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                                    "Verum usque in praesentem diem multa garriunt inter se Canonici de abscondito quodam istius Abbatis Thomae thesauro, quem
                                    saepe, quanquam adhuc incassum, quaesiverunt Steinfeldenses. Ipsum enim Thomam adhuc florida in aetate existentem ingentem
                                    auri massam circa monasterium defodisse perhibent; de quo multoties interrogatus ubi esset, cum risu respondere solitus erat:
                                    "Job, Johannes, et Zacharias vel vobis vel posteris indicabunt"; idemque aliquando adiicere se inventuris minime invisurum.
                                    Inter alia huius Abbatis opera, hoc memoria praecipue dignum iudico quod fenestram magnam in orientali parte alae australis
                                    in ecclesia sua imaginibus optime in vitro depictis impleverit: id quod et ipsius effigies et insignia ibidem posita demonstrant.
                                    Domum quoque Abbatialem fere totam restauravit: puteo in atrio ipsius effosso et lapidibus marmoreis pulchre caelatis exornato.
                                    Decessit autem, morte aliquantulum subitanea perculsus, aetatis suae anno lxxiido, incarnationis
                                    vero Dominicae mdxxixo." 
                                     "I suppose I shall have to translate this," said the antiquary to himself,
                                    as he finished copying the above lines from that rather rare and exceedingly diffuse book, the Sertum Steinfeldense Norbertinum."Well,
                                    it may as well be done first as last," and accordingly the following rendering was very quickly produced: 
                                    "Up to the present day there is much gossip among the Canons about a certain
                                    hidden treasure of this Abbot Thomas, for which those of Steinfeld have often made search, though hitherto in vain. The story
                                    is that Thomas, while yet in the vigour of life, concealed a very large quantity of gold somewhere in the monastery. He was
                                    often asked where it was, and always answered, with a laugh: 'Job, John, and Zechariah will tell either you or your successors.'
                                    He sometimes added that he should feel no grudge against those who might find it. Among other works carried out by this Abbot
                                    I may specially mention his filling the great window at the east end of the south aisle of the church with figures admirably
                                    painted on glass, as his effigy and arms in the window attest. He also restored almost the whole of the Abbot's lodging, and
                                    dug a well in the court of it, which he adorned with beautiful carvings in marble. He died rather suddenly in the seventy-second
                                    year of his age, AD 1529." 
                                    The object which the antiquary had before him at the moment was that of
                                    tracing the whereabouts of the painted windows of the Abbey Church of Steinfeld. Shortly after the Revolution, a very large
                                    quantity of painted glass made its way from the dissolved abbeys of Germany and Belgium to this country, and may now be seen
                                    adorning various of our parish churches, cathedrals, and private chapels. Steinfeld Abbey was among the most considerable
                                    of these involuntary contributors to our artistic possessions (I am quoting the somewhat ponderous preamble of the book which
                                    the antiquary wrote), and the greater part of the glass from that institution can be identified without much difficulty by
                                    the help, either of the numerous inscriptions in which the place is mentioned, or of the subjects of the windows, in which
                                    several well-defined cycles or narratives were represented. 
                                    The passage with which I began my story had set the antiquary on the track
                                    of another identification. In a private chapel - no matter where - he had seen three large figures, each occupying a whole
                                    light in a window, and evidently the work of one artist. Their style made it plain that the artist had been a German of the
                                    sixteenth century; but hitherto the more exact localizing of them had been a puzzle. They represented (will you be surprised
                                    to hear it?) JOB PATRIARCHA, JOHANNES EVANGELISTA, ZACHARIAS PROPHETA, and each of them held a book or scroll, inscribed with
                                    a sentence from his writings. These, as a matter of course, the antiquary had noted, and had been struck by the curious way
                                    in which they differed from any text of the Vulgate that he had been able to examine. Thus the scroll in Job's hand was inscribed:
                                    "Auro est locus in quo absconditur" (for "conflatur"); on the book of John was: "Habent in vestimentis suis scripturam quam
                                    nemo novit" (for "in vestimento scriptum", the following words being taken from another verse); and Zacharias had: "Super
                                    lapidem unum septem oculi sunt" (which alone of the three presents an unaltered text). 
                                    A sad perplexity it had been to our investigator to think why these three
                                    personages should have been placed together in one window. There was no bond of connection between them, either historic,
                                    symbolic, or doctrinal, and he could only suppose that they must have formed part of a very large series of Prophets and Apostles,
                                    which might have filled, say, all the clerestory windows of some capacious church. But the passage from the Sertum
                                    had altered the situation by showing that the names of the actual personages represented in the glass now in Lord D_____'s
                                    chapel had been constantly on the lips of Abbot Thomas von Eschenhausen of Steinfeld, and that this Abbot had put up a painted
                                    window, probably about the year 1520, in the south aisle of his abbey church. It was no very wild conjecture that the three
                                    figures might have formed part of Abbot Thomas's offering; it was one which, moreover, could probably be confirmed or set
                                    aside by another careful examination of the glass. And, as Mr Somerton was a man of leisure, he set out on pilgrimage to the
                                    private chapel with very little delay. His conjecture was confirmed to the full. Not only did the style and technique of the
                                    glass suit perfectly with the date and place required, but in another window of the chapel he found some glass, known to have
                                    been bought along with the figures, which contained the arms of Abbot Thomas von Eschenhausen. 
                                    At intervals during his researches Mr Somerton had been haunted by the
                                    recollection of the gossip about the hidden treasure, and, as he thought the matter over, it became more and more obvious
                                    to him that if the Abbot meant anything by the enigmatical answer which he gave to his questioners, he must have meant that
                                    the secret was to be found somewhere in the window he had placed in the abbey church. It was undeniable, furthermore, that
                                    the first of the curiously-selected texts on the scrolls in the window might be taken to have a reference to hidden treasure. 
                                    Every feature, therefore, or mark which could possibly assist in elucidating
                                    the riddle which, he felt sure, the Abbot had set to posterity he noted with scrupulous care, and, returning to his Berkshire
                                    manor-house, consumed many a pint of the midnight oil over his tracings and sketches. After two or three weeks, a day came
                                    when Mr Somerton announced to his man that he must pack his own and his master's things for a short journey abroad, whither
                                    for the moment we will not follow him. 
                                    
