<h2>IN KROPFSBERG KEEP.</h2>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><big>In Kropfsberg Keep.</big></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">To</span> the traveller from Innsbrück to Munich, up
the lovely valley of the silver Inn, many castles
appear, one after another, each on its beetling
cliff or gentle hill,—appear and disappear, melting
into the dark fir trees that grow so thickly
on every side,—Laneck, Lichtwer, Ratholtz,
Tratzberg, Matzen, Kropfsberg, gathering close
around the entrance to the dark and wonderful
Zillerthal.</p>
<p>But to us—Tom Rendel and myself—there
are two castles only: not the gorgeous and
princely Ambras, nor the noble old Tratzberg,
with its crowded treasures of solemn and splendid
mediævalism; but little Matzen, where
eager hospitality forms the new life of a never-dead
chivalry, and Kropfsberg, ruined, tottering,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>
blasted by fire and smitten with grievous years,—a
dead thing, and haunted,—full of strange
legends, and eloquent of mystery and tragedy.</p>
<p>We were visiting the von C——s at Matzen,
and gaining our first wondering knowledge of
the courtly, cordial castle life in the Tyrol,—of
the gentle and delicate hospitality of noble Austrians.
Brixleg had ceased to be but a mark on
a map, and had become a place of rest and delight,
a home for homeless wanderers on the
face of Europe, while Schloss Matzen was a
synonym for all that was gracious and kindly
and beautiful in life. The days moved on in a
golden round of riding and driving and shooting:
down to Landl and Thiersee for chamois,
across the river to the magic Achensee, up the
Zillerthal, across the Schmerner Joch, even to
the railway station at Steinach. And in the
evenings after the late dinners in the upper
hall where the sleepy hounds leaned against
our chairs looking at us with suppliant eyes,
in the evenings when the fire was dying away
in the hooded fireplace in the library, stories.
Stories, and legends, and fairy tales, while the
stiff old portraits changed countenance constantly
under the flickering firelight, and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span>
sound of the drifting Inn came softly across
the meadows far below.</p>
<p>If ever I tell the Story of Schloss Matzen,
then will be the time to paint the too inadequate
picture of this fair oasis in the desert of
travel and tourists and hotels; but just now it
is Kropfsberg the Silent that is of greater importance,
for it was only in Matzen that the
story was told by Fräulein E——, the gold-haired
niece of Frau von C——, one hot evening in July,
when we were sitting in the great west window
of the drawing-room after a long ride up the
Stallenthal. All the windows were open to
catch the faint wind, and we had sat for a long
time watching the Otzethaler Alps turn rose-color
over distant Innsbrück, then deepen to
violet as the sun went down and the white
mists rose slowly until Lichtwer and Laneck
and Kropfsberg rose like craggy islands in a
silver sea.</p>
<p>And this is the story as Fräulein E—— told
it to us,—the Story of Kropfsberg Keep.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>A great many years ago, soon after my grandfather
died, and Matzen came to us, when I
was a little girl, and so young that I remember<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span>
nothing of the affair except as something dreadful
that frightened me very much, two young
men who had studied painting with my grandfather
came down to Brixleg from Munich,
partly to paint, and partly to amuse themselves,—"ghost-hunting"
as they said, for they were
very sensible young men and prided themselves
on it, laughing at all kinds of "superstition,"
and particularly at that form which believed in
ghosts and feared them. They had never seen
a real ghost, you know, and they belonged to a
certain set of people who believed nothing they
had not seen themselves,—which always seemed
to me <i>very</i> conceited. Well, they knew that we
had lots of beautiful castles here in the "lower
valley," and they assumed, and rightly, that
every castle has at least <i>one</i> ghost story connected
with it, so they chose this as their hunting
ground, only the game they sought was
ghosts, not chamois. Their plan was to visit
every place that was supposed to be haunted,
and to meet every reputed ghost, and prove that
it really was no ghost at all.</p>
<p>There was a little inn down in the village then,
kept by an old man named Peter Rosskopf, and
the two young men made this their headquarters.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span>
The very first night they began to draw from
the old innkeeper all that he knew of legends
and ghost stories connected with Brixleg and
its castles, and as he was a most garrulous old
gentleman he filled them with the wildest delight
by his stories of the ghosts of the castles about
the mouth of the Zillerthal. Of course the old
man believed every word he said, and you can
imagine his horror and amazement when, after
telling his guests the particularly blood-curdling
story of Kropfsberg and its haunted keep, the
elder of the two boys, whose surname I have forgotten,
