Complete Works of Wilkie Collins (1083 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Wilkie Collins
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“Talking of power, have you read the account of the execution last year of that wonderful criminal, Anna Maria Zwanziger? Wherever she went, the path of this terrific woman is strewed with the dead whom she has poisoned. She appears to have lived to destroy her fellow-creatures, and to have met her doom with the most undaunted courage. What a career! and what an end! (1)

“The foolish people in Wurzburg are at a loss to find motives for some of the murders she committed, and try to get out of the difficulty by declaring that she must have been a homicidal maniac. That is not
my
explanation. I can understand the murderess becoming morally intoxicated with the sense of her own tremendous power. A mere human creature — only a woman, Julie! — armed with the means of secretly dealing death with her, wherever she goes — meeting with strangers who displease her, looking at them quietly, and saying to herself, “I doom you to die, before you are a day older” — is there no explanation, here, of some of Zwanziger’s poisonings which are incomprehensible to commonplace minds?

“I put this view, in talking of the trial, to the military commandant a few days since. His vulgar wife answered me before he could speak. ‘Madame Fontaine,’ said this spitfire, ‘my husband and I don’t feel
your
sympathy with poisoners!’ Take that as a specimen of the ladies of Wurzburg — and let me close this unmercifully long letter. I think you will acknowledge, my dear, that, when I do write, I place a flattering trust in my friend’s patient remembrance of me.”

There the newspaper extracts came to an end.

As a picture of a perverted mind, struggling between good and evil, and slowly losing ground under the stealthy influence of temptation, the letters certainly possessed a melancholy interest for any thoughtful reader. But (not being a spiteful woman) I failed to see, in these extracts, the connection which Frau Meyer had attempted to establish between the wickedness of Madame Fontaine and the disappearance of her husband’s medicine chest.

At the same time, I must acknowledge that a vague impression of distrust
was
left on my mind by what I had read. I felt a certain sense of embarrassment at the prospect of renewing my relations with the widow, on my return to Frankfort; and I was also conscious of a decided increase of anxiety to hear what had been Mr. Keller’s reception of Madame Fontaine’s letter. Add to this, that my brotherly interest in Minna was sensibly strengthened — and the effect on me of the extracts in the newspaper is truly stated, so far as I can remember it at this distant time.

On the evening of the next day, I was back again at Frankfort.

 

(1) The terrible career of Anna Maria Zwanziger, sentenced to death at Bamberg in the year 1811, will be found related in Lady Duff-Gordon’s translation of Feuerbach’s “Criminal Trials.”

CHAPTER XVI

 

Mr. Keller and Mr. Engelman were both waiting to receive me. They looked over my written report of my inquiries at Hanau, and expressed the warmest approval of it. So far, all was well.

But, when we afterwards sat down to our supper, I noticed a change in the two partners, which it was impossible to see without regret. On the surface they were as friendly towards each other as ever. But a certain constraint of look and manner, a palpable effort, on either side, to speak with the old unsought ease and gaiety, showed that the disastrous discovery of Madame Fontaine in the hall had left its evil results behind it. Mr. Keller retired, when the meal was over, to examine my report minutely in all its details.

When we were alone, Mr. Engelman lit his pipe. He spoke to me once more with the friendly familiarity of past days — before he met the too-fascinating widow on the bridge.

“My dear boy, tell me frankly, do you notice any change in Keller?”

“I see a change in both of you,” I answered: “you are not such pleasant companions as you used to be.”

Mr. Engelman blew out a mouthful of smoke, and followed it by a heavy sigh.

“Keller has become so bitter,” he said. “His hasty temper I never complained of, as you know. But in these later days he is hard — hard as stone. Do you know what he did with dear Madame Fontaine’s letter? A downright insult, David — he sent it back to her!”

“Without explanation or apology?” I asked.

“With a line on the envelope. ‘I warned you that I should refuse to read your letter. You see that I am a man of my word.’ What a message to send to a poor mother, who only asks leave to plead for her child’s happiness! You saw the letter. Enough to melt the heart of any man, as I should have thought. I spoke to Keller on the subject; I really couldn’t help it.”

“Wasn’t that rather indiscreet, Mr. Engelman?”

“I said nothing that could reasonably offend him. ‘Do you know of some discreditable action on the part of Madame Fontaine, which has not been found out by anyone else?’ I asked. ‘I know the character she bears in Wurzburg,’ he said; ‘and the other night I saw her face. That is all I know, friend Engelman, and that is enough for me.’ With those sour words, he walked out of the room. What lamentable prejudice! What an unchristian way of thinking! The name of Madame Fontaine will never be mentioned between us again. When that much-injured lady honours me with another visit, I can only receive her where she will be protected from insult, in a house of my own.”

“Surely you are not going to separate yourself from Mr. Keller?” I said.

“Not for the present. I will wait till your aunt comes here, and brings that restless reforming spirit of hers into the business. Changes are sure to follow — and my change of residence may pass as one of them.”

He got up to leave the room, and stopped at the door.

“I wish you would come with me, David, to Madame Fontaine’s. She is very anxious to see you.” Feeling no such anxiety on my side, I attempted to excuse myself; but he went on without giving me time to speak — ”Nice little Miss Minna is very dull, poor child. She has no friend of her own age here at Frankfort, excepting yourself. And she has asked me more than once when Mr. David would return from Hanau.”

My excuses failed me when I heard this. Mr. Engelman and I left the house together.

