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    Jezebel's Daughter

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    say? She was too considerate to press me; she only asked me to think of

      it. I have been trying to think of it ever since--and the more I try, the

      more I dread the consequences if that madman is brought into the house."

      Fritz shuddered at the prospect.

      "On the day when Jack comes into the house, I shall go out of it," he

      said. The social consequences of my aunt's contemplated experiment

      suddenly struck him while he spoke. "What will Mrs. Wagner's friends

      think?" he asked piteously. "They will refuse to visit her--they will say

      she's mad herself."

      "Don't let that distress you, gentlemen--I shan't mind what my friends

      say of me."

      We both started in confusion to our feet. My aunt herself was standing at

      the open door of the summer-house with a letter in her hand.

      "News from Germany, just come for you, Fritz."

      With those words, she handed him the letter, and left us.

      We looked at each other thoroughly ashamed of ourselves, if the truth

      must be told. Fritz cast an uneasy glance at the letter, and recognized

      the handwriting on the address. "From my father!" he said. As he opened

      the envelope a second letter enclosed fell out on the floor. He changed

      color as he picked it up, and looked at it. The seal was unbroken--the

      postmark was Wurzburg.

      CHAPTER VII

      Fritz kept the letter from Wurzburg unopened in his hand.

      "It's not from Minna," he said; "the handwriting is strange to me.

      Perhaps my father knows something about it." He turned to his father's

      letter; read it; and handed it to me without a word of remark.

      Mr. Keller wrote briefly as follows:--

      "The enclosed letter has reached me by post, as you perceive, with

      written instructions to forward it to my son. The laws of honor guide me

      just as absolutely in my relations with my son as in my relations with

      any other gentleman. I forward the letter to you exactly as I have

      received it. But I cannot avoid noticing the postmark of the city in

      which the Widow Fontaine and her daughter are still living. If either

      Minna or her mother be the person who writes to you, I must say plainly

      that I forbid your entering into any correspondence with them. The two

      families shall never be connected by marriage while I live. Understand,

      my dear son, that this is said in your own best interests, and said,

      therefore, from the heart of your father who loves you."

      While I was reading these lines Fritz had opened the letter from

      Wurzburg. "It's long enough, at any rate," he said, turning over the

      closely-written pages to find the signature at the end.

      "Well?" I asked.

      "Well," Fritz repeated, "it's an anonymous letter. The signature is 'Your

      Unknown Friend.' "

      "Perhaps it relates to Miss Minna, or to her mother," I suggested. Fritz

      turned back to the first page and looked up at me, red with anger. "More

      abominable slanders! More lies about Minna's mother!" he burst out. "Come

      here, David. Look at it with me. What do you say? Is it the writing of a

      woman or a man?"

      The writing was so carefully disguised that it was impossible to answer

      his question. The letter (like the rest of the correspondence connected

      with this narrative) has been copied in duplicate and placed at my

      disposal. I reproduce it here for reasons which will presently explain

      themselves--altering nothing, not even the vulgar familiarity of the

      address.

      "My good fellow, you once did me a kindness a long time since. Never mind

      what it was or who I am. I mean to do you a kindness in return. Let that

      be enough.

      "You are in love with 'Jezebel's Daughter.' Now, don't be angry! I know

      you believe Jezebel to be a deeply-injured woman; I know you have been

      foolish enough to fight duels at Wurzburg in defense of her character.

      "It is enough for you that she is a fond mother, and that her innocent

      daughter loves her dearly. I don't deny that she is a fond mother; but is

      the maternal instinct enough of itself to answer for a woman? Why, Fritz,

      a cat is a fond mother; but a cat scratches and swears for all that! And

      poor simple little Minna, who can see no harm in anybody, who can't

      discover wickedness when it stares her in the face--is _she_ a

      trustworthy witness to the widow's character? Bah!

      "Don't tear up my letter in a rage; I am not going to argue the question

      with you any further. Certain criminal circumstances have come to my

      knowledge, which point straight to this woman. I shall plainly relate

      those circumstances, out of my true regard for you, in the fervent hope

      that I may open your eyes to the truth.

      "Let us go back to the death of Doctor-Professor Fontaine, at his

      apartments in the University of Wurzburg, on the 3rd of September, in the

      present year 1828.

      "The poor man died of typhoid fever, as you know--and died in debt,

      through no extravagance on his own part, as you also know. He had

      outlived all his own relatives, and had no pecuniary hopes or

      expectations from anyone. Under these circumstances, he could only leave

      the written expression of his last wishes, in place of a will.

      "This document committed his widow and child to the care of his widow's

      relations, in terms of respectful entreaty. Speaking next of himself, he

      directed that he should be buried with the strictest economy, so that he

      might cost the University as little as possible. Thirdly, and lastly, he

      appointed one of his brother professors to act as his sole executor, in

      disposing of those contents of his laboratory which were his own property

      at the time of his death.

      "The written instructions to his executor are of such serious importance

      that I feel it my duty to copy them for you, word for word.

