Sunday 9 July 2023

A Ready Answer


‘One night I saw him standing naked at his bedroom window. Between his thighs hung the dark semblance of a hank of knotted rope. Later, I caught sight of him sitting on his fancied throne at the corner of the moonlit walled garden. His shoulders appeared to sag under the sheer weight of unbearable loneliness.’
Witness statement by schoolgirl Christelle Grace Temple, aet. 16,
from the Case Notes of Dr. Tibor Decuillé Cowry Ph.D., D.Sc., LL.D.,
Director, Royal Baronsgrove Institute, preparatory to the 
pre-trial Psychiatric Report on Eugene Zerah Hoffrege, aet. 19.


 
In the humdrum is the beginning of murder.
    Painfully bored, I found myself once again in the chapel robing room with my mild objections sermonised to silence.
    ‘The Ready Answer,’ the school chaplain raged, ‘of a Plausible Intriguer and Enterprising Rogue!’
    He pointed for the nth time to the absurdest of the acronyms he’d scrawled in red pen on the title page of my latest slapdash essay, an initialled comment from his crackpot system of grades that denoted, I knew, the dire mark of Beta double-minus for our Revision papers.
    He stabbed the paper with a nail-bitten forefinger.
    ‘It must have taken considerable ingenuity to produce a mark as bad as this.’
    I nodded and smiled encouragingly.
    ‘I can’t pretend to say I understand you very well.’
    ‘R.A.P.I.E.R! The Ready Answer of a Plausible Intriguer and Enterprising Rogue! My faith is a true blade that cuts through deceit!’
    Old Hopalong snorted and examined me forbiddingly over misted specs.
    ‘Qui vult decipi, decipiatur. I am not among the gullible who wish to be deceived, young man, nor shall I be deceived.’     
    The face of the Rev. H. W. F. Walmesley darkened a shade and he eased the celluloid of his dog collar.
    Tears had gathered in his failing eyes so he fumbled in his haste to retrieve a loose sheet of notepaper tucked under the first page of my essay.
    I recognised the oppressive regularity of my father’s handwriting.
    Like iron railings.
    ‘Judgement notwithstanding the verdict, this morning I had this curious letter from your father making enquiry as to whether the results of your entrance scholarship exam have been delayed. Hmmm.’
    His voice softened with a conciliatory – almost pitying – shift of tone. 
    ‘For the sake of your poor parents I suggest you break the delicate news of your defeat without delay.’
    He limped to the ambry to fetch his missal and dismissed me with a grunt.
    ‘Cut along, boy.’

That evening, secure within my mother’s abandoned henhouse, I withdrew from a dusty ledge above my dissecting benches an official-looking letter and the envelope which had enclosed it.
    Its flap hung loose.
    I’d steamed it open weeks earlier.
    I read again the satisfying words in the dim light that filtered through the ventilation shutters.
    It was formal notification of the failure of the candidate to pass his University Entrance Scholarship examinations under an early admissions scheme.
    ‘I’m tired of setting an example,’ I sighed. I was aware the muted defiance in my voice possessed a new edge of rancour. ‘I’ve deliberately flunked where I was expected to win.
    I resealed the letter in its envelope and returned it to its hiding place behind a congealed rubber glove.
    ‘I’m not at all sure that what I’ve done isn’t a chargeable offence – in the eyes of the Guv’nor,’ I murmured. ‘But at least I’ve won a brief reprieve, so ...’     I vowed to seize the precious fleeing hours!
    ‘Fugit hora! Carpe diem!’
    Until midnight I laboured to trim my best catapult for perfect balance, and to rebind the whipping cord on its grip.
    There was no hindrance to my remaining in the workshop from teatime to the small hours as the Ancient Parents were attending one of their interminable civic meetings exhorting bleeding-heart worldlings to bankroll country holidays for poor city children.
    I saw them leave by the gate, wearing their virtue for all the street to see.
    In the henhouse, the remains of my mother’s dry mash mixture packed in hempen sacks furnished a serviceable baffle for the thudding of my catapult practice.
    A half inch diameter ball-bearing or a one ounce drilled lead angler’s weight can deliver the knockout shock of a giant-killer’s sling-shot.
    After my carpeting by Old Hopalong, I’d sloped off in the lunch recess to visit Leggett Ironmongers and, just before Wednesday early closing,  Edgar Leggett the elder had served me himself.
    ‘Found a fish to play?’ he’d mumbled; his chestnut hair was not his own, neither his teeth. 
    ‘Yes,’ I’d nodded, ‘and one that will follow the bait.’

