
Templar Tower of the Beauties
by
John Presco
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
I want funding for a documentary and T.V. series that will investigate the strange death of Princess Grace who may have sought to become a real Knight Templar.
In the a tower of Arginy Castle, members of a neo-Templar group that is not the Solar Temple group, drew portals on the wall so that diseased Knights Templars could come through and reveal occult secrets and the whereabouts of the vast Templar treasure that was concealed long ago. The De Rosemont family was involved in several searches for this treasure. Jacques Breyer had formed a new Rosicrucian cosmology. The Solar Temple attached itself to the Arginy Knights of the Rose Cross, and allegedly committed mass suicides and murders so members can pass into another realm, perhaps travel to a distant star. Consider the suicides by the Heaven’s Gate cult.
Tower of Eight Beauties
Posted on May 4, 2012 by Royal Rosamond Press



I was sent the genealogy of one of the gentleman standing in front of Arginy castle, and the ‘Tower of Eight Beauties’. He asked me if I was kin to the Rosemont family.
Jon Presco
The oldest part of the castle is a tower, the “Tower of the Eight
Beauties”. Constructed in red bricks, its walls are more than one
metre thick.
THE TREASURE HUNT BEGINS.
The first organised search of the treasure trove left by de Beaujeu
was organised by one of his descendants, Anne de Beaujeu. She talked
about “very old documents that testified about the presence of a
major and historical depot”. The men entering the underground network
of tunnels were decimated by traps that had probably been put in
place by Count de Beaujeu. Anne de Beaujeu eventually gave up and had
the entrance to the underground network sealed off.
In 1914, the new owner of the castle, Duke Pierre de Rosemont, felt
the time was ripe for a new enterprise. After breaking down the wall
that Anne de Beaujeu had built, the Duke opened the entrance to the
underground caverns. One of his workmen, however, had his legs
crushed when he was hit by two stone balls that rolled out of a wall
another trap installed so many centuries earlier. De Rosemont decided
to change his tactics and opted for safer methods. After some
scouting of his own, de Rosemont discovered a hole that led
downwards, so he decided to try to reach the treasure on his own.
One of the Duke’s descendants claims to have excellent evidence
concluding that Pierre de Rosemont was able to gain access to the
tomb of Camus said to be very close to the secret treasure of the
Knights Templars. Apparently, though, having almost reached his goal,
the Duke was struck by violent blows and cries emanating from below,
balls of mauve fire encircling the room and strange odours and
visions. When the water began to rise mysteriously, he decided to
retreat as quickly as he could. Upon reaching the surface, he decided
never to return, so he made sure that no one would ever discover the
hole through which he had reached the underground network.
The oldest part of the castle is a tower, the “Tower of the Eight
Beauties”. Constructed in red bricks, its walls are more than one
metre thick. It appears circular from the outside, but inside, on the
first floor, the tower becomes octagonal. At the top are eight
openings that appear to have no functional use. It is also known as
the “Tower of Alchemy”, for the walls were once covered with
alchemical symbols. Though these symbols are almost invisible today,
but we have photographic records of them in our possession.
It was towards this tower that two of the greatest alchemists of our
age set course: Eugene Canselier and Armand Barbault, the author
of “Gold of a Thousand Mornings”. Their visit to the castle was not a
tourist outing, instead, Barbault and his wife stayed there for
several weeks in the company of the now infamous Jacques Breyer.
In 1950, a mysterious English colonel came to Arginy and asked
whether the owner, Gilbert Marie Jacques de Chambrun d’Uxeloup de
Rosemont, was willing to sell the estate for no less than one hundred
million French francs. De Rosemont flatly refused. Two years later,
he and Jacques Breyer decided to have another go at discovering the
treasure of Arginy.
Arginy, is located on the territory of the municipality of Charentay (Rhone).The castle, isolated in the plains between the Saone and the Beaujolais, seems to spring from the Middle Ages. Flanked by several towers and two drawbridges, surrounded by heavy water and green, he probably saw successively pass the Templars, the Lords of the Renaissance and all the cream of modern esotericism.