but whose Christian name was Rupert,
calmly said, "Your story is most satisfactory:
we will sleep in Kropfsberg Keep to-morrow
night, and you must provide us with all that
we may need to make ourselves comfortable."</p>
<p>The old man nearly fell into the fire. "What
for a blockhead are you?" he cried, with big
eyes. "The keep is haunted by Count Albert's
ghost, I tell you!"</p>
<p>"That is why we are going there to-morrow
night; we wish to make the acquaintance of
Count Albert."</p>
<p>"But there was a man stayed there once, and
in the morning he was dead."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Very silly of him; there are two of us, and
we carry revolvers."</p>
<p>"But it's a <i>ghost</i>, I tell you," almost screamed
the innkeeper; "are ghosts afraid of firearms?"</p>
<p>"Whether they are or not, we are <i>not</i> afraid
of <i>them</i>."</p>
<p>Here the younger boy broke in,—he was
named Otto von Kleist. I remember the name,
for I had a music teacher once by that name.
He abused the poor old man shamefully; told
him that they were going to spend the night in
Kropfsberg in spite of Count Albert and Peter
Rosskopf, and that he might as well make the
most of it and earn his money with cheerfulness.</p>
<p>In a word, they finally bullied the old fellow
into submission, and when the morning came
he set about preparing for the suicide, as he
considered it, with sighs and mutterings and
ominous shakings of the head.</p>
<p>You know the condition of the castle now,—nothing
but scorched walls and crumbling piles
of fallen masonry. Well, at the time I tell you
of, the keep was still partially preserved. It was
finally burned out only a few years ago by some
wicked boys who came over from Jenbach to
have a good time. But when the ghost hunters<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span>
came, though the two lower floors had fallen
into the crypt, the third floor remained. The
peasants said it <i>could</i> not fall, but that it would
stay until the Day of Judgment, because it was
in the room above that the wicked Count Albert
sat watching the flames destroy the great castle
and his imprisoned guests, and where he finally
hung himself in a suit of armor that had belonged
to his mediæval ancestor, the first Count
Kropfsberg.</p>
<p>No one dared touch him, and so he hung
there for twelve years, and all the time venturesome
boys and daring men used to creep up
the turret steps and stare awfully through the
chinks in the door at that ghostly mass of
steel that held within itself the body of a murderer
and suicide, slowly returning to the dust
from which it was made. Finally it disappeared,
none knew whither, and for another dozen years
the room stood empty but for the old furniture
and the rotting hangings.</p>
<p>So, when the two men climbed the stairway to
the haunted room, they found a very different
state of things from what exists now. The room
was absolutely as it was left the night Count
Albert burned the castle, except that all trace<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span>
of the suspended suit of armor and its ghastly
contents had vanished.</p>
<p>No one had dared to cross the threshold, and
I suppose that for forty years no living thing had
entered that dreadful room.</p>
<p>On one side stood a vast canopied bed of
black wood, the damask hangings of which
were covered with mould and mildew. All the
clothing of the bed was in perfect order, and on
it lay a book, open, and face downward. The
only other furniture in the room consisted of
several old chairs, a carved oak chest, and a big
inlaid table covered with books and papers, and
on one corner two or three bottles with dark
solid sediment at the bottom, and a glass, also
dark with the dregs of wine that had been poured
out almost half a century before. The tapestry
on the walls was green with mould, but hardly
torn or otherwise defaced, for although the heavy
dust of forty years lay on everything the room
had been preserved from further harm. No
spider web was to be seen, no trace of nibbling
mice, not even a dead moth or fly on the
sills of the diamond-paned windows; life seemed
to have shunned the room utterly and finally.</p>
<p>The men looked at the room curiously, and, I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span>
am sure, not without some feelings of awe and
unacknowledged fear; but, whatever they may
have felt of instinctive shrinking, they said
nothing, and quickly set to work to make the
room passably inhabitable. They decided to
touch nothing that had not absolutely to be
changed, and therefore they made for themselves
a bed in one corner with the mattress
and linen from the inn. In the great fireplace
they piled a lot of wood on the caked ashes of
a fire dead for forty years, turned the old chest
into a table, and laid out on it all their arrangements
for the evening's amusement: food, two
or three bottles of wine, pipes and tobacco, and
the chess-board that was their inseparable travelling
companion.</p>
<p>All this they did themselves: the innkeeper
would not even come within the walls of the
outer court; he insisted that he had washed
his hands of the whole affair, the silly dunderheads
might go to their death their own way.
