Manly Wade Wellman - Judge Pursuivant 01

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Manly Wade Wellman - Judge Pursuivant 01 Page 5

by The Hairy Ones Shall Dance (v1. 1)


  "Remarkable," mused Judge Pursuivant. Then his great shrewd eyes studied me. "Don't go to sleep there, Mr Wills. I know you're tired, but I want to talk lycanthropy."

  "Lycanthropy?" I repeated. "You mean the science of the werewolf?" I smiled and shook my head. "I'm afraid I'm no authority, sir. Anyway, this was no witchcraft - it was a bona fide spirit seance, with ectoplasm."

  "Hum!" snorted the judge. "Witchcraft, spiritism! Did it ever occur to you that they might be one and the same thing?"

  "Inasmuch as I never believed in either of them, it never did occur to me."

  Judge Pursuivant finished his drink and wiped his mustache. "Skepticism does not become you too well, Mr Wills, if you will pardon my frankness. In any case, you saw something very werewolfish indeed, not an hour ago. Isn't that the truth?"

  "It was some kind of a trick," I insisted stubbornly.

  "A trick that almost killed you and made you run for your life?"

  I shook my head. "I know I saw the thing," I admitted. "I even felt it." My eyes dropped to the bruised knuckles of my right hand. "Yet I was fooled - as a magician, I know all about fooling. There can be no such thing as a werewolf."

  "Have a drink," coaxed Judge Pursuivant, exactly as if I had had none yet. With big, deft hands he jxjured whisky, then soda, into my glass and gave the mixture a stirring shake. "Now then," he continued, sitting back in his chair once more, "the time has come to speak of many things."

  He paused, and I, gazing over the rim of that welcome glass, thought how much he looked like a rosy blond walrus.

  "I'm going to show you," he announced, "that a man can turn into a beast, and back again."

  IX

  ''To a terrified victim he is doom itself."

  He leaned toward the bookshelf beside him, pawed for a moment, then laid two sizable volumes on the desk between us.

  "If this were a fantasy tale, Mr Wills," he said with a hint of one of his smiles, "I would place before you an unthinkably rare book -one that offered, in terms too brilliant and compelling for argument, the awful secrets of the universe, past, present and to come."

  He paused to polish a pair of pince-nez and to clamp them ujxin the bridge of his broad nose.

  "However," he resumed, "this is reality, sober if uneasy. And I give you, not some forgotten grimoire out of the mystic past, but two works by two recognized and familiar authorities."

  I eyed the books. "May I see?"

  For answer he thrust one of them, some six hundred pages in dark blue cloth, across the desk and into my hands. ''Thirty Years of Psychical Research, by the late Charles Richet, French master in the spirit-investigation field," he informed me. "Faithfully and interestingly translated by Stanley De Brath. Published here in America, in 1923."

  I took the book and opened it. "I knew Professor Richet, slightly. Years ago, when I was just beginning this sort of thing, I was entertained by him in London. He introduced me to Conan Doyle."

  "Then you're probably familiar with his book. Yes? Well, the other," and he took up the second volume, almost as large as the Richet and bound in light buff, "is by Montague Summers, whom I call the premier demonologist of today. He's gathered all the lycanthropy-lore available."

  I had read Mr Summers' Geography of Witchcraft and his two essays on the vampire, and I made bold to say so.

  "This is a companion volume to them," Judge Pursuivant told me, opening the book. "It is called The Werewolf He scrutinized the flyleaf. "Published in 1934- thoroughly modem, you see. Here's a bit of Latin, Mr Wills: Intrabunt lupi rapaces in vos, non parcentes gregi."

  I crinkled my brow in the effort to recall my high school Latin, then began slowly to translate, a word at a time: "'Enter hungry wolves -'"

  "Save that scholarship," Judge Pursuivant broke in. "It's more early Scripture, though not so early as the bit about the hairy ones - vulgate for a passage from the Acts of the Apostles, twentieth chapter, twenty-ninth verse. 'Ravenous wolves shall enter among you, not sparing the flock.' Apparently that disturbing possibility exists even today."