      "Thus they begin:--

      " 'I hereby appoint my dear old friend and colleague, Professor

      Stein--now absent for a while at Munich, on University business--to act

      as my sole representative in the disposal of the contents of my

      laboratory, after my death. The various objects used in my chemical

      investigations, which are my own private property, will be all found

      arranged on the long deal table that stands between the two windows. They

      are to be offered for sale to my successor, in the first instance. If he

      declines to purchase them, they can then be sent to Munich, to be sold

      separately by the manufacturer, as occasion may offer. The furniture of

      the laboratory, both movable and stationary, belongs entirely to the

      University, excepting the contents of an iron safe built into the south

      wall of the room. As to these, which are my own sole property, I

      seriously enjoin my executor and representative to follow my instructions

      to the letter:--

      " '(1) Professor Stein will take care to be accompanied by a competent

      witness, when he opens the safe in the wall.

      " '(2) The witness will take down in writing, from the dictation of

      Professor Stein, an exact list of the contents of the safe. These

      are:--Bottles containing drugs, tin cases containing powders, and a small

      medicine-chest, having six compartments, each occupied by a labeled

      bottl
    e, holding a liquid preparation.

      " '(3) The written list being complete, I desire Professor Stein to empty

      every one of the bottles and cases, including the bottles in the

      medicine-chest, into the laboratory sink, with his own hands. He is also

      to be especially careful to destroy the labels on the bottles in the

      medicine-chest. These things done, he will sign the list, stating that

      the work of destruction is accomplished; and the witness present will add

      his signature. The document, thus attested, is to be placed in the care

      of the Secretary to the University.

      " 'My object in leaving these instructions is simply to prevent the

      dangerous results which might follow any meddling with my chemical

      preparations, after my death.

      " 'In almost every instance, these preparations are of a poisonous

      nature. Having made this statement, let me add, in justice to myself,

      that the sole motive for my investigations has been the good of my

      fellow-creatures.

      " 'I have been anxious, in the first place, to enlarge the list of

      curative medicines having poison for one of their ingredients. I have

      attempted, in the second place, to discover antidotes to the deadly

      action of those poisons, which (in cases of crime or accident) might be

      the means of saving life.

      " 'If I had been spared for a few years longer, I should so far have

      completed my labors as to have ventured on leaving them to be introduced

      to the medical profession by my successor. As it is--excepting one

      instance, in which I ran the risk, and was happily enabled to preserve

      the life of a poisoned man--I have not had time so completely to verify

      my theories, by practical experiment, as to justify me in revealing my

      discoveries to the scientific world for the benefit of mankind.

      " 'Under these circumstances, I am resigned to the sacrifice of my

      ambition--I only desire to do no harm. If any of my preparations, and

      more particularly those in the medicine-chest, fell into ignorant or

      wicked hands, I tremble when I think of the consequences which might

      follow. My one regret is, that I have not strength enough to rise from my

      bed, and do the good work of destruction myself. My friend and executor

      will take my place.

      " 'The key of the laboratory door, and the key of the safe, will be

      secured this day in the presence of my medical attendant, in a small

      wooden box. The box will be sealed (before the same witness) with my own

      seal. I shall keep it under my pillow, to give it myself to Professor

      Stein, if I live until he returns from Munich.

      " 'If I die while my executor is still absent, my beloved wife is the one

      person in the world whom I can implicitly trust to take charge of the

      sealed box. She will give it to Professor Stein, immediately on his

      return to Wurzburg; together with these instructions, which will be

      placed in the box along with the keys.'

      "There are the instructions, friend Fritz! They are no secret now. The

      Professor has felt it his duty to make them public in a court of law, in

      consequence of the events which followed Doctor Fontaine's death. You are

      interested in those events, and you shall be made acquainted with them

      before I close my letter.

      "Professor Stein returned from Munich too late to receive the box from

      the hands of his friend and colleague. It was presented to him by the

      Widow Fontaine, in accordance with her late husband's wishes.

      "The Professor broke the seal. Having read his Instructions, he followed

      them to the letter, the same day.

      "Accompanied by the Secretary to the University, as a witness, he opened

      the laboratory door. Leaving the sale of the objects on the table to be

      provided for at a later date, he proceeded at once to take the list of

      the bottles and cases, whose contents he was bound to destroy. On opening

      the safe, these objects were found as the Instructions led him to

      anticipate: the dust lying thick on them vouched for their having been

      left undisturbed. The list being completed, the contents of the bottles

      and cases were thereupon thrown away by the Professor's own hand.

      "On looking next, however, for the medicine-chest, no such thing was to

      be discovered in the safe. The laboratory was searched from end to end,

      on the chance that some mistake had been made. Still no medicine-chest

      was to be found.

      "Upon this the Widow Fontaine was questioned. Did she know what had

      become of the medicine-chest? She was not even aware that such a thing

      existed. Had she been careful to keep the sealed box so safely that no

      other person could get at it? Certainly! She had kept it locked in one of

      her drawers, and the key in her pocket.

      "The lock of the drawer, and the locks of the laboratory door and the

      safe, were examined. They showed no sign of having been tampered with.

      Persons employed in the University, who were certain to know, were asked

      if duplicate keys existed, and all united in answering in the negative.