At the time of the Gauls, the site was the center of a forest where it operated a salt mine. During the Roman conquest, a lieutenant of Caesar, named Arginusae, built an oppidum in this place, which subsequently took his name. The first red-brick building would last nine centuries. And on its ruins was built a castle in the Middle Ages. On the road to the castle near the Girardi?re which passes the castle, a Roman road indicates the presence of a very old past.
The castle was built in two periods: in the eleventh century – this time there is almost nothing – and in the sixteenth century. Near the tower known as the eight Beatitudes, near the moat, the research allowed to identify the old one into the ground.
In this passage, the remains of two towers belonging to the former defense system have been discovered, and the remains of a bridge of 5.80 meters long. In the eleventh century, the castle seems to have been built small, comprising only three towers and a dungeon.
The farm is located in front of the castle was built at a later time. As for the towers that rise to the drawbridge, they date from the sixteenth century.Who were the original owners of the castle? The regional archives do not remember. But in 1253, Louis de Beaujeu, the lord of the whole valley, chose to leave the family castle and moved to Arginy. His descendants will also Arginy their main residence, Guichard VI Grand in 1295, Edward 1st in 1331, Antoinnette of Beaujeu in 1343. Then some time later appears Vernet family who had some land in the town of Charentay. They will increase their area by acquiring the firm in 1365 Arginy, then in 1388 the castle and all its dependencies.
Throughout the fifteenth century, as successive owners of the premises, Guichard II Vernet (1422), Thomas de Vernet (1430), Jacqueline de Chalon (1453), Thomas de la Bussiere (1485).
In 1533, Claude King Francis Vignolles bought the first right of justice enjoyed by Beaujeu two centuries earlier. The castle was restored and enlarged, then the farm is built.
In 1576, Antoinette Vignolles continued expansion of the field by acquiring more land. In 1883 the family became owner of Rosemont eight hundred acres of land and the castle of Arginy. Rosemont was one of the best families of the French nobility. Their stronghold, in the fourteenth century, was located in Figeac in the Lot.
Interest in Arginy regarding the Temple treasury is related to Master William de Beaujeu, a member of the family which owned the area from the thirteenth to fourteenth century. Guillaume de Beaujeu, as explained in particular Dupuy in his “History of the Templars” of 1653, was originally buried in Saint-Jean d’Acre. Then returned to France, his remains were deposited in the Temple of Paris. Did she then traveled to Arginy through Guichard of Beaujeu? This is where the mystery begins, and the treasure hunt is launched …
This treasure hunt, dates back to the late fifteenth century: Anne of France (Anne de Beaujeu), daughter of Louis XI, had carried out searches in the dungeon of the castle with the hope of finding the treasure of the Templars.
His research, according to tradition, ended tragically. One of his workers who had descended into a pit, suddenly uttered a dreadful cry that per?urent his comrades remained in the open air. The man came out of the gallery, however, about one quarter of an hour later, he walked like a robot, with his skull crushed fragments from which emerged brains.
Arrived in front of his companions, he spread his arms and finally fell. They felt along his body already cold and, finding the latter “diabolical”, refused to resume work to flee in terror.
In 1883, ownership was Arginy Chambrun of Uxeloup Rosemont. Around 1900, Count Pierre de Rosemont began excavations to turn to find the treasure of the Templars. He cleared a vertical gallery in which one of his workmen down at the end of a cable…. His descent ended in an accident just as tragic as before: the man had his foot crushed by a kind of articulated wheel ..
Several years ago, his step-daughter – wife of Jacques de Cham Uxeloup Rosemont (now deceased) – revealed to Breyer and some of her friends that her stepfather had carried out excavations in the castle 1914. However, it would suddenly received “spiritual” to stop his investigations and clog the underground from which he had begun his research.
In fact, Pierre de Rosemont have discovered a mysterious sarcophagus. Breyer, meanwhile, was confident that would happen Rosemont to a room of small dimensions, situated less than 12 meters deep, which would be based in a Baron de Camus and his wife, a trained master of the esoteric Templar initiated the Renaissance, lead author of alchemical graffiti found inside the rooms and on the crest of entry.
