第 49 节
作者:敏儿不觉      更新:2021-02-24 22:58      字数:9322
  for a doubtful quantity like Kostolo?            He spoke of the happy relationship
  that had existed between husband and wife; and; in proof of their kindness
  for each other; told of a comedy interlude which had taken place on the
  Sunday morning。
  Boursier; he said; had to get up before his wife that morning; rising at
  six o'clock。     His rising did not wake his wife; and; perhaps humorously
  resenting her lazy torpor; he found a piece of charcoal and decorated her
  countenance   with   a   black   moustache。         It   was   true   that   Mme   Boursier
  showed some petulance over her husband's prank when she got down at
  eight o'clock; but her ill…humour did not last long。             Her husband caressed
  and petted her; and before long the wife joined her merry…minded husband
  in   laughing   over   the   joke   against   her。  That;   said   Maitre   Couture;   that
  mutual     laughter    and    kindness;    seemed     a   strange    preliminary     to  the
  supposed poisoning episode of two hours or so later。
  The truth of the matter was that Boursier carried the germ of death in
  his   own   body。     What   enemy   had   he   made?        What   vengeance   had   he
  incurred?      Maitre Couture reminded the jury of Boursier's poor physical
  condition;   of   his   stoutness;   of   the   shortness   of   his   neck。 He   brought
  forward Toupie's evidence of Boursier's illness of the previous year; alike
  in symptoms and in the sufferings of the invalid to that which proved fatal
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  on Tuesday the 30th of June。           Then Maitre Couture proceeded to tear the
  medical evidence to pieces; and returned to the point that Mme Boursier
  had    been   sleeping    so  profoundly;     so  serenely;    on  the   morning     of  her
  supposed      contemplated       murder    that   the  prank    played    on   her  by   her
  intended victim had not disturbed her。
  The President's address then followed。            The jury retired; and returned
  with a verdict of ‘‘Not guilty。''
  On this M。 Hardouin discharged the accused; improving the occasion
  with a homily which; considering the ordeal that Mme Boursier had had to
  endure   through   so   many   months;   and   that   might   have   been   considered
  punishment enough; may be quoted merely as a fine specimen of salting
  the wound:
  ‘‘Veuve   Boursier;''   said   he;   ‘‘you    are   about   to   recover   that  liberty
  which suspicions of the gravest nature have caused you to lose。                  The jury
  declares you not guilty of the crime imputed to you。               It is to be hoped that
  you will find a like absolution in the court of your own conscience。                   But
  do not ever forget that the cause of your unhappiness and of the dishonour
  which; it may be; covers your name was the disorder of your ways and the
  violation   of   the   most   sacred   obligations。     It   is   to   be   hoped   that   your
  conduct to come   may efface the shame of your conduct in the past;   and
  that repentance may restore the honour you have lost。''
  % IV
  Now we come; as the gentleman with the crimson handkerchief coyly
  showing   between   dress   waistcoat   and   shirt   might   have   said;   waving   his
  pointer as the canvas of the diorama rumbled on its rollers; to Riguepeu!
  Some   twenty   years   have   elapsed   since   the   Veuve   Boursier   stumbled
  from the stand of the accused in the Assize Court of the Seine; acquitted of
  the poisoning of her grocer husband; but convicted of a moral flaw which
  may   (or   may   not)   have   rather   diminished   thereafter   the   turnover   of   the
  epicerie in the Rue de la Paix。           One hopes that her punishment finished
  with her acquittal; and that the mood of the mob; as apt as a flying straw to
  veer   for   a   zephyr   as   for   a   whirlwind;   swung   to   her   favour   from   mere
  revulsion on her escape from the scaffold。              The one thing is as likely as
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  the other。     Didn't the heavy man of the fit…up show; eighteen months after
  his   conviction   for   rape   (the   lapse   of   time   being   occupied   in   paying   the
  penalty); return as an actor to the scene of his delinquency to find himself;
  not;   as   he   expected;   pelted   with   dead   cats   and   decaying   vegetables;   but
  cheered to the echo?          So may it have been with the Veuve Boursier。
  Though in 1844; the year in which the poison trial at Auch was opened;
  four   years   had   passed      since   the   conviction   of    Mme   Lafarge   at      Tulle;
  controversy on the latter case still was rife throughout France。                      The two
  cases   were   linked;   not   only   in   the   minds   of   the   lay   public;   but   through
  close analogy in the idea of lawyers and experts in medical jurisprudence。
  From  her   prison   cell   Marie   Lafarge   watched   the   progress   of   the   trial   in
  Gascony。       And when its result was published one may be sure she shed a
  tear or two。
  But to Riguepeu 。 。 。
  You will not find it on anything but the biggest…scale maps。                      It is an
  inconsiderable   town   a   few   miles   from   Vic…Fezensac;   a   town   not   much
  bigger   than   itself   and   some   twenty   kilometres   from Auch;   which   is   the
  capital of the department of Gers。              You may take it that Riguepeu lies in
  the heart of the Armagnac district。
  Some little distance from Riguepeu itself; on the top of a rise; stood
  the Chateau Philibert; a one…floored house with red tiles and green shutters。
  Not much of a chateau; it was also called locally La Maison de Madame。
  It   belonged   in   1843   to   Henri   Lacoste;   together   with   considerable   land
  about     it。   It   was     reckoned      that   Lacoste;     with   the    land   and    other
  belongings; was worth anything between 600;000 and 700;000 francs。
  Henri had   become   rich   late in life。         The   house   and   the   domain   had
  been left him by his brother Philibert; and another brother's death had also
  been   of   some   benefit   to   him。    Becoming   rich;   Henri   Lacoste   thought   it
  his   duty   to   marry;   and   in   1839;   though   already   sixty…six   years   of   age;
  picked on a girl young enough to have been his granddaughter。
  Euphemie   Verges   was;   in   fact;   his   grand…niece。         She   lived   with   her
  parents   at   Mazeyrolles;   a   small   village   in   the   foothills   of   the   Pyrenees。
  Compared with Lacoste; the Verges were said to be poor。                      Lacoste took it
  on himself to look after the girl's education; having her sent at his charges
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  to。a convent   at Tarbes。       In   1841; on the   2nd of   May;  the   marriage   took
  place。
  If this marriage of youth with crabbed age resulted in any unhappiness
  the neighbours saw little of it。         Though it was rumoured that for her old
  and   rich   husband   Euphemie   had   given   up   a   young   man   of   her   fancy   in
  Tarbes; her conduct during the two years she lived with Lacoste seemed to
  be    irreproachable。      Lacoste     was    rather   a  nasty    old  fellow    from    all
  accounts。      He    was    niggardly;    coarse;   and   a  womanizer。       Euphemie's
  position in the house was little better than that of head domestic servant;
  but in this her lot was the common one for wives of her station in this part
  of France。      She appeared to be contented enough with it。
  About two years after the marriage; on the 16th of May; 1843; to be
  exact; after a trip with his wife to the fair at Riguepeu; old Lacoste was
  taken suddenly ill; ultimately becoming violently sick。                 Eight days later
  he died。
  By   a   will   which   Henri   had   made   two   months   after   his   marriage   his
  wife was his sole beneficiary; and this will was no sooner proved than the
  widow betook herself to Tarbes; where she speedily began to make full use
  of her fortune。      Milliners and dressmakers were called into service; and
  the widow blossomed forth as a lady of fashion。               She next set up her own
  carriage。     If these proceedings had not been enough to excite envy among
  her    female    neighbours     the  frequent    visits   paid   to  her  in  her   genteel
  apartments by a young man did the trick。                The young man came on the
  scene less than two months aft