  He leafed through the book. "Do you know," he asked, "that Summers gives literally dozens of instances of lycanthropy, things that are positively known to have happened?"

  I took another sip of whisky and water. "Those are only legends, surely."

  "They are nothing of the sort!" The judge's eyes protruded even more in his earnestness, and he tapped the pages with an excited forefinger. "There are four excellent cases listed in his chapter on France alone - sworn to, tried and sentenced by courts - "

  "But weren't they during the Middle Ages?" I suggested.

  He shook his great head. "No, during the Sixteenth Century, the peak of the Renaissance. Oh, don't smile at the age, Mr Wills. It produced Shakespeare, Bacon, Montaigne, Galileo, Leonardo, Martin Luther; Descartes and Spinoza were its legitimate children, and Voltaire builded upon it. Yet werewolves were known, seen, convicted - "

  "Convicted on what grounds?" I interrupted quickly, for I was beginning to reflect his warmth.

  For answer he turned more pages, "Here is the full account of the case of Stubbe Peter, or Peter Stumpf," he said. "A contemporary record, telling of Stumpfs career in and out of wolf-form, his capture in the very act of shifting shape, his confession and execution - all near Cologne in the year 1589. Listen."

  He read aloud: "'Witnesses that this is true. Tyse Artyne. William Brewar. Adolf Staedt. George Bores. With divers others that have seen the same.'" Slamming the book shut, he looked up at me, the twinkle coming back into his spectacled eyes. "Well, Mr Wills? How do those names sound to you?"

  "Why, like the names of honest German citizens."

  "Exactly. Honest, respectable, solid. And their testimony is hard to pass off with a laugh, even at this distance in time, eh?"

  He had almost made me see those witnesses, leather-jerkined and broad-breeched, with heavy jaws and squinting eyes, taking their turn at the quill pen with which they set their names to that bizarre document. "With divers others that have seen the same" perhaps too frightened to hold pen or make signature . . .

  "Still," I said slowly, "Germany of the Renaissance, the Sixteenth Century; and there have been so many changes since."

  "Werewolves have gone out of fashion, you mean? Ah, you admit that they might have existed." He fairly beamed his triumph. "So have beards gone out of fashion, but they will sprout again if we lay down our razors. Let's go at it another way. Let's talk about materialization - ectoplasm - for the moment." He relaxed, and across his great girth his fingertips sought one another. "Suppose you explain, briefly and simply, what ectoplasm is considered to be."

  I was turning toward the back of Richet's book. "It's in here. Judge Pursuivant. To be brief and simple, as you say, certain mediums apparently exude an unclassified material called ectoplasm. This, at first light and vaporescent, becomes firm and takes shape, either upon the body of the medium or as a separate and Hving creature."

  "And you don't believe in this phenomenon?" he prompted, with something of insistence.

  "I have never said that I didn't," I replied truthfully, "even before my experience of this evening went so far toward convincing me. But, with the examples I have seen, I felt that true scientific control was lacking. With all their science, most of the investigators trust too greatly."

  Judge Pursuivant shook with gentle laughter. "They are doctors for the most part, and this honesty of theirs is a professional failing that makes them look for it in others. You - begging your pardon - are a magician, a professional deceiver, and you expect trickery in all whom you meet. Perhaps a good lawyer with trial experience, with a level head and a sense of competent material evidence for both sides, should attend these seances, eh?"

  "You're quite right," I said heartily.

  "But, returning to the subject, what else can be said about ectoplasm? That is, if it actually exists."

  I had found in Richet's book the passage for which I had been searching. "It says here that b
its of ectoplasm have been secured in rare instances, and that some of these have been examined microscopically. There were traces of fatty tissue, bacterial forms and epithelium."

  "Ah! Those were the findings of Schrenck-Notzing. A sound man and a brilliant one, hard to corrupt or fool. It makes ectoplasm sound organic, does it not?"

  I nodded agreement, and my head felt heavy, as if full of sober and important matters. "As for me," I went on, "I never have had much chance to examine the stuff. Whenever I get hold of an ectoplasmic hand, it melts like butter."