Also at the time of Count Pierre, two tragic incidents have also occurred at Arginy. A stranger presented himself at the castle claiming to discover the treasure of the Templars, was found two days later on the roadside, his skull broken. A farmer who undertook clandestine excavations suffered a similar accident: a wheel of his car crushed her head.
In 1950, Jacques de Rosemont, son of Peter and rushed to turn in search of the treasure of the Templars in working with a bulldozer. In vain … That same year, a British officer, representing a British secret society, offered a large sum for the castle to the Earl of Rosemont, who refused to sell. Many were later also those who sought to acquire the domain …
For some, the treasure of the Templars should generally be considered protected by hidden forces unleashing a curse against those who attempt to penetrate the secret. Now the site is by far Arginy deemed as the most dangerous, most inviolable, the most “overlooked”. So the treasure could be buried. Thus, fans of mystery and irrationality are not afraid to wield the syllogism he can consolidate it.
In 1953, when Jacques de Rosemont was still alive, a team of occultists, mediums and investigators determined undertook with the consent and support of Rosemont, to tackle the mystery and its Arginy Templar treasure. There was Jacques Breyer, writer and esotericism, Armand Barbault, alchemist, and his wife, remarkable medium, Maxime Roquemaure, Mr. and Mrs. Michon, Beaujeu, Claude Cariven, filmmaker, Mr. Champion and many others. All these scientists indulged in occult number of experiments spiritualist invocations night, some of which were particularly spectacular. The “contact” was established, it seems, with eleven entities Templar, guarding the treasure, and not willing to indicate access!
Works occult and excavations continued for some time. Then as numerous and varied incidents came the disturbing gradually.One after the other, the visitors left Arginy. The old feudal building soon found silence.
Not for long. All that France has occultists, Hermetics, mediums, magicians and other alchemists marched to Arginy. As researchers illegal, it is virtually impossible to estimate the number how many they were, for thirty years, to enter the field, handling the pendulum or dynamite, sounding every stone, every inch of land back? .. .
In a work as strange and exciting, published in 1973 by Robert Laffont, Time out of time, Gabrielle Carmi, medium and expert in comparative religion Kabbalah, the mystery of Arginy recovery while providing new details on it it. The treasure is a chest containing a collection of parchment making, state capitals of revelations on a variety of subjects, the work of insiders Temple.
However, Arginy has still not officially at least, delivered his secret. So why the craze delivery of researchers from very different backgrounds, to this place? Then there is the document that relates Schiffmann that Jacques de Molay, exposing the unfairness of the trial concluded that there was no hope, either for himself or for the Order. He brought near him, just days before his execution, the Count of Beaujeu, his nephew, “which had long shown a decided to enter the Order, initiated him into the mysteries” and held her remarks obscure.
This document then states: “As soon as Jacques de Molay was expired, Beaujeu proceeded to carry out its commitments. He secured nine knights unfortunate remains escaped the fury of persecution and torture of terror, he mixed his blood with that of his brothers and vowed to spread the Order on the globe as he would be perfect nine architects.
He went to ask the King Philip’s permission to remove the tomb of the Grand Master Grand Master’s coffin Beaujeu his paternal uncle’s predecessor Molay and having obtained it, he went with his brothers in the tomb of the great masters and drove off the coffin that instead of ashes of his uncle the box contained money, which has been mentioned. ” He also
removed the treasures contained in the two columns and transport, all in a safe place. ”
Esotericists and treasure hunters assume that this “place of safety” could be that Arginy Castle, located on the lands of the former estate of Beaujeu. However, it should be noted qu’Arginy was at the time a dependency of the Temple: the real castle was Beaujeu and it will be destroyed by the revolutionaries.
