Yet his most deep desires were for the Lord of Forest, and for the delights which they shared in Druid wood, and for the even larger gustos that were to be the rewards of Odo’s fearlessness by-and-by.
“I design great things for you, my Prettyman,” the Master would assure him, “and I intend that you shall go far in the service to which we are both enlisted.”
Even after Odo had been seized, and in the whiles that he lay in the dark prison at Lisuarte, the Master would come to him at night, and would fondle him, and; would repeat this assurance.
3. OF HIS CONFESSION AND CONVERSION
Black Odo was brought before the criminal court at Yair. He confessed everything, and departed from the truth only in saying it was Ettarre the wicked witch-woman, who had seduced his innocence; who had first led him to the Lord of the Forest; and who upon three occasions had rubbed him all over with the ointment and helped him into the wolf skin. But Ettarre, after she also had been fetched to Yair, would confess nothing. Her stubbornness was a calamity to the patience of her judges: yet these earnest men did not despair, but they tortured her white flesh again and again, even until she died, in their long-suffering attempts to win the obstinate girl to candor and repentance.
The tweezers and hammers and hot irons were not needed in cross-examining Odo, because he confessed freely whatsoever any one of his black-robed judges suggested, and then went edifyingly far beyond any merely judicial imaginings. Odo, called Le Noir, was therefore found guilty upon all counts.
Messire Gui de Puysange, president of the court, pronounced the sentence. His long fingers played idly with the large silver inkstand before him in the while that he was speaking. He pointed out that, thanks to the progress of science, in the enlightened age whose benefits they were all sharing, lycanthropy, or that form of mania in which the patient imagined himself to be, and acted as, a wolf, was now known to be an hallucination, or, as some learned persons thought, a form of chronic insanity; and, in either case, was, to the eyes of the considerate, more properly an affliction than a crime. The said Odo, called Le Noir, in consequence, and in consideration of his youth and of the corrupting influence exerted by his deceased paramour, and in consideration of his lack of educational advantages, should be sent to the monastery at Aigremont, for better restraint and rearing, and for the re-establishment of his mental and spiritual health, said Messire de Puysange. Science, gentlemen, said Messire de Puysange, science was at last, in these progressive times, teaching us how to deal sanely with the insane.
Over this rather neat epigram, felt generally to be a credit to the bench, his confreres blinked and nodded like a roosting line of benevolent owls. But the condemned boy wept a little. Youth parts from its illusions with pain; and Odo saw that it was his dear Lord of the Forest who, in a long black gown and a curled mountain of blond hair, was pronouncing this sentence, so that Odo knew the Master was only the head of the coven of Amneran, a mere sorcerer, and not the glorious being whom Odo had thought him.
So it was that the blessed Odo, as yet a little stained with the dust of his worldly journeying, lost faith in evil as a dependable ally.
Now for what seemed to him a long while Black Odo was not happy in the Monastery of St Hoprig, but went about on all fours, eating only such food as he could find; upon the ground. He still craved the delights of his nocturnal hunting; he thought especially about small girls; and constantly he was hoping it would not be long before he had another taste of the food he desired. Yet by-and-by, a little by a little, he grew reconciled to the quiet and easy life of the monastery.
He became interested in religious matters. He delighted in particular to have the good monks tell him about the suffering of the saints upon this wicked earth, and how these holy persons had been broiled and flayed and hacked into quivering mince-meat for their faith’s sake. When he listened to these stories he sat huddled, with his legs crossed very tightly. At times his shoulders twitched convulsively. Then the boy would growl, and he would wipe away the white foam which was dribbling thinly from the corners of his mouth.
Young Odo, too, was never wearied of discussing with his religious instructors the cunning torments which the damned must suffer eternally: and of the more intimate details of these tortures he began to speak with a fervor which was truly devout. In fine, grace entered into his heart; he desired to become an officially accredited servant of Heaven; and the order of St. Hoprig gladly received this most notable brand from the burning.
Sometimes, even after the novice had entered into his holy vocation, the Lord of the Forest would come to him in the night time, saying as of old,—
“I design great things for you, my Prettyman.”
But Brother Odo could not forget how basely this Gui de Puysange had deceived him, and how the dark and withered sorcerer had abused the faith of an innocent boy, by pretending to be the all-powerful Master of Evil. So Odo would make the sign of the cross, he would repeat the sacred Latin words, and he would thus force his tempter to depart.
And old Gui de Puysange would say: “You treat me very cruelly, my Prettyman. Nevertheless, I love you, and because of that covenant which is between us my love shall yet cherish you vicariously.”
4. OF THE DIVINE CONDESCENSIONS SHOWN UNTO HIM
Brother Odo increased in sanctity. He was blessed with religious fervors, such as the Devil so cunningly mimics with epilepsy, in which the inspired young devotee’s disregard of the flesh caused him to bite and claw at the bodies of all those who came to assist him from the pavement or the walkway where he was writhing in pious ecstasy. He was granted also the biliousness and the upset digestion needful to create an all-overbearing ardor against any compromise with the soft and wheedling ways of evil. A slight hiccough continually interrupted his talking, as his stomach was relieved of gas. He was accorded visions in which he was counselled and instructed by many saints.
These came to confirm the holy man in his faith by showing him from what sins and perversities they themselves had been rescued by faith who now were saints in the higher courts of Paradise.
“Such were the customs of my wicked way of living in Augsburg,” said St. Eutropia, “before the grace of Heaven visited me.”
“It was in this way I paid the ferryman with my body’s beauty,” said St. Mary the Egyptian, “in order that I might get to Jerusalem and obtain salvation.”
“Such was the form of loathsome and unnatural caress for which I was particularly notorious,” said St. Margaret of Cortona, “before I found repentance and true faith.”
All these sacred events the blessed saints would rehearse, with Brother Odo’s aid, so that he might perceive with his own senses from how poisonously sweet and how affable iniquities the most vile of sinners might yet be rescued, and brought into eternal glory, by the true faith.
Even better was to follow, in Heaven’s tender furtherance of the welfare of Heaven’s loving and vigorous servant. For in a while Ettarre, the reputed witch-woman whom Brother Odo had once so ardently desired, and whom communion with no saint had ever quite put out of his mind, now also came to him.
And it was a queer thing, too, that with the coming of Ettarre the appearance of his cell was changed into the appearance of a quiet-colored garden. Lilies seemed to abound everywhere in this garden, and many climbing white roses, also, which were lighted by a clear and tempered radiancy like that of dawn. Moreover, a number of white rabbits were frisking about Brother Odo, and he could hear the sound of doves that called to their mates very softly.