                                     II  
                                    
                                     Mr Gregory, the Rector of Parsbury, had strolled out before breakfast,
                                    it being a fine autumn morning, as far as the gate of his carriage-drive, with intent to meet the postman and sniff the cool
                                    air. Nor was he disappointed of either purpose. Before he had had time to answer more than ten or eleven of the miscellaneous
                                    questions propounded to him in the lightness of their hearts by his young offspring, who had accompanied him, the postman
                                    was seen approaching; and among the morning's budget was one letter bearing a foreign postmark and stamp (which became at
                                    once the objects of an eager competition among the youthful Gregorys), and was addressed in an uneducated, but plainly an
                                    English hand. 
                                    When the Rector opened it, and turned to the signature, he realized that
                                    it came from the confidential valet of his friend and squire, Mr Somerton. Thus it ran: 
                                    HONOURD SIR, 
                                    Has I am in a great anxeity about Master I write at is Wish to Beg you
                                    Sir if you could be so good as Step over. Master Has add a Nastey Shock and keeps His Bedd. I never Have known Him like this
                                    but No wonder and Nothing will serve but you Sir. Master says would I mintion the Short Way Here is Drive to Cobblince and
                                    take a Trap. Hopeing I Have maid all Plain, but am much Confused in Myself what with Anxiatey and Weakfulness at Night. If
                                    I might be so Bold Sir it will be a Pleasure to see a Honnest Brish Face among all These Forig ones. 
                                    I am Sir 
                                    
