"And made her confession?"
"And made her confession, mein Herr."
"What did she confess?"
The innkeeper shook his head.
"That no one ever knew, save the good G.o.d and her murderer."
"Her murderer!" I exclaimed.
"Ay, just that. Whatever it was that she confessed, she paid for it with her life. He heard her out, at all events, without discovering himself, and let her go home believing that she had received absolution for her sins. Those who met her that afternoon said she seemed unusually bright and happy. As she pa.s.sed through the town, she went into the shop in the Mongarten Stra.s.se, and bought some ribbons. About half an hour later, my own father met her outside the Basel Thor, walking briskly homewards. He was the last who saw her alive.
"That evening (it was in October, and the days were short), some travellers coming that way into the town heard shrill cries, as of a woman screaming, in the direction of Caspar"s farm. But the night was very dark, and the house lay back a little way from the road; so they told themselves it was only some drunken peasant quarrelling with his wife, and pa.s.sed on. Next morning Caspar Rufenacht came to Rheinfelden, walked very quietly into the Polizei, and gave himself up to justice.
""I have killed my wife," said he. "I have killed the Pere Chessez. And I have committed sacrilege."
"And so, indeed, it was. As for the Frau Margaret, they found her body in an upper chamber, well-nigh hacked to pieces, and the hatchet with which the murder was committed lying beside her on the floor. He had pursued her, apparently, from room to room; for there were pools of blood and handfuls of long light hair, and marks of b.l.o.o.d.y hands along the walls, all the way from the kitchen to the spot where she lay dead."
"And so he was hanged?" said I, coming back to my original question.
"Yes, yes," replied the innkeeper and his womankind in chorus. "He was hanged--of course he was hanged."
"And it was the shock of this double tragedy that drove the younger Chessez into the church?"
"Just so, mein Herr."
"Well, he carries it in his face. He looks like a most unhappy man."
"Nay, he is not that, mein Herr!" exclaimed the landlady. "He is melancholy, but not unhappy."
"Well, then, austere."
"Nor is he austere, except towards himself."
"True, wife," said the innkeeper; "but, as I said, he carries that sort of thing too far. You understand, mein Herr," he added, touching his forehead with his forefinger, "the good pastor has let his mind dwell too much upon the past. He is nervous--too nervous, and too low."
I saw it all now. That terrible light in his eyes was the light of insanity. That stony look in his face was the fixed, hopeless melancholy of a mind diseased.
"Does he know that he is mad?" I asked, as the landlord rose to go.
He shrugged his shoulders and looked doubtful.
"I have not said that the Pere Chessez is _mad_, mein Herr," he replied.
"He has strange fancies sometimes, and takes his fancies for facts--that is all. But I am quite sure that he does not believe himself to be less sane than his neighbours."
So the innkeeper left me, and I (my head full of the story I had just heard) put on my hat, went out into the market-place, asked my way to the Basel Thor, and set off to explore the scene of the Frau Margaret"s murder.
I found it without difficulty--a long, low-fronted, beetle-browed farmhouse, lying back a meadow"s length from the road. There were children playing upon the threshold, a flock of turkeys gobbling about the barn-door, and a big dog sleeping outside his kennel close by. The chimneys, too, were smoking merrily. Seeing these signs of life and cheerfulness, I abandoned all idea of asking to go over the house. I felt that I had no right to carry my morbid curiosity into this peaceful home; so I turned away, and retraced my steps towards Rheinfelden.
It was not yet seven, and the sun had still an hour"s course to run. I re-entered the town, strolled back through the street, and presently came again to the Friedrich"s Thor and the path leading to the church.
An irresistible impulse seemed to drag me back to the place.
Shudderingly, and with a sort of dread that was half longing, I pushed open the churchyard gate and went in. The doors were closed; a goat was browsing among the graves; and the rushing of the Rhine, some three hundred yards away, was distinctly audible in the silence. I looked round for the priest"s house--the scene of the first murder; but from this side, at all events, no house was visible. Going round, however, to the back of the church, I saw a gate, a box-bordered path, and, peeping through some trees, a chimney and the roof of a little brown-tiled house.
This, then, was the path along which Caspar Rufenacht, with the priest"s blood upon his hands and the priest"s gown upon his shoulders, had taken his guilty way to the confessional! How quiet it all looked in the golden evening light! How like the church-path of an English parsonage!
I wished I could have seen something more of the house than that bit of roof and that one chimney. There must, I told myself, be some other entrance--some way round by the road! Musing and lingering thus, I was startled by a quiet voice close against my shoulder, saying:--
"A pleasant evening, mein Herr!"
I turned, and found the priest at my elbow. He had come noiselessly across the gra.s.s, and was standing between me and the sunset, like a shadow.
"I--I beg your pardon," I stammered, moving away from the gate. "I was looking--"
I stopped in some surprise, and indeed with some sense of relief, for it was not the same priest that I had seen in the morning. No two, indeed, could well be more unlike, for this man was small, white-haired, gentle-looking, with a soft, sad smile inexpressibly sweet and winning.
"You were looking at my arbutus?" he said.
I had scarcely observed the arbutus till now, but I bowed and said something to the effect that it was an unusually fine tree.
"Yes," he replied; "but I have a rhododendron round at the front that is still finer. Will you come in and see it?"
I said I should be pleased to do so. He led the way, and I followed.
"I hope you like this part of our Rhine-country?" he said, as we took the path through the shrubbery.
"I like it so well," I replied, "that if I were to live anywhere on the banks of the Rhine, I should certainly choose some spot on the Upper Rhine between Schaffhausen and Basle."
"And you would be right," he said. "Nowhere is the river so beautiful.
Nearer the glaciers it is milky and turbid--beyond Basle it soon becomes muddy. Here we have it blue as the sky--sparkling as champagne. Here is my rhododendron. It stands twelve feet high, and measures as many in diameter. I had more than two hundred blooms upon it last Spring."
When I had duly admired this giant shrub, he took me to a little arbour on a bit of steep green bank overlooking the river, where he invited me to sit down and rest. From hence I could see the porch and part of the front of his little house; but it was all so closely planted round with trees and shrubs that no clear view of it seemed obtainable in any direction. Here we sat for some time chatting about the weather, the approaching vintage, and so forth, and watching the sunset. Then I rose to take my leave.
"I heard of you this evening at the Krone, mein Herr," he said. "You were out, or I should have called upon you. I am glad that chance has made us acquainted. Do you remain over to-morrow?"
"No; I must go on to-morrow to Basle," I answered. And then, hesitating a little, I added:--"you heard of me, also, I fear, in the church."
"In the church?" he repeated.
"Seeing the door open, I went in--from curiosity--as a traveller; just to look round for a moment and rest."
"Naturally."
"I--I had no idea, however, that I was not alone there. I would not for the world have intruded--"
"I do not understand," he said, seeing me hesitate. "The church stands open all day long. It is free to every one."