Les Halles did not contradict General Malaport, he simply brought him up to date on the latest developments. Tessier had let me see the colonel’s note the instant I walked into the room. I had read it through a couple of times, searching for a loop-hole which would open the door to the cell where Adam Ansbach was being held.
The persons under arrest are accused of complicity in the murders of Katiuscka Rodendahl and Ilse Bruen, registered amber-gatherers. The corpse of the latter was discovered in the pigsty of the Ansbach family; the former was found on the beach adjacent to Military Post 67, Nordcopp Installation, three miles from their farm.
Prussian magistrate Hanno Stiffeniis, on the direct authority of General Malaport, successfully conducted the groundwork for the investigation, and he will now continue to pursue the matter in Nordcopp.
As military commander of the zone, I, the undersigned, on this day, 15th August 1808, declare that further interrogation should be carried out by the competent military authorities, as per Reg. 176.b/1804, and that trial and execution of the sentence should be passed to the relevant judicial authority for the governance of East Prussia.
The Ansbachs were being sent to Königsberg.
As Sergeant Tessier explained it, the order issued by General Malaport limited my duty and my authority to Nordcopp alone.
‘Nothing could be simpler, monsieur,’ he said, dropping the paper on the table, looking up to meet my gaze. ‘As Colonel les Halles mentions here, your task has been successfully accomplished.’ He ran his fingernail along the pertinent line. ‘Here’s the word.
Groundwork
. A military judge in Königsberg will be appointed to complete the procedure and pronounce sentence. Surely, you have discussed the matter with the colonel?’
He smiled at me in the mild manner one might employ to calm a lunatic.
‘In your opinion, Sergeant, how am I to do what Colonel les Halles suggests,’ I paused before using the verb which indicated my new role, ‘and pursue the matter here in Nordcopp?’
He shrugged his shoulders, threatening to burst his jacket seams. ‘The soldiers who brought these orders told me that Colonel les Halles is convinced that other women have been murdered. Not these two alone. Perhaps you ought to go and look for the corpses?’
Was that the bone I had been thrown?
Only General Malaport could relieve me of the investigation. Until he did, I must remain in Nordcopp and try to ascertain precisely how many amber-workers had been killed. Those two girls alone? More?
For an instant, I was tempted to lean over the table, take hold of Tessier’s cross-belts, wrap them around his neck, and pull with all my might. If luck were with me, I might be thrown into the same cell with Adam Ansbach and his mother. There could hardly be
more than one cell in that cramped tower, which was as spacious as a privy.
‘I demand to see them,’ I said, struggling to control my anger.
‘That is impossible, sir.’ Tessier looked down and began to rifle through the papers on his desk. Finding nothing there, he looked at the grey-green stains of mould and the blocked-up cannon-holes in the ancient plaster wall. Then he murmured: ‘They were taken away an hour ago. They’ll be on the high road to Königsberg by now. Is there anything else?’
The door was narrow, very low. I had to bow my head—it might have been a ritual obeisance to the power of France—as I ducked outside. In the narrow alley, I took a deep breath. The air was foul, but fresher than in the confined space of the gaol, where Tessier and I had each breathed in what the other breathed out.
Nordcopp seemed empty. It made a contrast with the frenzied activity of the day before. Entering the town half an hour before, the guard on the gate had warned me: ‘It’s a public holiday today, monsieur. The shops are closed in honour of some . . . well, I don’t know. Do Lutherans
have
saints?’
I was angry and uncertain.
What next? Where now?
I did not intend to walk back to the coast. I had no wish to write a report for les Halles, and wished even less to speak with him. I had had my fill of eating cinder and ashes for one day. As I came to the end of the alley and turned right, I saw the high walls of the Pietist church, and all my hesitation dissolved away. I suddenly remembered the letter in my pocket. Corporal Grillet had delivered it into my hands the evening before, and I had ripped it open thinking it had come from Helena, afraid that something had happened to her, or to one of the children. I had been so anxious, I did not stop to examine the handwritten address.
It was not a note from home, I was relieved to see.