This morning, when I woke up, I thought, ‘Now there’ll be all Hell to pay!
    Not even to my mother had I confessed my self-scuppered scholarship.
    The old Memsahib and the Governor – missionaries both – formed a definite idea long ago that their pious son should follow their righteous path and, like them, serve the Lord in heathen parts. From infancy my future has been the ever-pressing subject of their pained solicitude.
    I found the Governor in our sunless front parlour, bible in hand.
    ‘My bright boy,’ he began, with a wealth of sarcasm on the adjective.
    His posture was as straight as a harp string. He was waiting for me before the dead hearth, feet planted astride on the dark parquet. A faint glimmer of daylight struggled through the half-drawn blinds.
    ‘Ahem.’ He cleared his throat the way he does as a prelude to a bawling out.
    ‘Without faith, the world will end in spiritual ... ahem ...’
    ‘Mayhem?’ I suggested.
    ‘What have you to tell me? Can it be news of that free scholarship they put you forward for?’
    ‘Yes, Father. I’ve been ploughed.’
    He was smiling to himself.
    He had known all along! A copy of The Times lay open on the sideboard.
    ‘The ways of Providence are strange, sonny. Strange to us now.’
    He clasped his hands and I could see his eyes were raised heavenwards.
    (Though my parents consider me as an object of general censure, they also regard our family as having been elected by God to know the privileges of saving grace. These canting sectarian pieties are shared by the Redemptorian League whose usage, habit, and practice consume our daily lives.)
    ‘It’s evident that you have neither the desire nor the vocation for the divine calling.’ He turned his head with a resigned glance for an instant.
    ‘Yet one cannot help feeling that a wise Providence has done all for the best.’
    To my astonishment I was then told that my hard-souled and joylessly joyous father is busily preparing for the Promised Land Upstairs. Apparently, the Great Rapture of the Second Coming is far, far more imminent than his peculiarly illuminated Redemptorians had hitherto reckoned, and Judgement Day is now practically round the corner!
    ‘When, precisely?’ I demanded.
    ‘Certainly in less time than it would take for you to earn a first class degree, my boy.’
    ‘I see. But what day will it be, exactly?’ I persisted, thinking: ‘I may have other plans.
    ‘The End of Days?’ My father’s answer rang out with rare good humour. His eyes were now fixed on a celestial distance. ‘Who knows? Today? Tomorrow? We may next meet when we rise with the Saints to greet the Lord in the air!’
    The old clock on the mantelpiece struck eight and he started.
    ‘Of one thing you may be certain.’ The Guv’nor snapped shut the Good Book with an air of finality. ‘We shall not taste death.’
    He stood in the doorway with thrown-back head and downward glance as from a pulpit and announced in organ-like tones:
    ‘This year, my boy, Holy Cross Day falls on a Sunday so the Elders are in good earnest to take our mission meeting to the Juvenile Colony and hold our Bible classes there.’
    I felt the pressure of his grip on my shoulder.
    ‘I count on your attendance. Observance is more than skin deep.’
    ‘Another praying-shop,’ I thought resentfully.

The farm settlement on the Fens is a training colony for juvenile delinquents and the Gov and the Mem are appointees of the Redemptorian League, charged to act as almoners in the disbursement of the league’s charitable funds.
    The inmates of this agrarian reform school are drawn from the lowest type of offenders, spawned by some of the most villainous families known to stalk London’s slums.
    I began to refine subtle thoughts that soon dominated my mind: ‘It would be something new and altogether exhilarating to be among young tearaways who consider it rather amusing to smash things or to steal without scruple or to reap some dim gratification in childish viciousness that finds joy in the pain of another.’ 
    My mind was beset by a curious inner turmoil.
    ‘Every reformation must have its victims,’ I brooded. ‘My thirst for blood has to be appeased. An urge over which I have no sanction.’
    I remained for some time in a state of sullen self-absorption, imagining my life degenerate into monotony, sacrificed to some futile sort of treadmill intended by my father.

The Sabbath found me trailing down the aisle, trapped in my wretched Sunday-second-best suit, keeping pace with the Gov and old Hopalong ... a poor sap doomed to hear the old trouper trumpet forth once more the Redemptorian League’s great work of moral rehabilitation and its God-given mission to reclaim every class of juvenile criminal and every den of East End undesirables from unwarrantable uncouthness.
    (Seven years ago, I – a boy soprano –  sang solo in this very chapel. Psalm Twenty-Three. The voice of a seraph. As the notes rose to sweetest perfection, I remember, I would think of fists soaked in the vinegar of Christ to toughen my resolve to live without any thought of the punishment scroll.)
    I hid myself by the choir stalls, wedged in beside two doltish farmhands.
    From my breast pocket I produced a bloodied handkerchief (Old Hopalong’s red ink has its uses!) and pressed it to my nose and lips.
    My shoulders heaved. Dry retching is a ruse that even the dimmest First Former knows will succeed when intent on cutting lessons.
    The farm-oafs, appalled, propelled me towards a staff door where, with one sickened glance at my official Redemptorian Yellow Pass, a sidesman waved me through.
    (I had, that morning, filched Mother’s almoner permit from her handbag.)
    I found myself in the exercise yard, a paved quad commanded by a guardhouse perched on a upper level like a signal box.
    A flat racing forecast from Goodwood blared from a wireless.                 Evidently, staff watchfulness markedly slackens during the hours of compulsory divine worship. 
    So I slipped through the entrance to the Laundry block, and up the stairs to the Infirmary overhead, wholly unchallenged.

The first thing I noticed was the rosary looped through the boy’s pyjama cord, and I smiled inwardly.  My raid behind enemy lines was over before it had properly begun.
    The boy-martyr I sought was the sole occupant of the sick bay.
    I removed my Bible from my pocket, inserted the Yellow Pass prominently as a book-mark, and approached.

Diagnostic Observation Schedule: Alester Baptiste, aet. 14 years.
n.b. Collective worship abstention/recommend Constructive Play (d/c)
.

    Thus was his entry on the bedside medical chart. I read rapidly. 
 
