‘Who is this?’ he asked, making no attempt to hide his animosity.
I was surprised. Pietism welcomes converts and the curious as a matter of faith.
‘Allow me to present Magistrate Stiffeniis,’ Gurten replied quickly. ‘He has been sent here to investigate the recent murders on the coast.’
I bowed.
‘The magistrate who is working for the French?’ said Bylsma, frowning. ‘What brings you to our convent, sir?’
I glanced questioningly at Gurten.
‘Pastor Bylsma is the custodian of the Jakob Spener library,’ Gurten explained. ‘This chapel contains relics which once belonged to the great Reformer. There are even locks of his hair in a box.’
‘True hair,’ Pastor Bylsma insisted. ‘From his own head, sir.’
‘Celestial!’ Gurten exclaimed. On his face I observed the same expression of ecstasy which had possessed him while he meditated naked on the cold tiles of his cell. ‘I was more violently moved when I examined those grey curls last night,’ he went on, ‘than when I stood beneath the painted ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Great art may inspire us for a moment, but sanctity is eternal. Professor Kant understood this concept.’
His piety seemed genuine enough, though I wondered whether this inclination towards the mystical might induce him to view material things with less cold realism than they merited. If I did decide to employ him, I thought, I would need to beware of his facile enthusiasm. A different aspect of the question occurred to me. Our Reformation was fired by a healthy disrespect for relics. And yet, they were venerating those grey curls from the head of Philipp Jakob Spener as if they were sacred. Nordcopp church seemed more pagan than a Catholic temple. And yet, that aspect did not disturb Johannes Gurten. Rather, it seemed to excite him all the more.
I wondered what Pastor Bylsma knew that might be useful to me. Why had Gurten led me there?
Johannes Gurten might have read my mind.
‘Pastor Bylsma,’ he entreated, ‘would you care to tell Herr Procurator Stiffeniis what Nordcopp is celebrating today, and explain the part that this particular room and you, of course, will play in the ceremony?’
Bylsma frowned again, and glanced reproachfully at Gurten. ‘Step up to the altar, sirs,’ he said.
A row of candles had been placed along the front edge of the altar-table, which was at the far end of the room. A plain wooden cross hung darkly symbolic on the wall behind. Bylsma bowed his head and whispered hoarsely in a voice not his own. I heard some words of prayer in Latin, ‘Cum dederit dilectis suis summum . . .’
He seemed to change before my eyes into a different man. Fervent intensity blazed brightly in his eyes, his tiny figure seemed to swell and grow. Of a sudden, he twirled around and began to speak about himself, but not in the person of Pastor Anton Bylsma of Nordcopp. His speech was measured, formal, distinctly archaic. He had become the long-dead founder of the Pietist Order in Germany.
‘It all came about in 1691, you see. I happened to be dwelling in the palace of Dresden at that time. I was employed as private chaplain to the Grand Elector of Saxony. But then, the Elector of Brandenburg—he soon became King Frederick I of Prussia, as you know—well, he proposed that I should go to Halle to select the teachers for the new Faculty of Theology at the university. I accepted the task, as I was bound to do, and so I took the opportunity to extend my absence and visit a friend, who was living here in Nordcopp. I stayed with him for—oh, two months, it must have been. Slightly longer, I suppose. Indeed, it was I, Philipp Jakob Spener, who founded the chapel and convent of the Holy Saviour . . .’
That first-person ‘I’ was disquieting; I had never spoken to a dead man before.
‘In this very room, sir!’ he thundered, spreading his hands wide. ‘And why did I stay so long in Nordcopp? My works will tell you,’ he said, pointing to the manuscripts and the scrolls on the table and the shelves. ‘My unpublished works, I should add. Take a look at those two pages on the table. Look at them, I say!’
I glanced uncertainly at Gurten.
He smiled back at me, and raised his finger to touch the side of his nose.
Wait, that gesture seemed to say.
Reluctantly, I did as I was told. I was expecting to find some obscure religious tract. Instead, the papers appeared to be rough notes of a scientific nature. There were diagrams and sketches of no artistic quality, yet what those drawings portrayed was clear enough. They depicted pieces of amber, some large, some small, but all containing insects.
