(Remainder of the manuscript destroyed)
MAJORDOMO GROSSMAN. A HISTORY OF THE DIABOLICAL TWO-WHEELER
Anno Domini 1347, Monsignor Robert de Prevois, the Inquisitor of Paris, received news from the mouths of honorable citizens that master Enguerrand de Auxbris-Malvoisin, obsessed by the Unclean One, had left the saving grace of the Christian faith, turned to incantations and magic, and built a demonic device that he rode through the streets terrifying people. Not wishing to act drastically, Monsignor Robert ordered Brother Guillaume of Poitiers to clandestinely inquire as to the truth of the rumors. Two months later, Brother Guillaume made his report to the Inquisitor confirming that the news about the devilish dealings of master Enguerrand was true, but that it was incomplete. In his home, Auxbris-Malvoisin regularly gathered a company of witches and wizards whose heresiarch was a schismatic monk named Callistus and whose secular leader was a certain Josephus Ferrarius; this Satanic society met regularly at black masses where they broke mirrors and spoke unfathomable blasphemies about God.
The machine which master Enguerrand publicly and shamelessly rode through the streets of Paris, proved that he was inspired by Satan who is the author of all evil things. Frere Guillaume describes it like this: “Instead of two wheels connected by an axel, one next to the other like on a normal cart, master Enguerrand has built a vehicle where the wheels stand one behind the other connected by a beam which is topped by a seat. It is clear to everyone that such an apparatus cannot stand upright, and it certainly cannot be ridden. And yet master Enguerrand, obviously with the aid of the powers of darkness, accompanied by the great noise of frightened children screaming, rides down the steep streets on this hellish contraption and scandalizes all those who pass there.”
Despite the irrefutability of the evidence, guided by the lessons of our Savior on tolerance and forgiveness, Robert de Prevois wrote a letter to Enguerrand, counseling him to leave his heresies behind, his sinful ways and bodily pleasures, and to return in humility to his mother Church, which forgives all sins and every blasphemy, except for blasphemy against the Holy Ghost. Master Enguerrand, obviously under the complete control of demonic possession, not only showed no intention or wish to repent, but rather haughtily replied, calling the Inquisitor a servant of Satan, saying that he himself was indeed sinful but that he did not know why he would be more sinful than he, Robert de Prevois; he said that he, Enguerrand, possessed evidence that Holy Father Sylvester II (may God protect us from the very thought) had become the Pope thanks to a deal with the Devil; he said that he repented everyday, but saw no reason to do so in front of the Inquisitor. Left with no choice, Robert de Prevois ordered the secular authorities to capture and shackle the heretics.
However, Satan, who is the Prince of this world and the Master of darkness, and who has the power to see some part of the future, found a way to inform his servants Enguerrand, Josephus and Callistus of what was awaiting them, so the three of them snuck out of Paris under the cover of night and went to find sanctuary with the Marquis de Rocheteau, an evil and perverted man. Feeling safe, from there they began sending letters to the honorable Inquisitor, letters full of insults and inconceivable rudeness, to the extent that it is troubling to read them and impossible to reproduce them. Completely overcome with the insanity of their conceit, steeped in irrationality, they began making as many of those demonic two-wheelers as possible with the insane intention of, when the time came, riding off on the path to heaven on them, never dreaming that they would be tumbling out of control into hell. At Rocheteau castle the scum of the earth, thieves, drunks and loose women began to gather, and the Marquis and Enguerrand gave a whipping to Isabelle de Monmoranse, a virgin whose virtue was known far and wide, for they said that no one is virtuous in this world. And so the rumors of the infamous atrocities of the demonic society, who called themselves the Order of the Little Brothers, reached the royal throne. Desiring to maintain peace in the kingdom and quiet among his subjects, the King ordered the Knight, Dagobert of Lourdes, to capture the Rocheteau castle and turn the transgressors against God’s and the King’s authority over into the hands of justice.