Moreover, if one sticks to the document Schiffmann, how to design “a few days before his execution,” Jacques de Molay had been as easy to receive visitors, initiate, give specific instructions etc.. sans surveillance et en toute libert? ? unattended and freedom? Molay, besides his captors, would be surrounded by spies … How to explain the good grace with which Philip the Fair acceded to the request of the Count of Beaujeu?
No historian has not addressed the reality of the relationship between Jacques de Molay and the Count of Beaujeu.
To our knowledge, the document Schiffmann, was first published in France by John Carpenter in 1945. It could therefore influence Pierre de Rosemont, nor the different researchers in the 1900s. Fewer still Anne of France, who first, performed searches Arginy. Finally, another contradiction, the document makes no reference to the field of Beaujeu. ” Indeed, following the previous quote, it says: “It is likely that is was in Cyprus where the Archimandrit where resided with the Patriarch of the Grand Chapter clerical Order.”
Thus, if one believes the document Schiffmann (provided it is genuine and that its content is not only symbolic) National Treasure should be in Cyprus, probably in Limassol, thesis which was to joined several other historians.
So there is a real mystery: a strong oral tradition, dating from the time of the affair of the Templars, “she Arginy designated as a cache of order, tradition, including the daughter of Louis XI, who knows what average would have known?
Snow White and the Tower of Eight Beauties
Posted on March 19, 2012 by Royal Rosamond Press














In 1998 a gentleman related to one of the men you see gathered in front of Rosemond castle, sent me a genealogy of his kindred, and the kin of Gilbert Marie Jacques de Chambrun d’Uxeloup de Rosemont, and asked me if we were related. I shared this question with my Knight Templars group, and got a sour reaction. I wondered if it was because of the mass suicides and murder that occurred in the Solar Temple cult, that allegedly involved an attempt on the life of Princess Grace of Monaco, who was formerly the actress, Grace Kelly, who starred in High Noon. Her husband was the Count of Rosemont, one of many titles he owned.
I have alleged my late sister was at the center of a cult because her autobiography was dismissed, none of it appearing in her two biographies written by hostile outsiders.
The movie Snow White is due out. The Poet, Robert Graves discusses Snow White along with Sleeping Beauty, whom was named Rosamond.
The War on Women is real. I am doing a painting of my Muse, wearing a crown of blooming thorns, Rena holding a spindle my Rougemont/Rosemont Templars wore on Crusade.
Jacque Breyer and his group are not connected to the Solar Temple who borrowed their information and sorely used it.
Jon Presco
Copyright 2012
The families of the victims in Grenoble were not about to let the situation fade away. Police identified several prominent members who were still alive and went into action.
Michael Tabachnik,
profile (CORBIS)
Michael Tabachnik, 58, an internationally renowned Swiss musician and conductor, was arrested as a leader in the Solar Temple, and was indicted for “participation in a criminal organization,” which included murder. He came to trial in Grenoble during the spring of 2001.
French magistrate Luc Fontaine theorized that two deceased members of the cult—police officer Jean-Pierre Lanchet and architect Andre Friedli—had been the shooters at the mass suicide near Grenoble, and were therefore guilty of killing unwilling victims. One of the children found in a plastic bag there had been only 18 months old. The crime reconstruction had the two suspects shooting the others, dowsing them with gasoline, and before killing themselves, setting the bodies on fire.
The oldest part of the castle is a tower, the “Tower of the Eight
Beauties”. Constructed in red bricks, its walls are more than one
metre thick. It appears circular from the outside, but inside, on the
first floor, the tower becomes octagonal. At the top are eight
openings that appear to have no functional use. It is also known as
the “Tower of Alchemy”, for the walls were once covered with
alchemical symbols. Though these symbols are almost invisible today,
but we have photographic records of them in our possession.
It was towards this tower that two of the greatest alchemists of our
age set course: Eugene Canselier and Armand Barbault, the author
of “Gold of a Thousand Mornings”. Their visit to the castle was not a
tourist outing, instead, Barbault and his wife stayed there for
several weeks in the company of the now infamous Jacques Breyer.