    Apparently, the boy was in disgrace. (His playtime had been d/c’, that is, ‘discontinued’.)
     I then put into execution the plan of action that had germinated in my uncurbed thoughts. Often and often I had pictured to myself what true devilment might be like, now I was to find out.
    I examined critically his dirty pudding of a face, his bizarre frizzed fair hair and the weak mouth of the simple-minded. Even so, he had perfect teeth.
    ‘Alester Baptiste?’
    ‘Who tell you my name? Yuh de bredthren fram de amshouse?’
    ‘Yes,’ I replied more or less truthfully.
    ‘Wozzup?’
    ‘I have news from the almoners. They have those funds for your release.’ I was guessing, yet his tawny eyes widened with recognition.‘We can get you out of here. Tonight.’
    ‘Inna de nigh? Yuh a jester, man!’
    ‘If you don’t want to spend the rest of your life in this state-run snake pit, then listen.’
    I went to the window and pointed to the building below. It would be so easy, I explained forcibly, to climb over the roof of the refectory, drop on to the coal bunker, and slink away into the shadows of the shrubbery beside the moat.
    ‘Then cross the water in the shallows to the base of the tower, where I’ll be waiting,’ I said.
    At once he began to whimper.
    ‘Wenna de watta is dutty dey say don’t play inna it wid de running belly. In dis country I am cold too bad. It does leave me sick.’
    As evidence of this he withdrew his chamber pot from concealment under the bed.
    ‘Nonsense! We don’t have time to go into side issues, just do as I say! ’
    The lad’s intelligence was not keen enough to follow the drift of this remark so I shifted my position.
    ‘You can expect nothing here,’ I continued. ‘Nothing. It’s because you know they have nothing to give that you know you have nothing to lose.’
    ‘Dem is a no good bunch. I know dis t’ing for true.’
    He groaned heavily, and sank into his pillows.
    ‘Agreed. So it’s only right we get you out of here. And fast. Is that not so?’
    He regarded me with sudden doubt.
    ‘Wha’s agowin wid yuh?’
    ‘Are you able to keep a secret?’
    He looked at me with a vague fear in his face.
    ‘Shouldah wanna hear it?’ he wavered.
    I then explained every detail of his escape.
    ‘Tonight. Eleven o’clock.’
    ‘Eleben!’ the boy exclaimed with extraordinary brightness and emphasis. 
    ‘We must hurry,’ I urged. ‘You need to decide now.’
    ‘Eleben! Yuh pwomise dis is true?’
    ‘Don’t ask for promises,’ I rounded on him, ‘ask only for revenge. Only blood drowns the pain.’
    I glanced at my watch, then plunged my hidden scalpel into the ball of my thumb. A thin stream of blood appeared.
    The demon in me waited and would not be satisfied until I saw the boy’s end written in his own blood.
    ‘You and me. We’re brethren. We must take the Oath of Brothers-in-Blood.’
    Sight of the blood seemed to transfix him and render him as passive and tractable as a little child. He allowed me to make an incision in his right thumb.
    It is repugnant to see mixed blood, to see blood mingle with mine in two veins at once, yet to achieve my ends I concealed my distaste.
    ‘Remember, you’ve to keep this business dark,’ I reminded him.
    ‘Breathe easy, man. My blood take yuh, man. Yuh is my best fren.’
    ‘Then that is all that need be said.’
    His dark listening face, framed by the smooth whiteness of the bed sheets, made him for the minute a painting imagined by an orientalist.
    ‘Eleven o’clock,’ I repeated.
    ‘Yuh mean,’ he muttered awkwardly, ‘dat yuh soon come back?’
    As a sign of the strange kinship we had sworn to one another, I bathed my mouth in his blood.
     I washed my hands in an enamelled tin basin, and reapplied lanolin cream to the boy’s bandage.
    The boy looked up with a gleam of something very like hope in his troubled eyes.
    I had been called upon to act the part of the Tempter and he was cast perfectly as the Tempted.
    ‘You have my word,’ I smiled.

Out on the colony forecourt I stood at the ramparts and surveyed the waters of the moat. A breeze coming up from the river brought with it the odour of sedgeweed.
    The margins of the far banks were defended by barbed wire entanglements and, anyhow, as I’d warned the boy, the mud on the other side was so sticky and thick that, if he attempted to wade in at any point, the mire would be sure to swallow him up. The approach I favoured was a direct ascent of the bailey tower ruins, never mind the water’s shelving depth.
    As I strode across the causeway I could think only of the boy, and of the bond of blood which had sealed our oath and united our hands; I could think only of the debt of blood that must be honoured and consecrated to my ends.

Later, when I returned for tea, I overheard the Memsahib talking to the Guv’nor. 
    ‘It is clearly our duty to see those boys come to no moral harm.’
    She sniffed as only my parents can sniff; her own cue to yet another moralism.
    ‘None shall be forgotten; not a grain of corn shall be lost. Of that we may be sure.’