                                    Your obedt Servt 
                                    
                                    
                                    WILLIAM BROWN P.S. - The Villiage for Town I will not Turm It is name
                                    Steenfeld.        
                                    The reader must be left to picture to himself in detail the surprise,
                                    confusion, and hurry of preparation into which the receipt of such a letter would be likely to plunge a quiet Berkshire parsonage
                                    in the year of grace 1859. It is enough for me to say that a train to town was caught in the course of the day, and that Mr
                                    Gregory was able to secure a cabin in the Antwerp boat and a place in the Coblentz train. Nor was it difficult to manage the
                                    transit from that centre to Steinfeld. 
                                    I labour under a grave disadvantage as narrator of this story in that
                                    I have never visited Steinfeld myself, and that neither of the principal actors in the episode (from whom I derive my information)
                                    was able to give me anything but a vague and rather dismal idea of its appearance. I gather that it is a small place, with
                                    a large church despoiled of its ancient fittings; a number of rather ruinous great buildings, mostly of the seventeenth century,
                                    surround this church; for the abbey, in common with most of those on the Continent, was rebuilt in a luxurious fashion by
                                    its inhabitants at that period. It has not seemed to me worth while to lavish money on a visit to the place, for though it
                                    is probably far more attractive than either Mr Somerton or Mr Gregory thought it, there is evidently little, if anything,
                                    of first-rate interest to be seen - except, perhaps, one thing, which I should not care to see. 
                                    The inn where the English gentleman and his servant were lodged is, or
                                    was, the only "possible" one in the village. Mr Gregory was taken to it at once by his driver, and found Mr Brown waiting
                                    at the door. Mr Brown, a model when in his Berkshire home of the impassive whiskered race who are known as confidential valets,
                                    was now egregiously out of his element, in a light tweed suit, anxious, almost irritable, and plainly anything but master
                                    of the situation. His relief at the sight of the "honest British face" of his Rector was unmeasured, but words to describe
                                    it were denied him. He could only say: 
                                    "Well, I ham pleased, I'm sure, sir, to see you. And so I'm sure, sir,
                                    will master." 
                                    "How is your master, Brown?" Mr Gregory eagerly put in. 
                                    "I think he's better, sir, thank you; but he's had a dreadful time of
                                    it. I 'ope he's gettin' some sleep now, but - " 
                                    "What has been the matter - I couldn't make out from your letter? Was
                                    it an accident of any kind?" 
                                    "Well, sir, I 'ardly know whether I'd better speak about it. Master was
                                    very partickler he should be the one to tell you. But there's no bones broke - that's one thing I'm sure we ought to be thankful
                                    - " 
                                    "What does the doctor say?" asked Mr Gregory. 
                                    They were by this time outside Mr Somerton's bedroom door, and speaking
                                    in low tones. Mr Gregory, who happened to be in front, was feeling for the handle, and chanced to run his fingers over the
                                    panels. Before Brown could answer, there was a terrible cry from within the room. 
                                    "In God's name, who is that?" were the first words they heard. "Brown,
                                    is it? 
                                    "Yes, sir - me, sir, and Mr Gregory," Brown hastened to answer, and there
                                    was an audible groan of relief in reply. 
                                    They entered the room, which was darkened against the afternoon sun, and
                                    Mr Gregory saw, with a shock of pity, how drawn, how damp with drops of fear, was the usually calm face of his friend, who,
                                    sitting up in the curtained bed, stretched out a shaking hand to welcome him. 
                                    "Better for seeing you, my dear Gregory," was the reply to the Rector's
                                    first question, and it was palpably true. 
                                    After five minutes of conversation Mr Somerton was more his own man, Brown
                                    afterwards reported, than he had been for days. He was able to eat a more than respectable dinner, and talked confidently
                                    of being fit to stand a journey to Coblentz within twenty-four hours. 
                                    "But there's one thing," he said, with a return of agitation which Mr
                                    Gregory did not like to see, "which I must beg you to do for me, my dear Gregory. Don't," he went on, laying his hand on Gregory's
                                    to forestall any interruption - "don't ask me what it is, or why I want it done. I"m not up to explaining it yet; it would
                                    throw me back - undo all the good you have done me by coming. The only word I will say about it is that you run no risk whatever
                                    by doing it, and that Brown can and will show you tomorrow what it is. It's merely to put back - to keep - something - No;
                                    I can't speak of it yet. Do you mind calling Brown?" 
                                    
                                     "Well, Somerton," said Mr Gregory, as he crossed the room to the door,
                                    "I won't ask for any explanations till you see fit to give them. And if this bit of business is as easy as you represent it
                                    to be, I will very gladly undertake it for you the first thing in the morning." 
                                    
                                     "Ah, I was sure you would, my dear Gregory; I was certain I could rely
                                    on you. I shall owe you more thanks than I can tell. Now, here is Brown. Brown, one word with you." 
                                    
                                     'shall I go?" interjected Mr Gregory. 
                                    "Not at all. Dear me, no. Brown, the first thing tomorrow morning - (you
                                    don't mind early hours, I know, Gregory) you must take the Rector to - there, you know" (a nod from Brown, who looked grave
                                    and anxious), "and he and you will put that back. You needn't be in the least alarmed; it's perfectly safe in the daytime.
                                    You know what I mean. It lies on the step, you know, where - where we put it." (Brown swallowed dryly once or twice, and,
                                    failing to speak, bowed.) "And - yes, that's all. Only this one other word, my dear Gregory. If you can manage to keep from
                                    questioning Brown about this matter, I shall be still more bound to you. Tomorrow evening, at latest, if all goes well, I
                                    shall be able, I believe, to tell you the whole story from start to finish. And now I"ll wish you good night. Brown will be
                                    with me - he sleeps here - and if I were you, I should lock my door. Yes, be particular to do that. They - they like it, the
                                    people here, and it's better. Good night, good night." 
                                    They parted upon this, and if Mr Gregory woke once or twice in the small
                                    hours and fancied he heard a fumbling about the lower part of his locked door, it was, perhaps, no more than what a quiet
                                    man, suddenly plunged into a strange bed and the heart of a mystery, might reasonably expect. Certainly he thought, to the
                                    end of his days, that he had heard such a sound twice or three times between midnight and dawn. 
                                    He was up with the sun, and out in company with Brown soon after. Perplexing
                                    as was the service he had been asked to perform for Mr Somerton, it was not a difficult or an alarming one, and within half
                                    an hour from his leaving the inn it was over. What it was I shall not as yet divulge. 
                                    Later in the morning Mr Somerton, now almost himself again, was able to
                                    make a start from Steinfeld; and that same evening, whether at Coblentz or at some intermediate stage on the journey I am
                                    not certain, he settled down to the promised explanation. Brown was present, but how much of the matter was ever really made
                                    plain to his comprehension he would never say, and I am unable to conjecture. 
                                    