‘It was here in Nordcopp’, the pastor continued, ‘that my reflections led me to propound the True Faith in the Germanic lands. It was here that I, Philipp Jakob Spener, founded the spiritual roots of our national history.’
Bylsma paused.
Was he waiting for me to share his enthusiasm?
‘I am aware of the greatness of the man,’ I said, glancing uncertainly at Gurten. ‘You do not need to convince me, sir. At the same time, I do not wish to interrupt your preparations for the feast. Indeed, I have . . .’
‘Pastor Bylsma was referring to what Spener discovered while he was here, Herr Procurator,’ Gurten said quickly, holding my gaze longer than was necessary. There is more that you should know, he seemed to be saying.
He turned back to the priest. ‘I was hoping, sir, that you would speak particularly of the Venerable Spener’s interest in amber.’
‘He was alluding to that fact, to amber, I mean, when he mentioned that he had uncovered the roots of German history and culture here in Nordcopp,’ Pastor Bylsma added somewhat huffily.
The first person singular had been replaced by the third. I felt relieved.
‘I was fortunate to find his written notes on the subject,’ the priest added more meekly. ‘Spener passed a great deal of his time on the seashore, drawing what the people found there. It was Prussian territory then and Baltic gold fascinated his mind. He spoke of amber as the heart of Prussia in the text that I discovered.’
‘Spener collected amber,’ Gurten put in, as if afraid the detail might be lost.
‘He left a veritable treasure,’ agreed Pastor Bylsma, lowering his voice.
‘What kind of treasure?’ I asked with less enthusiasm.
Is there a village in the continent of Europe that does not have its tale of hidden treasure of inestimable worth? Was this what my would-be pupil, Johannes Gurten, wanted me to hear? A half-wit priest recalling the short visit of a notable theologian to the area, his passing interest in natural amber, the fact that he had collected a piece or two while visiting his friend in the town two centuries earlier?
My mind flew back to the corpse of Ilse Bruen. The triangle carved in her gullet. The fact that Adam Ansbach and his mother were already locked up in the darkest dungeon of Königsberg castle. I had allowed myself to be distracted by an over-excited youth who wished to practise law under my tutelage.
‘I am sure it says a great deal for the honour of Spener and Nordcopp,’ I said, preparing to make my excuses and leave them to it.
‘Great mysteries surround the greatest names in our national history . . .’
‘Pastor Bylsma,’ Gurten interrupted him brusquely, ‘please show Herr Stiffeniis what you showed to me last night.’
The pastor’s mouth fell open. ‘You are a devout Pietist . . .’
‘So is Procurator Stiffeniis,’ Gurten fired back. ‘He is a Prussian, and he is trying to help our countrymen. Help him, sir!’
There was a fever of passion and anxiety in this exchange.
‘I thought . . . that is . . .’ Pastor Bylsma burbled. ‘I believed it was the French who were to benefit in this case from the magistrate’s assistance.’
I heard the note of sarcasm in his voice.
‘Herr Bylsma, whatever you intend to show me,’ I paused for a moment, afraid to add my own rhetoric to theirs, ‘show me quickly. Herr Gurten is right. I have seen two corpses in three days. Prussian lives are at stake. My only aim is to save them.’
By
lsma fixed me with a watery stare. Then, he nodded. Turning to the altar, he bowed to the cross and stretched out his arms, resting his hands on either edge of the table. Was he praying to the founder again? A loud mechanical click broke the silence, and a narrow drawer slid out from beneath the altar-table.
‘Come up,’ he said.
I stood on one side, Gurten took his place on the other.
A vivid scarlet cloth hid from view whatever the drawer might contain.
Bylsma turned his face to mine. His eyes were bright, his cheeks seemed to swell, as if he wanted to speak, but feared to do so.
What was he afraid of?
‘What you are about to see,’ he warned me, his voice a tremor, ‘has survived the greed of Russians, Lithuanians and Poles. Unscrupulous Prussians have tried to lay their hands upon it, too. With the arrival of the French, the time-honoured rules of prudence have been doubly reinforced. They would certainly remove it from this holy place. I am hesitant to . . .’