Most honoured Sir,
I have been instructed to report to you without delay, having come with letters of introduction from the High Court in Potsdam.
Given the situation on the coast, where I was refused access to your person yester-night, I will await your pleasure at the Pietist guest-house in Nordcopp. You may find me by asking for,Yours, most obsequiously,
Johannes Gurten.
The name was like a rope thrown to a drowning man. He was Prussian. From the elegance of his calligraphy, I judged him to be a man of letters, and, possibly, of breeding. The tone of his note suggested that it was a bureaucratic matter, some urgent communication from the court in Potsdam which Gurten had been entrusted to deliver. If the messenger had been obliged to travel so far, it was my duty to meet with him at the earliest possible moment. With the finding of the corpse of Ilse Bruen the previous evening, the confrontation with les Halles that morning, and the discovery that the girl’s body had been mutilated, I had forgotten all about Johnannes Gurten.
I would search him out and see what he wanted.
The Pietist meeting-house was the largest edifice in Nordcopp, though not so grand as the Pietist church in Lotingen where I had held court just three days before. Even so, as I stood before the large double door, I had the impression that the Pietist church and the attached convent were large enough to contain the rest of Nordcopp. I had seen the church the day before while looking for the house of Dr Heinrich, but I had had no other impression of the convent than of a blank grey wall at the very end of a lane, where the scurrying crowd who rushed from one shop to the next were obliged to turn right.
I lifted the latch, and entered.
The act of entering a Prussian church always moves me. I do not feel the same emotion when I enter a Catholic cathedral, though I have visited many such temples in Italy, and seen the frescoes and the paintings that they contain. The armies of saints—Gerolamo bent over his books, a tame lion seated at his feet; Sebastian, looking like a pin-cushion; the host of Madonnas and long-haired
Magdalens—distract me from prayer, and seem out of place in the House of God.
In a Pietist chapel, everything is as it ought to be.
Silence reigns. The perfume of incense scents the air. An atmosphere of rarefied sanctity is tangible. No idols based on human models prance upon the walls. The mystery of godliness remains undefiled. A simple wooden cross reminds the visitor of Christ’s sacrifice: no futile attempt is made to represent His endless suffering. The cold is penetrating; it provokes shivers. And yet, it is not the cold alone, it is a sense of the abiding presence of God which calls forth goose-pimples. I remembered the cavernous nave of the family chapel in Ruisling on a Sunday, as I took my little brother, Stefan, by the hand and led him into the darkness that he feared so much. I have seen some of the greatest spectacles in Nature—the soaring mountains and sweeping glaciers of Switzerland, the thundering cascade of the Marmore cataract on the River Nera in Italy—yet my experience of the Infinite was formed in Pietist chapels. What are fury and exaltation in comparison with silence and immobility?
As I pushed the door and stepped inside the Church of Christ the Saviour, I left my rage and stinging sense of humiliation outside. I knew that Johannes Gurten would be waiting there for me. A Pietist promise is not like any other.
The silence and the chill embraced me like a familiar cloak.
The air was scented with all the essences of a lifetime: damp earth, sweet myrrh, melted wax. The nave was long, the hammer-beam roof high, the aisles on either side divided by matching rows of slender columns. I made my way towards the altar table, closed my eyes and turned my thoughts to God. I begged Him to illuminate me, to help me see the way ahead, to sanction my decisions and guide my thoughts.
One thing above all others concerned me. I prayed that Johannes Gurten would help, not hinder me. I hoped that he would not heap more problems upon me. I stood in silence for some minutes, head down, eyes closed, listening for the Voice of the Lord inside myself.
The perfume of the place grew so intense, it seemed to possess me.
I opened my eyes. The candle on the altar-table sputtered, guttered, went out, then lit up again, though no door was opened, no one came.
Was this a sign from God? And if so, a sign of what?
An ogive arch and a wooden door at the end of the left aisle caught my eye. I read the sign: GUEST-HOUSE. I lifted the latch and found myself in a small courtyard formed by the church itself, a low building across the way, and the ancient city walls of Nordcopp. Once, it might have been a garden, but there was not much light, and the garden had been paved over, leaving only a single apple tree in the centre of the courtyard.