<i>He</i> would not aid and abet them. One of
the stable boys brought the basket of food
and the wood and the bed up the winding
stone stairs, to be sure, but neither money nor
prayers nor threats would bring him within<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span>
the walls of the accursed place, and he stared
fearfully at the hare-brained boys as they worked
around the dead old room preparing for the night
that was coming so fast.</p>
<p>At length everything was in readiness, and
after a final visit to the inn for dinner Rupert
and Otto started at sunset for the Keep. Half
the village went with them, for Peter Rosskopf
had babbled the whole story to an open-mouthed
crowd of wondering men and women, and as to
an execution the awe-struck crowd followed the
two boys dumbly, curious to see if they surely
would put their plan into execution. But none
went farther than the outer doorway of the stairs,
for it was already growing twilight. In absolute
silence they watched the two foolhardy youths
with their lives in their hands enter the terrible
Keep, standing like a tower in the midst of the
piles of stones that had once formed walls joining
it with the mass of the castle beyond. When
a moment later a light showed itself in the high
windows above, they sighed resignedly and went
their ways, to wait stolidly until morning should
come and prove the truth of their fears and
warnings.</p>
<p>In the mean time the ghost hunters built a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
huge fire, lighted their many candles, and sat
down to await developments. Rupert afterwards
told my uncle that they really felt no fear whatever,
only a contemptuous curiosity, and they
ate their supper with good appetite and an unusual
relish. It was a long evening. They
played many games of chess, waiting for midnight.
Hour passed after hour, and nothing
occurred to interrupt the monotony of the evening.
Ten, eleven, came and went,—it was
almost midnight. They piled more wood in
the fireplace, lighted new candles, looked to
their pistols—and waited. The clocks in the
village struck twelve; the sound coming muffled
through the high, deep-embrasured windows.
