
“Beats the hell out of me, Brother Ivor,” I admitted. “I know you Europeans are degenerate and sadly
lacking in Christian virtues, but that seems an awfully stern punishment for overcharging.”
Well, he didn't say nothing to that, and we rode in silence for about half an hour, til we left the city limits
and got out into the suburbs, and pretty soon we came to a rocky hill, and there on top of it was this huge
castle.
“The Baron will be so happy to meet you!” said Ivor. “I told him how you had agreed to help us.”
“I'm always happy to help advance the cause of science,” I said modestly.
“Tonight we will witness the culmination of his life's work,” continued Ivor. He leaned over and added
confidentially. “He is delighted that you are a man of the cloth. He wants you to baptize his creation.”
“Well, a critter what's made of twenty or thirty other men ain't the easiest thing in the world to baptize,” I
said. “I figure we'll have to baptize each part separately, at maybe five dollars a shot, just to be on the
safe side. Can't have his left elbow doing evil things when the rest of him is trying to serve the Lord, if you
see what I mean.”
“Money is no object to the Baron,” answered Ivor.
“You don't say?” I replied. “I don't suppose he wants his castle blessed too, just to cover all the bases?”
“You'll have to speak to him about it,” said Ivor, as the horse starting climbing a little path in the hill.
“We're almost there.”
We reached a huge wrought-iron gate and Ivor got out and rang a bell, and a moment later the gate
opened inward just long enough to let us through, and then slammed shut behind us. Ivor guided the
horse up to the huge front door, and then we stopped and climbed down off the wagon, and the door
opened, and out stepped this real skinny guy with wide staring eyes. He was wearing some kind of a
laboratory coat, and he was smoking a Turkish cigarette that was stuck in a long gold holder.
He walked over to the back of the wagon and looked at Gustave.
“Excellent, excellent,” he murmured. “You have done well this night, Ivor.” Then he turned to me. “You
are Doctor Jones?”
“The Right Reverend Doctor Lucifer Jones, at your service,” I said.
“I am Baron Steinmetz,” he said. “Ivor has told me how you have aided my cause. I wish to thank you.”
“Well, I had in mind something just a tad more substantial than a handshake,” I said.
“I quite understand, and you will not find me ungrateful, Doctor Jones. But first let us bring the body
inside and prepare for the final transformation.”
The three of us lifted old Gustave out of the wagon and carried him into the castle, which was huge and
cold and kind of damp and made of stone and lit by candles.
“This way,” said the Baron, heading off for a staircase that led down to the basement. We almost lost
Gustave a couple of times as the stairs kept curving around corners, but finally we made it to the next