On the far side of the space, I saw the sign again. GUEST-HOUSE. Another ogive arch, another narrow wooden door. I listened carefully before pushing the door and entering. As quiet as a forgotten tomb, the flagged corridor was barely illuminated by a single lantern. A paper hanging from a pin on a wooden board shifted in the draught. I lifted it up, and turned the paper towards the light.
Regulations of the community.
5.00 Bible reading; 6.00 Cleansing of the house; 7.00 Breakfast duties; 8.00 Tending the sick; 9.00–12.00 Biblical instruction to the children of the poor; 12.00 Cleansing of the church; 13.00 Luncheon; 14.00–17.00 Private study.
There was more of the same, but I did not read it all. A second sheet listed the names of the guests. I was interested in one alone: Johannes Gurten. It was at the foot of the list, and next to it the number VII was inscribed in Latin numerals.
I glanced along the corridor and counted seven doors. Over each lintel was a number, together with a Biblical quotation. I made my way to the last door in the row, at the farthest, darkest end, and read the inscription above the door:
Only knock, and ye shall enter
. Leaning close, my voice low, I called out: ‘Herr Gurten?’
No answer came.
With the heel of my hand, I knocked three times very gently.
Silence.
I waited a few moments, then called out: ‘Herr Gurten?’
As I lowered my hand, preparing to turn away, my sleeve caught on the handle, and the door swung slowly open on the wings of gravity and faulty carpentry.
There was a man inside.
He was naked, sitting on the cold floor, legs crossed, ankles hooked over his hips. His eyes were large, the irises bright blue, his arms were raised, the thumbs and forefingers meeting in front of his face to form an oval. His hair was blond and cut very short, showing off the planes of his skull. A candle burned on a saucer in front of him, casting a pale golden light over his rippling muscles. He had made no attempt to cover his sex, which rested limply on the tiles. His mouth distended in a tranquil smile.
Had I disturbed some mysterious and intimate rite?
‘Do not desert me, sir,’ he said quietly, moving only the muscles of his mouth. ‘Give me a moment to complete my meditation.’
I took a step forward.
‘Please, close the door.’
I did so, then turned to him again.
His eyes flashed open. They were large, the pupils blue. He unfolded his legs, and stood up with surprising alacrity.
‘This is no Himalayan temple, sir. You are still in the convent of
Christ the Saviour
,’ he laughed, holding out his hand in welcome, totally oblivious, it seemed, of the fact that he was as naked as a Greek god. Though slightly shorter of stature than myself, he projected a self-confidence that I could hardly have matched in my judge’s cap and toga.
I am not used to nudity. Not even my own. While still at university in Halle, sharing a room with three other students, I was obliged to make my monthly bath in the stone tub in the basement of my lodgings, taking my turn with the water and the soap. I made a point of scrubbing my body as quickly as I could—summer or winter, the water was always cold—then drying myself off, and dressing as rapidly as possible. And even where my wife and my
duties as a husband are concerned, there is a great deal of natural reserve. More on my part than on Helena’s, I admit.
I took his hand and pressed it.
‘I was . . . was looking . . . for . . .’ I stuttered.
‘Johannes Gurten,’ he smiled and bowed, laying his right hand on his heart as if swearing an oath. On his middle finger he wore a ring with an inscribed cornelian. ‘You received my message, Herr Stiffeniis. I was beginning to wonder if it had gone astray. The French could have . . . Please excuse my state of undress. You may not believe it, but I am a trainee magistrate. And I have been ordered to continue my apprenticeship under your tutelage.’
His statement surprised me more than his nudity.
‘I will tell you everything in a moment, sir, though it might be better if I dress first. My hour of meditation was almost done, in any case.’
He brought the only chair and set it out for me. There was no other furniture except for a narrow bed. The room was austere, cramped, damp and bare, except for a cross hanging from a nail on the grey wall above the bed. Ventilation was provided by a window no larger than a playing-card. To see outside one would have had to peep out, one eye at a time, like looking through a telescope.