In 1950, a mysterious English colonel came to Arginy and asked
whether the owner, Gilbert Marie Jacques de Chambrun d’Uxeloup de
Rosemont, was willing to sell the estate for no less than one hundred
million French francs. De Rosemont flatly refused. Two years later,
he and Jacques Breyer decided to have another go at discovering the
treasure of Arginy.

Did Grace Kelly have links with a secret cult?
Published on Sunday 28 March 2010 11:45
THE white Jaguar sped through the narrow, twisting roads leading up to the former priory.
Security lookouts lined the route, their walkie talkies crackling into life as soon as each checkpoint was passed. This was not the first car to make the four-hour journey from the principality of Monaco to the remote French village of Villie-Morgon that day, but the beautiful female occupant was by far the most important.
Her arrival had been planned in detail and no expense had been spared. The cascades of white flowers that decorated the priory were for her benefit alone. To its head of security, they had seemed an innocuous detail but one he knew he must get right if he wanted to stay in favour with his boss, Joseph di Mambro. As di Mambro’s most trusted employee, he was familiar with the need for subterfuge when it came to deceiving the rich men and women who engaged in ritualistic practices at the priory. Even he, however, was dumbfounded when the car pulled up and its blonde passenger disembarked. The woman before him was Princess Grace of Monaco, and soon she would undergo a sexually charged initiation into the murderous cult of the Solar Temple.
First the princess was taken to a derobing chamber, where an acupuncturist, who to this day is still haunted by the princess’s intense blue eyes, began to relax her by placing needles on meridians known to give sexual pleasure. Then Grace was given something to drink, perhaps a tranquilliser. At about 7pm, dressed in a white templar robe with a red cross, she was escorted down an inner staircase to the crypt of the priory, where she lay down on a huge round altar marked with a mixture of cabalistic signs and pictures of the 12 apostles. As Wagnerian music rose in a crescendo, the higher entities were asked if they agreed that Grace should become high priestess of the order, to which they responded yes. The princess was taken back upstairs and in the early hours of the morning was driven home in the Jaguar that had brought her to the priory.
There has been much written about Grace Kelly since her death, in 1982. Beautiful, serene and mysterious, she captivated the world for decades. A much-anticipated exhibition at the Victoria & Albert museum next month will focus attention on her role as a style icon, with pieces from her wardrobe displayed alongside her films and photographs, yet apparently, beneath the glamorous facade of her fairy-tale life lies a dark underbelly. Whispers of sexual promiscuity and even the suggestion that Kelly was not at the wheel when the car carrying her and teenage daughter Stephanie plunged off a rocky hillside continue to surface. None is more bizarre, though, than the claim that, shortly before her untimely death, Kelly was initiated into a cult called the Order of the Solar Temple. The allegations centred on interviews with a man who worked for over a decade for di Mambro, a senior leader of the sect, and an acupuncturist who claimed she helped prepare the princess for the initiation ceremony that is said to have taken place in the summer of 1982 in an ancient priory in Beaujolais.
The Order of the Solar Temple achieved worldwide notoriety in 1994 when 69 members in Europe and north America died in what appeared to be a planned series of mass suicides and murders. All the dead were followers of Luc Jouret, a 46-year-old self-styled guru and supposed homeopathic healer who lectured on New Age theories. While di Mambro directed the group from behind the scenes, Jouret was its persona. Like many cult leaders, Jouret warned his followers of a coming apocalypse. He explained this would occur through environmental disasters and only the elite would survive.
Documentary producers David Cohen and David Carr Brown had just completed a film about the tragedy that had engulfed the cult when they stumbled upon an apparent connection with Kelly. “We had been working on the documentary for more than a year and were pretty sure we knew the story inside out,” recalls Cohen.
Shortly after their film was shown across Europe, however, a mysterious Frenchman contacted the filmmakers. “He told me we didn’t know the full story. Which, of course, got our attention,” says Cohen.