  "They generally do," the judge commented, "or so the reports say. Yet they themselves are firm and strong when they touch or seize."

  "Right, sir."

  "It's when attacked, or even frightened, as with a camera flashlight, that the ectoplasm vanishes or is reabsorbed?" he prompted further.

  "So Richet says here," I agreed once more, "and so I have found."

  "Very good. Now," and his manner took on a flavor of the legal, "I shall sum up:

  "Ectoplasm is put forth by certain spirit mediums, who are mysteriously adapted for it, under favorable conditions that include darkness, quiet, self-confidence. It takes form, altering the appearance of the medium or making up a separate body. It is firm and strong, but vanishes when attacked or frightened. Right so far, eh?"

  "Right," I approved.

  "Now, for the word medium substitute wizard.'' His grin burst out again, and he began to mix a third round of drinks. "A wizard, having darkness and quiet and being disguised to change shape, exudes a material that gives him a new shape and character. Maybe it is bestial, to match a fierce or desperate spirit within. There may be a shaggy pelt, a sharp muzzle, taloned paws and rending fangs. To a terrified victim he is doom itself But to a brave adversary, facing and fighting him - "

  He flipped his way through Summers' book, as I had with Richet's. "Listen: '. . . the shape of the werewolf will be removed if he be reproached by name as a werewolf, or if again he be thrice addressed by his Christian name, or struck three blows on the forehead with a knife, or that three drops of blood should be drawn.' Do you see the parallels, man? Shouted at, bravely denounced, or slightly wounded, his false beast-substance fades from him." He flung out his hands, as though appealing to a jury. "I marvel nobody ever thought of it before."

  "But nothing so contrary to nature has a natural explanation," I objected, and very idiotic the phrase sounded in my own ears.

  He laughed, and I could not blame him. "I'll confound you with another of your own recent experiences. What could seem more contrary to nature than the warmth and greenness of the inside of Devil's Croft? And what is more simply natural than the hot springs that make it possible?"

  "Yet, an envelope of bestiality, beast-muzzle on human face, beast-paws on human hands - "

  "I can support that by more werewolf-lore. I don't even have to open Summers, everyone has heard the story. A wolf attacks a traveler, who with his sword lops off a paw. The beast howls and flees, and the paw it leaves behind is a human hand.**

  "That's an old one, in every language."

  "Probably because it happened so often. There's your human hand, with the beast-paw forming upon and around it, then vanishing like wounded ectoplasm. Where's the weak point, Wills? Name it, I challenge you."

  I felt the glass shake in my hand, and a chilly wind brushed my spine. "There's one point," I made myself say. "You may think it a slender one, even a quibble. But ectoplasms make human forms, not animal."

  "How do you know they don't make animal forms?" Judge Pursuivant crowed, leaning forward across the desk. "Because, of the few you've seen and disbelieved, only human faces and bodies showed? My reply is there in your hands. Open Richet's book to page 545, Mr Wills. Page 545 . . . got it? Now, the passage I marked, about the medium Burgik. Read it aloud."

  He sank back into his chair once more, waiting in manifest delight. I found the place, underscored with pencil, and my voice was hoarse as I obediently read:

  "'My trouser leg was strongly pulled and a strange, ill-defined form that seemed to have paws like those of a dog or small monkey climbed on my knee. I could feel its weight, very light, and something like the muzzle of an animal touched my cheek.'"

  "There you are, Wills," Judge Pursuivant was crying. "Notice that it happened in Warsaw, close to the heart of the werewolf country. Hmmm, reading that passage made you sweat a bit - remembering what you saw in the Devil's Croft, eh?"

  I flung down the book.

  "You've done much toward convincing me," I admitted. "I'd rather have the superstitious peasant's behef, though, the one I've always scoffed at."

  "Rationalizing the business didn't help, then? It did when I explained the Devil's Croft and the springs."

  "But the springs don't chase you with sharp teeth. And, as I was saying, the peasant had a protection that the scientist lacks - trust in his crucifix and his Bible."

  "Why shouldn't he have that trust, and why shouldn't you?" Again the judge was rummaging in his book-case. "Those symbols of faith gave him what is needed, a strong heart to drive back the menace, whether it be wolf-demon or ectoplasmic bogy. Here, my friend."