                                     III 
                                     
                                     
                                     This was Mr Somerton's story: 
                                    "You know roughly, both of you, that this expedition of mine was undertaken
                                    with the object of tracing something in connection with some old painted glass in Lord D_____'s private chapel.
                                    Well, the starting-point of the whole matter lies in this passage from an old printed book, to which I will ask your attention."
                                    
                                    And at this point Mr Somerton went carefully over some ground with which
                                    we are already familiar. 
                                    "On my second visit to the chapel," he went on, "my purpose was to take
                                    every note I could of figures, lettering, diamond-scratchings on the glass, and even apparently accidental markings. The first
                                    point which I tackled was that of the inscribed scrolls. I could not doubt that the first of these, that of Job - 'There is
                                    a place for the gold where it is hidden' - with its intentional alteration, must refer to the treasure; so I applied myself
                                    with some confidence to the next, that of St John - 'They have on their vestures a writing which no man knoweth.' The natural
                                    question will have occurred to you: Was there an inscription on the robes of the figures? I could see none; each of the three
                                    had a broad black border to his mantle, which made a conspicuous and rather ugly feature in the window. I was nonplussed,
                                    I will own, and but for a curious bit of luck I think I should have left the search where the Canons of Steinfeld had left
                                    it before me. But it so happened that there was a good deal of dust on the surface of the glass, and Lord D_____,
                                    happening to come in, noticed my blackened hands, and kindly insisted on sending for a Turk's-head broom to clean down the
                                    window. There must, I suppose, have been a rough piece in the broom; anyhow, as it passed over the border of one of the mantles,
                                    I noticed that it left a long scratch, and that some yellow stain instantly showed up. I asked the man to stop his work for
                                    a moment, and ran up the ladder to examine the place. The yellow stain was there, sure enough, and what had come away was
                                    a thick black pigment, which had evidently been laid on with the brush after the glass had been burnt, and could therefore
                                    be easily scraped off without doing any harm. I scraped, accordingly, and you will hardly believe - no, I do you an injustice;
                                    you will have guessed already - that I found under this black pigment two or three clearly-formed capital letters in yellow
                                    stain on a clear ground. Of course, I could hardly contain my delight. 
                                    "I told Lord D_____ that I had detected an inscription which
                                    I thought might be very interesting, and begged to be allowed to uncover the whole of it. He made no difficulty about it whatever,
                                    told me to do exactly as I pleased, and then, having an engagement, was obliged - rather to my relief, I must say - to leave
                                    me. I set to work at once, and found the task a fairly easy one. The pigment, disintegrated, of course, by time, came off
                                    almost at a touch, and I don't think that it took me a couple of hours, all told, to clean the whole of the black borders
                                    in all three lights. Each of the figures had, as the inscription said, 'a writing on their vestures which nobody knew'. 
                                    "This discovery, of course, made it absolutely certain to my mind that
                                    I was on the right track. And, now, what was the inscription? While I was cleaning the glass I almost took pains not to read
                                    the lettering, saving up the treat until I had got the whole thing clear. And when that was done, my dear Gregory, I assure
                                    you I could almost have cried from sheer disappointment. What I read was only the most hopeless jumble of letters that was
                                    ever shaken up in a hat. Here it is: 
                                    Job 
                                               DREVICIOPEDMOOMSMVIVLISLCAVIBASBATAOVT
                                    