‘Show Herr Stiffeniis what you showed to me.’ Gurten’s voice was imperative.
Bylsma nodded, caught hold of the edge of the scarlet cloth, and threw it back.
‘The collection of Philipp Jakob Spener,’ he announced.
The drawer had been divided into compartments of various sizes, lined with the same bright scarlet material, though it was irregular and puffy like a well-worn cushion. Fifteen or sixteen pieces of amber rested on top of the cloth, though there was room for more. Vague, impressed outlines seemed to suggest that certain pieces had been recently removed. Some were dark in colour, others a rich, bright yellow; some were large, others smaller. Some of these objects had been carved into forms which were recognisable: a figurine of a woman with a distended belly; a head of a wolf, its tongue protruding from its jaws. The largest piece of all was a crucifix made of red amber; the body of Christ had been cut in a paler yellow. All of the pieces had been polished to highlight their natural beauty. And yet, there was a blasphemous, pagan element in every one. They contained a fly, a beetle, or some other insect form which was entirely new to me.
‘The treasure of Jakob Spener,’ Gurten whispered passionately.
We studied the collection in silence, each man lost in his own thoughts.
‘Spener was strongly attracted to amber,’ Gurten explained, his eyes fixed on the display. ‘He found great religious significance in it. Clearly, he was influenced by the likes of Nettesheim and Paracelsus. If amber had survived, together with the creatures that it contained, Spener said, then there must be a reason. It was God’s will, His gift. On the other side, Spener was intrigued by the strange physical properties of the material, in particular the crackling force that it gives off when rubbed with a dry cloth. The ancient Greeks were equally fascinated, and had a name for it. Elektron . . . Why, Spener asked himself, was there such a vast quantity of amber in the Baltic Sea? What place was this in those lost days before the Prophets? What unknown world was being revealed, piece by piece, by the action of the erosive sea? Pastor Bylsma was telling me just last night that Spener wrote many beautiful pages on the mystery of amber.’
I thought of Edviga Lornerssen. She, too, had spoken of amber as a gift from the Baltic. Yet she sold amber, and she had told me something of the unscrupulous passion with which men searched for it.
I pointed with my finger at the empty spaces.
‘Was he planning to add other pieces here?’ I asked.
Pastor Bylsma looked gravely at me. ‘The reliquary has been violated,’ he said. ‘These three pieces were the finest in the whole collection.’
Tears stood out in his grey eyes.
‘What happened to them?’ I asked.
‘Robbed.’
‘Four or five months ago, sir,’ Gurten specified.
‘They’ve been here since 1687!’ Bylsma cried, appealing to me as a magistrate. ‘Here! In this secret drawer. My custodial position requires me to examine the collection. I have to remove the dust, and make certain that damp does not invade the reliquary and damage the contents. To reduce the danger of cracking, I polish them twice a year with fish oil.’ He sobbed, and raised his sleeve to his eyes. ‘Last month, I came to clean them, sir. Today is the memorial day, you see. Once a year this treasure is shown to the faithful of Nordcopp. They’ll come in through that door at four o’clock this afternoon to pray before the relics. Oh, the shame of it! Nothing has ever been stolen before. It is a sacrilege . . .’
Again, Gurten cut him off.
‘You know who did it, do you not?’
If a witness was being questioned, Gurten was leading the enquiry.
‘I would not wish to put the blame on any person,’ Bylsma whined. ‘It’s just that . . . well, as I mentioned to Herr Gurten, there is a certain . . . well, a coincidence that cannot be ignored. Nothing more . . .’
He glanced at me as if he wished to be reassured.
‘Whatever you tell me will remain between the three of us,’ I forced myself to say.
‘Two Prussian girls came here seeking sanctuary, sir,’ he admitted. He might have been spitting out needles. ‘They said that they had run away from the French camp on the coast.’
‘This was in the month of March, Herr Stiffeniis,’ Gurten added.
Gurten knew the story, but he wanted me to hear it from the lips of Pastor Bylsma. Indeed, he added details that the clergyman forgot or glossed, details which Gurten clearly thought were important. I was impressed with the young man’s discreet manner of going about things. He was intuitive, relentless. I knew that I would make a magistrate of him.