As we approached the door of Madame Fontaine’s lodgings, it was opened from within by the landlady, and a stranger stepped out into the street. He was sufficiently well dressed to pass for a gentleman — but there were obstacles in his face and manner to a successful personation of the character. He cast a peculiarly furtive look at us both, as we ascended the house-steps. I thought he was a police spy. Mr. Engelman set him down a degree lower in the social scale.

“I hope you are not in debt, ma’am,” he said to the landlady; “that man looks to me like a bailiff in disguise.”

“I manage to pay my way, sir, though it is a hard struggle,” the woman replied. “As for the gentleman who has just gone out, I know no more of him than you do.”

“May I ask what he wanted here?”

“He wanted to know when Madame Fontaine was likely to quit my apartments. I told him my lodger had not appointed any time for leaving me yet.”

“Did he mention Madame Fontaine’s name?”

“Yes, sir.”

“How did he know that she lived here?”

“He didn’t say.”

“And you didn’t think of asking him?”

“It was very stupid of me, sir — I only asked him how he came to know that I let apartments. He said, ‘Never mind, now; I am well recommended, and I’ll call again, and tell you about it.’ And then I opened the door for him, as you saw.”

“Did he ask to see Madame Fontaine?”

“No, sir.”

“Very odd!” said Mr. Engelman, as we went upstairs. “Do you think we ought to mention it?”

I thought not. There was nothing at all uncommon in the stranger’s inquiries, taken by themselves. We had no right, that I could see, to alarm the widow, because we happened to attach purely fanciful suspicions to a man of whom we knew nothing. I expressed this opinion to Mr. Engelman; and he agreed with me.

The same subdued tone which had struck me in the little household in Main Street, was again visible in the welcome which I received in Madame Fontaine’s lodgings. Minna looked weary of waiting for the long-expected letter from Fritz. Minna’s mother pressed my hand in silence, with a melancholy smile. Her reception of my companion struck me as showing some constraint. After what had happened on the night of her visit to the house, she could no longer expect him to help her to an interview with Mr. Keller. Was she merely keeping up appearances, on the chance that he might yet be useful to her, in some other way? The trifling change which I observed did not appear to present itself to Mr. Engelman. I turned away to Minna. Knowing what I knew, it grieved me to see that the poor old man was fonder of the widow, and prouder of her than ever.

It was no very hard task to revive the natural hopefulness of Minna’s nature. Calculating the question of time in the days before railroads, I was able to predict the arrival of Fritz’s letter in two, or at most three days more. This bright prospect was instantly reflected in the girl’s innocent face. Her interest in the little world about her revived. When her mother joined us, in our corner of the room, I was telling her all that could be safely related of my visit to Hanau. Madame Fontaine seemed to be quite as attentive as her daughter to the progress of my trivial narrative — to Mr. Engelman’s evident surprise.

“Did you go farther than Hanau?” the widow asked.

“No farther.”

“Were there any guests to meet you at the dinner-party?”

“Only the members of the family.”

“I lived so long, David, in dull old Wurzburg, that I can’t help feeling a certain interest in the town. Did the subject turn up? Did you hear of anything that was going on there?”

I answered this as cautiously as I had answered the questions that had gone before it. Frau Meyer had, I fear, partially succeeded in perverting my sense of justice. Before my journey to Hanau, I might have attributed the widow’s inquiries to mere curiosity. I believed suspicion to be the ruling motive with her, now.

Before any more questions could be asked, Mr. Engelman changed the topic to a subject of greater interest to himself. “I have told David, dear lady, of Mr. Keller’s inhuman reception of your letter.”

“Don’t say ‘inhuman,’“ Madame Fontaine answered gently; “it is I alone who am to blame. I have been a cause of estrangement between you and your partner, and I have destroyed whatever little chance I might once have had of setting myself right in Mr. Keller’s estimation. All due to my rashness in mentioning my name. If I had been less fond of my little girl here, and less eager to seize the first opportunity of pleading for her, I should never have committed that fatal mistake.”

So far, this was sensibly said — and, as an explanation of her own imprudence, was unquestionably no more than the truth.

I was less favorably impressed by what followed, when she went on;

“Pray understand, David, that I don’t complain. I feel no ill-will towards Mr. Keller. If chance placed the opportunity of doing him a service in my hands, I should be ready and willing to make use of it — I should be only too glad to repair the mischief that I have so innocently done.”

She raised her handkerchief to her eyes. Mr. Engelman raised his handkerchief to his eyes. Minna took her mother’s hand. I alone sat undemonstrative, with my sympathies in a state of repose. Frau Meyer again! Nothing but the influence of Frau Meyer could have hardened me in this way!

“I have entreated our sweet friend not to leave Frankfort in despair,” Mr. Engelman explained in faltering tones. “Although my influence with Keller is, for the present, a lost influence in this matter, I am more than willing — I am eager — to speak to Mrs. Wagner on Madame Fontaine’s behalf. My advice is, Wait for Mrs. Wagner’s arrival, and trust to
my
zeal, and
my
position in the firm. When both his partners summon him to do justice to an injured woman, even Keller must submit!”

The widow’s eyes were still hidden behind her handkerchief. But the lower part of her face was visible. Unless I completely misinterpreted the mute language of her lips, she had not the faintest belief in the fulfillment of Mr. Engelman’s prediction. Whatever reason she might have for remaining in Frankfort, after the definite rejection of her too-confident appeal to Mr. Keller’s sympathies, was thus far undoubtedly a reason known only to herself. That very night, after we had left her, an incident occurred which suggested that she had some motive for ingratiating herself with one of the servants in Mr. Keller’s house.

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