                                    St John 
                                           RDIIEAMRLESIPVSPODSEEIRSETTAAESGIAVNNR
                                    
                                    Zechariah 
                                         FTEEAILNQDPVAIVMTLEEATTOHIOONVMCAAT.H.Q.E 
                                    
                                     "Blank as I felt and must have looked for the first few minutes, my disappointment
                                    didn't last long. I realized almost at once that I was dealing with a cipher or cryptogram; and I reflected that it was likely
                                    to be of a pretty simple kind, considering its early date. So I copied the letters with the most anxious care. Another little
                                    point, I may tell you, turned up in the process which confirmed my belief in the cipher. After copying the letters on Job's
                                    robe I counted them, to make sure that I had them right. There were thirty-eight; and, just as I finished going through them,
                                    my eye fell on a scratching made with a sharp point on the edge of the border. It was simply the number xxxviii in Roman numerals.
                                    To cut the matter short, there was a similar note, as I may call it, in each of the other lights; and that made it plain to
                                    me that the glass-painter had had very strict orders from Abbot Thomas about the inscription, and had taken pains to get it
                                    correct. 
                                    "Well, after that discovery you may imagine how minutely I went over the
                                    whole surface of the glass in search of further light. Of course, I did not neglect the inscription on the scroll of Zechariah
                                    ('Upon one stone are seven eyes'), but I very quickly concluded that this must refer to some mark on a stone which could only
                                    be found in situ, where the treasure was concealed. To be short, I made all possible notes and sketches and tracings,
                                    and then came back to Parsbury to work out the cipher at leisure. Oh, the agonies I went through! I thought myself very clever
                                    at first, for I made sure that the key would be found in some of the old books on secret writing. The Steganographia
                                    of Joachim Trithemius, who was an earlier contemporary of Abbot Thomas, seemed particularly promising; so I got that, and
                                    Selenius's Cryptographia and Bacon's De Augmentis Scientiarum, and some more. But I could hit upon nothing.
                                    Then I tried the principle of the 'most frequent letter', taking first Latin and then German as a basis. That didn't help,
                                    either; whether it ought to have done so, I am not clear. And then I came back to the window itself, and read over my notes,
                                    hoping almost against hope that the Abbot might himself have somewhat supplied the key I wanted. I could make nothing out
                                    of the colour or pattern of the robes. There were no landscape backgrounds with subsidiary objects; there was nothing in the
                                    canopies. The only resource possible seemed to be in the attitudes of the figures. "Job," I read: 'scroll in left hand, forefinger
                                    of right hand extended upwards. John: holds inscribed book in left hand; with right hand blesses, with two fingers. Zechariah:
                                    scroll in left hand; right hand extended upwards, as Job, but with three fingers pointing up." In other words, I reflected,
                                    Job has one finger extended, John has two, Zechariah has three. May not there be a numeral key concealed
                                    in that? My dear Gregory," said Mr Somerton, laying his hand on his friend's knee, "that was the key. I didn't get it to fit
                                    at first, but after two or three trials I saw what was meant. After the first letter of the inscription you skip one letter,
                                    after the next you skip two, and after that skip three. Now look at the result I got. I've underlined the letters which form
                                    words: 
                                    DREICIOPEDMOOMSMVIVLISLCAVIBASBATAOVT
                                    
                                    RDIIEAMRLESIPVSPODSEEIRSETTAAESGIAVNNR
                                    
                                    FTEEAILNQDPVAIVMTLEEATTOHIOONVMCAAT.H.Q.E.
                                    
                                    "Do you see it? Decem millia auri reposita sunt in puteo in at...
                                    (Ten thousand [pieces] of gold are laid up in a well in...), followed by an incomplete word beginning at. So far so
                                    good. I tried the same plan with the remaining letters; but it wouldn't work, and I fancied that perhaps the placing of dots
                                    after the three last letters might indicate some difference of procedure. Then I thought to myself, "Wasn't there some allusion
                                    to a well in the account of Abbot Thomas in that book the Sertum? Yes, there was: he built a puteus in atrio
                                    (a well in the court). There, of course, was my word atrio. The next step was to copy out the remaining letters of the inscription,
                                    omitting those I had already used. That gave what you will see on this slip: 
                                    RVIIOPDOOSMVVISCAVBSBTAOTDIEAMLSIVSPDEERS ETAEGIANRFEEALQDVAIMLEATTHOOVMCA.H.Q.E. 
                                     "Now, I knew what the first three letters I wanted were namely, RIO -
                                    to complete the word atrio; and, as you will see, these are all to be found in the first five letters. I was a little
                                    confused at first by the occurrence of two i's, but very soon I saw that every alternate letter must be taken in the remainder
                                    of the inscription. You can work it out for yourself; the result, continuing where the first 'round' left off, is this: 
                                    
                                    "rio domus abbatialis de Steinfeld a me, Thoma, qui posui custodem super ea. Gare à qui la touche.
  
                                     'so the whole secret was out: 
                                    "Ten thousand pieces of gold are laid up in the well in the court of the Abbot's house of Steinfeld by me, Thomas,
                                    who have set a guardian over them. Gare à qui la touche.
  