‘It wasn’t the first time we’ve had fugitives,’ the pastor explained. ‘Most of them have no place to go. They are girls doing men’s work, foreign conquerors watching over them like hawks. No law protects them inside the French camp.’
I thought of Edviga. The girl was tall, and strong. A woman doing the work of a man. The French were certainly watching her. Colonel les Halles was digging for the opportunity to punish and demean her. Foreign conquerors. Bylsma had summed up the situation well. But Edviga had spoken only of cabins that were cold and damp. How far did the French idea of punishment extend? Long ago, as every Prussian knows, the Teutonic Order punished amber theft with death by hanging on the seashore.
‘They said they were afraid for their lives,’ the pastor continued.
‘Did the French come looking for them here?’ I insisted.
Pastor Bylsma shook his head.
‘Perhaps they had no need to look, sir,’ Gurten observed.
‘I do not understand your argument,’ I said to him.
‘Maybe the French knew that the girls were here,’ Gurten continued with a wry smile. ‘The French may have sent them, commissioned them, so to speak, told them exactly what to steal.’
‘How did those women know where the treasure was?’ I asked.
Bylsma’s cheeks began to colour. ‘I . . . Well, that is, I got them to wash all the windows. Not just in the church. In here, as well.’ He paused for a beat, looked away, and caught the eye of Gurten. ‘Like I told you, Herr Gurten. They were very . . . well, it was very difficult to say no . . . diabolical, I suppose . . .’
Gurten stepped into Bylsma’s shoes. ‘They won his trust, sir. He let them come in here to wash the windows and dust off the books in Jakob Spener’s library.’
Magda Ansbach swore that the amber-girls were a danger to celibate men. And chastity played no part in the rules that Spener had laid down for his followers. How easily might two handsome temptresses have played upon the weaknesses of a middle-aged priest like Bylsma? If the girls had come intent on theft and seduction, I did not doubt that they had succeeded in their ploy.
Were they Kati Rodendahl and Ilse Bruen?
‘They stayed for two days only,’ Bylsma mumbled on. ‘They helped with meals, cleaned the church, worked in the kitchen. Then, suddenly they disappeared without a trace. I did not understand it then. But the next time I came to open up the relic-box, I found
those pieces missing.’
He halted suddenly, as if the tale had robbed him of his energy.
‘What could I do, sir? Could I tell the French? If the soldiers had seen the treasure, they’d have seized the rest of it. And then, some days ago, a girl was murdered down on Nordcopp shore. Another one died just yesterday.’ He shook his head, and peered at me uncertainly. ‘Could the victims be the same two girls who stayed here in the convent?’
‘What names did your visitors give?’
‘Annalise and Megrete, sir.’
‘Those are not the names of the dead women,’ I said.
‘They may have given false ones,’ Gurten quickly interposed.
‘Can you describe them?’ I asked.
The small man raised his shoulders, as if to suggest that he had not paid much attention. But his pale cheeks began to flush very red. ‘Very tall girls, sir. Big, strong, healthy girls with callused hands. Working girls with long blonde hair . . . that is, I noticed the fact, though they were always wearing scarves.’
‘You told me last night that they were both very beautiful, Herr Pastor.’
Gurten spoke as if to add a forgotten detail, but he sought my eyes out, and he held my gaze. He glanced at the priest, who was agitating his hands, rubbing them nervously together. He was clearly in a state of acute embarrassment, thinking of his recent guests. I might have blushed myself, I thought, remembering Edviga as she sat beside me on the bed the night before.
‘Can you describe the missing pieces of amber?’ I asked the priest.
Bylsma bent his head very low over the reliquary. ‘They didn’t take the oldest pieces, the ones that are elaborately carved,’ he said. ‘They took three pieces only, but they were large ones, each containing an insect. Big, black bugs. The largest insects in the collection. The amber was the colour of gold, and incredibly beautiful.’
‘And you’ve no idea where those women went afterwards?’ I insisted.
Pastor Bylsma pressed his hand to his mouth and shook his head, but Gurten had an answer.
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