When eleven struck from the Colony stables I was much relieved somehow that it was not the sinister chimes of midnight I heard breaking the stillness of that desolate spot.
    The Moat Farm clockhouse surmounts the mews where the colony’s working horses are quartered and, despite our separation by the breadth of the moat, the shuffling of their hoofs in the straw reached my ears as I stood at the parapet of the ruined bailey I’d made my own watchtower. 
    Of other farm sounds I heard none save for a rat scurrying on the ramparts to the waste bins behind the refectory kitchens.
    The planet Venus shone like a blue lamp, a caution I ignored.
    I had been standing there for two hours thinking of how I should kill him – slowly, in my own time, as with my animal and bird specimens – talking to him all the while. Thus I stood for many golden minutes revolving the possibilities of my point of vantage and assigning my actions to it. 
    Then eleven struck and I perceived a shadow of a shadow stir below the roofline and the darkness yielded a new scurrier, which as quick as a trained monkey slid down a drainpipe to the bank of the moat.
    I heard Lester’s half-stifled gasp before he slipped into the shallows and breasted the smooth evenness of the waters towards me.
    ‘Young’un!’ I called softly.    
    ‘A-who dat?’
    ‘Keep still until I throw a line.’
    I had secured a doubled rope to the tower’s lightning rod and I swung the two lines within the boy’s grasp.
    He rubbed his slim brown hands together and grabbed the ropes.
    ‘You my bredthren, man!’ he grinned with a show of extraordinarily white teeth.
    I braced my feet against the parapet and began to belay him up, foothold by foothold, until he reached a weathered stonework shelf that capped a buttress.
    I held the ropes taut then I caught his left wrist in my grasp.
    ‘Dis is not an easy somet’ing.’
    ‘Take hold of that slab,’ I whispered. ‘You don’t have a dog’s chance unless you do as I say.’
    As his hand gripped the ledge I whisked the rope up from his snatching fingers so smartly that it struck my face like a whiplash.
    ‘My arms ache,’ he moaned. He was panting hoarsely. ‘You nah hear what I say?’
    ‘No time for tears,’ I taunted. ‘Think of it as Constructive Play.’
    I had contrived his plight to be this dreadful and uneasy posture. Over one corner of the stone ledge was crooked his left arm, which principally supported the weight of his body, while his right leg was turned up and precariously hooked over the lip of the slab.
    In all truth he was on the slab at last.

I was greatly cheered by the success of my scheme and my heart now panted with eagerness to accomplish my great purpose.
    But I resolved first to explain to him the infallibility of the Redemptorian Elect and the preordination of all that would come to pass.
    Below me, in the darkness, the whites of the boy’s eyes widened.
    ‘Yuh inna big chouble, mista! A whole heap’f chouble.’
    One warning tug of the remaining rope was threat enough to silence him.
    ‘Sound travels on still water. If you raise your voice, the Superintendent will hear.’
    I then explained that special liberty by which we Redemptorians, the Chosen and Elected Ones, are made free.
    ‘You must know, Lester, that I was chosen and elected to be saved before the world was made.’
    ‘Yuh inna a jam, man, trus’ me!’ he persisted, writhing in pain.
    Fear held him in a vice.
    I smiled sweetly. Nothing in the world delights a Redemptorian so much as consigning detractors to eternal perdition.
    So I took the boy to task for his ignorance of the great doctrine of the election of grace, and of how I had been assured of salvation by an eternal decree never to be dissolved.
    I remembered word for word the assurances of my father.
    ‘We are the Chosen Few,’ I recited, ‘covenanted by God, who will never fall away.’
    ‘Tink God a-go help you?’ His voice was half-afraid, half-reproachful.
    The boy’s snivelling remarks began to nettle me and I became irritated beyond measure until I was positively glad to give up the task of delivering the sublime truths my father had brought to light.
    So I relaxed the remaining rope to see my half-strung marionette squirm and grapple with the ledge in a moment of panic. 
    I was conscious of the sound of the tearing of some material, probably the canvas of his haversack as it fell. It rebounded off an outcrop of rock some eighty feet below.
    ‘Wha’appen to you? Wha’gawenon?’
    ‘I am going to kill you,’ I said quietly, without hurry, and my resolution rose, indignant to be quit of him.
    ‘You must be joke!’
    ‘Your last hour has arrived. You shall go your way, and I shall go mine.’
    That boy must have died a hundred times in the ten minutes I held him dangling in dread on the line. Looking down I saw his mouth gasping like a fledgling’s panting gape as he glanced sideways at the water.
    He was fighting for breath and I had the satisfaction of hearing his teeth chatter; I think he knew his end was near.
     ‘Fear is better than pain for the pleasure derived by the tormentor,’ I thought with a lighter heart. ‘To inflict great suffering and hear the cry of it and not to doubt. It is in this torment that one finds true greatne
ss.’
    He seemed grateful when I smiled. That smile I bestowed on him was like the kiss of the torturer.
    Then a beam of light shot out across the causeway and the Reformatory Superintendent blew three loud blasts on his whistle.
    Lester’s lips trembled with a premonition.
    I let go the rope and reached for my catapult.
    He clutched his last safehold in bewilderment before a more than lucky slingshot caught him a true sockeroo smack between the eyes.
    ‘Lawd have mercy pon ...
    He stopped suddenly, with a jerk, as a man stops in the narration of something which has left an ineffaceable pain in his life.
    His shirt clung wet to his back. The marks of his fingers were still wet on the ledge.
     As he fell, I remembered the thrush in our garden that had flown from the bird bath that morning.
    ‘Flying with wet wings,’ I thought.