      The medical attendant was examined, and declared that it was physically

      impossible for Doctor Fontaine to have left his bed, and visited the

      laboratory, between the time of writing his Instructions and the time of

      his death.

      "While these investigations were proceeding, Doctor Fontaine's senior

      assistant obtained leave to examine through a microscope the sealing-wax

      left on the box which had contained the keys.

      "The result of this examination, and of the chemical analyses which

      followed, proved that two different kinds of sealing-wax (both of the

      same red color, superficially viewed) had been used on the seal of the

      box--an undermost layer of one kind of wax, and an uppermost layer of

      another, mingled with the undermost in certain places only. The plain

      inference followed that the doctor's sealing-wax had been softened by

      heat so as to allow of the opening of the box, and that new sealing-wax

      had been afterwards added, and impressed by the Doctor's seal so that the

      executor might suspect nothing. Here, again, the evidence of the medical

      attendant (present at the time) proved that Doctor Fontaine had only used

      one stick of sealing-wax to secure the box. The seal itself was found in

      the possession of the widow; placed carelessly in the china tray in which

      she kept her rings after taking them off for the night.

      "The affair is still under judicial investigation. I will not trouble you

      by reporting the further proceedings in detail.

      "Of course, Widow Fontaine awaits the result of the investigation with

      the composure of conscious innocence. Of course, she has not only

      submitted to an examination of her lodgings, but has insisted on it. Of

      course, no red sealing-wax and no medicine-chest have been found. Of

      course, some thief unknown, for some purpose quite inconceivable, got at

      the box and the seal, between the Doctor's death and the return of the

      Professor from Munich, and read the Instructions and stole the terrible

      medicine-chest. Such is the theory adopted by the defense. If you can

      believe it--then I have written in vain. If, on the other hand, you are

      the sensible you
    ng man I take you to be, follow my advice. Pity poor

      little Minna as much as you please, but look out for another young lady

      with an unimpeachable mother; and think yourself lucky to have two such

      advisers as your excellent father, and Your Unknown Friend."

      CHAPTER VIII

      "I will lay any wager you like," said Fritz, when we had come to the end

      of the letter, "that the wretch who has written this is a woman."

      "What makes you think so?"

      "Because all the false reports about poor Madame Fontaine, when I was at

      Wurzburg, were traced to women. They envy and hate Minna's mother. She is

      superior to them in everything; handsome, distinguished, dresses to

      perfection, possesses all the accomplishments--a star, I tell you, a

      brilliant star among a set of dowdy domestic drudges. Isn't it infamous,

      without an atom of evidence against her, to take it for granted that she

      is guilty? False to her dead husband's confidence in her, a breaker of

      seals, a stealer of poisons--what an accusation against a defenseless

      woman! Oh, my poor dear Minna! how she must feel it; she doesn't possess

      her mother's strength of mind. I shall fly to Wurzburg to comfort her. My

      father may say what he pleases; I can't leave these two persecuted women

      without a friend. Suppose the legal decision goes against the widow? How

      do I know that judgment has not been pronounced already? The suspense is

      intolerable. Do you mean to tell me I am bound to obey my father, when

      his conduct is neither just nor reasonable?"

      "Gently, Fritz--gently!"

      "I tell you, David, I can prove what I say. Just listen to this. My

      father has never even seen Minna's mother; he blindly believes the

      scandals afloat about her--he denies that any woman can be generally

      disliked and distrusted among her neighbors without some good reason for

      it. I assure you, on my honor, he has no better excuse for forbidding me

      to marry Minna than that. Is it just, is it reasonable, to condemn a

      woman without first hearing what she has to say in her own defense? Ah,

      now indeed I feel the loss of my own dear mother! If she had been alive

      she would have exerted her influence, and have made my father ashamed of

      his own narrow prejudices. My position is maddening; my head whirls when

      I think of it. If I go to Wurzburg, my father will never speak to me

      again. If I stay here, I shall cut my throat."

      There was still a little beer left in the bottom of the second bottle.

      Fritz poured it out, with a gloomy resolution to absorb it to the last

      drop.

      I took advantage of this momentary pause of silence to recommend the

      virtue of patience to the consideration of my friend. News from Wurzburg,

      I reminded him, might be obtained in our immediate neighborhood by

      consulting a file of German journals, kept at a foreign coffee-house. By

      way of strengthening the good influence of this suggestion, I informed

      Fritz that I expected to be shortly sent to Frankfort, as the bearer of a

      business communication addressed to Mr. Keller by my aunt; and I offered

      privately to make inquiries, and (if possible) even to take messages to

      Wurzburg--if he would only engage to wait patiently for the brighter

      prospects that might show themselves in the time to come.

      I had barely succeeded in tranquilizing Fritz, when my attention was

      claimed by the more serious and pressing subject of the liberation of

      Jack Straw. My aunt sent to say that she wished to see me.

      I found her at her writing-table, with the head-clerk established at the

      desk opposite.

      Mr. Hartrey was quite as strongly opposed as the lawyer to any meddling

      with the treatment of mad people on the part of my aunt. But he placed

      his duty to his employer before all other considerations; and he

      rendered, under respectful protest, such services as were required of

     


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