  He laid a third book on the desk. It was a Bible, red-edged and leather-backed, worn from much use.

  "Have a read at that while you finish your drink," he advised me. ''The Gospel According to St John is good, and it's already marked. Play you're a peasant, hunting for comfort."

  Like a dutiful child I opened the Bible to where a faded purple ribbon lay between the pages. But already Judge Pursuivant was quoting from memory:

  "'In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him; and without him was not anything made that was made . . .'"

  X

  "Blood-lust and compassion."

  It may seem incredible that later in the night I slept like a dead pig; yet I had reason.

  First of all there was the weariness that had followed my dangers and exertions; then Judge Pursuivant's whisky and logic combined to reassure me; finally, the leather couch in his study, its surface comfortably hollowed by much reclining thereon, was a sedative in itself He gave me two quilts, very warm and very light, and left me alone. I did not stir until a rattle of breakfast dishes awakened me.

  William, the judge's servant, had carefully brushed my clothes.

  My shoes also showed free of mud, though they still felt damp and clammy. The judge himself furnished me with a clean shirt and socks, both items very loose upon me, and lent me his razor.

  "Some friends of yours called during the night," he told me dryly.

  "Friends?"

  "Yes, from the town. Five of them, with ropes and guns. They announced very definitely that they intended to decorate the flagpole in the public square with your corpse. There was also some informal talk about drinking your blood. We may have vampires as well as werewolves hereabouts."

  I almost cut my lip with the razor. "How did you get rid of them?" I asked quickly. "They must have followed my tracks."

  "Lucky there was more snow after we got in," he replied, "and they came here only as a routine check-up. They must have visited every house within miles. Oh, turning them away was easy. I feigned wild enthusiasm for the man-hunt, and asked if I couldn't come along."

  He smiled reminiscently, his mustache stirring like a rather genial blond snake.

  "Then what?" I prompted him, dabbing on more lather.

  "Why, they were delighted. I took a rifle and spent a few hours on the trail. You weren't to be found at all, so we returned to town. Excitement reigns there, you can believe."

  "What kind of excitement?"

  "Blood-lust and compassion. Since Constable O'Bryant is wounded, his younger brother, a strong advocate of your immediate capture and execution, is serving as a volunteer guardian of the peace. He's acting on an old appointment by his brother as deputy, to serve without pay. He told the council - a badly s
cared group - that he has sent for help to the county seat, but I am sure he did nothing of the kind. Meanwhile, the Croft is surrounded by scouts, who hope to catch you sneaking out of it. And the women of the town are looking after Susan Gird and your friend, the Hen Doktor."

  I had finished shaving. "How is Doctor Zoberg?" I inquired through the towel.

  "Still pretty badly shaken up. I tried to get in and see him, but it was impossible. I understand he went out for a while, early in the evening, but almost collapsed. Just now he is completely surrounded by cooing old ladies with soup and herb tea. Miss Gird was feeling much better, and talked to me for a while. I'm not really on warm terms with the town, you know; people think it's indecent for me to live out here alone and not give them a chance to gossip about me. So I was pleasurably suqjrised to get a kind word from Miss Susan. She told me, very softly for fear someone might overhear, that she hopes you aren't caught. She is sure that you did not kill her father."

  We went into his dining room, where William offered pancakes, fried bacon and the strongest black coffee I ever tasted. In the midst of it all, I put down my fork and faced the judge suddenly. He grinned above his cup.

  "Well, Mr Wills? 'Stung by the splendor of a sudden thought' -all you need is a sensitive hand clasped to your inspired brow."

  "You said," I reminded him, "that Susan Gird is sure that I didn't kill her father."

  "So I did."

  "She told you that herself. She also seemed calm, self-contained, instead of in mourning for - "

  "Oh, come, come!" He paused to shift a full half-dozen cakes to his plate and skilfully drenched them with syrup. "That's rather ungrateful of you, Mr Wills, suspecting her of patricide."

  "Did I say that?" I protested, feeling my ears turning bright red.

 

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