The details of my return on the empty last bus are fragmentary and vague.
    My coat-sleeve was nearly torn off, while all the buttons of my shirt had been wrenched away while lying on the parapet.
    Otherwise I showed no sign of scratch or hurt.
    ‘You do look cold, love.’ 
    The blue-trousered conductress with henna’d hair gave me the glad eye while she poured sweet tea from a chipped thermos flask into its stainless steel cap. Behind her right ear was a tucked a thinly rolled cigarette no more substantial than a toothpick. Her voice rasped.
    ‘How about it, lovey?’ She proffered the steaming cup.
    I smiled my hard inscrutable society smile that never betrays an emotion.
    I did not trust myself so far as to speak.
    Then she probed. ‘Well, you are a night-owl.’
    ‘Flat tyre,’ I lied without hesitation. I produced my cycle clips from my jacket pocket.
    ‘‘Had a spill. Gonna to fetch my bike in the morning.’
    The tea soon brought me to myself, and, after another deep draught, I was greatly revived and felt my spirit rise again above the sphere of mortal conceptions and the bourgeoisisms of the laws of men.
    On that rapturous night I came to the belief that the more laden with transgressions the sinner tends, the more likely is the bestowal by Heaven of the mercy of eternal grace.
    And I calmed myself with the serene and indissoluble certainty that, since my salvation was divinely preordained, so also was the manner of Lester’s death.

I remembered the scene in the vestry and the words of our school chaplain. He was afflicted by a curiously lazy right eye, which causes his active eye to gleam with greater fixity on the penitents summoned before him.
    ‘I confess I am grievously displeased to see a debauchee so strayed from the path as to have wholly lost his way.’
    He had leafed through my manuscript again before sounding off.
    ‘I fear the clear light from the candle of the Lord no longer shines on your soul.’
    ‘I agree, sir,’ I answered placidly, ‘my premise is a somewhat complicated and abstruse calculation.’
 

    Judas Iscariot: How the Twelfth Man Won the Match, my casuistical entry for the Divinity Prize Essay on the set topic of Predestination and the Betrayal Paradox, draws on the laws of cricket to examine the fulfilment of prophecy. I cited a recent notable county game in which the match was saved by a left-handed substitute player no less able than his fellows. (Three left-handed catches in two innings! A county record!) Of course, Judas was reputedly a southpaw; medieval iconography invariably depicts his bag of thirty pieces of silver clutched in his left hand.
    My contention, then, had been to reveal to my schoolmasters that Judas was not the villain-of-the-piece nor unusually wicked, and the lesson we can learn from Judas’s rôle as fate-conniving instrument in the drama of the Apostolate is that out of any twelve men chosen for the advancing of an enterprise – in fact, out of any twelve men assembled on a field of play, never mind the cricket pitch – one man probably is, or will be, a Judas.

That night, I dreamt I saw a Judas tree take root and blossom in my father’s high-walled garden. In my dream the flowers were blood-red.
 
(Extract from an unpublished novel, The Boy from the High-Walled Garden.) 
Catherine Eisner © 2023 

See also:
Just Before Nine

See also:  
A Serial Killer Diarist and Unremarked Clues to John George Haigh’s Crimes
https://catherineeisnerfrance.blogspot.com/2014/05/i-am-serial-killer-diarist-unremarked.html?m=0



Catherine Eisner believes passionately in plot-driven suspense fiction, a devotion to literary craft that draws on studies in psychoanalytical criminology and psychoactive pharmacology to explore the dark side of motivation, and ignite plot twists with unexpected outcomes. Within these disciplines Eisner’s fictions seek to explore variant literary forms derived from psychotherapy and criminology to trace the traumas of characters in extremis. Compulsive recurring sub-themes in her narratives examine sibling rivalry, rivalrous cousinhood, pathological imposture, financial chicanery, and the effects of non-familial male pheromones on pubescence, 
and Listen Close to Me (2011)

 
 

Monday 19 June 2023

His Master’s Remembrancer

No man is a hero to his valet.

Armimas
rmimas
mimas
imas
mas
as
A protective charm against forgetfulness.

‘Obey!’ he commanded the wolfhound.

          There were only the three of us in his private quarters in our capital’s last redoubt.

          As far as the social divide was concerned he might just as well have rebuked us both.

          He had named us both ‘Wolf’. ‘In this room,’ he told us grimly, ‘there can be no Trinity!’

          (‘Nor a triumvirate,I thought. I understood his meaning readily enough. He despised the ineptitude of his field marshals whom he treated like waiters.)

          This was his world now – the Boss, his Dog and the Valet – an enemy-infested world that had shrunk to a fortified underground room he was content to inhabit to be spared sight of the grey hopeless distance. Besides, his eyes were intolerant to sunlight.

          He glanced at the clock, then spoke again: ‘Remind me once more, Wolf. At what hour did our great Warrior-King leave this world?’

          ‘Twenty minutes past two, my Master,’ I answered promptly. ‘1786. In the morning.’

          (The Bakelite electric clock above the steel bulkhead door read twenty-past-two. Four hours would pass before dawn.) Evidently his challenge was yet another sly test of his memory-man. (‘Cicero kept a slave,’ he had bluntly told me on the day I was appointed. ‘A mnemonist to summon up the names of plotters against Rome. A nomenclator.’)

           His love of our nation’s Great Warrior King was only matched by his love of the Roman Empire and its chronicler, Cicero.

          I saw him stoop and whisper to the dog: ‘I rather fear, my dear Wolf, that when we have more citizens than soldiers it is time to take my leave.’ (It was evident the news had reached him of mass desertions at the front. As one of my duties, I was expected to keep a tally for the Action List of names marked down for elimination as conspirators, a running total in constant dispute. The Master loathed the patrician class, particularly those who’d retained their nobiliary particle.)

          ‘Take my leave.’  It was if a sudden chill had caused me to shiver. In his talk of the death of an emperor there was clearly a terrible meaning; an acceptance that saw him bow to his own imminent dissolution. I had a comforting sense that this moment was preordained, an unalterable scheme of events that would culminate in the defeat of his Great Cause.

