your bullets are of lead, foolish magician.
Lead!
"'What? Afraid? Am I not a broad target?' he sneered.
"'You're unarmed, Mr. Fane,' retorted the little man with as much calm as his jumping nervous system would allow him to demonstrate.
"'I can't shoot an unarmed man. But I want you to undo your spells on that young man,
and then you can stand aside while both of those young people go out of this hellish place.
"'I'm not afraid of you,' stoutly.
"'I know now what to expect. You—you took me.
me by surprise before. The master laughed soft and long. I am not an unarmed man, Mr. Benny.
There are occult forces at my disposal as you have witnessed. That would strip you of the power
to press the trigger. But I scorn to use them against such a miserable impunity opponent.
The word stung. Cagliostromederno, stepping forward with the pistol pointed at the master's stomach,
said brusquely,
move to one side.
Instinctively the master gave way.
Cagliostro sprang past him and up to the altar.
He drew Sybil gently to one side
and leaned over the prostrate young man.
He breathed against the closed eyelids.
He whispered into the ears.
And then he took both hands and drew Luke Porter
into a sitting position.
All right, he queried briefly.
Luke drew a long breath of relief.
Knew what was going on all the time,
he exclaimed, but just couldn't speak or move. Give me that pistol, Benny. The occultist shook his head.
You take the young lady and rod as fast as you can to the draw. It's open. Get out quick. Your car is in front.
Never mind me, I can take care of myself. Go while the draw is open.
How wise is our great Cagliostro-Moderno? drawled a mellow voice. Luke and the occultist both turned like a flash.
They had for the time forgotten Guy Fane, who had slipped quietly to
the entry door and, carefully avoiding the pavement which had swallowed up his unfortunate mother,
stood there, leaning against the lentil negligently.
To go while the draw is open, he laughed.
How long do you think it will take me to reach my study?
I who am acquainted with every passage, every stairway here, five minutes after I have reached
my study, I shall have the pleasure of going on a long journey, and I think you three
will go with me, in fire and flame.
from the altar of Lucifer.
No, do not stir.
You cannot escape.
I shall close the draw first,
and the fuse will burn exactly five minutes.
Stop him, shouted Luke,
reaching for the pistol.
You have ruined my hope to be as other human beings are.
Perhaps if I had gained what I desired,
I might have acquired a heart as well, who knows.
But now I am harder than the very nucleus of the crystal sphere.
You shall not live to triumph over me.
"'This castle will make a splendid funeral pyre, will it not?'
The little occultist stood stupidly, while Guy Fane turned to go.
"'Give me that pistol!' cried Luke again, snatching at it,
and firing after the disappearing master.
The shot echoed and re-echoed along the chapel walls
and out through the adjoining corridors.
As it died away, they could hear Guy Fane's eerie laughter ringing mockingly through the doorway,
mingled with his rapidly retreating footfalls.
The master had gone, unharmed, to carry out his threat.
The draw! Sybil! Give me your hand! Benny! I can't forgive you for not giving me that pistol before.
If I'd shot the monster, we would be safe now, snapped Luke, drawing Sybil after him along the pavement blocks
that had appeared sound when the master had retreated.
Cagliostro stared mournfully, but did not follow them. A sudden white light of determination broke across his face, he spoke quickly.
I can stop him! Hold him! Wagonafri you to escape!
"'Run, I'll get him at his study.'
"'Don't be a fool,' shouted Luke,
"'pulling Sybil along down the corridor
"'that led to the courtyard giving upon the draw.
"'You'll be trapped!'
"'A strangely transfiguring smile
"'rested on the little occultist's face,
"'transforming it into something finer,
"'bigger than it had ever appeared before.
"'Good-bye!' he said simply, and was gone.
"'There was no time to dissuade him.
"'Luc swept the panting Sybil up into his arms,
"'twice she had stumbled in their,
their mad flight. He covered the short remaining distance with his precious burden in record time,
and as he emerged into the courtyard saw with grateful heart that the draw was still open,
lighted by the headlamps of the waiting car. His limbs braced themselves for the final effort.
He staggered out upon the drawbridge holding the girl closely to him.
If we go, we go together, he told himself grimly.
At the middle of the draw, it began to tremble and jar. The draw was rising slowly,
Guy Fain must have reached his study and have closed it.
The cables creaked and groaned for a moment Luke's heart almost stopped beating
as he flung himself face down Sibyl beside him on the rapidly perilous slope of the draw.
They clung together. In another moment they would lose their hold and slip down back into the courtyard to perish by the explosion.
The jarring recommenced. The draw, miracle of miracles, began to lower again.
Sybil got to her feet dazedly. Luke Rose caught at her hand and drew her along.
In another minute they had reached the edge.
Another, and they were across the moat, and Luke was pulling the girl into the seat of the little car.
He slid in behind the wheel, started the engine.
Then he turned and honked several times, watching to see the little occultist in the doorway.
A fine column of smoke was rising from midway in the building, a loud crackling,
the waving hands of Herbert Benny from the window over the draw.
Goodbye.
Don't forget.
Cogliostro
The little man was smiling wanly
Rumbling
A heavy thunderous roar that rose in terrible crashing explosion
Shaking the earth
Rocking the car's occupants from side to side
Blinding light flashed from the castle on all sides
The landscape stood out distinct as in broad daylight
It was sheer stupidity to linger in the open
Luke sick at heart for the fate of the little occultist
who had so nobly risen to that great opportunity of his life,
drove off down the steep roadway as rapidly as he dared
to get beyond the radius of falling stone and debris.
Guy Fane had been right.
The oracle had spoken truly.
The master had left his monstrous body
and stepped out into freedom at last.
End of Chapter 13.
End of the Gargoyle by Greta Laspina.