It was only after several parts of the mystery caller’s story checked out, however, that the filmmakers agreed to meet the man – who insisted on remaining anonymous due to the continuing police investigation into the cult – in Paris. “During the filming of our documentary about the Solar Temple, former members had told us that we needed to track down di Mambro’s head of security, as he was the man who knew all the secrets,” Cohen recalls. “He was happy to talk about his role. But it wasn’t until we had met him a few times that he mentioned Grace. One of the most unusual things about the Solar Temple was the amount of rich and successful people that had become members, but the notion that Grace Kelly may be one of them seemed too far-fetched.” But still they persisted.
Kelly was born in 1929 in Philadelphia. She was the third child of Jack Kelly, a handsome, domineering man who was convinced his daughter would never amount to much. For the rest of her life, Kelly looked elsewhere for love from men. After finishing school, she rebelled, enrolling at the Academy of Dramatic Art in New York against her parents’ wishes. As a conciliatory measure, she agreed to lodge at the Barbizon in Manhattan, a ladies-only hotel with strict rules. But she quickly found ways around them, developing a passion for older, rich men. Kelly got her big break in her 20s, opposite Gary Cooper in High Noon, and it wasn’t long before she had become one of the biggest stars of the 1950s.
In 1955 the magazine Paris Match arranged for Kelly to meet Prince Rainier of Monaco at the Cannes Film Festival. Both had tired of unsatisfactory liaisons, and the prince was in need of an heir, so Kelly finally married. Their apparently fairy-tale wedding was one of the most captivating of the 20th century. Officially Kelly was happy in her role as devoted wife, mother and philanthropist, but reports over the years have pointed to a more conflicted reality. It has been suggested that she came to find the perimeters of her kingdom confining.
Donald Spoto spends much of his new book, High Society, defending the image of the Hollywood star. His biography stems from hours of interview tapes he collected from Kelly prior to her death. The two became friends, so it is perhaps unsurprising that he gives short shrift to questions about her connection to the Solar Temple. “I heard (about the rumours] once but I defy anyone to give me any shred of credible evidence that they are true,” he says. “It goes against everything in Grace’s character. Here was a woman who, long before we had the word ‘feminist’, thought for herself, who acted strongly and independently against the constraints of the studio system, a woman who always had her eye on being a wife and mother and never cared to climb the ladder to success.
“She was a good and decent woman. She was also a very traditional Roman Catholic. Her faith was enormously important to her. It wasn’t that sort of superstitious, knee-jerk, frightened, guilt-ridden kind of Irish-American Catholicism. It was very deep. It was tolerant. It was open.
“It’s just like all of the tales about Grace’s hundreds of lovers. The whole thing is comical. Did she have boyfriends before she married? Of course she did. She was a beautiful, sensual, passionate woman who enjoyed male company, and men loved her. But it was no more than that.”
Allegations that Kelly belonged to the Solar Temple were also dismissed as “sick fantasies” by a Monaco palace spokesman at the time the documentary went out on Channel 4 in 1997. But while there are those who prefer to deny anything that suggests a wildness in the princess’s life, they are in the minority. Since her death, biographers have struggled to chart the exact number of her lovers. In her book True Grace, Wendy Leigh paints a picture of a woman whose sexual appetite borders on the wanton. She unearths compelling evidence that the princess enjoyed passionate relationships with many men, including one with David Niven that is said to have lasted for decades.
Quite how far Kelly indulged might never be known. Kelly’s life was paradoxical: she was indeed a spiritual but highly sexual woman who, according to many, was frustrated by the limitations of life as a royal. Could that be why she turned to the Order of the Solar Temple in the last months of her life?
There may be no direct corroboration for her connection to the cult, but the circumstantial evidence is strong, according to Cohen. “We know that di Mambro’s security guard was an integral part of the inner workings of the Solar Temple. He was di Mambro’s driver, but he also looked after security and the cult’s finances. We were able to corroborate this through former members of the cult.
But the biggest breakthrough was when the acupuncturist agreed to speak to them. “She also wished to remain anonymous, and we wondered at first whether she had been pressurised into speaking to us. As she talked, though, it became clear that it was the Solar Temple she feared. Her description of how she had prepared the princess for the initiation ceremony, by calming her through acupuncture, convinced us that the former film star had indeed become part of the cult as she searched for happiness just months before her death.”