                                    "The last words, I ought to say, are a device which Abbot Thomas had adopted.
                                    I found it with his arms in another piece of glass at Lord D_____'s, and he drafted it bodily into his cipher,
                                    though it doesn't quite fit in point of grammar. 
                                    "Well, what would any human being have been tempted to do, my dear Gregory,
                                    in my place? Could he have helped setting off, as I did, to Steinfeld, and tracing the secret literally to the fountain-head?
                                    I don't believe he could. Anyhow, I couldn't, and, as I needn't tell you, I found myself at Steinfeld as soon as the resources
                                    of civilization could put me there, and installed myself in the inn you saw. I must tell you that I was not altogether free
                                    from forebodings - on one hand of disappointment, on the other of danger. There was always the possibility that Abbot Thomas's
                                    well might have been wholly obliterated, or else that someone, ignorant of cryptograms, and guided only by luck, might have
                                    stumbled on the treasure before me. And then" - there was a very perceptible shaking of the voice here - "I was not entirely
                                    easy, I need not mind confessing, as to the meaning of the words about the guardian of the treasure. But, if you don't mind,
                                    I"ll say no more about that until - until it becomes necessary. 
                                    "At the first possible opportunity Brown and I began exploring the place.
                                    I had naturally represented myself as being interested in the remains of the abbey, and we could not avoid paying a visit
                                    to the church, impatient as I was to be elsewhere. Still, it did interest me to see the windows where the glass had been,
                                    and especially that at the east end of the south aisle. In the tracery lights of that I was startled to see some fragments
                                    and coats-of-arms remaining - Abbot Thomas's shield was there, and a small figure with a scroll inscribed Oculos habent,
                                    et non videbunt (They have eyes, and shall not see), which, I take it, was a hit of the Abbot at his Canons. 
                                    "But, of course, the principal object was to find the Abbot's house. There
                                    is no prescribed place for this, so far as I know, in the plan of a monastery; you can't predict of it, as you can of the
                                    chapter-house, that it will be on the eastern side of the cloister, or, as of the dormitory, that it will communicate with
                                    a transept of the church. I felt that if I asked many questions I might awaken lingering memories of the treasure, and I thought
                                    it best to try first to discover it for myself. It was not a very long or difficult search. That three-sided court south-east
                                    of the church, with deserted piles of building round it, and grass-grown pavement, which you saw this morning, was the place.
                                    And glad enough I was to see that it was put to no use, and was neither very far from our inn nor overlooked by any inhabited
                                    building; there were only orchards and paddocks on the slopes east of the church. I can tell you that fine stone glowed wonderfully
                                    in the rather watery yellow sunset that we had on the Tuesday afternoon. 
                                    "Next, what about the well? There was not much doubt about that, as you
                                    can testify. It is really a very remarkable thing. That curb is, I think, of Italian marble, and the carving I thought must
                                    be Italian also. There were reliefs, you will perhaps remember, of Eliezer and Rebekah, and of Jacob opening the well for
                                    Rachel, and similar subjects; but, by way of disarming suspicion, I suppose, the Abbot had carefully abstained from any of
                                    his cynical and allusive inscriptions. 
                                    "I examined the whole structure with the keenest interest, of course -
                                    a square well-head with an opening in one side; an arch over it, with a wheel for the rope to pass over, evidently in very
                                    good condition still, for it had been used within sixty years, or perhaps even later, though not quite recently. Then there
                                    was the question of depth and access to the interior. I suppose the depth was about sixty to seventy feet; and as to the other
                                    point, it really seemed as if the Abbot had wished to lead searchers up to the very door of his treasure-house, for, as you
                                    tested for yourself, there were big blocks of stone bonded into the masonry, and leading down in a regular staircase round
                                    and round the inside of the well. 
                                    "It seemed almost too good to be true. I wondered if there was a trap
                                    - if the stones were so contrived as to tip over when a weight was placed on them; but I tried a good many with my own weight
                                    and with my stick, and all seemed, and actually were, perfectly firm. Of course, I resolved that Brown and I would make an
                                    experiment that very night. 
                                    "I was well prepared. Knowing the sort of place I should have to explore,
                                    I had brought a sufficiency of good rope and bands of webbing to surround my body, and crossbars to hold to, as well as lanterns
                                    and candles and crowbars, all of which would go into a single carpet-bag and excite no suspicion. I satisfied myself that
                                    my rope would be long enough, and that the wheel for the bucket was in good working order, and then we went home to dinner.
                                    