          For how else could it end when it was I, the Master’s valet, who had engineered his fall?

You might just wonder how a hexed chicken-bone can be introduced into the royally guarded sick bed of a vegetarian tyrant and Would-be Autocrat of All the World. I will tell you how.

          My hair is saxon-flaxen. My eyes are blue. So it is true, of course, that from my infancy I have passed for a member of my Master’s tribe but, then, ever since the Middle Ages, so many of the Newly Converted – the Noviter Conversis – have assumed the mantle of their inquisitors, and adopted their speech; a language which – like the Master’s bull-bellowing-orations – is often merely a turgid and mystical aggregation of words promising nothing, to which his voice easily lends itself.

          Such is the inviolable certainty of the Master’s race. Hence his diktat that the beliefs of our Outcast Elect must be reduced to the obscurity of a debased creed deserving of being wiped off the face of the earth.

          Yet do our rulers imagine that, following our distant ancestors’ enforced conversion, the secrets of the Elect were not restored to us in our cradles even while the recusant Elders perished within their walled Settlements of Exclusion? Let me confess: the prepotent words of ancient and secret ordinances, conjurations and maledictions, still echo in our blood from birth. For I, who had received the slave’s portion, had received a greater gift.

          ‘As fast as the throbbing progresses,’ the Master had grated, nursing his left hand, ‘as quickly my flesh withers.’ He had cut an abject figure. A pained smile, his face blueish-grey.

          He could not have known that my people for centuries have regarded all sleep as a perilous state since the unguarded body is peculiarly open to attack by demon-magic.

          That the Master’s vanity could be flattered by my demonic stratagems can be understood only when you consider that many ladies of the arts, particularly young movie starlets, pursued him with shamelessly seductive love letters often clipped to glossy publicity stills of their posing as come-hither ingénues in popular celluloid froth for the masses.

          Naturally, I considered it my duty to intercept such importunities.  

          For it was one of these cris de cœur that lent credence to my subterfuge: ‘I love you, my Emperor, and want to be with you always in the joy of your divine-anointed future. My heart bursts with the ardency of my respect for you, etc.’ The letter with a single rose, its stem embellished with a red silk ribbon, I placed on the pillow of the Master’s bed.

          A pullet’s bone had been concealed within the ribbon’s folds, a charm against evil men invested with our most powerful necromancy. I’d performed the prescribed forty-two repetitive adjurations over that hollow bone in which a louse, teased from the wolfhound’s bedding, had been imprisoned.

          When the Master uncovered the rose and letter beneath his counterpane, his gaunt cheeks were seen to be singularly flushed in a patchy, unnatural way, yet the tributes remained untouched because that night the profound sleep of beseeched misfortune at once overtook him.

          The next morning an early dispatch informed the Master of incalculable casualties on the Eastern Front as his armies retreated pursued by a massive counteroffensive.

Ours was once an enslaved people so the Ancients tell us and, from that morning, the ineffaceable suffering in my life – as another Androcles – intensified under the brute I served.

          Whereas it is not exactly a case of putting one’s head into a lion’s mouth, it is too near for absolute peace of mind when at close quarters one is required to apply mortician’s greasepaint to the Master’s sunken cheeks to evince a counterfeit bloom.

          It was the face not of an individual; it was the face of an entire nation, seen on postage stamps.

          That face was now rigid. Sweat beaded his forehead and his limbs pulsed with a sharp acrid smell. A bestial stink.

          Day and night, deep below on Sub-level Four, I was caged with this totem. On the increasingly rare occasions he ventured out in his armoured car to view the ruined city, the warning signs that reminded him The Enemy is Listening seemed only to prolong his caged paranoia.

          Things come apart precipitately when they are held together by lies. So when they learned the Eastern Front was held by broken promises the ranks fell apart.

Not all occasions are equal for the efficacy of a curse. I chose carefully the hour when the stars favoured me to call down a curse on this loathsome man.

          The Master’s voice had the charm of Satan; he’d oil his voice with a glass of clear honey, glycerin and water. My duty was to prepare the mixture he’d gargle before his speeches.  In accordance with the cabbalistic rituals of our fabled mystics, before the glass was filled the seven signs of seven were written in honey on the inside of the glass while the given invocation was recited.

          The next day, for the first time, his left arm began the violent twitching with which henceforth he would be afflicted, while the tremors in his hands were more pronounced, his lips quivered, and his left eyebrow was gripped by a persistent nervous tic.

          Consider. Were not the tremors of his hands the mark of Cain, mankind’s First Murderer and likewise a vegetarian? Thereafter, in public, the Master would hold a pair of gloves, grasping his left hand to conceal the infirmity rendered by my sorcery.

          Such was the ground I had prepared for the Master’s downfall. Nothing sharpens the mind like a condemned cell. That it was a conspiracy of one against the powers of evil and entirely dependent on my own acts and devices is an historical fact.

Behind me, from his desk, I heard an almost inappreciable indrawn breath, a sound I recognized as a cue preparatory to speech, as if something had just occurred to him.

          So I turned at the door.

          ‘Don’t you know it’s unlucky to turn back?’ The Master was smiling with a sickening glazed look; the sort of cynical smile you see on the face of the dead.

          ‘Have you a revolver?’ The words were hardly audible.

          Before I could answer he went on:

          ‘Take mine.’

          He looked round him as a person looks round a room before starting on a long journey to remember all he leaves behind.

