第 47 节
作者:敏儿不觉      更新:2021-02-24 22:58      字数:9320
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  was     dressed     in  complete      mourning;      and    covered     her   face    with   a
  handkerchief。       It was manifest that; in the phrase of the crime reporters;
  ‘‘she felt her position keenly。''          The usual questions as to her name and
  condition she answered almost inaudibly; her voice choked with sobs。
  Kostolo; on the contrary; replied in organ tones。               He said that he was
  born in Constantinople; and that he had no estate。
  The acte d'accusation was read。            It set forth the facts of the adulterous
  association   of   the   two   accused;   of   the   money   lent   by   Mme   Boursier   to
  Kostolo; of their meetings; and all the suspicious circumstances previous
  to the death of the epicier。
  The   cook…girl;   Josephine   Blin;   had   prepared   the   potage   au   riz   in   the
  kitchen; using the small iron pan that it was her wont to employ。                    Having
  made the soup; she conveyed it in its terrine to a small secretaire in   the
  dining…room。        This secretaire stood within the stretch of an arm from the
  door of the comptoir in which Mme Boursier usually worked。                       According
  to   custom;   Josephine   had   divided   the   potage   in       two   portionsone   for
  Boursier and the other for the youngest child。              The youngster and she had
  eaten the second portion between them; and neither had experienced any
  ill…effects。
  Josephine  told her  master   that   the  soup   was   ready。        He  came   at   her
  call;   but   did   not   eat   the   soup   at   once;   being   otherwise   occupied。  The
  soup   stood   on   the   secretaire   for   about   fifteen   minutes   before   Boursier
  started to eat it。
  According   to   the   accused;   the   accusation   went   on;   after   Boursier's
  death   the   two   doctors   asked   that   they   might   be   allowed   to   perform   an
  autopsy;   since   they   were   at   a   loss   to   explain   the   sudden   illness。 This
  Mme   Boursier   refused;   in   spite   of   the   insistence   of   the   doctors。     She
  refused; she said; in the interest of her children。             She insisted; indeed; on
  a quick burial; maintaining that; as her husband had been tres replet; the
  body   would   rapidly   putrefy;   owing   to   the   prevailing   heat;   and   that   thus
  harm would be done to the delicate contents of the epicerie。
  Led   by   rumours   of   the   bluish   stainsalmost   certain   indications   of   a
  violent deaththe authorities; said the accusation; ordered an exhumation
  and autopsy。       Arsenic was found in the body。            It was clear that Boursier;
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  ignorant;   as   he   was;   of   his   wife's   bad   conduct;   had   not   killed   himself。
  This was a point that the widow had vainly attempted; during the process
  of   instruction;   to   maintain。   She   declared   that one   Clap;   a   friend   of   her
  late   husband;   had   come   to   her   one   day   to   say   that   a   certain   Charles;   a
  manservant; had remarked to him; ‘‘Boursier poisoned himself because he
  was tired of living。''      Called before the Juge d'instruction; Henri Clap and
  Charles had concurred in denying this。
  The   accusation   maintained   that   the   whole   attitude   of   Mme   Boursier
  proved   her   a   poisoner。     As   soon   as   her   husband   became   sick   she   had
  taken the dish   containing the remains   of the  rice soup; emptied   it into   a
  dirty  vessel;  and   passed   water   through   the   dish。     Then   she had   ordered
  Blin to clean it; which the latter did; scrubbing it out with sand and ashes。
  Questioned   about   arsenic   in   the   house;   Mme   Boursier   said;   to   begin
  with;    that  Boursier     had   never    spoken    to  her   about   arsenic;    but  later
  admitted that her husband had mentioned both arsenic and mort aux rats to
  her。
  Asked      regarding     the  people     who    frequented     the   house    she   had
  mentioned all the friends of Boursier; but neglected to speak of Kostolo。
  Later   she   had   said   she   never   had   been   intimate   with   the   Greek。    But
  Kostolo; ‘‘ barefaced enough for anything;'' had openly declared the nature
  of his relations with her。        Then Mme Boursier; after maintaining that she
  had    been   no   more    than   interested    in  Kostolo;    finding   pleasure    in  his
  company;       had   been   constrained     to  confess    that  she   had   misconducted
  herself with the Greek in the dead man's room。                  She had given Kostolo
  the run of her purse; the accusation declared; though she denied the fact;
  insisting that what she had given him had been against his note。                      There
  was only one conclusion; however。              Mme Boursier; knowing the poverty
  of her paramour; had paid him as her cicisbeo; squandering upon him her
  children's patrimony。
  The accusation then dealt with the supposed project of marriage; and
  declared that in it there was sufficient motive for the crime。               Kostolo was
  Mme Boursier's accomplice beyond any doubt。                   He had acted as nurse to
  the invalid; administering drinks and medicines to him。                  He had had full
  opportunity for poisoning the grocer。            Penniless; out of work; it would be
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  a good thing for him if Boursier was eliminated。                He had been blatant in
  his visits to Mme Boursier after the death of the husband。
  Then followed the first questioning of the accused。
  Mme   Boursier   said   she   had   kept   tryst   with   Kostolo   in   the   Champs…
  Elysees。      She    admitted     having    been    to  his  lodgings    once。     On    the
  mention of the name of Mlle Riene; a mistress of Kostolo's; she said that
  the woman was partly in their confidence。              She had gone with Mlle Riene
  twice   to   Kostolo's   rooms。     Once;   she   admitted;   she   had   paid   a   visit   to
  Versailles with Kostolo unknown to her husband。
  Asked   if   her   husband   had   had   any   enemies;   Mme   Boursier   said   she
  knew of none。
  The questioning of Kostolo drew from him the admission that he had
  had a number of mistresses all at one time。             He made no bones about his
  relations with them; nor about his relations with Mme Boursier。                    He was
  quite blatant   about it;   and   seemed to   enjoy the   show   he was putting up。
  Having   airily   answered   a   question   in   a   way   that   left   him   without   any
  reputation; he would sweep the court with his eyes; preening himself like a
  peacock。
  He   was   asked   about   a   journey   Boursier   had   proposed   making。        At
  what time had Boursier intended making the trip?
  ‘‘Before his death;'' Kostolo replied。
  The  answer  was unintentionally  funny;  but   the  Greek took   credit   for
  the amusement it created in court。           He conceived himself a humorist; and
  the fact coloured all his subsequent answers。
  Kostolo said that he had called to see Boursier on the first day of his
  illness   at three  in   the  afternoon。    He  himself  had   insisted   on   helping   to
  nurse the invalid。       Mme Boursier had brought water; and he had given it
  to the sick man。
  After    Boursier's    death    he   had   remarked      on   the  blueness     of  the
  fingernails。     It was a condition he had seen before in his own country; on
  the body of a prince who had died of poison; and the symptoms of whose
  illness had been very like those in Boursier's。            He had then suspected that
  Boursier had died of poisoning。
  The   loud   murmurs   that   arose   in   court   upon   his   blunt   confession   of
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  having   misconducted   himself   with   Mme   Boursier   fifteen   days   after   her
  husband's   death   seemed   to   evoke   nothing   but   surprise   in   Kostolo。        He
  was     then   asked    if  he  had   proposed     marriage     to  Mme      Boursier    after
  Boursier's death。
  ‘‘What!''     he   exclaimed;     with    a  grin。   ‘‘Ask     a   woman      with   five
  children to marry mea woman I don't love?''
  Upon   this   answer   Kostolo   was   taken   to   task   by  the   President   of   the