                                    "I had a little cautious conversation with the landlord, and made out
                                    that he would not be overmuch surprised if I went out for a stroll with my man about nine o'clock, to make (Heaven forgive
                                    me!) a sketch of the abbey by moonlight. I asked no questions about the well, and am not likely to do so now. I fancy I know
                                    as much about it as anyone in Steinfeld: at least" - with a strong shudder - "I don't want to know any more. 
                                    "Now we come to the crisis, and, though I hate to think of it, I feel
                                    sure, Gregory, that it will be better for me in all ways to recall it just as it happened. We started, Brown and I, at about
                                    nine with our bag, and attracted no attention; for we managed to slip out at the hinder end of the inn-yard into an alley
                                    which brought us quite to the edge of the village. In five minutes we were at the well, and for some little time we sat on
                                    the edge of the well-head to make sure that no one was stirring or spying on us. All we heard was some horses cropping grass
                                    out of sight farther down the eastern slope. We were perfectly unobserved, and had plenty of light from the gorgeous full
                                    moon to allow us to get the rope properly fitted over the wheel. Then I secured the band round my body beneath the arms. We
                                    attached the end of the rope very securely to a ring in the stonework. Brown took the lighted lantern and followed me; I had
                                    a crowbar. And so we began to descend cautiously, feeling every step before we set foot on it, and scanning the walls in search
                                    of any marked stone. 
                                    "Half aloud I counted the steps as we went down, and we got as far as
                                    the thirty-eighth before I noted anything at all irregular in the surface of the masonry. Even here there was no mark, and
                                    I began to feel very blank, and to wonder if the Abbot's cryptogram could possibly be an elaborate hoax. At the forty-ninth
                                    step the staircase ceased. It was with a very sinking heart that I began retracing my steps, and when I was back on the thirty-eighth
                                    - Brown, with the lantern, being a step or two above me - I scrutinized the little bit of irregularity in the stonework with
                                    all my might; but there was no vestige of a mark. 
                                    "Then it struck me that the texture of the surface looked just a little
                                    smoother than the rest, or, at least, in some way different. It might possibly be cement and not stone. I gave it a good blow
                                    with my iron bar. There was a decidedly hollow sound, though that might be the result of our being in a well. But there was
                                    more. A great flake of cement dropped on to my feet, and I saw marks on the stone underneath. I had tracked the Abbot down,
                                    my dear Gregory; even now I think of it with a certain pride. It took but a very few more taps to clear the whole of the cement
                                    away, and I saw a slab of stone about two feet square, upon which was engraven a cross. Disappointment again, but only for
                                    a moment. It was you, Brown, who reassured me by a casual remark. You said, if I remember right: 
                                    ""It's a funny cross; looks like a lot of eyes." 
                                    "I snatched the lantern out of your hand, and saw with inexpressible pleasure
                                    that the cross was composed of seven eyes, four in a vertical line, three horizontal. The last of the scrolls in the window
                                    was explained in the way I had anticipated. Here was my 'stone with the seven eyes". So far the Abbot's data had been
                                    exact, and, as I thought of this, the anxiety about the "guardian" returned upon me with increased force. Still, I wasn't
                                    going to retreat now. 
                                    "Without giving myself time to think, I knocked away the cement all round
                                    the marked stone, and then gave it a prise on the right side with my crowbar. It moved at once, and I saw that it was but
                                    a thin light slab, such as I could easily lift out myself, and that it stopped the entrance to a cavity. I did lift it out
                                    unbroken, and set it on the step, for it might be very important to us to be able to replace it. Then I waited for several
                                    minutes on the step just above. I don't know why, but I think to see if any dreadful thing would rush out. Nothing happened.
                                    Next I lit a candle, and very cautiously I placed it inside the cavity, with some idea of seeing whether there were foul air,
                                    and of getting a glimpse of what was inside. There was some foulness of air which nearly extinguished the flame, but in no
                                    long time it burned quite steadily. The hole went some little way back, and also on the right and left of the entrance, and
                                    I could see some rounded light-coloured objects within which might be bags. There was no use in waiting. I faced the cavity,
                                    and looked in. There was nothing immediately in the front of the hole. I put my arm in and felt to the right, very gingerly
                                    - 
                                    "Just give me a glass of cognac, Brown. I"ll go on in a moment, Gregory...
                                    