          He fondled the muzzle of his dog. (His breath was fouler than Wolf’s when scavenging the old winter garden, now overrun with willow herb and nettles.)

          ‘His life will be nothing without me.’

          I stretched out my hand and took the revolver, which was of an unfamiliar pattern. I made up my mind to shoot Wolf at once. 

          ‘The quietus will seem from my own hand, you understand.’ The words were pronounced by a tyrant who issued orders that sent thousands to their deaths. Even in this extremity he was shooting from someone else’s shoulder; demanding I do his dirty work without compunction, as though I were simply another thuggish condottiere from his elite death squad.

          He half rose in his chair to unlock a drawer. I saw his own service revolver reposed within. He withdrew a leather-bound cigarette case, which he opened and extended to me.

          (I curbed a start of surprise. Famously, the Master neither took strong drink nor smoked.)

          The cigarette case revealed a dozen glass ampoules packed in sawdust.           

          ‘Take one.’ He lowered his voice.

          Often – so very often – I wanted to cram glowing ashes into my mouth rather than answer with the expected rote assent: ‘Very good, my Master,’ or ‘As the Master pleases,’ regardless of the task he ordained.

          I smartly placed the cyanide vial in my tunic breast pocket. I noticed the master was – unusually for this early hour – wearing service dress, yet such was his physical decline the uniform was now a poor fit. His trousers hung on him; in the first week of my appointment, I had been commended for introducing knife-edge sewn-in creases to spruce up his turnout.

          On his left breast the Master wore his Medal for Valour, awarded for distinguished service when a corporal. Beneath the medal was pinned his gold Party badge, member Number One. It was whispered a misfortune had befallen the original owner of this coveted membership number, which had been reassigned to the Master. His rival for first place, we heard, had been ‘administratively exiled’ to a Detention Camp for Political Education.

          As it was, I was haunted by my recollection of sewing that uniform with thread moistened by my own heathenish spittle, every stitch counted according to a numeromancy older than the Witch of Endor and her demon familiars.

          And, yes, it’s true the Master did indeed shoot himself that morning but, if I am to be believed, he died by my own hand; the hand that threaded the fatal needle because, you see, the day was chosen. A Monday it was, remember, a day especially opportune for blood-letting.

          The Master’s last words to me?

          ‘We are now willed to flourish from the ashes, free of our infantile servitude to the People’s legends from the Old Dispensation. The new man must fight for the New Order, Wolf.’

          ‘I give my word, I answered glibly, ‘as freely as my life is given, repeating the pledge that had bound me to this barbarian for seven long years (and in my mind I rehearsed again its curiously equivocal deniability).

          (‘There has now risen a new authority as to who our Redeemer is,’ his Minister for Spiritual Reform had once explained to me. ‘This new authority is our Master.’)

          The Master clasped and unclasped his hands without thought, a sure sign of his bodily pain. His eyes glittered with rheum. His teeth were resolutely clenched and he pressed his abdomen while feigning to adjust his waistband.

          His inflammatory bowel complaint was first defined by a brilliant gastroenterologist, regrettably a remote lineal descendant of one of our recusant Elders, with whose name the discovery would be for ever linked. The Master refused to utter the physician’s name. He called his gastrointestinal affliction his Vulcanitis (even his own pathology he made the stuff of Olympian myths).

          The Master was a delusional case. How desperate was his search for panaceas, to my mind, may be measured by his craven submission to the remedies of a crank dietician who, ever since our incarceration in the redoubt, had prescribed a treatment of crushed nettles in an infusion, fetched daily from a makeshift dispensary at Sub-level Two in one of the fortress’s surviving cellars.

          It was to this dispensary that I now withdrew, the wolfhound close on my heels.

          One of my tasks had been the supply of fresh nettles from the winter garden for steeping in a field water cask. I would pour the foul-smelling potion from its brass spigot into the Master’s carafe to be taken as a tincture.

          The Master believed the decoction fired up his rhetoric. He was fond of repeating a folk saying well known in our language: ‘My words, like nettles, sting only those who are incautious.’

        (He had touched my arm at our parting. ‘And when I give my word, I am in the habit of keeping it.’ A moment later a faint gunshot was heard confined by the door I had just closed behind me.)

          I took Wolf by the leash and scrambled up the service access shaft that connected the dispensary to the surface where the entrance was concealed by a cunningly disguised trapdoor professing to be a commemorative slab dedicated to a long-lived empress whose baroque belvedere pavilion collapsed on the Ides of March on the same spot following the great hurricane of 1876.

          (Even then, if truth be told, it was borne in on me that the meretricious convolutions of the Master’s overwrought speeches were no less baroque than his nation’s florid civic splendour now laid waste under the relentless carpet bombing dealt by his enemy’s superior firepower . . . and, indeed, that both floridities were now no more than so much scorched earth few could deny.)

          Wolf surged ahead, teeth bared, bristling with unease, as we emerged hidden by a clump of nettles into a smoke-shrouded dawn. The last boom of our guns defending the city was like the slamming shut of a prison door on our freedom; we were besieged. A hail of returning shell and mortar fire caused us to draw back to seek refuge in the crater of a half-toppled obelisk that mocked the remains of the garden colonnade.

          Ahead of us machine-guns stuttered and a breach in the outworks appeared, lit up by signal flares. I was assailed by the stench of machines and smoke and fell back oppressed, faint from intimations of my destiny, while headlong through the opening burst a host of messenger-angels – incorporeal, transcendent – clothed in the pure white samite raiment predicted by our prophets.