According to Cohen, di Mambro’s former security guard told him that, after the ceremony at the priory, Kelly was asked to donate 20 million Swiss francs to the order. She agreed to pay 12 million francs into a bank in Zurich, but shortly after began to have doubts and quarrelled with di Mambro. “They got greedy and asked for too much cash,” he says. “Grace threatened to expose di Mambro’s demands for money, and her attitude spooked him. She was, after all, not the only person of influence in the order, and di Mambro could not afford to alienate his rich patrons.”
A few months later, on 13 September, Kelly was out driving with her younger daughter Stephanie when their car crashed over a mountainside, landing, bizarrely, in a garden owned by another Solar Temple member. Kelly was pulled alive from the wreckage, but had suffered serious injuries and died in hospital the next day, bringing to an end an exceptional life, and with it all possibility of a reliable resolution to the eternal enigma of her life.
At the trial, two former Solar Temple members testified about what they knew. They insisted that senior cultists had ordered the mass suicides and execution of traitors. One stated that that some senior members who were above even Jo Di Mambro had survived and would exact retribution against anyone who spoke out. She said she had overheard another member tell Di Mambro that if members did not willingly cooperate with the suicide plan, they would be forced to do so.
Information also came out that Di Mambro and Tabachnik had co-founded the order after traveling together to Egypt to visit the temples of the pharaohs. Together they had set up the Golden Way in 1978, whose members were taught that they would find peace in death and would merge with a cosmic energy force. That group, with Luc Jouret onboard, eventually became the Solar Temple.
Jehan de Rougemont vs. Vampires
Posted on August 4, 2013 by Royal Rosamond Press












Kergen looks very much like Rena’s boyfriend whom I met in the living room of the Harkin’s house. He had large intense eyes. I believe he was twenty six. I did not like his energy. He drove seventeen year old Rean to Los Angeles for a reason Rena was reluctant to talk about. If he had not called the Venice muscle men “fags” I would never have met Rena. When she came out of that dark doorway at 3:00 A.M. she can out as Le Princess de Nuit. If she had bit me in the neck, I would have loved it. Twenty four hours later, she gave me the second best kiss in the history of kisses.
When she came back to bed after saying goodbye to Kergen (for want of his real name) Rena woke me. She had made a tent with the covers. The look on her faces was alarming. She looked like a cat hissing. Her eyes were completely wild – and very mischevious!
“Help me!” She said. “I can’t stand him!”
I was truly afraid. Rena was possessed. If we touched our sexual play would have been on their terms. I saw this in our first kiss. In the living room Kergen was giving Rena the sign of Satan with his fingers.
“I don’t want to play, anymore Rena!” and I turned my back to her and forced myself into a deep sleep. We were distant in the morning as we packed to go to Nebraska. I did not know if I had saved her, and, whose side she was on.
In the a tower of Arginy Castle, members of a neo-Templar group that is not the Solar Temple group, drew portals on the wall so that diseased Knights Templars could come through and reveal occult secrets and the whereabouts of the vast Templar treasure that was concealed long ago. The De Rosemont family was involved in several searches for this treasure. Jacques Breyer had formed a new Rosicrucian cosmology. The Solar Temple attached itself to the Arginy Knights of the Rose Cross, and allegedly committed mass suicides and murders so members can pass into another realm, perhaps travel to a distant star. Consider the suicides by the Heaven’s Gate cult.
Sometimes Fiction masks the Truth. The Rougemont/Rosemont family -is for real! They came to own the Shroud of Turin as Knight Templars. This is my discovery. But, have I been led by a unseen hand. A seer said I got each night to the Cathedral of the Souls where I have a reserved seat at a great oval table. There is a hooded figure standing behind me.
There was never a dull moment with Rena. We were – intense! We had to be set apart! But look at Our Story that we created, that created us. We are Archetypes. Who are we?
Jon Presco
Copyright 2013
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