                                    "Well, I felt to the right, and my fingers touched something curved, that
                                    felt - yes - more or less like leather; dampish it was, and evidently part of a heavy, full thing. There was nothing, I must
                                    say, to alarm one. I grew bolder, and putting both hands in as well as I could, I pulled it to me, and it came. It was heavy,
                                    but moved more easily than I expected. As I pulled it towards the entrance, my left elbow knocked over and extinguished the
                                    candle. I got the thing fairly in front of the mouth and began drawing it out. Just then Brown gave a sharp ejaculation and
                                    ran quickly up the steps with the lantern. He will tell you why in a moment. Startled as I was, I looked round after him,
                                    and saw him stand for a minute at the top and then walk away a few yards. Then I heard him call softly, "All right, sir,"
                                    and went on pulling out the great bag, in complete darkness. It hung for an instant on the edge of the hole, then slipped
                                    forward on to my chest, and put its arms round my neck. 
                                    "My dear Gregory, I am telling you the exact truth. I believe I am now
                                    acquainted with the extremity of terror and repulsion which a man can endure without losing his mind. I can only just manage
                                    to tell you now the bare outline of the experience. I was conscious of a most horrible smell of mould, and of a cold kind
                                    of face pressed against my own, and moving slowly over it, and of several - I don't know how many - legs or arms or tentacles
                                    or something clinging to my body. I screamed out, Brown says, like a beast, and fell away backward from the step on which
                                    I stood, and the creature slipped downwards, I suppose, on to that same step. Providentially the band round me held firm.
                                    Brown did not lose his head, and was strong enough to pull me up to the top and get me over the edge quite promptly. How he
                                    managed it exactly I don't know, and I think he would find it hard to tell you. I believe he contrived to hide our implements
                                    in the deserted building near by, and with very great difficulty he got me back to the inn. I was in no state to make explanations,
                                    and Brown knows no German; but next morning I told the people some tale of having had a bad fall in the abbey ruins, which,
                                    I suppose, they believed. And now, before I go further, I should just like you to hear what Brown's experiences during those
                                    few minutes were. Tell the Rector, Brown, what you told me." 
                                    "Well, sir," said Brown, speaking low and nervously, "it was just this
                                    way. Master was busy down in front of the 'ole, and I was 'olding the lantern and looking on, when I 'eard somethink drop
                                    in the water from the top, as I thought. So I looked up, and I see someone's 'ead lookin' over at us. I s'pose I must ha'
                                    said somethink, and I 'eld the light up and run up the steps, and my light shone right on the face. That was a bad un, sir,
                                    if ever I see one! A holdish man, and the face very much fell in, and larfin, as I thought. And I got up the steps as quick
                                    pretty nigh as I'm tellin' you, and when I was out on the ground there warn't a sign of any person. There 'adn't been the
                                    time for anyone to get away, let alone a hold chap, and I made sure he warn't crouching down by the well, nor nothink. Next
                                    thing I hear master cry out somethink 'orrible, and hall I see was him hanging out by the rope, and, as master says, 'owever
                                    I got him up I couldn't tell you." 
                                    "You hear that, Gregory?" said Mr Somerton. "Now, does any explanation
                                    of that incident strike you?" 
                                    "The whole thing is so ghastly and abnormal that I must own it puts me
                                    quite off my balance; but the thought did occur to me that possibly the - well, the person who set the trap might have come
                                    to see the success of his plan." 
                                    "Just so, Gregory, just so. I can think of nothing else so - likely,
                                    I should say, if such a word had a place anywhere in my story. I think it must have been the Abbot... Well, I haven't much
                                    more to tell you. I spent a miserable night, Brown sitting up with me. Next day I was no better; unable to get up; no doctor
                                    to be had; and, if one had been available, I doubt if he could have done much for me. I made Brown write off to you, and spent
                                    a second terrible night. And, Gregory, of this I am sure, and I think it affected me more than the first shock, for it lasted
                                    longer: there was someone or something on the watch outside my door the whole night. I almost fancy there were two. It wasn't
                                    only the faint noises I heard from time to time all through the dark hours, but there was the smell - the hideous smell of
                                    mould. Every rag I had had on me on that first evening I had stripped off and made Brown take it away. I believe he stuffed
                                    the things into the stove in his room; and yet the smell was there, as intense as it had been in the well; and, what is more,
                                    it came from outside the door. But with the first glimmer of dawn it faded out, and the sounds ceased, too; and that convinced
                                    me that the thing or things were creatures of darkness, and could not stand the daylight; and so I was sure that if anyone
                                    could put back the stone, it or they would be powerless until someone else took it away again. I had to wait until you came
                                    to get that done. Of course, I couldn't send Brown to do it by himself, and still less could I tell anyone who belonged to
                                    the place. 
                                    "Well, there is my story; and if you don't believe it, I can't help it.
                                    But I think you do." 
                                    "Indeed," said Mr Gregory, "I can find no alternative. I must believe
                                    it! I saw the well and the stone myself, and had a glimpse, I thought, of the bags or something else in the hole. And, to
                                    be plain with you, Somerton, I believe my door was watched last night, too." 
                                    "I dare say it was, Gregory; but, thank goodness, that is over. Have you,
                                    by the way, anything to tell about your visit to that dreadful place?" 
                                    "Very little," was the answer. "Brown and I managed easily enough to get
                                    the slab into its place, and he fixed it very firmly with the irons and wedges you had desired him to get, and we contrived
                                    to smear the surface with mud so that it looks just like the rest of the wall. One thing I did notice in the carving on the
                                    well-head, which I think must have escaped you. It was a horrid, grotesque shape perhaps more like a toad than anything else,
                                    and there was a label by it inscribed with the two words, "Depositum custodi"1 
                                    
                                    
                                     1.Keep that which is committed to thee.
                                    
                                                                                                                  
                                  
                                 
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