Nothing happened, nothing to break the heavy
silence; and with a feeling of disappointed
relief they looked at each other and acknowledged
that they had met another rebuff.</p>
<p>Finally they decided that there was no use in
sitting up and boring themselves any longer,
they had much better rest; so Otto threw himself
down on the mattress, falling almost immediately
asleep. Rupert sat a little longer,
smoking, and watching the stars creep along
behind the shattered glass and the bent leads<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>
of the lofty windows; watching the fire fall
together, and the strange shadows move mysteriously
on the mouldering walls. The iron
hook in the oak beam, that crossed the ceiling
midway, fascinated him, not with fear, but
morbidly. So, it was from that hook that for
twelve years, twelve long years of changing
summer and winter, the body of Count Albert,
murderer and suicide, hung in its strange casing
of mediæval steel; moving a little at first, and
turning gently while the fire died out on the
hearth, while the ruins of the castle grew cold,
and horrified peasants sought for the bodies of
the score of gay, reckless, wicked guests whom
Count Albert had gathered in Kropfsberg for
a last debauch, gathered to their terrible and
untimely death. What a strange and fiendish
idea it was, the young, handsome noble who
had ruined himself and his family in the society
of the splendid debauchees, gathering them all
together, men and women who had known only
love and pleasure, for a glorious and awful riot
of luxury, and then, when they were all dancing
in the great ballroom, locking the doors and
burning the whole castle about them, the while
he sat in the great keep listening to their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>
screams of agonized fear, watching the fire
sweep from wing to wing until the whole mighty
mass was one enormous and awful pyre, and
then, clothing himself in his great-great-grandfather's
armor, hanging himself in the midst
of the ruins of what had been a proud and
noble castle. So ended a great family, a great
house.</p>
<p>But that was forty years ago.</p>
<p>He was growing drowsy; the light flickered
and flared in the fireplace; one by one the candles
went out; the shadows grew thick in the
room. Why did that great iron hook stand out
so plainly? why did that dark shadow dance
and quiver so mockingly behind it?—why— But
he ceased to wonder at anything. He was
asleep.</p>
<p>It seemed to him that he woke almost immediately;
the fire still burned, though low
and fitfully on the hearth. Otto was sleeping,
breathing quietly and regularly; the shadows
had gathered close around him, thick and
murky; with every passing moment the light
died in the fireplace; he felt stiff with cold.
In the utter silence he heard the clock in the
village strike two. He shivered with a sudden<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>
and irresistible feeling of fear, and abruptly
turned and looked towards the hook in the
ceiling.</p>
<p>Yes, It was there. He knew that It would
be. It seemed quite natural, he would have
been disappointed had he seen nothing; but
now he knew that the story was true, knew that
he was wrong, and that the dead <i>do</i> sometimes
return to earth, for there, in the fast-deepening
shadow, hung the black mass of wrought steel,
turning a little now and then, with the light
flickering on the tarnished and rusty metal.
He watched it quietly; he hardly felt afraid;
it was rather a sentiment of sadness and fatality
that filled him, of gloomy forebodings
of something unknown, unimaginable. He sat
and watched the thing disappear in the gathering
dark, his hand on his pistol as it lay by him
on the great chest. There was no sound but
the regular breathing of the sleeping boy on the
mattress.</p>
<p>It had grown absolutely dark; a bat fluttered
against the broken glass of the window. He
wondered if he was growing mad, for—he hesitated
to acknowledge it to himself—he heard
music; far, curious music, a strange and luxurious<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span>
dance, very faint, very vague, but unmistakable.</p>
<p>Like a flash of lightning came a jagged line
of fire down the blank wall opposite him, a line
that remained, that grew wider, that let a pale
cold light into the room, showing him now all
its details,—the empty fireplace, where a thin
smoke rose in a spiral from a bit of charred
wood, the mass of the great bed, and, in the
very middle, black against the curious brightness,
the armored man, or ghost, or devil, standing,
not suspended, beneath the rusty hook.
And with the rending of the wall the music
grew more distinct, though sounding still very,
very far away.</p>
<p>Count Albert raised his mailed hand and
beckoned to him; then turned, and stood in
the riven wall.</p>
<p>Without a word, Rupert rose and followed
him, his pistol in hand. Count Albert passed
through the mighty wall and disappeared in
the unearthly light. Rupert followed mechanically.