Comrade Wolf! was their first greeting. There were yells of wild laughter when Wolf slipped the leash and the platoon leader deftly caught him.

            As they came near, I saw the invaders were cradling sub-machine guns half-concealed by their white capes; evidently their advance from the snowbound Eastern Front had been so rapid their winter service uniforms were all they had: fleece caps, belted sheepskin coats or white quilted jackets.

            Broad faces. Cheekbones as though hacked out of ice. Nearly all were marked by some disfigurement, a record written on them of fatal combat where frostbite was no less cruel a foe.

            Yet, astonishingly, they clapped me on the back and chorused, ‘Wolf! Wolf!

            It was thanks to the Party’s ultra-demagogic Minister of Information that Wolf was more renowned than Rin Tin Tin.

            We were celebrities. So, of course, they – those guileless white-clad victors – delivered us as valued trophies to their own feared despot and for a gilded hour they were heroes.

‘I did not inherit my throne,’ my new master boasts with a slippery flippancy, ‘I was chosen.’

            Again we have fallen on evil days. For now Wolf, too, has a new master.

            Our new owner is, indeed, of a New Order. He is the Supreme Leader of the new World Order and rules half the hemisphere. Truly, my former Master had espoused the Great Cause to see his arch-enemy vanquished, yet this victorious peasant-faced Man of the People, at a stroke, has seized the ideological high ground.

            Under his peasant heel, the Master’s fatherland has been damned a vassal state. And I? My fate is to be the Supreme Leader’s valet, installed in a new reptile house.

            (Once, once, I had dreamt of a time when I’d be granted a great estate such as that bestowed by our Warrior-King in 1740 on his valet, the son of a peasant. Now my eyes have been opened. Am I to be ever cursed a Gibeonite, and never cease to be a slave?)

            The Supreme Leader is a man, so far as I can see, of no particular distinction. From the way I see it, he fails to apprehend what is important and what is not. That will be his undoing.

            His time will come.

            He wears with relish my gold watch, the watch with a personal inscription the Master had presented to me. The defeated ruler’s favorite slave, too, becomes the trophy of a conqueror.

            Now I live lower than dirt; below, in the basement area, under the arch of the steps that lead to the Supreme Leader’s grand front door. Of his mute slaves there is not one who does not fear their hell-bent ruler and quake at his tread. 

            Many times, on his approach, the monster bawls my name; stamps a tantrum at his door to bid his prized drudge: ‘Take off my boots!’ 

            And there, on that doorstep, so near above my head, there at that boot scraper, under his tyrant heel he stamps out the dirt while I, his bootblack, suffer his taunts to bear all the cold earth, all the cold earth he rains down to mire my hair. 

          Ranting. Ever stomping to defile my hair.

          I am Absalom, my golden hair caught in a thicket of my own trickery.

          The Supreme Leader’s promises are ruinous. In time, he too will learn.

          There shall be more conjurations. More maledictions.

          Misfortune seldom comes alone to a house.

Ochnotinos
chnotinos
notinos
otinos
tinos
inos
nos
os
A protective charm against the deliriums of fever.

Keeping accounts does not necessarily mean one settles them. 


© Catherine Isolde Eisner 2023

See also: A fervent proselytiser for the mystical recovery of a Greater Germany. Between life and death, January 14 1944. Poet Franz Lüdtke’s ‘Ostvisionen’ for Colonisation to the Baltic Coast.
https://catherineeisnerfrance.blogspot.com/2018/02/between-life-and-death-january-14-1944.html 


See also: Correction Notice, Soviet Weekly January 17 1946 . . . an ‘Exchange of Information’ Restored.

Monday 12 June 2023

A Discomposed Gnat-Bitten Townie Sulks and Composes an Anti-Haiku in Memory of a Disagreeable Visit to the Atonal English Countryside.

 babbling of birds
the warbling of a brook
then a five-barred thing


The anti-haiku poet’s expression of a gnat horde
composed in a fury of fountain pen ink.

For three haikus perhaps holding a glimmer of promise and presumptuously dedicated to England’s truest nature poet, John Clare, at whose feet I sit, see: https://catherineeisnerfrance.blogspot.com/2017/02/three-haikus-in-homage-to-john-clare.html


Friday 14 April 2023

Beware of Pity

(Ungeduld des Herzens*)

In homage to Stefan Zweig


             This blossomed tree grown crookèd on the hill

             an onshore wind espouses lest desire

             reveal that void – cathedral of the soul –

             whose hawk in spirals weaves a twisted spire. 

         Catherine Eisner 

 

*The Heart's Impatience, a powerful psychological study of emotional betrayal, is a 1939 novel by the Austrian writer Stefan Zweig and it was his longest work of fiction; published in English as Beware of Pity. The protagonist, a young lieutenant, moved by compassion is trapped into a tragic engagement to a wealthy heiress, wheelchair-bound and infatuated and overwhelmed by a make-believe romance than can never be realised.      

 

See also: Sternstunden, Toxic Pacts and the Silent Woman’s Tryst of Blood  https://catherineeisnerfrance.blogspot.com/2013/12/sternstunden-toxic-pacts-and-silent.html

         

Legend

Near lost the tide. We grazed the harbour wall.

Sheared bows. Half her good name the Devil tore

To goad our fears:

Bounty she is! No more The Bountiful!

Who tells on what Rock might you ground ashore?

And ask: Who steers?’


                                                                                Catherine Eisner