He felt the crushing of the mortar
beneath his feet, the roughness of the jagged
wall where he rested his hand to steady
himself.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The keep rose absolutely isolated among the
ruins, yet on passing through the wall Rupert
found himself in a long, uneven corridor, the
floor of which was warped and sagging, while
the walls were covered on one side with big
faded portraits of an inferior quality, like those
in the corridor that connects the Pitti and Uffizzi
in Florence. Before him moved the figure of
Count Albert,—a black silhouette in the ever-increasing
light. And always the music grew
stronger and stranger, a mad, evil, seductive
dance that bewitched even while it disgusted.</p>
<p>In a final blaze of vivid, intolerable light, in
a burst of hellish music that might have come
from Bedlam, Rupert stepped from the corridor
into a vast and curious room where at
first he saw nothing, distinguished nothing but
a mad, seething whirl of sweeping figures,
white, in a white room, under white light,
Count Albert standing before him, the only
dark object to be seen. As his eyes grew
accustomed to the fearful brightness, he knew
that he was looking on a dance such as the
damned might see in hell, but such as no living
man had ever seen before.</p>
<p>Around the long, narrow hall, under the fearful<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>
light that came from nowhere, but was omnipresent,
swept a rushing stream of unspeakable
horrors, dancing insanely, laughing, gibbering
hideously; the dead of forty years. White,
polished skeletons, bare of flesh and vesture,
skeletons clothed in the dreadful rags of dried
and rattling sinews, the tags of tattering grave-clothes
flaunting behind them. These were the
dead of many years ago. Then the dead of more
recent times, with yellow bones showing only
here and there, the long and insecure hair of
their hideous heads writhing in the beating
air. Then green and gray horrors, bloated
and shapeless, stained with earth or dripping
with spattering water; and here and there
white, beautiful things, like chiselled ivory, the
dead of yesterday, locked it may be, in the
mummy arms of rattling skeletons.</p>
<p>Round and round the cursed room, a swaying,
swirling maelstrom of death, while the air grew
thick with miasma, the floor foul with shreds of
shrouds, and yellow parchment, clattering bones,
and wisps of tangled hair.</p>
<p>And in the very midst of this ring of death, a
sight not for words nor for thought, a sight to
blast forever the mind of the man who looked<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span>
upon it: a leaping, writhing dance of Count
Albert's victims, the score of beautiful women
and reckless men who danced to their awful
death while the castle burned around them,
charred and shapeless now, a living charnel-house
of nameless horror.</p>
<p>Count Albert, who had stood silent and
gloomy, watching the dance of the damned,
turned to Rupert, and for the first time spoke.</p>
<p>"We are ready for you now; dance!"</p>
<p>A prancing horror, dead some dozen years,
perhaps, flaunted from the rushing river of
the dead, and leered at Rupert with eyeless
skull.</p>
<p>"Dance!"</p>
<p>Rupert stood frozen, motionless.</p>
<p>"Dance!"</p>
<p>His hard lips moved. "Not if the devil came
from hell to make me."</p>
<p>Count Albert swept his vast two-handed
sword into the fœtid air while the tide of
corruption paused in its swirling, and swept
down on Rupert with gibbering grins.</p>
<p>The room, and the howling dead, and the
black portent before him circled dizzily around,
as with a last effort of departing consciousness<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>
he drew his pistol and fired full in the face of
Count Albert.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Perfect silence, perfect darkness; not a
breath, not a sound: the dead stillness of a
long-sealed tomb. Rupert lay on his back,
stunned, helpless, his pistol clenched in his
frozen hand, a smell of powder in the black
air. Where was he? Dead? In hell? He
reached his hand out cautiously; it fell on
dusty boards. Outside, far away, a clock
struck three. Had he dreamed? Of course;
but how ghastly a dream! With chattering
teeth he called softly,—</p>
<p>"Otto!"</p>
<p>There was no reply, and none when he called
again and again. He staggered weakly to his
feet, groping for matches and candles. A panic
of abject terror came on him; the matches
were gone! He turned towards the fireplace:
a single coal glowed in the white ashes. He
swept a mass of papers and dusty books from
the table, and with trembling hands cowered
over the embers, until he succeeded in lighting
the dry tinder. Then he piled the old books
on the blaze, and looked fearfully around.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>No: It was gone,—thank God for that; the
hook was empty.</p>
<p>But why did Otto sleep so soundly; why did
he not awake?</p>
<p>He stepped unsteadily across the room in the
flaring light of the burning books, and knelt by
the mattress.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>So they found him in the morning, when no
one came to the inn from Kropfsberg Keep,
and the quaking Peter Rosskopf arranged a
relief party;—found him kneeling beside the
mattress where Otto lay, shot in the throat
and quite dead.</p>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span></p>
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